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Junkies beware: Vermont authorities believe 'Ronald Reagan,' a Fentanyl-laced batch of heroin, infiltrating Green Mountain State

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Fentanyl is 50 times more potent than heroin, according to the Vermont Department of Health.

BURLINGTON, Vt. — There have been several fentanyl-related deaths and overdose incidents in Vermont since December, according to state officials, who are concerned about the powerful opioid being added to heroin to increase the street drug's potency.

On Wednesday, Vermont State Police warned heroin users that a batch of suspected fentanyl-laced heroin, dubbed "Ronald Reagan," is believed to be making the rounds through New England.

There has been only one seizure of this particular heroin product in Vermont so far, but the packets that were recovered were empty, making it impossible to test for the presence of fentanyl, according to Scott Waterman, VSP public information officer.

Pure fentanyl also has been seized in connection with several investigations, including fatal overdoses in Burlington, St. Johnsbury and Royalton and a suspected Fentanyl overdose in Williston. Lab results are pending in the Williston case, Waterman said.

In some instances, fentanyl-laced heroin or pure fentanyl is being sold with various packaging, including but not limited to:

  • unmarked red-and-white glassine bags;
  • a folded dollar bill design;
  • a red devil with an image of a baby face in blue ink;
  • a red Superman image;
  • and the phrase "The King" alongside a gorilla head

State Police officials are urging anyone who uses heroin daily to be "extremely careful of the product they buy," which could prove deadly. "The use of a fentanyl-laced batch of heroin, or especially pure fentanyl, can easily lead to overdose and death due to fentanyl's powerful effect," police said.

The powerful synthetic opiate analgesic is more potent than morphine and up to 50 times more powerful than heroin. Even a very small amount of pure fentanyl – just a few grains – can stop a person's breathing and lead to death, according to the Vermont Department of Health

Fentanyl is typically used to treat patients with severe or chronic pain, or given to patients recovering from serious surgical procedures.

Like heroin, morphine and other opioid drugs, fentanyl works by binding to the body's opiate receptors, highly concentrated in areas of the brain that control pain and emotions. When opiate drugs bind to these receptors, they can drive up dopamine levels in the brain's reward areas, producing a state of euphoria and relaxation, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Vermont State Police Capt. JP Sinclair can be reached at 802-241-5520 for more information about heroin- and fentanyl-related crime and overdoses. More information on the health effects of heroin and fentanyl overdoses is available by calling the Vermont Health Department Communication Office at 802-863-7281.




Springfield mayoral candidate Johnnie Ray McKnight's office burglarized, computer equipment stolen: report

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McKnight, 33, announced in February that he's running for mayor.

SPRINGFIELD — Mayoral candidate Johnnie Ray McKnight says his campaign office was burglarized and a laptop computer and other equipment were stolen.

McKnight arrived at his office at 11 Pearl St. on Wednesday afternoon to find more than $2,000 worth of technology equipment missing, according to Western Mass News, media partner of MassLive / The Republican.

"I inspected all around and I ... saw that the door was open, and I saw the intruders came in through there and they just stole my property," he told the TV news station.

McKnight said he hopes images of the thief were captured by surveillance cameras outside the Apremont Triangle building, located about a block west of police headquarters. Police are investigating.

He characterized the incident as "unfortunate" and asked anyone with information to contact him at 413-214-4576.

McKnight, 33, has a master's degree in business administration from American International College. He announced his political aspirations in February.


UMass trustees could select new system president Friday

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The search committee interviewed candidates earlier in April.

BOSTON - University of Massachusetts Board of Trustees could select a new president by Friday, according to the agenda of a meeting just posted Wednesday.

The Presidential Search Committee will meet Thursday morning and is likely to designate finalists at that meeting, according to a UMass official.

The committee interviewed candidates over two days earlier this month

The Board of Trustees has scheduled the special meeting for Friday morning for the purpose of meeting with finalists and, potentially, electing a new president.

One of the agenda items is "Appointment of the President of the University of Massachusetts and Delegation to enter into a contract with new President." This is listed with a potential vote.  

President Robert L. Caret is leaving to become the chancellor of the University of Maryland system.

Korn Ferry International has been leading the search. It's unclear how many semifinalists there are.  

Caret is set to begin his new job July 1. He has been president here for about four years. 

Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito praises Springfield; promises strong city-state partnership

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Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito plans to meet with elected officials in all 351 communities in Massachusetts.

SPRINGFIELD - Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito told Mayor Domenic J. Sarno and city department heads on Thursday that the state is bullish on Springfield and will be partners in furthering the city's endeavors in economic and workforce development and other priorities.

Polito met with Sarno and his top advisers during a nearly hour-long, closed-door meeting at the Municipal Operations building on Tapley Street, conferring on the city's needs, concerns and action plans. The stop in Springfield and other Western Massachusetts communities on Thursday was part of a statewide tour to meet local elected officials in all 351 communities.

"These round tables, these small meetings are really important," Polito said after the meeting. "They stick with you. We have a very important strategy around regional efforts and making sure that in each region, we understand what the issues are, what the priorities are, what the concerns are, where the energy is and how we can tap into that and partner with you to bring your communities to the level that you envision."

Polito praised economic development efforts in Springfield including the upcoming construction of an $800 million MGM Springfield project and the Union Station redevelopment project. The state will continue to partner in those efforts and others, she said.

"But Springfield's success is much bigger than that," Polito said.


Gov. Charlie Baker, upon taking office in January, used an executive order to empower Polito to build and expand partnerships with communities statewide on behalf of his administration.

Sarno said he and his department heads stressed during the meeting that Springfield is striving to be the hub of workforce development in the region and state with education and training initiatives, aided by the state.

Sarno said he and top officials spoke of the city's top priorities and of general needs and budget challenges faced in areas such as public safety, public works, health and human services, and elder affairs. They also cited challenges such as unfunded state mandates, and the desire for the state to assist with the very high cost of school busing, he said.

Sarno described the meeting with Polito as "invaluable."

Polito said she was impressed the Springfield is creating a "pipeline of students with skills they need to fill the jobs that are being created here in Western Massachusetts," particularly in precision manufacturing.

City Councilor Timothy Rooke praised the Baker-Polito administration for an "incredible" outreach effort.

"I think this administration is task oriented and they are looking for partnerships," Rooke said. "If the city and towns are willing to work with the state to improve efficiencies and stretch taxpayer dollars, you are going to see a significant impact in Springfield and also other communities in the area. I think it's an exciting time."

Polito was also visiting Agawam, Westfield, and West Springfield on Thursday.

Assistant Superintendent asks Holyoke school community to accept and embrace receivership

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In a letter to the Holyoke Public School Community, Assistant Superintendent Paul Hyry-Dermith addressed the uncertainty that receivership will bring in the future but asked all remain committed to the district.

HOLYOKE -- In a letter to the Holyoke Public School Community, Assistant Superintendent Paul Hyry-Dermith addressed the uncertainty that receivership will bring in the future but asked all remain committed to the district.

The letter follows Tuesday's vote by the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to declare Holyoke a "chronically underperforming" Level 5 district.

In Thursday's note, Hyry-Dermith says all must "accept and ultimately embrace receivership and be part of making it work for our children and families."

He asks the school community to "join me, immediately and in the days, weeks, months, and years ahead, in doing the right thing. For now that means staying focused on our work - with these children and families this year. It also means actively dispelling myths and rumors related to receivership. It means being flexible and open to change. And it means doing our best to assure that all of our actions are motivated by our holes, dreams, and good intentions for Holyoke's children."

Read the letter in full below.

Assistant Superintendent asks Holyoke school community to accept and embrace receivership

Holyoke home ownership event set with 'Open House Extravaganza'

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The open houses will run from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.

HOLYOKE -- More than 20 open houses of properties for sale will be held around the city Sunday (May 3) in an event organized by Mayor Alex B. Morse and the Buy Holyoke Now Committee.

The event will begin at 11 a.m. at 17 Holly Meadow Road and run to 4 p.m., a press release from Morse's office said.

Buy Holyoke Now is a group of public, nonprofit and private-sector organizations promoting home ownership here.

Open houses will be held on Cherry Hill, Fairfield Avenue, Oxford Street and Central Park Drive, among others listed at buyholyokenow.com.

The website also includes information about first-time home-buyer workshops.

"The series covers such topics as: finding the right mortgage product, working with a Realtor, fair housing, home inspection and budgeting," the website said.

For information call the mayor's office at (413) 322-5510 or visit buyholyokenow.com.

Click here to watch a video that accompanied the press release.


Feeding Hills man arrested after allegedly pulling knife on officer during traffic stop

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Bradley Kiddy, 19, is facing charges of assault with a dangerous weapon and disorderly conduct after what police describe as a road rage incident led to an alleged confrontation with officers.

Police arrested a Feeding Hills man Thursday morning after he allegedly pulled a knife on an officer during a traffic stop.

Bradley Kiddy, 19, is facing charges of assault with a dangerous weapon and disorderly conduct after what police describe as a road rage incident led to an alleged confrontation with officers.

Agawam police officer Christopher Lanski saw Kiddy allegedly yelling and raising his middle finger in the Route 57 rotary, according to a police report. Lanski pulled Kiddy over and asked for his license and registration.

"Why did you stop me? What is your [probable cause?]" Kiddy allegedly responded, according to Lanski's report. "I know my [expletive] rights, you're a dick."

Kiddy eventually produced his identification and registration, the report said. Lanski reported seeing Kiddy reach under the front seat when asked to exit the car. When Lanski began to pat Kiddy down for weapons, Kiddy allegedly "pulled out a folded bladed knife and flicked his wrist attempting to open the knife as he pulled it out of his pocket."

Lanski and another officer grabbed Kiddy's arms, according to the police report. Lanski reported that he disarmed Kiddy and placed him in handcuffs. Officers allegedly confiscated marijuana found in the car.

Kiddy was arraigned in Westfield District Court. Kiddy's attorney did not return a request for comment prior to publication.

Baltimore protesters frustrated by lack of details from Freddie Gray investigation

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BALTIMORE (AP) — The refusal of authorities to provide more than a few sketchy details about the Freddie Gray investigation may be legally appropriate, but many people in Baltimore were finding it hard to be patient Thursday when police revealed nothing about the internal investigation they turned over to the state's attorney's office. Nearly two weeks after Gray's death, the...

BALTIMORE (AP) -- The refusal of authorities to provide more than a few sketchy details about the Freddie Gray investigation may be legally appropriate, but many people in Baltimore were finding it hard to be patient Thursday when police revealed nothing about the internal investigation they turned over to the state's attorney's office.

Nearly two weeks after Gray's death, the public still doesn't know much more than it did on Day One. The central question -- what caused his fatal spinal cord injury -- remains a mystery.

"The transparency is just not there," the Rev. Cortly "C.D." Witherspoon said after Police Commissioner Anthony Batts refused to answer any questions Thursday.

Batts said his department's report was delivered a day ahead of time to State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, and that from now on, any questions should go to her.

Mosby also declined to talk, issuing a statement Thursday asking "for the public to remain patient and peaceful and to trust the process of the justice system."

With rumors flying about how Gray's spine was "80 percent severed," as his family's lawyer Billy Murphy put it, police did release a new piece of information Thursday, but it served mostly to raise more questions about how truthful the six suspended officers have been with investigators.

Deputy Commissioner Kevin Davis said investigators discovered a security camera recording showing that the police van carrying Gray had made a previously undisclosed, second stop, after the 25-year-old black man was put in leg irons and before the van driver made a third stop and called for help to check on his condition. The van then made a fourth stop, to pick up another passenger, before Gray arrived at the police station with the fatal spinal-cord injury that left him unresponsive.

The Associated Press talked later Thursday with grocery store owner Jung Hyun Hwang, who said officers came in last week to make a copy. Speaking in Korean, he said the only other copy had been stolen, along with his video equipment, when looters destroyed his store Monday night. He told the AP that he didn't see what the recording showed.

Police had said Gray was obviously injured and asking for medical help when he was hoisted into the van on April 12, and unresponsive on arrival at the station. He died in a hospital after a week in a coma.

Then, last week, Batts said the additional passenger who was picked up along the way had told investigators the driver did not speed, make sudden stops or "drive erratically" during the trip, and that Gray was "was still moving around, that he was kicking and making noises" up until the van arrived at the police station.

Baltimore police have been less forthcoming than police in Ferguson, Missouri, after white officer Darren Wilson fatally shot a black man, 18-year-old, Michael Brown, last year in an incident officially deemed self-defense. For example, Baltimore police haven't publicly revealed the suspended officers' races or disciplinary histories.

Beyond the slim chronology, authorities have refused to discuss evidence, such as the details of his handling to statements from any of the six suspended officers. Their names are known only because the AP and other news organizations filed public records requests for the documents police filed seeking to have Gray charged with carrying a switchblade.

"I understand there are questions people want to have answered, but unfortunately, we can't release any more about it," Capt. J. Eric Kowalczyk said.

The forensic pathologists who studied Gray's body for clues also aren't making official statements.

Bruce Goldfarb, a spokesman for the Maryland State Medical Examiner's Office, told the AP Thursday that the office has completed Gray's autopsy, but the forensic investigation is still in process and no conclusions have been sent to police or prosecutors. When the report is complete, Goldfarb said, a copy will be sent to the Baltimore State's Attorney's Office.

"The autopsy has been done, it only takes about two and a half hours," Goldfarb said. "The autopsy is only one part of the forensic investigation. The whole point is to determine cause and manner of death, and there are lab tests and lots of other things that have to be done."

Legal experts and the Gray family lawyers say secrecy is appropriate at this point in the probe, when it's still possible that some witnesses haven't been questioned, or even found.

"By releasing too many details, you run the risk that witnesses' testimony will change to mirror the details you have released," said David S. Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice in Miami. He said investigators must verify or corroborate much of the information they receive, and meanwhile the public could be misled that the probe is leading to a particular outcome.

Investigators also face challenges with police that are different from killings by civilians. There's the question of whether an officer acted "reasonably" considering the circumstances -- a common defense in use-of-force cases. And investigators can't simply force officers to give statements or lose their jobs, because that would mean their testimony is coerced, and therefore wouldn't hold up in court, Weinstein said.

"If they are compelled to give a statement as a condition of their employment, you cannot then use those statements against them in a criminal proceeding," he said. "This is where the decision to grant immunity comes into play."

The Gray family's lawyers sought to dispel the idea that the police report would be made public at this point.

"This family wants justice, and they want justice that comes at the right time and not too soon," attorney Hassan Murphy said Wednesday.

People are right to demand transparency, but the appropriate time for disclosure is either during a trial, if charges are filed, or when prosecutors announce no indictments, said Steve Levin, a former federal prosecutor in Baltimore who now works as a defense attorney.

The voracious 24-hour news cycle is another factor, especially so when civil unrest and violence are involved. Saturating the public with information prior to filing criminal charges also can make it extremely difficult to seat an impartial jury later, said Robert Jarvis, a law professor at Nova Southeastern University.

"It makes it appear that they are not doing anything, which leads to unfounded criticism and can rush law enforcement into ill-considered action," Jarvis said.

Meanwhile, protests over Gray's death are spreading and continuing. Crowds gathered Thursday in Philadelphia and Baltimore. Other protests led to arrests in New York and elsewhere.


16 co-workers at New York company split $58M Mega Millions jackpot

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Ophthotech Corp. spokeswoman Evelyn Harrison says the employees have been pooling funds since 2010 to play the lottery, each pitching in $4 weekly to buy tickets.

NEW YORK (AP) -- Sixteen co-workers at a New York City biopharmaceuticals company have won a $58 million Mega Millions jackpot.

New York State Lottery officials said Thursday the colleagues call themselves the Lucky 16 Trust and pooled their money before the March 24 drawing.

Most of the employees come from New York and New Jersey. One travels from her home in Venice, California. They'll split the funds.

Ophthotech Corp. spokeswoman Evelyn Harrison says members of the winning group work in all parts of the company, from senior to administrative posts. She says the employees have been pooling funds since 2010 to play the lottery, each pitching in $4 weekly to buy tickets.

Worker Matthew Jung says after they won they huddled in a conference room to let the news sink in. He says nobody accomplished much that day.

Palmer schools closed Friday to allow officials to assess rash of bomb threats

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The decision was taken by superintendent and the administration in coordination with the police department.

PALMER — The recent spate of bomb threats that have resulted in the evacuation of Palmer school buildings several times this month has resulted in the cancellation of all classes on Friday, for all grades, kindergarten through 12.

The decision was taken by Superintendent Thomas Charko and the administration in coordination with the police department.

School and police officials will meet on Friday to discuss the proliferation of bomb threats and come up with a plan to address the matter.

"A lot of children are nervous. It is a good idea; the administration and the police are going to discuss what they can do to stop this from happening," school committee chairman Gary Blanchette said in an interview Thursday evening.

In addition, police and first responders will be meeting with Palmer students at the schools next week, when assemblies are planned to discuss the numerous threats that have taken place to "discuss the seriousness of this kind of stuff," Blanchette said.

None of the bomb threats have been substantiated.

Western Mass News - WGGB/WSHM

Springfield homicide remembrance ceremony: 'I wasn't just going to die, I was going to be slaughtered like my mother'

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The ceremony at Court Square was organized by Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni's office and the Baystate Family Advocacy Center's Homicide Bereavement Program.

SPRINGFIELD — They belong to a unique club that no one ever wants to join: They are the family members of homicide victims, a club united by grief and pain that will never go away.

For Mariah Girouard, July 30, 2010, is a day of ignominy – the day her mother was brutally killed in their Hampden home, and the day she almost became a crime statistic herself.

But Girouard survived.

On Thursday evening, she relived her nightmare at "Standing Together: Homicide Victims Remembrance," a ceremony held in Springfield's Court Square. The event was organized by Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni's office and the Baystate Family Advocacy Center Homicide Bereavement Program, which provides therapeutic services to victims' families.

"It sounds like a cliche," said Girouard, whose mother, 47-year-old Valerie Girouard, was stabbed eight times, "but my life really did flash before my eyes."

Girouard, who was 15 at the time, awakened to screams and found her ex-boyfriend, Jesus Gilberto Garcia, stabbing her mother to death in the family's kitchen. Garcia was sentenced to life imprisonment in October 2011.

At that moment, Girouard said, she realized "I wasn't just going to die, I was going to be slaughtered like my mother was."

The young woman was among several people who shared their experiences of being the family member of a homicide victim.

Before Syreeta Frazer sang a stirring rendition of John Lennon's "Imagine," a song of peace and hope, she told the story of her son, 20-year-old Tavis Humphrey-Frazer, a promising athlete who was shot to death in Springfield seven months ago.

"Can you imagine," Frazer asked the crowd, what it's like to lose a loved one to homicide, what it's like to get a phone call telling you that your child is gone. She recounted the many times she tried to imagine how murder victims' families must feel when they get that call.

Then, she got that call on Sept. 21, 2014. "They told me that my son had been shot in the head," Frazer said.

As she sang a solo, a cappella version of "Imagine," Frazer paused briefly to wipe away tears and compose herself.

Charles Weston, the father of 18-year-old Emily N. Weston, the victim of a 2011 motor vehicle homicide in Franklin County, said, "I love my daughter now more than ever."

Gail Hiller said the murder of her son, Nicholas P. Hiller, on Mar. 20, 2010, may as well have happened yesterday, because every day, at every turn, there's something that reminds her of him.

"You are thrown into a hell that there's no name for," the mother said, choking back tears while addressing the crowd. "Every activity reminds you that they're gone."

Hiller said she tried everything from prayer, reciting so many Hail Marys and Our Fathers, to counseling, but her sadness took her to very dark places.

Hiller said her church has been very comforting to her throughout her family's ordeal, with one exception: When Hiller asked someone, whom she didn't identify, if her son was in heaven, she was told that he was probably in purgatory because "he was selling marijuana at the time of his death," she said.

Kirk Smith, president and CEO of YMCA of Greater Springfield, validated the lives of all homicide victims, some of whom get blamed for their predicaments. Smith told Hiller not to listen to the person who told her that her son wasn't in heaven, because that person didn't know her son.

"No one's life is in vain," Smith said, his voice rising as he implored people to make sure that homicide victims don't become mere statistics.

"As long as you're vertical and you're still here, you're relevant," he said. "Don't give up. Don't give in."

Smith said homicide is an equal-opportunity phenomenon that doesn't care about socioeconomic conditions, whether you live in the city or the suburbs.

"This isn't a political issue. This is a pain issue. ... Pain has no boundaries," Smith said. "Homicide doesn't care about your zip code."

A few dozen silhouetted cut-outs, each one adorned with the name of a homicide victim, filled the steps and brick pathways leading to the gazebo in court square.

At the end of the ceremony, the names and ages of victims were read aloud, a single bell chiming in remembrance for each person whose life was cut short.


 

Photos: Google's Steve Vinter, keynote speaker at STCC Foundation's Not Just Business As Usual event

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SPRINGFIELD - Google's Steve Vinter was the keynote speaker at Springfield Technical Community College Foundation's Not Just Business As Usual event held at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall Of Fame on Thursday, April 30, 2015. Vinter is also the co-founder of MassCAN and a graduate of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. At the event STCC honored STCC Alumni and...

SPRINGFIELD - Google's Steve Vinter was the keynote speaker at Springfield Technical Community College Foundation's Not Just Business As Usual event held at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall Of Fame on Thursday, April 30, 2015.

Vinter is also the co-founder of MassCAN and a graduate of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst.

At the event STCC honored STCC Alumni and Professor Beth McGinnis-Cavanaugh with the STCC Works Excellence Award. Eight STCC Works scholarship winners were also honored at the event.

Law Day in Springfield commemorates the rule of law

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Christina Turgeon, Hampden County Bar Association president, announced the two John F. Greaney award recipients Cristina Ianello and the late Lynne Govoni.

SPRINGFIELD - Lawyers, professors, judges and students gathered in a Hampden Superior Court courtroom Thursday to celebrate Law Day under the theme "Magna Carta: Symbol of Freedom Under Law."

Cristina Ianello mug 43015.jpgCristina Ianello 
This year's Law Day commemorates the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta.

Christina Turgeon, Hampden County Bar Association president, announced the two John F. Greaney award recipients Cristina Ianello and the late Lynne Govoni. They were honored for service to the legal community.

Govoni's two children Kelsey Govoni and Erik Govoni accepted the award from Greaney, retired Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court justice, on her behalf.

Govoni, owner of Lynne Govoni Paralegal Services, volunteered for many years for the Children's Miracle Network and was a foster mother for many years to over 500 children.

Turgeon said Ianello has been a member of the board of directors of the Hampden County Bar Association - sponsor of Law Day - for several years and chaired several committees.

Ianello devoted countless hours of community service, Turgeon said. "The list goes on and on," she said.

Hampden Superior Court Judge C. Jeffrey Kinder, master of ceremonies, said Law Day was created in the Eisenhower administration to celebrate the importance of the rule of law.

Law Day was made official in 1961 when Congress issued a joint resolution designating May 1 as the official date for celebrating Law Day.

A fifth grade class from Mountain View School in East Longmeadow was in attendance at the ceremony.

The Mock Trial Team of Springfield Renaissance School presented a debate on whether or not consumers still have protections against large companies in light of court decisions regarding arbitration agreements and class action waivers.

One side argued the door to class action lawsuits by consumers is essentially shut, the other argued the door was still open.

After that presentation Western New England University Law School professors Bruce Miller and Art Wolf spoke on arbitration agreements and class action waivers.

Kinder ended by thanking Noreen E. Nardi, executive director of the Hampden County Bar Association and her staff for the work they do year round.

Dow falls 195 points as investors weigh disappointing corporate earnings

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Overall corporate earnings have come in better than analysts were expecting, but they are still much weaker than they were at the end of last year.

By STEVE ROTHWELL

NEW YORK - Stocks logged their biggest drop in two weeks on Thursday as investors assessed some disappointing earnings news.

Harman International, which makes audio systems for cars, and Yelp, an online listings company, were among the companies that fell sharply after posting weak earnings.

The stock market has sagged this week after climbing to record levels on Friday.

While many investors remain optimistic that growth will resume later in the year that belief isn't yet being backed up stronger economic data or good corporate earnings reports. A surge in the dollar in the first three months of the year is hurting company earnings for those that sell overseas, and a plunge in oil prices that lasted into January is hurting the energy sector.

"Until we see an improvement in earnings numbers ... investors are kind of caught," said Gina Martin Adams, an equity strategist at Wells Fargo Securities.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 21.34 points, or 1 percent, 2,085.51. That was the biggest drop since April 17. The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 195.01 points, or 1.1 percent, to 17,840.52. The Nasdaq composite declined 82.22 points, or 1.6 percent, to 4,941.42.

Overall corporate earnings have come in better than analysts were expecting, but they are still much weaker than they were at the end of last year.

Companies in the S&P 500 are currently forecast to report average growth in earnings per share of just 0.6 percent for the first quarter, according to data from S&P Capital IQ. That compares with a growth rate of 7.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2014.

Gains for stocks have slowed this year, as the market has entered the seventh year of a bull run. After Thursday's losses, the S&P 500 index was up just 1.3 percent for the year and the Dow just 0.1 percent.

The market is struggling to push higher as stock valuations have climbed. The price-earnings ratio, a measure of how much investors are willing to pay for every $1 of earnings, is now just above 17. Three years ago it was 12.5.

"We're treading water," said Ron Sanchez, chief investment officer at Fiduciary Trust Company International. While he still recommends owning U.S. stocks, Sanchez says his expectations for returns are "much more modest" than at any time during the last three years.

Yelp was among the biggest losers on Thursday.

The stock plunged $11.89, or 23 percent, to $38.39 after it reported a loss of $1.3 million in its first quarter and gave a lower-than-expected revenue outlook late Wednesday. Yelp said the number of visitors to its desktop site fell as more users browsed on smartphones and tablets.

Harman International also dropped after reporting earnings that fell short of analysts' estimates and lowered its own forecast for revenue and earnings. The company blamed the impact of the appreciating dollar and weaker growth. Its stock fell $9.82, or 7 percent, to $130.38.

The bond market steadied after a sell-off on Wednesday. The yield on the 10-year government Treasury note held at 2.04 percent. The yield on the note has been moving higher after dropping as low as 1.65 percent in January.

Oil rose nearly 2 percent Thursday and finished April with a gain of more than 20 percent. U.S. oil gained $1.05, or 1.8 percent, to $59.63 a barrel. Brent crude rose 94 cents to $66.78 a barrel. Analysts say recent reports showing fewer rigs drilling for oil in the U.S. and supplies leveling off are supporting higher prices.

In metals trading, gold dropped $27.60, or 3.3 percent, to $1,182.40 an ounce. Silver fell 54.6 cents, or 3.3 percent, to $16.12 an ounce. The price of copper rose 9.2 cents, or 3.3 percent, to $2.89 per pound.

The euro rose to $1.1240 from $1.1114 the day before. The dollar rose to 119.35 yen from 119.01 yen.

In other energy futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

  1. Wholesale gasoline gained 3.2 cents to $2.05 a gallon.
  2. Heating oil rose 2.8 cents to $1.976 a gallon.
  3. Natural gas rose 14.5 cents to $2.751 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Holyoke police at Route 5 accident with 1 dead, another hurt

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At least one more person was badly hurt in addition to the person who was killed, police said.

Updated at 11:59 p.m. Thursday, April 30, 2015 to note an older male also suffered serious injuries, according to Western Mass News, media partner of The Republican and MassLive.com.

HOLYOKE -- One person is dead after a head-on collision involving at least two vehicles and police have closed Route 5 north between the Mount Tom Access Road and the Easthampton line, Lt. James Albert said.

Another person, believed to be an older male, had to be extricated after being trapped in one of the vehicles with serious injuries, Albert said, according to Western Mass News, media partner of The Republican and MassLive.com.

The accident occurred around 671 Northampton St. and police got the call just before 9:30 p.m., he said.

The section of Route 5, also known as Northampton Street, was closed so police could investigate the accident and because no turn-off routes are accessible for drivers who might come upon the scene to reverse direction, he said.

Details such as the identity of the person who died, how many other drivers and passengers were involved in the accident and when Route 5 would reopen were unavailable.


Palmer superintendent, middle school principal to be disciplined for 'mishandling' of bomb threat

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School Committee Chairman Gary Blanchette said he and members of the board are not at liberty to specify what the form of discipline the two administrators would be subjected to.

PALMER - Following a closed door School Committee meeting with Superintendent Thomas Charko and the Converse Middle School Principal David Stetkiewicz, and members of the administration on Thursday evening, the board's chairman confirmed disciplinary action will be taken against the two administrators for what he said was a mishandling the April 7 bomb threats at Converse.

School Committee Chairman Gary Blanchette said he and members of the board are not at liberty to specify what the form of discipline Charko and Stetkiewicz would be subjected to, due to confidentiality requirements involving personnel.

He also said the board would administer the discipline related to Charko; and that the superintendent would be responsible for disciplining Stetkiewicz.

The incidents on April 7, at Converse, consisted of a student twice writing "bomb" and gym" on a bathroom wall. An unidentified student later confessed to school authorities that he wanted school to be dismissed.

Thomas CharkoPalmer School Superintendent Thomas Charko is seen during the April 16, 2015 school board meeting. 
However, the incident became problematic for Charko and Stetiewicz, as they chose not to contact police. Many parents expressed anger at the administration and some said they felt terrorized.

The school board said policy requires the administration to notify police right away, and that it is not for the administration to determine whether a threat is credible. Charko and Stetiewicz chose not to contact police, involving the April 7 incidents.

In addition, an erroneous message was texted to parents that day by Stetiewicz -- that stated "there was a bomb in the gym" -- although that was not the case.

"We did meet tonight with the administrators involved regarding the complaints. Disciplinary action will be taken that we deem appropriate," Blanchette said.

"And we are comfortable that this situation will never happen again," he said. "We were very pleased with the way the meetings went tonight."

The chairman said the committee "will make recommendations" involving the principal and, in the near future, discipline Charko

"We have not made any decision yet; our attorney was there, and instructed us to what we should do," Blanchette said. "I think the parents understood that we took the complaints very seriously. We are also pleased with what we heard tonight."

Gunman wearing skull mask robbed State Street liquor store in Springfield; police investigating

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J&J Pacakage Store, 1121 State St., was robbed at gunpoint by a man wearing a Halloween-style mask late Thursday night, according to authorities, who continue to investigate.

SPRINGFIELD — A gunman wearing a skull mask robbed a State Street liquor store in the city's Bay neighborhood late Thursday night.

The armed robbery at J&J Pacakage Store was reported at 10:35 p.m. and drew multiple cruisers to the business at the corner of State and Dresden streets.

There were no reported injuries or any indication of what was taken, but a review of surveillance video revealed the robber had a silver revolver and was wearing a Halloween-style mask, according to investigators.

The assailant was about 5-foot-9 and wearing all gray, including a sweatshirt with some sort of emblem on the upper right chest, police said. He was last seen running east on State Street.

Police cruisers played the area for the suspect, using spotlights as they searched Colonial Avenue, Dearborn Street and other nearby blocks.

Meanwhile, customers attempting to enter the package store were turned away while the investigation was underway.

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


MAP showing approximate location of armed robbery:


Northwestern DA: Greenfield man facing heroin, child endangerment charges after drugs, needles found at apartment

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Everett Kendrick, 39, of 12 Miles St., Greenfield, was expected to be arraigned in Greenfield District Court on charges of heroin possession with intent to distribute, child endangerment, and possession of a class B substance, subsequent offense.

GREENFIELD — An alleged drug dealer was arrested Wednesday night after authorities raided his Greenfield apartment and found heroin and drug paraphernalia, according to Mary Carey, communications director for Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan.

Everett Kendrick, 39, of 12 Miles St., Apt. 16, is being held on $5,000 bail pending arraignment Friday, May 1, in Greenfield District Court on charges of heroin possession with intent to distribute, child endangerment, and possession of a class B substance, subsequent offense.

Kendrick was arrested at his Miles Street apartment, just off Main Street, by members of the Northwestern Anti-Crime Task Force, who had warrants to search Kendrick and his apartment. Carey said officers recovered 42 bags of heroin, 19 packets of suboxone, and an electronic scale, among other items, inside Kendrick's apartment.

Officers also discovered evidence that a young toddler was living at the residence with Kendrick and his girlfriend, although neither the child nor girlfriend were present during the execution of the search warrant.

More than 10 uncapped needles, some of which contained a liquid suspected to be heroin, were located in the bathroom within reach of a toddler, according to authorities. One of the uncapped needles contained dried blood, officials said.

Kendrick told police that he sold two bundles of heroin to the occupants of a vehicle that police observed Kendall meeting with, according to Carey.

Authorities said Kendrick told them that he traveled to Holyoke twice a day to buy heroin, purchasing 10-12 bundles a trip for $35 a bundle and selling them in Greenfield for $80-85 a bundle.

Kendrick had almost $160 cash on him at the time of his arrest, police said.


MAP showing approximate location of drug raid:


 

Violent sex offender, wanted by Hadley and Worcester police, arrested in Pennsylvania

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Sease was wanted by the state police and the Hadley, Grafton and Worcester police departments.

HADLEY -- A violent sex offender, wanted by Hadley and Worcester police, was captured in Pennsylvania Thursday morning where he was living under a false identity, state police said.

Richard P. Sease, 47, was taken into custody shortly before 7 a.m. by members of the Pennsylvania State Police Fugitive Apprehension Unit and United States Marshals, according to a release by Massachusetts State Police.

Sease, who was on the Massachusetts State Police Most Wanted List , was in an apartment at 756 Garden St. in Meadville, Penn.

Sease was wanted by the state police and the Hadley, Grafton and Worcester police departments. He is believed to have fled Massachusetts around May 2013 after an arrest in Worcester.

He was added to the Massachusetts State Police Most Wanted List in April 2014. At that time he was the subject of nine outstanding Massachusetts warrants charging him with stalking; carrying a dangerous weapon, threatening to commit a crime (murder); two counts each of failure to register as a Level 3 sex offender and criminal harassment; and five counts of violating a harassment prevention order.

During the Massachusetts State Police Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section's Central Team's investigation into Sease's whereabouts, troopers learned that he was a suspect in an Ashtabula County, Ohio, rape, during which the victim was allegedly drugged.

Sease was further wanted in Ohio at the time for failure to register as a sex offender in that state.

While attempts to locate and arrest Sease in Ohio were unsuccessful, the Massachusetts State Police Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section continued working with Ohio authorities throughout the investigation.

Massachusetts prosecutors will work with Pennsylvania authorities to arrange Sease's rendition here..

State police also notified Ohio authorities of his capture.

Sease was taken to the Crawford County Jail and charged in Pennsylvania as a fugitive from justice. U.S. Marshals are considering federal sex offender charges under the Adam Walsh Act.

He is being held on a $500,000 bond.

State police said the assistance of the public was crucial to the suspect's capture. They said they received information through their 1-800-KAPTURE tip line that proved essential to investigators.


Hitchcock Center celebrates groundbreaking at Hampshire College

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The center has launched a fundraising campaign to coincide with the groundbreaking.

AMHERST - With the Hitchcock Center groundbreaking ceremony Friday afternoon at Hampshire College, the center has now launched an overall fundraising campaign to complete funding for the 9,000 square-foot project.

The Building For the Future campaign has raised $4.6 million of the $5.8 million project cost.

And now the center is asking the community at large to donate. A group of donors will match all donations given or pledged between now and May 31, of up to $100,000

"Our campaign's success relies on broad-based community support. We invite all to help us create a historic new living environmental education center, one which will immediately become a destination for our entire region," according to a press release. "We

call on our community now to give generously as they can. Pledges can be made over a three-year-period.

The center, which is being built on college land, has a new website where people can donate or learn more about the project.

 The building is being created to be the most advanced measure of sustainability. Fewer than 10 buildings have been certified, according to a press release. 

The project has received funding from the Kendeda Fund, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, the Massachusetts Cultural Council among other sources. 

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