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Northampton Police Department to host free, kid-friendly 'Police Day' event on Saturday, May 9

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The free, family-friendly event is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 9, at the Northampton Police Department, 29 Center St.

NORTHAMPTON — The Northampton Police Department will host "Police Day" on Saturday, May 9, featuring tours of the city's new police station, equipment demonstrations, snacks, and more.

The kid-friendly event will be held at the station, 29 Center St., from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

There will be three guided tours of the new station at various times throughout the day, numerous police cruisers from area departments, opportunities to try on police gear and watch crime scene demos, and even a "cruiser lights show" demonstrating various strobe and emergency lights used by police.

There will be music, compliments of Hits 94.3 FM, a limited number of free T-shirts for kids, and complimentary popcorn and refreshments. And youngsters who dream of becoming a firefighter or police officer some day will have a chance to hop into a real police car or climb aboard a real Northampton Fire Rescue fire truck.

For more information, check out the event flier on the Police Department's Facebook page. Event organizers say, "Bring your camera to capture the fun!"

The Northampton Police Department, 29 Center St., can be reached at 413-587-1100.



Former Cathedral High School site in Springfield emerges as leading contender for location of planned new Catholic school

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While the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield ruled out one site, it said two more of the four proposed sites have problems.

10:26 p.m. update: This story has been updated with a comment from the communications director for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield.


WEST SPRINGFIELD - Surrey Road in Springfield, where tornado damaged Cathedral High School once stood, has emerged as the leading site of four locations previously announced for a new regional Catholic high school, according to consultant Paul Gagliarducci.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield ruled out the former Uniroyal manufacturing plant in Chicopee as having too many environmental problems, he said. The Brush Hill Avenue site in West Springfield is landlocked and would require buying property from the Dominican Nuns monastery and a solar farm adjacent to the St. Stanislaus cemetery in Chicopee would complicate the process there, he said.

Gagliarducci made his comments to about 40 people Tuesday evening during a meeting at St. Thomas the Apostle School in West Springfield.

"I can't say they're out," he said, referring to the Brush Hill and St. Stanislaus properties, "but they have problems."

Mark Dupont, communications director for the diocese said of the remaining sites, no one site is a leading contender over the others.

"There currently is no leading site, the review process continues reviewing both locations publicly identified as well as others. Any suggestion that one site has emerged as a leading contender is simply a false interpretation of tonight's meeting."

In addition to the four previously announced sites, the diocese is considering other possible locations throughout the diocese, he added.

As the diocese continues its review of potential locations for the new school – that would merge Cathedral and Holyoke Catholic high schools, Gagliarducci said the ease of building on a particular site is one of the considerations the diocese is taking into account.

During aPowerPoint presentation, Gagliarducci said site considerations include: lot size, ease of build, existing utilities, environmental constraints and remedies, accessibility, ownership/cost and compatibility to surrounding neighborhoods.

The diocese hopes to build a new school for 500-550 students on a site that would be ideally between 45-50 acres with 250-300 parking spaces and athletic fields, Gagliarducci said. He said a site would have to be at least 30 acres.

Gagliarducci, former superintendent for Hampden-Wilbraham public schools, says there are three groups of opinions on a location for the new high school: Surrey Road; anywhere but Surrey Road; and a group that doesn't care about the site, but just want it built.

Gagliarducci said the new school would need an endowment of at least $15 million to ensure a long-term future for a school that would need to provide tuition relief to many students.

Declining student enrollment in Catholic high schools, rising tuitions and competition for charter schools and newly built public schools nationwide pose a challenge for building a new high school, he said.

For the last four years, Cathedral has been renting space at the former Memorial Elementary School in Wilbraham. The school has an enrollment of about 200 students.

Meanwhile, Holyoke Catholic has been operating out of the former Assumption elementary school in Chicopee. Enrollment at Holyoke Catholic is about 250 students.

Bishop Michael T. Rozanski has said he hopes to have a decision on a site for the new school in June when the school year ends.

With the help of Congressman Richard E. Neal, the diocese has secured $29 million in federal disaster assistance to aid with the construction of a new school.


More details coming on MassLive and in The Republican.

Holyoke Superintendent of Schools addresses receivership vote

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Superintendent of Schools Sergio Paez addressed the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education vote for the district in an open letter to the Holyoke Public Schools Community.

HOLYOKE -- Superintendent of Schools Sergio Paez addressed the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education vote for the district in an open letter to the Holyoke Public Schools Community.

The board declared Holyoke Public Schools a "chronically underperforming" Level 5 district on Tuesday. Members voted 8-3 in favor of receivership. 

Following that vote, control of city schools will be transferred to the chosen receiver. Elementary and Secondary Education Commissioner Mitchell Chester said Tuesday he will serve as the district receivership until he appoints one for Holyoke Public Schools.

"There will be many questions during this transition," Paez wrote. "We are committed to the important work that needs to be done and our students are our primary priority. This will not change!" 

Paez said the work he and other school employees have implemented since he joined the district 20 months ago "is not going to be compromised." 

During the board meeting Tuesday, several members said they were interested in continuing such work. 

"I would ask that we capitalize on the forward momentum that Dr. Paez has achieved," said Board Member Katherine Craven. She said that selecting the right individual to serve as receiver for the district will be key to state efforts. 

Chester said he is also impressed by some of the newly implemented programs in the district - including more Advanced Placement classes, universal preschool -- and that his office will keep what's working in city schools. "We don't want to throw the baby out of the bathwater." 

Stocks end mostly higher as company earnings reports start to pour in

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The Dow Jones industrial average rose 72 points to close at 18,110.

By KEN SWEET

NEW YORK -- target=_blankStocks posted modest gains Tuesday as investors worked through another large batch of earnings reports.

Pharmaceutical stocks rose after drug giant Merck reported better-than-expected results. Twitter plunged nearly 20 percent after its results, which were released early, missed analysts' marks.

Earnings season is at its busiest this week, with more than 150 companies reporting their results, including Apple, Exxon Mobil, Ford and others. So far, earnings have been coming in better than the gloomy expectations analysts had at the beginning of the month.

But with stocks trading at all-time highs, there's little momentum for this market to barrel upward, strategists say.

"This market just feels tired to me," said Dan Morgan, a fund manager at Synovus Trust.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 72.17 points, or 0.4 percent, to 18,110.14. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 5.84 points, or 0.3 percent, to 2,114.76. The Nasdaq composite edged down 4.82 points, or 0.1 percent, to 5,055.42.

Merck rose $2.88, or 5 percent, to $59.88. While the company's profits fell 44 percent from a year ago, the results still handily beat analysts' estimates. Adjusted earnings for the maker of diabetes drugs Januvia and Janumet were 85 cents a share versus the 75 cents expected by analysts. Other health care stocks also rose, including Aetna, drugmaker AbbVie and laboratory equipment maker Waters Corp.

The Nasdaq ended lower partly because of Apple, which fell $2.09, or 1.6 percent, to $130.56.

The iPhone and computer and maker reported a record quarterly profit of $13.6 billion, but Apple's outlook was not as rosy as some analysts had predicted. Apple had $193.5 billion in cash on its balance sheet and plans on increasing its dividend and share buyback.

Twitter was the center of some late-day drama when its quarterly results were unexpectedly released before the market closed. Twitter's revenue missed analysts' expectations, sending its shares down $9.39, or 18 percent, to $42.27.

Much of the focus this week will be on the Fed's two-day policy meeting, which ends Wednesday. Policymakers are discussing when the Fed should start raising interest rates again. The Fed opened the door to rate increases after its March meeting, but some recent weak economic data might complicate that picture.

"What we do know is the Fed is going remain accommodative and keep interest rates low for the foreseeable future," said David Lefkowitz, senior equity strategy at UBS Wealth Management.

Another weak signal on the U.S. economy came out Tuesday. The Conference Board reported that its index of consumer confidence fell to the lowest level in four months as hiring slowed down.

The Conference Board said its index fell to 95.2 in April from 101.4 in March. That was the lowest since 93.1 in December. The survey's measure of how respondents assess current economic conditions fell for the third straight month. Their expectations for the future also fell.

In energy markets, the price of U.S. oil rose slightly while global crude slipped. Benchmark U.S. crude rose 7 cents to close at $57.06 a barrel in New York. Brent crude fell 19 cents to close at $64.64 a barrel in London.

In other energy futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange: wholesale gasoline fell 0.7 cent to close at $2.002 a gallon, heating oil fell 0.4 cents to close at $1.917 a gallon and natural gas rose 2.7 cents to close at $2.517 per 1,000 cubic feet.

U.S. government bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.98 percent from 1.92 percent late Monday.

Precious and industrial metals futures closed mostly higher. Gold rose $10.70 to $1,213.90 an ounce. Silver gained 20 cents to $16.59 an ounce and copper edged up a penny to $2.78 a pound.

Seen on social media: Holyoke Public Schools placed in receivership

Baltimore protests continue despite curfew; police use smoke grenades, pepper balls (photos, video)

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A line of police behind riot shields hurled tear gas canisters and fired pepper balls at as many as 200 protesters Tuesday night to enforce a citywide curfew, imposed after the worst outbreak of rioting in Baltimore since 1968.

BALTIMORE -- A line of police behind riot shields hurled tear gas canisters and fired pepper balls at as many as 200 protesters Tuesday night to enforce a citywide curfew, imposed after the worst outbreak of rioting in Baltimore since 1968.

Demonstrators threw bottles at police, and picked up the canisters and hurled them back at officers. No immediate arrests were reported, and the crowd rapidly dispersed. It was down to just a few dozen people within minutes.

The clash came after a day of high tension but relative peace in Baltimore, as thousands of police officers and National Guardsmen poured in to try to prevent another round of looting and arson like the one that rocked the city on Monday.

It was the first time since the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 that the National Guard was called out in Baltimore to quell unrest.

The racially charged violence on Monday was set off by the case of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man who died of a spinal-cord injury under mysterious circumstances while in police custody.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said 2,000 Guardsmen and 1,000 law officers would be in place overnight.

"This combined force will not tolerate violence or looting," he warned.

In a measure of how tense things were on Tuesday, Baltimore was under a 10 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew. All public schools were closed. And the Baltimore Orioles canceled Tuesday night's game at Camden Yards and -- in what may be a first in baseball's 145-year history -- announced that Wednesday's game will be closed to the public.


The streets were largely calm all day and into the evening, with only a few scattered arrests.

About 15 minutes after the 10 p.m. curfew took effect, police moved against protesters who remained in the street in the city's Penn North section, near where a CVS pharmacy was looted.

Around the same time and in a different neighborhood, police tweeted that they were making arrests in South Baltimore after people started attacking officers with rocks and bricks. At least one officer was reported injured.

Monday's outbreak of looting, arson and rock- and bottle-throwing by mostly black rioters erupted just hours after Gray's funeral. It was the worst such violence in the U.S. since the unrest last year over the death of Michael Brown, the unarmed black 18-year-old shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.

Political leaders and residents called the violence a tragedy for the city and lamented the damage done by the rioters to their own neighborhoods.

"I had officers come up to me and say, 'I was born and raised in this city. This makes me cry,'" Baltimore Police Commissioner Anthony Batts said.

Haywood McMorris, manager of the wrecked CVS store, said the destruction didn't make sense: "We work here, man. This is where we stand, and this is where people actually make a living."

But the rioting also brought out a sense of civic pride and responsibility in many Baltimore residents, with hundreds of volunteers turning out to sweep the streets of glass and other debris with brooms and trash bags donated by hardware stores.

Blanca Tapahuasco brought her three sons, ages 2 to 8, from another part of the city to help clean up the brick-and-pavement courtyard outside the CVS.

"We're helping the neighborhood build back up," she said. "This is an encouragement to them to know the rest of the city is not just looking on and wondering what to do."

Some of the same neighborhoods that rose up this week burned for days after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. 47 years ago. At least six people died then, and some neighborhoods still bear the scars.

Jascy Jones of Baltimore said the sight of National Guardsmen on the street gave her a "very eerie feeling."

"It brought a tear to my eye. Seeing it doesn't feel like the city that I love," she said. "I am glad they're here, but it's hard to watch."

At the White House, President Barack Obama called the deaths of several black men around the country at the hands of police "a slow-rolling crisis." But he added that there was "no excuse" for the violence in Baltimore, and said the rioters should be treated as criminals.

"They aren't protesting. They aren't making a statement. They're stealing," Obama said.

The rioting started in West Baltimore on Monday afternoon and by midnight had spread to East Baltimore and neighborhoods close to downtown and near the baseball stadium.

At least 20 officers were hurt, one person was critically injured in a fire, more than 200 adults and 34 juveniles were arrested, and nearly 150 cars were burned, police said. The governor had no immediate estimate of the damage.

With the city bracing for more trouble, several colleges closed early Tuesday, including Loyola University Maryland, Johns Hopkins University and Towson University.

The violence set off soul-searching among community leaders and others, with some suggesting the unrest was about more than race or the police department -- it was about high unemployment, high crime, poor housing, broken-down schools and lack of opportunity in Baltimore's inner-city neighborhoods.

The city of 622,000 is 63 percent black. The mayor, state's attorney, police chief and City Council president are black, as is 48 percent of the police force.

"You look around and see unemployment. Filling out job applications and being turned down because of where you live and your demographic. It's so much bigger than the police department," said Robert Stokes, 36, holding a broom and a dustpan on a corner where some of the looting and vandalism took place.

He added: "This place is a powder keg waiting to explode."

In the aftermath of the riots, state and local authorities found themselves facing questions about whether they let things spin out of control.

Batts, the police commissioner, said police did not move in faster because those involved in the early stages were just "kids" -- teenagers who had just been let out of school.

"Do you want people using force on 14- 15- and 16-year-old kids that are out there?" he asked. "They're old enough to know better. But they're still kids. And so we had to take that into account while we were out there."

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake waited hours to ask the governor to declare a state of emergency, and the governor hinted she should have come to him earlier.

"We were trying to get in touch with the mayor for quite some time," Hogan said. "She finally made that call, and we immediately took action."

Rawlings-Blake said officials initially thought they had the unrest under control.

Gray was arrested April 12 after running away at the sight of police, authorities said. He was held down, handcuffed and loaded into a police van. Leg cuffs were put on him when he became irate inside. He died a week later.

Authorities said they are still investigating how and when he suffered the spinal injury -- during the arrest or while he was in the van, where authorities say he was riding without being belted in, a violation of department policy.

Six officers have been suspended with pay in the meantime.

While opioid deaths rise in Massachusetts, Springfield numbers stabilize as officials work on strategies, treatment

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Springfield, which had 22 opioid deaths in 2012 and 23 in 2013, had 14 for the first nine months of 2014, according to statistics.

SPRINGFIELD - Contrary to a statewide trend, unintended deaths due to opioid abuse appear to have declined in Springfield over time, possibly related to anti-opioid strategies and expanded use of an anti-overdose drug, according to the city's health commissioner.

The comments from Health and Human Services Commissioner Helen Caulton-Harris occurred as the state released statistics on Tuesday showing that unintended opioid overdose deaths rose in Massachusetts from 668 deaths in 2012 to 969 in 2013. The number was 874 from January through September of 2014.

Opioids include heroin and some prescription pain killers.

In contrast, Springfield had 22 opiate overdose deaths in 2012, and 23 deaths in 2013, and 14 for the first nine months of 2014, according to the released statistics.

Caulton-Harris said the report is focused on fatalities, but she believes the city should focus on the non-fatal overdoses for a fuller picture.

"It would help us understand if our prevention and intervention strategies are working - education and training," Caulton-Harris said.

051611 domenic sarno mug.jpgDomenic Sarno 

Mayor Domenic Sarno said opioid addiction is a "devastating" issue, and one that is best fought on the front-end, such as education. He joined Caulton-Harris in saying that the use of Narcan, an anti-overdose drug, is also key in preventing deaths.

Sarno praised efforts by Gov. Charlie Baker to better control access to prescription drugs to reduce abuse, and praised the Police Department for its efforts to crack down on heroin sales in Springfield.

While one overdose case is too many, Sarno said the statistics in Springfield for deaths seems to be "trending down."

The city, with state grant assistance, created the Springfield Coalition for Opioid Overdose Prevention (SCOOP) that has existed since 2009, Caulton-Harris said. The coalition members meet to develop strategies on how to best prevent and intervene in possible overdoses, she said.

The city, under a pilot program, provided training to residents, community based organizations and 181 Springfield police officers on the use of Narcan to save lives, she said.

In addition, Springfield is the lead agency for the Mass. Opioid Abuse Coalition, which is a partnership with Chicopee and East Longmeadow, regarding anti-opioid abuse strategies, Caulton-Harris said

Police Commissioner John Barbieri said police continue to "investigate and arrest those individuals that sell illicit drugs and profit from the misery of those addicted."

"Along with the other members of Mayor Sarno's Springfield team; private non-profit agencies; and our local, state and federal governmental partners, we will continue to work to address addiction issues," Barbieri said.

Massachusetts State Police announce sobriety checkpoint for undisclosed Middlesex County location

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A sobriety checkpoint will be held on the evening of May 1 into the morning of May 2, according to Col. Timothy P. Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police.

A sobriety checkpoint will be conducted at an undisclosed Middlesex County location on Friday evening, May 1, into Saturday morning, May 2, Col. Timothy P. Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police, announced on Tuesday.

The grant-funded checkpoints are aimed at increasing public safety by removing intoxicated motorists from state roadways, according to police.

The checkpoints will operate during varied hours and the selection of vehicles won't be arbitrary.

Motor vehicle crashes claimed 326 lives in Massachusetts in 2013, including 118 from alcohol-related incidents, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.


 

Springfield man admits invading home, pointing loaded gun at ex-girlfriend in shower

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Miguel Pizarro-Escalera on Wednesday pleaded guilty to 13 charges, including two of home invasion, and was sentenced by Hampden Superior Court Judge Richard J. Carey to 10-12 years in state prison followed by five years probation.

SPRINGFIELD - Miguel Pizarro-Escalera admitted Wednesday that he invaded the home of his ex-girlfriend last year and pointed a loaded gun at her while she was in the shower.

When police arrived at the home Pizarro-Escalera - who has a Ludlow address in court records - led them on a chase, all the while carrying a loaded gun in a messenger bag.

Assistant District Attorney Melissa G. Doran said Wednesday that Pizarro-Escalera, 23, demonstrated escalating conduct - over four different days - to the ex-girlfriend, but also created a scary situation for police who were chasing an armed man.

Pizarro-Escalera pleaded guilty to 13 charges, including two of home invasion, and was sentenced by Hampden Superior Court Judge Richard J. Carey to 10 to12 years in state prison followed by five years probation.

Besides the home invasion charges Pizarro-Escalera pleaded guilty to four counts of violating an abuse prevention order, two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, and a count each of unarmed burglary, assault and battery in violation of a restraining order, assault and battery, carrying a loaded firearm and illegal possession of a firearm.

Doran outlined the four 2014 incidents that made up the charges.

On Feb. 11 Pizarro-Escalera went to his ex-girlfriend's home about 2:10 a.m. and smashed a window. He was stepping through the window when the woman said she was calling police and he ran.

Doran said he began that day by kicking at the door, and she reminded him of the restraining order.

The second incident was on Feb. 15 when he went to the home and punched and kicked a different woman who was there. The ex-girlfriend tried to get him away and he assaulted her and then ran away.

In a March 5 incident Pizarro-Escalera went to the home and knocked aggressively on the front door and window.

The most serious incident was June 23 at about 5:30 a.m.

Police got a call for a man with a gun in a residence, and knew the address and that Pizarro-Escalera had a restraining order against him, Doran said.

When police got there they saw Pizarro-Escalera on the porch talking to the woman, who yelled that he had a gun. He ran and they chased him on foot as Pizarro-Escalera was trying to pull something from a bag.

Officers caught him and he resisted arrest, throwing the messenger bag into a yard. The bag was found to contain a handgun loaded with four rounds.

Police learned that the incident started when ex-girlfriend was taking a shower with her current boyfriend and the shower curtain was ripped open.

Pizarro-Escalera was holding a gun at them. The woman agreed to go downstairs with Pizarro-Escalera as he requested. Another woman at the home called police.

Doran said there were several children in the home at the time but the other woman took them into a room so they did not see Pizarro-Escalera with a gun.

Defense lawyer Marissa Elkins asked Carey to adopt the 10 to 12 year sentence recommended by prosecution and defense. She said Pizarro-Escalera is taking responsibility for his actions.

 

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's friend: 'I really miss the person that I knew'

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Teachers and friends on Wednesday painted a portrait of Tsarnaev as a hard-working kid who grew up to be a young man who enjoyed rap music, video games, fast cars and hanging out with friends.

BOSTON — When Dzhokhar Tsarnaev saw sketches by his college friend Alexa Guevara, he told her she should go to art school.

"He told me I have talent, and I shouldn't let it go to waste," Guevara said. "I should go to art school and do what makes me happy."

Now, Tsarnaev, 21, is facing death or life in prison for his role in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings that killed three people and injured 260 and for killing an MIT police officer. Guevara, 21, cried on the witness stand as she testified for the defense, one of the teachers and friends who defense lawyers called Wednesday to paint a portrait of Tsarnaev as a hard-working kid who grew into a young man who enjoyed rap music, video games, fast cars and hanging out with friends.

"Why are you crying?" asked defense lawyer Miriam Conrad.

Guevara answered through her tears, "Because I really miss the person that I knew."

As defense lawyers work to convince 12 jurors to spare Tsarnaev's life, they began to fill out the details of Tsarnaev's life before he and his older brother set the bombs. Defense lawyers have brought evidence to show that Tsarnaev's older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was increasingly influenced by radical Islam in the years before the bombing. They are arguing that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was not a political or religious radical but was simply following his brother's lead.

dzhokhar-tsarnaev-young-with-tamerlan.jpgTamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in Cambridge. 

Catheryn Charner-Laird, who taught Tsarnaev in third grade at Cambridgeport School in Cambridge, soon after his family immigrated to the United States, said Tsarnaev was "very quiet" and still learning English, but he made friends and played soccer at recess. "He was incredibly hard-working. He cared a lot about his studies," Charner-Laird said.

Tsarnaev skipped fourth grade, and acclimated quickly to fifth grade, recalled his Cambridgeport teacher, Tracey Gordon. She described the young Tsarnaev as "super kind, really smart, very quick to learn, a very hard worker." He was enthusiastic about new things, whether visiting a farm or dancing. Gordon recommended Tsranev for a peer resolution program, where he would help mediate students' disputes, because, she wrote in a recommendation, he "understands conflicts are normal and not necessarily easily resolved."

Tsarnaev went to Cambridge Community Charter School for middle school. Becki Norris, Tsarnaev's adviser, said he was a mostly A student who was smart, quiet and well-behaved. "Teachers all loved him," Norris said. Tsarnaev played soccer, coached by Norris' husband.

Defense lawyers showed the jury pictures of Tsarnaev in middle school, accepting a soccer trophy and holding Norris's newborn baby.

There was some indication even then of Tsarnaev's turbulent family life. He left the school days into ninth grade. The school sent him home to change his pants because they did not conform to the dress code, and his mother complained that he had no appropriate clean pants and the family did not have money to buy new ones. She pulled him out of the school, where he had made friends and done well academically, Norris said, to attend Cambridge Rindge and Latin School.

Norris gave Tsarnaev a bittersweet smile. "He was a great kid who I had really great affection for," Norris said. "There's only ever a handful of those, but you don't forget them."

Some of the most emotional testimony came from Tsarnaev's friends, who graduated Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, then attended the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth with him.

dzhokhar tsarnaev young 5th grade.jpgDzhokhar as a 5th grade student at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School. 

Tiarrah Dottin was one of a group of five CRLS graduates, including Tsarnaev, who would hang out their freshman year at UMass Dartmouth. They would drink together, play video games, watch television and hang out. They called their evenings "bro nights," though two of the friends were women. Dottin said the crew had a special bond, coming from the same high school. Dottin described Tsarnaev as "loyal, fun, laid back," as someone who would offer friends rides in his car. She acknowledged on cross-examination that he was also private and shared little about his religious beliefs.

Sometimes the school would organize club nights, where students would be bused to a club in Providence. On one such night, Dottin snapped a selfie of herself leaning into Tsarnaev at the club, both of them with wide grins. Dottin cried on the witness stand when she saw the picture. They had been drinking and having a fun time, she recalled. "I was excited to see him. I hadn't expected him to be there," Dottin said. "When I saw him, I was like 'Jahar, let's take a picture,' and we did!" Jahar was Tsarnaev's nickname.

Guevara met Tsarnaev through Dottin, and was also friends with Azamat Tazhayakov and Dias Kadyrbayev, friends of Tsarnaev's who were convicted of obstruction of justice for removing a backpack with fireworks from Tsarnaev's dorm room.

Guevara spent time with the boys regularly, watching them play a soccer video game and ordering in Domino's Pizza and the chocolate lava cakes that Tsarnaev liked. They would party - drink and smoke marijuana. Tsarnaev would argue with friends about who the best rapper was. Guevara and Tsarnaev would play the online word game Ruzzle. Tsarnaev did not talk about religion or politics with his friends.

"I always knew I was going to have a good time if I was hanging out with Jahar," Guevara said. "He was very approachable, very kind, very accepting of whatever anyone had to say." Guevara said she felt happy around Tsarnaev, "like I could relax and not take whatever I was saying so seriously."

"He could be flirtatious, but never in a way that would make you feel uncomfortable," Guevara said. "He just knew when to stop."

Tsarnaev told her he wanted to transfer to UMass Amherst to study marine biology.

In March 2013, a month before the bombing, Guevara went with Tsarnaev and other friends to the Charles River in Cambridge, where they set off sparklers. "We were all like whooping and hollering, really happy. Jahar was jumping through the fireworks," she said.

When court ended for the day, Guevara ran out of the John Joseph Moakley U.S. Courthouse courtroom sobbing.

Tsarnaev stood up, put his hands in front of him and, surrounded by U.S. marshals, walked back into lockup.


Photos: Westfield State University students hold 'pie in the face' fundraiser

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On the campus of Westfield State University on Wednesday, it was pies made of Cool Whip topping that were flying into faces. Watch video

WESTFIELD — We all know about apple pies, cherry pies, even French meat pies. But on the campus of Westfield State University on Wednesday, it was pies made of Cool Whip topping that were flying into faces.

The University's Circle K Club, a division of the Kiwanis Club of Westfield, held a fundraiser to help Camp Sunshine in Casco, Maine, a program that helps children with life-threatening illnesses and their families.

Circle K Club President Morgan Leake came up with the idea to replace the tried and true "jail and bail" events they have used in the past. For the pie toss, anyone could pay $3 to throw or shove a "pie" into the face of a roommate, friend or even professor.

Ken Magarian, Director of Advancement and University Relations, an adviser to the club, was the smiling recipient of multiple pies. "It's COLD!" he shouted after licking off the second pie to cover his face. (some of the Cool Whip was still a little frozen at the start of the event).

The Circle K Club holds events year-round, including a breakfast with Santa, the Words with Friends citywide spelling bee, and "HOOT" day (Helping Out Our Town), where students volunteer in various Westfield businesses.


Bud Light removes slogan some thought endorsed rape: video

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The words "the perfect beer for removing 'no' from your vocabulary for the night" were circulated on social-media sites this week with some people saying it promoted rape culture.

Anheuser-Busch apologized Tuesday for a slogan it placed on some of its Bud Light containers that some people inferred was an endorsement of rape.

The words "the perfect beer for removing 'no' from your vocabulary for the night" were circulated on social media sites this week with some people saying it promoted rape culture, according to Bloomberg Business.

Alexander Lambrecht, vice president of the company's Bud Light division, said that the message won't be printed on any more bottles, adding that the company would never condone disrespectful or irresponsible behavior.

"The Bud Light Up for Whatever campaign, now in its second year, has inspired millions of consumers to engage with our brand in a positive and light-hearted way," he said in a statement emailed to Bloomberg Business. "In this spirit, we created more than 140 different scroll messages intended to encourage spontaneous fun. It's clear that this message missed the mark, and we regret it."

The slogan was one of 140 messages it printed on beer labels as part of its "Up For Whatever" ad campaign.

Here are some tweets:

Part of the discussion on Reddit involved whether a drunk person should be able to say "no" when asked if he or she is OK to drive, according to NPR.

Poking fun at Bud Light, others on Twitter and elsewhere simply said that they say "no" to one of America's best-selling beers on a regular basis, NPR reported.

Commenters reacted similarly on Facebook.

"As a woman, as a mother of a girl and a boy, I find this message very disturbing and dangerous," someone using the name Danielle Sawada posted on Bud Light's Facebook page. "I have been a Bud Light drinker for quite a while, but until this campaign ends, you do not have my dollars."

The New York Times quoted a Democratic congresswoman from New York who was particularly upset with the company.

"This grossly shortsighted marketing tactic shows an epic lack of understanding of the dangers associated with excessive alcohol consumption, such as sexual assault and drunk driving." the Times quoted U.S. Rep. Nita Lowney as saying. "We need responsible companies to help us tackle these serious public health and safety problems, not encourage them."

The company would not tell the Times how many bottles are on the market with the controversial slogan, but a spokesman said it would not go on any more products, effective immediately.

The Washington Post quoted statistics compiled by the National Institutes of Health that indicated that at least half of all sexual assaults involve the use of liquor by either a victim on a perpetrator. This means, the Post added, that alcohol is "by far, the most common date rape drug."

A 2004 Harvard study, for instance, found that colleges with higher binge drinking rates have more sexual assaults, and that nearly three-quarters of college rape victims reported being drunk when they were attacked, the Post reported

In issuing its apology, Tuesday, the company said that it intended the label to be a fun way of invoking the ongoing "Up for Whatever" advertising campaign in which young drinkers say yes to trying new things, according to USA Today.

Bud Light took over a Colorado town for its ad campaign, and is descending upon Catalina Island off California next month, the newspaper reported.

Oh yes, and not to forget, some people, like this Twitter user, think people are too darned sensitive these days:


Chicopee offering tennis lessons

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Lessons are for beginners, intermediates and advanced players.

CHICOPEE - The Parks and Recreation Department is offering five sessions of summer tennis lessons for adults and children, ages 8 and above

Lessons are for beginners, intermediates and advanced players who want to fine tune their game. The first session of tennis lessons will be held at Williams Park tennis courts and the remaining sessions will be held at the Szot Park. Lessons will be held on Monday and Wednesday evenings, at 3 p.m., 4 p.m. and 5 p.m.

The first session starts May 4 and will offer eight classes held twice a week for one-hour. The cost is $65 for residents and $70 for non-residents.

Session two starts June 2 and additional lessons will run throughout the summer.

Sign ups are now being taken at the Chicopee Parks office at 687 Front St.

More information about the lessons and registration is available on the Parks and Recreation Department web page of the City of Chicopee's site.

Activist Jynai McDonald: 'Nothing will stop crime more than giving our young people a job'

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Community activist Jynai McDonald, speaking at a police-community relations forum Wednesday night, advocated increased services for youth as a way to prevent crime in Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD — Community activist Jynai McDonald, speaking at a police-community relations forum Wednesday night, advocated increased services for youth as a way to prevent crime in Springfield.

"My most effective solution to this is lets give our young people a summer job," McDonald said. "Nothing will stop crime more than giving our young people a job."

Addressing an auditorium of community members, elected officials and police officers at the Rebecca M. Johnson School, McDonald advocated for increased services for youth, while urging young people to respect officers and avoid sparking confrontations.

The city's young people need more incentive-based programming and extended hours at community centers, McDonald said.

"In the summer, when it doesn't get dark until 7, 8, 9 p.m., why do they close at 6?" McDonald asked.

Police and young people need training to understand each other better, McDonald said, urging young people to handle any abuses by filing a complaint after the fact rather than physically confronting police.

"We need to build a mutual respect," she said.

McDonald spoke before Commissioner John Barbieri took the stage, as the department attempts to repair relations between the department and minority populations. The department has won plaudits for its C3 policing initiative, which uses anti-insurgency tactics and community policing to fight gang violence. But the department has also dealt with police brutality cases in recent years, including a $575,000 settlement in the 2009 beating of Melvin Jones III.

Gallery preview 

Holyoke arrangement on county treatment center not subject to Council vote

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A lease conveys a more involved interest in a property than a license, which signals a shorter-term use.

HOLYOKE -- City Council approval normally is required for the disposition of property but the plan to have the Hampden County Sheriff's Department temporarily occupy a municipal site here falls outside that requirement, a city lawyer said.

Because the Sheriff Department's Western Massachusetts Correctional Alcohol Center will occupy the former Holyoke Geriatric Authority under a license instead of a lease, only the mayor's approval is required for the transaction, Assistant City Solicitor Kara Cunha said.

Cunha provided an opinion (see below) about the arrangement April 21 at the request of City Council President Kevin A. Jourdain and also commented Wedneday.

A license is a revocable permit to enter property for a particular purpose and does not convey interest in the property. A license means the occupant will have limited privileges of entry, use and occupancy, Cunha said. Sheriff Michael Ashe said the treatment center will use only half of the authority building at 45 Lower Westfield Road.

"It was chosen because it is going to be a short-term use of the property," Cunha said.

In contrast, a lease transfers to a tenant a leasehold interest in the real property, a kind of temporary ownership.

Under the license arrangement, approval from Mayor Alex B. Morse was sufficient to let the county occupy the authority via a license. But if the Sheriff's Department decided to occupy the property long-term or buy the property, City Council votes would be required to declare that the authority property was surplus in terms of municipal needs and to dispose of, or sell, the property, Cunha said.

The state Division of Capital Asset Management and Maintenance recommended the city-county arrangement for the use of the authority property be executed with a license instead of a lease, Morse said.

The county must remove the treatment center from its Howard Street site in Springfield by May 8 to accommodate the property acquisitions of MGM Springfield for an $800 million casino in Springfield.

The move here will be limited to 18 months as the county seeks a permanent home for the facility, said Ashe, who didn't rule out a longer arrangement at the authority.

The sheriff's department will pay the city about $45,000 a month for rent, water, sewer, gas and electric services. At $540,000 a year, that's a savings of more than $120,000 compared to the $666,000-a-year rent at Howard Street, Ashe said.

Jourdain, a lawyer and a councilor since 1994, said his understanding was the county's use of the authority property was the conveying of an interest in real estate.

"The mayor needs a council vote on that," Jourdain said.

On April 7, the City Council voted unanimously to contact the Sheriff's Department to offer the Holyoke Geriatric Authority space for the treatment center. Morse said later he had discussed that option with county officials a few months earlier without a definite decision.

Ward 5 Councilor Linda L. Vacon also raised questions about the arrangement in a letter to the editor of The Republican and MassLive.com.

Vacon said the City Council should have had a chance to review the arrangement with the county regarding use of the authority property. Among questions councilors would have asked was why the county was getting a deal that will be $120,000 a year less than the Howard Street rent at a time when Holyoke's funding is tight, what assurances exist that the county will vacate the authority after 18 months and whether a plan was in place in case increased traffic causes a problem, she said.

"What happened to the promise of transparency made by Mayor Morse?" Vacon said.

"Everything has been transparent," Morse said. "The sheriff and I made a point of showing up at the council meeting even though that wasn't required, to answer any questions they had. This process has been transparent. We did it efficiently and we did it effectively and we did it with the best interest of the city in mind."

Holyoke Law Department opinion:


Motorcycle crash in Enfield sends rider to Baystate Medical Center with serious injuries: reports

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The motorcylclist reported sustained serious injuries, but an update on his condition wasn't immediately available.

ENFIELD — A motorcycle crash in Enfield late Wednesday afternoon sent the rider to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield with serious injuries, according to news reports.

The crash temporarily closed the westbound side of Route 190 (Hazard Avenue) near Freshwater Boulevard while police and emergency personnel responded to the scene, according to Western Mass News, media partner of MassLive / The Republican.

The rider, whose identity wasn't released by police, sustained serious injuries after colliding with a Ford Explorer at about 4 p.m., NBC Connecticut reports.

The crash scene was cleared and roads reopened around 7 p.m.

Anyone who witnessed the crash is asked to call the Enfield Police Department at 860-763-8920.



 

Holyoke to offer low-cost tennis, basketball & field hockey lessons for children this summer

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Get your rackets ready, registration for summer tennis lessons in Holyoke is now open.

HOLYOKE -- Get your rackets ready, registration for summer tennis lessons in Holyoke is now open.

The Holyoke Parks & Recreation Department is offering a half-day summer tennis program for children ages six through 13 years old. Those interesting in learning the sport to intermediate players are welcome.

The six-week program begins June 29 and runs through August 7. Families are welcome to sign up for one week or the entire program. Classes will cost $30 per week with the exception of the first week of courses, which will cost $25 due to a shortened schedule.

In addition to tennis, the department is also offering shorter sessions of basketball and field hockey. The first basketball session will be held June 29 through July 2 and the second will be July 13-17. The four-day field hockey program will run July 20-24.

Organizers say the classes will offer a low instructor-to-camper ratio, early drop off times and the opportunity for kids to have fun while learning a skill. More information and registration forms here.

Probing questions, some disruption as Springfield police commissioner asks for trust at public forum

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Springfield Police Commissioner John Barbieri laid out a vision for a service oriented, more transparent police department at a community relations forum Wednesday night, fielding questions from residents on police brutality, youth services, body cameras and other issues.

Related: Activist Jynai McDonald: 'Nothing will stop crime more than giving our young people a job'


SPRINGFIELD — Springfield Police Commissioner John Barbieri laid out a vision for a service-oriented, more transparent police department at a community relations forum Wednesday night, fielding questions from residents on police brutality, youth services, body cameras and other issues.

The tone of the evening was largely welcoming, if probing, with both critical questioners and Barbieri himself receiving applause from the audience in the auditorium of the Rebecca M. Johnson School. The forum was briefly disrupted when one man, angered by Barbieri's refusal to discuss recent anti-racism protests in Baltimore, began yelling from the seats; he was escorted out of the room.

Barbieri made a pitch for public trust in his opening remarks, describing his department as focused on community engagement and saying residents could rely on the department to fairly investigate their complaints.

"We're not law enforcement officers. We're public service officers," Barbieri said to applause. "We're not the warriors on patrol in your neighborhood, we're the guardians."

Barbieri said the vast majority of police encounters do not lead to arrest, and described Springfield's civilian complaint board and internal investigations unit as among the most progressive in the state.

But the forum's public question session featured some pointed questions and tense arguments, with some residents raising the specter of recent killings of unarmed black men by police officers across the country. Springfield itself has dealt with some high-profile police brutality cases in recent years, including a $575,000 settlement in the 2009 beating of Melvin Jones III.

One man, who did not give his name and spoke with the volume and urgency of a preacher, described an alleged case of police brutality in 2012 and drew cheers when demanded answers from the commissioner. Barbieri said he was not aware of that incident, but would look into it.

When resident Stacey Green raised the issue of recent police violence protests in Baltimore and Barbieri asked her to remain focused on Springfield, the same speaker began yelling from his seat. DeJuan Brown of the anti-violence organization AWAKE, who spoke at the forum, said the man was "grandstanding" and asked listeners to give Barbieri a chance.

The man continued saying police could not ignore unrest over killings of black people across the United States, and was escorted from the auditorium.

Community members raised a number of issues, with Barbieri saying the department would try to respond to their concerns. Robert Kelly, an administrator at the SABIS International Charter School, called on police to fund and promote youth services and sports leagues; Barbieri endorsed the idea, but said the department was currently spread thin dealing with its 186,000 calls for service in the last year.

Asked about body cameras for officers, a tool increasingly used by some departments to increase accountability and document police encounters, Barbieri said he was strongly in favor of them but said the issue legally had to be decided in negotiations with the police union. And he told another resident the department is trying to set up a gun buy-back program before the start of summer.

In his opening remarks and his responses to several questioners, Barbieri referred to what he described as an "appalling" number of police fatalities. According to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, 126 officers were killed in 2014. (Critics of police shootings often cite a report from the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement that found that a black person is killed by police or vigilante action every 28 hours in the United States, a figure that includes both armed and unarmed encounters.)

"I've never seen any segment of society painted with such a broad swatch as police officers," Barbieri said, citing the shooting death of Springfield officer Kevin Ambrose, who was killed while intervening in a domestic violence incident in 2012. "Does anyone remember that he sacrificed his life for a woman of color?"

The event was sponsored by the anti-violence group AWAKE and the neighborhood councils in Old Hill, Upper Hill, McKnight and Bay, the four neighborhoods around Mason Square, and by the New North Citizens Council. Its timing, as Baltimore reels from unrest surrounding the unexplained death of Freddie Gray while in police custody, was coincidental, Barbieri told MassLive; the forum had been in the works for months.


State rep pushes for study of Massachusetts' undocumented immigrants

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Seeking a comprehensive look at an issue that inspires charged exchanges, House Judiciary Chairman John Fernandes argued Wednesday in favor of legislation to study the "impact, both positive and negative," of undocumented immigrants in the state.

By ANDY METZGER

BOSTON — Seeking a comprehensive look at an issue that inspires charged exchanges, House Judiciary Chairman John Fernandes argued Wednesday in favor of legislation to study the "impact, both positive and negative," of undocumented immigrants in the state.

milford state rep john fernandes.jpgJohn Fernandes 

"This attempts to be an independent fair-minded approach to the issue," Fernandes, a Milford Democrat, told the Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies.

Fernandes, who first joined the House in 2007, told the committee the legislation was a re-file of the first bill he ever sponsored. He said the study would provide some information around policy questions that cause people to "duck and run" while others gird for "battle."

"Every time we try to address them one at a time they become lightning rods and people will use the excuse, 'Well if we do that, we're ignoring this,'" Fernandes said.

The night before the hearing, Fernandes voted with 114 of his colleagues to reject a budget amendment that would have required legal status verification for public housing. Fernandes, who said he is the son and grandson of immigrants from Portugal and Italy, has opposed granting driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants and last fall claimed a pro-immigration group sought to block him from the Judiciary chairmanship.

"If we leave the status quo, then we accomplish nothing," said Fernandes.

Regarding the issues he hopes the commission would address, Fernandes said, "Can we extract out of the underground economy an income tax for our community even though the federal government has no way of doing that?"


Thousands gather in cities across the U.S. to protest death of Baltimore man

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Thousands of people hit the streets in Baltimore and several other cities on Wednesday to protest the death of a black man who died after his arrest by Baltimore police.

BALTIMORE (AP) -- Thousands of people hit the streets in Baltimore and several other cities from Boston and New York to Indianapolis and Washington, D.C., on Wednesday to protest the death of a black man who died of spinal injuries after his arrest by Baltimore police and to demand reforms to police procedures.

While protests of the death of Freddie Gray were mostly peaceful, there were some arrests, including 16 in Baltimore and more than a dozen at a rally in Manhattan's Union Square. Gray, of Baltimore, was critically injured in police custody.

After meeting with faith leaders and a lawyer for Gray's family, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said officials were working hard to make the investigation into Gray's death transparent and keep the community informed.

Police have said that they will turn over findings from their investigation to the state's attorney on Friday

Still, anger and anxiety hung over Baltimore.

Hundreds of protesters, many of them students wearing backpacks, marched through downtown, calling for swift justice in the case of Gray.

Authorities carefully monitored the rally after teenagers started the violence Monday afternoon, throwing bricks and bottles at officers who had gathered near a major bus transfer point. The situation escalated from there, overwhelming police as protesters set fire to cars and buildings and raided stores.

Schools closed Tuesday because of the mayhem, but reopened Wednesday, after the city's first night of a curfew went off without the widespread violence many had feared.

About 3,000 police and National Guardsmen descended on the city to help keep order, and life wasn't likely to get completely back to normal anytime soon: The curfew was set to go back into effect at 10 p.m.

The curfew got off to a not-so-promising start Tuesday night when about 200 protesters ignored warnings from police and pleas from pastors and other community activists to disperse. Some threw water bottles or lay down on the ground.

A line of officers behind riot shields hurled tear gas canisters and fired pepper balls at the crowd, which dispersed in a matter of minutes.

Police said 35 people were arrested after the curfew went into effect.

And in what was one of the weirdest spectacles in major-league history, Wednesday afternoon's Baltimore Orioles game at Camden Yards was closed to the public for safety reasons.

Earlier in the day, protesters outside the office of Baltimore's top prosecutor said they supported State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, who took office in January and pledged during her campaign to address aggressive police practices.

Mosby's office is expected on Friday to get investigative findings from police on Gray's death. She will then face a decision on whether and how to pursue charges against the six police officers who arrested Gray.

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