Trending Topics

‘Unrighteous': Mass. PD chief slams town’s decision to grant parole to cop-killer

Rolando Jimenez, now 64, shot and killed Holliston police officer John Johnson, then 31, on Aug. 13, 1981; the Parole Board granted Jimenez parole on his sixth attempt

Patrolman John E. Johnson

Rolando Jimenez, now 64, shot and killed Holliston police officer John Johnson, then 31, on Aug. 13, 1981. He was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole following a jury trial in Middlesex Superior Court in 1982, where he was convicted of second-degree murder.

Officer Down Memorial Page

By Charlie McKenna
masslive.com

HOLLISTON, Mass. — A man convicted of killing a Holliston police officer in 1981 was released from prison on Wednesday, prompting a harsh rebuke from the town’s police chief, who called the man’s release “unrighteous.”

Trending
The man made a non-emergency call reporting that his father had shot his sister; when Pima County deputies arrived, he was waiting with a gun
Now-former St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith pleaded guilty after being accused of physically attacking an online critic of his leadership
“I promise I’m a better rider than you too,” the motorcycle-riding Orange Police officer can be heard saying as he pursued the man
Katrina Ahrens filed lawsuits alleging that the city allowed a nonprofit organization to mishandle donations intended to honor the memory of her husband, Senior Cpl. Lorne Ahrens

Rolando Jimenez, now 64, shot and killed Holliston police officer John Johnson, then 31, on Aug. 13, 1981. He was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole following a jury trial in Middlesex Superior Court in 1982, where he was convicted of second-degree murder.

The Parole Board granted Jimenez parole on his sixth attempt. He had previously been denied in 1999, 2004, 2009, 2014 and 2019, according to a copy of the parole board’s decision.

In it, the board deemed Jimenez a low risk of recidivism given his lengthy incarceration and participation in rehabilitation programs while in custody. The decision notes that Jimenez had not had a sanctioned disciplinary report in 20 years.

But Holliston Police Chief Matthew J. Stone wrote, “no rehabilitation program can undo what Rolando Jimenez did on that dreadful August evening more than 43 years ago.”

“Inmate Jimenez not only murdered the patriarch of the Johnson family, but he terrified a community that still affects many of us today,” Stone wrote in a statement posted to the department’s Facebook page. “The murder of Officer John Johnson was not an accident. It was not a mistake. And it was not a lapse in judgment by Rolando Jimenez. This was an ambush. This was violent. And this was a murder of a police officer.”

Stone said he was “disgusted” by the decision to release Jimenez, adding that it “goes against every moral that is right and that is just.”

“The decision... to release the murderer of a police officer back into the society in which he once terrorized is... unfathomable,” he wrote.

©2024 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit masslive.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.