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More to Springfield drug stabbing than meets eye, defense lawyer says

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The victim was seeking to buy drugs, but was stabbed, struck with bricks and robbed instead, the prosecutor said.

SPRINGFIELD - A lawyer for a man charged in a drug-related stabbing assured a judge Thursday that there is more to the case than meets the eye.

stephenthomas55crop.jpgStephen B. Thomas 
First, defendant Stephen B. Thomas was breaking up a fight between two men, not participating in it, lawyer Nicholas J. Horgan said in Springfield District Court.

Second, one of the combatants was a male prostitute posing as a female to earn money for drugs, Horgan said.

"He was selling his body" for crack cocaine, the lawyer said.

Once the two men began fighting, Thomas tried to intervene; the fighting resumed and the male posing as a female was eventually stabbed, Horgan explained.

Thomas, 55, of Springfield pleaded innocent to armed robbery and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon during his arraignment before Judge William Boyle.

Assistant District Attorney Jill O'Connor said the victim approached Thomas and another man around 4:30 a.m. Thursday at High and School streets.

The victim was seeking to buy drugs, but was stabbed, struck with bricks and robbed instead, the prosecutor said.

Thomas held the victim down during the assault, and directed the other man to take $60 from his pocket, O'Connor said.

The victim was taken to the hospital with non life-threatening injuries and later identified Thomas as one of his assailants, according to O'Connor, who asked for $5,000 bail.

Horgan asked for a low cash bail, explaining that Thomas has limited income from working odd jobs.

The defendant is married, with three children and has lived in Springfield for 19 years, Horgan said.

His client has no criminal convictions while the victim likely "has a record of his own," Horgan said.

Boyle set bail at $5,000 and scheduled a pretrial hearing for June 22.


Springfield Historical Commission lifts demolition delay on St. Jude Mission Church

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Diocese hopes to break ground by fall on new church in Indian Orchard. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD - "Very pleased" was how the Rev. William Pomerleau expressed himself after the Springfield Historical Commission voted 3 to 1 to lift the nine-month demolition delay imposed by city ordinance on St. Jude Mission Church in Indian Orchard.

"The historical commission is known for saving buildings," said Pomerleau, pastor of Our Lady of Sacred Heart Parish in Pine Point. "I am very grateful they did not hold our feet to the fire and make us wait nine months. We hope to start construction in the fall."

Pomerleau, and representatives from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, appeared before the commission Thursday evening to appeal the delay that is automatic when demolition is sought of a city building 100 years of age. Parishioners at St. Jude have been worshiping at Our Lady of Sacred Heart, considered its mother church, since a microburst in 2011 severely damaged the mission church.

Pomerleau had recommended, based on costs to repair and upgrade the 19th century structure, that St. Jude be razed and a smaller, more energy efficient church be built on site for less than half the money for the 600 estimated worshipers it will serve. The diocese agreed. Estimated cost to repair and upgrade the existing church had been put at $3.5 million by Daniel O'Connell's Sons. The diocese had negotiated a settlement of $1.5 from its insurance for damage to the church in 2013. After scheduled presentations for the diocese by Atty. Robert L. Quinn, structural engineer Bernard J. Hunt, who said much of the church would have to be demolished even in a rebuild, and architect Ray Casella, as well as Pomerleau, the historical commission agreed with the diocese's appeal, but not without debate.

Pomerleau was asked when he hoped to start construction (the fall); was the money to rebuild available (yes); would the rose window on the church's facade be saved (no, but an existing large cross would be visible inside a large window designed to be a prominent architectural feature in the new church).

Commission member Robert McCarroll voted to lift the demolition, saying he felt the diocese "made the case that the damage caused by Mother Nature and the expense to fix it was more than what you have." However, he told Pomerleau that he expected construction to begin in the fall "otherwise the delay could have stayed in place."

Member Benjamin Murphy agreed with McCarroll's assessment and voted to lift the ban, as did member Marjorie Guess. However, Guess, who seemed not to agree with Hunt's structural analysis, added that she "knew the church really well" and that voting for its demolition left "a better taste in my mouth." Commission chair Ralph Slate voted against lifting the demolition delay. He questioned Hunt's analysis of the amount of demolition work that would be involved in repair of the existing church, and the two debated why European churches centuries old are able to remain in use.

After the meeting, Slate said he had to "go with my conscience."

"If this demolition delay ordinance were not in place, you would only read about something liked this after it was done," Slate said. "You have to wait 141 years today to have a building (as old as St. Jude's)."

His sentiments were echoed by audience member William J. Devlin, who introduced himself as an architect and suggested a phased upgrade to the existing church in terms of making in handicapped accessible.

Several parishioners spoke in support of Pomerleau's request to remove the demolition delay and get on with building a new church, including one who said the mission church had helped her "turn her life around." John Lysak, former city councilor, said while he "hated to see an old building torn down," he was more upset by the idea of parishioners, "a lot of whom don't have transportation," wanting to worship and not having a nearby parish.

His comments seemed to reverberate as the meeting ended and the dozen or so attendees walked across the steps of City Hall, faced by a soft evening light on the white steeple of Old First Church, which was purchased by the city after its final service was held in 2007.

Greenfield mayor proposes 'Child Safety Zone' sex offender ordinance

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Servicenet has scrapped a plan to move three sex offenders to a home on High Street.

GREENFIELD -- The mayor of Greenfield is proposing an ordinance that would regulate the actions of registered sex offenders and place limitations upon where they may live.

Mayor William Martin has instructed planning director Eric Twarog to craft a Child Safety Zone ordinance similar to those adopted by dozens of communities across the state, reports the Greenfield Recorder. Such laws generally prohibit sex offenders from living near schools, parks and other places children frequent.

The measure would go first to the Planning Board, which would hold a public hearing, and then to the City Council. If approved, it would be submitted to the state's attorney general for legal review.

Martin's action followed news from ServiceNet that it had scrapped plans to move three Level 3 sex offenders from a facility on Silver Street to a home at 149 High Street, an area near Beacon Field and the Greenfield Middle School.

Local residents expressed relief at the news at Wednesday night's Town Council meeting, according to the Greenfield newspaper. It's not clear whether the sex offenders will stay at the Silver Street address or be moved out of town by the social services agency.

Martin said the ordinance would add another layer of protection to the state law that regulates sex offenders. Among other requirements, sex offenders must register their work and home addresses with the Sex Offender Registry Board.


Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com


Easthampton city council rejects local option that could let future mayor slash education funding

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The measure would have let the city count school retiree health costs toward state-mandated minimum net education spending.

EASTHAMPTON -- School Committee Chair Debora Lusnia pleaded with the City Council to defeat a measure that could allow a future mayor to slash education funding and still meet a state-mandated minimum school spending threshold.

The council after lengthy debate Wednesday night unanimously (0-7) rejected a local option that would let the city count school retiree health insurance costs toward meeting its Chapter 70 net school spending requirement. The local vote was authorized under Section 260 of Chapter 165 of the Acts of 2014, or the fiscal 2015 state budget act.

All Massachusetts school districts must spend a certain minimum amount on education, determined by a formula, to be eligible for state aid (Chapter 70) and avoid fines. Being able to report the retiree health costs as part of education could potentially give the city a significant margin to cut spending if times got tough.

"I'm concerned for the future," said Lusnia, after being recognized by Council President Joseph McCoy. "This would enable a future mayor and city council to cut funds to the schools substantially."

Easthampton's school spending currently exceeds the state minimum by around $900,000, said Mayor Karen Cadieux. The retired teachers' health costs stand at around $400,000. If the benefits had been counted as education this fiscal year, Easthampton would have spent around $1.3 million in excess of the minimum, increasing the margin by which the city could have cut school spending while remaining on the good side of the state.

When Cadieux introduced the measure in March, she said it represented a one-time opportunity, and that she wanted to give the City Council the opportunity to make its own decision about the financial reporting option. Cadieux added that she is supportive of the schools and would not consider decimating the education budget.

Easthampton is one of 127 Massachusetts communities that did not, for one reason or another, adopt the optional reporting practice following the Education Reform Act of 1993.

District 3 Councilor Joy Winnie said she trusted that any mayor who slashed education funding would not be re-elected. "I don't think any mayor would ever come in and do something like that," she said. "Our feet are held to the fire by the voters."

At-Large Councilor Tamara Smith said a mayor could indeed devastate the budget within a single two-year term. Smith spoke passionately against the measure. "This could come off the back of our students," she said. "We're looking at preparing for a worst-case scenario we have never seen, versus the potential to lose $400,000 off the backs of our children's education."

District 5 Councilor Daniel Rist said he had been "going back and forth," but was persuaded by Smith's argument. "I think I will have to change my vote," he said. Rist noted that Cadieux was "neutral on the matter" and remarked that auditor Valerie Bernier had recommended the measure, saying it would give the city a tool for the future.

Finance Director Melissa Zawadzki said under the proposal, the school retiree health benefits would still be paid for out of the general budget, not the school budget, but reported to the state as net education spending.

Cadieux has not made her full fiscal 2016 municipal budget available for download, citing technological limitations. However, a condensed budget message (pdf) posted to the city's website shows a $38.2 million municipal spending plan with $16.2 million allocated to the schools and a little less than $7.5 million going to employee benefits.

The Easthampton School Committee has proposed a $17.9 million budget for fiscal 2016 that avoids layoffs and maintains services.


Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com


Springfield Caribbean Carnival Association awards $2,500 in scholarships

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There were five recipients for the first ever Caribbean Carnival Association scholarships.

SPRINGFIELD-- Azhane Mitchell said going through an interview process for the Springfield Caribbean Carnival Association Heritage scholarship was tough, but made it all the more rewarding when she was selected as a recipient.

Mitchell, a student at Roger L. Putnam Vocational Academy, is one of five Springfield high school seniors to be selected to receive a $500 scholarship from the carnival association.

"It feels awesome. It's a blessing to know that people are out there willing to help you succeed," said Mitchell who will attend Keene State College in New Hampshire in the fall to study behavioral psychology and international relations.

Mitchell's father Leonard Mitchell said he is proud of his daughter.

"It's an honor that they are celebrating them in this way," said Mitchell, who attended the first annual scholarship gala held at the Barney Carriage House Thursday night.

Scholarship Committee chair Veta Daley said it was a rigorous process and the selected students showed dedication to their education and the community.

"This is the first time we do the scholarships so we started from zero, but thankfully people purchased tickets for the gala and we were able to make this happen," she said. "It's not much money, but we hope it will still help these young people achieve their dreams."

Rushawna Elliott, a senior at the High School of Commerce, said she simply felt "blessed," to receive the scholarship. Elliot, who moved to Springfield from Jamaica in 2012, will be attending American International College to study nursing.

Alexis Stephenson, a senior at Springfield Renaissance School, and Ashley Scott, a student at Gateway to College at Springfield Technical Community College were also honored. Stephenson will study biology at Wake Technical Community College in North Carolina and Scott will study engineering at STCC.

Andre Fraser is a senior at the High School of Science and Technology, he plans to study music at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Fraser said he was honored to be selected.

"They really celebrate you for being who you are," he said of the committee members.

Each student received a scholarship named after a respected Caribbean leader in the community. Those honored included:

-Veta Daley, a native of Jamaica who currently serves as the Chief Schools Officer for 15 elementary schools in Springfield.

-Dr. Dhanesh Dookhran, MD, MPH, a native of Trinidad and Tobego who attended the Harvard School of Public Health and completed his residency at Baystate Medical Center.

-Althea Clement, a native of Jamaica, who worked for the Springfield schools for more than 30 years, including serving as Assistant Superintendent of Schools.

-Fitzroy Brown, a native of Jamaica, and owner of Brown's Auto Body for 40 years located in Springfield.

Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno attended the event and told all of the scholarships recipients to never forget their roots.

"When a door does not open for you take that adversity and use it to make you stronger," he said of the challenges they may face in life. "You are beacons of hope for this community and we are all so proud of you."

Traditional Caribbean cuisine was provided by the Golden Krust restaurant on Wilbraham Road in Springfield.

Springfield woman charged with hiding 6 bags of heroin in bra requests 6-month sentence

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"The car was given to me. I didn't steal it, but I'm willing to plead guilty anyhow," Funk said.

SPRINGFIELD - A woman charged with hiding six bags of heroin in her bra requested a six-month jail sentence during her arraignment Thursday.

Renee Funk, 40, of Springfield volunteered for an 180-day jail term immediately after pleading innocent to drug and motor vehicle charges.

"I had a relapse," Funk told Judge William Boyle, explaining that she has battled addiction and picked a number of prostitution and drug-related charges in recent years.

The six-month term would allow her to get drug treatment and resolve her latest legal problems, Funk said.

"I want to clear this up today," she added.

Funk was arrested Wednesday night after police spotted her behind the wheel of a 2009 GMC Arcadia reported stolen last week. Following the traffic stop, she was charged with heroin possession, receiving stolen property and driving without a license.

In Springfield District Court Thursday, she offered to plead guilty to the new charges despite professing innocence to one.

"The car was given to me. I didn't steal it, but I'm willing to plead guilty anyhow," she said.

But Assistant District Attorney Jill O'Connor said Funk deserved an 18-month sentence, given the new charges and her criminal history.

Funk is currently serving a six-month suspended sentence from a previous case, according to O'Connor, who said the new charges represent potential probation violations.

The owner of the stolen vehicle also wants to make a statement before sentencing and was not available Thursday, O'Connor said.

In response, Funk said most of her convictions have been for "little things" not serious enough to warrant an 18-month sentence.

"I have never been in real trouble in my life," she said.

Boyle continued the case to Friday and suggested that Funk should be represented by a court-appointed attorney - an offer she had refused earlier in the hearing.

"Do you have any favorite lawyers?" the judge asked, referring to her frequent court appearances.

When Funk offered no candidates, the judge continued the discussion to Friday.


Relationship between CNR Changchun Railway Vehicles maker, Springfield, off to promising start, company vice president says

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Hiring for the CNR Changchun Railway Vehicles Co. plant is expected to begin in 2016 and 2017.

This story follows and expands upon: CNR Changchun Railway to build larger factory at former Westinghouse site in Springfield


SPRINGFIELD - The relationship between CNR Changchun Railway Vehicles and Springfield, site of its $65 million 220,000-square-foot railroad car factory and new North American headquarters, is off to a promising start.

This was the message brought by CNR MA Vice President Jai Bo who spoke Thursday at the annual meeting of the Western Massachusetts Economic Development Council held at the Student Prince Cafe and The Fort Dining Room downtown.

It was a busy day for Jai, who'd met earlier in the day with throngs of local business leaders looking to sell their goods or services to CNR Changchun as it moves forward with the largest new manufacturing plant Greater Springfield has seen in some time.

In November 2014, China-based CNR received  $566-million contract to build 284 Red Line and Orange Line subway cars for the MBTA. Those cars will need everything form control systems to lights, seating, handicap-accessible ramps.

"I want to share that opportunity with all of you here," Jai told the gathering through a translator.

The first Orange Line cars will be produced starting in December 2018. The first Red Line cars will be produced here in early 2019.

Hiring is expected to begin in 2017 and 2018 with many workers needing about a year of training in China, the company has said.

Bobby Doyle, a senior consultant for Changchun said the company has reached out to schools from universities and colleges,  Springfield Technical Community College, Holyoke Community College and to Roger L. Putnam Vocational-Technical Academy and other high schools.

A delegation from the College of Engineering at Western New England university plans to visit Changchun's facilities in China in late June.

"We are interested in helping prepare a workforce," Western New England University President Anthony S. Caprio said following the EDC meeting. "But we are more interested in assisting them with their research and development."

Western New England has engineers specializing in railway-related topics.

The University of Massachusetts Amherst has met with Changchun and hopes to work with the company as well, said Mike Malone, vice chancellor for research and engagement. he cited the university's strengths in plastics and other material research and in wireless controls.

DC quadruple murder suspect Daron Dylon Wint had help, authorities say

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An ex-convict denied bond on a murder charge Friday had help from others holding a family captive inside their mansion for at least 18 hours, authorities said, and their investigation is continuing.

WASHINGTON -- An ex-convict denied bond on a murder charge Friday had help from others holding a family captive inside their mansion for at least 18 hours, authorities said, and their investigation is continuing.

During their ordeal, the business executive and his wife told others to stay away -- even ordering a pizza deliverer to leave two pies at the door -- as they frantically arranged for $40,000 in cash to be dropped off at the home.

But once four neat stacks of $100 bills were left on the seat of a red sports car in the family's garage, Daron Dylon Wint brutally struck and stabbed Savvas Savopoulos, the CEO of the American Iron Works company where he had once worked as a welder, Wint's charging document said.

Savopoulos's wife Amy, their 10-year-old son Philip and their housekeeper Veralicia Figueroa also were killed, and then the house was set on fire with matches and a flammable liquid.

The fire began on the queen-sized mattress where the boy's body was stabbed and burned, authorities said.

Firefighters found the adults' bodies in the next room. Evidence shows the women suffered "blunt force and sharp force trauma" before the $4.5 million mansion was set on fire.

Authorities linked what may have been two different men to Amy Savopoulos' blue Porsche 911 the day of the killings. One, "with short, well-groomed hair," was spotted driving erratically away from the crime scene. Another, wearing a dark hoodie, was videotaped carrying a bucket near where the Porsche was set on fire later that day.

The pizza gave Wint away. His DNA was found on the crust of a partially-eaten slice of pepperoni, one of two pizzas ordered by Amy Savopoulos the night of May 13 while the group was "being held against their will," an affidavit said.

A woman believed to be Amy Savopoulos paid for the pizzas by credit card and told the delivery person to leave the food on the porch, because she was "nursing her sick child" and would not come to the door, the document says.

Wint, who was tracked down by U.S. Marshals and arrested Thursday night with two other men and three women, appeared in a white jump suit in court Friday.

A court document said authorities believe the killings "required the presence and assistance of more than one person." None of the people detained with Wint were immediately charged with any crimes.

Wint is being represented by Natalie Lawson, a public defender. His defense argued that authorities lack probable cause, since a suspect seen driving the Porsche had short hair. Wanted posters issued while Wint was a fugitive showed him with long hair.

D.C. Superior Court Judge Erroll Arthur agreed with Assistant U.S. Attorney Emily Miller to deny bail, noting that Wint was arrested with some of the missing money, and that the DNA from the pizza ties him to the slayings.

U.S. marshals and police had tracked Wint to New York and back before dozens of officers swarmed a car and truck in the nation's capital, arresting the whole group without a fight.

"We had overwhelming numbers and force," Robert Fernandez, commander of the U.S. Marshal Service's Capital Area Regional Fugitive Task Force, told The Associated Press on Friday. "They completely submitted immediately."

"I don't think they knew we were tailing them until the moment we swarmed in on them," said Fernandez.

The truck, which belongs to Amerit Fleet Solutions, is a rolling garage equipped to service vehicles away from fixed locations. Spokeswoman Karen Vinton said the California-based company is cooperating with authorities.

Wint's record was cited as a reason for denying him bond. He was arrested three times for assault in 2006 and 2007, serving a 10-month sentence in New York, and then convicted of assaulting a girlfriend in Maryland in 2009.

In 2010, he pleaded guilty to malicious destruction of property after he allegedly broke into a woman's apartment, stole a television, vandalized her car and threatened to kill her infant daughter. Also in 2010, Wint was arrested carrying a 2-foot-long machete and a BB pistol outside the American Iron Works headquarters, but weapons charges were dropped after he pleaded guilty to possessing an open container of alcohol.

"Though Mr. Wint is now incarcerated and he's held without bond, our work is not done," acting District of Columbia U.S. Attorney Vincent Cohen said outside the courthouse. "We intend to unseal additional search warrants in the coming days."


Hole in one? Giant sinkhole forms at Missouri golf course entrance (photos)

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A big sinkhole discovered Friday near the driving range of a southwest Missouri golf course is attracting the attention of geological experts.

BRANSON, Mo. -- A big sinkhole discovered Friday near the driving range of a southwest Missouri golf course is attracting the attention of geological experts.

The hole, which is 80 feet wide and 35 feet deep in some places, was created by two separate sinkholes that formed near the entrance to Top of the Rock golf course near the resort town of Branson, Martin MacDonald, conservation director for Bass Pro Shops, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

The Jack Nicklaus-designed par-3 course is part of the Bass Pro Shops-owned Big Cedar Lodge complex and hosted a Champions Tour event last month. The sinkhole isn't near the main course and won't affect play, MacDonald said.

Geologists say such sinkholes are fairly common in the Ozarks because of its karst topography, a feature in which water is constantly circulating through bedrock below the ground. That's why the region has so many sinkholes and caves, including Lost Canyon Cave, an attraction at the Big Cedar complex, MacDonald said.

The initial focus Friday was ensuring the safety of the public and facilities, none of which were in danger, geological engineer Gary Pendergrass said. Next week, engineers will conduct a more in-depth investigation to determine the best way to replace the 7,000 cubic feet of material displaced by the hole, he said.

But before the hole is filled, it will be explored if there's anything to learn about karst topography.

"From the Top of the Rock perspective, it's not what you want to have," MacDonald said. "But we'll see if we've got anything unique down there."

Doug Gouzie, associate professor of geology and sinkhole expert at Missouri State University, told the Springfield News-Leader that the sinkhole could have been caused by an undiscovered cave and that recent heavy rains likely played a huge role.

Photos; The Chicopee Kielbasa Festival continues Saturday, Sunday and Monday

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CHICOPEE - The 2015 Chicopee Kielbasa Festival continues Saturday, Sunday and Monday in Szot Park. The event features food, live music, vendors and a Midway with carnival rides and games. The festival will also feature the first appearance of the giant King Kielbasa in more than 15 years. The festival runs from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday...

CHICOPEE - The 2015 Chicopee Kielbasa Festival continues Saturday, Sunday and Monday in Szot Park. The event features food, live music, vendors and a Midway with carnival rides and games.

The festival will also feature the first appearance of the giant King Kielbasa in more than 15 years.

The festival runs from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on Saturday, Sunday and Monday from noon to 10 p.m.

Wind-swept fire destroys uninsured 3-story Ware home; 2 occupants, 1 firefighter transported to hospital

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Flying embers also ignited a brush fire on the property of a motor repair shop at 55 West St., hundreds of feet away


WARE - High wind gusts fed the intense flames of a fast moving blaze, destroying a 3-story, uninsured home at 82 West Main St. late Friday afternoon, that resulted in both occupants and a first responder being transported to the hospital from smoke inhalation, Fire Chief Thomas Coulombe said.

He said it appeared no smoke alarms engaged to provide warning. Two other houses, one across the street and another beside the fire ravaged home sustained some damage from the intense heat.

There were no serious injuries, and personnel from the state fire marshal were on scene to determine the cause; it was reported to Ware authorities at 5:17 p.m. The destroyed home is near Barnes Street.

Police closed West Main Street from Vernon Street to West Street, detouring traffic for hours. The roadway remained blocked to through traffic at 10 p.m. Friday.

A large swath of businesses and residences were without electrical power until nearly 9 p.m., and were forced to close, including several on West Street.

An employee at the Big Y grocery store said the ice cream might be a little soft. A store clerk at Bruso's Liquor Mart, located at the corner of West and West Main streets, said business suffered Friday night.

The power line to the gutted West Main Street house became severed, and National Grid shut off power, as a precaution, to the section of town affected by that line.

Flying embers ignited a brush fire on the property of a motor repair shop at 55 West St., hundreds of feet away, Coulombe said.

"We had a fully involved, 3-story structure fire - the front porch to the attic" upon arrival at the scene, the fire chief said. "It's a total loss."

He said the occupants stated to authorities the home was not insured, and that there was $140,000 worth of jewelry inside.

In addition to Ware fire and police, fire crews from Belchertown, Hardwick, Monson, Palmer and Petersham, and the state police assisted.

"The guys did a great job knocking down a dangerous, wind-driven fire," Coulombe said. It was largely contained by 6:30 p.m.

Crazy

Posted by Jaime Gendreau on Friday, May 22, 2015

2 wounded in North End shooting

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Police are investigating a North End shooting that sent two people to the Baystate medical center with gunshot wounds.

UPDATE6:00 a.m. May, 23, 2015



Police now confirm that two people, a male and female, were wounded when shots rang out in the parking area of J & J's Mobil on Main Street in the North End shortly after 1 a.m.

Capt. David Martin said both victims suffered non-life threatening injuries.



SPRINGFIELD— Two people are being treated for gunshots wounds at the Baystate Medical Center after they were shot in the driveway of J & J Mobil at 3111 Main Street Saturday morning.

Springfield Police Capt. David Martin confirmed the 1:15 a.m. shooting, but said he had no information about the exact number of victims nor their medical conditions.

Police dispatchers on the Springfield Police frequency and in calls to area police departments on a regional police frequency said two people were taken in private cars to the Baystate Medical Center emergency room, just a few blocks from the shooting scene.

The first officer to arrive reported seeing a large number of cars leaving the parking area of the gas station and convenience store as he approached the scene. The cars, as many as 10 to 20 vehicles, all turned north on Main Street. Springfield police contacted Chicopee police on the regional frequency to apprise them of the shooting and the vehicles headed their way.

At the scene, officers and detecives searched for evidence, eventually setting out 10 marker cones, mostly near the north entrance/exit of the complex. Many of those cones were marking the location of spent shells casings.

This is a breaking story and more information will be posted as it becomes available.

Autopsy set in Maryland after mom found pushing corpse of son, 3, in park swing

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The woman, 24, was spotted with the body at about 7 a.m. by police called to Wills Memorial Park in La Plata, Maryland

An autopsy has been scheduled after a woman was found Friday pushing her dead 3-year-old son in a Maryland park swing, possibly for hours or even overnight.

Investigators said they have not ruled out foul play, although there were no obvious signs of trauma to the child, according to Diane Richardson, a spokeswoman with the Charles County Sheriff's Office.

The woman, 24, was spotted with the body at about 7 a.m. by police called to Wills Memorial Park in La Plata, Maryland, after receiving a call from someone concerned that the woman and child had been there for an usually long period of time, WJLA-TV reported.

It was "instantaneously clear the child was dead" for some period of time when police tried to administer first aid, Richardson said.

To remove the body, deputies cut the chain on the swing's seat, police told Southern Maryland Newspapers Online.

The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore planned to conduct an autopsy, authorities said. A spokesman said he had no immediate information.

Police did not identify the woman or the child. She answered some questions before the emotionally disturbed woman was taken to a hospital for a medical evaluation, Richardson said.

She said deputies will investigate the woman's movements over the past several days to try to determine "what led to this moment."

The child and his mother had been seen at the park the day before, Richardson said, but it was unclear if the child was alive then or whether the mother had left overnight, the Washington Post reported.

The woman gave authorities several addresses, including one in Washington, D.C., and one in Charles County, where La Plata is located, Richardson said.

Yesterday's top stories: Northampton man held after allegedly pouring chemical into daughter's stomach tube, Springfield Fire Department welcomes 13 recruits, and more

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Wilbraham police charged a 14-year-old boy with domestic assault and battery, malicious damage and resisting arrest after he allegedly assaulted his father.

These were the most read stories on MassLive.com yesterday. If you missed any of them, click on the links below to read them now.

1) Northampton man held without bail after allegedly pouring Liquid Plumr into daughter's stomach tube [Fred Contrada]

2) Springfield Fire Department welcomes 13 recruits, including 1st Hispanic female firefighter [Elizabeth Roman] Photo gallery above

3) Wilbraham police charge 14-year-old with assaulting his father and damaging property in the home [Suzanne McLaughlin]

4) Springfield woman charged with hiding 6 bags of heroin in bra requests 6-month sentence [Jack Flynn]

5) Cara Rintala's appeal to dismiss charge of murdering her wife denied [Fred Contrada]

Man admits being high on heroin when he rammed school van

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A New Hampshire man was charged after he told police he was high on heroin when he drove into the rear of a school van.

FITCHBURG— A New Hampshire man told police he was high on heroin when he rammed the rear of a school van while driving in Fitchburg. The van was not carrying students at the time, police said.

David Plaisted, 22, of New Ipswich, New Hampshire, was nodding off and nearly fell asleep in his feet as he talked to officers at the scene of the accident. Plaisted admitted he had injected heroin just 40 minutes before the crash.

Police said they found a number of hypodermic syringes in Plaisted's possession.

Plaisted was charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of drugs, operating with a suspended license and a variety of municipal motor vehicle violations.


Hispanic Association in Higher Education Awards Gala honors students, community leaders

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State Commissioner of Higher Education Carlos Santiago was the keynote speaker.

SOUTH HADLEY — Vianca Baez remembers many times this past semester at Springfield Technical Community College when getting through another school day seemed impossible.

"Sometimes I spent hours crying in Jennifer's office," she said referring to Hispanic Association in Higher Education member Jennifer Sanchez.

After a good cry, some solid advice and a hug Baez was on her way feeling like she could achieve anything.

"You are all very dear to me and the experiences I've had this year I will take with me for lifetime," she said during the 2nd annual Hispanics in Higher Education Awards Gala held at Elegancia Banquet Hall on Friday night.

The Hispanic Association in Higher Education was formed two years ago at STCC as a way to unite Hispanic professors, administrators and other staff members on campus. The group, led by STCC Dean of Arts, Humanities and Social Services Arlene Rodriguez and academic councilors Maria Zayas-Bonilla and Sanchez , worked to recruit Hispanic students or any other students who perhaps needed some extra academic help, extracurricular activities and even friendship.

"They are like my adoptive children. We have all become like a family. Sometimes it seems like our offices are like dorm rooms with students coming and going, but that's how we like it. We want them to feel comfortable coming to us," Sanchez said.

After two years the Latinos Achieving A Valuable Education club started by the association will see four of its own graduate; Luz Tamara Navarro, Rosamaria Santiago, Jonathan Serrano who will go on to the University of Massachusetts and Samaily Bonilla who will attend Bay Path University in the fall.

Rodriguez said the association hopes to keep track of the graduating students in order to connect them with current students.

"They serve as excellent role models for students who are with us by sharing their stories of success," she said.

This year the gala honored participants of the Cafe Con Leche series started by the association.

"We wanted to recognize our members, our students and the Cafe Con Leche speakers who took time from their schedules to make a difference in our students lives," Bonilla said.

The Cafe Con Leche series features Latino leaders in the community who have achieved success in their careers. Honored speakers included State Rep. Carlos Gonzalez, Holyoke mayoral candidate Anthony Soto, Holyoke City Council member Jossie Valentin, El Sol Latino founder and editor Manuel Frau-Ramos, Public Relations Coordinator for the Springfield Public Schools Lucila J. Santana, The Republican, MassLive and El Pueblo Latino reporters Damaris Perez Pizarro and Elizabeth Roman, Edward Nunez, assistant vice president of business development at Freedom Credit Union and several others who could not attend.

STCC President Ira Rubenzahl attended the event in support of the association and the club. The college was recently named a Hispanic Serving Institution after reaching more than a 25 percent Latino student body.

The event included a keynote address by newly appointed state Commissioner of Higher Education Carlos Santiago. Santiago, 62, is a native of Puerto Rico and was twice named one of 100 most influential Hispanics in the United States by Hispanic Business magazine. He emphasized the importance of student support groups such as the Hispanic Association in Higher Education and told the audience a student's success can begin at birth.

"It's not higher education alone, this starts at early education. We know that achievement gaps start with children's birth weight. When they are born if children are born underweight it will impact their opportunities to get into college," he said. "You also have to have the school districts aligned and the universities aligned and the political leadership to move these initiatives forward."

Heroin epidemic exacts a savage toll in Plymouth

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Plymouth counted 15 drug-related deaths last year and 313 overdoses, a total 50 percent greater than Taunton's, a city of similar size that once had been considered the face of the drug epidemic.

By Brian MacQuarrie, The Boston Globe

PLYMOUTH -- Fire Chief G. Edward Bradley carries Narcan, the drug that reverses heroin overdoses, nearly everywhere he goes around this sprawling town. Even to the Little League field when he watches T-ball games.

It's part of a personal mission, gnawing and never-ending, that Bradley sees as the greatest challenge of his long career.

"You see all the alarms around town for the nuclear plant we have here. I wish we had one for heroin," Bradley said last week.

Plymouth counted 15 drug-related deaths last year and 313 overdoses, a total 50 percent greater than Taunton's, a city of similar size that once had been considered the face of the drug epidemic.

This year, Plymouth is on track to smash its own grim record. By Saturday, the town had recorded 136 overdoses-- an average of exactly one a day --and 10 related deaths.

It's a tally that has risen so quickly, so stunningly, that many Plymouth leaders did not realize the town had an opioid crisis until it overwhelmed them. That includes Police Chief Michael Botieri.

"It took time for me to become a believer in this epidemic," Botieri said. Now, nearly everyone believes.

"It's not getting any better, obviously," Bradley said. "We realized we're as bad as some of the biggest cities in the state, if not worse."

Plymouth's per-capita overdose rate is significantly higher than hard-hit Worcester's, a city three times its size that saw a 59 percent rise in overdoses last year.

While the numbers grow, so has Plymouth's response.

A task force has been formed, a new squad of plainclothes police has made more than 200 drug arrests in the last six months, and the local hospital is making drug-abuse prevention and treatment a critical priority.

"There is no solution to this unless everybody works together," Bradley said. "Don't be afraid. Don't hide. Jump up and down and scream."

The task force is meeting regularly and draws together officials from the schools, courthouse, district attorney's office, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth, legislators, Town Hall, clergy, and the YMCA.

Plymouth officials cannot yet document that the effort is bearing fruit, in terms of fewer overdoses and deaths, but officials say progress has begun. Leaders from all levels of government-- and residents, too --are talking with each other about the drug crisis in ways they never had before.

Information is shared, and strategies are taking shape.

"Sometimes I think I spend more time with these people than I do with my doctors and my medical staff, and that's because it's such a huge social issue," said Peter Holden, president of Beth Israel Deaconess in Plymouth. "It's been an amazing evolution, and it's been in some regard a terrible eye-opener."

The hospital is bringing social workers and behavioral health specialists into the emergency room to help addicts in crisis find a path to treatment and sobriety. And Holden has shown a wake-up video about opioid use, produced by Plymouth North High School students, to the board of trustees of the Massachusetts Hospital Association, which he leads as chairman.

Since then, the Plymouth video has been shown to nearly 1,000 hospital executives around the country.

At home, the battle received a resounding boost when Town Meeting voted last year to hire seven police officers to focus on drug and street crimes. Police Sergeant Chris Butler, an Army veteran of the 82d Airborne Division, volunteered for the group.

"It was a real opportunity to give this a try and make a difference," Butler said.

The plainclothes unit was an easy sell, said Town Manager Melissa Arrighi. Every time Plymouth's department heads meet, the latest overdose numbers are a jolting reminder of the need for action, she said.

"It's been absolutely devastating to me," the school district's superintendent, Gary Maestas, said. "It's devastating when I walk down a sidewalk in our community and see a syringe on the sidewalk. My heart skips a beat."

The opioid crisis has swept through cities and towns all across Massachusetts, accounting for more than 1,000 deaths last year, state officials said. The crisis does not discriminate, but finding a reason for Plymouth's uncommon level of suffering has been elusive.

"Why here? I have absolutely no answer for you," Arrighi said.

The overdoses occur at all times of day in Plymouth, in neighborhoods throughout the town's 134 square miles, and across income levels.

In December, a motorist stopped abruptly at Fire Department headquarters to drop off an unconscious 32-year-old man who had overdosed on heroin. The driver sped away, and his companion survived.

In January, an overdose prompted a 911 call from a distraught girl who found her grandmother unconscious in the home.

The 56-year-old woman, who was revived by a Fire Department crew, had been caring for the girl and her 9-year-old brother.

Some townspeople blame drug dealers from Boston and Providence for the heroin epidemic; others suspect the influence of addicted transients.

Bob and Bonnie Sullivan, who live near the Cape Cod Canal, have devastating firsthand knowledge of the crisis, which affected all four of their sons, now ranging in age from 23 to 29. They went from alcohol to marijuana, and then painkillers to heroin; opioid addiction has ravaged their household.

When their sons were in the drug's grip, they stole thousands of dollars from the home. Jewelry and tools, too. One son overdosed in the room above the kitchen, Bob Sullivan recalled while fingering the kind of Narcan syringe he used to save him.

The owner of a used-car dealership, Sullivan estimated that he and his wife have spent more than $100,000 on treatment for the boys. Three of them are clean now, and the fourth is navigating his way through the court system.

"I would wake up every single morning thinking, 'What next?'?" Sullivan said. "But regardless of the problems we have, we are so lucky that our kids are alive."

Sullivan said he knows of 20 young people in Plymouth who have died of overdoses.

With every death, officials here are reminded that the fight will be long-- perhaps decades long, perhaps generations. They insist they are committed.

"For me, it's kind of personal," Bradley, the fire chief, said while driving through the town. "I have six grandchildren."

Holyoke man stabbed during domestic dispute

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A Holyoke man was stabbed in the head and shoulder by his wife as they argued.

HOLYOKE— A Holyoke woman has been charged with assault with the intent to commit murder after police said she stabbed her husband in the head.

Holyoke Police Lt. Larry Cournoyer said the unidentified woman was arrested Saturday shortly before 6 a.m. at her 13 Hamilton St. home. Police were called to quell a domestic dispute, and upon arrival found the husband suffering wounds to his head and shoulder. He was transported to the Baystate Medical Center with what police are calling "non-life threatening" injuries.

The wife will be charged with assault with the intent to commit murder and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon when she is arraigned Tuesday in Holyoke District Court.

'He hasn't had a license in 30 years,' Springfield man's lawyer tells judge

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"So you took the vehicle from the thief?" Shea asked. "Yes," the defendant said.

SPRINGFIELD - Van Kilpatrick's lawyer objected to his client being charged for driving with a suspended license.

"He hasn't had a license in 30 years," attorney Amit Singh said Friday in Springfield District Court.

Over his lawyer's objections, Kilpatrick pleaded guilty to operating with a suspended license and using a motor vehicle without authority during a plea-change hearing before Judge Matthew Shea.

At a prosecutor's request, Shea sentenced the defendant to 30 days in jail for using a motor vehicle without authority and 10 days for operating with a suspended license.

Kilpatrick, 52, of Springfield, was arrested on April 16 after city police spotted him behind the wheel of a 2003 Pontiac Grand Am reported stolen two days earlier in West Springfield.

A computer check showed the driver also had three outstanding arrest warrants and was a wanted as a fugitive in Connecticut.

Kilpatrick was arrested at the scene and the Grand Am was towed, according to the arrest report.

In court Friday, the defendant said he was returning the stolen vehicle to the owner when police stopped him. The vehicle had been taken by a woman with a drug problem, and Kilpatrick was doing her a favor by returning it, he said.

"So you took the vehicle from the thief?" Shea asked.

"Yes," the defendant said.

His lawyer said there were conflicting accounts about how his client ended up driving the Grand Am. If Fitzpatrick decided to go to trial, he could have been acquitted, Sing added.

But the defendant, citing family reasons, insisted on pleading guilty to the two charges anyhow, the lawyer said.

Under the plea agreement, Kilpatrick received credit for time served, meaning he effectively served the sentence before leaving the courtroom.

But Kilpatrick is still held without bail on the fugitive charge, which was not included in the plea agreement.

Shea continued that case to July 7 for a pretrial hearing.

 

Holyoke man faces car theft and firearms charges

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A Holyoke man faces car theft and firearms charges after he is found sleeping in a stolen car, with a stolen handgun.

HOLYOKE— A Holyoke man could have picked a better place to spend the night. Not only was the pickup truck he was sleeping in stolen, but the illegal handgun in the truck was reported stolen as well.

Lt. Larry Cournoyer told MassLive.com Jose Serrano, 33, who tells police he is homeless, was arrested after Holyoke police received a 911 call reporting a suspicious person. Officers found Serrano sleeping in a truck near 141 Sargeant Street just after 3:30 a.m. Saturday. A check of the vehicle found it had been reported stolen in Millbury.

Officers searched the truck cab and found a .38 Special revolver reported stolen from Westfield.

Serrano is being held pending arraignment on motor vehicle theft and firearms charges in Holyoke District Court on Tuesday.

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