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Sold: SNL bought by McGraw Hill Financial

On Monday, McGraw Hill Financial announced it had signed a definitive agreement to buy Charlottesville-based SNL Financial for $2.225 billion in cash from privately held New Mountain Capital.

Jason Feuchtwanger from McGraw Hill says his company is committed to Charlottesville as a strategic location and no layoffs are planned for current SNL employees.

SNL, which provides financial news and analysis to subscribers, has 3,000 employees in 10 different countries, while McGraw Hill has a massive 17,000 employees in 30 countries. McGraw Hill’s iconic brands include Standard & Poor’s rating services.

The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2015.

“We are enthusiastic about SNL because it is a fast-growing, highly complementary subscription-based business that will enable us to accelerate our strategy to be the leading provider of transparent and independent benchmarks, analytics, data and research across the global capital, commodity and corporate markets,” said Douglas L. Peterson, president and CEO of McGraw Hill Financial in a written release.

Mike Chinn, president and CEO of SNL Financial, will report to Peterson once the deal closes.

“This is an exciting day for our clients, employees and shareholders and a true milestone event in our 28-year history,” says Chinn,

Many are asking just how rich does this make Reid Nagle, who founded SNL in 1987 and who was the second largest shareholder when New Mountain Capital bought a majority stake in 2011?

“No comment as far as that goes,” says SNL spokesperson Christina Twomey in an e-mail.

Updated on July 28.

 

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Pipeline’s new path: Puts it in someone else’s backyard

The newest proposed route for the 550-mile Atlantic Coast Pipeline, announced July 15, would avoid a pending historic district around Wingina in southern Nelson County, but cut through a state wildlife management area along the James River. On July 14, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commision requested that Dominion seek a route that avoids both, says Dominion spokesman Jim Norvelle.

And though Dominion has now agreed to comply with this request from FERC, Norvelle says Dominion has previously looked at over 80 alternative pipeline routes, variations and adjustments.

No matter the final path, though, local landowners say if the pipeline must come through, they’d prefer it to be located along existing rights-of-way, which include high-voltage electric transmission towers, power lines, interstates or highways, and railroad lines.

Joanna Salidas, president of the pipeline-opposing nonprofit Friends of Nelson, says Dominion’s newest proposed route, the one which FERC has asked them to reconsider, doesn’t lessen the impact for the families in its path. In an e-mail, she writes, “If Dominion cared about property owners, historical resources, or the environment, they would use existing rights-of-way which have already been seriously compromised from their original state.”

Salidas says impacted families’ homes have been peaceful and private, and that Dominion’s project will force them to endure a construction zone that’s eight highway lanes wide and a pipeline that will permanently carry the risk of explosion.

Yogaville, a spiritual community in Buckingham County, is founded on the idea of peaceful living, and its residents have more to complain about than just the pipeline—right outside this community, the power company has proposed the location of a compression station, or “engine” that will power the interstate natural gas pipeline.

“Our religious practices are based on silence,” says Swami Sarvaananda, a Yogaville resident of 40 years who does not support the pipeline near Yogaville, or anywhere. With the pipeline potentially situated half a mile away from the community and the compressor not much further, she says she’s worried about the noise, the health of nearby water and a loss of revenue for the community, which hosts 10,000 visitors from around the world each year.

But it’s not all bad news for Nelson residents fighting the pipeline. The newest proposed route would spare some properties that were previously in the pipeline’s path. “The change [in route] takes into account the importance of the Nelson County culture and history,” writes Peter Agelasto, the chair of the board of trustees for the Rockfish Valley Foundation. “We are pleased to see the change even though it impacts other environmental concerns and retains the pipeline in Nelson County.”

Agelasto, who also supports the Atlantic Coast Pipeline joining an existing utility line, continues to assert that Nelson is no place for any pipeline.

Norvelle says Dominion prefers to colocate with existing rights-of-way where possible, and has announced a plan to do so in counties near Franklin, Virginia, but few existing rights-of-way can be fully shared for safety reasons. Colocating doesn’t mean fully sharing an existing right-of-way, he says, but rather putting the right-of-way for a pipeline adjacent to the existing right-of-way. If Dominion chooses to join an existing right-of-way near Franklin, Novelle says 12 percent of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline would be colocated.

“Colocating for a short distance, jumping off and then jumping on again, can affect as many property owners as if we don’t [colocate],” Norvelle writes in an e-mail. He says existing rights-of-way don’t often go in the direction a pipeline needs to go.

The specifics of FERC’s request for a new alternative route will be addressed either within the next 45 days or in the Atlantic Coast Pipeline’s final application in September.

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Down the rabbit hole: Talented C’ville restaurant staff in demand

Are representatives from an out-of-state hospitality company trying to poach some of Charlottesville’s most talented restaurant staff?

According to local restaurant owners, the answer is yes. According to the out-of-state guys, the answer is hmmm, well, that wasn’t their intention and they’re sorry for the misunderstanding.

Will Richey, owner of The Whiskey Jar, The Alley Light and Revolutionary Soup, says he received an e-mail from the staff at Rabbit Hole Magazine—an online mag created by a Chicago-based hospitality and restaurant company called Element Collective—that said a representative would be in Charlottesville and he wanted to feature photos of two of Richey’s popular eateries on their site.

Richey agreed, and though he was unable to make the photo shoot, he says he set one up with his bartender at Alley Light and Chris Dexter, the representative from Rabbit Hole Magazine.

Later that week, Richey says he stopped by Alley Light and his bartender said the photo shoot went well—and that Dexter had offered him a job at an up-and-coming rooftop bar. The bartender said he turned down the offer, but did accept a consulting position, says Richey, who was offended that someone would come into his restaurant under the guise of publishing a story and attempt to steal his staff.

Richey sent an e-mail to other local restaurant owners to warn them about his experience with Rabbit Hole Magazine and Michael Keaveny, owner of Tavola, replied, saying he had a similar experience.

According to Keaveny, members of his staff said Dexter had come into the restaurant, chatted with them and eventually asked for the manager’s phone number. Dexter asked a few employees to act as consultants for his new project and took one of them to its site at the Graduate Hotel, Keaveny says.

Dexter says his company, Element Collective, is working on food and beverage concepts for the Graduate Hotel, the newly renovated hostelry that took over the old Red Roof Inn on the Corner. In two to six months, he says, the hotel will have a restaurant component and Element Collective will be overseeing it, “Hopefully in a collaboration with one of the top restaurateurs/chefs in C’Ville,” Dexter wrote in an e-mail. He denied he had offered jobs to any of Richey or Keaveny’s staff members, and wrote that he was “disheartened and upset by the accusations,” and that he had reached out immediately to “set the record straight.”

Not all local restaurateurs are as troubled by the idea that Dexter offered jobs, says longtime Charlottesvillian Peter Griesar, owner of the new Brazos Tacos at the Ix property. While restaurateurs have a tacit agreement to not aggressively go after each other’s employees, the concept of poaching isn’t new—and it isn’t unfair, he says.

“Employees are human beings and they have the right to get any job they want,” says Griesar, who does agree that going into someone else’s restaurant and making job offers during an employee’s shift isn’t the way he’d recommend doing it.

Dexter says he is eager to smooth over the misunderstanding and, as “the food and drink talent here rivals any city across the country,” he looks forward to “becoming actively involved in the tight-knit scene and getting to know each and every person involved on a more personal level.”

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Donald’s day off: Trump cuts the ribbon at Albemarle Estate

 

Minutes before top Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s helicopter landed on the grounds of the Trump Winery in southern Albemarle County on Tuesday, July 14, a soft breeze rustled the grapevines on the 1,300-acre estate and, in an occurrence that might have seemed eerily symbolic to some of Trump’s critics, the American flag flanking the front door of the former Patricia Kluge-owned mansion-turned-B&B suddenly toppled.

In the midst of his somewhat brazen 2016 presidential campaign, the elder Trump was in Albemarle County to celebrate the grand opening of Albemarle Estate—a bed and breakfast owned by his son, Eric, and situated at Trump Winery, which Eric says is the largest winery on the East Coast. And while Trump praised his son’s accomplishments opening the B&B and producing what he calls “the finest wine in the world,” he could only lay off of his political agenda for so long.

“Sometimes it helps to have a terrible reputation,” Trump said about bidding for the large chunk of property where Albemarle Estate and Trump Winery are now situated. He recalled that few people bid against him at the auction and boasted that he paid only $6.2 million for the land, before turning his sights to the Albemarle House, which was originally on the market for $100 million in 2009. After he bought the land that surrounded the house, he bought the roads that lead up to it, effectively rendering it unsellable to anyone else. He eventually negotiated the price of the house down to $6.5 million.

“That’s what our country should be doing,” he said, referring to his own negotiation. He mentioned that the U.S. is currently $18 trillion in debt and noted that the government pays “a fortune” to lobbyists who make bad deals.

And on his son’s big day, The Donald was sure to add that he proposes taking back jobs from foreigners, forcing American corporations to relocate their out-of-country factories to domestic soil and putting Americans back to work in their own country. Calling Ford’s proposed investment of $2.5 billion into two factories in Mexico, and Apple’s manufacturing products in China “unfair trade,” Trump didn’t mince words. “It doesn’t help us,” he said.

The Trumps gave guests complimentary flutes of sparkling Trump wine and invited them inside to tour the 26,000-square-foot, 45-room mansion while a pianist filled its lower level with soft tunes. The hotel has 10 bedrooms with five located in the main house, four in the pool house and one in a luxurious log cabin that John Kluge once called his “thinking room.” The rooms, which range in price from $399 to $699 for one night and one person, include a fully stocked gourmet mini-bar and a marble-finished bathroom with Trump Spa Bath Collection amenities. Meticulously manicured English-style gardens surround the estate.

The B&B was made possible by a 2012 Albemarle County rezoning law that went into effect just four months prior to Trump’s purchase of the mansion, which made it easier to open B&B-type dwellings in rural zoned areas. Trump Winery’s manager, Kerry Woolard, moved into an apartment in the mansion to satisfy the county’s live-on-site requirement.

“It’s palatial,” Tricia Traugott, the author of local wine blog Charlottesville Uncorked says about the space. “This is like something you’d see in Bavaria at one of King Ludwig’s castles.”

The younger Trump is just as excited to open his estate as the guests are to tour it.

“We have truly poured our heart and soul into this property,” said Eric Trump, who was recently named in C-VILLE Weekly’s 2015 Power Issue. “We’ve had the time of our lives working on this together.”

And as Eric took his dad to the upper rose garden terrace of the estate, the elder Trump congratulated his son, shared a couple oohs and ahhs with a few guests and then was overheard giving what sounded like fatherly advice to his son. “Are you going to paint this white or not, Eric?”

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Big box bickering: Why some locals are wailing over Wegmans

The Fifth Street development project, now known as 5th Street Station, is soon to be a big box retail sanctuary with almost half a million square feet of space, an abundance of parking and a buffet of popular brands—and it only took about two decades to build on this historically sought-after plot of land previously owned by Grand Piano and Coran Capshaw, that once housed a landfill.

Since the ’90s, ideas for the site have been repeatedly pitched, supported, shot down and deferred. Approved in 2008, 5th Street Station is officially underway, promising popular shops like Wegmans, Field & Stream, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Mattress Warehouse, Panera Bread, PetSmart, Sprint, Great Clips, Hair Cuttery, Lee Nails, Jersey Mike’s Subs and the Virginia ABC. Eight other leases are currently in negotiation.

And, as the story goes, many are thrilled to have these big brands within reach.

“Wegmans—that’s the best thing since sliced bread. They make Whole Foods look penny-ante,” says Blake Caravati, owner of Vector Construction and former mayor of Charlottesville.

Though Vector isn’t involved with this project, Caravati stays on top of local construction.

“The only unfortunate part is that it’s in the county,” he says, jokingly, as a city resident acknowledging that a large sum of tax dollars will be pumped back into Albemarle as a result of the shopping center.

However, not everyone is excited about the presence of this big box development.

Mike Meintzschel, nature lover and local resident of over 20 years, is concerned about the project’s negative impact on Moores Creek. And he has photos to back it up.

According to Meintzschel, he and other residents of the Willoughby neighborhood thought they had reached an agreement with the developers, a “small victory” he says that has not been fulfilled. The developers, he says, originally planned for the shopping center to be situated closer to Moores Creek, one of the area’s most polluted water traces which surrounds three sides of the development, but agreed to push the shopping center inland far enough that it would not interfere with the watershed, and to stabilize the floodplain by filling it in with dirt.

“They’re right up against the creek, there’s no denying that,” Meintzschel says, concluding that “the preliminary stuff that we see along the creek bed is not what we expected.”

He doesn’t like the rock that’s been put around a few storm drains, and says the stones are small and one storm could wipe them all away. Meintzschel says the developers “just sort of threw the rocks down,” while the county and city set a better example by meticulously laying larger rocks around storm drains during other restoration efforts on Moores Creek.

“What’s happening doesn’t match the intelligence of the city,” he says.

But the attorney for the developers, Fairburn, Georgia-based S.J. Collins Enterprises, says they have volunteered to go beyond what the county required to carry out a number of site improvement projects. Those efforts include cleaning up the old landfill on the property two years earlier than mandated, implementing stream bank improvements to Moores Creek and removing invasive plant species that are crowding out native species on the riverbank, says Valerie Long of Williams Mullen law firm in an e-mail. The developer also plans to implement a water treatment facility to detain polluted water that runs off the highway and treats it before it reaches the creek.

Richard Randolph, planning commissioner for the Scottsville district where 5th Street Station is located and a Board of Supervisors candidate, says he gives the developers the benefit of the doubt.

“It’s easy for one to take photographs and point fingers, but this is a process of transition and it’s not completed,” he says, noting that the health of Moores Creek actually increased from a very poor rating to a rating of poor in nonprofit StreamWatch’s latest assessment, which was released in June.

According to Randolph, the results of the assessment are “hardly a point where we declare victory,” but he hopes to see the water quality of Moores Creek improve further with the help of S.J. Collins and “there is an expectation that it will.”

The health of Moores Creek isn’t the only concern locals have, and even Caravati, a fan of the project, notes that access to the shopping center could be “a bit strained,” as Fifth Street is already a busy road during rush hour. He says traffic is usually backed up from cars that are headed downtown from I-64, and 5th Street Station will add to that congestion.

On the bright side, folks living on the south side of town won’t have to make the long drive up Route 29 North just to get to an upscale grocery store, says Long. She says this new convenience for southsiders may result in reduced traffic congestion on Route 29, and the long-awaited connector road between Avon and Fifth streets will also significantly improve the transportation network.

And beyond traffic or stream health, there’s the undeniable glee that many people seem to feel from the impending arrival of the beloved grocery chain.

“We are told that shoppers come from up to 90 miles away to shop at Wegmans,” Long says.

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Dog attack witness: Police K9 was “vicious”

Thursday night, a K9 from the Charlottesville Police Department was accidentally released from the back of a patrol car on the 700 block of Prospect Avenue where it bit a 13-year-old girl several times, breaking the skin and requiring stitches, according to Captain Gary Pleasants.

“The dog was vicious,” says Bridget Brown Shackelford, a neighbor who saw the attack.

Shackelford says the dog attacked the girl for about a minute, while the girl screamed and latched onto an officer for help. The attack ended when an officer got the dog under control.

Shackelford held the hysterical girl until her mother arrived and the ambulance came. The girl’s trauma was evident.  “She was shaking so bad, my body was shaking,” says Shackelford, who notes the girl told her she was afraid of dogs and screamed it several times as she was being attacked.

Shackelford says the officers on duty were quick to say the attack wasn’t anyone’s fault.

The dog is a 3-year-old Dutch shepherd and one of two dogs in Charlottesville’s K9 unit, according to Pleasants.

The officers on Prospect Avenue were initially investigating a vehicle with a stolen license plate when they smelled marijuana and called for a K9 unit. The unit arrived and and the dog’s handler inspected the suspicious vehicle before going back to his patrol car to get the K9. He unintentionally touched his car’s automatic release and the back opened, releasing the unleashed dog.

The dog then ran directly to a group of people that included the girl.

“It was an accident,” Pleasants says. He believes the dog reacted to a quick movement made by someone in the group, causing it to attack.

The police department is not naming the officer who released the K9 from the vehicle, but says the officer tried to call for the K9 and it did not respond.

The K9 is currently in the handler’s care, according to Pleasants.

 

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New watershed assessment: Still bad, but not as bad

Though the health of the Rivanna River watershed has consistently failed to meet one of five Virginia water quality standards, a new report shows that its conditions are improving.

According to David Hannah, the executive director of StreamWatch—a local nonprofit that assesses watershed health by monitoring and testing streams—32 of the 50 assessed streams failed to meet the Virginia water quality standard for aquatic life in a report the organization released this month.

That’s a failing 64 percent of streams that lead into the Rivanna River, which is slightly less than the 67 percent failing average that StreamWatch has monitored since 2003.

It’s not all bad news, though.

“The fact that there is an improvement in water quality at the same time our population is growing is actually a great accomplishment,” says Robbi Savage, executive director of the Rivanna Conservation Society, a partner of StreamWatch.

Not only has the population contributing to wastewater increased by 17 percent, according to Hannah, but for this assessment, he and volunteers monitored more sites than ever before. In the first few years of sampling, StreamWatch monitored 25 sites. That number grew to 38 in 2007 and now stands at 50.

The Rivanna River Watershed 2012-2014 Stream Health Report is also the first in which no streams were given a rating of “very poor” in the Rivanna River watershed.

Savage, who says Moores Creek, traditionally the watershed’s most unhealthy, improved from a very poor rating to a rating of poor, and she hopes the urban stream’s health will continue to improve. She and the Rivanna Conservation Society planted buffers at Quarry Park to keep polluted runoff from reaching Moores Creek and sponsored 27 other river cleanups.

Of the 50 monitored streams, three were rated poor, 29 were fair, 13 were good and five were very good.

In order to meet Virginia water quality standards, a stream must achieve a rating of “good” or “very good,” which means only 36 percent of sampled streams passed in this assessment, though almost half of the streams are at least fair in rating.

Hannah and Savage agree that the community should commit to improving water quality, as the Rivanna River watershed is one where we drink, swim, fish and play.

Savage says anyone can help improve the conditions by conserving water, applying pesticides and herbicides consistently with manufacturers’ instructions, ensuring that cars are in good condition and not leaking oil or brake fluids, and making sure properties are properly buffered where dirt and soil can’t run off into waterways.

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New digs: More construction on West Main

The mixed-use residential complex going up on West Main and 10th streets now has an official name: Uncommon. And the developers have a description of the type of people they hope will live there.

“Uncommoners are trendsetters who don’t try too hard,” the development’s website says, but this hip tagline doesn’t describe the planning they’ve put into building such trendy digs.

The city had previously granted a special use permit to build a nine-floor, 101-foot structure, but Erin Hannegan from Mitchell Matthews Architects says the residential building “was reduced for a variety of reasons.”

That’s probably just as well after the outcry following the development of The Flats @ West Village, the sheer bulk of which has caused some city councilors to ask whether such density is appropriate for West Main.

According to the developer, Ryan Doody of CA Student Living in Chicago, a smaller building with fewer units is better suited to fit the needs of the student population and is more in tune with the character of West Main Street.

Charlottesville city planner Brian Haluska says the decision on how high to build a particular site comes from cost of land, construction type, terms of the loan, minimum requirements or formalities of the building and that “there aren’t many sites left for large scale brand new buildings,” on West Main.

The Sycamore House Hotel is a nine-story hotel in review, but beyond that, he doesn’t see many more popping up.

This hotel will be built where the current Sycamore House Studio Art Shop sits at 1108 West Main St.—right down the block from Uncommon. John Bartelt, owner of the art shop, says the development of West Main Street isn’t preferred, but it’s inevitable. He’s noticed more foot traffic past his shop since the opening of The Flats.

“I don’t know if it necessarily translates to more business,” he says, “Probably not.”

Bartelt thinks business on West Main won’t increase until more retail shops are created instead of residential areas. He says the 7,100-square feet of retail provided by Uncommon isn’t enough.

The now six-floor, 66-foot-tall residential complex at Uncommon will house 162 units of 4-bedroom, 3-bedroom, 2-bedroom and studio apartments. Uncommon will include a community room along Roosevelt Brown Boulevard, which will be similar to CitySpace on the Downtown Mall, and scheduling preference will be given to the Fifeville and 10th and Page neighborhoods or residents in the building, according to Hannegan.

Residential and commercial parking will be under the building and the complex will include a fitness room, study lounge, club room, yoga studio and terrace-level swimming pool.

“Uncommoners live on the edge, but just down the street,” the Uncommon website says. As developments in this area continue popping up, more and more people may soon be “living on the edge” in an area that once took pride in staying true to its historic aesthetic.

However, Haluska says the building was approved by the Board of Architectural Review, which ensures that new construction is compatible with existing historic districts. Now that it’s only six floors, it will better fall in line with the UVA Children’s Hospital, which was an original concern, Haluska says.

And the changing of West Main continues across the street from Uncommon, where the former Team Tire building is being renovated for as-yet-undisclosed retail/restaurant use, according to Ecorp Real Estate president Mark Green.

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Capital indictment against alleged double slayer

The man accused of killing Robin and Mani Aldridge is now charged with capital murder in the commission of a robbery and robbing a residence.

On June 18, Gene Everett Washington and his attorney appeared in Charlottesville Circuit Court to learn the additional charges.

Investigators believe Washington beat the school teacher and her daughter to death and robbed their Rugby Avenue home before setting it on fire in December. He was initially charged with two counts of first degree murder.

Capital murder involves a crime in addition to the murder, such as rape, robbery or abduction, explains legal expert David Heilberg. “If there’s probable cause, [Commonwealth’s Attorney] Dave Chapman can take it to the grand jury and ask for capital murder indictments.”

Capital murder requires two defense attorneys, and there are only four local private lawyers certified to defend capital cases, says Heilberg, who is one of them, as is Washington’s attorney, Lloyd Snook. Washington also will get a state capital defender.

“There was a big hue and cry after the death penalty was reestablished in the ’70s and they’d appoint anyone to defend them,” says Heilberg. “You could get a real estate lawyer or a drunk. The law established attorneys must be certified.”

He also says that any experienced prosecutor knows better than to bring a weak capital case.

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Aldridge murders: Gene Washington goes to grand jury

 

Gene Everett Washington’s DNA was found on a blood-stained knife, towels and rubber gloves in a dumpster outside of his Barracks West apartment, according to evidence presented in Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court June 11. The DNA also matched that of Mani Aldridge, the slain daughter of Robin Aldridge, both of whom were killed in a December double homicide.

Over 10 witnesses testified during a preliminary hearing against the accused killer of the local teacher and her daughter, and Washington learned that the prosecutor had new evidence linking him to the murders.

The dumpster also contained Robin Aldridge’s new iPhone 6, which rang when police called her phone number, as well as a pair of bloody orange and black Nikes, which Washington can be seen wearing in surveillance footage from the day of the murders and in his own Youtube videos.

Investigators obtained surveillance footage from ABC Store and 7-Eleven cameras, and a Barracks West neighbor, Aaron Alai, who had a personal camera system set up to monitor the parking lot after his car had recently been shot with a BB gun.

In Alai’s footage, a black male can be seen carrying sneakers and a plastic bag to where the dumpster is located just out of the frame. He jogs away in the same direction he originally appeared from.

Investigators say the bloody knife, towels and gloves were found in plastic bags similar to the ones seen in the video.

On the same day investigators found evidence in the dumpster, they found the Aldridge’s stolen car just feet away in a Barracks West visitor parking space.

Detective Stephen A. Carson says he was alerted that the vehicle was found and began knocking on Barracks West residents’ doors to ask for more information.

When he knocked on the door of a man whom he now identifies as Washington, he says a young, black male with an afro pick answered the door and identified himself as James. “James” held the door wide open, and Carson said when “James” saw his police badge, he slowly began closing the door until it was only open 11-12 inches.

Carson asked if Washington knew any details about the stolen car or evidence found in the dumpster and said Washington vigorously picked his hair and broke eye contact when Carson used sensitive words like “murder” or “homicide.”

Washington said he didn’t have any additional information and he would ask his mother and girlfriend, Carson said.

Investigators believed Washington brutally beat the victims, according to testimony, and after finding the slightly bent bloody knife, they suspected he stabbed the women before swaddling their bodies in sheets or cloths and setting their Rugby Avenue home on fire. Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Elizabeth Killeen presented photographs of the knife.

William Tatton, a volunteer firefighter and first responder to the house fire on December 5, 2014, testified that he “saw an elderly woman’s hand resting on the stairs,” as he was searching the basement of the Aldridge’s home for victims. This was the body of Robin—the body of Mani was soon found lying next to her mother’s. Tatton’s testimony was tearful and sobs could be heard throughout the courtroom.

At the time of the arrest, two cellphones and two gold necklaces were found on Washington. Detective Blaine Cosgro testified that, after comparing serial numbers and SIM cards, he found that the phones, an iPhone 4s and and iPhone 5s, belonged to Robin and Mani, respectively.

Defense Attorney LLoyd Snook called no witnesses to the stand.

After the hearing, a friend of Robin, Katharine Hannigan said she still can’t believe “something so violent was done to someone who lived her life so peacefully,” and with all the new evidence, she is optimistic.

“I think we’re gonna get him,” Hannigan said.

Washington will appear in front of the grand jury June 15.