Bonavolonta Named Special Agent in Charge of FBI's Boston Field Office
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Bonavolonta Named Special Agent in Charge of FBI's Boston Field Office
Joseph Bonavolonta PHOTO: FBIJoseph Bonavolonta has been named special agent in charge of the FBI’s Boston Field Office, announced FBI Director Christopher Wray.
About Bonavolonta
Bonavolonta has served as deputy assistant director for the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division since March 2018. He previously helped lead the Boston Field Office as assistant special agent in charge from 2013 to 2017 and is honored to be returning to the office.
Bonavolonta has held a variety of leadership, operational, and investigative positions throughout his FBI career.
He entered on duty in May 1996 as an investigative specialist in the FBI’s New York Field Office.
In August 2000, he received his first assignment as a special agent in the New York Field Office, where he spent many years investigating the Bonanno La Cosa Nostra (LCN) Family within the office’s organized crime branch. His work led to the convictions and/or guilty pleas of dozens of high-ranking members and associates of the Bonanno LCN Family. For his contributions to these investigations, Bonavolonta received the Attorney General’s Director’s Award for Superior Performance in 2005.
From 2006-2007, Bonavolonta served as the program manager in the Organized Crime Section at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C., where he was responsible for the coordination of organized crime cases throughout the country. He also directed an international organized crime initiative in coordination with the Italian National Police aimed at combating joint criminal operations between the American-based LCN Families and the Sicilian Mafia.
Bonavolonta was promoted to supervisory special agent of the corporate/securities fraud squad at the Newark Field Office in 2008.\
Bonavolonta directed the investigations of major economic crimes, to include corporate/securities fraud, intellectual property rights, Internet fraud, wire and mail fraud, and money laundering. Under Bonavolonta’s supervision, his team generated some of the most significant economic crimes investigations in New Jersey.
In 2013, Bonavolonta received a promotion to assistant special agent in charge of the Boston Field Office, where he oversaw the cyber and counterintelligence programs as well as the resident agencies in Bedford/Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Providence.
Bonavolonta then served as the section chief for the FBI’s employee development and selection program from March 2017 to March 2018. In this role, he managed the national oversight responsibilities for the supervisor development, transfer, senior leader selection, and senior executive service programs.
Bonavolonta was born in Montclair, New Jersey, and earned a Bachelor of Arts in political science/communications from Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey.
2018 Rhode Island Criminal Justice Hall of Fame Inductees - June 2018
Hugh Clements
Colonel of the Providence Police Department
Clements was appointed to the Providence Police Department on May 5, 1985, as a night Patrol Officer in the Uniform Division. He then went on to serve on the Neighborhood Response Team Uniformed Task Force before being transferred to the Special Investigations Bureau, the department’s vice and drug unit. In 1990, Clements was promoted to Detectives where he worked in the night squad. In 1992, Detective Clements was promoted to the rank of Sergeant where he spent three years as a night Sergeant in Sub-District 1, South Providence. Sergeant Clements was then transferred to the Detective Bureau where he served as the Squad 2 Sergeant and spent the next seven years supervising the investigations of all major crimes including murder, robbery, burglary, firearms offenses and gang activity. In a squad that carried an extremely heavy caseload, he played an active role in several major investigations during this time.
In 2002, Hugh was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant and transferred to the midnight shift of the Patrol Bureau. Lieutenant Clements was later assigned as District 5 Commander covering the neighborhoods of Olneyville, Hartford, and Silver Lake. Consistent with the department philosophy at this time, the true community police model was practiced with several creative and innovative initiatives carried out in this particular district. He was transferred back to the Detective Bureau, and in December 2005, he was promoted to Captain where he was responsible for all major crimes operations in the Investigative Division.
In 2008, when promoted to Major he was assigned for one year as the Commander of the Homeland Security Division, before being reassigned as the Commanding Officer of the Uniform Division.
He later served as Deputy Chief and was appointed as Acting Chief of Police in July 2011, and on January 6, 2012, he was appointed as the 37th Chief of the Department and promoted to the rank of Colonel.
He was named to the bench in October of 2010 by then-Governor Donald Carcieri. He replaced Judge Rogeriee Thompson when she was elevated to serve as a U.S. Circuit Judge.
Before being appointed to the court, Stone was a partner at the Providence-based law firm Adler Pollock & Sheehan.
Stone was a graduate of Fisk University and earned a J.D. from Case Western Reserve School of Law.
Joseph Stetkiewicz
Chief, Central Falls Police Department
Joseph Stetkiewicz served as the chief of the Central Falls Police Department from 1946 to 1968.
Robert McKenna
Director, Roger Williams University Justice System Training, and Research Institute; Lieutenant, East Providence Police Department (Ret.)
Robert McKenna is the Associate Dean and serves as an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice in the School of Justice Studies at Roger Williams University.
Additionally, he serves as the Director of the Justice System Training & Research Institute, the professional development component of the School of Justice Studies.
Associate Dean McKenna holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice and a Master of Science degree in the Administration of Justice from Salve Regina University, Newport, Rhode Island, as well as a Juris Doctor degree from The New England School of Law, Boston, Massachusetts.
Stephen Springer
(retired) Detective, Providence Police Department; Investigator, Rhode Island Office of Attorney General
A 1968 graduate of the Providence Police Academy, Stephen J. Springer served in the Patrol Bureau for approximately five years before being promoted to Detective. For the next 30 years, he served as a Detective, largely in the South Providence area. During that time, he served as the primary or secondary investigator on more than 200 homicides, a number unmatched in Rhode Island law enforcement. He joined the RI Office of Attorney General in 2004 as an investigator, retiring in December 2017.
He has received numerous awards over his career, including the Attorney General’s Law Enforcement Award (1978), Rhea Archambeault Award (1984), Medal of Valor (1984), Commissioner’s Award (1993), Rhode Island Justice Assistance “Neil Houston Award” (2001), and FOP Outstanding Police Officer of the Year (2002).
Over the course of his nearly 50 years in law enforcement, Stephen Springer epitomized professionalism, dedication, courage, and integrity, tirelessly working on the streets for his entire career, and in the process served as the face of law enforcement to all those he encountered.
Springer and his wife Virginia McGinn reside in Barrington, RI.
Susan Erstling, Ph.D., LICSW
(retired) - Family Services of RI; Rhode Island State Victim Assistance Academy
Erstling headed the Family Service of RI trauma and loss center, and is a founder of the RI State Victim Assistance Academy.
She has a wealth of experience working with victims, witnesses, and responders in the aftermath of violent incidents, including shootings.
She and her team also provided training to professionals across the state regarding the effects of trauma.
Lionel “Pete” Benjamin
Major, Rhode Island State Police
Lionel Benjamin passed away in 2008.
Benjamin joined the RI State Police Department in 1958, retiring as a Major in 1990, having served 15 of those years as the youngest and longest serving Executive Officer in the country.
As a graduate of the F.B.I. Academy, he was recognized for his expertise in the prevention of organized crime and served proudly under the direction of the legendary Colonel Walter E. Stone.
Consistent with his altruistic nature, he had been a volunteer fireman for the Marieville Fire Department for 15 years as well as a U.S. Marine Corps Veteran of the Korean Conflict.
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