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Yesterday's top stories: Teenage girl stabbed in pre-arranged playground fight, new school to be called Pope Francis High School, and more

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District Court Judge William Boyle decided to continue a case against three Thai men accused of hunting animals with slingshots until an intepreter could be found.

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. One of the most viewed photo galleries was of the ribbon cutting ceremony at the new Elias Brookings school, above.

1) Girl, 15, stabbed in pre-arranged playground fight in Westfield [Dan Glaun]

2) Pope Francis High School: Springfield diocese announces new name for combined Cathedral, Holyoke Catholic high schools [Michelle Williams]

3) Rare language complicates Forest Park wildlife killing case [Jack Flynn]

4) Springfield police investigating South End shooting [Jack Flynn]

5) Foul ball hits fan's nachos at Red Sox-Rangers game, causes 'explosion of cheese' [Nick O'Malley]


Buckland pedestrian struck by car, airlifted

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A pedestrian was struck in injured by a car Friday evening in Buckland.

BUCKLAND— A pedestrian walking on South Street in Buckland was struck by a car and injured Friday evening. The victim was airlifted by helicopter to an area hospital police said.

According to Western Mass News, TV partner of The Republican and MassLive, Buckland Police and Massachusetts State Police from the Shelburne Falls barracks responded to the South Street scene at approximately 9:30 p.m. to investigate the incident.

Police say there is no word on the extent of the victim's injuries.

White Brook Middle School rallies to support Easthampton food pantry hit by budget cut

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Students are staging a food drive and "Superhero Day."

EASTHAMPTON -- Students at White Brook Middle School are stepping up to support the Easthampton Community Center, the 12 Clark St. food pantry that will see a $20,000 budget cut under Mayor Karen Cadieux's fiscal 2016 municipal budget.

The school's Free the Children Club, working with student council member Ruby McElhone-Yates, will hold a Kids-Helping-Kids Emergency Food Drive from June 2-12.

Students will set up boxes throughout the building to collect food that kids like to eat, said Healthy Youth Coalition Coordinator Ruth Ever.

The school has been decorated with posters highlighting the campaign, and daily public service announcements are educating students about the Easthampton Community Center and its impact upon the community at large, said Ever.

Cash donations will also be accepted at the school's central office.

In addition, a "Super Hero Day" to benefit the food pantry is planned at White Brook on Friday, June 5.

Students and faculty will be allowed to wear their favorite superhero T-shirt or cape for a $1 fee. The money will be donated to the Community Center food program. The event is sponsored by the Students Against Destructive Decisions club, or SADD.

The theme ties in with a recent Easthampton Healthy Youth Coalition campaign that aims to promote "superpowers" such as kindness and cooperation, said school guidance counselor Heidi Baj.

The non-profit Easthampton Community Center provides emergency food to low-income residents from the Easthampton area. At the end of June, the center begins its 10-week summer meals program for children who qualify for free and reduced lunch during the school year.

The city's $20,000 cut does not mean the center, which last year operated on an approximate $157,000 budget, will close down. "We will do whatever it takes to keep feeding the hungry," said executive director Robin Bialecki.

Cadieux cited the 1855 Anti-Aid Amendment to the state constitution in her decision to stop funding the Community Center. The amendment bars municipalities from providing direct cash support to non-profits, unless it's done on a contractual basis.

Members of the City Council said last week they are working on a possible solution to restore at least partial funding to the local food pantry's meal program in fiscal 2017.

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com


This has been a month of extreme weather around the world

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May has been a month of weather extremes.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Even for a world getting used to wild weather, May seems stuck on strange.

Torrential downpours in Texas that have whiplashed the region from drought to flooding. A heat wave that has killed more than 1,800 people in India. Record 91-degree readings in Alaska, of all places. A pair of top-of-the-scale typhoons in the Northwest Pacific. And a drought taking hold in the East.

"Mother Nature keeps throwing us crazy stuff," Rutgers University climate scientist Jennifer Francis says. "It's just been one thing after another."

Jerry Meehl, an extreme-weather expert at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, points out that May is usually a pretty extreme month, with lots of tornadoes and downpours. Even so, he says, this has been "kind of unusually intense."

The word "stuck" provides one possible explanation.

Francis, Meehl and some other meteorologists say the jet stream is in a rut, not moving nasty weather along. The high-speed, constantly shifting river of air 30,000 feet above Earth normally guides storms around the globe, but sometimes splits and comes back together somewhere else.

A stuck jet stream, with a bit of a split, explains the extremes in Texas, India, Alaska and the U.S. East, but not the typhoons, Francis says.

Other possible factors contributing to May's wild weather: the periodic warming of the central Pacific known as El Nino, climate change and natural variability, scientists say.

Texas this month has received a record statewide average of 8 inches of rain and counting. Some parts of the Lone Star State and Oklahoma have gotten more than a foot and a half since May 1. The two states have gone from exceptional drought to flooding in just four weeks.

Texas state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon attributes the heavy rainfall to an unusually southern fork in the jet stream, a stuck stationary front and El Nino, and says the downpours have probably been made slightly worse by climate change.

For every degree Celsius the air is warmer, it can hold 7 percent more moisture. That, Nielsen-Gammon says, "is supplying more juice to the event."

While it is too early to connect one single event to man-made warming, scientific literature shows "that when it rains hard, it rains harder than it did 20 to 30 years ago," says University of Georgia meteorology professor Marshall Shepherd.

As bad as the Texas flooding has been, the heat wave in India has been far worse -- in fact, the world's fifth-deadliest since 1900, with reports of the 100-degree-plus heat even buckling roads. And it's a consequence of the stuck jet stream, according to Francis and Weather Underground meteorology director Jeff Masters.

When climate scientists look at what caused extreme events -- a complex and time-consuming process that hasn't been done yet -- heat waves are the ones most definitely connected to global warming, Shepherd says.

The stuck jet stream has kept Alaska on bake, with the town of Eagle hitting 91, the earliest Alaska has had a temperature pushing past 90, Masters says.

And on the other end of the country, New York; Boston; Hartford, Connecticut; Albany, New York; Providence, Rhode Island; and Concord, New Hampshire, all have received less than an inch of rain this month and are flirting with setting monthly records for drought, he says.

El Nino is known to change the weather worldwide, often making things more extreme. This El Nino is itself weird. It was long predicted but came far later and weaker than expected. So experts dialed back their forecasts. Then El Nino got stronger quickly.

Some scientists have theorized that the jet stream has been changing in recent years because of shrinking Arctic sea ice, an idea that has not totally been accepted but is gaining ground, Shepherd says.

Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University, likens what's happening to a stewpot: Natural climate fluctuations such as El Nino go into it. So do jet stream meanderings, random chance, May being a transition month, and local variability. Then throw in the direct and indirect effects of climate change.

"We know that the stew has an extra ingredient," Hayhoe says, referring to climate change. "That ingredient is very strong. Sometimes you add one teaspoon of the wrong ingredient and boy, it can take your head off."

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Your Comments: Relocating the Springfield Registry of Motor Vehicles

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Readers have a variety of suggestions s to where a new Springfield Registry office should go.

This story follows:Registry of Motor Vehicles seeking bids once again for new Springfield location


SPRINGFIELD - The Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles is trying once again to find a new, improved location for its Springfield branch office after a deal to locate one on a private street near the corner of St. James Avenue and Martone Place fell through.

Speaking Thursday at a ribbon-cutting event for a new Registry services desk at the AAA Pioneer Valley office in Amherst, interim registrar Erin Deveney said a new set of bid specifications for a new Registry office are out and she hopes to have a site selected in 90 days.

She promised a modern facility large enough to serve Springfield and surrounding areas. There is a registry office in Chicopee and Easthampton and  AAA offers some registry services to its members from offices in Amherst and on Capital Drive in West Springfield.

Neighbors and city council members complained of the St. James Avenue/ Martone Place location saying the traffic would be disruptive to the community. The city didn't issue required approvals and won in court when the developers who had a contract with the  state sued.

So where do you think the new office should be? Here are some comments form MassLive readers:

spfldacresguy wrote that the old Mutual Man might make a good mascot for a new RMV:

The old car dealership at Bay and Berkshire seems like it could be a good spot. Tons of space for parking and a flat area.

1Os wrote:

Eastfield Mall.

peter1 wrote that Springfield probably needs more than one office:

There are registry offices in 42 cities and towns in mass. Plus there are some like in Worcester that have FOUR yes Worcester has 4 offices. Do you think a city like Springfield with 152,000 people could have at least THREE?
Give me a break.

whatnameworks suggested a space that is to be demolished and redeveloped by its owners:

How about the old JC Penneys at the Eastfield Mall? Plenty of (already built) room AND parking!

Publius referenced self-serve kiosks available at Boston's Haymarket branch as well as branches in Worcester, Springfield, Watertown, Brockton, Plymouth, Wilmington and South Yarmouth:

When can we expect to see the RMV kiosks throughout the state that Gov. Baker said he wanted put in? I sure hope it's soon so people can do their transactions online, especially those who don't have home computers.

fred987 wrote:

There is a 3-story building available, right next door to existing Registry (where the Registry used to be). Buy this building, keep existing office, and more than double the square footage. Makes sense to me.

jazzy wrote:

The state wants to build some huge, fancy and over priced facility. Just renovate a large existing building. Speed up the lines by paying the clerks by the number of people they serve. Cut down on breaks. I don't understand why you wait for an hour to process a reg renewal that takes less than two minutes  once you get to the counter. the whole RMV is a joke. Just a huge cash cow for the state. $75 for a title? $80 a year for a vanity plate?

 

Bird, frog and turtle hunting arrests in Forest Park provoke debate among MassLive readers

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SPRINGFIELD - The arrest of three men for hunting birds, frogs and turtles in Forest Park this week drew an especially spirited response from MassLive readers. Following a brief court appearance Thursday, three Tai refugees were released and ordered to return for arraignment on June 11. The delay was caused by the lack of an interpreter fluent in Karen, the...

SPRINGFIELD - The arrest of three men for hunting birds, frogs and turtles in Forest Park this week drew an especially spirited response from MassLive readers.

Following a brief court appearance Thursday, three Tai refugees were released and ordered to return for arraignment on June 11. The delay was caused by the lack of an interpreter fluent in Karen, the tribal language spoken by the defendants. .

By Friday afternoon, more than 300 comments had been posted.

Here is a sampling of reactions:

mohawk8: "I feel bad for these guys. They weren't hiding so they obviously didn't know any better. I also hate to see wildlife being killed in the park. I grew up in Forest Park and have enjoyed the park for 35 years. We can't have people hunting in the park but these guys don't deserve a harsh punishment, they just need to be properly educated."

FranklySpoken: "There is no reason to believe these men were hunting because they or their families were hungry. Instead, they seem to have been hunting for delicacies, probably to sell to others in their communities."

lxs36: "Instead of the judge ordering them to stay out of city parks he should have said to stay out of Springfield."

GoodGuy2000: "I would drop the animal cruelty charge, they weren't killing for kicks, they were going to eat what they killed. Let the hunting without a license and violating a city ordnance stand."

WestSideBill: "I wouldn't call this hunting."

donkey: "Welcome to America. We speak English here. Good Day."

HeWhoWatches: "Kinda feel bad for these guys, I doubt they had any knowledge they were breaking the law......just trying to eat."

rotocane: "Between the Non-Profit Petting Zoo and Local Hunter/Gatherers this has turned into a real Chinese Fire Drill...

aubrie5: "These people do not belong here. They were born into a different culture and should have been left in that culture."


John Beattie:
Tell that to... well, nearly all of our ancestors.

Former Amherst College student, accused of rape, sues school over expulsion

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The Asian student from New York is suing the college for $75,000 and for the right to continue his education.

A former Amherst College student, who says he was expelled after being falsely accused of rape, filed suit against the college Friday in U.S. District Court in Boston.

The student, listed in court filings as John Doe, said he was expelled because administrators wanted to show they were tough on sex offenders, according to the Boston Business Jourmal.

In court documents, the student, who identifies himself as an Asian from New York, seeks $75,000 in damages, and a chance to resume his education.

He claims he was railroaded at a time when newspapers were running stories about domestic assaults on campus.

"In the just six weeks from the date the complaint was filed against him, the plaintiff found himself held guilty of assault, expelled from the college, ejected from the campus and branded a sex offender, with his entire future in ruins," the suit states, in part. "The actions taken by the defendants resulted from a deeply flawed investigatory and disciplinary process during which the plaintiff was denied the most rudimentary elements of fairness promised to him by Amherst in its Student Handbook."

The college, meanwhile, issued a statement referencing federal law protecting any person from sexual discrimination, and requiring colleges to have regulations in place to deal with claims of sexual discrimination, including, sexual violence.

"The college has put in place a process that is consistent with the requirements under Title IX and is fair to all parties," the school's statement reads. "In this instance, the hearing board concluded that the individual violated the college's policies on sexual misconduct and respect for other persons. The college is confident that the hearing board followed the College's process in making its decision."

According to the Boston Globe, the student was accused in October 2013 of committing rape when he was a sophomore in February 2012.

"In the just six weeks from the date the complaint was filed against him, the plaintiff found himself held guilty of assault, expelled from the college, ejected from the campus and branded a sex offender, with his entire future in ruins," the lawsuit reads.

The suit said the college's actions against the student included "deeply flawed investigatory and disciplinary process" in which he was denied "the most rudimentary elements of fairness."

Pete Mackey, a college spokesman, defended the school's actions.

"That process was followed in this case," Mackey told the Globe. "We are confident that the process the college followed was appropriate and that the court will conclude that the college's process was fair.''

The suit further states that after the disciplinary process was finished, the student found text messages previously concealed by the victim, identified by a pseudonym as Sandra Jones, that admitted not only that she consented to the sex, but that she was a "moving force behind it," according to the Globe.

"Nevertheless, Amherst has refused to take any action to correct or remediate the wrong committed against plaintiff. By this action, the plaintiff seeks to right these grievous wrongs, complete his education, salvage his reputation and restore his emotional and psychological well-being," the suit reads.

Last year, another student, also identified as "John Doe," sued the college in U.S. District Court in Springfield over its handling of a five-year-old rape case that his lawyer said was unproven. In this case, the student's diploma was withheld two weeks before graduation.

Officials for the college made the argument in the Springfield court that - despite welcoming the accused back into its midst after a year's probation and promoting him to an ambassador - it was justified in thwarting his graduation and rescinding a paid fellowship just before commencement.

In this case, John Doe was identified as a South African native, and demanded that the college grant him his diploma so that he not be left without permanent housing or face possible deportation. He was, at the time, in the country on an extended student visa on the basis of a one-year fellowship.

His accuser, identified only as "Student A" in court records, told college officials that Doe raped him after several drunken, sexually aggressive attempts on campus in 2009. The facts of the sexual encounter are contested; Doe argues it was consensual. Student A complained at the time of the incident but declined to file a formal complaint.

The lawsuit was filed last July as Amherst College and other exclusive learning institutions find themselves under increasing scrutiny for their treatments of reports of sexual assaults on campus.

Dozens of colleges were being investigated by the U.S. Department of Education, including five other colleges in Massachusetts: the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Boston University, Emerson College, Harvard College and Harvard University Law School.

A civil rights official with the Obama administration last year signaled the government is prepared to yank federal funding from colleges that resist revamping policies around sexual assault and discrimination. 

Scott A. Roberts, a lawyer for Amherst College, argued the 2014 lawsuit was attempting to derail the school's efforts to improve its treatment of alleged rape victims. Amherst College revisited its standards after two students publicly criticized the school's response to sexual assault - one in the school newspaper, the other in a suicide note before leaping to his death from the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa, Fla.

Last fall, Amherst students participated in a rally in which they took an "It's on us" pledge to combat sexual assaults on campus.

South Hadley light board drops controversial plan to build new headquarters on residentially-zoned property

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The South Hadley Electric Light Department Board of Commissioner's chair, Anne Awad, supported stopping the new building project, saying the process leading to that authorization had lacked transparency

SOUTH HADLEY - The controversial authorization last year to build a new, $10 million electric light department facility, on residential-zoned land, off Old Lyman Road -- supported by the municipal utility company's general manager Wayne Doerpholz -- was canceled by the agency's governing board by a 2-1 vote on Thursday.

Proponents of the new building, including Doerpholz, said the current facility requires costly repairs, lacks adequate space and is prone to flooding.

Those opposed to a new site on Old Lyman Road voiced a variety of objections over the past year.

They said the headquarters should remain in the Falls village, and that Old Lyman Road, located outside the village, is a residential area inappropriate for an industrial operation. Some questioned the cost, while others said the public was kept in the dark about the idea.

The South Hadley Electric Light Department Board of Commissioner's chairwoman, Anne Awad, supported stopping the new building project, saying the process leading to that authorization had lacked transparency -- and that the previous board members that had approved it failed to engage the community in the decision.

Kurt Schenker, who, like Awad, was elected to the panel in April, urged continuation of the project, saying $500,000 had already been spent and it would be wasteful to stop the project.

Christine Archambault, who was on the losing side of the Oct. 30, 2-1 vote that initially approved the $10 million idea, was on the winning side at the May 28 meeting -- joining Awad to reject building the new facility.

Archambault also questioned whether $500,000 had already been spent, saying she had not been presented with invoices to approve for that kind of money.

The Thursday vote rescinded the October action.

Awad said the process for locating a new facility, or possibly keeping SHELD where it is, in the South Hadley Falls section of town at 85 Main St., would begin anew.

She said community input would be sought, the South Hadley Regional Development Authority would be involved, along with the town administration including the selectboard.

Awad said the South Hadley Falls Neighborhood Association would also be part of the engagement process.

Contacted on Friday, town administrator Michael Sullivan welcomed the SHELD decision.

"It's always been a hope there would be an $8 million, or $9 million, or $10 million investment as another catalyst in the Falls," he said.

Sullivan said he is confident an adequate site within the approximate 6-square mile footprint of the Falls could be located, should SHELD really need to move to another location. He also said co-mingling of facilities in the future between SHELD and the town is worth exploring.


Police: NY mom chases down iPhone thief in laundromat after he punches her 6-year-old son

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The man fled toward the parking lot and the woman continued chasing him. He broke free, but not before she wrestled her phone away from him.

BRONX, NY - The mother of a 6-year-old chased a suspect out of a laundromat after the man tried to steal her iPhone and punched her child in the face.

The woman, 22, was with her son in a Bronx laundromat around 5 a.m. last Sunday when a man approached her to buy DVDs, according to reports by New York news outlets. She rebuffed his sales pitch and he grabbed her iPhone, which was charging nearby.

The mother grabbed the thief but he broke free of her grasp. The child stepped in his way and the thief punched the boy in the face, knocking him to the ground. The man fled toward the parking lot and the woman continued chasing him. He broke free, but not before she wrestled her phone away from him.

Police have released surveillance video from the laundromat, which shows the woman chasing the suspect around the room.

Mother and child were treated for minor injuries at a local hospital and released.

Former Lee Police Chief fraud trial pits neighbor against neighbor, cops against former boss

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Chief Jeffrey Roosa nearly cried on the witness stand when he was forced to concede under questioning by a federal prosecutor that the flow of money to and from the Lee Police Association under Buffis' watch seemed questionable.

SPRINGFIELD - The ongoing fraud and money-laundering trial for former Lee Police Chief Joseph Buffis has pitted neighbor against neighbor, sibling against sibling and police against their former boss.

Although, based on their witness stand demeanors, some appeared more reluctant than others.

Take the current Lee police chief, for instance. Chief Jeffrey Roosa nearly cried on the witness stand when he was forced to concede under questioning by a federal prosecutor that the flow of money to and from the Lee Police Association under Buffis' watch seemed questionable.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Breslow pressed him about a government-prepared chart detailing thousands of dollars prosecutors contend Buffis stole from the Lee Police Association.

"How did you feel when you first saw these charts?" Breslow asked.

"I don't know how to answer that ... upset, I guess," Roosa said.

"Why?" Breslow asked.

"Because ... it didn't look good," Roosa said, choking up.

Buffis is accused of fleecing the Laliberte Toy Fund, a police-sponsored Christmas charity for needy children, for more than $120,000 over a decade. The alleged scam included an allegation he extorted $4,000 from a Lee couple to shelve a prostitution investigation, which raised the suspicions of outside law enforcement agencies. Prosecutors say Buffis siphoned money from the charity to line his own bank accounts and pay his personal bills.

Federal investigators also contend Buffis stole from the Lee Police Association plus $30,000 from the Bingo fund at his own church.

Longtime Lee Patrolman Adrian Kohlenberger seemed less torn up about testifying against his former superior. Kohlenberger was the government's final witness on Friday. He told jurors that he was a D.A.R.E. officer without a budget and raised $2,000 on his own time to launch a police association youth basketball team.

"Why did you raise the money yourself?" Breslow asked.

"I didn't want to just take the money from the (Lee Police Association), I wanted to help raise the money for the team," Kohlenberger testified, after curtly telling jurors that he had never met a needy family in the small town of Lee who had been helped by the toy fund.

Earlier in the day, Buffis' neighbor and close friend, David Dickhaus, gave credible testimony but clearly seemed to be in Buffis' corner. Although he was a prosecution witness, he testified under cross-examination that his and Buffiis' wives had been shopping for toys for the Laliberte fund and that he had personally seen shelves in the couple's basement brimming with toys.

"There were two sets of shelves ... three tall, three deep, two rows of those filled with toys," he said. "These were children's toys; these were Christmas toys, these were Laliberte Toy Fund toys ... I didn't realize how big (the charity) was," he told defense lawyer Levinson.

Investigators have said in court documents that they could not identify a single family in the small town of Lee who had been helped by the toy fund.

However, there appeared to be no love lost between Buffis and his brother-in-law, also called as a government witness on Friday.

Robert Wheeler, older brother to Janet Buffis, testified that he agreed to do $4,000 in siding and roofing work on a "spec house" the Buffises were building in 2008. Wheeler said the couple had run out of money to complete the project, and he agreed to do the work at no profit. They agreed Wheeler would be paid when the house was sold.

"Did you get paid when he sold the house?" Assistant U.S. Attorney Deepika Shukla asked.

"No," Wheeler answered flatly.

He told jurors he sent two bills with no response after he discovered the house had been sold (albeit at a loss) six months after Wheeler had completed the work. He testified that he saw Buffis and his sister at a family wedding in 2010, and greeted them.

"I simply tried to say hello; they looked the other way. I haven't seen them since," Wheeler said.

He left the courtroom without a glance in the couple's direction.

Testimony will resume in U.S. District Court on Monday morning.


Ware police: 5 arrested on heroin-related charges during raid at 130 North St.

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Ware police said they seized cash and heroin after a raid at 130 North St.

Ware police arrested five suspected heroin dealers during a raid at 130 North St. on Friday, according to investigators.

Western Mass News, television partner to The Republican and MassLive, reports Ware police executed a search warrant at the address with the assistance of Amherst police.

They seized cash and heroin, police said. The raid went off at about 1 p.m. and included a K-9 unit.

Ware police charged Larry Green with possession with intent to distribute heroin and conspiracy to violate drug laws. His bail was set at $15,000.

Daniel Juda was charged with possession with intent to distribute heroin and conspiracy to violate drug laws. His bail was set at $5,000.

Christopher Tworek was also charged with possession with intent to distribute heroin and conspiracy to violate drug laws. His bail was set at $2,500.

James Shea was charged with possession of heroin and possession of a class B substance. His bail was set at $100.

Justin Koziol was charged with possession of heroin. He was released on personal recognizance.

Ware has the highest opioid death rate in Massachusetts, according to statistics released by state health officials.

Martin O'Malley joins Hillary Clinton in 2016 Democratic presidential race

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Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley on Saturday joined the Democratic presidential race with a longshot challenge to Hillary Rodham Clinton for the 2016 nomination.

BALTIMORE (AP) -- Former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley on Saturday joined the Democratic presidential race with a longshot challenge to Hillary Rodham Clinton for the 2016 nomination.

"I'm running for you," he told a crowd of about 1,000 people at Federal Hill Park in Baltimore, where he served as mayor before two terms as governor.

He said "the urgent work" drawing him into the campaign was "to rebuild the truth of the American dream for all Americans."

O'Malley has made frequent visits in recent months to early-voting Iowa, where he was headed later Saturday, and New Hampshire, his destination Sunday. Still, he remains largely unknown in a field dominated by Clinton.

"My decision is made. Now you will all have a vital choice to make next year, for the good of your families, and for the good of the country you love and carry in your hearts."

Already in the race is Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who could be O'Malley's main rival for the support of the Democratic left.

An ally of former President Bill Clinton, O'Malley was the second governor to endorse Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign in 2007. But he says Democrats deserve a choice in the 2016 primary.

"The presidency is not a crown to be passed back and forth ... between two royal families," O'Malley said. "It is a sacred trust to be earned from the people of the United States, and exercised on behalf of the people of the United States."

A leading Republican contender is former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, son and brother of presidents.

The 52-year-old O'Malley has spoken often about the economic challenges facing the nation and said he would bring new leadership, progressive values and the ability to accomplish things.

"Our economic and political system is upside down and backward and it is time to turn it around," he told the crowd.

O'Malley has presented himself to voters as a next-generation leader for the party, pointing to his record as governor on issues such as gay marriage, immigration, economic issues and the death penalty.

Just weeks ago, riots in Baltimore broke out following the death of Freddie Gray, an African-American man who died in police custody following his arrest last month.

A few demonstrators gathered near Federal Hill Park to protest O'Malley's criminal justice policies as mayor, an office he held from 1999 until his election as governor in 2006. "He's claiming to be this savior of Baltimore, but he's not," said Duane Davis, who said he is homeless.

During O'Malley's speech, there was sporadic shouting from protesters.

O'Malley was known for his tough-on-crime, "zero tolerance" policies that led to large numbers of arrests for minor offenses. Critics say it sowed distrust between police and the black community. Supporters note the overall decrease in violent crime during his tenure.

O'Malley has defended his work to curb crime, saying he helped address rampant violence and drug abuse. He has said the unrest in Baltimore should wake up the nation to the need to address despair in poor communities.

"Last month, television sets around the world were filled with the anger and the rage, and the flames of some of the humblest and hardest hit neighborhoods of Baltimore. For all of us who have given so much of our energies to making our city a safer, fairer, more just and more prosperous place, it was a heartbreaking night in the life of our city," O'Malley said.

"But there is something to be learned from that night, and there is something to be offered to our country from those flames. For what took place here was not only about race, not only about policing in America. It's about everything it is supposed to mean to be an American."

O'Malley could soon be joined in the Democratic field by former Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, who plans to make an announcement next week, and former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, who is exploring a potential campaign.

Sanders has raised more than $4 million since opening his campaign in late April and sought to build support among liberals in the party who are disillusioned with Clinton.

One of O'Malley's first tasks as a candidate would be to consolidate support among Democrats who are reluctant to back Clinton and eyeing Sanders.

Man wounded in Holyoke shooting; 1 held, gun seized

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Holyoke police arrested a juvenile after a man was shot on Dwight Street Saturday morning.

HOLYOKE— One man was transported to the Baystate Medical Center with non-life threatening gunshot wounds after a shooting on Dwight Street in Holyoke. Within minutes, police were able to chase down the suspected shooter and a weapon was found in his possession.

Holyoke Police Lt. Larry Cournoyer said police were called to the vicinity of 912 Dwight Street between Linden Street and Whiting Avenue just before 3 a.m., for a 911 report of shots fired with a victim lying on the street.

Witnesses described the alleged shooter for the first officers on the scene, and said he ran up Linden Street. With that information officers were able to cut off the suspect's line of travel and within minutes the 17-year-old suspect was in custody. Sgt. David Usher made the arrest behind 388 Appleton Street, about two blocks from the shooting scene. A Ruger semi-automatic pistol was found in the suspect's possession.

Apparently the suspect and the victim had been embroiled in a dispute over the course of several days, Cournoyer said, and just after midnight the situation boiled over. The two were involved in a large fight on Newton Street at about 12:40 a.m. Both men fled that scene when police arrived. Then, shortly before 3:00 a.m. police were called to South Street for the report of shots fired there. Officers found nothing at that scene, but within minutes they were called to the Dwight Street shooting scene.

Cournoyer said the shooting suspect told police he was shot at on South Street, and he believed the later victim was responsible.

The suspect is being held pending arraignment in Holyoke Juvenile Court Monday.

Amherst girl, 17, injured in bear attack; EPO, Amherst police investigate

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Police and EPOs investigate bear attack in South Amherst, in which a 17-year-old girl was slightly injured.

AMHERST— A 17-year-old Amherst girl was slightly injured when she was attacked by a Black Bear Saturday evening. Police officers had a large bear cornered in a South Amherst residential area, and were waiting for Environmental Police Officers to respond to the scene.

Amherst Police Sgt. Brian Johnson said the incident happened at some point between 9 and 9:30 p.m. when she was walking her dog.

Johnson said police have yet to question the girl, who was taken to a local hospital by her family for treatment.

Police learned that the girl was walking her dog when the bear approached her aggressively. The girl said she jumped up on a car to avoid the bruin, but she was scratched in the confrontation.

Amherst blogger Larry Kelly said police on the scene estimated the bear to be between 300 and 400 pounds and is wearing a radio tracking collar. Johnson said the bear is now in the Tracey Circle area of South Amherst.

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

Conway man dies in Mohawk Trail crash

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A 65-year-old Conway man was killed when the car he was driving slammed into the rear of a stopped tractor trailer rig.

FLORIDA— A 65-year-old Conway man was killed when the car he was driving crashed into the rear of a stopped tractor trailer rig.

The Berkshire Eagle reports that the flatbed truck was stopped in the breakdown lane of Route 2 in the town of Florida Saturday morning, when the sub-compact Honda Fit struck the rig from behind. The driver of the car was pronounced dead at the scene.

The incident is being investigated by the Massachusetts State Police attached to the Berkshire County District Attorney's office.


Man wounded in Forest Park shooting

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Witnesses say a 26-year-old man was shot and wounded as he sat in an idling car on draper Street Saturday night. Police are continuing to investigate.

SPRINGFIELD— A 26-year-old man is being treated at the Baystate Medical Center for a probable gunshot wound after witnesses say he was shot as he sat in a vehicle on Draper Street Saturday night.

Springfield police continue to investigate the incident, and would not confirm that a shooting had taken place. Springfield Police Lt. Scott Richard said police were called to the vicinity of 69 Draper Street at about 11:40 p.m. for shots fired, and a man with a probable gunshot wound was subsequently brought to the hospital by private car. However, detectives were still interviewing the victim and witness trying to determine exactly what had happened.

Witnesses at the scene told the Republican that a man well known to neighbors was sitting in a car standing near 70 Fountain Street, when two men ran up to the car and fired one or two shots. The driver of the car returned to the vehicle and drove the wounded man to the Baystate Medical Center emergency room.

The side entrances and driveway for the corner lot at 70 Fountain St. front on Draper Street. Witnesses said the car the victim was in was standing in front of the driveway while the driver ran an errand. Some neighbors said they heard shouting just before the shot or shots were fired.

Various witnesses said they heard either one or two shots, then the two masked men ran behind 70 Fountain Street, between the house and a garage. Neighbors said the suspects would have several avenues of escape from behind the house.

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

Springfield police confirm Forest Park shooting

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A 26-year-old man was wounded in a Draper Street shooting late Saturday night. Police say he is currently listed in stable condition at the Baystate Medical Center.

SPRINGFIELD Springfield police now confirm that a 26-year-old man was shot late Saturday night and is being treated at the Baystate Medical Center.

Lt. Scott Richard said police were called to the vicinity of 69 Draper Street in the Forest Park section of the city for the report of shots fired. Richard said when officers arrived at the scene of the 11:40 p.m. report, the victim had already been taken from the scene and there was no obvious evidence of a shooting.

Detectives have since confirmed the shooting and Richard said the man is currently listed in stable condition at the hospital.

Witnesses on Draper Street told the Republican that a man who had grown up in the neighborhood was sitting in a car standing near 70 Fountain Street, when two men ran up and fired one or two shots into the vehicle, wounding the man inside. The driver of the car returned to the vehicle and drove the wounded man to the Baystate Medical Center emergency room.

The side entrances and driveway for the corner lot at 70 Fountain St. front on Draper Street. Witnesses said the car the victim was in was standing in front of the driveway while the driver ran an errand.

Various witnesses said they heard either one or two shots, and some neighbors said they heard shouting just before the shot or shots were fired. Two masked men were seen running behind 70 Fountain Street, between the house and a garage. Neighbors said the suspects would have several avenues of escape from behind the house.

Richard said the incident remains under investigation.

Secretary Kerry flown to Swiss hospital after bike crash

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Secretary of State John Kerry was injured Sunday in a bicycling accident in France

GENEVA (AP) -- Secretary of State John Kerry was helicoptered to a Swiss hospital Sunday after a bike crash outside of Geneva, where he had been holding nuclear talks with Iran's foreign minister.

Kerry suffered a likely leg injury, but did not lose consciousness, State Department spokesman John Kirby said. The top American diplomat was in stable condition.

Kerry suffered the accident near Scionzier, France, about 40 kilometers southeast of the Swiss border. Paramedics and a physician were on the scene with his motorcade at the time.

Kerry was transported to Geneva's main hospital HUG, where he was being evaluated, Kirby said.

It was unclear how long he was expected to stay there and the status of Kerry's current, four-nation trip was unclear.

Kerry had planned to travel later Sunday to Madrid for meetings with Spain's king and prime minister, before spending two days in Paris for an international conference on combating the Islamic State.

Kerry's cycling rides have become a theme of his diplomatic journeys, often taking his bike with him on the plane.

During discussions in late March and early April between world powers and Iran, he took several bike trips during breaks in the negotiations. Those talks were held in Lausanne, Switzerland, and led to a framework agreement.

Kerry met Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif for six hours in a Geneva hotel Saturday as the sides now work to seal a comprehensive accord by June 30.

Man wounded while driving minivan in Indian Orchard shooting

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A man was injured when he was shot Sunday morning, apparently as he drove his car in Indian Orchard.

SPRINGFIELD— The driver of a minivan was wounded when he was apparently attacked by a gunman as he drove on Lyons Street Sunday morning.

Springfield Police Lt. Scott Richard confirmed that one man was injured in a shooting, and was transported to the Baystate Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries.

Richard said the original call reporting the shooting came from 1294 Worcester Street at about 3:30 a.m., and the victim was transported by ambulance from that address. However, police inspected a blue Chrysler minivan as it sat in the middle of nearby Lyons Street, noting blood in the car, and the tinted, rear passenger side window apparently shot out. When they arrived at the scene, officers said the car was running and abandoned in the middle of the street near Caton Lane.

The point where the minivan was found and the reporting address is approximately one-quarter of a mile.

Richard could not confirm that the minivan was connected with the Worcester Street report.

The shooting marks the second personal injury shooting incident within four hours. Just before midnight a 26-year-old man was injured when he was shot as he sat in a vehicle on Draper Street.


ICYMI Business: Agawam lab with Saudi ties for sale; bookstore survives; and more

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As a region, Greater Springfield had an unemployment rate of 5 percent, the region's unemployment rate had not been that low since it was 4.8 percent in April of 2008.

In case you missed it: Greater Springfield unemployment improves, an Agawam business going through bankruptcy gets to keep its interim management and World Eye Bookshop in Greenfield reaches out for, and gets, support from its community.

Here are five business stories you might have missed for the week of May 25:

1) Springfield unemployment falls to 7.6 percent, hits 5 percent in region

We are getting back to pre-recesion levels: As a region, Greater Springfield had an unemployment rate of 5 percent; the region's unemployment rate had not been that low since it was 4.8 percent in April 2008.

2) Buy books or say 'bye-bye': Greenfield's World Eye Bookshop seeks $15,000 in sales by week's end

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World Eye Bookshop in Greenfield meeting goal, turns to next chapter

Ownership said it looks like the store will make it.

3) Gov. Charlie Baker opens Registry of Motor Vehicles office in Hadley

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Registry of Motor Vehicles seeking bids once again for new Springfield location

AAA management estimates a similar AAA-run registry office in West Springfield serves about 20,000 customers a year. That works out to 1,200 customers each month, and Hadley will be just as busy.

4) Springfield unveils $130,000 in Pine Point storefront improvements

The city hosted a news conference at Gateway Hardware, a store that specializes in hockey equipment and recently revamped its Boston Road facade.

5) Bankruptcy trustee hopes to keep Agawam business, under fire for Saudi dealings, running while marketing it for sale

Consultant Seth Schalow, first brought on board by creditor Bank Rhode Island, will keep Spectrum Analytical running, its customers satisfied, its bills paid and and its 150 employees working and getting paid as Schalow helps market the business for sale. Bank Rhode Island ousted the company's founder this spring after discovering irregularities.

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