Harris said parole supervision for Nee included counseling for anger management and a mental health evaluation. Nee also has to be screened for alcohol and drug use and has a nightly curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. He is under parole supervision until July. Coria Holland, spokesperson for the state commissioner on probation, said Nee would be on probation until May 2010.
Nee had a parole hearing on March 28 and was paroled on May 8, said Terrel Harris, spokesman for the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security. The parole hearing came after Nee had served about half of his jail sentence.
Listen. I don't know who you are, but you are clearly not qualified to make any sort of analysis. you have never even met me. That's right I said me. This is Tobin Kerns, And you, miss, are a moron. I know you probably will not see this, as it was posted in Nov of 07, but god I hope you do. First of all before you start making any sort of judgments you should get your facts straight. In my trial both Joe Sullivan and Dan Farley stated that I was not involved with them when they went to police. They also said that they specifically went to the police to set me up because Joe Nee convinced them I was going to blow the whistle on their plot. I still got convicted because The system sucks. You should also know I was one of the most individualistic people in school. To be honest I was way to busy partying and screwing everything that walked to plan something like this. Hitler was an asshole and a moron. And the only reason people become therapists is because they do not want to deal with their own issues, so they get a job they can tell everyone else what is wrong with them. None of you can even agree with each other. Psychology is not a science, FDA approved drugs are a means of controlling the populace and suppressing individuality, and Freud wanted to f*** his mother. My email is tkernsED@gmail.com. e-mail me and maybe we can put our heads together, the last thing I want are people thinking I am a monster. You are obviously ill informed so do the right thing and get informed.
P.S. Howie Carr, you are a douche bag. I totally would have gone to my Grandads funeral. I loved him dearly.
"Obviously, being his parents, we're heartbroken," father Thomas Nee said after the sentencing.
Nee's attorney, Thomas Drechsler, asked Judge Charles Grabau to spare Nee any additional jail time.
"My client did go to police, and Kerns didn't. I felt that he should have gotten a more lenient sentence," Drechsler said. He said he plans to appeal the conviction.
Nee’s family was in tears, hugging outside the courtroom. His sister, Katherine Nee, said the ruling sends a message that people should not go to the police.
“Nobody ever gets the max when they are that young,” said one comment posted by someone using the screen name Lost Cause. “At the most he will get approximately 2 years, and after good behavior and any time served, he will not spend much time at all in the land of forced love.”
TheTrenchcoat Chronicles is Web site that says it specializes in following school shootings.
A poster there, using the screen name Trench Reynolds, said people seeking “true justice” should not celebrate just yet.
“If this is the only charge that Nee is convicted of he probably won’t see that much time,” the poster said. “Personally I’ll be surprised if he even sees the inside of a jail because of his connections.”
Hours earlier, Judge Charles Grabau said that the prosecution had proven its case on all three charges against Nee. But Grabau changed his mind after hearing closing arguments.
After Grabau announced that he intended to find Nee guilty on all three charges, the 21-year-old’s family members began crying in the courtroom at Plymouth Superior Court. Nee hugged his mother to comfort her.
But defense attorney Thomas Dreschler interrupted the scene, objecting that the judge had not heard closing arguments. Grabau said there had been a misunderstanding and that he would reconsider his verdict after hearing from both sides.
Farley, who was granted immunity in exchange for his testimony, said during cross-examination: "It's been dragged out so many years, everything's foggy. . . . I cannot give an accurate testimony."
His father, Thomas J. Nee, president of the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association, said after the nearly seven-hour hearing that he was glad to finally be in court.
"This is where the truth comes out," he said. "I have faith in the system."


