Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. www.eagletribune.com
www.eagletribune.com/punews/lo - [Cached]Published on: 8/30/2007 Last Visited: 8/30/2007
To Boston College Law School classmate David Brown, it was clear Eldridge was going places.
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"You see a lot of people in law school with lofty goals," said Brown, now a staff attorney at Merrimack Valley Legal Services in Lowell. -
2. www.eagletribune.com
www.eagletribune.com/punews/lo - [Cached]Published on: 8/30/2007 Last Visited: 8/30/2007
To Boston College Law School classmate David Brown, it was clear Eldridge was going places.
...
"You see a lot of people in law school with lofty goals," said Brown, now a staff attorney at Merrimack Valley Legal Services in Lowell. -
3. Lowell Sun Online - TODAYS HEADLINES
www.lowellsun.com/front/ci_352 - [Cached]Published on: 2/17/2006 Last Visited: 2/17/2006
"He has a medical condition that results on occasion in disorientation, confusion and memory loss, and is not and never has been a danger to anyone," said the man's attorney, David Brown, who read from a prepared statement. Brown works for Merrimack Valley Legal Services, which provides free legal help to low-income and elderly people.
"He feels like he's the subject of a witch hunt," Brown added. "It's really, really eating at him."
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Brown said his client has sought legal advice as to whether Cox violated his rights.
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Brown would not describe the man's medical condition is, but said that forcing his client to move into a full-care facility would not be "appropriate." The man has been living at Deming Way
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since October 2003, Brown said. He said the man had the medical condition at that time, and it has not worsened.
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Brown said his client's situation could be remedied by some simple steps that would fit under the services that the Housing Authority should provide to handicapped tenants. For example, the door of the man's apartment could be painted a different color than the others so that he doesn't mistakenly walk into other residents' units, Brown said.

