Three plead not guilty in county court

NORWICH – Three individuals charged with a variety of felony crimes pleaded not guilty in Chenango County Court Monday, while another pair were sentenced following plea deals in their respective cases.
• James F. Amatuccio, 35, Unadilla, pleaded not guilty to three counts of second degree burglary, a class C felony, and three counts of petit larceny, a class A misdemeanor.
According to his August indictment, Amatuccio knowingly entered and unlawfully remained at three locations in the towns of Bainbridge and Guilford, allegedly committing the crime of larceny and – in concert with another – stealing multiple pieces of jewelry, documents and an Amazon Kindle.
• Daniel F. McEwan Jr., 25, Guilford, pleaded not guilty to three counts of second degree burglary, a class C felony, and three counts of petit larceny, a class A misdemeanor.
Indicted in August, it’s alleged that McEwan – on three separate occasions and in concert with another – knowingly entered and unlawfully remained at three locations in the towns of Bainbridge and Guilford, stealing multiple pieces of jewelry, documents and an Amazon Kindle.
• Kathy J. Paul, 40, Sherburne, pleaded not guilty to charges of third degree welfare fraud, a class D felony, and offering a false instrument for filing, a class E felony.
Paul, indicted in August, is accused of committing a fraudulent act, taking or obtaining public assistance benefits valued at more than $3,000. According to her indictment, she withheld information from the Chenango County Department of Social Services, failing to disclose earned income her household was receiving.
It’s alleged that Paul received an estimated $10,058 to which she was not entitled.
• Paul B. Dunn, 46, Coventry, was sentenced to five years probation after pleading guilty on July 20 to one count of first degree offering a false instrument to file, a class E felony, in an agreed upon disposition between the county’s district attorney’s and public defender’s offices.
• David H. Morley, 43, McDonough, was sentenced to one to three years in state prison, to be served as parole supervision at the Willard Drug Treatment Center.
On Aug. 20, Morley pleaded guilty to one count of driving while intoxicated, a class E felony, in an agreed upon disposition between the county’s district attorney and public defender offices.

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