6/10 Project Supervisor Pleads Not Guilty to Multiple State Felony Charges

GoLocalProv News Team

6/10 Project Supervisor Pleads Not Guilty to Multiple State Felony Charges

Former Barletta official Dennis Ferreira pleading not guilty to four charges for his role in the 6/10 dumping. PHOTO: GoLocal
Dennis Ferreira, the former project supervisor for Barletta Heavey Machine on the construction of the $410 million 6/10 project, appeared before Magistrate John McBurney in Providence Superior Court on Tuesday morning to plea to multiple state charges.

While Ferreira oversaw the project for Barletta, the Massachusetts-based company that dumped tons of contaminated material in the Olneyville neighborhood, the material was piled up to the height of the second floor of adjacent homes. The neighborhood is one of the poorest in the state -- per capita income is just $18,000.

The dumping took place in the summer of 2020, and Rhode Island Department of Transportation Director Peter Alviti repeatedly lied about the dumping.

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GoLocal unveiled the dumping in September of 2020.

Ferreira has already pleaded guilty to three federal charges. He is awaiting sentencing in federal court in March.

In State court Tuesday, Ferreira plead not guilty to four counts. Magistrate McBurney agreed to Ferreira’s attorney Kevin Bristow’s request for $10,000 personal recognizance for bail.

 

The four charges:

The charges are two counts of disposing of refuse at other than a licensed facility and one count of operating a solid waste management facility without a license — each a felony charge. And he is facing a misdemeanor charge of giving a false document to agent, employee, or public official.

Last week, Ferreira’s former employer Barletta plead not guilty to state charges. John Bulman entered the plea for the company.

The company in October entered into a non-prosecution agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice, and as a part of that agreement, the company paid a total of $1.5 million.

Ferreira, who had worked for Barletta for decades, and his late father had worked for the company for decades as well.


TIMELINE: 6/10 Contamination GoLocal Investigation

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