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1.18.23 - Volume 1, Issue 8

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CP_MBHC_20230118_1_A01

HISTORY

ABBOT HALL

SPORTS

The Dixey Collection

Select Board hires next finance director

A Super Bowl of their own

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IN THIS ISSUE

NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25

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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.

TM

January 18, 2023

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VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 8

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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG

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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT

Missing mother lived with husband, sons in Marblehead ‘It’s a very scary situation’ BY LEIGH BLANDER AND WILLIAM J. DOWD This is a developing story. For the latest details on the case, go to MarbleheadCurrent.org. The Cohasset mother whose New Year’s Day disappearance has gripped the state and the nation

lived here in Marblehead with her husband and children a couple of years ago. “I’m beside myself. It’s a very scary situation,” said Judith Doane, who sold the home at 6 Edgewood Road to Ana Walshe in 2018 and lived nearby. Walshe and her family moved to Cohasset in 2020. “I hope to God she’s alive. I’m praying that she’s alive,” Doane told the Marblehead Current. Walshe’s husband, Brian, was

Missing mother Ana Walshe and her family lived in Marblehead recently.

arrested Jan. 8 on charges that he “committed the crime of misleading police investigators,” according to Cohasset Police. The couple has three young sons. “She had those babies,” Doane said. “My husband and I took the kids a couple of times.” Doane remembers Ana as always looking her best. “She is absolutely beautiful,

COURTESY PHOTO / Cohasset Police

WALSHE, P. A10

PACK MENTALITY

Officer’s ‘day in court’ finally nears

Splashes with wolves

Gallo has been on paid leave since June 2021 BY KRIS OLSON CURRENT PHOTO / NICOLE GOODHUE BOYD

Laurie Swope and Jen Spungen, right, talk as they slowly immerse themselves into the water for a dip at Devereux Beach on Wednesday morning, Jan. 11. More photos, Page A8.

BY LEIGH BLANDER As the sun came up with a pink hue over Devereux Beach, the good news was that the water temperature was twice the air temperature. The less-than-good news was that the air temperature was only 20 degrees. No matter the mercury, the Marblehead Wolfpack was there, ready for their twice-weekly dip in the

Atlantic. “This is my coldest day yet,” said Nicole Parkman, one of more than 60 people about to walk into the ocean at 8 a.m. The Wolfpack is a club of hardy locals who immerse themselves — up to the chest or shoulders — in the ocean for at least two minutes every Wednesday and Friday. The group has about 100 members.

“I keep myself distracted by chatting with people,” Parkman said with a laugh. It was a special day for her. Along with 15 others, she received her honorary Wolfpack beanie for logging her third dip. The recipients all kneeled in the sand to receive the blue hat with a wolf-and-wave logo and be knighted SPLASH, P. A8

REAL ESTATE

Crown jewel of Marblehead dives put on market Longtime owner lists commercial property, business for $1M BY WILLIAM J. DOWD The crown jewel of Marblehead’s dive bars — the Rip Tide Lounge — has been placed on the market for $1 million, real estate broker Sam Gifford of Churchill Properties LLC told the Marblehead Current. “It’s definitely on the real estate market,” said Gifford. “George [Ciampa]

has owned and operated it since the late 1960s. He’s been at it for a really long time, and if the right buyer, the right person, comes along, he’ll step aside and enjoy retirement.” Gifford took the Current’s call while standing in the establishment the morning of Jan. 10. He’s already been showing the place and talking to prospective buyers. “Since the listing got posted, my phone has been ringing nonstop for three or RIP TIDE, P. A9

COURTESY PHOTO / EYAL OREN / WEDNESDAYS IN MARBLEHEAD

The Rip Tide Lounge, the iconic bar at 116 Pleasant St., has been placed on the real estate market for $1 million.

From our Mariner family to yours, happy new year! And thank you for your continued support. Heather, Michael & Phil

To learn more visit www.marinermarblehead.com, or stop by our Welcome Center at 31 Atlantic Avenue.

BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW

By the time Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer convenes a hearing to determine whether further disciplinary action is warranted against Christopher Gallo in late February or early March, the town will have paid the Marblehead police officer approximately $140,000 not to come to work. Gallo has been off the job since June 16, 2021. He was initially given a five-day suspension and placed on paid administrative leave after the Massachusetts Inspector General’s Office on June 9 delivered to the town the results of its investigation into photos purporting to document Gallo’s official police vehicle parked at his residence when he was supposed to be on duty, spanning months. To confirm the IG’s findings, the Marblehead Police conducted its own investigation, and outgoing Police Chief Robert O. Picariello issued the suspension “for non-compliance to [department policy on] devotion to duty and failure to report for duty.” Gallo appealed, and he was placed on administrative leave with pay, pending a hearing to determine whether further disciplinary action should be taken. Very little has changed since, other than some of the players who will have a hand in deciding whether Gallo returns to the Marblehead police force. GALLO, P. A4


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