׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://AIjodZ5tf8Cu5_8pHZmLyN1uUIvlWs0CU3sRIpEr7gc a`'p׉	 7cassandra://4mb_YWoK2ASYKFMYpTv9grevh4P-4T1iccqTF1yLTOQͿL`׉	 7cassandra://ZNhZNn89vyXqcpxSLGou7sx5OBWMYdLXp5CRxVWvcM07!` iĒ*}jנiĒ*}m 9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈EiĒ*}X׉E#Daylight Saving Time! Spring Forward Your Clocks One Hour on Saturday Night!
Vol. 35, No. 9
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Published
Every Friday
New Malden High School principal is
appointed for 2026-27 school year
MPS Supt. announces Boston Public Schools administrator
Michael Sabin will take reins at MHS July 1
By Steve Freker
A
new principal has been appointed
to lead Malden High
Michael Sabin, a Boston Public
Schools administrator, has been
appointed as the next Malden
High School principal, effective
July 1, 2026. (Courtesy Photo)
School, following a search-and-hire
process which began in December
and continued through the end of
this past month of February. Superintendent
of Schools Timothy Sippel
told the members of the Malden
School Committee at its regular
meeting Monday night that he
has appointed Michael Sabin as
the next principal at Malden High
School, effective July 1, 2026. Supt.
Sippel informed administrators
and staff at Malden High School of
the decision just before the start of
the meeting in an email message
early Monday.
Sabin is coming to Malden from
the Boston Public Schools, where
he is now in his fourth school year
as Executive Director of School and
District Transformation. Before that
he had served seven years as principal
at the McDevitt Middle School
in Waltham. He also served as a K-8
principal in Boston for five years
and before that, two years as a
Somerville K-8 school leader. His career
education, spanning 35 years
in all, began as a teacher in the
Cambridge Public Schools in 1991.
PRINCIPAL | SEE PAGE 9
Malden City Council approves resolution opposing
city resources being used to assist ICE agents,
others in immigration enforcement here
Action follows weeks of discussion over original proposal of Council order
rejecting broader interaction between local employees, federal agencies
By Steve Freker
Further, the resolution noted
condemnation of the actions of
T
he specter of immigration
law enforcement that has
gripped many parts of this country
is affecting residents here in
Malden, several City Councillors
attested. Led by chief City Council
sponsors Carey McDonald (At
Large) and Stephen Winslow
(Ward 6), a resolution was approved
unanimously, expressing
strong, definitive opposition
to the use of municipal resources
“to assist with the Federal government’s
responsibility for civil
(non-criminal) immigration enforcement
in any manner not
required by law, court order, or
subpoena.”
one specific federal agency, U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE), stating specifically,
“We support the protections
in the US Constitution for
due process and condemn aggressive
and inhumane tactics of
ICE agents in Malden and other
communities across the country.”
This vote came following discussions
held over several weeks
and in subcommittee meetings,
which followed a late-January
Council meeting where Councillors
McDonald and Winslow
originally proposed passage of a
formal Council order, calling for a
potential policy instructing: “...No
city employees, departments,
appointees, processes or representatives
shall assist in fulfilling
the unique and separate responsibilities
of the Federal government,
including immigration
enforcement, or cooperate with
any Federal agencies or policies
contrary to the stated goal of
this Order. Through executive action,
through select boards, other
Councils are acting on this.”
The proposal for the order —
for which Malden Police Chief
Glenn Cronin expressed disagreement
at the January meeting
where it was broached —
was sent to the Council’s PubRESOLUTION
| SEE PAGE 8
Glenn Cronin
Malden Police Chief
617-387-2200
Friday, March 6, 2026
Malden DPW ‘trash tagging’
addresses noncompliance, seeks to
improve neighborhood cleanliness
Flyers will be placed on problems barrels;
enforcement and potential fines will follow
Special to The Advocate
T
he Malden Department of
Public Works (DPW) has begun
a citywide trash tagging initiative
as part of an ongoing effort
to address unsanitary conditions
and improve neighborhood
cleanliness. During this
time, DPW staff are placing informational
flyers on barrels that
do not meet the City of Malden’s
trash disposal requirements. This
period is intended to help residents
understand and comply
with the ordinance before formal
enforcement and fines begin.
To
avoid violations, please ensure
that:
TRASH | SEE PAGE 3
Residents must follow the trash
pickup rules —Trash MUST
be contained within a lidded
barrel with the lid completely
closed — for both regular trash
and recycling, or fines may be
assessed.
Malden Police Chief Cronin
Statement on Local Law
Enforcement's interaction with
Federal Agents & Agencies
M
alden Police Chief Glenn
Cronin read the following
statement at the recent Malden
City Council meeting with a call
for City Council Order 72-26,
which partly read: “No city employees,
departments, appointees,
processes or representatives
shall assist in fulfilling the
unique and separate responsibilities
of the Federal government,
including
immigration enforcement,
or cooperate with any Federal
agencies or policies contrary
POLICE | SEE PAGE 6
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̮9ׁHhttp://Advocate.news.maׁׁЈנiĒ*}r ̋9ׁHhttp://Facebook.com/ׁׁЈנiĒ*}q P9ׁHhttp://gmail.comׁׁЈ׉E]Page 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Malden middle school teacher, coach faces sexual assault charges
Suspect placed on leave, released on $75,000 cash bail after arraignment in district court
Special to the Advocate
A
Malden middle school teacher,
who was also the longtime
head coach of the Malden
High Girls Basketball team, was
released on $75,000 cash bail
following his arraignment on
charges of rape and indecent
sexual assault on February 25.
Middlesex District Attorney Marian
Ryan and Stoneham Police
Chief James O’Connor said that
Scott Marino, 54, of Stoneham,
was arrested on Wednesday,
February 24 and charged with
two counts of rape, one count of
indecent assault and battery and
one count of furnishing alcohol
to a person under the age of 21.
On February 18, 2026, Marino
allegedly provided alcohol
to and sexually assaulted an
18-year-old female, who was
known to him, at his Stoneham
home. The suspect pleaded not
guilty to those charges at his arraignment
on Thursday, February
25 in Woburn District Court
and released later that day on
$75,000 cash bail.
Local students make Q2 Honor Roll at BC High
T
he following local students
made the Q2 Honor Roll at BC
High for the 2025-2026 school
year. Please note that students
with an asterisk (*) next to their
name were inducted into the National
Honor Society in December
2025, as well.
National Honor Society is an
organization overseen by the
National Association of Secondary
Schools and Principals
(NASSP) that recognizes and
empowers students to excel in
the areas of scholarship, character,
leadership and service
(the four pillars). It is meant to
be an organization populated
by the highest role-models
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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Marino worked as a teacher at
Linden S.T.E.A.M. Academy for
grades K-8 in Malden for a number
of years and recently completed
his 10th season as head
of the Malden High School Girls
Basketball team. Under the bail
requirements, Woburn District
Court Judge Jane Prince ruled
Marino will be under GPS monitoring,
ordered to not drink alcohol,
stay off school property,
not contact the victim, or leave
Massachusetts and surrender his
passport. Marino is due back in
court next on Thursday, April 16
for a hearing.
Court papers remain sealed,
pending a motion by defense to
impound them, according to an
online report, and his attorney,
Kevin Mullen, of Quincy, declined
to comment on the charges outside
court after the arraignment,
according to reports.
In an email message to parents
and staff of the Malden Public
Schools on February 24, Superintendent
of Schools Timothy Sippel,
Ed.L.D. informed them that
Marino was “immediately placed
on leave from the Malden Public
Schools when the police informed
the district of the investigation
into these allegations.”
“The district is fully cooperating
with relevant law enforcement
agencies in their investigation,
which is ongoing. Due to
personnel and privacy laws, the
district will not be commenting
further on this case,” Supt. Sippel
added.
“I understand how upsetting
and distressing this is to our
community given the serious
nature of these allegations. We
thank you for your continued
commitment to our students
and our district community. The
safety of our students and staff
is our highest priority,” Supt. Sippel
stated.
According to school officials,
resources both in-house via
school counselors and outside
professional trauma specialists,
were immediately made available
throughout last week and
including the early part of his
week to support students at Malden
High School who desired or
required assistance.
within our school, who will work
to improve their school and local
community through leadership
and service. Students who
have completed one semester
at BC High and maintain a
cumulative GPA to the faculty
council’s satisfaction are invited
to be considered for candidacy
at the beginning of their junior
or senior year.
Please join us in celebrating
their accomplishments!
The following students from
Malden were honored: Jacob
Lee,* Honors (2026); Theodore
Marion-Brown, High Honors
(2029); Xiaoyu Zhu, High Honors
(2026).
Malden Reads book
discussion with the Mayor
T
he Malden Public Library and
Malden Reads invite you to
join Mayor Gary Christenson to
discuss this year’s book selection,
“Our Missing Hearts” by Celeste
Ng. The discussion will take place
on Wednesday, March 11, from
6:30–7:30 p.m. in the beautiful
art galleries at the Malden Public
Library. Light refreshments
will be served.
Set in a near-future America
marked by fear, censorship and
division, “Our Missing Hearts”
explores what happens when a
society built on democratic ideals
begins to fracture. The novel
follows a young boy searching
for his missing mother — a
poet whose words have been
deemed dangerous by the government
— and examines how
art, storytelling and human connection
can resist oppression
and ignite hope.
Malden Reads is a community
reading organization run by
residents in collaboration with
the Malden Public Library. Each
season Malden Reads invites the
city of Malden, Massachusetts, to
read a selected book and participate
in a program of events, projects
and community initiatives
centered around the themes of
the book. Malden Reads looks
forward to having you join Mayor
Christenson and the Malden
community to discuss this book.
Copies of both the physical
book and downloadable versions
are available at the Malden
Public Library and copies may be
purchased at The Gallery@57 (57
Pleasant St. in Malden).
׉	 7cassandra://PYov1pUESt9Kk_oDHLbLtHVRjkhFtfWcrP_Wn87lG1s3` iĒ*}Z׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 3
Malden Democrats Will Caucus
Thursday, March 12, 2026
O
n Thursday, March 12, the
Malden Democratic City
Committee will hold its annual
caucus to elect delegates to the
2026 Massachusetts Democratic
Party Convention.
All voters registered as Democrats
in Malden are eligible to
vote in their ward’s caucus and
to become delegates. All Malden
wards will caucus at 7:00pm
on March 12 at St. Paul’s Parish,
27 Washington Street in Malden.
Doors will open at 6:30pm
and close at 7:15pm for sign in.
When participants arrive, they
will be directed to sign in at their
ward’s table. Voter registration
will be available. There is ample
parking in the area. The event is
fully accessible.
This year at the caucus, we expect
to be joined by Mass Dems Chair
Steve Kerrigan as well as many candidates
and elected officials.
Caucusing with one’s ward is a
good way to meet other Democrats
in the city and to learn more
about the Democratic Party, issues,
and candidates for office.
This year’s Massachusetts Democratic
Convention is a nominating
convention for statewide offices
and will be held in Worcester
from Friday, May 29 through
Saturday, May 30, 2026.
For more information about
the Massachusetts Democratic
Party, the caucus process, and
the convention, visit massdems.
org. For more information about
the Malden Democratic City
Committee, contact Amanda
Smith, Vice Chair, at abs0628@
gmail.com.
State Rep. Donato’s Response to Letter to the Editor
I
n last week’s edition of The
Malden Advocate, a letter was
written to the editor by a reader
relative to the Proposition 2
½ Override. This letter suggestTRASH
| FROM PAGE 1
• Trash bags are placed inside
a lidded barrel
• The barrel lid is securely
closed
• The barrel has a valid trash tag
affixed, or approved blue PAYT
bags are used
• After the 60-day education
period, violations may result in
fines.
City officials appreciate your
cooperation as we work together
to maintain clean, safe
and sanitary neighborhoods
throughout Malden.
Residential Trash and
Recycling Overview
Summary
—Weekly trash & recycling
pickup is provided for residential
dwellings with six units or
less; more than six units or commercial
properties must establish
private pickup.
—All qualifying residences
Like us on Facebook advocate
newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
ed that I was not in favor of the
override. I want my position on
this matter to be clear. I never
indicated to this individual that
I am not in favor. I believe this
are eligible for one free city-issued
barrel for trash and one for
recycling.
—All recycling is done on a
“single stream” basis; there is no
need to separate materials.
—Residents may use any covered
barrel for additional recycling
materials.
—Per city ordinances, trash
MUST be contained within a lidded
barrel with the lid completequestion
should be decided by
the voters of Malden.
Thank you,
State Representative Paul Donato
ly
closed. Failure to do so may result
in a fine.
Trash must be placed as follows:
—In
a blue Pay as You Throw
bag, which may be placed in any
lidded barrel, OR
—In any household bag in a
City issued barrel with a CURRENT
year trash sticker
—Trash must be curbside by 7
a.m. on the day of pickup.
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
City Councillor Sets Record
Straight on Override Vote
Dear Editor,
I would like to set the record
straight to my constituents and
the voters of Malden. I did vote
in favor along with my city council
colleagues to hold a special
election proposing a Proposition
21/2 Override. I did so because I
felt the voters had a right to be
able to choose for themselves if
they supported or opposed an
override.
However, I want to make it
perfectly clear that I personally
do not support an override at
this time and will be voting no
on both ballot questions come
March 31st. There are a number
of reasons why I am not in favor
of an override. The main reason is
the timing. I do not feel enough
due diligence has been done
prior to asking for an override to
seek pro-active ways to cut expenses
within the city without
the potential threat of cutting
essential services.
At this time, I believe a proposition
override will have long term
detrimental effects on all our residents.
Let’s take the time to get it
right before asking our residents
to dig deeper into their pockets
and help Keep Malden Affordable
for all.
Sincerely,
Chris Simonelli
Councilor Ward 7
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Malden Police vs. Beebe School All-Stars Basketball Fundraiser
Proceeds benefiting upcoming students’ trip to ‘Nature’s Classroom’
By Steve Freker
I
t was a real battle on the hardwood
Tuesday night, but it
was all for fun at the Beebe K-8
School gymnasium. The Beebe
School educators “All-Stars” hosted
the Malden Police Basketball
stars for a hoop showdown and
it drew a great crowd. The event
included a night of competition,
heads-up play and a lot of laughs
and smiles.
Most importantly, it was a big
fundraiser night for students of
the school who will be attending
the Nature’s Classroom trip later
this spring for the first time in a
number of years. Nature’s Classroom
is a multi-day, sleepover
field trip at a supervised camp in
Charlton, Mass., where students
go through a full slate of activities,
which include exploring the
outdoors and getting a first-person
view of nature up close, in
real time.
The Malden School Committee,
at meetings held earlier this
year, heard presentations from
representatives of the city’s K-8
schools and approved trips
to Nature’s Classroom for this
school year. This will be the first
time in a number of years Beebe
School has sought to send students
to the Nature’s Classroom
experience.
Ther small admission charge
for Tuesday night’s game is all
going toward defraying the cost
of the trip. The fundraising night
was one of a number of events
the Beebe School is hosting to
make sure that every student
that wants to take the trip has
that opportunity.
Many of Beebe’s teaching facBEEBE
BASKETBALL: Here are all the participants in the game Tuesday night, the Malden Police AllStars
on the right and the Beebe K-8 School All-Stars on the left. Center, back row, is Superintendent
of Schools Timothy Sippel. (Courtesy/Katie Bowdridge)
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home improvement
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all winter!
arch 24, 2026, 5:30 pm, at
Forestdale Park Assisted
Living and Memory Care Community,
341 Forest Street, Malden.
Our support group for caregivers
meets in person at Forestdale
Park. Dealing with Alzheimer's
disease and related dementia
isn't easy, so it is helpful
to share your concerns and
personal experiences with others
who completely understand
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ALZHEIMER | SEE PAGE 7
Spring
is Here!
ulty took part in the event, as did
plenty of Malden Police patrolmen
and supervisory officers.
Included were the contingent
of Student Resource Officers
and supervisor Sgt. Rob O’Brien,
who are assigned to the Malden
Public Schools. Also on hand to
cheer on the educators and the
MPD players was Malden Superintendent
of Schools Timothy
Sippel and Malden School Committee
Vice Chairperson Jennifer
Spadafora.
MALDEN POLICE ALL-STARS: Here are the members of the Malden
Police Department who competed in the Beebe School Fundraiser
Basketball Game on Tuesday night. (Courtesy/Katie Bowdridge)
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׉	 7cassandra://-TTSNQmy0OtFs330Tn2JUttRo673Mz7kd1oJdwNsiMg:` iĒ*}\׉EKTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 5
Sen. Lewis and Mass. Senate strengthen fair housing protections for renters and buyers
O
n February 12, 2026, State
Senator Jason Lewis joined
his colleagues in the Massachusetts
Senate to unanimously
pass legislation that protects residents
from discrimination in the
housing market. On February
17, the Massachusetts House referred
the legislation to its committee
on Ways and Means. Reportedly,
the Trump administration
has abandoned enforcement
of the federal Fair Housing
Act.
Illegal discrimination continues
to hamper many homebuyers’
and renters’ ability to find a
home. A 2020 study by the Boston
Foundation and Suffolk University
found that 71% of Black
participants faced housing discrimination
and were 30% more
likely to be “ghosted” by real estate
agents. It also found that
renters of all backgrounds with
housing vouchers were highly
likely to be prevented from even
seeing apartments.
“The amount of discrimination
in our housing market is horrific,
and it is appalling that the Trump
administration is trying to dismantle
fair and affordable housALL
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
POLICE | FROM PAGE 1
to the stated goal of this Order.”
As someone who has interacted
with this community in
a law enforcement capacity for
over 30 years, I’d like to believe
that the vast majority of our residents
would support any goal
of a safe, livable and welcoming
community. As Chief, it’s at
the core of what we do every
day, while striving to protect the
rights and dignity of all members
of our community. That said, the
proposed “order” is not one that I
support for several reasons.
We are a department guided
heavily by state laws (MGL’s),
Code of Mass Regulations
(CMR’s) and our departmental
policy, in particular, our State Accreditation
policies which guide
absolutely everything we do.
Injecting this “order” language
into our policies would be con8
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trary to many of the policies enacted
by the state and codified
in our State Accreditation policies.
Adopting local ordinances
that must be reconciled with
these simply leaves too much
room for interpretation. In fact,
the very wording of ‘safe, livable,
and welcoming’ is subjective
and means different things
to different people. It is both unfair
and unrealistic to expect our
police officers to interpret this
in a way that meets the goals
of the cosponsors. I suspect the
same goes for other city employees
and departments as well. I’m
aware that many city departments
have partnerships with
the federal government. The
MPD, MFD, MPS, MHA, Office of
Strategic Planning and Community
Development (OSPCD), just
to name a few, have all received
federal funding and/or training
at one point or another and
many annually.
A categorical prohibition on
assisting or cooperating with
federal agencies risks intentionally
impairing these critical functions,
even when that cooperation
has no connection to immigration
enforcement and directly
serves local public safety
priorities. Federal agencies are
connected to the Malden Police
Department in the same manner
they are connected to most midsized
municipal police departments:
through formal, routine,
and legally authorized mechanisms.
These connections primarily
arise from joint task forces,
grant funding, intelligence
sharing, training programs, and
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emergency-response coordination
administered by the Department
of Justice. For example,
Malden officers participate
in FBI-led task forces (such as
Joint Terrorism Task Forces, violent
crime initiatives, missing
and exploited children, Bank
Robbery Task Force, and others),
we work with ATF on firearms
tracing and gun-crime investigations,
coordinate with
DEA partners on narcotics trafficking
and enforcement, and
we work with the U.S. Marshals
fugitive task forces. These relationships
are standardized nationwide
and typically governed
by memoranda of understanding,
agreements, or grant conditions,
which we currently have.
In addition, federal involvement
commonly flows through
an administrative and operational
infrastructure. This includes
DOJ grant programs (e.g., Byrne
JAG, COPS), access to federal databases
and intelligence products
via regional fusion centers,
in our case the Commonwealth
Fusion Center (CFC), FEMA coordination
during disasters, and
federally provided training
through institutions like Federal
Law Enforcement training
centers (FLETC) or the FBI National
Academy.
None of these connections
are unique to Malden, these are
connections available to all municipalities
across the country.
This is a standard policing model,
in which municipal departments
are integrated into a multilayered
federal, state, and local
law-enforcement system. These
connections are ordinary, transparent,
and policy-driven. To sever
our ties to these critical federal
partnerships would be completely
irresponsible and would
undoubtedly place our community
in the dark, out of touch, and
in danger. Information is the lifeblood
that ensures a safe, livable
and welcoming community.
Contrary to the goals stated in
the “order,” it’s important to understand
that police officers are
not situated in the same way as
other municipal employees or
departments. By the very nature
of our profession, local law
enforcement agencies such as
ours are inextricably connected
to a wide range of state and federal
law enforcement partners.
These relationships are not discretionary
or political; they are
rooted in statutory obligations,
court orders, task force participation,
information-sharing requirements,
and long-standing
public safety mechanisms.
Many of these communications
occur through mandatory
reporting channels that exist
specifically to safeguard our
local community from serious
crime, violence, terrorism, human
trafficking, narcotics distribution,
and other threats. A blanket
statement that “no city employees
shall assist in fulfilling
the unique and separate responsibilities
of the Federal Government”
is excessive and risks undermining
legitimate and necessary
public safety functions. This
approach, to me, reflects a reaction
to a complex and problematic
national issue rather than
the operational realities of local
policing. Effective public safety
requires limited, purposeful
communication with federal
partners when it directly advances
the protection of our community,
and needs to be free to be
accomplished without a subjective
set of goals.
While the proposal states that
the “order” “shall not require the
City to break preexisting contracts
or agreements with Federal
entities” this appears intended
to mitigate legal risk, it introduces
significant confusion and
operational challenges.
The term “pre-existing” is inherently
subjective and undefined.
This creates uncertainty
as to which agreements are covered,
how long they are covered,
how they are interpreted, and
who determines whether a given
activity falls within or outside
the scope of a protected agreement.
More importantly, the language
would appear to prohibit
the City, and by extension the
Police Department, from entering
into any future contracts, expired
contracts, memoranda of
understanding, task force agreements,
or grant-related arrangements
with federal agencies, regardless
of their purpose or benefit
to the community. This could
effectively freeze the Department’s
ability to adapt to emerging
public safety needs, access
federal resources, or participate
in lawful cooperative efforts that
are routine for local police departments.
I’m going to provide
you with two examples of how
critically important our ties are
with our federal partners:
Just a few years ago, the cities
׉	 7cassandra://2q900XltmkYuIqObpWlShDp5fk90GFKap9Vc-rk3nD43` iĒ*}^׉EXTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 7
IT system was hacked. Through
a partnership with the United
States Secret Service (whom we
have no existing agreement or
contract) responded immediately
and through their specific
expertise, mitigated what could
have been a catastrophic release
of information. My point is
that if this “order” was in place, at
that time, reaching out and contacting
the Secret Service would
have been a violation of the “order”,
this makes no sense…
In another disturbing case,
there was a recent press release
by the United States Attorney’s
Office (District of Massachusetts).
The headline read, “New
York Man Convicted of Sex trafficking
a Minor and forced labor.”
He was convicted by a federal
jury for sex trafficking of a
minor by force, fraud, and coercion,
transportation of a minor
with intent to engage in criminal
sexual activity, and forced labor.
No verdict can replace the pain,
suffering, and lifelong trauma for
the victim, but the perpetrator
will be incarcerated for a number
of years and unable to reoffend.
I mention this case as the
young child was a Malden resident.
Det. Bob DiSalvatore and
Det. Renee Kelley worked closely
with our federal partners in the
FBI to bring this case to a conclusion
and conviction.
Finally, from an enforcement
and compliance perspective, the
scope of the language prohibiting
assistance with “the unique
and separate responsibilities
of the Federal government” is
so difficult to apply in practice.
Many law enforcement activities
involve overlapping jurisdictional
responsibilities, shared intelligence,
or parallel investigations.
Without clear, objective
standards, the proposed “order”
places officers and supervisors in
untenable positions where routine,
lawful police work could be
construed as a violation, exposing
the City and its employees
to unnecessary legal and operational
risk.
I am aware that this proposed
“order” is a reaction to the Immigration
and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) operations. I sent the
council a Community Newsletter
back in January of 2025 outlining
our role as it relates to immigration
enforcement. Every word in
it, is still true today.
At the same time, it is critical
for me to be clear: the Malden
Police Department does not enforce
federal immigration law,
will not enforce federal immigration
law, and will not divert local
resources for civil immigration
enforcement. Our officers’ role is
to uphold state laws and regulations,
departmental policy, protect
constitutional rights, and ensure
that all community members,
regardless of immigration
status, feel safe reporting crimes,
seeking assistance, and engaging
with law enforcement.
I remain committed to this
department maintaining communications
with federal agencies,
regardless of existing contracts
or agreements, to the extent
required by law and operational
necessity, and only when
such communication directly
serves legitimate public safety
purposes. This allows us to safeguard
the rights of all community
members, preserve trust between
the police and the public,
and continue to fulfill our
sworn duty to protect the City
of Malden.
In closing, as the Chief of Police
being charged with the responsibility
of our communities’ safety,
I respectfully ask the council
not to support this unenforceable
proposed “order.”
Thank you very much.
Chief Glenn Cronin
Malden Police Department
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
RESOLUTION | FROM PAGE 1
lic Safety Committee, where it
was discussed in detail, with the
new resolution, passed at the last
meeting, the end result.
The difference between a City
Council “order” versus a City
Council “resolution” — under
Massachusetts law — is as follows:
A Council order is a formal
directive which could lead to an
administrative action, potentially
expanding and/or changing established
policy. A Council resolution,
however, is simply a declaration
of the sense of the Council,
its stance on a matter, support or
opposition to a situation or issue.
Following is the text of Resolution
130-26, which was approved
unanimously by the Malden
City Council at the February
24 meeting:
Resolved: That it is the sense
of the Malden City Council that
no resources of the City of Malden
should be used to assist
with the Federal government’s
responsibility for civil (non-criminal)
immigration enforcement in
any manner not required by law,
court order, or subpoena. This includes
not assisting Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, Customs
and Border Protection, or
other Federal agencies charged
with this responsibility.
The City Council asks that all
city staff and representatives
comply with this intent to the
best of their ability and within the
limits of the law. This resolution is
not intended to violate any Federal
law, nor shall it be interpreted
to do so. We support the protections
in the US Constitution
for due process and condemn
aggressive and inhumane tactics
of ICE agents in Malden and
other communities across the
country. As a diverse and immigrant-rich
community, we dedicate
our resources to creating
a safe, livable, and welcoming
community for all.
The motion calling for passage
of Resolution 130-26 was made
by one of its original sponsors,
Councillor McDonald, seconded
by Councillor Winslow; voting
unanimously in favor were Councillors
Peg Crowe (Ward 1), Paul
Condon (Ward 2), Ryan O’Malley
(Ward 4), Ari Taylor (Ward 5),
Winslow (Ward 6), Chris Simonelli
(Ward 7), Jadeane Sica (Ward 8),
Karen Colón Hayes (At Large), Michelle
Luong (At Large), McDonald
(At Large) and Council President
Amanda Linehan (Ward
3). Councillors Colón Hayes, Sica
and Simonelli requested to be
added as cosponsors to the resolution
as the night’s discussion
continued.
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden
Massachusetts
Board of Appeal
215 Pleasant Street
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
Telephone 781-397-7000 x2104
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public hearing on
Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 6:30 pm Eastern Time (US and
Canada) at Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant St, Room #106 Herbert
L Jackson Council Chambers, Malden, MA on Petition 26-004
by Trademark Partners / Unlimited Soccer / MPadel Malden
seeking a variance under Code of the City of Malden as amended
– Title 12, Section 12.20.010 Table of Off-Street Parking and
Loading Regulations as per plans Res-075790-2026 at the
property known as and numbered 735 Broadway, Malden, MA
and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #184-573-368
Additional information, Petition & plans available for public
review in the Office of Inspectional Services, 215 Pleasant
St., 3rd floor, Malden MA or online at www.cityofmalden.
org or https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/
SelfService#/home
Nathaniel Cramer, Chair
February 27, March 06, 2026
The Malden City Council voted unanimously on a resolution opposed to the use of municipal resources
to assist any federal-based immigration law enforcement operations in Malden. The 2026-2027 City
Council, pictured from left to right: Front row: Michelle Luong (At Large), Chris Simonelli (Ward 7),
Council President Amanda Linehan (Ward 3), Ari Taylor (Ward 5) and Carey McDonald (At Large);
back row: Peg Crowe (Ward 1), Jadeane Sica (Ward 8), Paul Condon (Ward 2), Ryan O’Malley (Ward
4), Karen Colón Hayes (At Large) and Stephen Winslow (Ward 6). (Courtesy/City of Malden)
Councillor McDonald spoke on
the resolution before the vote.
“The challenge and the need [for
protection] has not gone away.
The reality is right now; Malden
and every other community
that has a substantial immigrant
population is under direct
threat from our federal government,”
he said.
“It is not just about what’s in the
headlines — deportations, arrests,
family separations are happening
and have been happening
in Malden at a much higher
rate in the last year, since January
2025,” Councillor McDonald added.
“For us as leaders, we have to
be doing everything that we can,
under our control, to not participate
in this oppressive regime,
to keep our people safe and to
reduce the risk that they will be
targeted by the federal government.”
“It
goes against the presumption
for so many generations
that the feds are here to help us,”
Councillor McDonald said. “I do
not believe that the leadership
of the federal government is here
to help us. I think we are in an incredibly
dangerous time and we
have to be cautious.”
“We know other communities
are taking action. We must take
action. It became clear that there
was not support in this body, our
administration, to pass an order
affecting policy. But this [resolution]
is still important,” he added.
“This is our fallback approach —
that we advance something that
is meaningful in our community.
Our community is watching us
and that this will matter.
“Thank you to everyone who
engaged in this. This is such a key
issue for the safety and the future
of our community.”
“We need to take a public
stand on unlawful actions on
immigration in Malden and other
communities. We do need to
make a stand as a Council,” Councillor
Winslow said.
Councillor Colón Hayes said
residents “aren’t protected in
Malden” from immigration enforcement.
“For anyone watching
who gets pushback that anything
happening on the state level,
the world level, doesn’t affect
Malden, that is absolutely wrong,”
Councillor Colón Hayes said. “We
hear that from our constituents
and it’s important to say it out
loud. We aren’t protected here
in Malden.”
She said she had submitted a
copy to her colleagues of a report
from a Malden-based agency,
the Leah Zallman Center for Immigrant
Health Research, located
at 350 Main St., which the Councillor
asserted had compiled data
showing the scope and number
of incidents involving immigrant
law enforcement both statewide
and locally in Malden.
“I’ve spoken to the Police Chief
and department heads who support
this paper, and I also strongly
support this resolve,” said Ward
8 Councillor Sica, in requesting to
be added as a cosponsor.
Ward 7 Councillor Chris Simonelli,
through the Council President,
asked Special Assistant to
the Mayor Maria Luise to confirm
the support of the Mayor’s
Office for the resolve. She spoke
briefly, thanking original cosponsors
Councillors McDonald and
Winslow, as well as Chief Cronin
and all those who worked on the
initiative: “Mayor [Gary] Christenson
intends on issuing a statement
in support of this resolve
following its [anticipated] passage,”
she said.
“There was a tremendous
amount of work and discussion
on this resolve, from the sponsors,
our colleagues and a high
volume of community feedback,”
Council President Amanda Linehan
said, just before the final vote
was taken. “This is a very tense
time and our voice as a Council
is needed on this issue.”
Later in the meeting, the original
proposal for a Council order
on the matter was reread, and a
9-2 Council vote was recorded
to place the Order 72-26 on file,
with Councillors McDonald and
O’Malley voting in opposition to
that action.
Council Order 72-26 read as
follows: “Order: That, as a diverse
and immigrant-rich community,
the limited resources of the City
of Malden shall be fully dedicated
to address the local needs
and priorities of Malden’s residents,
businesses and visitors.
The goal of this order is to provide
for a safe, livable and welcoming
community for all. No
city employees, departments, appointees,
processes or representatives
shall assist in fulfilling the
unique and separate responsibilities
of the Federal government,
including immigration enforcement,
or cooperate with any Federal
agencies or policies contrary
to the stated goal of this Order.
RESOLUTION | SEE PAGE 12
׉	 7cassandra://VWQhHXt491Jmmllset_WVEtLp1YMwq8JkGy7Rul_yXw1q` iĒ*}`׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 9
PRINCIPAL | FROM PAGE 1
In his message Friday, Superintendent
Sippel said, “I am pleased
to announce the formal appointment
of Michael Sabin as the next
principal of Malden High School,
effective July 1, 2026. The expertise
he brings from many years as
an urban school leader will be an
asset as we continue our work to
do right by all kids.”
Supt. Sippel described Sabin’s
present professional position in
Boston, where he is “leading work
within the district to support a large
caseload of schools who are identified
by the state as needing assistance.
“[Sabin] collaborates with
principals and school leadership
teams to raise achievement, including
in some of Boston’s most complex
high schools, and schools have
made significant academic growth
and exited state intervention with
his support,” Supt. Sippel stated.
The MPS Superintendent noted
Sabin is bilingual, fluent in Spanish,
including seven years as a bilingual
teacher in Cambridge and Lawrence,
as well a year abroad, teaching
at a high school in the Central
American country of Colombia in
2007-2008.
The Superintendent described
the search/selection process, relating
that Sabin emerged as the
top candidate for the position after
two rounds of interviews, the
first with a community panel that
included staff, students, caregivers
and community members, and
a second with senior district leaders.
As the finalist, Sabin visited Malden
High last Thursday, February
26 in a three-session day/evening
to meet with students, faculty and
staff, members of the School Committee
and parents and caregivers.
The final step was a one-on-one interview
with the Superintendent,
before the hiring was announced
Monday.
“Mr. Sabin is looking forward to
working with all of the teachers,
students and families to build
on Malden High’s great traditions
and meet the needs of all
community members,” Supt. Sippel
said.
Sabin will be replacing outgoing
nine-year Malden High School
Principal Chris Mastrangelo, who
is in his 17th year at MHS. Mastrangelo
succeeded Ted Lombardi,
who served just one year as principal
before departing mid-year in
2017 for the Boston Public Schools.
Previously, Mastrangelo was a Malden
High House Principal for eight
years. He is in his 33rd year as an
educator.
Malden Public Library’s
March Artist
T
he Malden Public Library will be featuring the artwork of Naomi
Khan throughout the month of March. She has been involved
in the arts her entire life and career, from designing jewelry,
signs and murals to illustrating books and greeting cards.
Art has always brought joy to Naomi’s life.
An artist reception will be held at the Library on Thursday,
March 12, from 6 to 7 p.m. and everyone is welcome to attend.
FAIR | FROM PAGE 5
ing options for residents as part
of their anti-DEI campaign,” said
Senator Lewis. “This bill boosts
education and enforcement to
help protect all residents from
discrimination and promote fair
housing opportunities.”
The Senate’s bill mandates fair
housing training for all real estate
agents as part of their licensure
or license renewal process.
It also increases penalties for second-offense
fair housing law violations,
increasing a current 90day
license suspension to 180
days. Violations include discrimination
against potential renters
or buyers based on their characteristics,
such as their race, age,
religion, marital status or use of
a housing voucher.
THE DECEDENT’S FINAL TAX RETURN
P
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Walkways, Driveways & Patios Installed
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding Installed
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Drywall & Carpentry
Waterproofing
ursuant to Internal Revenue
Code Section 6012(b)(1), an
individual income tax return
must be filed by the Personal
Representative of the estate or
by a person charged with the
property of the decedent. The
tax return must be filed by the
usual due date of the return
which is April 15th following
the end of the calendar year.
The tax return must be filed
at the Internal Revenue Service
center associated with the
decedent’s residence at the
time of death. There is no continuing
obligation to make estimated
income tax payments
on behalf of the decedent (assuming
the decedent was making
quarterly estimated income
tax payments during the calendar
year of his or her death). The
IRS will issue a refund check on
behalf of the deceased taxpayer
so long as Form 1310 (Statement
of Person Claiming Refund
Due a Deceased Taxpayer)
is attached to Form 1040.
The IRS’s new policy effective for
calendar year 2025 is to no longer
issue paper refund checks.
All refunds must be direct deposited.
Once a single taxpayer
has died, his or her bank account
will be frozen. The IRS will
then issue a paper refund check
and mail to the responsible person.
Form 1310 is not necessary
if there is a surviving spouse filing
a married filing joint income
tax return.
A “married filing joint” tax return
may be filed in the year of
one of the spouse’s death as
well as in the event both spouses
die during the calendar year.
A surviving spouse may use the
“married filing joint” tax tables
for two years after the death of
the first spouse even if the surviving
spouse remains unmarried,
pays for more than half of
the cost of maintaining a home
that is the principal residence
for the entire year of a child who
qualifies as a dependent on the
surviving spouse’s tax return.
In the case of a sale of the
principal residence by the surviving
spouse, the surviving
spouse may exclude $500,000
of capital gain (as opposed to
$250,000 of capital gain allowed
for a single person) if the sale
takes place no later than two
years after the date of death
of the first spouse. The principal
residence must have been
owned by at least one of the
spouses and used as the principal
residence by both spouses
prior to the death of the first
spouse.
A tax return is required to be
filed on behalf of the decedent
if the gross income equals or exceeds
the new standard deduction.
For 2025, the new standard
deduction for a single person is
$15,750. The Tax Cuts & Jobs Act
of 2017 eliminated the deduction
for personal exemptions
starting in calendar year 2018.
A tax return for the estate
must be filed if in any calendar
year the gross income of the
estate is $600 or more. The tax
form to be filed is Form 1041. A
tax return for a trust needs to be
filed if the trust has any “taxable”
income or has “gross” income of
$600 or more, regardless of how
much of that $600 in income is
“taxable” income. A trust will
also file using Form 1041.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
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`'p׉	 7cassandra://L9alZgt95WnnRzoNSjb5JR9EHZ20qEDYjjIHOY_IwwEͭ`׉	 7cassandra://N2nNJfFe-WtU-k1TPkay13DU8B53jPeKlhXEne1hVvY0(` iĒ*}ט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://bXoalXB83u2-OF6U8BdQTjPKoUU7G03B6gozsgH4bds %`'p׉	 7cassandra://HLiKi3X2a_Dsc7_JZtvmu_Ri9pXF3_ACFp_K3QJBxN8͵`׉	 7cassandra://uazcNfRcDmjL3xahlT7NQBUUQkXicdlaNE_PsJ2_vao8` iĒ*}芑נiĒ*}虁 nb9ׁHhttp://season.alׁׁЈ׉E8Page 10
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
Tools to Help You Find the
Perfect Place to Retire
Dear Savvy Senior,
What resources can you recommend for researching
good places to retire in the U.S.? My husband and I
are interested in relocating to a warmer climate when
we retire next year.
Looking to Relocate
Dear Looking,
It’s exciting to think about relocating in retirement!
Whether you’re considering seasonal escapes or a
permanent change, there are a wide variety of digital
resources that can help you find and research
new locations. Here are some tips and tools to help
you get started.
Where to Retire?
Deciding where to relocate when you retire is a
big decision. There are many factors to think about
to ensure the move supports your lifestyle, financial
goals, and overall well-being. To help you identify
some good retirement locations you need to consider
things like cost of living, climate, taxes, health
care, housing, crime, access to social and recreational
activities, access to transportation and proximity
to family and friends.
If you’re at the beginning of your search, a good
starting point is BestPlaces.net. This site compiles demographic
data from numerous reliable sources, updates
it regularly and lets you easily compare cities
using different criteria, such as housing cost, climate,
crime, religious practice, voting patterns and education
level. They even offer a 10-question “Where is
the best place for me to live?” quiz, which may suggest
some locations you may never have thought of.
There are also news and financial publications like
U.S. News & World Report, Forbes, WalletHub, Bankrate
and The Motley Fool that publish “best places to
retire” ranking lists on their websites each year. These
can give you an idea of popular retirement locations
based on different sets of criteria.
Once you identify a few good spots, here are
some additional resources that can help you dig a
little deeper.
Cost of living: Affordability is often the No. 1 factor
when deciding where to relocate. To research and
compare the cost of living from your current location
to where you would like to move, use the previously
mentioned BestPlaces.net, the Economic Policy Institute
Family Budget Calculator at EPI.org/resources/budget
and/or Bankrate’s cost of living calculator
at Bankrate.com/real-estate/cost-of-living-calculator.
And, because housing is a big expense, you
can take a deeper dive into these costs at Zillow.com
and Realtor.com.
Taxes: Some states are more tax friendly than others.
To investigate how states treat retirees when it
comes to income, sales, property and other taxes, see
Kiplinger tax guide at Kiplinger.com – search “Taxes
on Retirees: A State-by-State Guide.”
Crime rate: To evaluate how safe a community or
area is, the FBI Crime Data Explorer (cde.ucr.cjis.gov)
allows you to explore crime statistics at the national,
state, and local levels.
Climate: You can find U.S. climate/weather information
at National Centers for Environmental Information
at NCEI.noaa.gov. And to research climate
change factors and the risks of extreme temperatures,
wildfires, floods, hurricanes, severe storms,
earthquakes and drought in different locations, use
ClimateCheck.com and FEMA (Hazards.fema.gov/
nri/map).
Health care: If you’re enrolled or planning to enroll
in original Medicare, check the coverage and availability
of providers in your new location. Search by
ZIP code for health care providers and facilities at
Medicare.gov/care-compare, and check star ratings
for quality of care. If you’re enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage plan and you move out of the coverage
area, you’ll need to find a new plan in your new area.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
1. On March 6, 1994, the Biosphere 2 experiment began in Arizona;
what was it?
2. In the 1990s what state had highway “immigrant crossing” signs
to avoid collisions?
3. What MLB teams are named after birds?
4. An Illinois teen has used what two small wood instruments to win
two Guinness World Records for creating tall tower structures?
5. On March 7, 1933, “Monopoly” was created in what city with the
first USA boardwalk?
6. What famous newsman cohosted “The Morning Show” with a puppet
named Charlemagne?
7. In 2026, Olympic Village athletes were served what new kind of
pasta?
8. On March 8, 1950, the Volkswagen Type 2 began production; it is
usually called what?
9. What city has been called Sin City?
10. Who won an Oscar and two Olympic gold medals?
11. March 9 is National Meatball Day; reportedly, what popular dish
with meatballs was developed more in NYC than Italy?
12. Colonies of what Antarctica bird have been found and counted
from outer space?
13. What D.C. newspaper sponsored a children’s essay contest and requested
John Philip Sousa to compose a march for the award ceremony?
14.
On March 10, 1876, in what city did Alexander Graham Bell make
the first phone call?
15. Which was the last country in the Western Hemisphere to abolish
slavery?
16. March 11 is Johnny Appleseed Day; he was born in what Worcester
County town with a name including a person’s name?
17. What language does the word smorgasbord come from?
18. “Pastagate,” a 2013 incident of a restaurant receiving a warning
letter from the government for using Italian words on a menu, occurred
in what province?
19. Persephone was the Greek goddess of the Underworld and what
season?
20. On March 12, 1933, who gave his first “fireside chat” radio address?
ANSWERS
1. A glass-enclosed living system inhabited
by seven people; it is now
a lab for experiments
2. California
3. Baltimore Orioles, St. Louis Cardinals
and Toronto Blue Jays
4. Toothpicks (in 2026) and popsicle
sticks
5. Atlantic City
6. Walter Cronkite
7. A limited-edition one shaped like
the Olympics’ interlocking rings
symbol
8. VW Bus
9. Las Vegas
10. Kobe Bryant
11. Spaghetti and meatballs (meat was
more expensive in Italy than for its
NYC immigrants)
12. Emperor penguins
13. The Washington Post (It was called
“The Washington Post March” and
was played by the Marine Band.)
14. Boston
15. Brazil (in 1888)
16. Leominster
17. Swedish
18. Quebec (the letter generated public
pushback and an official’s resignation)
19.
Spring
20. FDR
׉	 7cassandra://N2nNJfFe-WtU-k1TPkay13DU8B53jPeKlhXEne1hVvY0(` iĒ*}b׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 11
Malden High School Boys Basketball Senior Night Honors
Bolling, Fernandes, Okoth and McMahon are Recognized
By Steve Freker
T
he Malden High School Varsity
Boys Basketball Team recognized
the Class of 2026 players
at their final home game with a
special Senior Night celebration
in the Roy Finn Gym.
The evening became even
more special when the Golden
Tornado team pulled out a 58-53
win over visiting Medford— in
overtime— sealed by a last-second
steal of a Medford inbounds
pass by senior Ryan McMahon,
with the Mustangs trailing by
only a bucket at the time, 55-53.
McMahon matched his single-season
scoring high with 15
points and fellow senior captain
Kaua Fernandes Dias Valadares
scored 18 points and had 12 rebounds
in the Senior Night win.
Ryan McMahon, a 6-0 point
guard, played two years of Varsity
Basketball and served as
a tri-captain this season.along
with Fernandes and Okoth. He
averaged 8.5 points and 5 assists
per game this season and ended
up as the team "Iron Man." registering
— by far— the most minutes
of on-court time. For the last
five games, McMahon did not sit
at all, playing every minute of
every game. McMahon is also a
four-year Varsity Baseball starter
and is already near the top of
the all-time Tornado list for career
pitching wins and strikeouts.
Kaua Fernandes Dias Valadares,
a 6-5 big man, is a fouryear
varsity man and a returning
Greater Boston League AllStar
this year. For the second
year in a row Fernandes led
Malden in scoring (12.3 ppg)
and rebounds (10.1 rpg) and
at times was a force under the
boards. His defense improved
this year and he was much
more active on both ends of
the court, according to Malden
head coach Don Nally.
Colin Okoth, a 6-2 forward
had his best season, in the starting
lineup for 17 of 20 games.
He was a reliable defender and
Tri-captain Ryan McMahon with family members. (Advocate Photos/ Henry Huang)
Tri-Captain Colin Okoth with
family on Senior Night. (Advocate
Photos/ Henry Huang)
Tri-Captain Kaua Fernandes Dias Valadares with family members
on Senior Night.
rebounder and often provided
some needed scoring as corner
"3" specialist who nailed
many during the season. His biggest
game was a career-high 23
point outing— featuring 6({!)
three-pointers in a home win
over Revere. Okoth is a threesport
performer for Malden,
contributing as a two-way end
in football in his first try at that
Senior Chace Bolling with family members on Senior Night. (Advocate
Photos/ Henry Huang)
Tornado sport last fall and a first
baseman/outfielder on the baseball
team.
Chace Bolling, a 5-9 guard, had
an excellent season in his first
year on the team. A high-energy,
two-way player, Bolling used
his skills to develop a consistency
that led him to break into the
starting lineup as a "2" guard for
most of the second half of this
season. He had several games
in double-digit scoring including
a 22-point outing versus Arlington
Catholic, a season single-game
high.
Everyone gets together for a photo on Senior Night at the Finn Gym.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
RESOLUTION | FROM PAGE 8
This Order shall be followed to
the maximum extent permitted
by law, provided that it shall not
require the City to break pre-existing
contracts or agreements
with Federal entities.”
Before that vote was taken,
Councillor McDonald said, “There
were some concerns from the Police
Chief, City Treasurer and Mayor’s
Office whether this version
— this order — offered enough
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
clarity for city employees and
possible consequences.”
“I still feel this particular issue
deserves a policy and I wish
we had more time — gave this
more to time to get to something
stronger and more meaningful,”
McDonald added.
“I was going to comment before
[we voted on] the resolution,
but I did not want to rain on people’s
parades,” Councillor O’Malley
said. “I was not in full support
of this order as it was written,
and I appreciated the work
done in committee. We are the
City Council and we do set policy
and we should not be afraid
of that. The resolve does not have
the effect of policy.”
“While the order is not in form I
would support, the amendment
offered by Councillor Winslow
would have been a great alternative,”
Councillor O’Malley said.
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Huang, Michelle
Weiss, Gregory
BUYER2
SELLER1
Tnd Cross Street LLC
Cohen, Ned S
OBITUARY
Josephine M. Kader
Of Malden. Passed
away peacefully at
Tufts Medical on February
27th at the age
of 84. Born on March
1st in Boston, she was
the beloved daughter
of Vincenzo and
Josephine Baglio. Josephine spent 40+
years as a Secretary for Tulis Miller & Co
in Boston.
She was a devoted mother to her
only child Steven and proud and loved
Nana to Aria and Dante who truly were
the light of her life. She loved her grandchildren
more than words can express,
and nothing brought her greater joy
than them always cheering them on.
Her spirit will live in each of them.
Josephine is survived by her only
child Steven Kader and his wife Tania of
Everett and two beloved grandchildren
Aria and Dante. She also leaves behind
many nieces and nephews.
She was predeceased in death by
her parents Vincenzo and Josephine
Baglio, and her sisters Phyllis Ferdinand
and Lena Mirisola.
Visitation was held Thursday March
5, at the Salvatore Rocco & Sons Funeral
Home in Everett, followed by burial in
Thursday Woodlawn Cemetery, Everett.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/ Advocate.news.ma
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden
Massachusetts
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
MALDEN SITE PLAN REVIEW COMMITTEE
FOR ACCESSORY DWELLING UNITS
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Site Plan Review Committee for Accessory Dwelling Units will hold a public
hearing in Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA, Mayor’s Conference
Room, 4th Floor, at 6:00 P.M. on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, on the petition of Scott Fitzpatrick,
Manager of Fitzpatrick Construction Consulting LLC, on behalf of 385-387 Salem Street
LLC filed in Permit Application #CMID-075583-2026 under Title 12, Code of the City of
Malden, Section 12.32.030.D, seeking Site Plan Review and Site Plan Approval of a
proposed Accessory Dwelling Unit to be constructed on the first floor of the existing
building, in the location of the former restaurant, existing building currently used for a
multi-family dwelling with five units and vacant space with use to be determined, at the
property known as and numbered, 385-387 Salem Street, Malden, MA, and by City
Assessor’s Parcel Identification # 102 731 104. Petition and plans are available for public
review in the Inspectional Services Department, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street,
Room 330, Malden, MA and through the City website under Permit Application# CMID-075583-2026
at https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By: Nelson Miller
Building Commissioner
Site Plan Review Committee Chair
March 06, 13, 2026
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER2
Cohen, Carol A
ADDRESS
272-274 Cross St #5
33 Wyllis Ave
CITY
Malden
Malden
DATE
02.09.26
02.13.26
PRICE
311726
489000
׉	 7cassandra://ft2NzZgMuLHBf0H9JjyGmrxUEJxPqDOxr-9Fz99-F9w2` iĒ*}d׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
Page 13
OBITUARY
Arthur Donald Kahn
Of Malden, MA.
Passed away peacefully
on February 27th,
2026, at the age of 92.
He led a remarkable
life of service and was
devoted to his family,
his jewelry business
and his community.
Arthur proudly
served in the United
States Army during
the Korean War and was stationed at
Fort Dix from 1950 to 1953. His military
service defined him and inspired
a lifelong commitment to supporting
veterans’ causes.
Following his service, he played football
at Northeastern University where
he earned his business degree. A passionate
athlete and avid Boston sports
fan, he helped develop Malden’s Pop
Warner Football program.
After college, Arthur earned his degree
from the Gemological Institute of
America, becoming an authority in diamonds
and other precious stones. He
took that expertise and along with his
brother David, joined the family business,
The Malden Jewelry Store, founded
in 1925 by his father Barney.
Arthur became an icon in Malden
Square. In his signature suits and ties,
he could be found peering through his
eye loupe, appraising diamonds and
kibitzing with all the customers. The
store was a top destination for jewelry
and electronics until it closed in 2004.
For generations, the Kahns were part of
life’s most meaningful moments – often
knowing about marriage proposals before
anyone else.
Arthur walked to work every day,
regardless of the weather. His day was
never complete without a workout at
the Malden YMCA. He worked tirelessly
for numerous organizations including
the Chelsea Soldiers Home and
the Shriners Hospital for Children. He
held leadership positions with Malden’s
Chamber of Commerce, YMCA,
Rotary Club, Housing Authority and
Masonic Lodge. A proud veteran, he
was a commander of Jewish War Veterans
Post #74 and past commander
of the Malden Disabled American Veterans
Chapter #85.
When he did relax, he read the Malden
Evening News, The Boston Globe
and his favorite news magazines cover
to cover. He loved Frank Sinatra, telling
off-color jokes, McDonald’s chicken
McNuggets and chocolate shakes, and
his many Boxer dogs.
At age 71, he sold the business and
spent more and more time with his
wife Barbara at their summer cottage
in Maine which they enjoyed for over
30 years.
Arthur cherished and adored his devoted
wife Barbara, the brightest light
in his life. From the day they married
in 1959, he proudly carried his favorite
photo of her as Northeastern University’s
prom queen.
Arthur was a role model to his three
children and when he became “Papa”,
a delightfully silly side emerged, much
to the joy of his grandchildren.
Arthur is survived by his wife of 66
years, Barbara, his son Jeffrey (Reneé),
daughters Heidi and Heather (Michael);
ten grandchildren Danny (Emily),
Amanda, Mitchell, Jason (Lauren),
Madeline, Samantha (Matthew), ReLEGAL
NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
OFFICE OF THE CONTROLLER
INVITATION FOR BID
The City of Malden invites sealed bids in accordance with M.G.L. Ch. 30, Sec. 39M from Vendors for:
2026 Lead Service Line Replacement - Contract One (1)
Contract Documents will be available by email request at maldenengineering@cityofmalden.org after: 10:00 A.M., Thursday
March 12, 2026. Bidders are requested to email the Engineering’s Office their Company Name, Address, Email address, & Phone
and what bid they are requesting. Bids must be submitted to the Office of the Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden,
MA 02148 by 2:00 P.M. on or before Thursday April 2, 2026; bids will be publicly opened at this time.
All bidders must be prequalified by MassDOT. The contract will only be awarded to a MassDOT pre-qualified contractor.
All bidders must be actively registered in sam.gov and the contract will only be awarded to a contractor that provides
evidence of registration and their Unique Entity ID with their bid or promptly upon request after bids are received and
prior to contract execution.
All bidders must comply with the Build America, Buy America Act of 2021 and the Housing and Urban Development Act
of 1968, as amended.
All bids must be accompanied by a bid deposit in an amount that is not less than five percent (5%) of the value of the bid.
Bid deposits, payable to the City of Malden, shall be either in the form of a bid bond, or cash, or a certified check on, or a treasurer’s
or cashier’s check issued by, a responsible bank or trust company. Bidders are reminded that the bid deposit covers the City for
damages when a bidder withdraws its bid after the bid submission date. Be advised that to the extent permitted by the law the City
will retain all bid deposits for withdrawn bids.
All bids are subject to the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 30, Section 39M. Wages are subject to minimum wage rates determined
by the Massachusetts Department of Labor and Industries pursuant to M.G.L. Chapter 149, Sec. 26 to 27H. The schedule of wage
rates applicable to this contract is included in the bidding documents. In addition, the prevailing wage schedule will be updated
annually for all applicable projects lasting longer than one (1) year. You will be required to pay the rates set out in any updated
prevailing wage schedule. Increases in prevailing wage schedules will not be the basis for change order requests. The successful
bidder will be required to provide a Certificate of Insurance demonstrating current coverage of the type and amounts set forth in
the Project Manual.
The successful bidder will be required to furnish both a Labor and Materials Payment Bond in the amount of 50% of the contract
total within 10 days of notification of contract award.
The costs of any bond and any insurance required in this Invitation for Bid are the responsibility of the bidder; such costs will not
be reimbursed by City and should be included in your bid.
All City of Malden bids are available by request. Addenda’s will be sent to the contact information provided.
The City will reject any and all bids in accordance with the above referenced General Laws. In addition, the City reserves the
right to waive minor informalities in any or all bids or to reject any or all bids (in whole or in part) if it be in the public interest
to do so.
In the event that any person wishes to attend a bid opening or pre-bid meeting, accessible and reasonable accommodations will be
provided to persons requiring assistance. If you need a reasonable accommodation, please contact the city of Malden’s ADA
Coordinator, Maria Luise, at least two business days in advance of the meeting: 781-397-7000, Ext. 2005 or mluise@cityofmalden.
org.
CITY OF MALDEN
Office of the Controller
March 06, 2026
becca (Vince), Mikayla, Alexandra and
Benjamin. He is also survived by five
great grandchildren Aryanna, Chase,
Ellie, Ezra and Griffin.
Malden will not be the same without
Arthur, but his example of service
will endure.
Family and friends gathered in honor
of Arthur’s life, service at Goldman
Funeral Chapel, 174 Ferry Street, Malden,
Monday, March 2nd.Burial immediately
following.Buried along with Arthur
will be his vast collection of veterans’
baseball caps which he wore with
honor daily.
Donations in Arthur’s memory can
be made to the D.A.V. Chapter 85 at 85
Willow St., Malden, MA 02148. For online
condolences go to: www.goldmanfc.com.
LEGAL
NOTICE
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
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call The Advocate
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at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
www.mastrocola.com
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
BUDGET
SERVICES
RUBBISH REMOVAL
* Interior-Exterior Demolition
Bathroom/Kitchen/Decks, Etc.
* All Types of Debris Removed
* Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $239.
~ Licensed & Insured ~
Call (978) 494-3443
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
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advertise on the web at
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Classifieds
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Page 15
Get your Mortgage with Beyond Financing, Inc.
Lower rates @ www.beyondfinancing.com Powered by Finley Concierge
Beyond Financing, Inc. Licensed in CA-CT-FL-MA-NH-NC-RI-SC-TX
999 Broadway, Suite 500-N, Saugus-MA 01906 www.BEYONDFINANCING.COM 857.410.1391 NMLS ID: 2394496
IN CA, CT & MA: Mortgage Broker Only, not a Mortgage Lender or Mortgage Correspondent Lender. In FL, NH, NC, RI, SC & TX: Mortgage Broker and Correspondent Lender.
Loans are available fairly and equally regardless of race, color, religion, sex, familial status, national origin, military status, disability, or ancestry.
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
67 Saville St., Saugus 01906
List Price: $479,900
Listed by Lori Johnson Cell: 781.718.7409
Opportunity awaits in this 4-room, 2-bedroom,
1.5-bath Colonial-style home - perfect for first
time home buyer looking to build equity. The first
floor features, living room, kitchen with dining
area leading to deck, convenient half bath.
Upstairs offers two bedrooms and a full bath.
Additional highlight; newer high efficiency heating
system, updated electric, one-car detached garage,
deck over looking fenced yard. Bring your ideas
and make this home shine again!
581 Proctor/231 Washington Ave, Revere
List Price: $1,489,900 - Mixed Use Property
Listed by Annemarie Torcivia: Cell: 781.983.5266
Solid brick 4-unit mixed-use investment at 581 Proctor Ave
& 233 Washington St featuring 3 residential units and a
2000+ sq ft commercial dance studio with long-term tenant of
39 years. Residential units include two 4-room/2-bedroom/1bath
apartments and one 6-room/3-bedroom unit with office
or den. Common laundry room. Property currently operating
at a strong 9% cap rate. All tenants are Section 8 with
reliable income stream. All De-lead Certificates in hand.
Excellent cash flow, durable construction, and exceptional
tenant stability make this a true investor opportunity. Dance
studio leased till 2029. .
781.231.9800
808 Main St, Unit A, Malden - Rental
Rental List Price: $2,200
Listed by: Patricia Torcivia Cell: 781.820.0974
All Newly Renovated 4 Room/1+ bedrooms/1 bathroom unit that is
located around the corner from Oak Grove "T" Station! Unit
features an all new eat-in cabinet kitchen with new refrigerator and
new electric stove, living room, 1+ Bedrooms with a ceiling fan in
Main one...all new laminate flooring throughout ..approximately 500
sq ft of living space and Heat/Hot Water is included and an all new
rear porch for breakfast morning coffee facing the sun..Close to
most everything including Malden Center, a laundromat, public
transportation (Oak Grove "T"), restaurants and shopping! Rent
includes heat and hot water. Tenant pays for electricity..Do not miss
out on this opportunity ideal for the daily commuter! Walk to Oak
Grove "T"...1st month's rent, last month's rent is due at signing
lease..available now..
123 Arnold Ave., Revere, MA 02151
List Price: $569,000
Listed by: Michael Foulds Cell: 617.461.1952
Check out this prime location. Bring your vision to this spacious property
offering a great opportunity for investors, flippers, or buyers seeking an
opportunity to add value. This 5 bedroom, 2 bath home is the ideal canvas
for renovation and customization to make it your own. The layout includes
a main living level offering a living room, large kitchen, seasonal sunroom,
4 bedrooms and full bath. Plus, there is an additional 1 bedroom extended
living area with additional living room and 2nd full bath on the second
floor for in-laws, guests or your own main bedroom suite. Set high on an
oversized lot, the home enjoys seasonal city views and excellent natural
light and privacy. Ample off street parking on a large lot for potential
expansion.
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Medford, Malden, Everett, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
FOR
SALE
FOR
RENT
FOR
SALE
FOR
SALE
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 6, 2026
#
1
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
SALEM $349,900
RARE OPPORTUNITY to build your dream
home in Witchcraft Heights neighborhood.
READING $899,900
Desirable 7 rm Ranch offers 3 bedrms, 2 baths, quartz
kitchen, corner lot. Move-in ready!
LYNNFIELD $2,499,900
UNIQUE Mixed use property, 4 bedroom home plus rear building, great corner
lot with ample off street parking, many possibilities! Call for details.
CANTON $899,900
10 room, 6 bedroom, 2 ½ bath single family home featuring central
air, 1 car oversized garage, inground pool, many updated.
SAUGUS - COMING SOON!
7 rm Cape Cod style home offers 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1st flr laundry,
sunroom, garage, convenient location.
LYNN $589,900
RARE opportunity to own mixed use building! Large store front on 1st floor,
spacious 3-4 bedroom residential unit on 2nd floor, garage, off st. parking
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA / (781) 233-7300
EVERETT - COMING SOON!
Desirable Park Plaza condo offering 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage parking.
CHELSEA $3,100,000
GREAT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY! 7 corner condo units each
with 2 bedrooms & 2 baths, located at Mill Creek.
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