Eric Russell has been a general assignment reporter at the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram since 2012 and has been a journalist in Maine for 13 years. Because he doesn’t have a specific geographic or topical area to cover, Eric often is free to roam the state in pursuit of the most interesting stories, whether it’s tackling the big topic of the day or chasing ideas that fall just outside the boundaries of everyday news. His favorite assignments are ones where he can leave the office and meet with people in their homes or their workplaces to talk about their struggles and challenges – and sometimes their triumphs. Or to try and answer complicated questions: How does a woman die alone in a Wells mobile home without anyone knowing for 2.5 years? How does a convicted rapist from Massachusetts disappear before his sentencing and then live quietly in Gorham for 34 years before being caught? How does a husband in Bath respond when his wife develops early-onset Alzheimer’s disease? Eric grew up in Southern Maine, went to college at the University of Maine and worked in Bangor for eight years before joining the Press Herald. He lives in Brunswick with his wife, a school teacher, and two daughters.
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PublishedJune 1, 2013
State House politics turn nasty and personal
Gov. Paul LePage’s May 23 press event to veto MaineCare expansion, and trump Democrats’ similar event to trumpet its passage, shows how the opposing sides in Augusta would rather talk past each other than sit in a room away from the cameras and find compromise.
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PublishedMay 29, 2013
LePage sounds off about freedom of speech during Wednesday meeting with press
Gov. Paul LePage held a press conference Wednesday, taking the opportunity to further express his anger at being silenced during a recent Appropriations Committee meeting and annoyance over the TV debacle at his office last week.
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PublishedMay 29, 2013
LePage irate about ‘stifling’ of his words
‘We might as well go home, roll up our sleeves and get our guns out,’ the governor says.
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PublishedMay 26, 2013
Find triggers memory of Maine war tragedy
A local man recalls the 1943 crash that killed two British pilots in training – and has debris that fell from the sky.
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PublishedMay 23, 2013
Fugitive rapist found in Maine is punished
Gary Alan Irving, who fled after his 1979 conviction in Massachusetts, gets up to 40 years for his crimes.
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PublishedMay 21, 2013
Murder suspect ‘so normal,’ but had past arrests
In June 2012, Dube led police on a 130 mile-per-hour high-speed chase on I-95 north of Bangor, and was about to go to prison.
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PublishedMay 21, 2013
Marine seeks Katahdin memorial for Maine’s fallen
Maj. David Cote hopes to honor the 46 Mainers who have died in the war on terror with engraved rocks atop the state’s tallest mountain.
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PublishedMay 19, 2013
Maine Turnpike toll hike pays off
Six months in, revenue has increased by 16 percent even though traffic has dropped by 4 percent.
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PublishedMay 15, 2013
Maine highway budget targets product, commish says
It would cut 56.5 vacant positions, cap state costs for employees’ health insurance and freeze merit and longevity pay for employees
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PublishedMay 13, 2013
Sarah Long bridge reopens to Maine-N.H. traffic
The bridge, one of those connecting Maine and New Hampshire, had been out of commission for more than five weeks after it was struck by a tanker.
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