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Video of Paris gunman aligning with Islamic State group raises questions of affiliations

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Two days after his death, a video emerged Sunday of one of the Paris gunmen pledging allegiance to the Islamic State group, while his two fellow militants have claimed to be from al-Qaida -- a fiercely rival extremist organization.

PARIS -- Two days after his death, a video emerged Sunday of one of the Paris gunmen pledging allegiance to the Islamic State group, while his two fellow militants have claimed to be from al-Qaida -- a fiercely rival extremist organization.

That seeming contradiction has raised questions about the connections among the three French attackers, whether they acted with the direct involvement or knowledge of the networks, and whether their friendship allowed them to put aside the rift between the groups.

The Islamic State group does not cooperate with al-Qaida's militants and actually fights them for territory in a side conflict of Syria's civil war.

In video verified by the SITE Intelligence Group, Amedy Coulibaly said he had worked in coordination with Said and Cherif Kouachi, the "brothers from our team," who carried out the massacre at the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday.

"We did things a bit together and a bit apart, so that it'd have more impact," he said in fluent French, adding that he had helped the brothers financially with "a few thousand euros" for the operation. The video also showed him doing pushups, and featured automatic rifles, pistols and ammunition. He spoke beneath the black-and-white flag used by many Islamic militants.

Coulibaly explained why the publication and his target -- the kosher supermarket -- were selected.

"What we are doing is completely legitimate, given what they are doing," he said.

The video appeared Sunday on militant websites, and two men who dealt drugs with Coulibaly confirmed his identify to The Associated Press. Police said they were investigating the conditions under which the video was posted.

Prosecutors said Coulibaly killed four hostages Friday in the supermarket, killed a policewoman, and shot and wounded a jogger. He died when police stormed the market, just minutes after security forces killed the Kouachi brothers.

Survivors say the Charlie Hebdo attackers claimed they were from al-Qaida in Yemen, the group the U.S. considers the most dangerous offshoot of that network.

But experts cast doubt over whether the attacks could have been coordinated by the rival groups. While Cherif Kouachi was convicted on terrorism charges in 2008, and his brother Said is believed to have trained and fought with al-Qaida forces while in Yemen, no evidence to date has emerged as to whether Coulibaly even went to Syria or Iraq, where IS holds territory. His widow was last traced to a town on the Turkey-Syria border a few days before the Paris attacks unfolded.

Since IS broke with al-Qaida last year, militants from the two groups have been locked in a bloody struggle in Iraq and Syria, where IS claims leadership of a universal caliphate of all Muslims and leadership of global jihad. The two groups have fought each other in battles that have left hundreds dead on both sides.

"It would be a massive surprise," said Peter Neumann, director of the International Centre for the Study of Radicalization at King's College London. "The idea that (the two groups) would consciously collaborate on operations abroad seems far-fetched."

"If anything, the most likely scenario is that there was some sort of playing off each other. Maybe -- if there was synchronizing -- it happened at the grassroots level," he said. Coulibaly's attack was far less professional, and appeared to be more spontaneous.

"He seems to be the prototype of the young, disengaged French Muslim who suffers from this sense of alienation, and then comes (to support an) ideology that makes him feel important, clear-cut and gives him purpose and orientation."

Timothy Holman, a researcher at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore, said the attackers represented who they wish to be perceived as representing, and had personal ties that likely surpassed the rivalries between the core extremist leadership abroad.

The Kouachis' link to Yemen also existed before the rift between IS and al-Qaida.

The friendship among the gunmen "predates their militant engagement, and they are fighting as much for each other in some ways as the groups," Holman said.

"In my opinion, their loyalty is first to their friends and family in the jihadist environment and then to the group. If Coulibaly's primary loyalty was to (IS), it is unlikely he would have acted at the same time as the Kouachi brothers," he added.

French police and judicial officials said they believed that while Coulibaly was committed to carrying out an attack, he was less of a strict ideologue or well-honed fighter than were the Kouachis -- and could have found inspiration from either al-Qaida or IS.

In their internationally aimed propaganda magazines, both extremist groups promote the idea that overseas attacks need not have organizational links to the main leadership, and that "mujahedeen," or holy warriors, should take matters into their own hands.

Thousands of young people from Western Europe have headed to the war zones in Syria and Iraq to join extremists. Lawyers and family members of some of those who have gone say many have only a hazy sense of who will meet them when they arrive. But security officials fear that they will return home with new training in warfare, nursing old grievances.

While a member of al-Qaida's branch in Yemen said anonymously Friday that the group had directed the Charlie Hebdo attack, the group has not issued an official statement on the matter. Its senior cleric praised the operation but also stopped short of claiming responsibility directly.

Regardless, even if the al-Qaida group did not know about the attacks in advance, jihadi fighters in the Middle East have a natural interest to claim such violence and present a unified front to adversaries -- even if it sometimes goes against local positioning.

SITE reported late Sunday that Moktar Belmoktar, the head of the Mourabitoune group that split from al-Qaida's north Africa wing, had expressed praise in online jihadi forums for the Charlie Hebdo attack.

Aymenn al-Tamimi, a Britain-based expert on militant groups in Iraq and Syria, suggested the claims of loyalty to the rival jihadi groups aimed to stir up fears of militants uniting to fight the West.

Al-Qaida in Yemen may reject the Islamic State's declared caliphate, he said, "but they have stressed the necessity of supporting each other against the common enemy -- which is, of course, the West."

Perhaps, al-Tamimi said, it was "to play on a bigger fear that the West has: that al-Qaida and the IS would come together for an attack," he added.


Vermont police arrest Massachusetts woman for sale of heroin

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The arrest comes a year after the governor of Vermont declared a heroin crisis in his state.

BRATTLEBORO, VT - Vermont State Police have charged a 45-year-old Massachusetts woman with selling heroin after a long investigation into drug sales.

Kelly J. Martel, 45, was arrested Jan. 5 in Brattleboro, which is close to the Massachusetts border, and charged with sales of heroin, police officials said.

martel.jpgKelly Martel 

Martel, a resident of Boxford, Massachusetts, was booked in the Brattleboro State Police barracks and was released with a citation to appear in Windam Superior Court in March 2015 to face charges, police said.

The Vermont Drug Task Force began investigating Martel for suspicion of distributing heroin in the greater Brattleboro area in the summer of 2014. During their investigation of Martel, undercover officers allegedly purchased heroin from her several times, police said.

During the investigation, Martel moved from Brattleboro to Massachusetts. In January, police learned Martel was in Brattleboro and made the arrest, officials said.

The arrest comes about a year after the governor of Vermont declared a heroin crisis in the state and said some is being bought in Massachusetts, where the cost is lower.

Bostonians at rally to support France after attacks note parallels to marathon bombing

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There also were blue-and-yellow "Boston Strong" banners remembering the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured more than 260.

BOSTON -- Hundreds attended a rally Sunday on Boston Common to support France after a three-day terrorism spree around Paris that killed 17 people last week.

The gathering was organized by the French Consulate and the city's French community to coincide with the massive anti-terrorism rally in Paris that drew millions.

The Boston demonstrators held a moment of silence for those killed in the attacks on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, a kosher supermarket and police officers. Some held French flags and banners saying in French, "I am Charlie" and "Boston is France."

There also were blue-and-yellow "Boston Strong" banners remembering the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured more than 260.

Boston, like the French capital, was shocked by the attack and endured days of tension before authorities caught up with the terrorism suspects -- who as in Paris were a pair of brothers.

One died after a shootout with police and the other was captured hiding in a boat in a backyard hours later. The suspects allegedly killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer during their last night of freedom. Jury selection began last week in the federal trial of the survivor, Dzhohkar Tsarnaev, who faces the death penalty if convicted.

Carlos Arrendondo, known for helping a man who lost both legs at the marathon finish line, was among those at Sunday's rally.

"Boston has been there in the past and we are still healing from that," Arrendondo told WCBV-TV. "It's time to support the people of France as well."

Fabien Fieschi, France's consul general in Boston, told the gathering, "We see, all around us, this solidarity, this sense of fraternity, which is very important." The consulate later said in a tweet it estimated nearly a thousand people attended.

Frank DuBourdieu and Raphaelle DuBourdieu, French citizens living in Cambridge, told WBZ-TV they wanted to spread a message of tolerance.

"Islam is not bad," Frank DuBourdieu said. "We have to make sure that France is going to continue to welcome people but reject any violence."

Springfield stabbing injures one man outside McDonald's

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The victim did not share information with police about the attack.

SPRINGFIELD - Police are investigating the midnight stabbing of a man and the theft of his car outside the McDonald's restaurant at 809 Boston Road.

The victim suffered three stab wounds which are not considered to be life-threatening. He was treated at a city hospital.

"The victim was uncooperative at the hospital to investigators," said Police Sgt. John Delaney, department spokesman.

The people the victim was with said at about midnight Sunday they were confronted by two black men as they pulled into the parking lot. When the driver lowered his window to talk to the men, they stabbed him multiple times, Delaney said.

According to the victim's companions, all the occupants of the car fled during the confrontation. The motor vehicle was then taken by the two assailants, Delaney said.

He did not say if the car had been recovered.

None of the passengers could identify the attackers, he said.

AirAsia Flight 8501: One black box recovered from under wing

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Searchers will continue to scour the seabed to try to locate the other black box, the cockpit voice recorder.

PANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia -- Divers retrieved one of the black boxes Monday from the AirAsia plane that plummeted more than two weeks ago into the Java Sea, a major breakthrough in the slow-moving hunt to recover bodies and wreckage.

The flight data recorder was found under part of the plane's wing and brought to the surface early in the morning, said Henry Bambang Soelistyo, head of the national search and rescue agency.

Divers began zeroing in on the site a day earlier after three Indonesian ships picked up intense pings from the area, but they were unable to see it due to strong currents and poor visibility, said Suryadi Bambang Supriyadi, operation coordinator at the national search and rescue agency.

He earlier said the black box was lodged in debris at a depth of about 30 meters (100 feet), but Soelistyo did not provide additional details about the discovery.

Searchers will continue to scour the seabed to try to locate the other black box, the cockpit voice recorder, which is believed to be emitting a separate signal between 2 meters (yards) to 20 meters (22 yards) away, he said.

"Hopefully, it can be retrieved within hours today," Supriyadi said from Pangkalan Bun, the town closest to the site on Borneo island. He added that diving conditions were not favorable.


The two instruments are vital to understanding what brought Flight 8501 down on Dec. 28, killing all 162 people on board. They provide essential information including the plane's vertical and horizontal speeds along with engine temperature and final conversations between the captain and co-pilot.

The flight data recorder will be taken to Jakarta, the capital, for analysis. It could take up to two weeks to download its information, said Nurcahyo Utomo, an investigator at the National Committee for Safety Transportation.

Officials recovered the aircraft's tail on Saturday, the first major wreckage excavated from the crash site. They were hopeful the black boxes were still inside, but learned they had detached when the plane crashed into the sea. On Sunday, the ships detected two strong signals near each other.

Search efforts have been consistently hampered by big waves and powerful currents created by the region's rainy season. Silt and sand, along with river runoff, have created blinding conditions for divers.

On Sunday, Soelistyo said divers located the wing and debris from the engine. Officials initially were hopeful it was the main section of the Airbus A320's cabin, where many of the corpses are believed to be entombed.

So far, only 48 bodies have been recovered. Three more were identified Sunday, including Park Seongbeom, 37, and his wife, Lee Kyung Hwa, 34, from South Korea, said Budiyono, who heads East Java's Disaster Victim Identification unit and, like many Indonesians, uses only one name.

He said they were discovered Friday on the seabed, still strapped to their seats. Their baby has not yet been found, but the infant's carrier was still attached to the man.

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 sent.

Chicopee modifies medical marijuana ordinance

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The city regulations were written before the state ones and they do not match.

CHICOPEE - The Planning Board voted 6-0 to modify the city's medical marijuana ordinance to better fit with state regulations.

"Right now you can't legally put a medical marijuana facility in Chicopee," said Elin Gaynor, chairwoman of the Planning Board.

Although some would like to ban the facilities, state law does not allow any city or town official to write regulations that are so restrictive it would make it impossible for anyone to locate a facility in the community.

The problem is city officials finished writing its ordinance regulating the facilities before the state finalized its rules on how medial marijuana facilities would be licensed. The city ordinance currently requires an owner to receive state permits before they can win city permits but the state law requires all applicants to finalize city permits before they receive state permits, she said.

The Planning Board agreed to change the regulation to match the state requirements. It also agreed to eliminate the 20,000 square feet maximum size allowed for a facility, saying the original regulation was too small.

The ordinance changes will still need approval from the City Council.

Medical marijuana became legal in Massachusetts on Jan. 1, 2013, although dispensaries have yet to open in the commonwealth.

There was some interest to locate facilities in two different spots in Chicopee but the plans were preliminary and did not progress.

Holyoke Councilors to resume discussing plan for Polish historic district, but backer seeks delay

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Supporters and opponents of the Polish historic district plan have accused each other of being untrustworthy.

HOLYOKE -- The City Council Ordinance Committee Tuesday (Jan. 13) is scheduled to resume consideration of a plan to establish a Polish Heritage Historic District on Lyman Street but an official wants the council to delay a vote until late March.

Historical Commission Chairwoman Olivia Mausel said Friday she will ask that the proposal, which has been underway since mid-2011, be tabled. Proponents have a lot of information like letters of support and details about grants and ways historic districts help communities that they need time to gather to submit to the City Council, she said.

The Ordinance Committee meeting is at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall.

The proposal lists 21 residential and commercial properties on the southern part of Lyman Street that supporters said mark an area of Polish heritage, with the focus being Mater Dolorosa Church at Lyman and Maple streets.

Between the 1890's and the outbreak of World War I, nearly a quarter century later, Polish immigrants journeyed here to work in the paper and other mills. They constructed Mater Dolorosa Church in 1901, built homes and established businesses.

Mausel said she would like two more months to get councilors as thorough a package to consider as possible.

"We have some data for them about historic districts, about how they help and about how they can help," Mausel said,.

The package will include:

--information about how such a historic designation would trigger the availability of state and federal grants such as funding to preserve historic properties;

--letters discussing the merits of the historic designation from Robert S. McCarroll of the Springfield Historical Commission and Springfield Preservation Trust; Craig Della Penna of the Northampton Historical Commission; Vitek Kruta, of the Holyoke Historical Commission and co-owner of Gateway City Arts, a studio on Race Street where artists work and art classes and other events are held; Stacia Caplanson of Preservation Massachusetts, a nonprofit historic preservation organization; and the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission.

--a more detailed presentation using slides of the proposed Polish Heritage Historic District.

Even if the Ordinance Committee decides against tabling the proposal and votes its recommendation on the proposal to the full City Council, Mausel said she would ask that the City Council delay a vote for a few months.

Ordinance Committee Chairwoman Rebecca Lisi said the committee likely will consider the proposed Polish Heritage Historic District in some way Tuesday, since it is on the posted agenda, and then discuss whether to table it.

The committee last considered the proposal Nov. 10. The meeting had to be moved upstairs to the more spacious City Hall ballroom to accommodate a crowd of more than 100 people.

The proposal has produced passionate support and opposition with each side accusing the other of being untrustworthy.

Supporters said the key to forming a district is to block the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield from demolishing Mater Dolorosa Church, which was built in 1901 and which the diocese closed in 2011. Mayor Alex B. Morse supports the plan to designate the area a Polish Heritage Historic District.

Parishioners so distrusted the Diocese that they occupied the church round-the-clock for a year, including unheated winter nights, after it closed to block demolition.

Establishing such a district would highlight the Polish heritage part of Holyoke's past and make the city and owners of properties within the district eligible for grants otherwise unavailable. Establishing a Polish historic district also could be a way to draw tourists, Mausel and others said, a notion critics have scoffed at.

The Diocese, which owns the church, has denied it plans to demolish the structure.

Opponents of the historic district plan say supporters are ignoring the reality that sometimes churches must close because of changing beliefs and demographics. They also question whether the Polish presence on Lyman Street exists enough now to merit a historic designation.

Foes like Jean Dietrich of Holyoke, chairwoman of the Finance Committee of Our Lady of the Cross parish, have said the parish was unable to afford the cost of maintaining Mater Dolorosa Church under historic guidelines.

The Diocese merged the former Mater Dolorosa Church with the former Holy Cross Church to form Our Lady of the Cross parish based at 23 Sycamore St.

The Diocese closed Mater Dolorosa for two reasons. First, because Holyoke's declining number of Catholics were unable to support so many parishes.

The second reason the Diocese has said that Mater Dolorosa had to be closed was because of the steeple -- but the fixture atop the 114-year-old church has essentially symbolized the debate.

An engineer hired by the diocese said the steeple was structurally unsound. But an engineer who did a report for free for former Mater Dolorosa parishioners said the steeple was strong.

Former Mayor Elaine A. Pluta requested a study of a possible Polish historic district in 2011 after the Diocese in Springfield closed Mater Dolorosa Church.

U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) Twitter, YouTube sites hacked by Islamic State supporters

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Hackers claiming to work on behalf of Islamic State militants seized control of the Twitter and YouTube sites of the military's U.S. Central Command on Monday.

WASHINGTON -- Hackers claiming to work on behalf of Islamic State militants seized control of the Twitter and YouTube sites of the military's U.S. Central Command on Monday. The Pentagon swiftly suspended the sites and said it appears that no classified material was breached.

The hacker group, which calls itself CyberCaliphate, appears to be the same one that is under FBI investigation for hijacking the websites or Twitter feeds of media outlets in the last month, including a Maryland television station and a New Mexico newspaper.

Defense officials said Monday that they have been in contact with the FBI, and that the previous breaches by the group raises questions about whether the hackers have any real connection to the Islamic State militants that are under U.S. and coalition attack in Iraq and Syria.

FBI spokesman Joshua Campbell said the bureau is investigating the Central Command Twitter and YouTube breaches and is working with the Pentagon to determine the scope of the incident.

The Central Command Twitter site was filled with threats that said "American soldiers, we are coming, watch your back." Other postings appeared to list names, phone numbers and personal email addresses of military personnel as well as PowerPoint slides and maps.

Most of the material was labeled "FOUO," which means "For Official Use Only," but none of it appeared to be classified or sensitive information, suggesting the hackers did not breach classified material. U.S. Central Command said that none of the information and documents posted on the hacked site were from the command's Internet servers or social media sites.


The breach only affected the Twitter and YouTube sites, which reside on commercial, non-Defense Department Internet servers. U.S. Central Command said its operational and military networks were not compromised, but officials are notifying law enforcement about the possible release of personal information that was posted on the Twitter site.


One of the documents appeared to be slides developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory, a federally funded research and development center focused on national security. The slides appeared to depict what it called "scenarios" for conflict with North Korea and China. It's not clear where the documents came from or how long ago they might have been taken, since some of the information was as much as a year old.

"This is little more than a prank or vandalism. It's inconvenient and it's an annoyance. But that's all it is," said Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman. "It in no way compromises our operations in any way shape or form."

Warren said Pentagon officials are in contact with Twitter and YouTube to ensure that military passwords and other security for such public websites are adequate.

The tweets came shortly after U.S. Central Command posted its own tweets about the U.S. and partner nations continuing to attack Islamic State terrorists in Iraq and Syria and one repeating a report that said France will deploy an aircraft carrier to the fight.

The hackers titled the Central Command Twitter page "CyberCaliphate" with an underline that said "i love you isis." And the broader message referred to the ongoing airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria and threatened, "We broke into your networks and personal devices and know everything about you. You'll see no mercy infidels. ISIS is already here, we are in your PCs, in each military base."

It added: "US soldiers! We're watching you!"

The intrusion on the military Twitter account carried the same logo, CyberCaliphate name and photo that appeared on the Albuquerque Journal's website in late December when one of its stories was hacked. And earlier this month, it appeared that the same hackers breached the Journal's Twitter account and also took over the website and Twitter feed of WBOC-TV in Salisbury, Maryland.

The FBI at the time acknowledged it was looking into the Albuquerque case, and WBOC said it was also in contact with the agency.

Some IS militant videos also were posted on the Central Command's YouTube site, purporting to show military operations and explosions.

"This is something we're obviously looking into, and something we take seriously," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. But he cautioned against comparisons to the broader hack attack against Sony. "There's a pretty significant difference between what is a large data breach and the hacking of a Twitter account," he said.

The military suspended the Central Command Twitter site and terminated the YouTube site. This is not the first time that U.S. government websites or other accounts have been hacked. It was not clear whether the site was attacked by the insurgent group or by sympathizers.


Massachusetts State Police: Alcohol-related traffic fatalities continue to decline in commonwealth

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In 2013, Massachusetts highway deaths related to alcohol declined by 8.5 percent, from 129 to 118 deaths, according to newly released data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

FRAMINGHAM — Alcohol-related driving fatalities continue to trend downward in the commonwealth, significantly outpacing the national average, according to Col. Timothy P. Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police.

In 2013, Massachusetts highway deaths related to alcohol declined by 8.5 percent (from 129 deaths in 2012 to 118 deaths in 2013), demonstrating a commitment by "state and local police to take impaired operators off our roads," Alben said.

During that same period, Massachusetts also saw a 15 percent reduction in overall traffic fatalities (from 383 to 326 deaths), according to National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) data.

By comparison, the national rates for alcohol-impaired driving fatalities and overall traffic deaths decreased by 2.5 percent and 3.1 percent, respectively.

"Continuing this impressive pattern of decline in traffic deaths highlighted in the 2013 NHTSA report will require a continuous, sustained investment and commitment to successful public safety policies," Alben said.

Officials attribute a variety of factors to the better numbers, including:


  • improved automobile safety features, such as front and side airbag systems

  • better vehicle engineering designs to withstand collisions

  • increased seatbelt compliance and improved child restraint systems

  • advancements in emergency medicine and emergency medal response

  • and educational and traffic safety awareness.



Wall Street: Falling oil prices drags stock market lower

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The Dow Jones industrial average slid about 97 points while Nasdaq composite lost about 39.

By MATTHEW CRAFT

NEW YORK — Falling oil prices dragged the stock market lower on Monday as Exxon Mobil, Chevron and other big energy companies sank along with crude.

The steep drop in oil prices over recent months has investors second-guessing expectations for the quarterly earnings season that starts this week.

Sam Stovall, the U.S. equity strategist at S&P Capital IQ, said that it seems that every day brings another drop in Wall Street's earnings forecasts.

"What's happening is that we're seeing the very low bar for fourth-quarter earnings raising anxiety," Stovall said. "It's the continued decline in oil, but it's also that nearly half of the S&P 500's revenues come from overseas. Japan is in recession, and Europe is teetering on the edge of it."

The Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 16.55 points, or 0.8 percent, to close at 2,028.26.

The Dow Jones industrial average slid 96.53 points, or 0.5 percent, to 17,640.84, and the Nasdaq composite lost 39.36 points, or 0.8 percent, to 4,664.71.

In a wide-ranging note to clients, Goldman Sachs slashed its forecast for oil prices. It now estimates that that crude will average $50.40 a barrel this year, far below its previous forecast of $83.75. It also trimmed its forecast for Brent crude, a type used in international markets, to $70 a barrel from $90.

Oil prices extended their slide, with U.S. crude losing $2.29 to settle at $46.07 a barrel. Brent lost $2.68 to $47.43. Both trade at their lowest levels since March of 2009.

"I think we're going to see plenty more volatility in the coming days as pressure mounts on oil producers to scale back production before prices get dangerously low," said Craig Erlam, market analyst at Alpari.

Monday also marked the unofficial start to the fourth-quarter earnings season as Alcoa turned in its latest quarterly results after the closing bell. The aluminum producer reported stronger earnings and revenue than Wall Street expected, pushing the stock up 20 cents, or 1 percent, to $16.38 in extended trading.

Analysts expect big corporations to turn in modest results for the fourth-quarter, forecasting earnings growth of 4.6 percent, according to S&P Capital IQ. Overall sales are expected to be meager, rising 2.3 percent, largely the result of sliding revenue for oil companies.

Traders are also looking ahead to Greece's general election on Jan. 25. Opinion polls show the Syriza party on track to win the election. Syriza wants to change the terms of the country's bailout agreement with lenders, but few think it will be able to govern without the support of other parties. Diminishing fears that Greece will drop the euro currency have helped take some pressure off the country's bond market.

Major markets in Europe climbed. Germany's DAX gained 1.4 percent, while France's CAC-40 added 1.2 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 closed flat.

Back in the U.S., Tiffany & Co. cut its outlook for annual profits and posted weaker sales in the holiday season, partially the result of a stronger U.S. dollar pinching results. The jewelry retailer's stock fell $14.44, or 14 percent, to $89.01, the biggest drop in the S&P 500.

AmerisourceBergen announced plans to buy MWI Veterinary Supply for roughly $2.5 billion, or $190 a share. The deal would give the prescription-drug distributer a foothold in the growing business of veterinary medicine. MWI's stock jumped $14.35, or 8 percent, to $190, while AmerisourceBergen sank $2.07, or 2 percent, to $90.93.

In the bond market, prices for Treasurys rose, pushing the yield on the 10-year Treasury note down to 1.91 percent from 1.95 percent late Friday.

In commodity trading, the price of gold gained $16.70 to settle at $1,232.80 an ounce, and silver rose 15 cents to $16.56 an ounce. Copper fell three cents to $2.73 a pound.

In other futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

  1. Wholesale gasoline fell 4.8 cents to close at $1.275 a gallon.
  2. Heating oil fell 4.9 cents to close at $1.654 a gallon.
  3. Natural gas fell 15.1 cents to close at $2.795 per 1,000 cubic feet.

AP business writer Pan Pylas contributed to this report from London.

Holyoke Ward 4 Councilor Jossie Valentin sets general update meeting for ward residents

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Valentin will meet with Ward 4 residents from 6 to 7 p.m. at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 485 Appleton St.

HOLYOKE -- Jossie M. Valentin, the City Councilor for Ward 4, will hold a news and updates meeting for ward residents Tuesday (Jan. 13).

The meeting will be from 6 to 7 p.m. at St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 485 Appleton St., according to a notice on the city website.

"Please join Councilor Jossie Valentin as she presents news and updates and asks for feedback at the Ward 4 meeting," the notice said.

Valentin is in her first, two-year term as Ward 4 councilor and has taken out nomination papers to run for reelection in the Nov. 3 election. She is on the council Public Service Committee and Development and Government Relations Committee.

Mississippi lawmakers eye making Bible the official state book because it's 'good role model'

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At least two bills are being filed during this state election year to make the holy book a state symbol.

JACKSON, Miss. -- Mississippi is the birthplace of William Faulkner, Richard Wright and recent U.S. poet laureate Natasha Trethewey. However, some lawmakers say they want to look beyond the secular literary world and designate the Bible as the state book.

At least two bills are being filed during this state election year to make the holy book a state symbol.

One is from Republican Rep. Tracy Arnold of Booneville, who is the pastor of a nondenominational Christian church. The other is from Democratic Reps. Tom Miles of Forest and Michael Evans of Preston, who say they have promises of bipartisan support from more than 20 colleagues.

Miles told The Associated Press on Monday he's not trying to force religion -- or even reading -- on anyone.

"The Bible provides a good role model on how to treat people," Miles said. "They could read in there about love and compassion."

Lawmakers say designating the Bible as the state book would be completely symbolic and nobody would be required to read it. Furthermore, Miles' version would not specify a particular translation.

Mississippi lawmakers over the years have designated several other symbols, including the teddy bear as the state toy and milk as the state beverage. The teddy bear was named for President Theodore Roosevelt after he refused to shoot a bear tied to a tree while hunting in Mississippi.

In 2014, Republican Gov. Phil Bryant signed a law that adds "In God We Trust" to the state seal. Legislators also begin each work day with a prayer over the microphone at the front of the House and Senate chambers, frequently with references to Jesus.

It's unlikely the proposal will generate much opposition in the Legislature this election year, unless House and Senate leaders decide they don't want to spend time on symbols.

Larry Wells -- whose late wife, Dean Faulkner Wells, was William Faulkner's niece -- said Monday that if Mississippi lawmakers feel compelled to designate a state book, they should draw on the state's native talent.

"It's impossible to conceive of a state abandoning its literary heritage like that," said Wells, director of a small publishing house in Oxford, Yoknapatawpha Press. "What would Faulkner and (Eudora) Welty and Shelby Foote and Richard Wright think? I think they would collectively link arms and say, 'Go back to kindergarten, Legislature.'"

Man taken to hospital after stabbing in Springfield's McKnight neighborhood

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The victim, who was uncooperative, sustained non-life-threatening injuries, Springfield Police Sgt. Lawrence Murphy said.

SPRINGFIELD — Officers responded to a report of a stabbing in the city's McKnight neighborhood on Monday.

A male victim was injured during an apparent altercation near the corner of Bay Street and Girard Avenue around 5 p.m. Multiple police cruisers were parked near the intersection and directly across from Nathaly's Market, the scene of an armed robbery on Thursday afternoon.

The victim, whose age was unavailable, sustained non-life-threatening injuries and was uncooperative, Springfield Police Sgt. Lawrence Murphy said.

AMR ambulance personnel responded to the incident.

An officer at the crime scene warned a group of young men congregating outside Nathaly's Market to move along.

Anyone with information about the stabbing is asked to call the Springfield Police Detective Bureau at 413-787-6355.


MAP showing approximate location of McKnight stabbing:


Boston 2024 boosters, opponents to meet with public at meetings in Boston neighborhoods

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With the official blessing of the United States Olympic Committee firmly in their grasp, Boston 2024 boosters and city officials have lined up several public meetings around Greater Boston to discuss the ramifications of the bid and solicit feedback.

BOSTON -- Organizers of the effort to bring the 2024 Summer Olympics to Boston were strongly criticized for not hosting public meetings with residents prior to being selected as the official US bid city.

Now, with the official blessing of the United States Olympic Committee firmly in their grasp, Boston 2024 boosters and city officials have lined up several public meetings around Greater Boston to discuss the ramifications of the bid and solicit feedback.

A monthly meeting about the games will be held near the end of every month between now and September.

January 27 at 6:30 p.m. -Suffolk Law School, 120 Tremont St., Downtown

February 24, 6:30 p.m. - Condon School Cafeteria, 200 D St., South Boston

March 31, 6:30 p.m. - Harvard Business School, Cambridge

April 28, 6:30 p.m. - Roxbury Community College, 1234 Columbus Ave., Roxbury

May 19, 6:30 p.m. - Cleveland Community Center, 11 Charles St., Dorchester

June 30, 6:30 p.m. - English High School, 144 McBride St., Jamaica Plain

July 28, 6:30 p.m. - Mildred School, 5 Mildred Ave., Mattapan

August 25, 6:30 p.m. - Ohrenberger School, 175 West Boundary Road, W. Roxbury

September 29, 6:30 p.m. - East Boston High School, 86 White St., East Boston

An additional public meeting is scheduled for January 21, 2015, at 6 p.m. at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. More information on the public meetings can be found here.

No Boston Olympics, a civic group opposing the games, has organized its own public meetings on the games.

January 14, 2014 6:00 p.m. - The First Church in Boston 66 Marlborough Street, Back Bay.

More information on the No Boston Olympics meetings can be found here.

Olympic boosters held a smattering of public meetings on Beacon Hill last February that were largely attended by members of the media. The lone public debate organized on whether or not Boston should host the games was held at the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston in December.

New in Massachusetts: The Bureau of Air and Waste

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Massachusetts' new environmental protection commissioner, Martin Suuberg, is dealing with a pair of newly named bureaus thanks to the last-minute work of his predecessor, David Cash.

By MICHAEL NORTON

BOSTON — Massachusetts' new environmental protection commissioner, Martin Suuberg, is dealing with a pair of newly named bureaus thanks to the last-minute work of his predecessor, David Cash.

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A Department of Environmental Protection spokesman confirmed to the State House News Service on Monday that early last week – before Gov. Deval Patrick left office – Cash wrapped up an effort that led to name changes for two of three Department of Environmental Protection bureaus. Spokesman Ed Coletta said discussions of name changes had been ongoing and said the new names "better identify what these particular bureaus do."

DEP's Bureau of Waste Site Cleanup will retain its name while the Bureau of Resource Protection will now be known as the Bureau of Water Resources and the Bureau of Waste Prevention is now the Bureau of Air and Waste.



Keystone XL oil pipeline bill clears Senate, despite Obama veto threat

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Legislation approving construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline cleared an initial Senate hurdle Monday, a victory for newly empowered Republicans angling for a quick veto showdown with President Barack Obama.

WASHINGTON -- Legislation approving construction of the Keystone XL oil pipeline cleared an initial Senate hurdle Monday, a victory for newly empowered Republicans angling for a quick veto showdown with President Barack Obama.

The bipartisan 63-32 vote was three more than the 60 required, and well above the level the highly controversial measure ever gained in recent years when Democrats controlled the Senate.

The measure has sparked intense debate over the Canada-to-Texas pipeline's potential impact on employment and the environment. While the project was proposed six years ago, the White House opposes the legislation as long as the administration is still conducting its formal review.

But with more than enough votes at their command, Republican and Democratic supporters said they hoped the legislation could win final approval and be sent to the White House by the end of next week.

"President Obama has every reason to sign the jobs and infrastructure bill that we will pass," said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. He noted that the Nebraska Supreme Court had recently rejected a legal challenge brought by opponents, an obstacle the White House had cited.

Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, made the case for the opposition. He said that if constructed, the pipeline would carry "some of the dirtiest, most dangerous and most polluting oil in the world." He called the project "anti-clear water, anti-clear air, anti-public health."

The proposed 1,179-mile pipeline would begin in Canada, enter the United States at Morgan, Montana, cut across South Dakota and connect with an existing pipeline in Steele City, Nebraska, that in turn reaches refineries along the Texas Gulf Coast. It would carry an estimated 800,000 barrels of crude oil a day.

The White House has repeatedly threatened a veto. If Obama follows through, it will become the first of what are expected to be numerous clashes with the Republican majorities now in control of both houses of Congress.

Since Congress convened on Jan. 6, the White House has issued a total of five veto threats, including two Monday.

By bringing the legislation to a vote swiftly after taking over the Senate majority, Republicans hope to achieve two goals at once.

Passing the measure is the first. Ushering in a new era of open Senate debate, with the opportunity for lawmakers to seek votes on proposed changes, is the second.

"It's the latest example of Congress getting back to work under a new Republican majority," said McConnell, in a jab at Democrats who have generally blocked votes on amendments over the past few years.

Democrats said they welcomed that, and some readied proposed changes that would try to put Republicans on record concerning climate change.

The Republican-controlled House passed pipeline legislation last week, as it often has in recent years. This time, for the first time since the project was proposed six years ago, the Senate is in Republican hands and the legislation commands enough bipartisan support to assure its approval -- if not enough to override a veto.

The most recent Senate vote, held in November, was on passage of a bill identical to the one voted on Monday. That gained 59 votes.

This time, 52 Republicans, 10 Democrats and one independent voted to allow it to advance. All the votes in opposition were cast by Democrats.

The pipeline project has unanimous support from Republicans in Congress, but it divides Democrats. Environmentalists generally oppose the legislation, while several unions support it for the jobs it would create.

In fact, there was significant debate over both the proposed project's impact on the environment and on the economy.

An environmental impact statement prepared by the State Department estimated that construction spending "would support a combined total of approximately 42,100 jobs throughout the United States for the up to 2-year construction period."

It added that not all the employment would be newly created, though. It said some of the jobs would be "continuity of existing jobs in current or new locations," a distinction often overlooked by the bill's supporters.

Once the proposed project opens, it will require "approximately 50 total employees in the United States: 35 permanent employees and 15 temporary contractors," the State Department estimated.

The project would have a bewildering range of possible impacts on the environment. They range from the effect on the Great Plains Aquifer under southern Nebraska to the fate of the American Burying Beetle, one of 14 species that could be affected that are proposed or currently receiving protection.

The review also said other options for extracting the oil and moving it toward refineries by rail or tanker ship would have a worse impact on climate change, in some cases far worse.

Smoke fills Washington, D.C. Metro station, killing 1 and forcing evacuation

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A spokeswoman for the metro system in Washington, D.C., says one person has died after smoke forced the evacuation of one of the U.S. capital's busiest downtown stations.

WASHINGTON -- A spokeswoman for the metro system in Washington, D.C., says one person has died after smoke forced the evacuation of one of the U.S. capital's busiest downtown stations.

Spokeswoman Caroline Laurin declined to give more information Monday evening, saying the National Transportation Safety Board was investigating.

Hundreds were evacuated from the L'Enfant Plaza station about 3:30 p.m. Monday. At least six were taken to the hospital.

District of Columbia Fire and EMS spokesman Timothy Wilson said earlier in the day that emergency medical workers evaluated dozens of passengers after smoke filled the station.

The source of the smoke was not immediately known.

Springfield City Council grants first-step approval to casino ethics ordinance after one calls it 'headline grabber'

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The ordinance, calling for a five-year ban on casino jobs for elected officials, could be amended before final approval by the City Council.

fenton.photo.JPGMichael Fenton 


SPRINGFIELD - The City Council on Monday gave first-step approval to an ordinance that would prevent the mayor and councilors from taking any Springfield casino jobs for five years after leaving office, aimed at promoting public trust and transparency.

Councilor Timothy Rooke, however, questioned the need for the ordinance and said he sees it as a "headline grabber."

The so-called Casino Ethics Ordinance was praised by several councilors during Monday's meeting, occurring as plans proceed for an $800 million casino in Springfield planned by MGM Springfield.

Councilors took the first of three steps to approve the ordinance, and referred it to the council's General Government Committee for further review and possible amendments.

Council President Michael Fenton, the lead sponsor, said the ordinance is a "policy-driven piece of legislation that is the first of its kind in Massachsetts."

"It will go a long way toward continuing to foster public trust around this project and is critically important to that," Fenton said.

Fenton said he is open to amendments.

Councilor Orlando Ramos praised the ordinance as "important and necessary," but favors a three-year waiting period rather than five year wait. Three years is the same as required of any member of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission in potentially accepting jobs in the casino industry, he said.

Rooke said he is philosophically opposed to the proposal, believing the council should not single out one industry for such a restriction when it does not have the same job-waiting requirements for other businesses that come before the council, such as Smith & Wesson and Baystate Health.

The proposal seems to create suspicion, Rooke said.

"I think it's a headline grabber," Rooke said.

Fenton said last week, in unveiling the proposed ordinance that the casino project "comes with unprecedented risks, and we owe it to the public to be as transparent and forthcoming as possible."

Fenton referred to the five-year ban as holding elected officials to the "highest of standards."

Fenton is also proposing a two-year ban on casino jobs for city employees after they terminate city employment if those employees are in "major policymaking" positions.

Under the ordinance, a major policymaking position is defined as "the executive or administrative head of any department and any person whose salary equals or exceeds that of $60,000 and who reports directly to the administrative head of any city department or person exercising similar authority."

Councilor Timothy Allen, E. Henry Twiggs and Bud L. Williams were among councilors giving early support to the ordinance.

"The point of the ordinance is to build public trust," Allen said.

It helps to make sure that business is conducted in an upstanding way, without implying that anything wrong has occurred, Allen said. The council, in addition to approving the city's host community agreement with MGM Springfield, must also consider zoning issues in the future.

Twiggs said he is not aware of any specific city official who is looking for a job, but the ordinance helps the public to respect the council, adding that "we need to always stand tall."

Rooke said he has no plans to seek a casino job, but would not want to hurt someone else in the city seeking such a job in the future.


Documentary film 'Trigger: The Ripple Effect of Gun Violence' examines impact of shootings on survivors, families and communities

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The film is an examination of gun violence in America, from mass school shootings to urban crime and more, and will be screened at three Springfield churches this month.

SPRINGFIELD — About 30,000 people are killed in shootings across the U.S. annually, and Springfield isn't immune to the problem – losing an average of about 16 people a year.

To that end, a documentary film titled "Trigger: The Ripple Effect of Gun Violence" will be shown at various Springfield venues beginning this week. The aim: to generate a dialogue about the extent of the problem.

The film is told from the perspective of people who've been directly impacted by shootings, including survivors, families of victims and entire communities.

The documentary is the result of a collaborative effort by Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, Presbyterian Peacemaking Program, and the Compassion, Peace and Justice Ministry of the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.

Locally, the Interfaith Council of Western Massachusetts and the the Greater Springfield Campaign Nonviolence Committee are sponsoring the screenings to explore ways to help make our communities more peaceful places to live, according to the Rev. Lauren Holm, pastor of Bethesda Lutheran Church and the East Church UCC, both in Springfield.

"The film is a platform for conversations on this critically important issue," Holm said.

The Springfield screenings are as follows:

  • Holy Cross Parish, 221 Plumtree Road, East Forest Park, 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15. Call rectory to register at 413-783-4111, ext. 116.
  • Bethesda Lutheran Church, 455 Island Pond Road, East Forest Park, 2 p.m. Monday, Jan. 19 (Children who attend will be invited to draw peace flags while adults view and discuss the film.).
  • and Sinai Temple, 1100 Dickinson St., Forest Park, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20.




AirAsia Flight 8501: Divers bring up cockpit voice recorder

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The cockpit voice recorder was freed from beneath the heavy ruins of a wing early in the morning from a depth of about 30 meters (98 feet).

PANGKALAN BUN, Indonesia -- Divers retrieved the crashed AirAsia plane's second black box from the bottom of the Java Sea on Tuesday, giving experts essential tools to piece together what brought Flight 8501 down.

The cockpit voice recorder was freed from beneath the heavy ruins of a wing early in the morning from a depth of about 30 meters (98 feet), a day after the aircraft's flight data recorder was recovered, said Tonny Budiono, sea navigation director at the Transportation Ministry.

"Thank God," he said. "This is good news for investigators to reveal the cause of the plane crash."

The device will be flown to the capital, Jakarta, to be downloaded and analyzed with the other box. Since it records in a two-hour loop, all discussions between the captain and co-pilot should be available.

The plane disappeared from radar 42 minutes into a flight from Surabaya, Indonesia, to Singapore on Dec. 28. All 162 people on board were killed, but only 48 bodies have been recovered so far.

The find is the latest boost in the slow-moving hunt to scour the shallow, murky stretch of ocean.

Over the weekend, the tail of the Airbus A320 was recovered, emblazoned with the carrier's red-and-white cursive logo. The black boxes are housed inside the tail, but they were missing when the wreckage was pulled to the surface.

The devices were soon located after three Indonesian ships detected two strong pings being emitted from their beacons, about 20 meters (22 yards) apart. Strong currents, large waves and blinding silt have hindered divers' efforts throughout the 17-day search, but they took advantage of calmer early morning conditions on both days to extract the instruments.

The information pulled from the black boxes -- which are actually orange -- will likely be vital. Designed to survive extreme heat and pressure, they should provide investigators with a second-by-second timeline of the flight.

The voice recorder captures all conversations between the pilots and with air traffic controllers, as well as any noises heard in the cockpit, including possible alarms or explosions. The flight data recorder saves information on the position and condition of almost every major part in the plane, including altitude, airspeed, direction, engine thrust, the rate of ascent or descent and what up-or-down angle the plane was pointed.

"There's like 200-plus parameters they record," said aviation expert John Goglia, a former U.S. National Transportation Safety Board member. "It's going to provide us an ocean of material."

In their last contact with air-traffic controllers, the pilots of the AirAsia jet asked to climb from 32,000 feet (9,750 meters) to 38,000 feet (11,580 meters) to avoid threatening clouds, but were denied permission because of heavy air traffic. Four minutes later, the plane disappeared. No distress signal was received.

Searchers also have been trying to locate the main section of the aircraft's cabin, where many of the victims are believed to be entombed.

Decomposition is making identification more difficult for desperate families waiting to bury their loved ones. Nearly all passengers and crew were Indonesian.

"I still believe many victims remain trapped there, and we must find them," said Gen. Moeldoko, Indonesia's military chief, who uses one name.

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