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Lafayette movie theater shooting: Witness inside Grand 16 says 'we're stronger than that'

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Witness at Lafayette movie theater shooting recounts shocking ordeal.

Landry Gbery started his "second life" after he was inside the Grand 16 in Lafayette July 24 when a lone, male shooter opened fire inside the movie theater. Details are still coming in, but officials have said that the shooter took three lives, including his own, and left seven others injured. 

Gbery was not inside the theater where "Trainwreck" was showing and where the shooter opened fire, but he was nearby in theater 13, watching another movie with a friend. The experience, he said, has left him in shock. 

"I'm still under the shock, honestly," said the Ivory Coast native who is a senior at the University of Louisiana Lafayette studying industry and technology. "This is the second part of my life. My new life starts right now. I've never been in that situation. ... I want to share a message of love, happiness and hope to everybody because this is nothing. This is just another one trying to scare everybody else and we're stronger than that."

Gbery said that although he didn't hear any gunshots, he did see an emergency light flashing and heard a voice come over an intercom asking patrons to leave the Grand 16.

"At that point, we understood that OK, emergency situation, we have to leave. At that point, I got out the building, I saw ... a lady on the ground, many cops around," Gbery said. "I thought, uh oh, we have to be careful. This is a frightening situation. This is not only a dangerous situation, this is a live, threatening situation. I have to protect my friend, protect myself, get to the car and leave. So, basically, we had to do that and as soon as we got out, we heard a guy yelling from the back, 'be careful, there's a guy inside shooting.'"

Until that point, Gbery thought the emergency was a fire drill and that he'd be able to go back inside the finish his movie. 

"But i think I was underestimating the situation, especially in Lafayette," he said. 

Gbery said it was hard to believe that a shooting like this could happen here. 

"This is the most beautiful city in the United States," Gbery said. "I love this city. ... I don't like my city to be in the spot like this, this is not the picture I want to share of this city."


Defense to suggest different shooter in trial of Holyoke man, accused of firing into apartment with women, children inside

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Jury selection is to start Monday in the trial of Francis Bastardo-Reyes, 23, of Holyoke.

SPRINGFIELD - A judge on Thursday ruled that the defense lawyer for Francis Bastardo-Reyes can introduce a "third party culprit" defense at the trial starting next week.

That means attorney Benjamin N. Farrell can suggest another man was the one who shot into a Holyoke apartment in which women and children were present.

When lawyers want to use that defense a judge must decide if there is evidence there is a connection between the victims and that other party.

Judge Mark D. Mason ruled in Hampden Superior Court that there is enough connection between the man proposed by Farrell as responsible and the family which was shot at.

Jury selection is scheduled to start Monday in the trial of Bastardo-Reyes, 23, of Holyoke.

Bastardo-Reyes is accused of firing several gunshots into a North Summer Street home at about 7 p.m. on Oct. 10. Bullets struck a room where two adults and three small children were watching television, police said. There were no injuries.

Charges against Bastardo-Reyes are: five counts of armed assault with intent to murder, five counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, illegal possession of a firearm, illegal possession of ammunition, malicious destruction of property worth over $250 and discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a building.

Mason heard pretrial motions in the case Thursday

Assistant District Attorney Max Bennett said two witnesses will say after the shots were fired they looked out the window and saw Bastardo-Reyes, who they knew, put a gun in his waistband.

Farrell said Bastardo-Reyes has no prior convictions.

Bennett said no gun was found that could be tied to the shooting.

He said there were problems between Bastardo-Reyes and his family and the family which included the victims.

He said he would like to bring prosecution witnesses - including the victims and family members - in through the back door of the courtroom rather than have them go through the hall where family members of Bastardo-Reyes might be sitting.

Mason reserved a decision on that.

Bennnett said there is some gang involvement with both families but he doesn't anticipate that will be a safety issue.

Yesterday's top stories: Court records say custody of child granted to rapist, citizens asked to line street for Marine's funeral, and more

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Police were investigating a shooting near the corner of Orange and Oakland streets in the city's Forest Park neighborhood Wednesday night.

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. The most viewed item overall, however, was the gallery of photos of the Cathedral High School football fundraiser that honored Marine Tommy Sullivan, killed in Chattanooga, above.

1) Court gave Westfield child rapist, now facing new charges, custody of his young daughter [Dan Glaun]

2) The public's guide to Springfield Marine Thomas Sullivan's funeral: Wake open to all, citizens encouraged to line Sumner Avenue as casket brought home to city [Conor Berry]

3) Springfield police investigating shooting near corner of Orange & Oakland streets in Forest Park [Conor Berry]

4) Springfield metropolitan area top 20 U.S. locales 'Americans are ditching' [Laura Newberry]

5) Boston Celtics rumors 2015: Levi Randolph added to training camp roster, according to reports [Jay King]

40,000 free books headed for needy Springfield children

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How can children learn to read if they don't have a book in their homes?

SPRINGFIELD — Estimates show that about 22,000 children in the city do not own a book – and the Springfield Federation of Paraprofessionals is mobilizing to do something about it before the start of the new school year.

Through a national program called First Book, the paraprofessionals and the American Federation of Teachers are working in collaboration with the Springfield public schools to bring 40,000 free, new books to city youth in an effort to prepare students to become readers by the time they reach fourth grade.

"How can children learn to read if they don't have a book in their homes?" said Catherine Mastronardi, president of the 700-member local paraprofessionals federation.

Parprofessionals work alongside classroom teachers to provide support in positions such as para-educators, certified nursing assistants and physical therapy assistants.

Mastronardi said she and other union members were attending a national conference last year when they learned about the national literacy program that has distributed more than 130 million new books to thousand of schools and community programs nationwide that work with children in need.

This is the first year Springfield has taken advantage of the program, she said.

Springfield is a Title I 26,000-student school district with 87.3 percent of the student population living in poverty, Mastronardi said.

After learning about the city's eligibility for the program, Mastronardi said the union quickly climbed on board the effort. "I can't think of a better gift than a book," she said.

A truckload of the 40,000 books will arrive in the city at Springfield Central High School the week of Aug. 17 where volunteers will unpack them for distribution at the city's annual back to school celebration from 10 a. m. to 2 p.m. on Aug. 29 at Central, Mastronardi said.

Any community that registers 2,000 eligible adults with First Book can bring the "Truck of Books" to their city.

So far, the city has 1,500 registrations from individuals representing organizations ranging from the YMCA, the city library, Square One and churches including Our Lady of Mount Carmel and Trinity, Mastronardi said.

All individuals who work or volunteer with children in the city to register at First Book's website.

More information is also available at the paraprofessional's website.

The drive to get books into the hands of low-income children is in keeping with the Davis Foundation's initiative to make sure every child is able to read by fourth grade.

Research shows that reading, talking and singing to children from birth helps them become good readers in school, according to Sally Fuller, project director for Reading Success by 4th Grade.

Holyoke would join few dozen neighbors if Community Preservation Act adopted

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A few dozen Western Massachusetts cities and towns have adopted the state Community Preservation Act.

HOLYOKE -- Given that the step would require imposition of essentially another tax, getting to the point of adopting the Community Preservation Act here will be a challenge., but Holyoke would have company.

The CPA is a state law which, if adopted, permits cities and towns to levy a property tax surcharge of 1 percent to 3 percent to raise revenue.

The money is used to acquire and protect open space, preserve historic buildings and establish affordable housing.

The state provides matching funds to communities that have enacted the CPA legislation.

The surcharge is a fee property owners would be charged of 1 percent to 3 percent of their annual property tax bill.

A proposal to adopt the CPA is in the Holyoke City Council Development and Government Relations Committee.

Here are Western Massachusetts cities and towns that have adopted the CPA and the year of adoption, according to the state Department of Revenue website:

--Amherst, 2008

--Belchertown, 2006

--Conway, 2005

--Deerfield, 2008

--East Longmeadow, 2007

--Easthampton, 2003

--Goshen, 2008

--Hadley, 2005

--Hampden, 2002

--Hatfield, 2008

--Leverett, 2003

--Longmeadow, 2007

--Northampton, 2007

--Monson, 2008

--Northfield, 2010

--Pelham, 2012

--Southampton, 2002

--Southwick, 2004

--Stockbridge, 2003

--Sunderland, 2012

--West Springfield, 2010

--Westfield, 2004

--Whately 2010

--Wilbraham, 2005

--Williamstown, 2003

For a complete list of communities that have adopted the CPA, along with surcharge exemptions they have chosen and other information, click here and then click on Community Preservation Local Acceptance.

Holyoke Community Preservation Act supporters face tax hurdle

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Holyoke property owners would have to agree to pay an additional 1 percent to 3 percent of their annual tax bill.

HOLYOKE -- The Community Preservation Act can be customized to be more acceptable to voters such as with a lower surcharge on property owners and payment exemptions, officials at a forum said Thursday (July 23).

Funding from the Community Preservation Act (CPA) would let the city accomplish projects otherwise beyond its reach in the categories of open-space and recreation, building restorations and affordable housing, they said, in the information session at Gateway City Arts on Race Street.

But the unavoidable hurdle will be convincing property owners/voters to accept another tax, said state Rep. Aaron M. Vega, D-Holyoke.

"As was mentioned, this becomes a campaign in many ways," Vega said.

"No one necessarily loves paying taxes," he said.

The difference with the CPA is the money would be raised locally and stay here to make improvements around the city, he said.

About 30 people attended the forum.

Besides Vega, speakers included Craig Della Penna, an agent with the Murphys Realtors in Northampton, Northampton City Council President William H. Dwight, Alicia Pimental of the New Bedford Community Preservation Act organizing committee and Olivia Mausel, Holyoke Historical Commission chairwoman.

The CPA is a state law which, if adopted, permits cities and towns to levy a property tax surcharge of 1 percent to 3 percent to raise revenue. The money is used to acquire and protect open space, preserve historic buildings and establish affordable housing. The state provides matching funds to communities that have enacted the CPA legislation.

The surcharge is a fee property owners would be charged of 1 percent to 3 percent of their annual property tax bill.

For example, with the property tax bill for the average single-family homeowner here at about $3,408 a year, the surcharge at 1 percent would be $34.08 a year and at 3 percent, $102.24 a year. That's based on valuations the City Council used in setting the current tax rate in December.

(The Holyoke tax rate is $19.04 per $1,000 valuation for residential property and $39.93 per $1,000 valuation for commercial property.)

Two methods exist for a city or town to adopt the CPA. One is with approval of the local legislative body, in this case the Holyoke City Council, followed by voter approval of a ballot question, the state website said.

The other method, if the City Council rejects the CPA, is for supporters to circulate a petition to get signatures of 5 percent of the registered voters to place a ballot question asking if voters want to adopt the CPA.

A proposal to adopt the CPA is in the City Council Development and Government Relations Committee.

Besides a choice of the rate of the surcharge, officials could make the CPA more acceptable by exempting property owners 65 and older from the fee and exempting the first $100,000 of someone's property from the charge, for example, officials said.

Achieving adoption of the CPA will take months of work, said Della Penna, who gave a slide-show presentation.

Of the state's 351 cities and towns, 158 have adopted the CPA since it became available as a law in September 2000. Della Penna said that while a mechanism exists for a community to repeal the act, that has never happened.

CPA remains in effect for a minimum of five years from the date of voter approval in a municipality. After five years, it can be revoked in the same way it was established, with a City Council vote and voter referendum.

In Northampton, Dwight said support has been strong for the CPA because residents see tangible benefits since voters adopted the act in 2007. That includes City Council approval in May of money from that fund to help with the $1.45 million renovation of Pulaski Park.

"The benefits are real and they're perceptible every day," Dwight said.

But persuading voters to support the CPA was a chore, he said.

"I have to say it was an uphill battle," Dwight said.

With CPA money, Holyoke could restore Scott Tower, a 56-foot-tall observation tower above Community Field and near Interstate 91 in Ward 6, Mausel said. The tower was built in the 1930's.

CPAcrowd.jpgA crowd in Holyoke hears presentations about the state Community Preservation Act Thursday (July 23) at Gateway City Arts, 92 Race St. 

"That needs help," Mausel said.

Another project could be fixing up the former National Guard Armory at 163 Sargeant St. It was built in 1907 -- "with that gaping hole in the side, it's still bleeding bricks," Mausel said.

CPA money also could be used toward the proposed $30 million to $35 million renovation of the Lyman Terrace public housing complex downtown, the restoration of stained glass windows at City Hall and the renovation of the Victory Theater on Suffolk Street, she said.

"I'm sure I just touched the surface," Mausel said.

Pimental discussed strategies that worked for New Bedford when "The Whaling City" adopted the CPA in November.

She advised gaining the support of the City Council and other local officials, targeting likely voters, illustrating projects that would be achieved with CPA money and staging an organized effort that includes raising get-out-the-vote money.

"You want everybody to be supportive of this act, but the reality is that not everybody is supportive of anything," Pimental said.

New Bedford voters approved adoption of the CPA 54 percent to 46 percent.

Pet Project: Pets available for adoption in WMass shelters July 24

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Born to howl - see a compilation of cute puppy videos

Each week, MassLive showcases dogs and cats available for adoption at shelters at rescue organizations in Western Massachusetts.

With the participation of the shelters listed below, many animals should be able to find a permanent home.

In addition, we'll include on occasion pet news and animal videos in this weekly feature like this compilation of cute puppy videos.

Disount spay/neuter program

SPRINGFIELD — Dakin Humane Society is offering a discount of spay and neutering of dogs and cats through July 31.

Dakin, with shelters in Springfield and Leverett, is offering $20 off spay and neutering operations for dogs and $10 off for cats.

All pets get a free nail trim, also, according to a press release from Dakin.

To make an appointment, call (413) 781-4019 and mention "SN 10-20" to get the discount.


WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS SHELTERS:

Dakin Pioneer Valley Humane Society
Address: 163 Montague Road, Leverett
Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 12:30 -5:30 p.m.
Telephone: (413) 548-9898
Website: www.dpvhs.org

Address: 171 Union St., Springfield
Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 12:30-5:30 p.m.
Telephone: (413) 781-4000
Website: www.dpvhs.org

Thomas J. O'Connor Animal Control and Adoption Center
Address: 627 Cottage St., Springfield
Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Saturday, noon-4 p.m.; Thursday, noon-7 p.m.
Telephone: (413) 781-1484
Website: tjoconnoradoptioncenter.com

Westfield Homeless Cat Project
Address: 1124 East Mountain Road, Westfield
Hours: Adoption clinics, Thursday, 5-7 p.m.; Saturday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
Website: http://www.whcp.petfinder.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/westfieldhomelesscatprojectadoptions

Westfield Regional Animal Shelter
Address: 178 Apremont Way, Westfield
Hours: Monday-Friday, noon-5 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Telephone: (413) 564-3129
Website: http://www.petfinder.com/shelters/ma70.html

Franklin County Sheriff's Office Regional Dog Shelter and Adoption Center
Address: 10 Sandy Lane, Turners Falls
Hours: Monday-Thursday, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Friday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
Telephone: (413) 676-9182
Website: http://fcrdogkennel.org/contact.html

Polverari/Southwick Animal Control Facility
Address: 11 Depot St., Southwick
Hours: Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-1 p.m.
Telephon: (413) 569-5348, ext. 649
Website: http://southwickpolice.com/chief-david-a-ricardis-welcome/animal-control/

Chicopee election: Friday last day to take out nomination papers

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Former Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette will challenge Mayor Richard J. Kos in this year's election.

CHICOPEE - Residents who want to run for mayor, City Council, School Committee, assessor or city clerk have until the end of Friday to take out nomination papers for any of the positions.

All nomination papers are due on July 28. Candidates must return them with a minimum of 50 signatures from registered voters to appear on the ballot. The one exception is for mayor, which needs 250 votes.

As of Thursday night there are not enough candidates in any of the races to warrant a September preliminary election.

The last person to have taken out papers is former Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette, who is challenging incumbent Mayor Richard J. Kos for the seat both have held in the past. No one else has taken out papers for mayor.

The City Council race for the four at-large seats is building to be the largest race in this year's election. All four incumbents, James K. Tillotson, Frank N. Laflamme, Robert J. Zygarowski and Gerard A. Roy have taken out papers.

Three newcomers, W. Kaween Fernando, Robert P. Tremblay and Douglas P. Girouard have taken out papers to challenge the at-large incumbents.

The nine city councilors who now represent wards have taken out papers to run for re-election. Six people have taken out papers to challenge them.

In Ward 1, incumbent Adam D. Lamontagne is being challenged by Robert J. Delano, who ran unsuccessfully for School Committee two years ago. In Ward 2, incumbent Shane D. Brooks is being challenged by Ronald M. Czelusniak, a Planning Board member. In Ward 5 incumbent Frederick T. Krampits is being challenged by Miguel A. Rolan-Castro Sr. In Ward 6 incumbent Timothy S. McLellan is being challenged by David Amo. In Ward 7 incumbent George R. Moreau, the council president, is being challenged by William Courchesne. In Ward 9 incumbent Gerard J. Roy is being challenged by Stanley Walczak, retired superintendent of Parks and Recreation.

So far Councilors John Vieau, Ward 3; William M. Zaskey, Ward 4 and Gary R. Labrie, Ward 8 have no opponents.

The assessor race has also generated some interest. Incumbents Brian W. Suchy and Victor M. Anop are facing a challenge from Kenneth P. Ritchott, who retired as the city's emergency management director. The third assessor, Laura McCarthy is serving a four-year term and is not up for re-election.

Currently there is only one person challenging any of the candidates for School Committee. James E. Tanhauser Jr. has taken out papers to run against incumbent Dana C. Cutter in Ward 1.

The remaining incumbents, Michael J. Pise, at-large; David A. Barsalou, Ward 2; Marjorie A. Wojcik, Ward 3; Sandra A. Peret, Ward 4; Deborah Styckiewicz, Ward 5; Susan S. Lopes, Ward 6; Donald J. Lamothe, Ward 7; Sharon M. Nawrocki, Ward 8 and Mary-Elizabeth Pniak-Costello, Ward 9.

City Clerk Keith W. Rattell has also returned election papers and is running for re-election unopposed.


Judge drops bail requirement for Springfield man accused of pulling gun on grandmother

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A Hampden Superior Court judge let Shawn Smith - accused of pulling a gun on his grandmother - out on his own recognizance.

SPRINGFIELD - When Shawn Smith was arraigned in Springfield District Court Wednesday morning in a case where he is charged with pulling a gun on his grandmother Judge William J. Boyle set a bail amount of $5,000 cash or $500,000 surety.

Smith's lawyer, Brandon Freeman, asked for a review of that bail in Hampden Superior Court, as is the right of any District Court defendant.

Assistant District Attorney Lee Baker told Hampden Superior Court Judge John S. Ferrara Wednesday afternoon he wanted bail increased to $10,000 cash.

Ferrara, after hearing from Freeman and Baker, decided to release Smith on his own recognizance. Smith must stay away from his grandmother and the building in which they each have an apartment.

Baker told Ferrara the request for increased bail from set by Boyle came after looking at the seriousness of the case and determining it would end up being indicted in Superior Court rather than staying in District Court.

Freeman in District Court and then again in Superior Court said his client has no criminal record, had recently graduated from Our Lady of the Elms College and has worked at Baystate Medical Center for a decade.

"He started out working in the kitchen," Freeman said in District Court, adding that his client is a supervisor in the anesthesiology department.

Smith's grandmother was not injured in the incident and waited four hours before calling police, the lawyer said.

In addition, police never recovered a weapon at the home, Freeman said.

"My client vehemently denies pulling a gun ... or ever even having a gun," he said.

The document signed by Boyle in District Court said the factors for the $5,000 bail were the nature and circumstances of the alleged incident; the potential penalty Smith faced; the fact the case involves an abuse count; and the family ties.

Smith, 27, is charged with pulling the gun on his grandmother after she complained about noise coming from his upstairs apartment.

He pleaded innocent Wednesday in Springfield District Court to one count of assault and battery on a person over 60.

In District Court Assistant District Attorney Benjamin Shorey said the defendant's 79-year-old grandmother asked him to stop drilling in his apartment, or at least be more careful where he drilled.

"Her ceiling was cracking," from the drilling, Shorey said while recounting the July 7 incident.

Her grandson did not respond well to the request, the prosecutor said.

"He came back (to her apartment) with a gun and threatened to shoot her," the prosecutor said.

Smith has pulled a gun on his grandmother on several occasions, including when she refused to co-sign a car loan he applied for, the prosecutor said.

The defendant has been named in four restraining orders by three women, according to Shorey, who said the grandmother also obtained a stay-away order Tuesday.

Mayor Domenic Sarno in June blasted judges for setting low bails for repeat violent offenders.

The Hampden County Bar Association called Sarno misguided in his blame of judges.

West Springfield man twice convicted of vehicle theft pleads guilty to breaking into car at Westfield Town Fair Tire

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Timothy M. Jones, 40, was arraigned in Westfield District Court Thursday and pleaded guilty to breaking and entering a vehicle in the nighttime, possessing a "burglarious instrument" and taking a license plate. Jones has been convicted of knowingly receiving a stolen car twice before, police said.

WESTFIELD -- A West Springfield man with a history of vehicle thefts has been sentenced to nine months at Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow after breaking into a car with a screwdriver at a local auto repair shop, according to court documents.

Timothy M. Jones, 40, was arraigned in Westfield District Court Thursday and pleaded guilty to breaking and entering a vehicle in the nighttime, possessing a "burglarious instrument" and taking a license plate. Jones has been convicted of knowingly receiving a stolen car twice before, police said.

westfield police patch small.jpg

On Wednesday, at about 10:30 p.m., a witness reported to police that a man matching Jones' description had been loitering at Town Fair Tire on Main Street in Westfield all day, and at the time was peering into vehicles, documents said.

When officers arrived, Jones was found exiting the front passenger door of a parked Ford Escort, reports said. Jones told police the car was unlocked and that he had been trying to find a place to sleep for the night.

Police found a yellow and black screwdriver under the front passenger seat of the Escort where Jones had been sitting, according to reports. The screwdriver fit perfectly into pry grooves in the vehicles ignition.

The license plate attached to the Escort at the time of the incident actually belonged to a Ford Escape in the same lot that was missing a plate, officers confirmed.

Louisiana theater shooter John Russell Houser was reclusive, angry, bizarre, neighbors say

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Neighbors remember John Russell Houser as a recluse who was often seen in the yard of his Phenix City, Ala., home working on his yard or working on one of the vehicles he kept on blocks. Watch video

Neighbors remember John Russell Houser as a recluse with bizarre behaviors, who was often seen in the yard of his Phenix City, Ala., home working on his yard or working on one of the vehicles he kept on blocks.

"I don't think he worked [outside the home]," neighbor Rick Chancey said. "He was home all of the time."

Neighbors along 32nd Street were surprised when they woke up Friday morning and learned Houser, whom they knew as Rusty, had opened fire in a Lafayette, La., movie theater, killing two and injuring nine before turning the gun on himself.

Knowing some of his history though, they weren't shocked.

Chancey said several years ago Houser placed a manifesto of sorts in his mailbox.

 

"It was just kind of odd," he recalled, saying the homemade flyer alluded to the end of days and how everyone needed to conserve and share resources.

Russell County Sheriff Heath Taylor said Houser was denied a permit to carry a concealed weapon by his office in 2006 due to a domestic violence report filed by Houser's then-wife in 2005. Houser was never arrested for domestic violence or for anything else in Phenix City or Russell County, Taylor said. Houser was arrested in Columbus in 1989 or 1990 for arson, but a grand jury failed to indict him. Houser did seek treatment for a mental illness in Phenix City from 2008-09, but he didn't know what he was being treated for.  

Norman Bone, who bought Houser's 32nd Street home at a public auction in February 2014, knew Rusty for 20-25 years. He went to church with Houser and his former wife, Kellie, at Eastern Heights Baptist Church in Columbus, Ga.

Bone remembered him as a "fine guy, a good guy," he said, while recalling that Houser even preached one night at the church.

Houser is a graduate of Columbus High School and Columbus State University.

Houser's church-going, normal-guy-image changed, though, when the Bones tried to take possession of Houser's which he bought for his daughter, Beth, and her boyfriend, Dan Ramsell.

Understandably, Houser was upset and angry over losing his house to foreclosure.

The Bones, though, said Houser's actions went beyond that. They were the actions of a madman.

Houser tried his hardest to destroy the house, the Bones said.

He tried to blow up the house by leaving the gas on and shutting off all of the vents, neighbors recalled.

Buckets containing human feces were placed inside the house, the Bones said. Purple paint was splattered throughout the interior and the exterior. The bathroom and kitchen drains were filled with concrete and the pool was filled with more than 300 Koi fish, they said.

Taylor confirmed much of the Bones' account of vandalism done to their home by Houser. He said a report was filed, but Houser was never arrested. Norman Bone said he awoke to his telephone ringing early this morning. It was the Federal Bureau of Investigation wanting to search Houser's former home. Bone met a Phenix City police officer at 3:14 a.m. and handed over the keys. As far as he knows, police didn't find anything.

Today, Norman Bone said his heart goes out to Houser's mom, Ruth, and his brother, Rem, and the family of those who lost their lives in Louisiana.

But he is thankful today.

"He could just as easily took it out on us," Norman Bone said.

As she prepares to move into Houser's former home after months of cleanup, Beth said: "I am glad that I am not going to be scared to now."

Remains of Marine GySgt. Thomas Sullivan of Springfield, killed in Chattanooga attack, arrive at Bradley International Airport

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The Springfield, Massachusetts native's remains arrived at about 4:50 p.m. aboard a Delta Air Lines flight at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut. Watch video

UPDATE, 7 p.m.: Hundreds lines Sumner Avenue

A new story has been posted »

UPDATE, 6:03 p.m.: The motorcade has arrived in Springfield and is turning onto Sumner Avenue.

UPDATE, 5:59 p.m.: The procession has crossed the border into Massachusetts on Interstate 91.

UPDATE, 5:37 p.m.: The motorcade bearing Gunnery Sgt. Sullivan has left Bradley airport en route to Springfield.


WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. -- U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Thomas J. Sullivan has returned to New England.

The Springfield, Massachusetts native's remains arrived Friday at about 4:50 p.m. aboard a Delta Air Lines flight at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut.

Sullivan, a combat veteran and recipient of two Purple Hearts, was killed July 16 after a gunman opened fire on military installations in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Sullivan was at a Marine Reserve training facility and was coming to to the aid of his brother Marines when he was killed.

A funeral Mass set for Monday is open only to family, friends, dignitaries and Marines, but the public is invited to attend Sunday's wake from 1 to 5 p.m. at T.P. Sampson Chapel of The Acres, 21 Tinkham Road, in the Sixteen Acres neighborhood of the city. More information on Sullivan's funeral is available here.

Steven Iacolo of West Springfield was waiting in a dusty parking lot near the Bradley runway for Sullivan's cortege to pass by. His cousin, Army Spc. Jeremy F. Regnier, 22, was killed in October 2004 armored vehicle drove over a bomb outside Baghdad. Regnier was originally from Agawam.

"I know what the family is going through," Iacolo said Friday. "They need to know that there are people who support them. They need to know the community is there for them."

Edward V. Morris, 90, an Army veteran of the Pacific World War II battles on Guadalcanal and Iwo Jima stood to watch Sullivan's procession pass. He'd traveled from his home in East Lyme, Connecticut, to meet Sullivan's plane.

"It never should have happened," Morris said, anger creeping into his voice. "We don't need all these guns. The shooter shouldn't have been able to get a gun. I've seen too many men die."

A map of Monday's procession is available here >>


House fire displaces nine on Elm Street in Westfield

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A fire at a multi-family home in Westfield has displaced nine people. Watch video

An updated version of this story is available here.

A fire at a multi-family home in Westfield has displaced nine people.

Firefighters and police were still on the scene on Elm Street at 6 p.m. Friday. The Red Cross has been notified to assist the victims, according to Westfield Fire Chief Mary Regan.

A video shot by Jim Ahearn, owner and barber at the Barber Parlor on Elm Street, shows smoke billowing from the top floor of the house.

More on this story as it develops.

Thousands line Sumner Avenue as Springfield native Marine Corps GySgt. Thomas Sullivan comes home

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Hundreds of Springfield residents lined Sumner Avenue on Friday afternoon to pay their respects to a native son, U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Thomas Sullivan, as a motorcade bearing his remains brought him home. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- Thousands of Springfield residents lined Sumner Avenue on Friday afternoon to pay their respects to a native son, U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Thomas Sullivan, as a motorcade bearing his remains brought him home.

Sullivan, 40, was among five U.S. servicemen killed July 16 during attacks on military installations in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

The flight carrying Sullivan's remains arrived at approximately 4:50 p.m. at Bradley International Airport. The motorcade, led by Springfield Police motorcycle units, reached Springfield at about 6 p.m.

People lined the entire length of Sumner Avenue from Longhill Street to Sumner Avenue Extension and Allen Street. They carried U.S. and Marine Corps flags, and many saluted as the hearse carrying the casket passed.

The motorcade arrived at Sampson's Chapel of The Acres at approximately 6:36 p.m., according to police reports. A wake for Sullivan at the Tinkham Road funeral home will take place Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. A private funeral Mass at Holy Cross Church in East Forest Park is set for 10:30 a.m. Monday, to be followed by a private burial at the Massachusetts Veterans Cemetery in Agawam.

However, Marines are welcome to attend all facets of the funeral, including the Mass and burial.

Sullivan, who grew up in the city's East Forest Park neighborhood, where hundreds gathered to watch their former neighbor pass by, died while trying to rescue fellow Marines, according to military officials.


This is a developing story; MassLive will have a new post with updates later this evening.


Details on services for Gunnery Sgt. Sullivan:

The public's guide to Springfield Marine Thomas Sullivan's funeral >>

Map: Routes of arrival in Springfield and funeral procession for Marine GySgt. Thomas Sullivan >>


Westfield Mayor Daniel Knapik running for at-large seat on City Council

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Knapik served as Ward 2 City Council from 2002 through 2009.

WESTFIELD - This city's municipal election process gained new attention today when Mayor Daniel M. Knapik started circulating nomination papers for an at-large seat on the City Council.

Knapik announced Jan. 1 he would not be a candidate for a fourth two-year term as mayor and since then has been finalist in two communities for appointment as town administrator. Town officials in both Southbridge and Walpole hired the other candidate earlier this year and Knapik withdrew his name from consideration in Wilbraham.

The mayor said Jan. 1 it was "time to seek out new challenges."

Today, the mayor said "there have been so many folks requesting I stay involved so that the great progress the city has made on all fronts will have a chance to continue.

"How could I not get involved," he said adding "having a chance to return to the City Council where I got my start 14 years ago is a good place to continue to make a difference."

Knapik must collect a total of 50 signatures from registered voters to secure an at-large position on the Nov. 3 election ballot.

He now joins six other candidates circulating nomination papers for one of the seven at-large seats that will be contested Nov. 3. Five other candidates, including incumbent Council at-Large members Brent B. Bean II, Matthew T. Van Heynigan and Dan Allie have already been certified to run for the at-large seats.

Still circulating nomination papers for at-large council seats are former City Council member John J. Beltrandi III, Current Ward 1 Councilor Christopher Keefe. Current at-large Councilor David A. Flaherty, Steve Dondley, and Mark Butler.

At-large candidates Carl Vincent, Muneeb Moon Mahmood and Rudolph Musterait have also been certified for the election process.

Knapik was first elected mayor in the city's 2009 municipal election defeating former Mayor Michael Boulanger. He was unopposed for re-election in 2011 and in 2013 he narrowly defeated Michael Roeder.

Prior to election as mayor, Knapik served as Ward 2 City Councilor from 2002 through 2009.

City Council President Brian P. Sullivan is the only certified candidate seeking election to the mayor's office. Michael L. Roeder and Harold Alan Phelps have are circulating nomination papers to run for mayor.

Nomination papers for all elected positions on the Nov. 3 election must be submitted to city election officials by Aug. 11 for certification.



Louisiana theater shooting: Killer used gun bought legally at pawn shop, police say

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Craft said Houser bought the weapon legally at a pawnshop in Phenix City, Alabama, last year, and that he had visited the theater more than once, perhaps to determine "whether there was anything that could be a soft target for him."

LAFAYETTE, La. -- A man who lost his family, home and businesses as he spent years angrily espousing right-wing extremism on television, the Internet and to anyone else who would listen did not say a word as he opened fire on strangers in a darkened movie theater, authorities said Friday.

John Russell Houser, 59, stood up about 20 minutes into Thursday night's showing of "Trainwreck" and fired on the audience, killing two people and wounding nine with a semi-automatic handgun.

"That was a horrific scene in there -- the blood on the floor, sticks in the seats (showing the trajectory of the bullets), the smell," state police Col. Michael Edmonson said after top officials got an inside look at the theater.

"He took his time, methodically choosing his victims," Gov. Bobby Jindal added. "One of the surviving wounded victims actually played dead to stay alive."

Houser then tried to escape by blending into the fleeing crowd after one of his victims pulled a fire alarm and hundreds poured out of the theater complex. But he turned back as police officers approached, reloading and firing into the crowd before killing himself with a single shot inside the theater, police said.

"This is such a senseless, tragic action," Lafayette Police Chief Jim Craft said. "Why would you come here and do something like this?"

Investigators recovered Houser's journals, were studying his online postings and trying to reconstruct his movements to identify a motive and provide what Edmonson called "some closure" for the victims' families.

Craft said Houser bought the weapon legally at a pawnshop in Phenix City, Alabama, last year, and that he had visited the theater more than once, perhaps to determine "whether there was anything that could be a soft target for him."

He had only been in Louisiana since early July, staying in a Motel 6 room littered with wigs and disguises. His only known connection to the Lafayette was an uncle who died there three decades ago.

Details quickly emerged about Houser's mental problems, prompting authorities in Louisiana and Alabama to bemoan the underfunding of mental health services in America.

Court records describe erratic behavior and threats of violence that led to a brief involuntary hospitalization in 2008 and a restraining order preventing Houser from approaching family members. Houser "has a history of mental health issues, i.e., manic depression and/or bi-polar disorder," his estranged wife told the judge.

Educated in accounting and law, he owned bars in Georgia -- including one where he flew a Nazi banner out front as an anti-government statement. He tried real estate in Phenix City, Alabama. But Houser's own resume, posted online, says what he really loved to do was make provocative statements at local board meetings and in the media.

On an NBC television affiliate's call-in show in the 1990s, Houser encouraged violent responses to abortion and condemned working women, host Calvin Floyd recalled. He was an "angry man" who spoke opposite a Democrat and really lit up the phones, he added.

Houser wrote that he was a weekly guest for 60 episodes on "Rise and Shine WLTZ" in Columbus, Georgia, where he "invited political controversy on every one of them, and loved every minute of it."

In recent years, Houser turned to right-wing extremist Internet message boards, where he praised Adolf Hitler, and advised people not to underestimate "the power of the lone wolf," according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, whose hate-group watchdogs spotted Houser registering to meet with former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke in 2005.

What prompted Houser to kill people Thursday night remains unknown.

He seemed like just another patron as he entered The Grand 16 theater, one of 25 people who bought tickets to the romantic comedy starring feminist jokester Amy Schumer as a boozing, promiscuous reporter.

Police believe he hoped to escape his deadly ambush before police closed in. Inside a Motel 6 room he rented, they found wigs, glasses and other disguises. Houser also swapped the license plates on his 1995 Lincoln Continental before parking it by the theater's exit door. He stashed the keys atop one of its wheels.

Once inside, he sat by himself and gave others in the theater no reason for concern before he began shooting, firing first at two women who were sitting in front of him, then wounding nine other people.

Twenty-one year old Emily Mann and a friend, who arrived a little bit late to the movie, were sitting in the same row as the gunman, and saw the flashes from his gun barrel.

"About twenty minutes into the movie, you hear one loud shot and you're sure that's not what it is because it would never be that. And then you hear another and another and another and you realize that those aren't just lights and sounds. That this is a man," Mann said.

As the chaos ensued she said she got down on her hands and knees and tried to make her way to the lobby.

"Lost a shoe, left my purse," she said.

Once outside the theater she ran to the lobby where people were yelling there was a shooter. She later found her friend outside the theater and drove home.

Jeanerette High School English teacher Ali Martin and librarian Jena Meaux were credited with helping save lives amid the chaos. Meaux, who was shot in the leg, told her colleagues that Martin, who was shot in the kneecap, still managed to pull a fire alarm, their former principal Heath Hulin said.

The lights came as the siren sounded, with a message urging everyone to leave. Outside, a woman was laying down, shot in her leg, said Jacob Broussard, who heard the gunshots from another theater across the hall.

"She was bleeding on the grass, in the front of the theater," Broussard said. "A man had actually dragged her out."

Theatergoers didn't panic, police said, but they left in a rush, leaving behind purses, keys and even shoes. Officers found 15 spent shell casings.

The two women killed were 21-year-old Mayci Breaux and 33-year-old Jillian Johnson. Breaux's body was brought to the same hospital where she was preparing to become a radiology technician. Johnson ran clothing and art boutiques, played in a rootsy rock band and planted fruit trees for neighbors and the homeless.

The wounded ranged in age from teenagers to their late 60s, Craft said. Five were treated at Lafayette General Health Center. Three patients had been stabilized, including one who remained in intensive care. Two others were released Thursday night.

Russell County Sheriff Heath Taylor said his office denied Houser's request for a concealed weapons permit in 2006 because he had been treated for mental illness and arrested for arson in Georgia.

"He was pretty even-keeled until you disagreed with him or made him mad," said Jeff Hardin, the former mayor of Phenix City, Alabama, just across the state line from Columbus. "Then he became your sworn enemy."

Hardin said he once partnered with Houser on a real-estate project, but they had a falling out and hadn't spoken since around 2007.

Houser was evicted from his home in Phenix City last year, then returned to throw paint, pour concrete down the plumbing and tamper with a gas line, Taylor said.

Houser's wife filed for divorce in March, saying their differences were irreconcilable and his whereabouts were unknown. His mother recently lent him $5,000, but "It just seems like he was kind of drifting along," Craft said.

Houser's only known relative in Lafayette, an uncle, died 35 years ago.

After detailing each victim's wounds, David Callecod, president of Lafayette General Health, pleaded Friday for society to provide as much funding for mental health services as it does for other medical problems.

Pressed to explain why Houser wasn't arrested before, Sheriff Taylor also blamed cuts in the safety net.

"There's cuts being made all over," Taylor said. "What should be scary for the community is that the cuts being made in mental health around the state are allowing these people, who should not be walking around, to be out in the community."

President Obama reunites with father's family during Kenya trip (video, photos)

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Fulfilling the hopes of millions of Kenyans, Barack Obama returned to his father's homeland Friday for the first time as U.S. president, a long sought visit by a country that considers him a local son.

NAIROBI, Kenya -- Fulfilling the hopes of millions of Kenyans, Barack Obama returned to his father's homeland Friday for the first time as U.S. president, a long sought visit by a country that considers him a local son.

The president spent the evening reuniting with his Kenyan family, including his elderly step-grandmother who made the trip to the capital of Nairobi from her rural village. U.S. and Kenyan flags lined the main road from Nairobi's airport, and billboards heralding Obama's trip dotted the city.

"I don't think that Kenyans think of Obama as African-American. They think of him as Kenyan-American," said EJ Hogendoorn, deputy program director for Africa at the International Crisis Group.

Obama's link to Kenya is a father he barely knew, but whose influence can nonetheless be seen in his son's presidency.

Obama has spoken candidly about growing up without his Kenyan-born father and feeling "the weight of that absence." A White House initiative to support young men of color who face similar circumstances has become a project dear to Obama, one he plans to continue after leaving the White House.

In Africa, Obama has used his late father's struggle to overcome government corruption as a way to push leaders to strengthen democracies. He's expected to make good governance and democracy-building a centerpiece of his two days of meetings and speeches in Nairobi, as well as a stop next week in Ethiopia.

"In my father's life, it was partly tribalism and patronage and nepotism in an independent Kenya that for a long stretch derailed his career," Obama said during a 2009 trip to Ghana, his first visit to Africa as president. "We know that this kind of corruption is still a daily fact of life for far too many."

The president's father, Barack Obama, Sr., left Kenya as a young man to study at the University of Hawaii. There, he met Stanley Ann Dunham, a white woman from Kansas. They would soon marry and have a son, who was named after his father.

The elder Obama left Hawaii when he son was just two years old, first to continue his studies at Harvard, then to return to Kenya. The future president and his father would see each other just once more, when the son was 10 years old. Obama's father died in a car crash in 1982, at age 46.

"I didn't have a dad in the house," Obama said last year during a White House event for My Brother's Keeper, his initiative for young men. "I was angry about it, even though I didn't necessarily realize it at the time."

Obama's first trip to Kenya nearly 30 years ago was a quest to fill in the gaps in the story of his father's life. In his memoir "Dreams From My Father," Obama wrote that at the time of his death, "my father remained a mystery to me, both more and less than a man."

What Obama uncovered was a portrait of a talented, but troubled man. An economist for the Kenyan government, the senior Obama clashed with then-President Jomo Kenyatta over tribal divisions and allegations of corruption. He was ultimately fired by the president, sending him into a tailspin of financial problems and heavy drinking.

The Kenyan leader Obama will meet with this weekend, Uhuru Kenyatta, is the son of the president his father confronted decades ago.

Obama met most of his Kenyan family for the first time on that initial trip to his father's home country. As he stepped off Air Force One Friday, he was greeted by half-sister Auma Obama, pulling her into a warm embrace. The siblings then joined about three dozen family members at a restaurant at the president's hotel for a private dinner.

Logistical constraints and security precautions prevented Obama from visiting Kogelo, the village where his father lived and is buried, on this trip. Sarah Obama, the step-grandmother he calls "Granny," still lives in the village.

Despite the intense focus on the American leader's local roots, the White House has cast the trip as one focused on the relationship between the U.S. and Kenya, not the president and his family. Officials say Obama's agenda is heavily focused on trade and economic issues, as well as security and counterterrorism cooperation.

The president is traveling with nearly two dozen U.S. lawmakers, along with 200 U.S. investors attending the Global Entrepreneurship Summit. Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha did not accompany the president.

Auma Obama said she believed her late father would be proud to see his son return to Kenya as American president.

"He'd be extremely proud and say, 'Well done,'" she said in an interview with CNN. "But then he'd add, 'But obviously, you're an Obama.'"

Westfield Athenaeum and Amelia Park Children's Museum host family fun event

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In the event of rain, the bike decorating and parade will be canceled. The movie will be moved indoor at the Children's Museum.

WESTFIELD - The Athenaeum is joing with Amelia Park Children's Museum to host a family fun bicycle decorating and parade event with an outdoor movie July 31.

Bike decorating will begin at the Westfield Athenaeum at 6 elm St. at 5:30 p.m. with youngsters decorating their bikes including the spokes, handlebars and helmets. Then all youngsters with their bikes will participate in a 6:45 p.m. parade down Holland Avenue to Amelia Park Children's Museum at 29 South Broad St.

At the Amelia Complex, families will gather for an outdoor showing of Big Hero 6. All are urged to bring blankets and chairs.

In the event of rain, the decorating and bike parade will be cancelled but the movie will be shown inside the Amelia Park Children's Museum.

Additional information is available by contacting Kate Deviny at 568-0638.

Spelman College cuts ties with Bill Cosby in wake of incriminating deposition's release

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A historically black college is discontinuing its endowed professorship with Bill Cosby after recent details emerged of his testimony in a sexual-assault lawsuit.

ATLANTA -- A historically black college is discontinuing its endowed professorship with Bill Cosby after recent details emerged of his testimony in a sexual-assault lawsuit.

Spelman told The Associated Press in a statement Friday that the college has parted ways with the 78-year-old actor and comedian. A deposition released this month shows the married father of five acknowledged he got sedatives to give to women before sex.

The program was established in the name of Cosby and his wife, Camille, to bring positive attention and scholars to the campus. The Cosbys donated $20 million to the college in 1988.

Cosby says the sexual activity with various women was consensual. He has never been charged with a crime.

Spelman suspended its endowed professorship with Cosby last year.

Suspected electrical fire displaces nine in Westfield

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The fire, which Westfield Deputy Fire Chief Patrick Egloff said began shortly before 5 p.m., displaced nine people from 336 Elm Street. Watch video

This post updates a story posted at 6:41 p.m.

Mitch Therrien got the call when he was at a friend's house: the three story multi-family building he called home, feet from the Great River Bridge, was on fire.

"I was actually running down the street," Therrien said, standing outside the building where, an hour earlier, smoke had poured from an attic window. "My old boss called me, another guy called me and told me 'your house is on fire.' I came over and they had the ladder truck up there."

The fire, which Westfield Deputy Fire Chief Patrick Egloff said began shortly before 5 p.m., displaced nine people from 336 Elm Street. Some were still in their apartments when it began but exited without injury, Egloff said; the Red Cross was called to provide aid to the tenants now faced with finding temporary housing.

Investigators suspect an electrical fire, though the investigation remains open, according to Egloff. Though no major structural damage was sustained, the building has no power and will be kept vacant until wiring repairs are made.

"We got here and we found an attic fire. It was knocked down quickly, but there was major electrical damage done," Egloff said. "The building is not livable at this time until the electrical wiring can be fixed."

For Therrien, that means putting some life plans on hold. His girlfriend and her son had recently moved into the apartment; now, he will be staying at a friend's house and she have to find another place until the situation is resolved.

"I just feel bad because I just brought her into my house," Therrien said. "She just moved in with me a little while ago, and now it's kind of ruined."

As he spoke, two more tenants walked up to the building, having also received a call about the fire. Therrien broke the news that, for now, they had no home to come back to.

Egloff, three engines, a tower truck and an ambulance responded to the scene, the Deputy Chief said. Holyoke and West Springfield firefighters covered the city during the response, in case of another call.

The length of the tenants' displacement will depend on how long it takes the building's landlord to repair the electrical system, Egloff said.

By 6:30 p.m., activity on the street had subsided. Firefighters waited by their truck as investigators moved through the building; some ate popsicles and read bad jokes printed on the sticks.

"What do you call a business run by apes?" one said.

A moment's pause.

"A monkey business!"

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