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Man in Revere officer’s slaying gets 8-12 years

Surrounded by family members, Patricia Talbot, mother of slain Revere police Officer Daniel Talbot, held framed photos of her son in Dedham Superior Court yesterday during the sentencing of Derek Lodie for murder. Surrounded by family members, Patricia Talbot, mother of slain Revere police Officer Daniel Talbot, held framed photos of her son in Dedham Superior Court yesterday during the sentencing of Derek Lodie for murder. (Pat Greenhouse/ Globe Staff)
By John R. Ellement
Globe Staff / October 29, 2009

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DEDHAM - In a courtroom awash with anger, remorse, pain, and defiance, a Revere man admitted yesterday that he helped orchestrate the 2007 killing of an off-duty Revere police officer who was shot and lay dying as his fiancée begged him to keep breathing.

Derek Lodie, 19, had faced a sentence of up to life imprisonment when first charged with being an accessory before the fact of murder. But yesterday, he was given an eight-to-12-year sentence in a plea agreement approved by Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley and Lodie’s defense attorney, J.W. Carney Jr. Under the agreement, the charge against Lodi was reduced to accessory before the fact of manslaughter.

Revere police Officer Daniel Talbot, 30, was shot in the head near the baseball field adjacent to Revere High School around 1:30 a.m. Sept. 29, 2007. With him was his fiancée, Constance Bethell, and three other Revere police officers. The police were off-duty and drinking beer in the park at the time, Assistant Suffolk District Attorney Edmond Zabin said in court yesterday.

Lodie admitted to Superior Court Judge Patrick Brady that he used his cellphone to summon the accused shooter, Robert Iacoviello Jr., from a nearby housing development after Talbot taunted him for being a member of a street gang known as the Bloods.

Iacoviello has been charged with first-degree murder and is being held without bail. He has pleaded not guilty.

But Carney said in court, and to reporters afterward, that while Lodie bears responsibility for his actions that morning, so do Talbot and the others with him who were drinking in the public park. Carney said they never identified themselves as police officers and instead left Lodie, who was then 17 and homeless, convinced that they were rival gang members.

Carney said that Lodi is remorseful for the role he played in the death.

“The ultimate tragedy, of course, was the death of Officer Talbot,’’ Carney told reporters. “But Derek Lodie, a 17-year-old homeless boy in Revere, should not take all the blame. . . . Derek Lodie was simply walking across the baseball field in Revere, minding his own business, before he was teased and taunted by a group of intoxicated police officers, who were pretending to be gang members.’’

Given the opportunity to address Brady, Talbot’s mother turned a courtroom full of stone-faced police officers into a group of men and women with tears in their eyes as she described her love for her son and the painful loss she feels daily.

“I had to bury my first born, which is something no mother should have to do,’’ she said, telling of being by her son’s side at the hospital after he was shot. “All I could do was to pray to God to take him peacefully.’’

As Patricia Talbot finished her brief statements, she turned toward Lodie with two framed photographs of her son in her hands and demanded that he look at Talbot. Lodie kept his head down and showed no obvious emotion.

“I just wanted to show you this,’’ she said to Lodie.

Bethell, Talbot’s fiancée, who was with him at the park that morning, said, “He was dying before my eyes, and there was nothing I could do to save him.’’

Bethell said the couple, who planned to marry in October 2008, had already bought a house and were talking about having children. But, those joyful memories have been wiped out of her life forever, she said through tears.

“I won’t get to see Danny grow old,’’ she said. “I will never forgive Derek Lodie for what he did.’’

Speaking last, Talbot’s younger brother, Paul, lashed out at the plea deal, which he said was an insult to his brother’s memory. “What you are saying to me is that our justice system doesn’t work,’’ he said.

He also said that he has not been able to tell his 4-year-old son why his beloved uncle no longer comes to play with him.

“I’m angry,’’ Paul Talbot said. “I am angry that I have lost my brother. I am angry that my son has lost his uncle.’’

Outside the courtroom, Conley defended the plea agreement.

“Anyone who’s been to Walpole for eight years knows this is hardly a light sentence,’’ Conley said.

Conley said he understood Paul Talbot’s anger, but said the decision to accept the plea was based on the several factors, including the strength of the evidence against Lodie.

After the hearing, Talbot’s relatives, led by Paul Talbot, walked past reporters and Conley, without further comment.

The shooting led to the firing of Revere police Sergeant Evan Franklin after an internal investigation. Franklin ran from the scene and ordered the first arriving police officer to drive him home and not provide assistance to Talbot, investigators said.

John Ellement can be reached at ellement@globe.com.