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Chicopee City Council returns 2 members to the Board of Health, seeking 3rd

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The Board of Health has had a vacant seat on it for months.

CHICOPEE - The City Council agreed to return a four-year commissioner to the Board of Health and is seeking another candidate to fill a vacant seat there.

The Board of Health has been short members for months, leaving the board struggling to reach a quorum and get much needed business done.

The Council voted 11-0 to reappoint Ernest Mathieu to the board. He has served since 2011 and his term is expiring in 2015. Before the vote, members praised Mathieu for his knowledge and good work on the board.

Two weeks ago the Council voted to return Janet Ely to the board as well. Councilors said she has also been a good member.

Councilor James K. Tillotson said nominations are open for the third position, which is reserved for someone with a medical background including a nurse, a chiropractor or someone else who holds a medical license.

The Council recently received legislative approval on a home rule petition that requested permission to change the city charter to allow someone with a medical certification to serve on the Board of Health. The previous regulations required a medical doctor to hold the seat and few live in Chicopee and are willing to serve, Tillotson said.

Anyone interested in serving on the board should contact the City Council or Mayor's office.


RadioShack files for bankruptcy protection; plans to sell up to 2,400 stores

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General Wireless, a subsidiary of Standard General, RadioShack's largest shareholder, has agreed to buy 1,500 to 2,400 of the company's U.S. stores. As part of the bankruptcy plan, Sprint may open mini-shops in as many as 1,760 of the acquired RadioShack stores.

NEW YORK -- Struggling electronics retailer RadioShack has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and says it will sell up to 2,400 stores.

General Wireless, a subsidiary of Standard General, RadioShack's largest shareholder, has agreed to buy 1,500 to 2,400 of the company's U.S. stores. As part of the bankruptcy plan, Sprint may open mini-shops in as many as 1,760 of the acquired RadioShack stores.

The Fort Worth, Texas company said Thursday that it has filed a motion to proceed with closing the rest of its 4,000 U.S. stores. It is also having discussions to sell all of its remaining assets.

RadioShack Corp. introduced one of the first mass-market personal computers and used to be the go-to stop for consumers' home electronics needs. But it struggled as shoppers increasingly shifted to making purchases online and growth in its wireless business slowed. It has suffered years of losses.

The New York Stock Exchange suspended trading of its shares on Monday and sought to delist it. The NYSE requires companies meet certain market capitalization thresholds to remain on the exchange.

RadioShack had warned of a possible bankruptcy in September, but received rescue financing that kept it afloat. Still, its CEO recently cautioned the chain might not be able to find a long-term plan to stay in business.

RadioShack worked hard on its turnaround efforts, hiring Walgreen Co. executive Joseph Magnacca as its CEO and former Treasury Department adviser Harry J. Wilson as chief revitalization officer. It also developed relationships with popular brands like Beats Audio and redesigned almost half of its U.S. locations -- some 2,000 stores -- in an effort to entice younger shoppers.

The company, which has not turned a profit since 2011, still operates nearly 5,500 stores and employs about 27,500 people worldwide, according to its last annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

RadioShack said Thursday that it also has more than 1,000 dealer franchise stores in 25 countries, stores operated by its Mexican subsidiary, and operations in Asia operations, which are not included in the Chapter 11 filing.

RadioShack, which was founded in Boston in 1921, started as a distributor of mail-order ship radios, ham radios and parts. In the 1950s, it entered the high-fidelity business, touting a device called the "Audio Comparator," a then-novel switching system that allowed the customer to mix and match components and speakers in the listening room.

In 1977, the chain started selling the TRS-80, known affectionately by its users as the "Trash 80," making the RadioShack as important in microcomputers as IBM or Apple.

Vladimir Putin has Asperger's syndrome? That's what 2008 Pentagon study says about Russian president

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Think Russian president Vladimir Putin has been acting a little bit unusual lately? Maybe that's because he has Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism. At least, that is what a Pentagon study obtained by USA Today suggests. The disorder "affects all of his decisions," the 2008 report says. Putin's "neurological development was significantly interrupted in infancy," the newspaper quoted...

Think Russian president Vladimir Putin has been acting a little bit unusual lately?

Maybe that's because he has Asperger's syndrome, a form of autism.

At least, that is what a Pentagon study obtained by USA Today suggests. The disorder "affects all of his decisions," the 2008 report says.

Putin's "neurological development was significantly interrupted in infancy," the newspaper quoted Brenda Connors, an expert in movement pattern analysis at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, R.I., as writing. Studies of his movement, Connors wrote, reveal "that the Russian President carries a neurological abnormality."

USA Today said that scientists can't prove their theory, because they were not able to obtain a scan of Putin's brain. But the report says autism specialists back the findings.

The report quoted a University of North Carolina psychiatry professor, Stephen Porges, as concluding that "Putin carries a form of autism." But Porges told the newspaper on Wednesday that he "would back off saying he has Asperger's."

According to CBS News, which also obtained a copy of the report, the research was conducted by the Office of Net Assessment, that the news agency describes as "a secretive, internal Pentagon think tank. "

CBS reported that the analysis was based on Putin's public actions recorded on video between 2000 and the time the study was completed.

The study also hypothesizes that Putin suffered an "insult" to his brain while he was still in his mother's womb and that she may have suffered a stroke while pregnant with him, CBS reported. Researchers theorized that may have affected the way Putin thinks and moves the right side of his body.

"His primary form of compensation for his disorder is extreme control and this is reflected in his decision style and how he governs," the report says.

The New York Daily News reported that the study was issued to USA Today as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the newspaper.

The report said that Putin suffered a "huge hemispheric event to the left temporal lobe of the prefrontal cortex ... very early in life, perhaps even in utero" affecting his ability to interact socially and posing "great behavioral challenges to his cognitive and emotional processing," according to the Daily News.

Those effects, Connors explained, manifest behaviorally in the lawmaker as hypersensitivity, social shyness and behavioral withdrawal from social stimulation.

Putin is just one of a number of public figures to have been associated with some form of autism, Fox News pointed out. The news agency cited Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, Lewis Carroll, Andy Warhol, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as public figures who have showed some signs of the condition.

The latest edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders published two years ago eliminated Asperger's disorder as a diagnosis, merging the condition with autism, according to Fox.

Up until that time, Asperger's syndrome had been considered to be a mild form of autism.

However, one of the main differences between Asperger's and autism is there is no speech delay in Asperger's, and the autistic symptoms are much less severe. Often times, individuals with Apserger's have good language skills, but their speech patterns may be unusual, and they may not pick up subtleties such as humor or sarcasm, according to Fox.

Later in the day, the White House refused to comment on the report.

"I don't have any comment on that Pentagon report," USA Today quoted White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest as saying Thursday after being asked in a briefing whether the Obama administration believed the report.
"I'm not saying it's (not) credible, necessarily; I'm just saying that I don't have my own personal reaction to it." he said.

Earnest would not even say if President Obama had been briefed on the study.

The study concludes that Putin's personal style is not expected to undergo any major changes as he ages, CBS reported.

Brian Williams 'misremembered' provides fodder for social media

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Social media is having a field day at NBC anchor BrIan Williams expense.

Dow Jones industrial average jumps 211 points led by health care, energy stocks

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Investors plowed money back into stocks following a slump the week before, encouraged by a 4 percent jump in the price of crude oil and Pfizer's $16 billion deal to buy the drugmaker Hospira.

By KEN SWEET

NEW YORK -- The stock market surged again on Thursday, putting the Dow Jones industrial average on track for its best week since 2011.

Investors plowed money back into stocks following a slump the week before, encouraged by a 4 percent jump in the price of crude oil and Pfizer's $16 billion deal to buy the drugmaker Hospira.

The Dow Jones industrial average jumped more than 200 points, its third big gain this week. The Dow is now up about 700 points, or 4 percent, so far this week.

That's a far cry from the week before, when the blue-chip index stumbled nearly 3 percent.

"We've been returning to more normal volatility and this week is just the most recent example of that," said Gabriela Santos, a global market strategist with JPMorgan Funds.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 211.86 points, or 1.2 percent, to 17,884.88. The Standard & Poor's 500 index added 21.01 points, or 1 percent, to 2,062.52. The Nasdaq composite rose 48.39 points, or 1 percent, to 4,765.10.

The gains put the Dow and S&P 500 back into the black for 2015.

Health care stocks and energy companies had some of the biggest gains.

Drug giant Pfizer said it would buy Hospira, a maker of injectable drugs, for $90 a share in cash. The deal is the first by Pfizer since it walked away from a merger with AstraZeneca last year. Like many other large drug companies, Pfizer is trying to generate more sales as its blockbuster drugs go generic. Hospira soared $22.84, or 35 percent, to $87.62 and Pfizer rose 92 cents, or 3 percent, to $32.99.

Oil also had a wild day.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose $2.03 to settle at $50.48 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, continuing a volatile ride that has lasted for several weeks. On Wednesday, oil plunged $4.60, or 8.7 percent, to settle at $48.45 a barrel the day before after the U.S. government reported an increase in crude inventories last week.

Few investors believe the turbulence in oil trading will end any time soon. While data earlier this week showed U.S. production is slowing, this week's crude oil inventory levels tell a different story.

"We're starting to see some production shifts, but it's happening slowly," Santos said. "Oil is going to keep making these big swings until something is done to deal with all this oversupply."

Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils, rose $2.50 to $56.66 a barrel in London.

U.S. stocks shrugged off more bad news in Europe. Greek stocks dropped as tensions between the country's new left-wing government and the European Central Bank intensified.

Greece's new left-wing government is insisting it will stick to its anti-austerity agenda, hours after the European Central Bank tightened the screws on Athens by withdrawing a key borrowing option for the country's banks.

Greek stocks dropped 3 percent on the news. European stocks closed mostly flat, after being down more sharply earlier in the trading day.

"The decision by the ECB to no longer accept Greek bonds as collateral may be aimed at piling the pressure on Greece to request an extension of its current bailout beyond February 28, but it is has also raised the risk that Greece could be forced into a default," said Jane Foley, an analyst at Rabobank International.

In other markets, U.S. government bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.81 percent.

Gold fell $1.80 to $1,262.70 an ounce, silver fell 20 cents to $17.20 an ounce and copper was flat at $2.60 a pound.

In other energy commodities:

  1. Wholesale gasoline rose 4.3 cents to close at $1.525 a gallon.
  2. Heating oil rose 3.9 cents to close at $1.806 a gallon.
  3. Natural gas fell 6.2 cents to close at $2.600 per 1,000 cubic feet.

AP writer Yuri Kageyama contributed to this report from Tokyo.

Local rapper Frankie Hayze uses imagery from actual Springfield murder scene in 'John Gotti' video

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"I meant no disrespect to him or anyone in his family by using clips from that crime scene," said Frankie Hayze, referring to murder victim Jermaine Cowell, who was shot dead in Springfield's Forest Park neighborhood in July 2014.

SPRINGFIELD — Local rapper Frankie Hayze uses images from an actual Springfield murder scene in the video for his song "John Gotti," which is making the social media rounds on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and other sites.

The video includes drug imagery and clips from a Forest Park homicide scene. The song itself is included on Hayze's new album, "Money is Life," which debuts Feb. 27 and will be available on cdbaby.com, iTunes and other digital outlets that sell music online.

Franki Hayze.jpg 

Hayze, born and raised in Springfield and honest about his past brushes with the law, says the video isn't intended to highlight the July 2014 killing of 27-year-old Jermaine Cowell, who was shot dead near the Golden Eagle Apartments on White Street.

"I meant no disrespect to him or anyone in his family by using clips from that crime scene," said Hayze (that's not his given name), adding that a friend who produced the video made sure not to include any identifying images.

Hayze, 22, currently lives in Forest Park and has been rapping since he was 12, but he didn't start pursuing a music career until he was 18.

"I ended up getting sidetracked by all the bad influences in Springfield. I started selling drugs, ended up getting arrested. (I have) seen that wasn't the life I wanted to be living, so I started pursuing music again," Hayze said.

But not everyone is excited about his music.

The video for "John Gotti" glorifies the thug life and sends the wrong message to our children, according to a Springfield woman who contacted MassLive / The Republican to voice her concerns. The murder-scene images are "very upsetting," the woman said, adding that she's concerned because the video is "going viral on Facebook."

"I believe he should not be idolized by the kids," she said in an email. "This guy is a criminal and has been arrested ... for drugs in our city."


MBTA to commuters: Prepare for more delays, disruptions as brutal cold continues

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The MBTA is advising commuters to be prepared for delays and disruptions to service over the next several days due to the severe weather. Red and Orange Line commuters should prepare for shuttle replacement service over the weekend.

BOSTON -- The MBTA is advising commuters to be prepared for delays and disruptions to service over the next several days due to the severe weather.

Boston is forecast to experience bitterly cold weather on Friday that MBTA officials expect will hamper propulsion systems on the system's ancient engines and subway cars.

"While the MBTA will work hard to provide regular weekday service, customers are strongly encouraged to stay updated on delays and service interruptions via mbta.com or on twitter @mbta," said the MBTA in a statement.

Recent record snowfalls and a cold snap have crippled the public transportation system with systemic delays. The delays were so bad earlier in the week that the MBTA asked commuters to avoid certain segments of the transit system. The system improved gradually as the week progressed.

Snow removal operations are expected to continue throughout the weekend on the Red and Orange Lines, requiring the use of shuttle buses on on the heavily traveled subway lines. New York's Metropolitan Transportation Agency loaned the MBTA two jet-powered snow blowers to assist in the removal of snow from the subway tracks.

CBS 3 Springfield report on death of monkeys at Forest Park zoo

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The monkeys reportedly died because of a combination of factors including hypothermia.


Northampton City Council approves spending for Lumberyard affordable housing project

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The council twice delayed its vote on CPA funding, while approving the appropriations for other CPA projects.

NORTHAMPTON - After much, much talking, the City Council approved $300,000 in Community Preservation money for the Lumberyard project on Pleasant Street.

Twenty-five people spoke about the project in the public comment session prior to the meeting. Twenty-one spoke in favor while four people had qualms about various aspects. The project will be built at the site of the former Northampton Lumber and offer 55 units of affordable housing and 5,000 square feet of commercial space.

The council twice delayed its vote on CPA funding, while approving the appropriations for other CPA projects. Community Preservation money is collected from a surcharge on property taxes. It can be used only for affordable housing, historic preservation, conservation purposes or recreation.

Prior to the council meeting, the American Friends Service Committee sponsored a rally on the City Hall steps to support affordable housing and urge passage of the CPA request. The rally was cut short, however, because of sub-freezing temperatures.

Among those who spoke in favor of the project were former mayors Mary Ford and Mary Clare Higgins, former city councilor Pamela Schwartz and former planning board member Jen Deringer. Several councilors also made lengthy speeches prior to the vote, which passed 7-1. Ward 1 councilor Maureen Carney cast the only nay vote. Ward 5 councilor David Murphy, a realtor, recused himself. An abutter has filed a suit in Land Court against the city and the developer, Valley Community Developmeznt Corporation, opposing the project.

The council also twice postponed a vote in the "Vibrant Sidewalk" resolution, in addition to referring it once to a subcommittee. On Thursday it passed it unanimously. The resolution was drafted in the wake of the removal of a half dozen benches from Main Street by Mayor David J. Narkewicz. Members of the business community had complained that the benches were being comandeered by street people. Narkewicz promptly returned the benches after the resulting outcry.

The resolution has no real teeth besides calling for more downtown benches. The originally scheduled vote was postponed because the resolution appeared to condone disruptive behavior on the street. It was subsequently revised.

In another postponed matter, the council voted to increase the stipend for city councilors from $5,00 a year to $10,000 and for School The raises take effect after the next election on Jan. 4, 2016. All those seats are up for reelection. The vote was 6-3 with Murphy, Ward 3 Councilor Ryan O'Donnell and Council President William Dwight voting no. Murphy proposed an amendment giving those elected officials the choice of taking the increase or accepting health insurance benefits, but he withdrew it after questions arose about its legality.

Day 11 of jury selection in Tsarnaev trial nets 13 interviews with possible jurors

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The process to find a pool of 12 jurors and 6 alternates has gone on longer than expected as the trial was originally scheduled to start on January 26. Only 142 prospective jurors have been interviewed out of a pool of 1,200.

BOSTON — Just 13 prospective jurors made it through day 11 of the voir dire process in the trial of alleged Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokar Tsarnaev.

The process to find a pool of 12 jurors and six alternates has gone on longer than expected as the trial was originally scheduled to start on Jan. 26. Only 142 prospective jurors have been interviewed out of a pool of 1,200.

Tsarnaev is facing 30 charges stemming from the bombing and the events that followed where four people were killed and more than 260 were injured. The 21-year-old from Cambridge is facing a possible a death sentence if convicted.

Many of the jurors interviewed did not appear fit for service on the jury as they expressed strong opinions about the death penalty or the guilt of Tsarnaev.

Juror 321, an Irish folk singer, said that he could not impose the death penalty on Tsarnaev if asked.

"I don't agree with the death penalty," he said.

Juror 333 said she had experience serving a federal jury in Rhode Island but that it would be difficult for her to be impartial in the trial of Tsarnaev.

"I would have a hard time being impartial. It's hard to go back on what you've seen versus what's being presented," she said.

Jury selection is expected to continue tomorrow at Moakley Courthouse in South Boston.

Area parishes ready for Lent with Friday luncheons

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Lent begins Feb. 18.

SOUTH HADLEY - Mardi Gras season is underway in New Orleans, in preparation for Shrove Tuesday and the start of this year's Lenten season on Feb. 18.

Preparations for the 40-days of fast have begun in the Pioneer Valley with parish notices of Lenten lunch preparation.

At All Saints' Episcopal Church, 7 Woodbridge St., the new featured hot dish will be lobster mac-and-cheese. The menu also includes lobster rolls, heirloom meatless soups, lobster salad, sandwiches, and gourmet desserts. The lunches will be served from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on all six Fridays during Lent. The first lunch will be on Feb. 20.

The lunches, now in their 45th year, raise about $3,000 for area feeding, shelter and other programs.

Take-out orders are available by calling (413) 532-8917. Parking is in the rear of the church which is fully handicapped accessible. Favorite recipes are often printed on request. Easter is April 5.

PM News Links: Mother, 32, daughter, 9, found hanging in basement; private Kennedy photos to be auctioned; and more

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An obituary published in a Connecticut newspaper, claiming the cause of an 83-year-old woman's death was hypothermia after her dog ate her socks and boots at the base of Mount Kilimanjaro, was just a continuation of her pranks from the afterlife, the newspaper reported later.

A digest of news stories from around New England.



Mother and daughter found.jpgAriana Rosa, top, and Marley Soares 
  • Brockton police investigate death of mother, 32, daugther, 9 found hanging in basement of home [The Enterprise of Brockton] Video above

  • Private photos of John and Jackie Kennedy at Cape Cod to be sold by Boston auction house [People]


  • Connecticut woman has last laugh as she publishes joke about her death in self-written obituary [Connecticut Post] Video below

  • New Hampshire man charged with fake drug sales online [Union Leader]


  • Deputy Fire Chief finds 1 uncle, loses other during fire at Revere house he grew up in [Boston Globe] Video below

  • Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey criticizes drug maker for dramatic increase in price of drug used to reverse heroin, opiod painkiller overdoses [Boston Herald]

  • Billerica firefigher killed in New Hampshire snowmobile accident [Billerica Minuteman]


  • Former Big Dig boss James Kerasiotes gets six months in prison for filing false tax returns [Sun Chronicle of Attleboro]


  • Vermont suspends tax refunds in wake of identity theft concerns [Burlington Free Press]





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    American Heart Association names 2015 Go Red for Women Ambassadors

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    Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women.

    Fifteen women, including three from Chicopee, have been named area ambassadors for the American Heart Association's annual Go Red For Women campaign. A promotional poster of the women, who were nominated as ambassadors against heart disease in women, was unveiled at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

    Heart disease is the leading cause of death in women, something highlighted by the poster and by the Go Red Leading Ladies in their attendance at association events.

    "One out of three women will be touched by heart disease. This poster will help educate women in our community about their greatest health risk, cardiovascular disease," said Mary Ann Burns, the association's area director. She called the Go Red Leading Ladies "role models" and said, in a release, that they were selected for knowing the "importance of good heart health."

    The women selected include Judith Danek, Sharon Owsiak and Kristin Tetrault, all of Chicopee; Molly MacMunn, Deerfield; Debra Boronski, East Longmeadow; Kimothy Jones, Enfield, Conn.; Kristen Styspeck, Hadley; Mary Quirk-Fallon, Holyoke; Gail Baquis, Laurie Gianturco and Kris Houghton, Longmeadow; Katherine Hart, Montague; Amy Trombley, Northampton; Anna Bowen, South Hadley; Christine Parizo, West Springfield

    Anyone interested in hosting a poster at their business or organization, should contact the American Heart Association at (413) 335-9044.

    Go to www.goredforwomen.org for more information on the Go Red For Women movement, tips for healthy living, to sign up for Go Red, healthy recipes and more.

    CBS 3 Springfield report on pothole repairs in West Springfield

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    State and local officials stumbled over each other trying to do repairs on Friday.

    Amherst police nab fugitive New York sex offender at Belchertown Road apartment complex

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    Jose Dones, 39, of Schenectady, New York, is being held on held on $10,000 cash bail pending arraignment on Feb. 9 in Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown, according to Amherst Police Lt. Ronald Young.

    AMHERST — Police arrested a New York sex offender at an Amherst apartment complex on Friday afternoon, according to Lt. Ronald A. Young, officer in charge of the Amherst Police Detective Bureau.

    Jose Dones, 39, of Schenectady, was taken into custody at a Belchertown Road apartment complex just after 2:30 p.m, Young said.

    Dones, a fugitive from justice, is wanted by New York authorities for allegedly failing to register as a sex offender. His extradition to that state will be determined by the courts, according to police.

    For now, though, he's being held on $10,000 cash bail and expected to be arraigned Monday, Feb. 9, in Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown, police said.



    Persistent motor vehicle break-ins drastically reduced in Ludlow following arrest of 3 men

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    Ludlow police believe two of the men apprehended, who reside in town, worked as a team. The third is a Springfield man -- with a criminal rap sheet court records show began in 1998.

    LUDLOW — There were more than 50 automobile break-ins since Christmas -- that had been plaguing the community -- but the rate was drastically reduced following the recent arrest of three men who have been arraigned in Palmer District Court, charged with stealing credit cards, breaking and entering and illicit drug use.

    Ludlow police believe two of the men apprehended, who reside in town, worked as a team. The third is a Springfield man with a criminal rap sheet dating to 1998, according to court records.

    "It is telling that (vehicle break-ins) have been drastically reduced since the three were arrested," police Sgt. Louis Tulik said in a telephone interview Friday.

    The Ludlow duo of Louis G. Lopes, 33, of 48 Newbury St. and Corey R. Dias, 25, of 14 Maple St. are represented by public defender Molly Del Howe-Lembcke.

    Lopes is charged with three counts of receiving stolen property, that carries a possible five-year jail sentence; and five counts of using a stolen credit card, that also carries a maximum five year sentence.

    Video shows him exiting the Westfield Walmart with a large television that he allegedly purchased with another individual's credit card.

    A statement Lopes provided to Ludlow police, filed with the court, shows him stating: "I have had a heroin problem for the last years" (sic); and stating: "Corey's breaking into cars every day. He told. I never saw him break into a car."

    In addition to being charged with possession of Cocaine, Dias was arraigned on larceny, two counts of using a stolen credit card, and receiving stolen property.

    Dias' pre-trial hearing is scheduled for March 23; Lopes' is scheduled for Feb. 20.

    John Hollister, 31, of 132 Vincent St., Springfield, who has been known to police for many years, is represented by Springfield attorney Michelle A. Dame.

    He is charged with breaking and entering, a felony that carries a maximum 20-year jail term.

    Hollister is also charged with four counts of using a stolen credit card.

    The probable cause report filed by police with the court states: "Hollister has an extensive record involving prior misuse of credit cards and is currently on probation. He has a history of defaults . . . and is a suspect in several other motor vehicle breaks in Ludlow."

    Hollister's pre-trial hearing is Feb. 27.

    For partner in planned vegan restaurant at former Seven Sisters Bistro site, restaurant success runs in the family

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    Ted Crooker's family has a half-century of experience operating restaurants in Maine and beyond.

    HADLEY -- When Keith Rehbein and his business partner Ted Crooker bought the former Seven Sisters Bistro at auction Wednesday, Rehbein said neither he nor Crooker has previously operated a restaurant.

    While technically true, Crooker's family has a half-century history of owning and operating restaurants in Maine and beyond.

    Crooker's late parents, Marion A. and Harry C. Crooker, bought the historic Estes Lobster House in South Harpswell, Maine, in the early 1960s, according to an obituary for Marion Crooker published in The Forecaster of Falmouth, Maine.

    Ted Crooker's brother, Larry Crooker, currently operates the establishment.

    "We continue to serve great seafood in the Estes tradition and have added a new seafood menu and vegetarian options," reads the website for the restaurant, which originally opened in 1947. "For over 50 years, Larry and his staff have been serving the finest lobster, seafood, chowders, sandwiches, salads and more." 

    An obituary for Marion Crooker published in the Portland Press Herald elaborates on Larry Crooker's restaurant experience: "Long time restaurateur, Larry built and established the Taste of Maine in Woolwich, as well as four more restaurants in Mid-Coast Maine and Florida where he was able to incorporate his cooking skills learned from his mother."

    Ted Crooker, partner in the Hadley restaurant venture, is retired from Harry C. Crooker and Sons, Inc., a paving and heavy construction company founded in Topsham Maine by the Crooker brothers' father and mother, according to the obituary.

    Once Rehbein and Crooker complete the purchase of the Seven Sisters building, the abutting farmland and neighboring commercial site, they will need to bring plans before the Hadley Planning Board, said town building inspector Timothy Neyhart.

    They will also need to seek a building permit for a new kitchen.

    At the auction Wednesday, Rehbein said it will take he and Crooker some time -- possibly a year -- to develop and open the vegan restaurant. The pair paid nearly $3 million for the restaurant, a home on the site, 32 acres of farmland, and a four-acre commercial site.

    Paul Ciaglo opened the Seven Sisters Bistro in 2012 and closed it after just over a year. Ciaglo filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April, 2014, after failing to make payments on a $1.27 million mortgage for the bistro to Chicopee Savings Bank. He owed a total of more than $4 million on the parcels that comprise the site, town officials said. The bank has not confirmed those figures.


    Anthem hack: Does HIPAA federal health privacy law have a gap?

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    Insurers aren't required to encrypt consumers' data under a 1990s federal law that remains the foundation for health care privacy in the Internet age -- an omission that seems striking in light of the major cyberattack against Anthem.

    WASHINGTON -- Insurers aren't required to encrypt consumers' data under a 1990s federal law that remains the foundation for health care privacy in the Internet age -- an omission that seems striking in light of the major cyberattack against Anthem.

    Encryption uses mathematical formulas to scramble data, converting sensitive details coveted by intruders into gibberish. Anthem, the second-largest U.S. health insurer, has said the data stolen from a company database that stored information on 80 million people was not encrypted.

    The main federal health privacy law -- the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA -- encourages encryption, but doesn't require it.

    The lack of a clear encryption standard undermines public confidence, some experts say, even as the government plows ahead to spread the use of computerized medical records and promote electronic information sharing among hospitals, doctors and insurers.

    "We need a whole new look at HIPAA," said David Kibbe, CEO of DirectTrust, a nonprofit working to create a national framework for secure electronic exchange of personal health information.

    "Any identifying information relevant to a patient ... should be encrypted," said Kibbe. It should make no difference, he says, whether that information is being transmitted on the Internet or sitting in a company database, as was the case with Anthem.

    Late Friday, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee said it's planning to examine encryption requirements as part of a bipartisan review of health information security. "We will consider whether there are ways to strengthen current protections," said Jim Jeffries, spokesman for chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.

    The agency charged with enforcing the privacy rules is a small unit of the federal Health and Human Services Department, called the Office for Civil Rights.

    The office said in a statement Friday that it has yet to receive formal notification of the hack from Anthem, but nonetheless is treating the case as a privacy law matter. Although Anthem alerted mainline law enforcement agencies, the law allows 60 days for notifying HHS.

    The statement from the privacy office said the kind of personal data stolen by the Anthem hackers is covered by HIPAA, even if it does not include medical information.

    "The personally identifiable information health plans maintain on enrollees and members -- including names and Social Security numbers -- is protected under HIPAA, even if no specific diagnostic or treatment information is disclosed," the statement said.

    A 2009 federal law promoting computerized medical records sought to nudge the health care industry toward encryption. Known as the HITECH Act, it required public disclosure of any health data breach affecting 500 or more people. It also created an exemption for companies that encrypt their data.

    Encryption has been seen as a controversial issue in the industry, particularly with data that's only being stored and not transmitted. Encryption adds costs and can make day-to-day operations more cumbersome. It can also be defeated if someone manages to decipher the code or steals the key to it.

    In fact, Anthem spokeswoman Kristin Binns said encryption would not have thwarted the latest attack because the hacker also had a system administrator's ID and password. She said the company normally encrypts data that it exports.

    But some security experts said a stolen credential by itself shouldn't be an all-access pass to encrypted data.

    Martin Walter, senior director at RedSeal Networks, a Silicon Valley cybersecurity firm, said encryption can be tuned to limit the data that even authorized users can view at one time. That makes it harder for an outsider to copy a whole stockpile of records.

    Under the HITECH law, the government set up a public database listing major breaches, known informally as the "hall of shame." Breaches on that list affected more than 40 million people over a decade, meaning that the Anthem case could be twice as damaging as all previous reported incidents combined.

    Indiana University law professor Nicolas Terry said it seemed at the time of the 2009 law that the government had struck a reasonable balance, creating incentives for encryption while stopping short of imposing a one-size-fits-all solution. Now he's concerned that the compromise has been overtaken by events.

    "In today's environment, we should expect all health care providers to encrypt their data from end to end," said Terry, who specializes in health information technology.

    If the voluntary approach isn't working, "HHS should amend the security rule to make encryption mandatory," he said.

    CBS 3 Springfield report on Forest Park zoo's reaction to death of monkeys

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    Zoo officials plan to install a system that will alert them when there is a power failure in the animals' quaraters.

    Westfield City Council considering creation of facilities manager position

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    Consolidation of public works related departments is the result of a management study conducted late last year.

    WESTFIELD - The City Council will consider creating a facilities manager position within a revised Department of Public Works rather than as an extension of the mayor's office.

    The council's Personnel Action Committee Thursday night gained support of the full City Council to refer the matter to the Legislative and Ordinance Committee with a recommendation that the manager position be contained in a new revised Department of Public Works.

    The council approved a new Facilities Management Department back in November but to date has not approved any funding for the position that will over see maintenance and upkeep of municipal buildings and energy conservation equipment installed in them over the past three years.

    Last month Mayor Daniel M. Knapik asked the council to consider consolidating some departments into a new Department of Public Works. That will incorporate Water, Water Resources, part of the Health and Parks and Recreation departments.

    The recommendation follows a management review conducted last last year by Tata & Howard of Marlborough. The recommendation, if approved, will put Water Resource Superintendent David Billips in charge of the new department.

    City Councilor Cindy Harris, chairperson of the Personnel Action Committee, said many duties of the new facilities manager are similar to those of the building inspector job and offered that the new position can easily be absorbed in the new DPW rather that create a new department under the mayor's office.

    "Longmeadow has been quite successful in such a move," Harris said.

    The full City Council agreed to consider the recommendation.

    But, City Councilor James R. Adams said it is important to move quickly with assignment of someone to oversee maintenance and other issues involving "our millions of dollars in municipal buildings and equipment. Right now we have no one responsible to determining our maintenance needs and I do not want to see these buildings fall into disrepair again like in the past."

    Adams noted the city has spent $41 million in renovations, rehabilitation and purchase and installation of new energy conservation equipment over the past three years.

    "I do not want to see that effort jeopardized or wasted," Adams said.

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