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— Quincy Massachusetts News by Quincy Quarry News – News, Opinion and Commentary
In the wake of yesterday’s relative quietude locally given a Snow Emergency declared on what turned out to be but a raw and rainy day, today is looking to be heating up early on what is otherwise an especially cold as well as windy day on the ever-increasingly mean streets of Quincy.
Shortly before 9 am this morning Quincy Quarry’ New’s senior Citizen Police Scanner Monitor heard word of the Quincy Police Department backing up a Federal law enforcement agency raid underway somewhere along Arlington Street in the Wollaston neighborhood.
While for reasons obvious details are scarce, do note that Arlington Street runs parallel to Newport Avenue from Beale Street to roughly the local Ocean State Job Lot store and then for but one block near the North Quincy Red Line station as well is that Arlington is the first street south of Newport Avenue.
Needless to say, Quincy Quarry News will be endeavoring to monitor the various federal agencies for press releases so as to endeavor to glean information as to why the feds conducted this latest raid in Quincy.
Arlington Street in Quincy, Massachusetts does a really weird jump that stops around Ocean State Job Lot/Marshall’s then picks up again at the backside of The 99 Restaurant/Hallmark Store place where it houses a dual branded Hotel at #1 Arlington St (North Quincy/same city just a local identification of the neighborhood within…. like Boston used to be before letting this type of street confusion redistricting settlement done by developers… anyways… I had to look it up in maps, as a lifelong Wollaston resident (Eastern Nazarene/Beechwood Knoll section of Wollaston in the 80s/90s) anyways as it’s also contributed to GPS/MAPS inaccuracies that have the potential to become a public safety nightmare on top of what we’re already dealing with from continually passing the buck forward. I hope there’s an update on the investigation our local PD assisted Federal Agencies with as these things are rarely mentioned to the public and that in itself hinders law enforcement’s ability to gain ground in a city where distrust in law enforcement has been generational and out in the open as a closed circuit.