Domestic violence experts reflect on Milan Lucic arrest
Experts tell WBZ it's common for domestic violence victims to scale back their stories when police get involved.
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Kristina Rex is a reporter for WBZ-TV News.
She joined the station in August 2018 from Portland, Maine, where she worked as a general assignment reporter, investigative reporter, and fill-in anchor at WCSH. She started her career in New England as well, working as a morning reporter for WLBZ in Bangor, Maine.
In Maine, Kristina reported on a wide variety of topics, including Maine's opioid epidemic, an electric company billing crisis, and the corrupt international business dealings of a local ski mountain. Her reporting on Portland's Unsolved Homicides earned her a Maine Association of Broadcasters award for Enterprise Journalism. She was also honored to travel to Houston in 2017 to cover Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath for KHOU.
An Andover native and a graduate of Phillips Academy and Boston College, Kristina is thrilled to be home, reporting for the station she grew up watching.
Experts tell WBZ it's common for domestic violence victims to scale back their stories when police get involved.
According to a search warrant obtained by WBZ, the victim's "left ear had been removed, part of his nose had been torn off, and his face was covered in blood."
I-Team sources said Boston Bruins forward Milan Lucic was arrested in Boston as a result of a domestic incident.
The truck driver who struck and killed 5-year-old Sidney Olson in Andover back in May will not face criminal charges.
A couple hundred Harvard Law students rallied outside Wasserstein Hall on campus Thursday in support of Palestinians and in opposition to what they're calling restrictions on speech on campus.
A massive construction site in Taunton is only 19% complete and no work is currently being done.
A Plymouth family returned home to Massachusetts from Gaza on Tuesday afternoon.
The man and woman accused of operating the ring were both in court on Monday.
Videos show protesters in crowded hallways and student areas, as they protested from 2 p.m. to midnight.
Why does Boston still use CharlieCards when other cities, like New York, are using phone tap-ins to ride the subway?
Three people were arrested Wednesday for allegedly operating a high-end brothel network out of apartment complexes in Massachusetts and Virginia.
The President of Brandeis University has revoked university recognition of a Pro-Palestine student organization.
Three people are charged in what's believed to be one of the largest single-location drug seizures in New England history.
Leroy Walker, whose son was killed in the shooting told WBZ-TV he hopes he hears something different from the president.
Maine has what is known as a "yellow flag law," the only one of its kind in the nation.