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St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church in Longmeadow to open new parish center

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The parish center will be used as an auxiliary room for church gatherings such as funeral receptions and church group meetings.

St. Mary's rectory 62211.jpgWorkers from Malone Mason Contractors work on the front of the new rectory under construction next to St. Mary's Church in Longmeadow. This building, a project of Kent Pecoy & Sons Construction, is one of two new buildings being built on the church property. The other is a new parish center, which is scheduled to officially open on Saturday.

LONGMEADOW - St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church plans to celebrate the grand opening of its new parish center on Saturday afternoon.

The Rev. Francis E. Reilly, pastor of St. Mary’s Parish, said the center was built “to enhance the community life of people of the parish.”

“We are very happy,” Reilly said of the new parish center. “It’s a dream come true.”

The St. Mary’s Parish Center will be used as an auxiliary room for church gatherings such as funeral receptions and church group meetings.

The new space is proof that St. Mary’s Parish is “a growing community,” Reilly said.

A new rectory is being built elsewhere on the church property, which is also where St. Mary's Academy is located.

On Saturday, there will be a 4 p.m. Thanksgiving Mass followed by a dedication ceremony. The Most Rev. Timothy A. McDonnell, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, will be the celebrant of the Mass.

The dedication will honor the deceased members of the committee that worked to make the new center a reality. The ceremony will also honor St. Mary’s parishioners.

The parish center is located behind the church and faces Hopkins Place.

Built by A.R. Green & Son Inc., of Holyoke, the new center will make the St. Mary’s “a more welcoming community,” said Reilly.

After the ceremony, there will be a reception “offering appetizers, beverages, music, and a wonderful opportunity to socialize with fellow parishioners,” according to St. Mary’s website.


Free legal advice available to tornado victims today thanks to bar associations

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The Massachusetts and Hampden county bar associations have teamed up for a special Dial-A-Lawyer program through 6 p.m. today

Victims of the tornadoes that hit
Central and Western Massachusetts
on June 1 can receive free legal advice from attorneys today
through the Disaster Relief Dial-A-
Lawyer.

The program is jointly offered by
the Massachusetts Bar Association,
Hampden County Bar Association
and Western New England School of
Law. Both bar associations also offer lawyer referral services.

Massachusetts residents facing legal issues due to the tornadoes can
call volunteer attorneys for legal advice from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. he legal advice is provided at no charge as a public service.

The Disaster Relief Dial-A-Law´
yer phone number is (413) 782-1659.
If a caller gets a busy signal, they are
asked to hang up and try again. Normal telephone charges will apply.

Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley says 'global payments' to health care providers will not reduce medical expenses

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Gov. Deval Patrick has proposed legislation that would move the state away from a fee-for-service approach to health care and toward global payments by creating accountable care organizations to better coordinate patient care.

MarthaCoakleyRH.jpgMartha M. Coakley

BOSTON – A new report from state Attorney General Martha M. Coakley finds that so-called “global payments” to health care providers do not lead to consistently lower medical expenses.

In its second annual report on health care costs in Massachusetts, Coakley’s office says the market continues to be plagued by wide variations in payments made by health insurers to providers – variations that are necessarily tied to the quality of care.

Gov. Deval L. Patrick has proposed legislation that would move the state away from a fee-for-service approach to health care and toward global payments by creating accountable care organizations to better coordinate patient care.

Coakley in her report warns a shift to ACOs is not by itself a “panacea to controlling costs.” And she says a shift to global payments could even make market disparities worse.

Speed believed to be factor in motorcycle crash on Massachusetts Turnpike in Natick that took life of Springfield resident Dewayne Holmes

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State police continue to probe the early Sunday morning crash.

State Police file art

SPRINGFIELD – Speed is believed to be a factor in a collision between two motorcycles on the Massachusetts Turnpike in Natick early Sunday that took the life of a 40-year-old city man and injured another man, also from Springfield.

Dewayne C. Holmes was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash which occurred about 1:30 a.m., Sgt. Michael Popovics said.

The second motorcyclist, Robert Cephus, 39, was taken to MetroWest Medical Center in Framingham, where he was treated and released.

Popovics said the crash occurred as the two motorcyclists rode side-by-side in the far right lane. “At one point, the two motorcycles made contact,” said Popovics, adding that the crash remains under investigation.

Both of the riders were ejected and one of the riderless motorcycles went on to strike a 2007 Infinity. The driver of that vehicle was not injured.

Holmes was riding a 2008 Suzuki GSX 130 and Cephas was riding a 2006 Suzuki GSX 130.

Springfield City Council, mayor urge passage of stronger seat belt law

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The bill is being reviewed by a Joint Legislative committee on public safety.

Seal belt crash 2008.jpgNo one was injured when this car crashed into a house on State Street in Monson in 2008. Both the driver and his passenger were wearing seat belts, police said.

SPRINGFIELD – The City Council and Mayor Domenic J. Sarno have jointly urged the state Legislature and governor to approve “Natalie’s bill,” which would allow police to pull over a motorist solely for failure to wear a seat belt.

The council passed a resolution Monday night in favor of the bill. It was signed Tuesday by Sarno and forwarded to the Legislature.

Beatriz Fuentes, of Springfield, whose daughter Natalie was killed in a car accident five years ago and was not wearing a seat belt, praised local officials for their support of the bill named in her daughter’s honor.

“I am elated by the momentum this is picking up,” said Fuentes, who was present for the council vote at City Hall. “I am very hopeful (of passage). The time has come, and the time is now.”

Fuentes was among advocates who urged passage of Natalie’s bill last week during a hearing before the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Public Safety and Homeland Security.

Natalie’s bill would create a “primary” seat belt law in Massachusetts, as compared to the current law, which allows police to ticket people for failing to wear a belt only if they are pulled over for another reason.

Sen. James T. Welch, D-West Springfield, said he is a strong supporter of Natalie’s bill. The support from the mayor and council sends a strong message to legislators, he said.

The bill would save lives by encouraging more people to wear seat belts, Welch said.

City Councilor James J. Ferrera III, the lead sponsor of the council resolution, said it is a “matter of public safety” and would greater awareness to the importance of wearing seat belts.

Sarno said he knows the Fuentes family and they “have taken this tragic situation and have created a positive legacy to help save lives.”

The council resolution, in urging the Legislature and Governor to pass the bill, states it would “hopefully save many lives in the years ahead.”

The council passed two resolutions related to the tornadoes of June 1.

In one resolution, the council promised to do everything it can to support the relief efforts and to assist in the rebuilding of homes and neighborhoods “in a way that preserves the beautiful neighborhoods and beautiful architecture” of the city. the lead sponsor was Councilor Timothy Allen.

In the second resolution, the council passed a resolution that encourages mortgage holding banks and companies to implement a voluntary moratorium on foreclosures and no-fault evictions for local residents. The lead sponsor was Councilor Amaad I. Rivera, and it stated, in part, “in times of crisis, our city cannot afford any more residents deprived of their homes.”

Corrections officer faces criminal charges in connection with alleged prank call to a suspect's hospital unit

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Demoranville will be arraigned in Springfield District Court on July 27.

SPRINGFIELD - A sergeant with the state Department of Corrections faces two criminal charges in Springfield District Court in connection with allegedly prank-calling a nurses' station outside accused cop shooter Tamik Kirkland's hospital room in May.

Adam Demoranville, an employee at the Shirley minimum security state prison where Kirkland was finishing out a sentence when he escaped in April, was charged after an evidentiary threshold hearing with threatening to commit a crime and disorderly conduct, according to court records.

Hampden County District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni previously said state police were pursuing charges against Demoranville after an anonymous phone call was placed to a nurses' station in the intensive care unit at Baystate Medical Center during which the caller allegedly said "I'm going to (expletive) kill you."

The call was traced back to Demoranville's cell phone, Mastroianni said, adding that Demoranville admitted placing the call but denied making any threat. The district attorney said the motive for the call appeared to be stupidity, rather than a hoax designed to boost department of corrections overtime pay, a theory that was originally batted around by law enforcement officials.

Kirkland broke out of prison in April after hearing his mother on April 30 had been shot and proceeded to go on a vengeful crime spree that culminated with the fatal shooting of a barbershop customer at Bill Brown's House of Beauty on State Street and the nonfatal shootings of a barber and two police officers, according to investigators.

Kirkland was wounded in a shoot-out with police and was recovering at Baystate, where a department of corrections security detail had been put in place. Demoranville was not assigned to that detail, however, Mastroianni said.

Demoranville will be arraigned on the two misdemeanor charges on July 27. He has been suspended without pay since an investigation into the phone call was launched, a spokeswoman for the state corrections department said.

PM News Links: Supersonic jet concept unveiled at Paris Air Show, a dating site just for college students, and more

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A Northampton man charged with trafficking cocaine is being held on $100,000 bail

Supersonic jet.jpgEads presents its new jet concept at the 49th International Paris Air Show, at Le Bourget, yesterday. The European aerospace group is continuing to develop the jet, which takes off from a standard runway but uses rocket boosters to soar above the atmosphere. The aircraft is unlikely to be ready for commercial use before 2050.

NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.


Stocks sink as Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke voices caution on economy

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Bernanke said some of the problems plaguing the economy "may be stronger and more persistent than we thought."

By MATTHEW CRAFT and STAN CHOE | AP Business Writers

062211 wall street.jpgFederal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's news conference is seen on a television screen in a booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Wednesday, June 22, 2011. Bernanke said some of the problems that are slowing the U.S. economy could persist into next year.(AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK — Stocks faded to a weak close Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the drags on the U.S. economy may be worse than previously thought.

Major indexes had been mixed for much of the day but turned lower in mid-afternoon trading as Bernanke spoke at a news conference.

Responding to a reporter's question, Bernanke said that some of the problems plaguing the economy such as weakness in the financial industry and the housing market and "may be stronger and more persistent than we thought."

Earlier, the Fed released a slightly lower forecast for U.S. economic growth this year. The Fed said it now expects the economy to grow between 2.7 percent and 2.9 percent this year, down from its previous estimate of 3.1 percent to 3.3 percent after its last meeting in April.

The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting Wednesday.

The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index slumped after Bernanke's cautious remarks about the economy. Bernanke also said Greece's debt crisis was a "very difficult situation."

The Dow closed down 80.34 points, or 0.7 percent, at 12,109.67. The S&P 500 index fell 8.38 points, or 0.7 percent, to close at 1,287.14. The Nasdaq fell 18.07 points, or 0.7 percent, to 2,669.19.

Even with the dimmer outlook, the Fed pledged no new help to boost the economy. The central bank's $600 billion bond-buying program draws to a close at the end of this month.

Among heavily traded companies, FedEx Corp. reported a 33 percent jump in income and said it expects global economic growth to continue. The package delivery company's stock rose 2.6 percent.

Analysts consider results from FedEx and its rival UPS Corp. important indicators for the broader economy because they ship orders for all kinds of businesses.

CarMax Inc. rose 7 percent, the biggest gain in the S&P 500 index. The dealership owner said profit rose 25 percent on higher used-vehicle prices.

Jabil Circuit Inc. rose 3 percent after the electronics part maker said its earnings doubled last quarter.

AeroVironment Inc. jumped 21 percent after the maker of unmanned aerial drones and charging systems for electric cars said its income rose 13 percent.

In Greece, the new government narrowly won a vote of confidence. That may help it push through budget cuts and other austerity measures that it needs to secure more emergency loans.

The cash will help the country at least delay a default on its debt, an event that would hurt banks and the European economy. Worries about a Greek default have weighed on global financial markets since May.

Three stocks fell for every two that rose on the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday. Volume was light at 3.3 billion shares, below the daily average of 3.9 billion over the previous two months.


Springfield arson squad investigating 'MacGyver bombs' found in Forest Park neighborhood

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Several of the chemical bombs have been found throughout the city over the past two weeks, according to the fire department

SPRINGFIELD - The city Arson and Bomb Squad is investigating the discovery of three "MacGyver bombs," or improvised explosives made of chemicals sealed inside a plastic soda bottle, that were found on Dwight Road in the city's Forest Park neighborhood, a fire official said.

Springfield Fire Department spokesman Dennis Leger said the three of the devices were spotted near 116 Dwight Road by a resident at about 5 p.m. He initially took them for trash but when one of the bottles exploded, he called the Fire Department, Leger said.

No one was injured.

Arson investigators were able to retrieve two of the devices and prevent them from detonating, he said.

Wednesday's discovery is apparently the latest in a string of such incidents, Leger said. Over the last 10 days, officials have discovered several such chemical bombs throughout the city, he said.

The devices are made by sealing caustic chemicals inside a liter bottle, causing the pressure inside the bottle to build up and eventually rupture. He would not say what chemicals were used or what concentration.

The name 'Macgyver Bomb' refers to the late 1980s, early 1990s television show "MacGyver," which featured a main character who improvised tools, weapons and even explosives out of ordinary objects.

Leger said the Arson Squad is taking it very seriously. If those responsible are arrested, they will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, Leger said.


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Springfield-area lawyers help tornado victims

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At the the Disaster Relief Dial-A-Lawyer event, questions included "Can I get my security deposit back for an apartment that can't be lived in because of the storm?"

June 22, 2011 - Springfield - Staff photo by Michael S. Gordon - A special Dial-a-Lawyer session at the Western New England College School of Law Wednesday focused on helping victims of the June 1 tornado. Three lawyers visible front to back are Kara S. Rescia, Richard C. Morrissey and Stephen J. Phillips.

SPRINGFIELD – The phones at Western New England University School of Law started ringing just as soon as lawyers arrived Wednesday for the Disaster Relief Dial-A-Lawyer and continued on and off all day.

It was a chance for tornado victims to pose questions to lawyers, questions like:

• Can I get my security deposit back for an apartment that can’t be lived in because of the storm?
• Why is my insurance claim taking so long?
• My contractor wants me to take out the building permit in my name. Should I do that?
• My neighbor’s tree has a branch dangling over my property. How can I make them take it down?

“I had to tell one woman that the last thing I did before I came in here today to take phone calls was settle my own homeowners claim for snow and ice damage last winter,” said attorney Richard C. Morrissey, who practices in Springfield. “It takes time.”

Morrissey added that if a building is uninhabitable, the lease is void and the tenant should get the security deposit back.

“If the landlord claims that the tenant caused all the damage, they aren’t going to be getting very much from their insurance company,” said Morrissey, who has also been taking similar calls pro bono at the Hampden County Bar Association offices since the storms hit.

The Hampden County Bar Association, the Massachusetts Bar Association and Western New England University School of Law sponsor regular dial-a-lawyer events twice a year. People can call in and bounce their questions off volunteer lawyers who are forbidden from giving their names or soliciting business, said Jennifer Rosinski, a public relations and marketing manager for the Massachusetts Bar Association.

Rosinski said some lawyers saw their own offices damaged from the June 1 tornadoes.

Western New England provides phone lines and space at the university’s S. Prestley Blake Law Center.

Rosinski said people who have questions can get similar help anytime by calling the Hampden County Bar Association at (413) 732-4648 or at (866) 627-7577.

“We’re just here to help people,” said attorney Stephen J. Phillips of Dunn & Phillips in Springfield and Westfield.

Joseph M. Pacella, of Eagan, Flanagan and Cohen in Springfield, said he got a lot of calls about contractors. Never take out the building permit yourself, he said. Doing so makes the homeowner responsible for code violations and workers compensation on the job site.

He also said homeowners need to know that state law requires that insurers pay to rebuild according to modern building codes. That could mean updating electrical service.

Morrissey said the most heartbreaking calls are from people who lost their identification or immigration documents. For legal immigrants, those documents are very hard-won and precious.

“That identification is worth their lives and they were willing to risk their lives to go back in and get it,” he said.

South Hadley School Committee upholds 3 percent raise for superintendent Gus Sayer

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Residents Luke Gelinas and Darby O'Brien won a judgment in court that the School Committee raised Sayer's salary in executive session, or behind closed doors, in violation of the state Open Meeting Law.

042610_gus_sayer.jpgThe South Hadley School Committee recently upheld a 3 percent raise for Superintendent Gus Sayer.

SOUTH HADLEY – On June 8, the School Committee reaffirmed its confidence in Superintendent Gus A. Sayer, upholding the 3 percent raise for him which was disputed because of a violation of meeting laws.

Two South Hadley residents last month won a judgment in court that the School Committee raised Sayer's salary in executive session, or behind closed doors, in violation of the state Open Meeting Law.

The School Committee was fined $5,000 for the violation and ordered to pay court fees for the residents, Luke Gelinas and Darby O'Brien. The raise vote was also invalidated.
For that reason, the superintendent's evaluation and a revote on the contract were on the June 8 agenda.

Gelinas and O'Brien have been vocal in their criticism of the school system for what they call its failure to protect the Phoebe Prince. The 15-year-old freshman killed herself in January 2010 after bullying by classmates.

Gelinas and O'Brien attended the meeting on June 8 to protest the superintendent's 3 percent raise.

Gelinas accused the committee of not advertising the meeting sufficiently, and suggested that members had planned to meet on a night when the Boston Bruins were playing in the Stanley Cup finals.

Gelinas was also critical that in the packet for the meeting were a couple of school-related items from The Republican, including a letter to the editor referring to "two residents who continue to badger the school committee and try their hardest to put a wedge in this community."

Dale Carey, chair of the School Committee, supported Sayer's continued presence on the job, but took exception to the raise. In spite of high marks in other areas, said Carey, the superintendent showed communication deficiencies in regard to the media and to settling conflicts among school staff.

With the exception of Carey, the School Committee voted to reconfirm the 3 percent raise to Sayer's estimated $125,000 salary.

Committee member Ed Boisselle described the superintendent's performance as a 70-hour-a-week job.

The committee also honored seven members of their community who are retiring, including South Hadley High School principal Daniel T. Smith, who was also caught up in the uproar following Prince's suicide.

Sayer praised Smith as "one of the finest principals I have ever known." He noted that Smith had spent most of his life at the high school, as a student for four years, a teacher for 33 years and principal for 11 years.

Also among the retirees was Beverly Atkinson, a revered fourth-grade teacher at Mosier Elementary School, whose experience includes teaching on an Indian reservation in Florida.

Springfield City Council slashes $2.7 million from proposed FY12 budget

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Mayor Domenic Sarno predicted more layoffs and cuts in services.

SPRINGFIELD – The City Council slashed about $2.7 million from the proposed fiscal year 2012 budget, leading Mayor Domenic J. Sarno to predict more layoffs and cuts in services.

101409_domenic_sarno_mug.jpgDomenic Sarno

Many councilors, however, said the cuts could be afforded primarily by not filling most of the vacant jobs in the city and by an across-the-board 5 percent cut in all non-salary accounts.

The council approved a final budget of $542.2 million, by a vote of 10-3. The budget, taking effect July 1, includes $330.8 million for the School Department.

Sarno said the councilors raised concerns about layoffs, but in effect will create more layoffs. His budget included 13.5 layoffs and the elimination of 54.5 vacant positions.

“The public will have to realize that there will be (negative) service implications,” Sarno said.

Council President Jose F. Tosado said he is proud of the council’s action, saying it is the largest amount of budget cuts he can recall.

012711 jose tosado mug.jpgJose Tosado

“We are in a very difficult fiscal position, and we need to tighten our belts just like the citizens tighten their belts,” Tosado said.

As proposed by Council Finance Committee Chairman Michael Fenton, the council cut 5 percent, totaling $1.7 million from all the city departments’ non-salary accounts, such as department supplies, materials and other expenses.

Two city councilors, Clodovaldo Concepcion and James J. Ferrera III, supported the mayor’s budget in its entirety.

Concepcion said the original $544.9 million budget was “bare-bones.” The mayor’s budget reflected a 2.1 percent increase over the initial adopted budget for this fiscal year.

Ferrera said that given the “unprecedented times” and tornado devastation, he believed the mayor “should have the opportunity to have his budget honored.”

Concepcion, Ferrera and Councilor Timothy J. Rooke opposed the final budget, with Rooke objecting to cuts in the Information Technology department.

In related action, the mayor’s request to use $10.5 million from the city’s stabilization fund was rejected by a vote of four in favor, nine against.

Tosado said Sarno can now return and propose using a lesser amount from reserves, as proposed by some councilors. Councilors, in the aftermath of a state-imposed Finance Control Board, want to reduce the use of reserve funds and be fiscally responsible, he said.

“It was a difficult but necessary process,” Fenton said. “We needed to reduce our reliance on stabilization reserves for reoccurring expenses.”

In addition, the council cut $539,910, which was set aside by the mayor for 13 vacant positions that the mayor wished to fill.

The council agreed to keep funds in place for four vacant police officer positions including plans to fill two sergeant positions, and one vacant master mechanic position in the Department of Public Works.

The council cut approximately $240,000 from the CitiStat Department, whose staff uses a computer-based management tracking system designed to improve the performance of city departments. The amount essentially eliminates the department, city officials said.

The council is limited in its ability to cut the school budget by state law, primarily restricted to being able to cut the funds for transportation, officials said.

There were no cuts to the school budget, which was approved by the School Committee.

Former Agawam resident Eric Hogan drowns on honeymoon in Bar Harbor, Maine

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The 28-year-old drowned in Frenchman Bay after kayaking off Hancock Point and getting caught in stiff winds, a Maine State Police spokeswoman said.

AGAWAM – Eric M. Hogan, who grew up in Agawam, died June 19 off Bar Harbor, Maine, while kayaking on the last day of his honeymoon, according to Maine State Police in Orono.

The 28-year-old Hogan drowned in Frenchman Bay after kayaking off Hancock Point and getting caught in stiff winds, a Maine State Police spokeswoman said Wednesday.

eric hogan.JPGEric Hogan

The Coast Guard recovered the Webster resident’s body Sunday off Hulls Cove off Bar Harbor. His kayak had been found earlier off the Porcupine Islands.

Hogan and his wife, Sarah Kellogg Hogan, were on their honeymoon. Hogan took his kayak onto the water alone about 7 a.m. Sunday while winds were blowing hard. Gusts later increased to 30 to 35 mph. An autopsy by the Maine state medical examiner’s office in Augusta showed Hogan died of an accidental drowning, according to an office staffer.

A student in a doctoral program at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Hogan was recalled fondly by those who knew him.

Mayor Richard A. Cohen, who attended Hogan’s May 28 wedding, spoke highly of him.

“He was just a great kid. Everyone who knew him loved him. He always had a big, big smile,” Cohen said.

The mayor, who met Cohen through the Eagle Scout program, described him as kind and caring.

Hogan was an Eagle Scout and a two-time Western Mass. wrestling champion, according to the obituary published in The Republican Wednesday. He was described as an adventure seeker who was certified in the first level of sky diving.

Cohen described Hogan as a very humble person. Upon congratulating him for winning a competitive science research grant, Cohen said the young man was more impressed with the fact that he would get a new computer out of it.

Alan R. Cohen, Hogan’s guidance counselor while he was a student at Agawam High School, also had good memories of him.

“He was just one of those perfect kids who enjoyed life,” said Cohen, the mayor’s twin brother. “He was the kind of person you liked to be around because he was so positive.”

Hogan was in the last year of a doctoral program in the UMass Memorial Medical Center Graduate School of Biomedical Science in Worcester, specializing in neurobiology. He was studying the molecular mechanism underlying addiction with a focus on nicotine. Paul D. Gardner, one of Hogan’s faculty advisors, described him as someone who was passionate about science.

“He was one of the friendliest people we have ever met. He went out of his way to help everyone in the lab,” Gardner said.

Hogan had a close call in an accident near the medical center in which an elderly man’s vehicle struck his car. When the senior citizen offered to buy him lunch Hogan took him up on it.

“I don’t know too many people who would go out to lunch with someone who almost killed him,” Gardner said.

A diehard Red Sox fan, Hogan never took his Red Sox baseball cap off, Gardner said.

Disabled South Hadley High School teacher Debra Caldieri, who taught Phoebe Prince, asks for help

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Eileen Moore, Prince's aunt, told the South Hadley School Committee she has been paying Caldieri's insurance premiums since her money ran out. Watch video

062211 debra caldieri.JPGSouth Hadley High School Latin teacher Debra Caldieri addresses the South Hadley School Committee on Wednesday evening. Calderieri is on unpaid medical leave and is looking to get some of her benefits back.

SOUTH HADLEY – The School Committee listened in silence Wednesday as a teacher out of work with a disability pleaded for help and her former students sang her praises.

Debra Caldieri, the high school's Latin teacher, has been on unpaid medical leave with multiple sclerosis since December. Approaching the microphone in the wheelchair she must now use constantly, Caldieri told the committee her health spiraled downward after the death of her student Phoebe Prince, leaving her jobless and destitute.

"I don't know what to do or where to go from here," she said. "Do you have answers or do I just remain a non-person to you?"

Caldieri, 48, was teaching in Vernon, Conn., when South Hadley hired her to teach Latin in 2005. She told the committee that her condition took a turn for the worse after Prince, a freshman, hanged herself in January of 2010. Investigators said Prince's suicide followed a period of intense bullying at school. Her death sparked an international move to combat bullying. Six former South Hadley High School students were charged with felonies in connection with her treatment.

062211 debra caldieri eileen moore.JPGView full sizeEileen Moore, the aunt of Phoebe Prince, stands in support of Debra Caldieri.

Caldieri told the committee that the high school was in a state of chaos on the day after Prince's suicide, affecting the normal protocol. As she explained the sequence of events in an earlier interview, Caldieri was disciplined by high school Principal Dan Smith after she drove four students off school grounds to the home of a male student during school hours. The boy had been dating Prince but broke up with her prior to her death, Caldieri said, and the girls were distraught because in consoling the boy about the breakup they feared they had bad-mouthed Prince.

According to Caldieri, one of the girls was 18 and authorized to sign herself out. The others needed the assent of their parents. Caldieri mistakenly thought they had obtained that consent when she left with them. On the drive back to school from the boy's house, she received a call from Smith telling her to come to his office. There, Smith chastized her and suspended Caldieri immediately.

"To him it was 'the stupidiest thing' I had ever done," she told the committee.

She added that she was heartbroken when she learned that Smith had made the "executive decision" not to inform her about Prince's funeral, which she missed.

Eileen Moore, Prince's aunt, told the committee that she has been paying Caldieri's insurance premiums since her money ran out. She asked the schools to help out as well.

"You can do better," she said. "Please lend a hand."

Several of Caldieri's former students added their voices to the mix, saying she repeatedly went beyond the call of duty for them.

"No other teacher expressed so much investment in my and my classmates' work," said Abbe Hamilton.

Josh Lopez said Caldieri knows him better than his own mother. "I can honestly say no other teacher cares more about her students than Miss Caldieri," he said. "To treat her like this is just not right."

Caldieri had a disciplinary hearing a week after she was suspended and was allowed back into her classroom, but was put on probation for a year. In the ensuing weeks, she was frequently monitored. Caldieri maintains that stress from the heavy oversight exacerbated her condition, causing her seizures to become more frequent and leading to her medical leave.

Although Caldieri says her doctors attribute her decline to the stress she endured in the workplace, the schools say her multiple sclerosis was a pre-existing condition and maintain they are not obligated to pay her while she's out. Superintendent Gus Sayer said a meeting on Caldieri's situation is scheduled for Monday. Committee Chairman Dale Carey thanked the public for their comments but said he did not have enough information to respond.

Old Bureau of Narcotics Mafia file sells at New York auction for nearly $11,000

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Anyone interested in "The Godfather" movie series and "The Sopranos" television show will find the files fascinating, an auction expert said.

mafia file paolo gambino.jpgView full sizeThis undated photo provided by Bonhams auction house shows a page featuring Paolo Gambino, from a thick government file discovered during the early 1990s on the backseat of a New York City taxi containing the mug shots, criminal history and associates and favorite hangouts of 843 Mafia members during the 1950s and early 1960s. Nearly 20 years after its discovery, the three-ring telephone book-sized binder titled "Mafia" and stamped "United States Treasury Department Bureau of Narcotics" on the cover, is being offered for sale at Bonham's New York on Wednesday, June 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Bonhams)

By ULA ILNYTZKY

NEW YORK — It was an unlikely — and coveted — find: a thick United States government file discovered on the backseat of a New York City taxi, its pages containing mug shots, criminal associates and favorite hangouts of over 800 Mafia members during the 1950s and early 1960s. Such notorious figures as Carlo "Don Carlo" Gambino, Meyer Lansky and Salvatore "Lucky Luciano" Lucania each had their own entries.

Nearly 20 years after it was found inside the yellow cab by a passenger, the 3-inch thick, three-ring binder stamped "Mafia" and "United States Treasury Department Bureau of Narcotics" was sold at Bonhams New York on Wednesday for $10,980.

The file, bought by James Finkle, a retired undersheriff from Essex County, N.J., was compiled sometime between 1957 and 1962 by the Bureau of Narcotics, an early iteration of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Robert F. Kennedy is believed to have used a copy of the file while he was U.S. Attorney General in 1963 during the televised McClellan Hearings into organized crime.

Only 50 copies of the file were thought to have been printed. The one for sale at Bonhams is No. 31, and the others were probably destroyed, said Christina Geiger, director of Bonhams New York fine books & manuscripts.

Geiger said the passenger found the binder inside a black bag on the seat of the cab on a snowy night in the early 1990s after leaving Radio City Music Hall.

"He basically just kept it to himself until contacting HarperCollins in 2006," said Geiger. The owner, who is connected with the film and music industry in Hollywood, did not wish to be identified.

HarperCollins published a facsimile of the book a year later, with some sections redacted. "Wiseguy" author Nicholas Pileggi called the publication "a treasure trove for true-crime buffs and mob aficionados."

The book is arranged regionally by state and country (Canada, Italy and Mexico). One page is dedicated to each hoodlum and a quick glance identifies New York as the capital of the underworld in the U.S., with 350 criminals listed, followed by California with 58 and Illinois with 45.

Anyone interested "The Godfather" movie series and "The Sopranos" television show will find the files fascinating, Geiger said.

mafia file lucky luciano.jpgView full sizeThis undated photo provided by Bonhams auction house shows a page featuring Salvatore "Lucky Luciano" Lucania, from a thick government file discovered during the early 1990s on the backseat of a New York City taxi containing the mug shots, criminal history and associates and favorite hangouts of 843 Mafia members during the 1950s and early 1960s. Nearly 20 years after its discovery, the three-ring telephone book-sized binder titled "Mafia" and stamped "United States Treasury Department Bureau of Narcotics" on the cover, is being offered for sale at Bonham's New York on Wednesday, June 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Bonhams)

"It really gives the flavor of organized crime in the middle of the century," she said. "From a book collecting perspective, this is the first time that the Mafia is acknowledged by the federal government, and probably the first time that the word was used in that context because (J. Edgar) Hoover was still denying the existence of organized crime not long before this was produced."

"What's so interesting is so much work went into this; 843 people, and each of them has a list of localities frequented, who they're married to, what their kids' names are, who their friends are, where they traveled to," she added.

The entry for Lansky, for example, says he was born Meyer Suchowlansky in 1902 in Poland and is "one of the top non-Italian associates of the Mafia," who "controls gambling in partnership with leading Mafiosi and finances large-scale narcotic smuggling and other illicit ventures."

Lansky was portrayed in "The Godfather II" movie by the character Hyman Roth, who whispers to Michael Corleone: "We're bigger than U.S. Steel." The Bureau of Narcotics files lists Lucky Luciano among his criminal associates, his favorite hangouts as Hollywood, Miami and Las Vegas and his business interests as hotels and casinos in Cuba and Nevada.

Titillating facts on Lucky Luciano include a description of him as "one of the highest ranking Mafia both in Italy & the US. From Italy he participates in directing of American rackets & regularly receives his share of the profits through Mafia couriers." His friends include some of the most powerful and influential Mafia bosses: the "prime minister" of the underworld Frank Costello and crime family boss Joe Bonanno.

On the bottom of each entry are the words: "Property of U.S. Govt — for official use only. Not to be disseminated or contents disclosed without permission of Commissioner of Narcotics."

Geiger said the cloth cover binder is not dated, except for two pages. One is from 1959, the other from 1962, indicating the files were most likely compiled before the McClellan hearings (there's no mention of the testimony in the book) and after the police raid on the mob conference in upstate New York in 1957.

There was evidence that Robert Kennedy used a copy to select "who he was going to target in the McClellan Hearings; 1,500 people testified before that committee and the Mafia file was used as a source for the hearings," Geiger said. "It started with the Bureau of Narcotics and then kicked upstairs to the attorney general's office."

Genovese crime family soldier Joseph Valachi testified for the government, famously coining the phrase La Cosa Nostra. It was the first time that the government and the public heard of the underworld as an integrated network of criminals with a hierarchical structure.


Displaced tornado victims tire of emergency shelter, long for homes to call their own

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There are still 122 people in the Springfield shelter and another 85 in West Springfield. The local red cross is committed to finding each a permanent home.

Cots fill the exhibition hall at the MassMutual Center that is being used as a Red Cross shelter for tornado victims.

SPRINGFIELD – After 17 days spent at the MassMutual Center, Maria Torres and Marcial Quinones were looking forward to moving out and moving in.

“We are thrilled,” Torres said in Spanish as she gathered her few belongings from the shelter and placed them in a shopping cart.

“Finally some privacy,” she said.

The pair lost their home, their apartment on Central Street in the"> June 1 tornado. They celebrated the first day of summer Tuesday by moving out of the shelter inside the cavernous MassMutual Center and into their new apartment on St. James Avenue.

They were one of the many families housed in the emergency shelter because they had nowhere else to go after the tornado swept through.

“We lost everything but the clothes on our backs and our identification,” said Quiñones.

The couple is also one of several families who have recently helped to find permanent housing by the American Red Cross - Pioneer Valley and other agencies.

As of Wednesday, there were still 122 people living in the emergency shelter, set up in the exhibition hall of the downtown civil center.

The Red Cross is working with Catholic Charities, HAP Inc., Catholic Charities, and the Springfield Housing Authority to find new housing for the displaced.

A rumor spread among those at the shelter that they would be put out on the street on Friday because the MassMutual Center would be needed for an upcoming concert, but Red Cross and MassMutual Center officials said Wednesday that is not true.

Red Cross spokeswoman Brenda Brouillette said the organization has set a deadline of Friday to have a strategic plan ready for the future of the shelter. That is not the same as closing it down and putting people out, she said.

“We want to make it clear that we are not shutting down the shelter,” she said. “We provide emergency shelter and assistance for folks, and now three weeks in, we are looking to get everyone situated into permanent housing,” she said.

MassMutual General Manager Matthew A. Hollander said the concert will not interfere with the operation of the shelter.

“The concert will be in the main arena and they are staying in an exhibit room on the other side of the building, so it would not interfere with the concert at all,” he said.

“We are willing to continue hosting (those in the shelter) for as long as it’s necessary,” he said.

American Red Cross of Pioneer Valley Executive Director Richard Lee said the agency will not be turning anyone out into the street on Friday or afterward.

“We are dealing with one client at a time trying to make sure that we can move them into a space that works for them and is ideally a permanent move,” he said.

“If by Friday there are people who still have no place to go then we will work with each of them to find a space,” he said.


According to Springfield’s interim development director Christopher Moskal, the tornado caused 220 residential buildings to be condemned.

He said 179 of those were single-family homes and most were owner-occupied. An estimated 300 to 350 rental units were lost.

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Brouillette said she is reaching out to local churches, community organizations, labor unions and other groups that have shown interest in sponsoring families in need.

She said there are some families that can not go through the traditional housing application process because they have bad credit or other issues.

“What these organizations would do is sponsor the family by signing the lease on an apartment and taking responsibility for the family,” she said. “They would keep track of them, help them with child care and make sure they are paying their rent and bills on time.”

City and state officials and representatives with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Small Business Administration will appear at two separate neighborhood informational meetings in Springfield Thursday and Friday.

The first meeting is planned for Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Holy Cross Parish Center gymnasium, 2211 Plumtree Road.

The second is scheduled fro 5:30 p.m. Friday at the Spring of Hope Church of God in Christ, 35 Alden St.

The meetings are planned to allow residents of those areas hear about updates in tornado recovery plans. FEMA and SBA officials will discuss assistance available to people who suffered property losses, and about services available at the disaster recovery centers that opened this week.

Those still staying at MassMutual Center now three weeks after the tornado expressed a combination of hard luck and frustration that comes with from having no where to go and no other options.

Jose Aponte said he is trying to find a new apartment. He moved into his last apartment in Forest Park on June 1, just a few hours before the tornado struck.

“I had just signed the paperwork that morning,” he said.

“Now I have to start all over again and find someplace new,” Aponte said. “I lost everything I had.”

A mother, who spoke only on the condition that her name not be used, said she and her family spent days living in a friend’s truck before them moved into the MassMutual Center.

She is staying their with her three children, ages 27, 19 and 14, and her one-year-old grandchild.

While the conditions are a step above the truck, it is still not ideal, she said.

“It’s been really hard for us here,” she said. “The cots are all right next to each other, so its like you’re sleeping right on top of strangers.”

She said some of the shelter staff are helpful while others seemed exasperated and bothered if you approach them for help.

“I have been actively trying to get an apartment since this happened and I just keep running into dead ends,” she said. “I need to find a place for me and my kids.”

She found a landlord who accepted her application, but he has so far not able to come to the shelter during regular business hours to fill out the necessary paperwork, she said.

“It’s just complicated,” she said.

“My oldest son has been trying to get odd jobs here and there to save up some money for us. I’m unemployed and we lost everything we had in the tornado,” she said.

“When we got to the house there was literally nothing left. The attic had collapsed into the first floor.”

In West Springfield there are still 85 people living in the shelter at the Eastern States Exposition Grounds.

West Springfield Mayor Edward J. Gibson said they are also working with HAP and the city housing authority to place families into affordable permanent or semi-permanent housing.

“It’s difficult because there are not that many apartments out there,” he said.

Gibson said they are hoping to place everyone by July 1.

“That is our goal, but we will have to see how it goes,” he said.

In other tornado-related news, the Springfield City Council will host a cookout next Wednesday at Court Square, with all proceeds benefiting the hardest hit neighborhoods from the June 1 tornado.

The cookout is from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Funds raised will be divided equally among the neighborhood councils serving the South End, Maple High, East Forest Park and Old Hill.

Councilors will be among volunteers serving hamburgers and hot dogs, chips, water and soda, and asking for a minimal donation of $5.

Businesses and organizations that are contributing to the council cookout include: Baystate Health; Community Music School of Springfield; Elegant Affairs; Friendly Restaurants; MassMutual Center; Performance Food Group; Spirit of Springfield; and Springfield Business Improvement District.

Comcast announced Wednesday that its charitable foundation has donated $50,000 to the area tornado relief efforts being administered by the United Way of Pioneer Valley.

Mary McLaughlin, a Western Massachusetts resident and Senior Vice President of Comcast’s Western New England Region, which includes Western Massachusetts, said “Our thoughts are with everyone who has been impacted by this tragedy and we are hopeful our contribution will help those hit the hardest with their personal needs and will also support the restoration efforts taking place across the Greater Springfield area.”

Dora Robinson, Executive Director of the United Way of Pioneer Valley, “We are very grateful to Comcast for making such funds available for the recovery efforts in our area. The tornadoes caused tremendous devastation and this gift will be used to help many families.”

Comcast is also making a $1,000 donation to The Evangelical Covenant Church in Springfield for allowing the company to use its parking lot as a staging area for their construction engineers and technicians as they rebuilt the area network. In addition to cash contributions and rebuilding efforts, Comcast installed complimentary video, phone and Internet services to shelters at the MassMutual Center and Moses Building at the Big E Fairgrounds for local residents who were left homeless due to the severity of the damage at their homes.

Comcast also assisted Square One, a local child care center in Springfield, with an urgent need for services at their new location.

In West Springfield, the First Congregational Church will mark the four-week anniversary with a special prayer service and supper Wednesday. The city’s Merrick neighborhood was hard hit by the twister.

“We want the neighborhood to know the church cares. When terrible things happen it is common to look for meaning, for God in the mess,” the church’s pastor, Jan Powers, said. “As I’ve listened to the congregation and our neighbors it is clear many people feel a little lost in the wake of the tornado.”

Gary W. Boisseau, the deacon at the church organizing the service, said “We know there are a lot of people grieving and suffering and who need hope and faith. ...We are trying to reach out to the entire community.”

Participants will be asked to give free-will offerings for tornado victims.

The service will begin at 6 p.m. at the church at 20 Lathrop St. with a meal to follow it at 6:45 p.m. Parking will be available at the Senior Center next door to the church at 128 Parker St. The church’s doors will open at 5 p.m. for those who want solitude and peace before the service begins.

Powers said the service is planning healing services around the tornado every other month for the next year.

Republican reporters Elizabeth Roman, Peter Goonan and Sandra Constantine contributed to this report.

Louisville tornado touches down near Churchill Downs

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Churchill Downs is where the Kentucky Derby has been run for more than 130 years.

050711 churchill downs.jpgJohn Velazquez rides Animal Kingdom to victory during the 137th Kentucky Derby horse race last month at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

By BRUCE SCHREINER

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A few barns partially collapsed and horses ran loose for a time Wednesday at Churchill Downs, home of the Kentucky Derby, after a powerful storm that spawned tornadoes blew through Louisville.

Officials have no immediate reports of serious injuries to humans or horses at the track on the southwestern side of Louisville. A mayor's spokesman said a couple people may have been trapped in their cars in high water on the east side of the city.

The National Weather Service said radar was tracking a confirmed tornado near the famed track and the University of Louisville campus about 8:10 p.m. Though no races are run on Wednesdays, there was simulcasting of races elsewhere, so people may have been there, said track President Kevin Flanery.

At least five barns were damaged, as was the chapel. The barn damage was on the backside of the track where workers live in the dorms, Flanery said.

"It's a hell of a mess back here," track spokesman John Asher said of the barn area where the damage was concentrated.

The iconic twin spires above the clubhouse overlooking the finish line were not apparently damaged, Flanery said. A Texas Hold 'em poker tournament was being held on the front side of the track when the storm hit, Asher said.

"Clearly we've got several barns with significant damage and we're just trying to make sure people and the animals are safe first," Flanery said.

Some horses had gotten loose for a time, but were later secured, Asher said. At least 1,300 horses were stable at Churchill, said vice president of racing Donnie Richardson.

Vans were being brought in to move horses out of torrential downpours and from the barns, Asher said. At least one barn was flooded by a water main break and horses were being moved to a safe area. The nearby state fairgrounds and Keeneland Racetrack in Lexington offered stall space if it was needed, he said.

The Kentucky Derby, the first leg of horseracing's Triple Crown, has been run for more than 130 years at the track. Churchill Downs is in its spring meet, in which racing takes place Thursday through Sunday until July 4.

The track has a capacity to handle a crowd of some 160,000-plus for the Kentucky Derby.

The 136-year-old track, owned by Churchill Downs Inc., underwent extensive renovations in 2002 and 2003 totaling more than $200 million. Thursday's racing card was cancelled because of the damage.

In August 2009, a flash flood heavily damaged the Kentucky Derby Museum, situated just off Gate 1 at Churchill Downs. The museum was closed for nine months while it underwent a $5.5 million renovation.

No damage has been reported on the university campus, which is sparsely populated at this time of year, said John Drees, a university spokesman. Drees said there were reports of power outages around campus. Dwight Mitchell, spokesman for Louisville police, said two buildings were damaged near the campus, though.

Eyewitnesses said they saw about a dozen power poles downed near the track and university. A weather service team will determine whether a tornado or straight line winds did the damage. More than 7,600 customers were without power in Jefferson County where Louisville is located.

The worst damage appeared to be in the Churchill Downs area, said Chris Poynter, a spokesman for Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer

Weather service meteorologist Ryan Sharp said damage also was reported in the Shively area, west of downtown Louisville.

Storm sirens wailed in Kentucky's largest city as multiple tornado warnings were issued as the storm went through.

"It looks like we dodged what could have been a really bad ... evening," Poynter said.

President Barack Obama announces 33,000 surge troops leaving Afghan

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Said Obama to a country eager for an exit: "The tide of war is receding." Watch video

062211 barack obama.jpgPresident Barack Obama delivers a televised address from the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, June 22, 2011 on his plan to drawdown U.S. troops in Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, Pool)

By BEN FELLER and JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON — Beginning to wind down a long and devastating war, President Barack Obama announced Wednesday night he was pulling home 33,000 troops from Afghanistan by next summer, withdrawing the "surge" of forces he had sent to rescue a flailing effort. Said Obama to a country eager for an exit: "The tide of war is receding."

A total of 10,000 troops will leave the war zone by the end of this year — fulfilling Obama's promise — and more than 20,000 additional forces will leave by the summer of 2012, shortly before the president will go before voters in search of a second term.

Still, almost 70,000 U.S. troops will remain in an unstable country, fighting in a war bound to see more Americans killed. Obama said they will leave at a steady pace, but the U.S. combat mission is not expected to end until December 2014 — and even then, a sizable and enduring contingent may remain in a different role.

Obama's announcement from the White House came in a perilous political environment, with Americans soured on the war and the economy, many members of Congress pushing him to get troops home even faster, and his Republican presidential rivals taking shots at his leadership at every chance. Conceding the economic strain of waging war at a time of rising debt and fiscal constraint, Obama said it was time for America "to focus on nation building here at home."

The withdrawal is supported by the bold bottom-line claims of his security team: Afghanistan, training ground for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on America, is no longer a launching pad for exporting terrorism and hasn't been for years. Yet the White House insists the U.S. must maintain a strong fighting force in Afghanistan for now to keep the country from slipping back into a haven for al-Qaida terrorists.

Obama said the materials recovered during the raid to get Osama bin Laden in Pakistan showed that the al-Qaida terror network was under deep strain. He said bin Laden himself expressed concern that his network would be unable to effectively replace senior leaders that had been killed.

The president declared, "We have put al-Qaida on a path to defeat, and we will not relent until the job is done."

Some fellow Democrats suggested Obama wasn't going fast enough. "We will continue to press for a better outcome," said House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi of California.

The president spoke for about 13 minutes from a silent East Room. It was a strategic moment for him to try to explain a turning point in the war effort without elevating it to a major Oval Office address — more of a stay-the-course case of progress and resilience.

"Of course, huge challenges remain," the president said. "This is the beginning — but not the end — of our effort to wind down this war. We will have to do the hard work of keeping the gains that we have made while we draw down our forces and transition responsibility for security to the Afghan government."

Significant questions still loom, including whether Afghanistan's government and security forces will be up to enormous job within a few years.

Yet Obama made clear the United States was ready to move on from a decade defined by wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, at a cost at of thousands of lives lost and more than $1 trillion spent.

Christopher Willson, partner of Michael Armitage, found guilty of fraud, conspiracy in federal court

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Willson was found guilty of one count each of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, six counts of wire fraud and four counts of false claims.


BOSTON – Christopher D. Willson, a scientist and business partner of Michael Armitage with EV Worldwide, was convicted by a federal jury in connection with a fraud scheme involving a $4.3 million federal energy research grant, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Willson was found guilty of one count each of conspiracy to defraud the United States and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, six counts of wire fraud and four counts of false claims.

Willson was the chief scientist and senior vice president of EV Worldwide, LLC (EVW), a Pittsfield, Mass. company that from 2000 through 2005 was recipient of a $4.3 million grant from the Federal Transit Administration. The grant was awarded as a budget earmark arranged by U.S. Rep. John Olver, D-Amherst, and was supposed to help the company research an electric battery that would be capable of powering public transit buses.

The payment was intended as a matching grant, where federal funds were to reimburse EV Worldwide 50 percent for money the company invested in the battery research.

Evidence submitted by the prosecution showed that between 2004-05, Willson submitted 10 fraudulent invoices showing EV Worldwide had spent on the project, when records revealed the company was millions of dollars in debt and had no other source of revenue other than federal grant money.

During this time, Willson repeatedly contacted and met with Olver and Federal Transit Administration officials, giving false updates about progress with the battery research. From this he was able to secure another $700,000 in funding, but he never disclosed the company’s financial problems, prosecutors charged.

The prosecution showed that the money was used to give Armitage approximately
$250,000, Willson $100,000 and another $110,000 was used to fund Hydrogen Storage Media, Inc., a Canadian-based research company that the pair founded.

U.S. District Judge Rya Zobel scheduled sentencing for October 6, 2011. Willson faces up to 20 years in prison for each of the six counts of wire fraud, up to five years in prison for each of the four counts of false claims and up to five years in prison on the conspiracy count. Willson also faces maximum fines of $250,000 per count.

Armitage in October pleaded guilty to 10 criminal counts for tax evasion, securing a $1 million loan with fraudulent documents, and defrauding the federal government. He is due to be sentenced in September, and could be sentenced to six years in prison and face up to $6 million in restitution.

Feud between Massachusetts Governor's Councilors Thomas Merrigan and Marilyn Devaney escalates with shouting match

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After the prolonged flare-up, councilors voted 6-0 to approve the nomination of Darren Alston as clerk magistrate of Northampton District Court.

thomas merrigan marilyn devaney.jpgGovernor's Councilors Thomas Merrigan, left, and Marilyn Devaney, right, engaged in a shouting match during a meeting on Wednesday.

By KYLE CHENEY

BOSTON – Councilors Thomas Merrigan and Marilyn Devaney escalated their war of words Wednesday, engaging in a screaming match and ignoring Lt. Gov. Tim Murray's calls to restore order during a meeting held just steps from Gov. Deval Patrick’s office that ended with three judicial nominees winning lifetime appointments.

The shouting between the two councilors, Democrats who have frequently – and increasingly pointedly – been at odds over Gov. Deval Patrick’s nominations, startled visitors to the Council Chamber, including members of the governor’s staff on hand to witness the altercation.

The brouhaha began when Merrigan – responding to a week-old allegation by Devaney that a qualified district court nominee was elbowed aside by one of Merrigan’s political allies – ripped Devaney for making “wild accusations” and accused her of spreading falsehoods.

“This ridiculous issue is all too familiar of Councilor Devaney’s weekly modus operandi – absurd and slanderous accusations without a shred of actual evidence – just media hungry and frenzied antics,” Merrigan said, reading from prepared remarks. “Councilor Devaney literally hovers and chases the news reporters all over the State House to harp on her nonsense.”

For months, Devaney has ripped Merrigan for what she claims are inappropriate political contributions and connections – claims Merrigan vehemently denies – and their spats have grown increasingly bitter.

After a dispute in April over a Springfield District Court nominee, Devaney accused Merrigan of playing politics with nominees, referencing donations he and his family have made to candidates such as Lt. Gov. Timothy Murray, who chairs the council meetings. She’s previously accused Merrigan of making inappropriate, last-minute changes to council hearing schedules, which he has also defended against.

During Wednesday’s meeting, Devaney intermittently interrupted Merrigan to reject his slights, and she received an assist from Councilor Mary-Ellen Manning, who repeatedly asked Lt. Gov. Murray to silence Merrigan for violating council decorum.

“This is wrong,” Devaney shouted as Merrigan continued to read his remarks.

“You’re wrong,” Merrigan shot back.

When Lt. Gov. Tim Murray interrupted and moved for a roll call on a Northampton clerk magistrate nominee, he was cut off by Merrigan, who said, “No, I’m going to finish.”

After some additional remarks by Merrigan, Devaney again interjected and said, “This is outrageous. There’s no place for this.”

Murray overruled several attempts by Manning and Devaney to silence Merrigan. The lieutenant governor repeatedly slammed the gavel in an attempt to restore order and limit remarks to one councilor at a time, but Merrigan and Devaney spoke over him in raised and heated tones, shouting and hurling accusations.

Before the argument broke out, councilors voted 5-2 to support the nomination of Marion Broidrick to clerk magistrate of the Orleans District Court. After the prolonged flare-up, councilors voted 6-0 to approve the nomination of Darren Alston as clerk magistrate of Northampton District Court and 7-0 to appoint Garrett McManus as an associate justice of the Suffolk County Juvenile Court.

Alston’s nomination was the root of Wednesday’s argument. Last week, Devaney argued that Alston was passed over for the clerk magistrate’s job in Greenfield District Court, where he had been serving as acting clerk magistrate, in favor of Kenneth Chafee, a political ally of Merrigan’s. She also contended that Greenfield District Court Judge William Mazanec withheld favorable information about Alston.

Devaney reiterated her complaint Wednesday and accused Mazanec of “an outright lie.” She called Chafee a “crony” of Merrigan and Mazanec.

Merrigan said Devaney’s statements were false, called them “typical of the malice, hate and smear, and the utter nonsense that we suffer and endure from Councilor Devaney at our weekly Governor’s Council meetings.” He also called the media “complicit” for reporting on Devaney’s accusations.

“Council Devaney is the poster child for those who would abolish the Governor’s Council, and she has no clue,” he said.

Devaney has previously clashed with other members of the council, including former Councilor Thomas Foley, who in 2008 requested a delay in a hearing on Ralph Gants, Gov. Deval Patrick’s nominee to the Supreme Judicial Court that year.

After that meeting, Devaney confronted Foley, wagging her finger at him and calling him “a disgrace.” “Shame,” she uttered repeatedly. Foley stood mostly in silence, but as Devaney walked away, he retorted, “Sorry about your cat.” At that same meeting, the council voted 5-1 to approve Mazanec’s appointment to the Greenfield District Court.

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