Get Headlines MetroThe top 10 local news from the Boston Underground and around New England is delivered daily. In November, the affidavit said, the candidate, identified in court documents only as Individual 1, received “numerous” texts from anonymous numbers threatening to reveal information that would “damage the reputation” of person 1, unless the person 1 succumb to the main search. Clark continued the affidavit, telling the FBI in January that she had also received threatening messages from unknown figures and that she feared the investigation was damaging her professional reputation and “breaking up the city.” Clark allegedly linked to the threatening texts when files from the combustion application manager, mobile service providers and other sources revealed that the messages were sent to numbers purchased by Clark in the registration application using an Apple device that had access to the address. IP of her house. The affidavit states that Clark in an interview with the FBI in February told agents that she did not know who sent the messages and suggested that a city official or one of her relatives might be responsible. She later admitted to sending the messages herself when confronted with electronic data pointing to her as the possible culprit, the affidavit said. Clark told agents she sent the messages because she feared her position as an inspector would be adversely affected if Person 1 took over as chief, the affidavit said. She also said that she felt that Individual 1 had achieved a lot based on her work, so she wanted the candidate to be “hit under a peg”. Among the texts Clark allegedly sent were messages that Individual 1 told investigators contained “personal material previously sent by Individual 1 to Clark using his personal email account.” Person 1 stated that the only person with whom he had shared this information was Clark. … Clark forwarded messages she had received on Individual 1, at least one of which she wrote, “has [him/her] bow out. “ At some point, Clark reportedly became personal. “Clark also showed person 1 a text message from an anonymous number containing a photo of person 1 and person 1’s wife taken at a wedding,” the jury said in a statement, adding that Clark told FBI agents said he had “received a text message containing a photo of the man 1 driving Clark’s car near a toll booth.” Clark also told FBI agents before she allegedly clarified that one or more of her Individual 1 colleagues, several of whom she named, could be responsible for the threats, according to the affidavit. But as soon as he thought about it, Clark shed some light on the wedding photo that had appeared in the threatening text chain. “Clark found the wedding photo on the Internet and took it using her mobile phone,” the statement said, paraphrasing what she allegedly confessed to investigators. “Clark sent a text message through the burner app that contained the image to Clark’s personal mobile phone and showed it to Individual 1. Clark told Individual 1 that she did not know who sent her the image.” It’s not just what Clark allegedly confessed during an interview with federal authorities on February 7, according to the affidavit. “Clark used burnout applications as Chicopee Public School Superintendent to contact students’ parents when they did not respond to calls from a public school-related number,” the affidavit said, paraphrasing the alleged mea. culpa her. The FBI was spotted investigating Clark’s home in Belchertown earlier Wednesday. The video, posted on the WWLP-TV website, shows FBI agents carrying containers of evidence from a house on the corner of Oak Ridge and Chestnut drives. Two wreaths and a flower exhibition were visible on the front porch of the house. Long before Wednesday’s Jan. 23 raid, Clark had e-mailed an FBI agent involved in the case and called for a specific sense of civic pride. The affidavit stated that Clark’s e-mail, sent that night at 11:33 p.m., stated that “regardless of which person, group of people or person [investigation] shows – it was not mentioned by us and a part of it was rather self-serving. …. I just feel that nothing and I repeat, nothing – will not help me personally. How does this help the city? “ This is breaking news that will be updated when more information is released. You can contact Travis Andersen at [email protected] Follow him on Twitter @TAGlobe.