Nearly per week after being discovered responsible in a jury trial of inappropriately touching a feminine worker, the previous superintendent of Everett colleges has pleaded responsible to inappropriately touching two extra former staffers.
Frederick Foresteire, 79, of Everett, was discovered responsible Feb. 9 following a three-day trial in Malden District Court of two counts of indecent assault and battery on an individual over 14. On Wednesday, he entered responsible pleas to 2 extra counts of the identical for inappropriately touching two different ladies.
“The defendant in this case used his position of power to victimize one of his employees, assaulting her and repeatedly making her feel unsafe, uncomfortable and powerless at her place of employment,” stated Middlesex DA Marian Ryan in a press release following the sooner jury trial.
In the jury trial, Foresteire was discovered responsible of inappropriately touching a 41-year-old lady who labored with him on the Everett Public School Administration Building. The touching occurred a number of occasions between 2017 and 2018.
Following the trial, Judge Emily Karstetter sentenced Foresteire to 18 months in state jail, of which he must serve 90 days earlier than getting into two years of probation. He was additionally ordered to keep away from all his victims and witnesses within the case and to keep away from Everett public colleges and their occasions. He must register as a intercourse offender.
Karstetter on Wednesday accepted the extra responsible pleas, through which Foresteire admitted to moreover indecently assaulting two different ladies he supervised in 2015, one a 47-year-old lady and the opposite a then-64-year-old lady.
Foresteire grew to become superintendent of the district in 1989, in line with earlier Herald reporting, and had served in that place for roughly 30 years earlier than being positioned on administrative depart, after which formally retiring, in December 2018 as an investigation was performed into the allegations of indecent assault and battery on three of his workers.
Source: www.bostonherald.com”