Documented Incidents

This page is a sourced log of documented incidents at Massachusetts Emergency Assistance hotel shelter sites and the state-level oversight findings about the program. Every entry is linked to a mainstream-media source — Boston Globe, WBUR, NBC Boston, CBS Boston, Boston 25, Cape & Islands NPR — or a state agency report. We do not include unsourced anecdote. We do not include incidents from other states. We do not manufacture connections between unrelated public-safety stories and the migrant program.

1,000+
Serious incidents at MA emergency shelters, Boston Globe investigation
Boston Globe, January 8, 2025

The Boston Globe's 1,000+ incidents investigation

On January 8, 2025, the Boston Globe published a state-records investigation documenting more than 1,000 serious incidents at Massachusetts emergency shelter sites — including drug arrests, domestic violence, and rapes. The investigation was based on records the Globe obtained from the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities (EOHLC).

  • 670+ serious incidents in calendar year 2024 alone
  • 176 reports of domestic violence over a 20-month window
  • Sex trafficking allegations, fights, fatalities, overdoses
  • 788% rise in serious incidents from 2022 to 2024

Following the Globe investigation, Governor Healey ordered an immediate inspection of all shelter facilities and instituted background checks for all shelter residents — a control the program had been operating without.

Source: Boston Globe — "Drug arrests, domestic violence, rapes: More than 1,000 serious incidents reported at Mass. shelters" (Jan 8, 2025). Follow-up: WBUR — Report recommends more security in Massachusetts emergency shelter system (Mar 4, 2025); GBH — Shelter leaders respond (Jan 14, 2025).

ICE Operation Patriot 2.0 – Massachusetts – September 2025
1,406 arrested in 27 days.

Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement's September 2025 operation in Massachusetts arrested 1,406 individuals on suspected immigration violations, including alleged members of MS-13, Tren de Aragua, Trinitarios, and 18th Street gangs. Combined with the May-June Operation Patriot (1,461 arrests, 790 with criminal records), federal enforcement made more than 2,800 arrests in MA during 2025.

Source: ICE.gov press release – public-domain federal photo

Marlborough — Ronald Joseph case

The most serious case to come out of a Massachusetts EA hotel shelter site involved Ronald Joseph, a Haitian national living at a Marlborough shelter operated by Eliot Community Human Services. Joseph repeatedly raped and impregnated his 13-year-old daughter, who was housed with him.

DateWhat happened
April 2024Eliot contacted police about the incident at the Marlborough shelter (Holiday Inn / Extended Stay).
April 2024Per a former shelter director's account, instead of being arrested, Joseph was put in a Lyft to a different shelter in Worcester County.
January 31, 2025Joseph arrested — eight months after the incident — and charged with aggravated rape of a child. Held without bail.
July 17, 2025Joseph pleaded guilty. Judge Kenneth Salinger sentenced him to 12 to 15 years in state prison.

The former shelter director, identified as Fetherston, has called on the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the "criminal acts and gross mismanagement" surrounding the shelter program.

Sources: Boston Globe — Migrant father sentenced in rape of daughter in Marlborough shelter (July 17, 2025); Fox News — Whistleblower asking AG Bondi to investigate.

Courthouse
Suffolk County Courthouse, Boston — where MA EA shelter cases are tried. (Wikimedia Commons / public domain.)

Rockland — Cory Alvarez case

In March 2024, Cory B. Alvarez, a 26-year-old Haitian national living at the Comfort Inn in Rockland — a state EA hotel shelter site — was arrested and charged with aggravated rape of a child. The 15-year-old victim was also a resident of the shelter and reported the assault to police after Alvarez allegedly raped her in his hotel room.

DateWhat happened
March 13, 2024Alvarez arrested, arraigned in Hingham District Court, held without bail.
March–June 2024Held without bail pending dangerousness hearing. Plymouth County DA Cruz pursues prosecution.
July 1, 2024Granted bail by judge citing "inconsistencies in the evidence and the alleged victim's version of events, lack of physical evidence, and [because] the surveillance did not support the claim."
OngoingCase status as of available reporting.

Following the arrest, Governor Healey publicly stated that Alvarez had entered Massachusetts through a federal program — confirming the federal-pipeline link to the EA shelter caseload.

Sources: Boston Globe — Man charged with raping teenager at Rockland hotel (March 14, 2024); CBS Boston — Held without bail; CBS Boston — Healey on federal program; NBC Boston; Boston.com — Released on bail.

Massachusetts State House at night
Massachusetts State House — where the Healey administration approved $1.96B in EA shelter spending across two fiscal years, much of it via after-the-fact emergency supplementals.

The DiZoglio audit — improper, unlawful, no-bid

In May 2025, State Auditor Diana DiZoglio released the findings of a comprehensive audit of the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities (EOHLC) covering July 2021 through June 2024. The audit found EOHLC had:

  • "Failed to adequately assess and act upon the increased demand for shelter services."
  • Engaged in improper and unlawful no-bid emergency procurements for food and transportation services.
  • "Bypassed established procurement procedures, resulting in a lack of fairness via competitive bidding and a lack of transparency and accountability in the contracting process."
$9.5 MILLION
Paid to single food vendor (Spinelli Ravioli) in 8 months
MA State Auditor Diana DiZoglio, May 2025

Specific findings the auditor flagged:

  • Two vendors received over $14 million for food and transit in just eight months under no-bid emergency procurement.
  • Spinelli Ravioli Manufacturing received over $9.5 million from the state in 8 months for food alone.
  • The state overpaid a food delivery vendor by ~10%.
  • A cab company hired to take migrants to appointments charged the state $147 for what would normally cost $5 in Boston.

For Yarmouth voters who paid attention to the 2024 ballot question on whether to give the State Auditor authority to audit the Legislature — that question passed with overwhelming support, and DiZoglio is the auditor doing the work. This is what state-level financial accountability looks like, and the EA program is what it found.

For the FY25 fiscal year, DiZoglio's Bureau of Special Investigations identified $11,952,288 in public assistance fraud across 4,179 completed investigations.

Sources: Mass.gov — Shelter Audit Finds Contract Mismanagement (DiZoglio release); WAMC — EOHLC broke procurement laws (May 21, 2025); GBH — Auditor finds Mass. overpaid (May 20, 2025); CBS Boston — Audit finds mismanagement, no-bid contracts; Mass.gov — BSI identifies $12M in public benefit fraud FY25.

Lewis Bay, Yarmouth MA
Lewis Bay, Mid Cape Cod — Yarmouth's natural harbor. From September 2023 through April 2024, 39 migrant families were housed at the Harborside Suites in violation of a town bylaw limiting hotel stays to under 30 days.

The Yarmouth Harborside Suites story

Yarmouth has direct lived experience with the EA hotel shelter program. From September 2023 through April 2024, the Yarmouth Harborside Suites hotel housed up to 39 migrant families placed there under state emergency assistance contracts.

The placement was a direct violation of a Yarmouth town bylaw that limits temporary hotel stays to less than 30 days. Town Select Board chair Michael Stone publicly stated the town would not take action against the migrants individually, but acknowledged the bylaw violation issue. The state ultimately relocated all 39 families to other shelters by April 25, 2024.

Earlier — in August 2023 — the state had attempted to place migrant families at the Yarmouth Resort on Route 28. That placement was halted by code-enforcement issues before any families were placed.

Yarmouth voters considering Question 4 should ask: was the state forthcoming with the town about the bylaw violation? Did the state seek the Select Board's input before placing families? The answer in both cases — per the public reporting — was no. That same state government would administer any federal-funding response to a Yarmouth sanctuary designation.

Sources: Cape & Islands NPR — Six families placed at Cape Cod motel (Sept 12, 2023); CapeCod.com — State expands migrant housing plan to Yarmouth Harborside Suites; Cape & Islands NPR — Migrants relocated from Yarmouth motel (April 25, 2024); CapeCod.com — Yarmouth Select Board hears about migrant status; CapeCod.com — Migrant shelter at Harborside Suites almost maxed; Stars and Stripes — Lawmakers slam Healey's 'covert operation' to move migrants.

Police cruiser
Federal ICE operations in Massachusetts during 2025 led to 1,461 arrests of illegal aliens, 790 of whom had prior criminal charges or convictions. (Source: DHS, May 19 2025.)
ICE Operation Patriot Boston
ICE Operation Patriot, Boston, June 2025. (Photo: ICE.gov public release)

ICE operations in MA — gang and violent-crime focus

Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement has conducted a series of large-scale enforcement operations across Massachusetts since the 2025 federal-policy shift. The arrests have focused — per ICE's own announcements — on illegal aliens with criminal records and documented gang affiliations.

  • March 18–23, 2025: ICE operation arrested 370 individuals in MA, including alleged members of MS-13, Tren de Aragua, Trinitarios, and 18th Street gangs.
  • May–June 2025 ("Operation Patriot"): 1,461 illegal aliens arrested across MA. 790 had criminal charges or convictions in the U.S. or abroad.
  • Property seized: 44kg methamphetamine, 5kg fentanyl, 1.2kg cocaine, three firearms.
  • Specific gang-member arrests publicly announced by ICE Boston: Salvadoran MS-13 members, Tren de Aragua, others.

The Yarmouth voter takeaway is not that every immigrant is a gang member — that's not what the data says, and we will not pretend it does. The takeaway is that federal enforcement priorities have explicitly shifted, and a Yarmouth resolution that signals non-cooperation lands in the middle of an active federal enforcement environment.

Sources: DHS — ICE arrests gang members, drug traffickers, violent criminal illegal aliens in sanctuary state Massachusetts (May 19, 2025); ICE Operation Patriot summary; ICE Boston releases; Newsweek — ICE descends on Boston.

The driver's license law and what it has meant

The Work and Family Mobility Act (MGL c.90) took effect July 1, 2023 — allowing Massachusetts residents to obtain standard driver's licenses regardless of immigration status. Since the law took effect, the RMV has issued:

  • 183,825 new learner's permits (cumulative)
  • 128,079 new driver's licenses (cumulative)
  • $28 million one-time RMV launch cost in the FY24 state budget — including 250 new staff and additional road test examiners

Massachusetts auto insurance premiums rose 10–15% in 2024 and 2025. Mainstream financial reporting attributes the increases to a mix of factors including general inflation, repair costs, severe weather claims, and underwriting risk pool changes. We will not assert a direct sole-causation link between the WFMA and rate increases unless and until that link is established by mainstream financial reporting; we will note both facts.

Sources: WBUR — Immigrant driver's license law credited with surge in new applications (July 8, 2024); Mass.gov RMV — WFMA announcement; WBUR — $28M cost analysis (March 16, 2023).

The Logan Airport baggage-claim shelter

By the spring of 2024, the EA shelter system was so over capacity that Massachusetts Family Welcome Centers were directing migrant families to sleep overnight in a baggage claim area at Boston Logan International Airport. On the night of June 25, 2024, 288 people — including children under one year old, sleeping on thin blankets on a hard floor — were in the airport.

On July 9, 2024, Governor Healey signed an order banning overnight sleeping at Logan. State police, social workers, and airport staff led the families to taxis, which moved them to welcome centers in Allston and Quincy. Some were taken to a former prison in Norfolk that had been converted into emergency shelter capacity.

This is the program above us — the program that Question 4 asks Yarmouth voters to publicly endorse.

Sources: Boston Globe — Ban on migrant families and homeless people sleeping at Logan Airport (July 9, 2024); CNN — Migrant families now banned from sleeping in Boston's airport; WBUR — Logan Airport is a 'de facto shelter' for homeless families (Jan 26, 2024); GBH — Migrant families no longer sleeping overnight at Logan Airport; WBUR — 'We started getting just planes of people' (Sept 18, 2023).

The background-check failure

After the Alvarez arrest in Rockland in March 2024, Governor Healey publicly stated that she ordered Criminal Offender Record Information (CORI) checks across the entire EA shelter system. Nearly a year later, in early 2025, she was "recently informed" that the checks did NOT happen at all shelter sites — calling the failure "absolutely unacceptable."

An audit by the Office of the State Auditor separately found that:

  • The Department of Housing and Community Development requires EA applicants to self-identify as registered sex offenders, but did not communicate this information to shelter site operators — meaning women and pregnant women living in the same shelter buildings had no way to know.
  • There was no clear communication channel between the state and shelter providers about CORI or SORI (Sex Offender Registry Information) results.
  • Shelter providers were operating effectively blind to the criminal histories of the residents the state had placed with them.

On March 15, 2025 — almost a full year after the first reported sexual assault — Massachusetts finally implemented a rule that an EA applicant who refuses a CORI check is ineligible for shelter. Until that date, the program operated without the basic vetting that any private homeless shelter has been doing for decades.

Sources: Boston Globe — Healey adds new shelter limits, background checks (March 14, 2025); Boston Globe — Background check fiasco, GOP demands reform (Jan 10, 2025); WBUR — State bars shelter eligibility for some criminal convictions; NBC Boston — Mass. bars shelter eligibility for criminal convictions; Mass.gov — DHCD does not ensure pregnant women aware of sex offenders living at same address (Auditor finding).

ICE Boston re-arrest of Cory Alvarez, August 13, 2024, Brockton MA
Federal ICE agents arrest Cory Alvarez in Brockton, Massachusetts on August 13, 2024 – after his release on $500 bond from the state court charges related to the alleged child rape at the Comfort Inn Rockland EA shelter. (Photo: ICE.gov public release)

Cory Alvarez — what happened after the bail release

The Alvarez case did not end with state-court bail in July 2024. After his release on $500 bond — over the prosecution's objection — Alvarez moved to Brockton. On August 13, 2024, ICE arrested him there on federal immigration charges. He was indicted federally and the case proceeded under federal jurisdiction.

That same federal-state interaction is exactly what Question 4 asks Yarmouth to publicly opt out of. A resolution endorsing "equal protection regardless of immigration status" is the kind of public artifact that lands a town on the federal sanctuary list — at the moment ICE is making arrests like this one inside the state.

Sources: Boston 25 News — Haitian national accused of raping 15-year-old arrested by ICE; ICE official release — ERO Boston arrests Haitian national accused of raping child in MA migrant shelter.

Quincy — Welington Aristy ICE arrest

In a separate 2025 incident: ICE Boston arrested Welington Aristy, a 29-year-old Dominican national, in connection with pending charges in Quincy. Aristy's criminal history included pending charges for possession with intent to distribute fentanyl, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (knife) in Quincy. (Source: ICE Operation Patriot 2.0 release.)

Boston Public Schools — the enrollment swing

The migrant influx hit Boston Public Schools enrollment numbers measurably:

  • Boston Public Schools enrollment increased by about 260 students from the 2023-24 to 2024-25 school year — the first enrollment increase in a decade, attributed by district leaders to migrant students.
  • The district added about 3,000 multilingual learners from 2020-21 to 2024-25, making up more than one-third of the district.
  • In the 2025-26 school year, BPS resumed declining — losing 1,645 students, more than one in ten students lost statewide. The decline was attributed to immigration policy changes suppressing newcomer entry.
  • The 2024-25 budget eliminated about 400 full-time equivalent positions. The 2026-27 budget proposes another 300-400 cuts.

The fiscal volatility this creates for school districts — bringing on staff to handle a new-arrival surge, then cutting them as the surge reverses — is one of the documented downstream costs of state policy that doesn't get counted in the EA shelter line item.

Sources: Boston Globe — BPS faces budget challenge, seeks 300-400 staff cuts (Feb 4, 2026); Boston Globe — Mass. public school enrollment drops to lowest level in 30 years (Jan 9, 2026); Boston Globe — Boston school enrollment increases for first time in a decade (Jan 14, 2025); WBUR — Proposed Boston school budget includes hard decisions (Feb 5, 2026).

What this site will NOT claim

For the record — and so unenrolled voters know we are filtering on facts, not framing — here is what this site does NOT claim, and why:

  • Boston street takeovers (October 2025) are NOT claimed as connected to the migrant program. Boston Police Commissioner has called the takeovers "out of control," and Governor Healey has spoken publicly about them. Mainstream coverage (Boston Globe, NBC Boston) does not connect the takeover phenomenon to the EA shelter program or to immigration status. We will not manufacture that connection. (Globe; NBC Boston.)
  • The 1,000+ shelter incidents are not all violent crime. The Globe's 670 figure for 2024 includes overdoses, medical emergencies, fights, and fatalities — not all of which are criminal acts. The number is alarming for what it says about program safety; it should not be conflated with a migrant-crime rate.
  • The Healey administration's own framing is that 75% of EA families are longtime MA residents. We disagree with how that figure is calculated — the surge composition is the differential — but we will use the agency-published figures and not invent our own.
  • Generic crime statistics by national origin have no place on a Yarmouth ballot site. We're here to talk about the resolution and the program. Not about people.

If you find a claim on this page that you can't verify against the linked source, email us — we will correct it or remove it. Corrections policy.

What this means for Question 4

The case for voting NO on Question 4 is not built on these incidents. The case is built on the federal targeting risk to Yarmouth's funding, the symbolic-only nature of the resolution, and the documented Concord precedent. (See the fiscal case; see Yarmouth's exposure; see the Concord precedent.)

What these incidents show is that the program above us — the program that's spending nearly two billion dollars on shelter, that the state auditor has just declared was administered with improper and unlawful procurement, and where serious incidents rose 788% in two years — is not a program Yarmouth voters should be eager to volunteer their federal funding to defend.

Vote NO on Question 4. How to vote →

Paid for by Vote No Yarmouth, Treasurer: George Cappola.
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