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U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy named to House Energy and Commerce Committee, subcommittees

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The Massachusetts Democrat said the subcommittees have broad legislative authority over health care reform, mental health, medical research, consumer protection, trade, manufacturing and the oversight of federal agencies.

BOSTON — U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy has been appointed to three subcommittees on the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

Kennedy will serve on the Health; Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade; and Oversight and Investigations subcommittees.

The Massachusetts Democrat said the subcommittees have broad legislative authority over health care reform, mental health, medical research, consumer protection, trade, manufacturing and the oversight of federal agencies.

Kennedy, who is beginning his second term, said the issues that come before the committee help define the Massachusetts economy and health of families, from public health issues like substance abuse to supporting the nation's manufacturing sector.

Kennedy, who represents the state's 4th Congressional District, will no longer sit on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, since those appointed to the Energy and Commerce Committee typically are not appointed to other committees.



South Korea deports American who allegedly praised North Korea in Seoul lecture

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The Korea Immigration Service decided to deport Shin Eun-mi, a California resident, after prosecutors determined that her comments violated South Korea's National Security Law, agency official Kim Du-yeol said.

SEOUL, South Korea -- A Korean-American woman accused of praising rival North Korea in a recent lecture was deported from South Korea on Saturday, in the latest in a series of cases that critics say infringe on the country's freedom of speech.

The Korea Immigration Service decided to deport Shin Eun-mi, a California resident, after prosecutors determined that her comments violated South Korea's National Security Law, agency official Kim Du-yeol said.

Shin departed the country on a flight to the U.S. on Saturday evening, another immigration official said on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.

"Frankly speaking, I feel like I'm betrayed by someone who I have a crush on," Shin told reporters before her departure.

She said she hopes to be able to return to both Koreas.

The Korean Peninsula remains technically in a state of war, split along the world's most heavily fortified border, because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. In South Korea, praising North Korea can be punished by up to seven years in prison under the National Security Law.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Shin had been barred from exiting South Korea for three weeks, and the U.S. has seen reports indicating the prosecution has asked for her to be deported and banned from the country for five years.

In a rare note of criticism of a key ally, Psaki said that despite South Korea's generally strong record on human rights, the security law limits freedom of expression and restricts access to the Internet.

Supporters argue that the law is needed because of continuing threats from North Korea. But critics want it scrapped. Past authoritarian leaders in South Korea frequently used the law to suppress political rivals.

Shin posted stories about her trips to North Korea on OhmyNews, a popular South Korean online news site. Her book on her trips was included in a government-designated reading list in 2013, but the Culture Ministry removed it this week. Ministry officials said they will seek to retrieve 1,200 copies that were distributed to libraries across South Korea.

During a November lecture in Seoul, Shin said many North Korean defectors living in South Korea had told her they want to go back home and that North Koreans hope new leader Kim Jong Un will bring change. She also praised the taste of North Korean beer and the cleanliness of North Korea's rivers.

Shin has said she had no intention of praising the country and was only expressing what she felt during her travels there.

Conservatives have sided with government moves to expel Shin, accusing her of ignoring North Korea's abysmal human rights conditions. But her impending deportation drew sharp criticism from liberals who say the conservative government of President Park Geun-hye is clamping down on freedom of speech.

"The decision to deport her is a clear violation of human rights," the Hankyoreh newspaper said in an editorial Friday. "The government is taking the lead in trampling on human rights."

At the United Nations, the deputy spokesman for Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Farhan Haq, told reporters: "The secretary-general's position on freedom of expression and freedom of opinion is well known. ... That would apply here as well." Ban is South Korean.

In October, prosecutors indicted a Japanese journalist on charges he defamed Park by reporting rumors that she was absent for seven hours on the day of a ferry disaster last April because she was with a man. Last month, the Constitutional Court ordered the dissolution of a small leftist party that officials say advocated a North Korean-style socialist system.

In December, a high school student threw a homemade explosive device toward a podium where Shin was speaking, injuring two people. Shin was not injured. The student was sent to a juvenile detention center and is awaiting trial.

State Police: Crash between two military trucks on I-91 North in Northampton leaves two seriously injured

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One vehicle rear-ended the other, according to police, with the two occupants of the rear vehicle becoming entrapped.

msp.jpgNORTHAMPTON - Two were seriously injured during a crash between two military vehicles on I-91 North in Northampton on Saturday morning.  

NORTHAMPTON - A crash between two military vehicles on I-91 North late Saturday morning left two seriously injured and backed up traffic for hours, according to state police.

The Massachusetts State Police released a statement about the initial findings of an investigation. Two military vehicles were traveling in tandem around 11:15 when both attempted to maneuver into the breakdown lane in Northampton, according to police. One rear-ended the other and the two occupants of the rear vehicle became entrapped.

They were extricated by members of the Northampton Fire Department, the statement said. Driver Michael Michael Andolena, 24, of Naugatuck, Conn., and passenger Alyssa Brenner, 19, of Terryville, Conn., were taken to Baystate Medical Center with serious injuries, troopers said.

The right travel lane of I-91 North was closed for approximately five hours in the wake of the accident.

The crash is still under investigation; further details were not immediately available.

Violence in Paris, beyond fuels debate among Muslims over interpretation of Islam

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Western critics are increasingly brazen about suggesting there is something inherent in Islam that is sparking violence by some of its adherents. Most Muslims reject this, arguing that the tumult of the post-colonial Middle East has created fertile ground for radicalism among people whose faith is fundamentally one of peace.

CAIRO -- After gunmen in Paris killed 12 people, Saudi Arabia's top body of Muslim clerics quickly condemned the attack and said it could have no acceptable justification. It was a signal from some of the Islamic world's strictest voices that cartoons lampooning the Prophet Muhammad in the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo were not a reason to kill the artists.

Only days later, Saudi Arabia sent an opposing message: On Friday, a young Saudi was whipped 50 times in a public square in the city of Jiddah, the first of what will be 20 such weekly rounds of lashes. That, along with 10 years in prison, is his sentence from the kingdom's religious-based courts for insulting Islam, based on posts on his blog criticizing prominent clerics close to the monarchy.

The contradiction points to the difficulties at a time of a growing debate within Islam about whether and how to reject a radical minority that some fear is dragging them into conflict and wrecking the faith.

Western critics are increasingly brazen about suggesting there is something inherent in Islam that is sparking violence by some of its adherents. Most Muslims reject this, arguing that the tumult of the post-colonial Middle East has created fertile ground for radicalism among people whose faith is fundamentally one of peace.

Nonetheless, the past year has seen increasing voices among Muslims saying their community must re-examine their faith to modernize its interpretations and sideline extremists. As much as recent attacks in the West, the rise of startlingly vicious violence by Sunni Muslim militants in the name of Islam against fellow Muslims, including Sunnis, brought it home for many Muslims that something must change in religious discourse.

In Syria and Iraq, the Islamic State group has butchered entire families of Sunnis and beheaded Sunni soldiers, as well as Western hostages. In Pakistan, a Dec. 16 militant attack on a school that killed 150 people, mostly children, stunned the country. It made many Pakistanis question any empathy they felt in the past toward militant groups -- the attitude of "even if they're wrong, they're still fellow Muslims."

"Now I hear more people talking openly against extremism and militancy," said Hasan-Askari Rizvi, an independent political analyst in Pakistan.

When people ask "why Islam?", much of the answer has little to do with the religion itself. The Arab world has seen decades of bloodshed and foreign intervention unlike any in any other region -- long entrenched dictatorships, regime suppression, two Iraq wars, the Syrian civil war and Libya's turmoil.

Those conflicts have stirred up hatreds -- against the U.S., against the West, against Shiites and other communities -- that rebound back into religion. Some youth angered by the conflicts find the answers in the version of "true Islam" touted by extremists like al-Qaida and the Islamic State group and promoted on the Internet. Those groups tell them Islam requires them to use violence to defend the faith, then provide whole networks to make it easy for them to do so.

Notably, Cherif Kouachi, one of the French brothers behind the Charlie Hebdo killings, appears to have been first radicalized by hearing of abuses of Iraqi inmates by American guards at Abu Ghraib prison.

The attack on Charlie Hebdo prompted condemnations from across the Muslim world --and fueled voices in the West contending that Islam fuels violence. Social media feeds bristled that insults to other religions do not tend to spark murders.

That frustrates many Muslims who tire of apologizing for an extremist fringe they view as distorting their religion. Still, Muslims are also turning inward for change in the community.

The most prominent call came days before the attack, when Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi gave a speech to Muslim clerics saying interpretations developed over centuries have made the Muslim world a "source of worry, danger, killing and destruction in the whole world." He called for a "religious revolution" to modernize the faith.

The Paris attack added a complication to the debate, because of the magazine's extremely broad lampooning of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Muslims who denounced the killings were often clearly discomfited by the content and defended their right to be upset over cartoons even some Western critics said crossed into racism.

In Egypt and Lebanon, political cartoonists published cartoons expressing solidarity with Charlie Hebdo, with images of pens standing up to gunmen. On Twitter, some pointed to Ahmed Merabet, a Muslim policeman of Algerian heritage killed by the attackers. "I am Ahmed the dead cop. Charlie ridiculed my faith and culture and I died defending his right to do so," was a tweet of solidarity circulating among Muslims.

"Obviously the act of terrorism is a far greater evil that the question of satirical comments," Khalid Samad, a lawmaker from an Islamist political party in mostly Muslim Malaysia, said.

But some in the religious establishment struggled with the issue.

On pan-Arab satellite channel al-Arabiya Thursday night, an official from al-Azhar, the state-run Egyptian institution that is one of the most prestigious centers of Sunni Islam, said al-Azhar is working to modernize religious discourse, in part by interpreting texts in light of the context in place and time as opposed to literally.

"But we can't exonerate the West for its insulting of the prophet. I'm not justifying what happened, but these are causes," Sheikh Ashraf Saad said. "Just as we condemn extremists, we must also condemn these freedoms that have reached the point of insulting the prophet."

He was countered by a Saudi journalist on the panel, Mshari al-Thaydi. "But the question is, why is it Muslims who get so angry and kill and blow things up? The French magazine insulted the pope, the Dalai Lama. ... Why do we express our anger in this way?

"We have 1,436 years in the history of Islam," he said. "Why do we hand ourselves over to a particular person who picks what he wants from that heritage and says that's Islam and accept it or you've left the faith?"

That hits to the issue of who speaks for Islam, where in the Sunni branch in particular, individual clerics build on centuries of scholarship to argue what the faith requires.

Al-Qaida and the Islamic State group roughly take elements from two relatively modern strands. One is the writing of Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood thinker Sayed Qutb, with its tenets that Muslim society has fallen from faith and violent jihad must be waged to bring "God's rule." The other is Wahhabism, a reform movement with a strict, literal and uncompromising interpretation of texts aimed at purging Islam of innovations. Wahhabism became the official doctrine of Saudi Arabia, which has promoted it around the Muslim world.

State religious institutions across the region, meanwhile, are widely criticized as stagnant. Government control has undermined their credibility among both liberal Muslims and militants. That was clear when Saudi Arabia's top religious body, the Council of Senior Scholars, condemned the Paris attack and called it "unacceptable under any justification."

That prompted a torrent of derision on Twitter from militant sympathizers who accused the clerics of doing the bidding of the U.S.-allied Saudi monarchy and protecting those who insult Muhammad. "The masks fall and reveal those who lick the boots of dictators," one proclaimed.

Wales man charged with 4th OUI violation after allegedly fleeing state trooper who tired to pull him over on Mass. Pike

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Massachusetts State Police arrested a Wales man on Saturday after he allegedly fled when a trooper tried to pull him over on the Mass. Pike in Auburn.

FRAMINGHAM— Massachusetts State Police arrested a Wales man on Saturday after he allegedly fled when a trooper tried to pull him over on the Mass. Pike in Auburn.

massachusetts state police patch small.jpg
According to troopers, they responded to a report of an erratic driver in a Honda Accord on I-90 East in Auburn around 1 p.m. Lt. David Wilson reportedly found the vehicle and saw it swerving across multiple lanes.

But when he tried to pull the car over, it allegedly sped up and the trooper lost sight of it. A short time later, however, the car was spotted, unoccupied, after having crashed into the wood line on Exit 12 in Framingham.

"After a subsequent search of the area, troopers located the driver and sole occupant, 44-year-old Edward Arnold of Wales, as he was walking on the ramp to Route 9 West in Framingham," the state police said in a news release. "He was placed under arrest."

Arnold is facing several charges including operating under the influence of drugs, 4th offense; failure to stop for a police officer, reckless operation of a motor vehcile, driving without a license, leaving the scene of an accident and several traffic violations. He was taken to Newton Wellesley Hospital for treatment of injuries he sustained in the crash and when released, he will be held pending arraignment in Westborough District Court on Monday.

State Police say their efforts were assisted by the Massachusetts State Police Airwing, Massachusetts State Police K-9, Massachusetts State Police Drug Recognition Expert, members of the Framingham Police Department, Framingham Fire and EMS, and Weston Fire and EMS.


Gov. Charlie Baker says hiring freeze necessary to ensure his administration doesn't make budget shortfall any worse

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When asked if layoffs and the downsizing of state agencies is something they are considering, Baker said it is too early to know.

SPRINGFIELD — Gov. Charlie Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito said Saturday that the hiring freeze they instituted a day earlier is the first step of their administration's efforts not to worsen the state's budget shortfall as they try to figure out how to best deal with it.

The exact amount of the Massachusetts budget shortfall is unclear, as former Gov. Deval Patrick estimated it was around $329 million while the Mass. Taxpayers Foundation placed the figure in the $700 million range. Baker said that among the main reasons for variations are unclear amounts of Medicaid spending.

"I think part of the reason for the variation is that nobody knows exactly, at least we don't know exactly at this point in time is what the year-end projection for Medicaid spending looks like. And that's associated with the (Mass. health) connecter and some of the issues there. And that's one of the things we've got to get our arms around in the next couple of weeks."

On Friday, Baker and Polito ordered all state agencies to immediately halt filling any open positions, and they ordered a full review of every state agency and program "examining their purpose, scope, budget, revenue sources, number of clients/customers served, and key services provided to determine opportunities for improvement." According to Baker and Polito's office, the move will generate a savings of $6.5 million in the current 2015 fiscal budget year.

When asked if layoffs and the downsizing of state agencies is something they are considering, Baker said it is too early to know as right now they are focused on not complicating the situation while they get a grasp on just how bad the budget shortfall is.

Following a swing which brought him to several locations in Berkshire County,

"In the short-term, we're still trying to figure out the size of the gap. And until we have a better understanding about that, were just going to try to make sure we don't make it worse," Baker said while stopping at the Student Prince restaurant in downtown Springfield to thank supporters. "The hiring freeze, the review of all the contracts- we just want to make sure we don't do anything in he next 30 days to make it worse."

The administration has also directed cabinet secretaries to review every single contract amendment made since Sept. 1 and to review all major procurement processes to determine if they are "in the best interest of the Commonwealth."

As candidates, Baker and Polito promised to run an efficient government by cutting down on wasteful spending and practices. They were formally sworn in on Thursday in a ceremony at the State House.

The Springfield reception at the newly re-opened Fort dining room came following a busy day with several stops in Berkshire County. While in Springfield, Baker and Polito watched the New England Patriots play the Baltimore Ravens and in relation to the game, the new governor even wagered some local fare.

According to sources in the Baker Administration, he made a bet with Maryland's governor-elect Larry Hogan over the game. If the Ravens were to win, Baker would have to provide Hogan with an assortment of Boston's best beers and some Boston Cream Pie cupcakes from Springfield's Koffee Kup bakery on Liberty Street. But if the Patriots came out on top. Hogan would have to hook Baker up with an assortment of fresh crabs from Maryland's shore.

When this story was published near the beginning of the third quarter, the Pats were down by 7 points.

On Sunday, Baker was scheduled to hold an inaugural reception in his hometown at Swampscott Town Hall at 1 p.m.


Train of fans heading to Patriots-Ravens game briefly blocked by protesters of Ferguson killing

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Organizers staged the four-and-a-half-minute demonstration at the Dedham station south of Boston to protest the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, last year.

DEDHAM, Mass. — Activists protesting police killings on Saturday briefly walked onto train tracks to block a commuter train packed with fans headed to the New England Patriots-Baltimore Ravens playoff game.

Organizers staged the four-and-a-half-minute demonstration at the Dedham station south of Boston to protest the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, last year. They said in a statement the amount of time symbolized the four-and-a-half hours that Michael Brown lay in the street after he was shot.

Transit Police Lt. Michael Shea told The Boston Globe that about 10 protesters were at the station. No one was arrested.

He could not confirm they delayed the train, which was at a regular stop and on its way to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough.

USA Swimming board: Ex-Holyoke YMCA coach Randall Smith, fired following sexual assault allegations, did not violate code of conduct

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Former Holyoke YMCA swim coach Randall Smith, who was fired but never charged following sexual assault allegations by a female swimmer, will not be banned from coaching the sport.

HOLYOKE — Former Holyoke YMCA swim coach Randall Smith, who was fired but never charged following sexual assault allegations by a female swimmer, will not be banned from coaching the sport.

The USA Swimming, Inc. National Board of Review concluded in a 2-1 decision that Smith did not violate the organization's code of conduct and that there was not enough evidence to ban Smith from coaching the sport for the rest of his life.

A female member of the Holyoke YMCA Vikings Swim Team accused Smith of inappropriately kissing and sexually touching her – allegations that led to his termination from coaching the Holyoke YMCA Vikings Swim Team. The allegations were first reported in an Outside magazine article, which detailed a chain of events that was critical of the Holyoke Police Department and the Holyoke YMCA.

The Police Department contended the magazine painted an inaccurate picture of their investigation, which never brought criminal charges against Smith, and the YMCA said it handled the situation appropriately by firing Smith.

The female swimmer who made the accusations claimed the abuse began in 2008 when she was 13 and continued for two and a half years..

The Republican / MassLive have previously declined to name Smith because he was never charged with a crime, but after the USA Swimming decision, which included his name, went public, the news organizations are including his name in this article.

The Republican / MassLive do not name alleged victims of sexual abuse.

The USA Swimming decision, dated Dec. 8, states that Smith, despite being allowed to coach again, will probably never be able to do so based on the allegations. The decision documents show that Smith coached at the Holyoke YMCA from 1981 until his termination in 2012.

The full USA Swimming decision can be read in its entirety here »



Where are AirAsia jet's black boxes? More pings detected as divers resume search

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AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes expressed optimism by tweeting that while still not confirmed, he was receiving strong information that the recorders may have been found.

PANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia -- A day after the tail of the crashed AirAsia plane was fished out of the Java Sea, the search for the missing black boxes intensified Sunday with more pings heard.

The signals were detected over an area spanning from 1 kilometer to 4 kilometers (1.6 miles to 2.4 miles) from the location of the jet's rear. Officials cautioned it was too soon to know if the sounds were coming from the cockpit voice and flight data recorders, which detached from the tail of when the aircraft plummeted into the sea Dec. 28, killing all 162 people on board.

"It was detected within a wide area, which needs to be combed by divers," said Nurcahyo Utomo, an investigator with Indonesia's National Commission for Transportation Safety. "Right now, I would not dare to say if it's from the black boxes."

He said the weather allowed work to continue in the morning, but that strong currents and high waves, which generally worsen in the afternoon, could prevent divers from thoroughly searching the area.

However, AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes expressed optimism by tweeting that while still not confirmed, he was receiving strong information that the recorders may have been found.

On Saturday, search crews had a major breakthrough after two weeks of hunting for victims and wreckage from Flight 8501. The red metal chunk from the tail, with the words "AirAsia" clearly visible across it, was brought to the surface using inflatable balloons.

But the find was tinged with disappointment when the black boxes were not found still attached. Their beacons emit signals for about 30 days until the batteries die, meaning divers have about two weeks left before they go silent.

The debris from the tail was brought up from a depth of about 30 meters (100 feet) and towed to a ship, where it was hoisted onto the deck. The vertical stabilizer was still largely intact, but the attached jagged fuselage was ripped open and tangled by a mess of wires.


The slow-moving search has been hampered by seasonal rains, choppy seas and blinding silt from river runoff.

Suryadi Bambang Supriyadi, operation director of Indonesia's national search and rescue agency, said his top priority remains finding the main section of fuselage, where most of the bodies are believed to be entombed. Several large objects have been spotted in the area by sonar, but they have not yet been explored underwater. So far, only 48 corpses have been recovered.

"This is what the families have been waiting for," he said. "They have been crying for 14 days."

The last contact the pilots had with air traffic control, about halfway into their two-hour journey from Indonesia's second-largest city, Surabaya, to Singapore, indicated they were entering stormy weather. They asked to climb from 32,000 feet (9,753 meters) to 38,000 feet (11,582 meters) to avoid threatening clouds, but were denied permission because of heavy air traffic. Four minutes later, the plane dropped off the radar. No distress signal was issued.

Overnight shooting victim in Springfield reportedly not cooperating with police investigation

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A man who was shot overnight in Springfield is expected to live but is not cooperating with police.

SPRINGFIELD — A man who was shot overnight in Springfield is expected to live but is not cooperating with police, according to media reports.

Springfield police patch

Around 2:30 a.m. Saturday, 911 calls sent police to the intersection of Cambridge, Montrose and Burr streets where a man was found shot. According to ABC affiliate WGGB-TV, the 48-year-old victim, who had a gunshot wound to his buttocks and hip, was taken to Baystate Medical Center.

Police at the scene reported finding several shell casings and although the investigation is open, the victim is refusing to help police, according to WGGB.

The police cleared the shooting scene within an hour and anyone with information is asked to call the Springfield Police Detective Bureau at (413) 787-6355. Those who wish to remain anonymous may text a tip via a cell phone by addressing a text message to "CRIMES," or "274637," and then beginning the body of the message with the word "SOLVE."


Staff writer Dave Canton contributed to this report.

Obituaries today: James Leahey Jr. was a vice president at MassMutual

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
011115-james-leahey.jpgJames Leahey Jr. 

James M. Leahey, Jr., 67, of Wilbraham died Wednesday. He was born in Springfield and raised in the Hungry Hill section of the city. He graduated from Cathedral High School, and received a bachelor's degree from Providence College. He was employed for 35 years at MassMutual Life Insurance Company, retiring as a vice president. He resided in Granville and in Wilbraham for the past 33 years, and was a communicant of St. Cecilia's Church. He was an avid golf enthusiast, was the former Wilbraham Club president, and also served as president of the Wilbraham Lions Club.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

CW network renews 'The Vampire Diaries,' 'Jane the Virgin,' other scripted series

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The order includes the freshman series "Jane the Virgin," a critical favorite that is still seeking a larger audience. Other returning shows include "Arrow," ''Reign," ''Supernatural," ''The 100," ''The Flash," ''The Originals" and "The Vampire Diaries."

PASADENA, Calif. -- Young fans of the CW television network won't have any suspense about their favorite programs. The CW said Sunday that all eight of the scripted series that were part of its fall lineup will return again next season.

The order includes the freshman series "Jane the Virgin," a critical favorite that is still seeking a larger audience. Other returning shows include "Arrow," ''Reign," ''Supernatural," ''The 100," ''The Flash," ''The Originals" and "The Vampire Diaries."

The CW has achieved modest success with a lineup heavy on zombies and vampires. CW President Mark Pedowitz said the network is slowly broadening its audience by attracting more men. Roughly 60 percent of the CW's audience is women.

The early order of new seasons for its series gives producers more time to develop stories and plot twists moving forward, Pedowitz said.

Worcester Police Chief Gary Gemme: Officers disheartened over no vote on support resolution in City Council

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Worcester Police Chief Gary J. Gemme said lack of leadership by city officials led to police once again being accused of unprofessional behavior.

WORCESTER – Police Chief Gary J. Gemme is blaming lack of leadership by elected officials for having a recent meeting to discuss a resolution to support police instead turn into listening to the public gripe about officers.

The resolution asking for councilors to publicly support the Worcester Police Department was part of Wednesday night's City Council meeting.

Police didn't ask for the City Council to bring up the issue, but officers accepted an invite from elected officials to appear at a council meeting, according to Gemme. The meeting ended without a vote on the resolution.

"I think it is disheartening to the men and women of the Worcester Police Department. They didn't ask for this recognition, but they did welcome it and showed up in force to accept it," Gemme said. "When they showed up, instead of being recognized by our local officials, they were berated by a small group of people with an anti-police agenda."

He continued to say, "The officers showed up at the request of elected officials only to walk away confused because of the lack of support for this resolution. I believe it was a lack of leadership on the part of our elected officials."

Gemme said those people speaking out against police already addressed the council a couple weeks before. At both meetings, he heard nothing but general statements made against police.

"I think very clearly that you have a group of local people, many who have a strong dislike against police in general," Gemme said. "I think they are taking national issues and trying to make a parallel that is not there. Before what happened nationally, where were they? Were they complaining to the city manager? Were they going to the mayor? Were they going to the local clergy or the ACLU? No they were not."

But the council still "backed down" from supporting the resolution after the recent meeting, the chief said.

The strong presence by police at the council meeting was two-fold, the chief said. Officers were there at the request of elected officials, but also there to support Officer Justin Bennes, Officer Rhonda Karlon and Massachusetts Army National Guard Staff Sergeant Daniel Papagno, who were being recognized in a public ceremony. They received honors from the police department in November for their service and actions.

Gemme said his department does not have systemic problems and takes complaints against officers seriously. The department’s Bureau of Professional Standards has officers assigned to investigate complaints.

According to Gemme, the department has removed and disciplined officers in the past when allegations are sustained. Officers don't want to work with other officers who violate public trust, he said.

Video: Demonstrators disrupt Bill Cosby performance; comic calms crowd

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As security waded into the audience to corral the protesters, Cosby called on the audience to remain calm.

HAMILTON, Ontario - A video has surfaced of hecklers disrupting Bill Cosby's third and final performance of a Canadian tour.

Some 30 women blew whistles, while others shouted down Cosby by chanting "we believe the women, we believe the women" on Friday, An unidentified man repeatedly called the 77-year-old comic an "'arrogant piece of (expletive)."

As security waded into the crowd, Cosby called on the audience to remain calm. The video was posted on TMZ.

Cosby is facing growing sexual assault allegations from more than 15 women, with some claims dating back decades. He has denied the allegations through his lawyer and has never been charged.



Shootings in Worcester reach record high in 2014

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The increase of shootings in Worcester over the past few years continued in 2014 as a record number of shooting incidents was reached.

WORCESTER – As 2014 came to a close in Worcester, it marked a new record for the city. The number of shootings jumped for the third time in as many years, reaching a new record high of 38.

Worcester Police Department statistics show there were 38 shooting incidents in 2014, surpassing the previous high of 33 shooting incidents in 2005. Police officials have often referred to 2004 and 2005 as the most violent in the city’s history, but that has now changed.

The steady increase of shootings over the past three years, which culminated with a new record high in 2014, has Police Chief Gary J. Gemme reiterating the need for a community plan to stamp down violence.

“Obviously, when you look at the numbers, we are facing the possibility that we might be losing control of this issue,” Gemme said Sunday. “Where will this number be in the future if we as a city don’t come up with a comprehensive community plan?”

Many of the bullets ripping through the city streets are the result of ongoing feuds between local gangs, such as the Kilby Street Posse and its rivals the Providence Street Posse and the Plumley Village East.

Other shootings involve the illegal drug trade, police officials said.

As shootings increased over the past few years, police officials note a common thread involving the victims and some perpetrators.

“Over the past 10 years there has been a high percentage of young men of color as victims or involved in this violence,” Gemme said. “What is disturbing is the trend continues. This is an issue I’ve tried to raise in the community for a number of years.”

But the chief believes some people don’t want to talk about it because it involves a discussion over the race of those involved in the shootings.

“There need to be solutions developed in those particular groups within the population,” Gemme said. “It requires leaders in those groups to discuss and address issues of gun violence.”

The 38 shooting incidents in Worcester last year led to 47 victims being shot. Some incidents involved multiple victims. Five of the seven homicides last year were by gunshots, statistics show.

Since 2011, the number of shooting incidents in the city has increased. While the shootings remained in the low 20s in 2011 and 2012, the statistic jumped to 29 in 2013.

The number of rounds being fired in shootings and gunshot calls in the city is becoming a troubling issue for the chief and police officials. The department began using the gunshot detection system called ShotSpotter because it provides police with real-time alerts of gun activity in the city.

“It gives us a better handle on the number of rounds being fired,” Gemme said. “When you have a suspect firing five, 10 and as many as 15 rounds, there are concerns the homicide rate could increase.”

To address the gun and gang violence, the department has created specialized units such as the Shooting Response Team and Street Violence Prevention Unit. Investigators from the Gang Unit, Vice Squad and Detective Bureau constantly share information and keep track of known gang members and those with a history of violence in the city.

The city manager’s office formed a Youth Advisory Committee last year aimed at helping identify job opportunities and youth programs in efforts to keep youth away from violence. Gemme believes the shootings are a community issue, and more needs to be done to address the problem.

“There doesn’t seem to be a comprehensive strategy beyond the police,” Gemme said. “If the incidents of gun violence continue, there is going to be an increase in homicides. If someone is a resident of this city and sees the escalation of shootings over the past three or four years, I’m sure that is a concern.”


Witness to Paris officer's death regrets posting video online

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The man whose amateur video of a Paris police officer's cold-blooded murder shocked the world now regrets sharing the footage online.

PARIS (AP) -- The man whose amateur video of a Paris police officer's cold-blooded murder shocked the world now regrets sharing the footage online, saying he never expected it to be broadcast so widely.

Engineer Jordi Mir told The Associated Press he posted the video out of fear and a "stupid reflex" fostered by years on social media.

"I was completely panicked," he said in an exclusive interview across from the Parisian boulevard where the officer was shot to death by terrorists Wednesday morning.

The short film immediately became the most arresting image of France's three-day-long drama, which began with a mass killing at the headquarters of satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo and ended Friday with the death of four hostages and the three terrorists in two separate shootouts.

"I had to speak to someone," Mir said. "I was alone in my flat. I put the video on Facebook. That was my error."

Mir said he left the video on Facebook for as little as 15 minutes before thinking the better of it and taking it down.

It was too late.

The footage had already been shared across the site and someone uploaded it to YouTube. Less than an hour after Mir removed the video from his page, he was startled to find it playing across his television screen.

In its unedited form, the 42-second film shows two masked gunmen -- brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi -- as they walk toward a prone police officer, later identified as 42-year-old Ahmed Merabet.

"You want to kill us?" one of the brothers says as he strides toward the wounded officer.

"No, it's OK, boss," Merabet says, raising his hand in an apparent plea for mercy.

Then he's shot in the head.

The video unleashed a worldwide wave of revulsion. British tabloids described it as "shocking" and "sickening." France's Le Figaro ran a still from the footage on its front page over a caption which read "War." CNN's Randi Kaye called it "an unforgettable image forever associated with this horrible attack."

The iconic nature of the imagery -- rebroadcast again and again -- has anguished Merabet's family. His brother Malek told journalists Saturday: "How dare you take that video and broadcast it? I heard his voice. I recognized him. I saw him get slaughtered and I hear him get slaughtered every day."

Some argue that the video plays a useful role by exposing terrorists' heartlessness. Mir said that one official told him the video helped galvanize French public opinion.

"For me, the policeman killed, it's like a war photo," Mir said at one point, comparing it to famed photographer Robert Capa's controversial picture of a soldier being shot dead during the Spanish Civil War.

The video did help cause an outpouring of support for Merabet and his family, with many adopting the tag "Je Suis Ahmed" -- I am Ahmed -- as a spin on the solidarity slogan "Je Suis Charlie." As Mir spoke to AP on Saturday, members of the public were still gathering at the site of Merabet's death to lay flowers and pay respect.

Mir didn't even know what he was filming at first. Drawn to his window when the sound of gunshots interrupted his emailing, he initially thought there was a bank robbery in progress. When he spotted the rifle-wielding men in black walking down the street, he assumed they were SWAT police going to help a stricken comrade.

"And -- horror -- they're not," Mir said.

As police rushed to the scene, Mir downloaded the video to his computer and then to a removable disk, which he handed to officers.

Then, he uploaded the footage to Facebook -- and to the world.

Mir, a slight man in his 50s whose parents were refugees from fascist Spain, is still at a loss to explain exactly what pushed him to share the chilling video with his 2,500 Facebook friends.

"There's no answer," he said. Perhaps a decade of social networking had trained him to share whatever he saw.

"I take a photo -- a cat -- and I put it on Facebook. It was the same stupid reflex," he said.

Mir wanted Merabet's family to know he was "very sorry," saying that he had turned down offers to buy the footage and that he wanted media organizations to blur Merabet's image before running it. But many, he said, just broadcast the unedited footage without permission.

The AP received Mir's authorization to run the video on condition that it cut the scene of the officer's death, which is standard AP practice.

Mir said that, if he could do it all again, he would have kept the video off Facebook.

"On Facebook, there's no confidentiality," he said. "It's a lesson for me."

Springfield car crash injures woman, traps her in motor vehicle

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The woman was taken to the hospital by ambulance with non-life-threatening injuries.

SPRINGFIELD - A woman was injured and trapped in her car following a Sunday afternoon accident on Cooley Street.

The woman said she slid on ice and then drove her Chevrolet Malibu into trees near 70 Cooley St., close to the intersection of Parker Street, said Dennis G. Leger, assistant to fire commissioner Joseph Conant.

She was trapped in her car following the crash and Springfield firefighters had to extricate her.

"We used the Jaws of Life to get her out," Leger said.

The woman was taken to the hospital by ambulance with serious but non-life-threatening injuries. She was alone in the car and no other vehicles were involved in the crash, Leger said.

The accident happened around 3:10 p.m. Cooley Street, eastbound from Parker to the city line, was closed while emergency workers handled the accident, he said.

Police officials said the cause of the accident is under investigation.

Photos: The 25th annual Springfield Bridal Expo at the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield

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WEST SPRINGFIELD - The 25th annual Springfield Bridal Expo was held Jan. 10-11 at the Eastern States Exposition's Better Living Center in West Springfield. The annual event featured bridal fashion shows from local bridal shops, jewelers, DJ entertainment, florists and wedding photographers. Couples could also view limousines, carriages or book wedding or honeymoon packages.

WEST SPRINGFIELD - The 25th annual Springfield Bridal Expo was held Jan. 10-11 at the Eastern States Exposition's Better Living Center in West Springfield.

The annual event featured bridal fashion shows from local bridal shops, jewelers, DJ entertainment, florists and wedding photographers.

Couples could also view limousines, carriages or book wedding or honeymoon packages.

Worcester woman busted on 6th OUI charge

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Worcester woman facing 6th OUI charge after traffic stop Sunday in Worcester.

WORCESTER - A Worcester woman was charged with her sixth driving under the influence offense Sunday morning after a state police trooper pulled over a car on Route 9, according to state police.

Just after midnight, Trooper Richard Frigon stopped a Toyota Camry on Route 9 for speeding, failing to yield and a marked lanes violation.

The driver of the car, identified by state police as 48-year-old Lisa B. Cook of Worcester, allegedly failed field sobriety tests.

"Cook was agitated and became combative while being arrested for operating under the influence of alcohol," state police said in a news release.

Cook was taken to the state police barracks in Millbury where she was held on $20,000 cash bail for driving under the influence of alcohol, sixth offense, and four additional motor vehicle infractions.

Faces in Northampton to close: What People Are Tweeting

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Faces has been in business for more than 40 years.

NORTHAMPTON - This week the owner of the popular Faces store announced he will close early this year.

Owner Peter Vogel cited the pressures of running an independent store including the increasing costs of health insurance, personnel, taxes and insurance.He did not release a specific closing date.

Pioneer Valley residents, students, college alumni and frequent downtown shoppers greeted the news that the funky clothing and gift shop was closing with dismay and disappointment.

The store first opened in Amherst about 40 years ago. The Northampton Faces opened in 1986.

Here are some of the things people were Tweeting about Faces.

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