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2014 Massachusetts governor's race: Steve Grossman releases behavioral health plan on same day as opponent Martha Coakley

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Several of Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate Steve Grossman's proposals involve investing more money into mental health care.

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Steve Grossman is announcing his own plan to improve behavioral health care on the same day as his opponent Martha Coakley rolled out hers.

Grossman, the state treasurer, and Coakley, the attorney general, are leading the field of Democrats competing for the governorship in 2014.

Coakley toured the Dimock Community Health Center in Roxbury on Monday morning and released a video about her brother’s suicide to draw attention to her proposals calling for increased funding for mental health services as well as methods to reduce the stigma, intervene early and provide more coordinated care for mental health patients.

Hours later, Grossman’s campaign sent out an email touting his own mental health- and substance abuse-related proposals. Grossman plans to speak about them Monday night at Faulker Hospital and Tuesday at an Association for Behavioral Healthcare meeting in Worcester.

Several of Grossman’s proposals involve investing more money into mental health care. He wants to fully implement a law, referred to as “Chapter 257” that increases the reimbursement rates for human service providers. He wants to increase reimbursement rates for mental health clinics and also increase the number of community placements available for mental health treatment. He would put $10 million into a new competitive grant program that gives schools and communities access to resources focused on prevention and awareness around mental health and substance abuse issues.

Grossman stressed the need to work with schools to educate students about drug addiction. He also wants to develop workplace programs that encourage counseling and reduce the stigma associated with mental health issues.

Grossman also touted an idea, previously advocated by Democratic gubernatorial candidate Joe Avellone, to create a task force with the six New England governors to coordinate efforts to address substance abuse and encourage people to seek treatment.

Grossman previously released a plan for criminal justice reform and in his announcement on Monday, he repeated some of those same ideas, such as freezing the expansion of prisons, investing in additional detoxification programs, and treating mental health and substance abuse as health rather than criminal justice issues.

Coakley, Grossman and Avellone are competing with former Homeland Security official Juliette Kayyem and former Medicare and Medicaid administrator Don Berwick for the Democratic nomination for governor.



So where is the missing Malaysia Airlines jet? Experts say the search could take a long time

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Since the start of the jet age in 1958, only a handful of jets have gone missing and not been found.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- In an age when people assume that any bit of information is just a click away, the thought that a jetliner could simply disappear over the ocean for more than two days is staggering. But Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is hardly the first reminder of how big the seas are, and of how agonizing it can be to try to find something lost in them.

It took two years to find the main wreckage of an Air France jet that plunged into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009. Closer to the area between Malaysia and Vietnam where Saturday's flight vanished, it took a week for debris from an Indonesian jet to be spotted in 2007. Today, the mostly intact fuselage still sits on the bottom of the ocean.

"The world is a big place," said Michael Smart, professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Queensland in Australia. "If it happens to come down in the middle of the ocean and it's not near a shipping lane or something, who knows how long it could take them to find?"

Amid the confusion, officials involved in the search say the Malaysian jet may have made a U-turn, adding one more level of uncertainty to the effort to find it. They even suggest that the plane could be hundreds of kilometers from where it was last detected.

Aviation experts say the plane will be found -- eventually. Since the start of the jet age in 1958, only a handful of jets have gone missing and not been found.

"I'm absolutely confident that we will find this airplane," Capt. John M. Cox, who spent 25 years flying for US Airways and is now CEO of Safety Operating Systems, said Monday. The modern pace of communications, where GPS features in our cars and smartphones tell us our location at any given moment, has set unreal expectations. "This is not the first time we have had to wait a few days to find the wreckage."

Based on what he's heard, Cox believes it's increasingly clear that the plane somehow veered from its normal flight path. He said that after the plane disappeared from radar, it must have been "intact and flew for some period of time. Beyond that, it's all speculation." If it had exploded midair along its normal flight path, "we would have found it by now."

Malaysian civil aviation chief Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, whose agency is leading a multinational effort to find the Boeing 777, said more than 1,000 people and at least 34 planes and 40 ships were searching a radius of 100 nautical miles (115 miles; 185 kilometers) around the last known location of Flight MH370. No signal has been detected since early Saturday morning, when the plane was at its cruising altitude and showed no sign of trouble.

Azharuddin said the search includes northern parts of the Malacca Strait, on the opposite side of the Malay Peninsula and far west of the plane's last known location. Azharuddin would not explain why crews were searching there, saying, "There are some things that I can tell you and some things that I can't."

Some aviation experts are already calling for airlines to update their cockpit technology to provide a constant stream of data -- via satellites -- back to the ground. Information about key system operations is already recorded on the flight data and voice recorders -- the so-called black boxes -- but as this crash shows is not immediately available. Such satellite uplinks would be costly and the benefit is debated.

Just about every major jet to disappear in the modern era has eventually been found. The rare exceptions didn't involve passengers.

In September 1990, a Boeing 727 owned by Faucett Airlines of Peru was ditched into the North Atlantic after running out of fuel on its way to Miami. The accident was attributed to poor pilot planning and the wreck was never recovered.

More mysterious was the disappearance of another 727 in Africa. It was being used to transport diesel fuel to diamond mines. The owners had numerous financial problems and one day, just before sunset, the plane took off without clearance and with its transponder turned off. It is believed to have crashed in the Atlantic Ocean. One theory, never proven, is that it was stolen so the owner could collect insurance.

"I can't think of a water crash in the jet age that hasn't been solved ," said Scott Hamilton, managing director of aviation consultancy Leeham Co.

The Malaysia Airlines jet had been headed from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. The 239 people aboard were mostly from China. In Beijing, passengers' relatives have complained that the airline has not been forthcoming with information, and that they've had to rely on news reports.

Some of those reports, however, have led to dead ends. Those false alarms appeared to leave searchers with little to go on.

The flight "was very high up in the air early in the morning, when it was still dark," Azharuddin said. "We have no witnesses on the ground and nobody on the plane can be contacted. The area is over the sea, so it's not as easy as that. There are a lot of constraints."

Whether the plane broke up in midair or crashed into the water, there would be some debris.

If the plane broke up "for some aerodynamic reason, like the wing fell off or there was a depressurization, there'd be big chunks of wing and fuselage all over the place. So it'd be very unlikely that it would just be destroyed and turned to dust," said Smart, the aerospace engineering professor.

He added that much of the wreckage may be at the bottom of the sea, which is 50 to 60 meters (165 to 195 feet) deep in the area where the plane was last detected.

The size of the debris field will be one of the first indicators of what happened, aviation experts say. A large, widespread field would signal the plane likely broke apart at a high elevation, perhaps because of a bomb or a massive airframe failure. A smaller field would indicate the plane probably fell intact, breaking up upon impact with the water.

Discovering the debris can take days.

A week after an Adam Air flight carrying 102 people vanished over Indonesian waters on Jan. 1, 2007, an Indonesian navy ship detected metal on the ocean floor. But it would take another two weeks for the U.S. Navy to pick up signals from the flight data and cockpit recorders, and seven months for the boxes to be recovered. The fuselage remains on the ocean floor, and Adam Air is now defunct.

The Malaysian Airlines jet could be less of a challenge than the Adam Air crash in one respect: It was last tracked over much shallower water.

But for now, the mystery is overwhelming.

"It's hard to imagine what could have caused it with these modern planes," Smart said.


Ten arrested during Worcester St. Patrick's Day Parade

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Ten people were arrested during Worcester's St. Patrick's Day Parade that saw 7,000 people line the parade route.

Worcester Police 
WORCESTER — Ten people were arrested during Worcester's St. Patrick's Day Parade that saw 7,000 people line the parade route.

"Most of the arrests made included disorderly conduct charges. Overall, the operation went well and officers ensured that those enjoying the parade were able to do so safely," said a representative of the Worcester Police Department.

Police did respond to a report of a man allegedly threatening another person with a gun. Worcester police said officers approached the man after getting a report about the threats. He was walking in a group headed north on Park Avenue, near Winfield Street, and threw the gun into the grass as officers approached.

Theodore Sullivan, 20, of Laurel Wood Road, Sterling, was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon, carrying a firearm without a license, and use of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Police also charged a juvenile and another man who reportedly became combative with officers, according to police.

The charges against the other seven people arrested at the parade included disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, resisting arrest and assault and battery on a police officer.

Over 7,000 people enjoyed Worcester's 32nd annual St. Patrick's Day parade on Sunday.

Gallery preview 

More than half of those arrested at 'Blarney Blowout' riot were not UMass students

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60 percent of those arrested at the Blarney Blowout appear to have no connection to the university.

AMHERST — A crosschecking of the list of those arrested Saturday at the “Blarney Blowout” with the University of Massachusetts student directory reveals a curious thing: more than half of those arrested do not appear to be UMass students.

UMass has received the lion’s share of negative publicity, locally and nationwide, for the alcohol-fueled riot involving thousands of people and tying up Amherst and UMass police for most of the day. But a review of names by The Republican / MassLive.com – the findings of which were confirmed by Amherst police and university officials Monday night – shows about 60 percent of those arrested were not UMass students.

Of the 60 people arrested, cited or summonsed, and named, by Amherst and UMass police as a result of Saturday's events, 35 would appear to have no connection to UMass.

Indeed, a broader search using student directories the other Five Colleges campuses, Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke and Smith, showed no students at any of those schools either.

In all, 20 UMass students, and one employee, were arrested, and four other students were summonsed to appear in court.

UMass spokesman Edward F. Blaguszewski said the campus has received a breakdown of student to non-student arrests Monday night by the Amherst police. He declined further comment.

University officials have promised UMass students who were arrested in the disturbance would be subject to campus disciple for violating the code of student conduct.

It goes without saying that any punitive measures under the code are applicable only to students. Non-students will only have to face punishment from the courts, provided they are found to be guilty.

What follows is a breakdown of the arrests and citations categorized according to each person's status with the university.

UMass students arrested or cited by Amherst police:

  • Sean F. Curran, 19, Attleboro, possession of alcohol under the age of 21, open container of alcohol;
  • Brittney R. Zecha, 19, Danvers possession of alcohol under the age of 21;
  • Ryan S. Young, 22, Wayne, N.J. open container of alcohol, and failure to disperse riot;
  • Jared Dawson, 21, Groton, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, assault and battery on a police officer, inciting a riot;
  • Thomas C. Donovan, 21, Holliston, disorderly conduct, failure to disperse riot;
  • Samuel Douglass, 20, Rehoboth, failure to disperse, riot, inciting a riot, disorderly conduct;
  • Ivan Rudovol, disorderly conduct, failure to disperse riot;
  • Steven Lundbohm, 20, Milton, disorderly conduct
  • Sara Munley, 19, possession of alcohol underage the age of 21 and disorderly conduct.
  • Calvin S. Diamond, 21, South Hadley, assault with a dangerous weapon, disorderly conduct, and violating the town’s nuisance house bylaw;
  • John J. Fitzgerald, 21, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct;
  • Cian G. Davoren, 22, Needham, failure to disperse, riot;
  • Molly H. Ryan, 21, riot failure to disperse.
  • Ariana Chapin, 23, Medford, cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Lauren Hague, 21, Cheshire, Conn., cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Robert C. Figliolia, 23, Forest Hills, N.Y., cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Andrew W. Murkidjanian, 23, Burlington, cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Meredith M. Willis, 20, Simsbury, Conn., possession of alcohol underage the age of 21, open container of alcohol;
  • Michael V. Sinopoli, 18, East Weymouth, possession of alcohol underage the age of 21, open container of alcohol.
  • Brennden Wood, 23, Wolcott, Conn. failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct;

UMass employee arrested:

  • Kyle C. Kielbasa, 28, Belchertown and charged him with disorderly conduct, being intoxicated and carrying a firearm, improper storage of a firearm, leaving a firearm in a vehicle.

UMass students summonsed to appear in court by Amherst police:

  • Nolan F. Garskovas, 19, Cambridge, possession of alcohol underage the age of 21;
  • Victor R. Silva, 23, Medford, open container of alcohol;
  • Alexander McFarland, 20, Belmont, possession of alcohol underage the age of 21;
  • Jack E. Bernardon, 21, Bedford, open container of alcohol.

Below is the list of those arrested or cited who appear to have no connection to the university.

Arrested by UMass police:

  • Sean Amaru, 21, of Falmouth, charging him with assault with a dangerous weapon - a beer bottle, disorderly conduct and resisting a police office making a lawful arrest;
  • Steven G. Hall, 22, of Nashua, N.H., charged with disorderly conduct;
  • Dana Mahar, Wolfeboro, N.H., 22, charged with disorderly conduct.
Arrested or cited by Amherst police:
  • Robert E. Finn, 21, open container of alcohol
  • Edward Estey, 23, Beverly, failure to disperse riot.
  • Owen McGowan, 19, disorderly conduct, inciting a riot, assault and battery on a police officer;
  • Robert P. McTaggart, 24, Agawam, open container of alcohol;
  • Conor F. Delaney, 19, Westwood, open container of alcohol;
  • Brendon Struck, 24, South Hadley, open container of alcohol;
  • Andrew Montano, 20, Hartford, possession of alcohol under the age of 21, open container of alcohol;
  • Hal C. Wingo, 19, Avon Conn., possession of alcohol underage the age of 21, open container of alcohol;
  • Stephen E. Gage, 20, East Falmouth, disorderly conduct, inciting a riot, assault with a dangerous weapon, resisting arrest, failure to disperse riot, assault and battery on a police officer;
  • Joshua N. Scott, 21, Springfield, disorderly conduct, inciting a riot, resisting arrest.
  • Steven Lundbohm, 20, Milton, disorderly conduct
  • Ryan J. Mack, 22, Longmeadow, assault with a dangerous weapon, disorderly conduct.
  • Gabriela A. Boudreau, 18, Arlington, riot, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct;
  • Zach R. Bodine, 23, New Bedford, assault and battery on a police officer, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct riot, failing to disperse;
  • Alec Rodrigue, 19, Concord, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest;
  • Garret Dube, 21, Salem, failure to disperse, riot;
  • Joshua Stambovsky, 22, Longmeadow, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest;
  • Jackson D. Hurley, 19, Foxboro, failing to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest;
  • Charles Clements, 19, Hopkinton, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct;
  • Brett Martin, 18, Hopkinton, failure to disperse, riot, disorderly conduct;
  • Lyle H. Baker, 20, failure to disperse, riot, resisting arrest;
  • Timothy Sughure, 20, Plainville, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct;
  • Richard Leahy, 20, failure to disperse riot.
  • Carrick D. Driscoll, 21, for open container of alcohol.
  • Ariana Chapin, 23, Medford, cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Kolin Campbell, 19, Norton, possession of alcohol under the age the age of 21, open container of alcohol.
  • Christopher A. Sinvil, 19, Windham, N.H., breaking and entering, misdemeanor, trespassing.
  • Jesse T. Duchesne, 19, Lowell, and charged him with possession of alcohol underage the age of 21, open container of alcohol.
  • John E. Tevnan, 20, Weymouth, possession of alcohol underage the age of 21, open container of alcohol.
  • Shayne W. O’Neil, 22, Burlington, cited on a nuisance house violation;
  • Max Smith Jr., 20, Burlington for possession of alcohol underage the age of 21;
  • Ryan E. Souto, 20, Cambell Hall, N.Y., possession of alcohol underage the age of 21.

UMass Blarney Blowout 2014: Laughter, smiles gone as students arraigned in connection with Amherst riot

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About half of the 73 defendants charged in connection with Saturday's Blarney Blowout were arraigned in Eastern Hampshire District Court on Monday. A second batch is expected to be arraigned Tuesday.

BELCHERTOWN — Gone were the smiling faces, the laughter, the gaiety.

The local students who showed up for arraignment Monday in Eastern Hampshire District Court appeared sullen and serious as they sat in the packed Belchertown courtroom, waiting for their names to be called. At least three dozen young defendants were arraigned on charges ranging from alcohol offenses to assaulting police officers in connection with the Blarney Blowout, an annual pre-St. Patrick's Day gathering in Amherst that boiled over into a full-scale riot Saturday afternoon.

At least 73 young defendants, many of them local college students, are expected to be arraigned in connection with the event, which resulted in injuries to police and participants and prompted a public rebuke from UMass Amherst Chancellor Kumble R. Subaswammy. Another batch of defendants is expected to be arraigned Tuesday, according to Clerk-magistrate William P. Nagle Jr., who said the court simply couldn't handle the sheer volume of arrests in a single session.

Many of the students who were charged with lesser offenses, including underage drinking and possessing open containers of alcohol, opted to pay fines and settle their cases on the spot. But those charged with more serious crimes, including assault and battery on a police officer, inciting a riot and failure to disperse during a riot, were ordered to return for pretrial conferences late next month.

While Saturday was a day of high drama in Amherst, where upwards of 4,000 young people consumed large amounts of alcohol and clashed with riot police, Monday was the polar opposite – a day of legal procedures that played out in a sober setting dominated by men and women in business suits, attorneys, court officers and law enforcement officials.

Judge Robert Gordon handled the heavy caseload stemming from the Blarney Blowout, an occasion that's ostensibly a celebration of Irishness, but really has become an annual embarrassment for the college town known for its hard-partying ways. Subaswammy said students who participated in the violence, which injured four police officers, "have brought shame on our fine university."

The list of defendants' names – Donovan, Delaney, Curran, Costello, Fitzgerald, Hurley and McGowan, among numerous other Irish surnames – could have doubled for Boston's social register, circa 1960.

Some defendants approached Gordon alone and asked the court to provide legal counsel, while others had parents accompany them to court and told the judge they'd hire their own lawyer.

Among those charged with more serious crimes was Owen McGowan, who pleaded not guilty to a felony count of inciting a riot and to misdemeanor counts of disorderly conduct and assaulting a police officer. He was ordered to return for an April 29 pretrial conference.

After the morning arraignments were over, some defendants and their parents declined to talk to reporters as they hurried to their cars and SUVs in the court's packed parking lot.


UPDATE: A full list of defendants' names appears here.

Harsh winter leads to fall in Pioneer Valley home sales; median price rises

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The median price rose 2.6 percent from $165,750 in February 2013 and $170,000 last month, according to the Realtor Association of Pioneer Valley.

SPRINGFIELD — Sales of single-family homes in the Pioneer Valley fell 5.8 percent last month, in part due to harsh winter weather.

"It's tough to get consumers out to look at homes, let alone purchase a home," said Robert P. Molta, owner/broker of Real Living Reality Professionals with 100 Realtors in five local offices. "That will rebound in the spring."

There were 211 homes sold in Franklin, Hampden and Hampshire counties in February, according to statistics released Tuesday by the Realtor Association of Pioneer Valley. There were 224 homes sold in February 2013.

The median price brought by those homes rose 2.6 percent, continuing a trend. The median price was $165,750 in February 2013 and $170,000 last month, also according to the Realtor Association of Pioneer Valley. Taking a longer view, the median sales price is down 1.2 percent from February 2009, when it was $172,000.

012114 patrick nolan.JPGPatrick Nolan 

"I was rather impressed that we are continuing the price increase," said Patrick Nolan, president of the Realtor Association.

Nolan, owner of five Century 21 offices in Greater Springfield, said open houses this weekend drew big crowds and he has one agent with three competing offers on one house.

"We are in the spring market now," he said. "There is a lot of positive news. You can buy a house cheaper than you can rent. We're getting boomerang buyers, people who lost a home and have cleaned up their credit. We are getting young people who have worked hard to maintain and build good credit."

Molta said two other factors slowing sales for February are a lack of inventory of homes for sale and a recent uptick in interest rates from historic lows.

Sales numbers:

  • Pending sales in the Pioneer Valley are up 8 percent from a year ago, from 338 in February 2013 to 365 in February 2014.
  • Statewide, the number of single-family homes put under agreement in February was up 20.4 percent compared to the same time last year: 3,587 homes in 2014 from 2,980 homes in 2013. It was the 12th straight month of year-over-year increases, according to the Massachusetts Association of Realtors.

Inventory:

The Realtor Association inventory in the Pioneer Valley is down 1.2 percent from 1,954 single-family homes for sale in February 2013 to 1,930 for sale last month.

Molta said cold weather and snow have slowed building projects and fewer people put homes up for sale in winter when it is harder to clean them up and present them to best advantage.

"But with that said, it is a fantastic time for a seller to put their home on the market," he said. "There is a small selection of homes out there."

Mortgage interest rates:

The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is 4.37 percent, according to FreddieMac.com. That's up from 3.51 percent a year ago this time.

While relatively low historically, a 4.37 percent loan can be daunting to someone expecting a rate in the 3 percent range.

"It takes some time for the consumer to adjust. It makes a difference for that first-time home buyer," Molta said. "And with lending standards getting tougher, it takes consumers some time to adjust."

Year-to-year comparisons by county:

(Note that percentage changes often don't mean much because of the relatively small number of homes sold in Franklin and Hampshire counties)

Hampden County:

  • Sales down 14.2 percent from 162 to 139.
  • Median price up 5.9 percent from $156,750 to $166,000.

Hampshire County:

  • Sales are up 14.6 percent from 41 to 47.
  • Median prices are down 4.2 percent from $240,000 to $230,000.

Franklin County:

  • Sales are up 19 percent from 21 to 25.
  • Median price is down 11.4 percent from $175,000 to $155,000.

Police looking for suspects in brutal beating on Red Line train in Boston (VIDEO)

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Transit Police are looking for suspects involved in an altercation on a Red Line train Sunday.

BOSTON — Transit Police are looking for suspects caught on tape in a brutal beating of other passengers on a Red Line train Sunday.

The video, seen above, shows a physical altercation between six individuals that appears to spiral out of control while the train is stopped at Broadway Station.

The assaults stemmed from a verbal disagreement between two groups of passengers.

The police are looking for people who match the following descriptions:

- 18 to 25-year-old white female, blonde hair, wearing blue jeans and a blue shirt carrying a flowered pocketbook - 18 to 25-year-old white female, brown hair, wearing blue jeans, black shirt white scarf, boots and a black purse

- 15 to 20-year-old white male, wearing jeans, royal blue hooded sweatshirt

- 30 to 40-year-old white male,wearing a red jacket and green sneakers

- 30 to 40-year-old white male, wearing blue jeans, black sweater, black shoes, black jacket

- 40 to 50-year-old white male, short hair, wearing jeans and a grey light weight jacket

Those with any information are encouraged to contact the Transit Police at 617-222-1050.

Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse suspends use of city-issued vehicle, will get rental or buy a car; also calls on state to appoint receiver for Geriatric Authority

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The mayor said the state take-over of the Geriatric Authority is necessary to ensure residents are taken care of and then moved to another facility.

Updated at 6:49 p.m. Tuesday, March 11 to include additional comments from Mayor Alex Morse about the early Saturday incident involving his car and cousin being arrested, along with details about the plight of the Geriatric Authority.

HOLYOKE -- Mayor Alex B. Morse said Tuesday he will suspend use of the city car that has been issued to him, following his cousin's arrest for drunken driving while operating it Saturday. Morse said he will consider options like renting a car or buying his own for personal use.

Addressing another controversy, Morse also said he asked the office of state Attorney General Martha Coakley to appoint a receiver to run the soon-to-close Holyoke Geriatric Authority. The nursing home at 45 Lower Westfield Road has lost its food vendor, leaving only two to three weeks of food in its kitchen for 71 residents, and will run out of funding to meet payroll for its 120 employees in a few weeks, he said.

In a press conference in his City Hall office, Morse said he understood why there's a flurry of questions surrounding the arrest, given his position.

"Obviously, as the mayor of the city, the buck stops with me. I take full responsibility for the incident," Morse said.

Nicholas Duclos, 22, of 83 Beacon St., Holyoke, a cousin with whom Morse was socializing at Bishop's Lounge in Northampton, pleaded not guilty to drunken driving and other charges that included driving with a suspended license Monday in Northampton District Court.

Police said Duclos was stopped about 12:30 a.m. Saturday after he drove onto the Nagle Walkway near the former Union Station restaurant off Pleasant Street.

Morse said he was out with friends socially Friday night into Saturday morning at a dance party at Bishop's Lounge on Strong Avenue in Northampton. He noticed the jacket pocket where he'd placed his car keys was empty. His jacket was with others' garments in the lounge, he said, though not an official coat-checking station.

Morse -- in his first round of accepting questions about the incident involving his city-issued car -- reiterated what he said in police reports about the arrest, that Duclos took his keys and drove the car, in search of food, without his permission.

"He asked me earlier in the night for the car and I said no," Morse said.

Duclos said in the police report he used the car with Morse's permission as he had previously.

Morse acknowledged that Duclos and others have driven the car -- a Ford Taurus issued through the Police Department -- with Morse as a passenger and with Morse's permission if the mayor had to be on the phone or doing other work en route to an event.

As for whether he was allowed to use the city-issued car for any personal use, aside from driving to and from home, Morse said City Solicitor Heather Egan is exploring that and other issues related to use of the vehicle.

Nevertheless, he said, he will cease using the car. He likely will rent a car or perhaps buy his own, said Morse: "I don't own a personal car."

Morse said he drank a martini at the social event with friends Friday at 10:30 p.m. at Bishop's Lounge on Strong Avenue in Northampton and had planned to be OK to drive home at 1:30 a.m.

"I had a drink at Bishop's Lounge. I wasn't planning on driving until 1:30 a.m. I've never driven intoxicated," Morse said.

He paid the $176 for the tow and impoundment fee out of his own pocket, not using city funds, to retrieve the vehicle, he said.

The authority is scheduled close on May 13 under a plan proposed by the authority board of directors and approved on Friday by the state Department of Public Health, he said.

Family members of residents said they have received letters from the authority that said residents would be transferred to the most appropriate nursing home in a 25-mile radius.

The state will monitor to ensure residents are appropriately relocated, Anne Roach, spokeswoman for the Department of Public Health, said Friday.

The facility has run out of funding after experiencing years of financial struggle. While some officials blame that on government reimbursements covering only 75 percent of costs, others cite mismanagement, such as shortcomings detailed in a >state audit released in September.

"The Geriatric Authority has obviously been mismanaged for many years," Morse said.

State take-over is needed to ensure residents are cared for in the interim while plans are made to transfer them to other nursing homes, said Morse, who said he has lost faith in the authority board of directors to make decisions about the facility.

The authority board continues trying to borrow money from a lender to keep the facility running, despite seeking and getting approval to begin closing, and for which it requires approval of the City Council, Morse said.

Authority Board Chairman Fred Glidden said last week the talks had continued about pursuing funding.

Glidden couldn't be reached Tuesday for comment immediately about Morse's asking the attorney general to install a receiver at the Geriatric Authority.

"I've unfortunately come to the conclusion that the board of directors is no longer capable," Morse said.

Morse said he contacted the attorney general's office and had yet to hear a definitive answer to his request that the state appoint a receiver to oversee the authority.

The authority has 80 nursing-home beds and 80 day-care slots for elderly people. It is overseen by a board consisting of three people appointed by the City Council and three appointed by the mayor, with those six choosing a seventh member.

Besides Glidden, board members are Jacqueline Watson, Joseph T. O'Neill, James Brunault, Raymond P. Murphy, Jr. and Catina Galanes Grass. Former city councilor Patricia C. Devine was the seventh member but resigned last month.

Board members are eligible for yearly stipends of $4,000 each.


Three Springfield residents deny gun, drug and stolen property charges

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Judge John S. Ferrara set bail at $50,000 cash or $500,000 surety for Sir Howard Sanders and Diaz. Drena Sanders has been released on $1,000 bail.

SPRINGFIELD - Three city residents each denied 11 charges - including seven gun crimes and two drug crimes - Tuesday in Hampden Superior Court.

Sir Howard Sanders, 23; Rey Manuel Diaz, 21; and Drena Sanders, 26, are each charged with four counts of possession of a large capacity feeding device, three counts of possession of a firearm without a firearms identification card; two counts of receiving stolen property (guns) over $250; and a count each of possession of Oxycontin with intent to distribute and distribution of marijuana.

All three - who were arrested Dec. 6 - live at 52 Clantoy St., according to court records.

Judge John S. Ferrara set bail at $50,000 cash or $500,000 surety for Sir Howard Sanders and Diaz. Drena Sanders has been released on $1,000 bail.


New York man arrested in connection with Stockbridge bank robbery

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Stockbridge police and the Massachusetts State Police have since obtained an arrest warrant for Christopher Blair in connection with unarmed robbery, larceny, and assault and battery charges.

STOCKBRIDGE - A Hillsdale, N.Y. man is in custody as a suspect in the robbery of a Stockbridge bank after he was apprehended by New York State police Monday night when they spotted him driving a truck that matched the description of the vehicle seen fleeing the bank three hours earlier, police said.

Christopher G. Blair, 34, was stopped Monday night at about 6:45 p.m. on Anthony Street in Hillsdale after a New York state trooper spotted his truck, a late model blue Chevrolet pickup with a green cap, and noticed it matched a description of the vehicle broadcast following the robbery of Lee Bank, 3 Elm St., Stockbridge, just before 4 p.m., police said.

Blair also matched the description of the suspect in the robbery, police said. He was taken into custody as a fugitive from justice and Stockbridge police were contacted, police said.

Stockbridge police and the Massachusetts State Police have since obtained an arrest warrant for Blair in connection with unarmed robbery, larceny, and assault and battery charges.

At his arraignment Tuesday on the fugitive charge in Livingston, N.Y., court, Judge Robert Moore ordered Blair to be held without the right to bail while he awaits extradition back to Massachusetts to face charges in connection with the robbery.

Hillsdale, N.Y., is roughly 18 miles away from Stockbridge.


View Stockbridge bank robbed, suspect arrested in New York. in a larger map

DNA taken from murder suspect Edwin Alemany has possible ties to Amy Lord case and others, prosecutor says

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Preliminary DNA evidence ties Alemany to three attacks, including the murder of Wilbraham native Amy Lord.

BOSTON - Preliminary DNA evidence shows a possible tie of Edwin Alemany to three of the attacks he is charged with committing, including the murder of Wilbraham native Amy Lord, according to a motion filed Tuesday by Assistant District Attorney John Pappas.

The motion was filed as the state is continuing to process forensic evidence relating to Alemany, 29, who is accused of murdering Lord and attacking three other women.

Pappas asked Suffolk County Superior Court Judge Diane Kottmyer on Tuesday to allow the state to take a cheek swab from Alemany, which will allow detectives to develop a DNA profile.

Alemany's attorneys agreed, and two detectives followed Alemany out of the courtroom to take the sample.

"There's more forensics to be done," Pappas said after court.

Lord, 24, was living in South Boston and working for an Internet marketing company in July when she was beaten, kidnapped, forced to withdraw money from ATMs and murdered. Alemany was charged with her murder and with three other assaults on women in Boston. Two occurred within hours of Lord's murder; the third happened in September 2012, but Alemany was charged in that case only after his arrest in the Lord case.

Prosecutors had said previously that they have forensic evidence. The motion filed by Pappas says prosecutors took a DNA sample off a water bottle Alemany drank from during an interview with the police. But the state now needs to take a sample directly from Alemany's body to verify the findings and produce evidence that is admissible in court.

The motion says that based on the sample from water bottle, Alemany was "œa possible source" of DNA that was found on the jeans of a 21-year-old woman who Alemany is accused of stabbing 18 hours after Lord was murdered.

Alemany was also deemed "œthe major contributor" to a DNA profile taken off a baseball hat left at the scene of the September 2012 assault, in which Alemany is believed to have attacked a woman from behind and choked her before taking her handbag. Prosecutors also have as evidence blood stains from Alemany's sneakers, and found that both Alemany and Lord were "œa possible source" of the blood stains.

2013 amy lord.jpegAmy Lord 

Alemany was represented in court by attorney Michelle Hubbard, who referred questions to attorney Jeffrey Denner. Denner told The Republican after the hearing that he has decided whether to use the insanity defense, but he is not prepared to reveal that information.

"I've said before, I will take a look at all the evidence as it comes in, see everything that's there, and make a determination after I've seen all the evidence to how we proceed," Denner said.

Alemany's parents and sister attended the hearing but declined to speak to the press. Lord's family did not appear to be present.

Alemany sat at the defense table in handcuffs, wearing a blue sweatshirt and a necklace with a cross on it. He did not speak during the brief court proceedings.

Alemany has a lengthy criminal record and also has a history of mental illness. He has been housed at Bridgewater State Hospital since his arrest in July, which is the state's facility for those in the criminal system with mental illness. The defense is likely to hinge on Alemany's state of mind.

Pappas said in court that he has already presented 2,500 pages of discovery to Alemany's attorneys, and expects to turn over another 1,500 pages. The information relates to all four attacks, which are being tried as a single case.

Author Joe McGinniss, whose books included 'Fatal Vision' and 'Going to Extremes,' was writing until the end

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Eventually, Joe McGinniss merged the story of his cancer treatment with tales from his early days in journalism.

PELHAMJoe McGinniss' last project was supposed to have been close to home. How close? The Hampshire County Courthouse is maybe 15 miles from the Pelham house where McGinniss lived with his wife and fellow writer, Nancy Doherty.

2014 joe mcginnis.jpgJoe McGinniss 

The book was to be titled “15 Gothic Street” and would have chronicled a year at Hampshire Superior Court.” McGinniss hoped to tell the stories of the victims, defendants, witnesses and families who passed through the courthouse doors in search of justice during that time. He also had his sharp writer’s eye on the folks who work there.

For part of that year, 2012, McGinniss sat in on a number of court proceedings. He published a magazine piece on the Cara Rintala murder trial, but the book project fell victim to the Internet’s grip on the publishing world and it was dropped before the year was up. In the midst of this, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer.

In the four decades prior to that, McGinniss helped spark the participatory journalism revolution with a string of bestselling nonfiction books that included himself as a character. He felt he had one more book in him, a work on his adventure with prostate cancer, but the disease caught up to him before he could finish it and he died Monday at UMass Memorial Hospital in Worcester. McGinniss was 71.

McGinniss made his name with the 1968 breakthrough “The Selling of the President.” The book, which described the marketing of Richard Nixon during the 1968 presidential campaign, landed him on The New York Times bestseller list and made him an overnight success at the tender age of 26.

Over the course of 40 years, McGinniss went on to published a dozen works, among them “Going to Extremes,” about the people and natural grandeur of Alaska, “Fatal Vision,” about former Green Beret Jeffrey McDonald, who was convicted of killing his wife and two young daughters, “The Miracle of Castel di Sangro,” about an Italian soccer team that came to be like family to the author, and most, recently, “The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin,” published in 2011.

Never shy about stating his opinions, McGinniss was a controversial figure in the writing world. Some other writers called him out for turning on McDonald, who had hired McGinniss to tell his story only to have the author conclude he was guilty. While researching the Palin book, McGinniss moved into a vacant home next door to the Palins in Wasilla, Alaska. He was skewered for this by right-wing pundits.

Doherty said Tuesday that much of the criticism of her husband was unjust.

“Joe had high standards about what was on and off the record,” she said. “He did take his lumps, but a lot of it was unfair.”

The couple moved to Pelham in 2007 after living for a while in Williamstown. A New York native, McGinniss went to the College of the Holy Cross and began his career in journalism at The Worcester Telegram. During that career, McGinniss traveled the world, from Alaska to Australia. He was assigned to write a book about the O.J. Simpson trial but returned the $1 million advance, calling the verdict “a farce.” He was also on the job at The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles when Sen. Robert Kennedy was assassinated on June 5, 1968.

After being diagnosed with prostate cancer, McGinniss knew his time was limited. Nonetheless, he continued writing, using his ordeal as material for a book tentatively called “The Last Chapter,” or “Fifteen Months” (the amount of time he was told he had left). The family talked him out of both working titles.

“We were down on that,” Doherty said. “We didn’t want it to be his last chapter.”

Eventually, McGinniss merged the story of his cancer treatment with tales from his early days in journalism. Doherty estimates he wrote 50,000 words before he died. She hopes to shape the material into publishable form.

Doherty said life with McGinniss was never boring.

“He was always on to the next adventure,” she said. “We had a lot of laughs.”

In addition to Doherty, McGinniss leaves his first wife, Chris Cooke McGinniss; their three children, Christine Marque, Suzanne Boyer and Joe McGinniss Jr.; his two children with Doherty, Matthew McGinniss and James McGinniss; and seven grandchildren: Dylan, Lauren and Carly Boyer; Sebastien, Cecilia and Samuel Marque; and Julien McGinniss. The family is planning a memorial service in New York and a private function for friends and close associates in Pelham, but the details have not yet been decided.


Jury finds Springfield not liable in wrongful demolition lawsuit

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The city claimed it tore down the building after the owner, Tykie Greene, failed to make necessary renovations.

SPRINGFIELD — A Hampden Superior Court jury has cleared the city of liability in a lawsuit that accused it of negligence in tearing down a commercial building in Indian Orchard.

Tykie M. Greene, of Springfield, who owned the building at 1279 Worcester St., had sued for $233,834 in damages in alleging negligence on the city’s part for the March 2008 demolition. A two-day trial ended last week.

Greene, in the civil suit, claimed that renovations of the condemned property were ‘substantially complete,” but the city failed to remove the property from the demolition list. The suit also accused the city of improper notice in advance of demolition.

Associate City Solicitor Anthony Wilson, who represented the city in the case, said there had been little or no renovations done, and the city acted properly in demolishing a blighted, condemned building, and with proper notice.

“This case is typical of all demolition,” Wilson said Tuesday. “The city has a process that is articulated in statute, and we follow that process. We are aggressive in remediating these blighted properties.”

The 14-member jury “took 20 minutes at most” in finding the city not liable in the case, Wilson said. Judge Edward J. McDonough presided over the case and Greene was represented by lawyer Scott Hibbert, who agreed the jury decision did not take long.

Greene had received a building permit in May 2007 for renovations, but it was rescinded months later for not proceeding in good faith, Wilson said. Greene had bought the property in November 2006, according to the suit.

The Building Department issued a “stop work” order, dated Jan. 30, 2008, saying the work being done was in violation of the building code. In the suit, Greene said he informed the city that the work was “substantially complete,” and that it was inspected and an occupancy certificate was issued.

Wilson said an occupancy permit had been issued mistakenly in March 2008 by the city, around the time of the demolition.

However, letters had previously been sent to Greene at two different addresses, notifying him that he had failed to meet city requirements, had failed to renovate the property, and that it was slated for demolition, Wilson said.

The letters in November 2007 and January 2008 “told him he needed to come in with a comprehensive plan, and he never did,” Wilson said.

The amount of damages sought by Greene included $19,344 for the purchase price and expenses, $7,500 listed as “repairs,” $20,000 for plan fee/architect, and $180,000 sought for new construction..

Hibbert declined comment except to refer to the allegations in the suit. The defendants were listed as the city of Springfield and senior building inspector Mark E. Hebert.


Malaysia Airlines flew hundreds of miles off course, military radar shows

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Civil aviation chief Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said the search remained "on both sides" of Malaysia.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- The missing Boeing 777 jetliner changed course over the sea, crossed Malaysia and reached the Strait of Malacca -- hundreds of miles from its last position recorded by civilian authorities, Malaysian military officials said Tuesday, citing military radar data.

The development added confusion and mystery into one of most puzzling aviation incidents of recent time, and it has raised questions about why the Malaysia Airlines flight apparently was not transmitting signals detectable by civilian radar, why its crew was silent about the course change and why no distress calls were sent after it turned back.

Many experts have been working on the assumption there was a catastrophic event on the flight -- such as an explosion, engine failure, terrorist attack, extreme turbulence, pilot error or even suicide. The director of the CIA said in Washington that he still would not rule out terrorism.

Flight MH370, carrying 239 people, took off from Kuala Lumpur at 12:41 a.m. Saturday, bound for Beijing. Authorities initially said its last contact with ground controllers was less than an hour into the flight at a height of 35,000 feet, when the plane was somewhere between the east coast of Malaysia and Vietnam.

But local newspaper Berita Harian quoted Malaysia's air force chief, Gen. Rodzali Daud, as saying that radar at a military base had tracked the jet as it changed its course, with the final signal at 2:40 a.m. showing the plane to be near Pulau Perak at the northern approach to the Strait of Malacca, a busy waterway that separates the western coast of Malaysia and Indonesia's Sumatra island. It was flying slightly lower, at around 29,528 feet, he said.

"After that, the signal from the plane was lost," he was quoted as saying.

A high-ranking military official involved in the investigation confirmed the report. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to disclose sensitive information.

Authorities had said earlier the plane may have tried to turn back to Kuala Lumpur, but they expressed surprise it would do so without informing ground control.

The search was initially focused hundreds of miles (kilometers) to the east, in waters off Vietnam, with more than 40 planes and ships from at least 10 nations searching the area without finding a trace of the missing aircraft.

Earlier Tuesday, Malaysia Airlines said in a statement that search-and-rescue teams had expanded their scope to the Strait of Malacca. An earlier statement said the western coast of Malaysia was "now the focus," but the airline subsequently said that phrase was an oversight. It didn't elaborate.

Civil aviation chief Azharuddin Abdul Rahman said the search remained "on both sides" of Malaysia.

Attention will now likely focus on the condition of the Boeing 777's electronic systems as it charted its new course back toward and then across Malaysia.

A radar antenna on the ground sends electromagnetic waves that reflect from the surface of an aircraft and almost instantly return, allowing controllers to calculate how far away a plane is. The antenna is mounted on a rotating platform, sending and receiving signals 360 degrees across the sky, enabling the plane's direction to be tracked by constant sweeps.

The system has limitations: Military and civilian air traffic controllers know something is moving through the air but might not know what it is. So planes were outfitted with transponders that can send a unique signal back to the radar station, which can differentiate them from other aircraft. From this signal, controllers can tell the flight number, heading, speed and altitude.

Radar stations at airports are designed to track planes up to about 60 miles. They are used to help sequence and space landing aircraft. Another series of stations called air route surveillance radar can track planes 200-250 miles away, depending on weather and the age of the technology. Station locations are selected to allow for a slight overlap so planes in heavy-traffic areas are never out of reach of radar.

While radar black spots can exist, experts said the plane's transponders normally would have been emitting signals that would have been picked up by civilian radar. The fact that it apparently wasn't detected suggests they were either disabled or switched off. Planes with no transponders can still be tracked by radar.

Low-flying planes can sometimes avoid radar detection. There is no set height they must be under, but the farther away they are from a radar station, the higher they can be because of the angle of the radar antenna and the curvature of the Earth.

Malaysian police chief Khalid Abu Bakar, who has been ordered to look at possible criminal aspects in the disappearance of Flight MH370, said hijacking, sabotage and issues related to the pilots' psychological health were all being considered.

An Australian TV station reported that the first officer on the missing plane, Fariq Abdul Hamid, had invited two women into the cockpit during a flight two years ago. One of the women, Jonti Roos, described the encounter on Australia's "A Current Affair."

Roos said she and a friend were allowed to stay in the cockpit during the entire one-hour flight on Dec. 14, 2011, from Phuket, Thailand, to Kuala Lumpur. She said the arrangement did not seem unusual to the plane's crew.

"Throughout the entire flight, they were talking to us and they were actually smoking throughout the flight," said Roos, who didn't immediately reply to a message sent to her via Facebook. The second pilot on the 2011 flight was not identified

Malaysia Airlines said it took the allegations very seriously, which it said it was not able to confirm, adding: "We are in the midst of a crisis, and we do not want our attention to be diverted."

Also Tuesday, Malaysian and international police authorities said two people who boarded Flight MH370 with stolen passports were Iranians who had bought tickets to Europe, where they planning to migrate. Their presence on the flight had raised speculation of a possible terrorist link.

Malaysian police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said investigators had determined one was a 19-year-old Iranian, Pouria Nourmohammadi Mehrdad. "We believe he is not likely to be a member of any terrorist group," Khalid said.

Interpol identified the second man as Seyed Mohammed Reza Delavar, a 29-year-old Iranian, and released an image of the two boarding at the same time. Interpol Secretary General Ronald K. Noble said the two men traveled to Malaysia on their Iranian passports, then apparently switched to their stolen Austrian and Italian documents.

CIA Director John Brennan said in Washington that Malaysian authorities "are looking very carefully at what went wrong; you know, if these individuals got onto the plane with these stolen passports, why they were not aware of it."

He also said there has been "a lot of speculation right now -- some claims of responsibility that have not been, you know, confirmed or corroborated at all. We are looking at it very carefully."

Asked if terrorism could be ruled out, Brennan replied, "No, I wouldn't rule it out. Not at all."

The United States has sent two Navy ships, at least one of which is equipped with helicopters, and a Navy P-3C Orion plane that can detect small debris in the water. It said the Malaysian government had done a "tremendous job" organizing the land and sea effort.

Vietnamese planes and ships also are a major component of the effort.

Lt. Gen. Vo Van Tuan, deputy chief of staff of Vietnamese People's Army, said authorities on land had also been ordered to search for the plane, which could have crashed into mountains or jungle. He said military units near the border with Laos and Cambodia had been instructed to search their regions.

"So far we have found no signs ... so we must widen our search on land," he said.


Ludlow selectmen vote to suspend indicted police officer Thomas Foye without pay

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Selectmen chair William E. Rooney called the vote the toughest of his six years on the board.

Audio: Listen to Foye's statement to the Board of Selectmen »


LUDLOW — The Board of Selectmen on Tuesday night voted to suspended indicted police Lt. Thomas Foye without pay, effective immediately, pending the outcome of his court case on charges of the theft of drugs from a police evidence locker last year.

The vote was 5-0.

Foye had been suspended with pay since his arrest, but with a Hampden Superior Court grand jury handing down a 5-count indictment last week, the board is allowed under state law to make the suspension without pay.

Foye and his attorney, Michael Clancy of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, were present.

At the start of the meeting, Foye asked if the board would be willing to go into executive session so that he might speak in private about particulars of his case without the press and public having access. When the board opposed that, he sat silent during the discussion, asking only that he be allowed to make a brief statement afterward.

In his statement, Foye, 49, made his first public comments on the case since his arrest, and gave a hint at the particular circumstances that led to his arrest and suspension and cost him his reputation and what had been a distinguished career in law enforcement.

He thanked the board for their time and consideration and said he would have his day in court to explain himself.

"I love this town and spent a lot of good years with a lot of good, dedicated service," he said. "I went into surgery a hero and came out a drug addict, and I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy."

He apologized to the selectmen for placing them in this position.

"I love this town and respect all of you," he said. Then he said he would work to reclaim his reputation.

"I'm not done with this. I'm going to help someone. Someday you'll be proud to say you know me again, and proud that I'm from this town," he said.

When he finished, he left the room and headed for the elevator. Clancy said he would have no further comment.

Selectmen chair William E. Rooney said the Foye fallout since August has been the toughest issue in his six years on the board. "You're my friend, my former neighbor. I know your family very well. I'm not enjoying this," he said.

But the charges against Foye are very serious, and the selectmen have a responsibility to act in the town's best interests, he said.

Foye was charged with tampering with evidence, theft of drugs from a dispensary and possession of a class B substance, cocaine, according to the office of Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley.

He is scheduled to be arraigned in Hampden Superior Court at a later date.

Foye, a 25-year police veteran, was arrested Aug. 15 at the Ludlow police station by members of the Massachusetts State Police assigned to the office of Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni.

His arrest was the result of an internal investigation within the department after some drug evidence was found to be missing. Ludlow police contacted the Hampden district attorney, and the DA referred the case to the state Attorney General’s Office.

Foye was arrested after he entered the evidence locker without authorization. At the time he was found to be in possession of cocaine, officials said. The investigation determined that Foye had entered the locker multiple times using a key that allowed him entry without leaving any record of it in his name. They also found empty evidence bags in his office.

Foye denied the charges at his arraignment in Palmer District Court following his arrest. He was released without bail on the condition that he surrender all firearms to the police and that he remain drug free and submit to random drug testing.

According to court documents, a video feed captured Foye entering the locked narcotics locker at the Ludlow Police Station, where he appears to manipulate and open evidence bags.

Prosecutors charge that between January and August of last year, he removed dozens of pieces of evidence including cocaine and prescription pills. They also charge that he replaced narcotics evidence in evidence bags with pills that did not match the description on the corresponding state lab paperwork.

Prior to his arrest, Foye’s career was described as exemplary. He had been promoted to the rank of provisional lieutenant by the Ludlow Board of Selectmen just three months prior to his arrest.

His salary in 2012 according to town records was $104,629, including $20,987 in overtime.

Foye, a former School Committee member, worked for nine years in the Detective Bureau. In the 1990s, he served on an anti-gang unit.

Two years ago, Foye participated in a forum at Ludlow High School where he warned parents and residents about the growing danger of prescription drug abuse. He said the problem in Ludlow is the worst he has seen it in the 25 years he has been working for the Police Department.



Angry cat Lux that terrorized Oregon family staying in home -- for now

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Two days after police arrived to subdue the 4-year-old part-Himalayan cat, owner Lee Palmer of Portland said he's taking the feline to a veterinarian.

PORTLAND, Ore. -- The Oregon owners of a 22-pound housecat that trapped them in their bedroom after attacking their baby say they're not giving up on their pet and are getting it medical attention and therapy.

Two days after police arrived to subdue the 4-year-old part-Himalayan cat, owner Lee Palmer of Portland said he's taking the feline to a veterinarian. A pet psychologist also is due at the house to see the cat, named Lux.

"We're not getting rid of him right now," Palmer said. "He's been part of our family for a long time."

Palmer said the animal attacked his 7-month-old child after the baby pulled its tail. The child suffered a few scratches on the forehead.

On the 911 call, Palmer tells the dispatcher he kicked the cat "in the rear" to protect his child. Palmer says the animal then "just went off over the edge" -- leading Palmer and his girlfriend to barricade themselves, their baby and the family dog in the bedroom for safety.

The cat can be heard screeching in the background of the call as Palmer says in a panicked voice: "He's charging us. He's at our bedroom door." Palmer also tells the dispatcher the cat has been violent in the past.

Officers used a dog snare to capture the animal, and placed it in a crate.

The cat attack story gained national attention after police put out a news release about it Monday. Palmer says the family has had proposals from people wanting to adopt Lux, but the family is not taking them up on it.


Monson School Superintendent Cheryl Clarke unveils budget plan to selectmen that calls for return of programs

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Superintendent Clarke said because funding is an issue, she had to try and "get creative."

Cheryl Clarke 41113.jpgMonson Superintendent Cheryl A. Clarke is seen at the Granite Valley Middle School in April 2013. 

MONSON - School Superintendent Cheryl A. Clarke unveiled to the Board of Selectmen on Tuesday night her fiscal 2015 budget plan that calls for a reorganization of administrators, new districtwide after-school programs, and the return of music and Spanish instruction at the middle school.

Her plan, she said, is to bring back programs and initiatives that have been lost, and to expand opportunities for all students.

"I want to say thank you," Selectmen Chairman Edward A. Maia told Clarke, saying this was the first time he's seen such an honest budget presentation. "You came to us with the solutions, not just the problems. I just want to say bravo."

Selectman Richard M. Smith said he appreciated Clarke's goals, and the approach she is using to achieve them.

Clarke said because funding is an issue, she had to try to "get creative."

Total operational expenses for fiscal 2015 are $10.728 million, with a funding gap of $46,000 which Clarke said should be covered by school choice money - funds from out-of-district students who attend Monson schools, bringing with them their share of state aid. The fiscal 2014 budget was $10.734 million.

Even with new positions, she said the budget is basically level-funded by reorganizing the administrative structure. All assistant principals will be eliminated, but all three schools will continue to have their own principals.

At Quarry Hill Community School, which is preschool through fourth-grade, a dean of students position will be created to work under the principal. While a dean of students has many of the same responsibilities as an assistant principal, they cannot sign off on formal staff evaluations, Clarke explained.

A coordinator of secondary academics will oversee the principals at both Granite Valley Middle School and Monson High School, she said. One of the duties of the coordinator will be to work on curriculum, she said.

Clarke said the district has approximately 1,100 students, and her plan is to make the district more attractive to encourage students to remain here, and entice others from other towns to attend school in Monson. As recently as fiscal year 2008, the district had 1,540 students.

Quarry Hill also will have a new technology teacher, and a math instructional coach to work with teachers as the school has been designated a level 3, or underperforming, school by the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

A new part-time after-school enrichment coordinator will be hired to put together after-school programs at the three schools; students will be surveyed as to what kinds of programs they would like to see offered, Clarke said. The middle school will see music return for fifth- and sixth-graders, and Spanish for seventh- and eighth-graders. She said Spanish hasn't been offered in 10 years.

The high school will have more electives, including cooking and early childhood (the course will feature time spent at the expanded preschool program at Quarry Hill), as well as more technology and virtual learning opportunities, she said.

Two administrative positions are being cut - a technology director and data manager. The duties of those positions will be folded into the technology specialist position and director of curriculum and technology integration.

Clarke expects to save $82,000 through the building administration restructuring (four administrators are in interim roles and will have to reapply), $100,000 through the central office restructuring, $80,000 by cutting two full-time teachers at Quarry Hill due to low class sizes, and $40,000 by cutting a special education teacher (21 fewer special education students are expected to be in the district next year), for a total savings of $302,000.

She said seventh- and eighth-grade students will have the opportunity to play high school sports. She said the budget was created in the best interest of the students and the district.

Recommended budget for the Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School District calls for the reduction of nine full-time teachers and counselors

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The assessments to the towns must be approved at town meetings in Hampden and Wilbraham.

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WILBRAHAM - The Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School Committee on Tuesday voted to recommend a budget for the regional school district for fiscal 2015 of $43,797,776, which is an increase of $1.3 million or 3.09 percent over this year’s budget.

The budget includes an assessment to the town of Wilbraham of $22,398,562, including a debt payment on the new Minnechaug Regional High School of $1.5 million, and an assessment to the town of Hampden of $7,441,792, including a debt payment on the new high school of $507,043.

Regional School Superintendent M. Martin O’Shea said the budget will require layoffs next year.

He said he will be proposing the layoff of nine full-time staff including counselors and teachers and eight paraprofessionals or aides. The assessments to the two towns are subject to approval at town meetings in the spring in Hampden and Wilbraham.

The school district has been experiencing declining enrollment. Enrollment next year is expected to decline by 64 students from 3,299 students this year to 3,235 students next year.

A declining number of students means a decline in the state aid to the district, O’Shea said. For each student, the state pays the school district approximately $9,500 per child in Chapter 70 aid.

The staffing cuts will be made across the related arts, core instruction and counseling staff, O’Shea said. Of the proposed nine reductions in full-time staff, three are because of declining enrollment, he said.

The reduction of eight aides will include two who staff the elementary school libraries.

The budget would need another $1 million to provide services at the same level as this year, O’Shea said.

He said in recent years, the regional school budget has been funded more through town contributions and less from state aid.

To keep up with state mandates, the state should be increasing Chapter 70 aid to the schools, O’Shea said.

The recommended budget also includes the reduction of $100,000 for office supplies and classroom supplies, the superintendent said.

O’Shea said it is still early in the budget process, and there could be more changes in state Chapter 70 aid and in the state reimbursement for regional transportation. The School Committee still is negotiating collective bargaining agreements, O’Shea added.

The recommended school budget also includes a $50,000 contribution for a capital investment fund to maintain the new Minnechaug Regional High School.



Obituaries today: Tanya Oswald worked at Diamond Match, MassMutual, South Church

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
031114 tanya oswald.jpgTanya Oswald 

Tanya (Lenilko) Oswald, 81, of Springfield, passed away on Friday. She was born and raised in Springfield, and graduated from the High School of Commerce. She worked for Diamond Match, MassMutual, was a secretary at South Church, was very active in the family business and was a full-time wife and mom. She was an avid NASCAR fan and golf enthusiast. She loved to work in her yard, enjoyed knitting, quilting, needlepoint and making sweaters for her grandchildren.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

Suspended Ludlow Police Lt. Thomas Foye: 'I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy' [audio]

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Speaking for a little more than a minute at Tuesday's selectmen's meeting, Foye offered apologies to the selectmen for placing them in the position of suspending him, spoke of his drug addition and the damage to his reputation, and said he will work to one day redeem himself.

This story accompanies a story on the Ludlow Board of Selectmen vote to suspend Thomas Foye without pay pending the outcome of his court case.


LUDLOW — Suspended Ludlow Police Lt. Thomas Foye, indicted on charges of stealing drugs from the police station evidence locker, delivered a brief but passionate address Tuesday night to the Board of Selectmen, moments after they voted to suspend him without pay.

Speaking for a little more than a minute, Foye offered apologies to the selectmen for placing them in this position, spoke of his drug addition and the damage to his reputation, and said he will work to one day redeem himself.

His comments were the first he has made publicly since Aug. 15, when he was arrested at the Ludlow Police Station.

Below is audio from the meeting. Speaking first is Selectmen Chair William Rooney who said the board's deliberation over Foye's case was the hardest moment in his six years on the board.

Foye's comments in their entirety:

"This might be odd coming from me at this juncture but I do want to say thank you to the board. Regardless of how you feel about the indictment or whatnot, as Mr. Saunders said, I'll have my day in court to explain the situation.

I will say too, I spent a lot of good years with this town, a lot of good, dedicated service.

I went into surgery a hero and came out a drug addict -- and I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy.

I'll say this. I love this town. I love all of you. I respect all of you. When you lay down tonight, don't think this something that was tough for you. You didn't put yourselves here; I put yourselves here. At least when I walk out of here tonight, I'll have my character, and I say that.

And I'm not done with this. I'm going to help somebody, and someday you're going to be proud to know me again. You'll be proud I'm a part of this town.

That's it."


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