
Man who fatally stabbed pregnant woman in Boston in 1974 and confessed to rape granted parole for second time
He violated his parole two years later when he fled to North Carolina and was returned to prison, the decision said. His requests for parole in 2014 and 2022 were denied.
On Sept. 23, 1974, police found the woman lying on the floor of a Beacon Hill apartment in a pool of blood, the ruling said. She was 20 weeks pregnant at the time and had suffered stab wounds to her chest and back, the ruling said. Investigators also detected evidence of a sexual assault.
Advertisement
A witness told police that she and the victim were sex workers in the city's Combat Zone, and that she had given her a key to the apartment so she could use it, officials said.
The witness also told police she had seen Marks and the woman talking on the afternoon of her death, the ruling said, and that the woman told her, 'If I'm not back in a reasonable hour of time, come up and check on me. I might be dead. He doesn't look right.'
The witness and three other residents, including a nurse, entered the apartment around 5 p.m. and found the woman's body, naked from the waist down.
Marks, meanwhile, fled to New York City and was apprehended there the next day, confessing to the slaying and providing the murder weapon, according to the ruling. He told investigators he had intended only to rob the woman but decided to kill her when he realized they were alone in the residence, officials said.
Advertisement
He stole money that the woman kept in a sock and admitted to raping her 'after she died,' the ruling said. 'He also admitted to taking several steps to conceal his crimes, which included wiping the door, coffee table, and knife blade with a rag.'
Marks has made strides during his most recent stretch behind bars, according to the ruling.
'Since his last hearing, Mr. Marks has engaged in programming to address his coping skills,' the decision said. 'He has continued his mental health treatment. He has participated in dialectical behavior therapy to address his needs. He has maintained his sobriety. He previously completed SOTP (Sex Offender Treatment Program).'
Marks also 'presented with insight into the causative effects of his behavior. He has previously invested in educational pursuits and has maintained employment.'
Once released, Marks will have to submit to electronic monitoring and testing for drugs and alcohol, attend at least three AA meetings a week, and seek 'mental health counseling for adjustment, trauma, and depression,' the ruling said.
He's currently incarcerated at the Old Colony Correctional Center in Bridgewater, records show.
Travis Andersen can be reached at

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
14 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Testimony resumes after off day in Karen Read retrial. Follow live updates.
Testimony resumes Friday — 8:33 a.m. .cls-1{clip-path:url(#clippath);}.cls-2,.cls-3{fill:none;}.cls-2,.cls-3,.cls-4{stroke-width:0px;}.cls-5{clip-path:url(#clippath-1);}.cls-3{clip-rule:evenodd;} Link copied By Travis Andersen, Globe Staff Testimony resumes Friday in Karen Read's sensational murder retrial in Norfolk Superior Court. Read, 45, has pleaded not guilty to second degree murder and two other counts for allegedly backing her SUV in a drunken rage into her boyfriend, Boston police Officer John O'Keefe, early on Jan. 29, 2022, after dropping him off outside a Fairview Road home in Canton following a night of bar hopping. Advertisement Her lawyers say she was framed and that O'Keefe entered the home, owned at the time by a fellow Boston cop, where he was fatally beaten and possibly mauled by a German Shepherd before his body was planted on the lawn. Read's first trial ended in a hung jury in July and she remains free on bail. The defense is currently presenting its case, and among their witnesses who've yet to testify are analysts from the Philadelphia crash reconstruction firm ARCCA, who said in the first trial that O'Keefe's injuries weren't consistent with a vehicle strike. A government expert testified at the retrial that his arm wounds were consistent with getting momentarily caught in a taillight during a sideswipe. Advertisement
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
‘Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest
A California judge has made a ruling after Oscar-nominated actor Haley Joel Osment was arrested for suspected public intoxication, People reported. Sixth Sense star Osment was arrested on April 8 in Mammoth Lakes, CA, on charges of alleged public intoxication and possession of a controlled substance. He was arraigned in a local court on June 2. During his arraignment, Osment requested and was granted a one-year diversion which requires him to attend three AA meetings each week for the next six months. Osment must also meet with his therapist at least twice weekly during the next six months and obey all to the outlet, the Mono County district attorney's office objected to Osment's diversion request because of the actor's previous DUI conviction. They also cited Osment's use of racial slurs towards arresting officers as reason the diversion should not have been granted. During his arrest, Osment accused one officer of being 'a f---ing Nazi' and use an antisemitic slur against another. If Osment completes the diversion program, the court will dismiss all charges related to the most recent incident. However, criminal proceedings will be reinstated if Osment does not complete the program. Osment will next appear in court on Jan. 5, 2026, when the judge will review his compliance with the issued an apology back in April for the 'disgraceful language' he used during his arrest, explaining that 'the past few months of loss and displacement' after losing his home in January's Eaton fire 'have broken me down to a very low emotional place.' "I'm absolutely horrified by my behavior. Had I known I used this disgraceful language in the throes of a blackout, I would have spoken up sooner," Osment said in his statement. "But that's no excuse for using this disgusting word. From the bottom of my heart, I apologize to absolutely everyone that this hurts. What came out of my mouth was nonsensical garbage—I've let the Jewish community down and it devastates me. I don't ask for anyone's forgiveness, but I promise to atone for my terrible mistake."Though Osment is best known for his adolescent roles in The Sixth Sense and Pay It Forward, he's maintained a busy career in subsequent years with over 130 acting credits. Most recently, he appeared opposite Channing Tatum in Zoë Kravitz's 2024 thriller Blink Twice.'Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 3, 2025
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
HMRC admits £47 million loss in breach of 100,000 taxpayer accounts
HMRC has lost £47 million of taxpayers' money after a phishing scam breached tens of thousands of tax accounts. Two senior civil servants at HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) told the Treasury Committee that 100,000 people have been contacted, or are in the process of being contacted, after their accounts were locked down in what they said was an 'organised crime' incident which began last year. Taxpayers who are being affected will suffer 'no financial loss', according to John-Paul Marks, the chief executive of HMRC, the UK's tax authority. Mr Marks told the Committee: 'It's about 0.2% of the PAYE population, around 100,000 people, who we have written to, are writing to, to notify them that we detected activity on their PAYE account.' Asked if this applied to individual working people's PAYE accounts, not companies, he replied: 'That's right, individuals. To be clear, no financial loss to those individuals. Mr Marks added: 'This was organised crime phishing for identity data outwith of HMRC systems, so stuff that banks and others will also unfortunately experience, and then trying to use that data to create PAYE accounts to pay themselves a repayment and/or access an existing account.' An investigation into the matter, which took place last year 'including jurisdictions outside the UK', led to 'some arrests last year,' Mr Marks told MPs. Angela MacDonald, HMRC's deputy chief executive and second permanent secretary, added: 'At the moment, they've managed to extract repayments to the tune of £47 million. 'Now that is a lot of money, and it's very unacceptable. 'We have overall, in the last tax year, we actually protected £1.9 billion worth of money which sought to be taken from us by attacks.' Get your tax return done early and find out sooner if you're owed money. ⏲️ We'll let you know if you've overpaid tax after you file your Self-Assessment tax return and refund you. 💷 File today. 👇 — HM Revenue & Customs (@HMRCgovuk) June 3, 2025 Ms MacDonald stressed the breach was 'not a cyber attack, we have not been hacked, we have not had data extracted from us'. She later added: 'The ability for somebody to breach your systems and to extract data, to hold you to ransomware and all of those things, that is a cyber attack. That is not what has happened here.' HMRC said it had locked down affected accounts and deleted log-in details to prevent future unauthorised access. Any incorrect information has been removed from tax records and officials have checked to ensure no other details have been changed. People affected will receive a letter from HMRC over the next three weeks. Elsewhere, Mr Marks told MPs that HMRC phone lines were down on Wednesday afternoon, but said this was 'coincidental'. They will be 'back up and available in the morning', he added. Recommended reading: HMRC urging parents to claim £2,000 tax-free childcare HMRC Child Benefit changes with opt-in campaign for parents More than half a million more savers to benefit from HMRC cash - apply today An HMRC spokesperson said: 'We've acted to protect customers after identifying attempts to access a very small minority of tax accounts, and we're working with other law enforcement agencies both in the UK and overseas to bring those responsible to justice. 'This was not a cyber-attack – it involved criminals using personal information from phishing activity or data obtained elsewhere to try to claim money from HMRC. 'We're writing to those customers affected to reassure them we've secured their accounts and that they haven't lost any money.'