Suspect in the stabbing of former Fall River Mayor arraigned on assault charges

The man police say stabbed former Fall River Mayor Will Flanagan was in court Tuesday afternoon

The Massachusetts District Court in Fall River
The Massachusetts District Court in Fall River
Paul C. Kelly Campos
Share
The Massachusetts District Court in Fall River
The Massachusetts District Court in Fall River
Paul C. Kelly Campos
Suspect in the stabbing of former Fall River Mayor arraigned on assault charges
Copy

The man accused of stabbing former Fall River Mayor Will Flanagan was in court on Tuesday afternoon.

Coree Gonzales, age 31, was arraigned at the Fall River District Court House, charged with four counts of assault on a police officer. He pleaded not guilty.

Police said Gonzales stabbed Flanagan on the street on Monday around 5 p.m. As of Wednesday, he had not been charged with any crime related to the attack on Flanagan. But during his arrest, Gonzales allegedly assaulted four police officers, according to a statement published on the FRPD’s Facebook.

Judge Heath Antontio ordered Gonzales to be held without bail and to undergo a mental evaluation.

Sgt. Ross Aubin of the Fall River Police Department said detectives worked through the night on Monday to locate Gonzalez.

“They established a suspect very early on and they spent the entirety of the night and early morning trying to locate the suspect,” Aubin said.

Prosecutors asked that information into the stabbing attack be impounded for 30 days while the investigation continues, a motion that Antonio granted.

Flanagan served as mayor in 2010 until he was later recalled from office. Aubin said on Tuesday that the former mayor was in stable but critical condition.

New England will face a West Coast challenger for the Feb. 8 championship
Higher taxes on Rhode Island’s richest are increasingly likely, although not without a lot of debate
The National Weather Service warns of dangerous wind chills and up to 15 inches of snow across southern New England
Starting Feb. 1, TSA will require travelers without compliant forms of identification to verify their identity through a biometric or biographic system
About 6.5% of postcard recipients file claims, court records show