The contract ensures work for at least another year at the Bath shipyard.
Dennis Hoey
Dennis Hoey is the Portland Press Herald’s night reporter, covering any and all news that breaks in the late afternoon and evening hours. He has been chasing stories after normal business hours in Portland since 2008. Before that he worked in the Press Herald’s Brunswick Bureau where he spent several years covering news in several midcoast towns from Rockland and Wiscasset to Bath and Brunswick. He also covered Bath Iron Works, the Brunswick Naval Air Station, Bowdoin College, and the Maine Yankee Nuclear Power Plant during his years in Brunswick. When he’s not hunting down criminals, politicians or law enforcement officials, Dennis enjoys spending time riding his bicycle, hiking, and cross country skiing.
Police may have found missing Maine victim’s body
Christiana Fesmire, 22, was brutally murdered last year by Buddy Robinson of Lewiston, but police never found the body.
Review: No evidence of sex abuse at Portland Diocese
A spokesman for Portland’s Roman Catholic Diocese said the audiet looked at part of 2011 and 2012.
Biddeford man sentenced to 5 years for cyberstalking
Sayer posted sexually explicit videos of his ex-fiancee to the Internet and invited men to her home for sexual encounters.
Scarborough police search for man with distinctive tattoos
The man is wanted for questioning by police in New Jersey and Maine.
Portland police find missing 80-year-old woman
Police said Martha Davis was not dressed for winter weather and suffering from dementia.
S. Portland water main break could take time to fix
Repair crews may have to work through the night to repair the water main break on Pickett Street.
Fugitive ex-prosecutor caught in New Mexico
James Cameron was on the run for more than two weeks before being arrested in Albuquerque.
Cape Elizabeth schools evacuated after threat found in bathroom
It takes only 20 minutes for Cape Elizabeth police to determine that the threat wasn’t credible, allowing school to resume.
Maine revenues less than predicted, cuts are likely
With the shortfall at $35.5 million for the period ending June 30, the governor and lawmakers may curtail spending.