CountJackula
June 9th, 2009, 02:16 PM
BOSTON - A high school football coach and another man killed a cocaine dealer to avoid paying a debt, dismembered his body and cooked the remains at a concrete business, prosecutors said Monday.
Daniel Bradley, 47, of Westwood, and Paul Moccia, 48, of Dedham, pleaded not guilty Monday in Wrentham District Court to murder charges in the death of Angel Antonio Ramirez, a construction worker from Guatemala who lived in Framingham.
Moccia met Ramirez near the concrete company in Walpole that Bradley co-owns and shot him in the back with a .357-caliber pistol, said Norfolk Assistant District Attorney Robert Nelson.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here
Moccia owed Ramirez $70,000 from drug deals and decided to kill him instead of paying up, authorities said.
Bradley dismembered the man's remains and then tried to get rid of the evidence once and for all, Nelson said.
"It was cooked," he said.
Prosecutors didn't say how they arrived at their theory, or how the body was cooked or disposed of.
Defense attorneys said their clients are innocent and noted prosecutors haven't produced a body.
Prosecutors believe forensic evidence from the concrete factory will bolster their case against the suspects, Nelson said
Source (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31175301/)
Daniel Bradley, 47, of Westwood, and Paul Moccia, 48, of Dedham, pleaded not guilty Monday in Wrentham District Court to murder charges in the death of Angel Antonio Ramirez, a construction worker from Guatemala who lived in Framingham.
Moccia met Ramirez near the concrete company in Walpole that Bradley co-owns and shot him in the back with a .357-caliber pistol, said Norfolk Assistant District Attorney Robert Nelson.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here
Moccia owed Ramirez $70,000 from drug deals and decided to kill him instead of paying up, authorities said.
Bradley dismembered the man's remains and then tried to get rid of the evidence once and for all, Nelson said.
"It was cooked," he said.
Prosecutors didn't say how they arrived at their theory, or how the body was cooked or disposed of.
Defense attorneys said their clients are innocent and noted prosecutors haven't produced a body.
Prosecutors believe forensic evidence from the concrete factory will bolster their case against the suspects, Nelson said
Source (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31175301/)