The only conservative media outlet in Maine is unsympathetic to this poor man: the rest of the press, including the Boston Globe, was much kinder.

“Welcome to Maine; come for a visit, stay for a lifetime”

Maine Media’s Poster Child for Welfare Programs Arrested in Major State Police Fentanyl Ring Bust

When homeless encampments flourished throughout Maine’s largest city in 2023 and 2024, Maine’s newspaper reporters were eager to tell the sad story of down-on-their-luck Mainers who had been failed by the state’s generous social services.

In dozens of instances, they turned to one man—46-year-old Bruce Cavallaro—the quasi-mayor of whatever homeless camp the reporters were covering on any given day.

Tragically for Maine’s newspaper reporters, their favorite spokesperson for “Mainers experiencing homelessness” was arrested Thursday as part of a high-risk search warrant executed on the apartment unit that Maine State Police say had been transformed into the center of a narcotics trafficking ring.

The Maine Drug Enforcement Agency (MDEA) announced Wednesday the arrest of seven people, including media darling Cavallarro, connected to a suspected drug operation in apartment 402 of 658 Congress St in Portland. Police say they had been investigating the apartment for months due to reports of drug trafficking, threatening displays with weapons and disorderly conduct.

Prior to getting lugged for his role in the narcotics peddling conspiracy, Cavallaro received extensive coverage in Maine’s media outlets for living in Portland’s large homeless encampments.

Indeed, his ubiquity in photographs published by the Bangor Daily News, Portland Press Herald, Lewiston Sun Journal, Maine Public, and even the Boston Globe is such a highly unusual coincidence that one has to wonder whether Cavallaro secretly has a highly paid press agent.

In nearly every story covering Cavallaro, the legacy media outlets portrayed the now-incarcerated would-be squatter as a victim of the city’s policy of clearing the trash- and needle-filled campsites over the past two years.

Cavallaro’s friends in the Maine media never got the memo that he somehow found his way into more stable housing at 658 Congress St, an apartment building whose owner remains unclear.

But according to the MDEA, Cavallaro was the man renting the apartment around which the major narcotics investigation revolved. They said that the landlord had evicted Cavallaro, but he refused to leave.

Cavallaro was among the seven arrested after a search of the apartment by police on Wednesday resulted in the seizure of fentanyl, methamphetamine, crack cocaine and other drug paraphernalia.

…. Before this bad turn of luck, Cavallaro received glowing coverage, was included in photoshoots and frequently quoted in news articles while he was living outside in the city’s homeless encampments, and was taken on several occasions to be a spokesperson for the opposition to the city’s policy of “sweeping” the camps.

Portland saw several large homeless encampments sprout up in various locations throughout the city, with the camps reaching their greatest size in the summer, fall and winter of 2023 into 2024.

Particularly large encampments were at the Marginal Way Park-and-Ride, the Fore River Parkway and under the Casco Bay Bridge at Harborview Park.

Those encampments, which at their peak consisted of well over 75 tents each and were littered with needles, garbage and a large number of [stolen _ ED] bikes, were eventually cleared one-by-one by the city, amid protests from the Maine Democratic Socialists of America and other activist groups.

Stories featuring Bruce include:

Portland Press Herald:

Bangor Daily News:

Boston Globe:

NewsCenter Maine:

Maine Public:

….. According to public records obtained by the Maine Wire in 2023, Portland had spent 50 times more per person on General Assistance welfare than other Maine cities and consumed 73 percent of all GA spending.

A spokesperson for the city declined to confirm whether Cavallaro was a beneficiary of the city’s robust welfare programs, citing privacy protections.