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West Springfield's White Hut to open burger eatery in Amherst

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White Hut has served its trademark hamburgers with fried onions in West Springfield since 1939.

062311 white hut.JPGRobert E. Barkett, left, and his brother Edward J. Barkett, right, owners of the White Hut at 280 Memorial Ave. in West Springfield, are opening a new store in Amherst.

WEST SPRINGFIELDWhite Hut, the city’s landmark burger joint, is opening a restaurant in Amherst, but don’t hold your breath waiting for any tofu burgers as it launches an outpost in the province of the politically correct.

The purveyors of the business plan to stick closely to their family’s recipe for success by not wavering from their basic burger menu.

“We decided it would be best,” Edward J. “E.J.” Barkett, who owns the Memorial Avenue eatery, said during an interview there Thursday.

“I have to admit I love our menu,” said his brother, Robert E. “Bobby” Barkett, who will own the Amherst venture with him.

Since 1939 White Hut has served up its legendary burgers smothered in fried onions along with french fries and soda. The 2-oz. burgers are made with hamburg from Arnold’s Meats in Chicopee. The hot-dogs are so-called Coney Island franks made with beef and pork from Grote & Weigel. A burger goes for $2.50, a hot-dog for $2.45. White Hut recently added soft-serve ice cream to its offerings, something it will also bring to Amherst.

Patrons sit around a counter on red bar stools overlooking a grill as attendants bark out their lunch orders. The decor of the restaurant is simple with terrazzo floors. Outdoor tables are a recent addition.

The look of the West Springfield White Hut will be transposed to the facade of the Amherst operation with a white stucco exterior with brick trim at 40-50 Main St. in Amherst. A mid-September opening has been set. The Amherst White Hut will occupy space formerly anchored by Newbury Comics.

The Barketts hope to duplicate White Hut’s success in Amherst and become that community’s burger burghers by appealing equally to the college and the townie crowd. Amherst has a large student population, being home to the University of Massachusetts, Amherst College and Hampshire College.

“We feel our menu would be ideal for both populations,” Edward said. “It’s a wonderful town with wonderful people.”

Robert said the brothers are hopeful White Hut can carve out a niche in Amherst because although it has a wide variety of eateries it does not have one whose cornerstone is the burger.

“We’re very excited to become a part of the Amherst community as business owners and as new neighbors,” Robert said.

Plans call for having the Amherst business open seven days a week with late night hours Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Exact hours have not yet been set.


Wyoming grizzly family causing bear jams

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A grizzly bear clan famous for its frequent roadside appearances in Grand Teton National Park is keeping park rangers especially busy this summer tending to tourist critter jams.

grizzlies.jpgGrizzly bear No. 399, with her three cubs in tow, crosses a road in Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park earlier this month. The bears have become a tourist attraction because of their frequent appearances near park roadways. Biologists speculate this behavior keeps at bay adult male bears, which sometimes kill cubs.

MEAD GRUVER, Associated Press

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — A grizzly bear clan famous for its frequent roadside appearances in Grand Teton National Park is keeping park rangers especially busy this summer tending to tourist critter jams.

The cubs are cute — no question about that — but a female grizzly with cubs happens to be one of the most dangerous animals in North America. And this Grand Teton clan has a history: One attacked a hiker; another was shot and killed by a hunter.

Biologists speculate the unusually camera-friendly behavior by Grizzly No. 399 and her daughter, No. 610, might serve to keep at bay adult male grizzlies, which sometimes kill cubs not their own. Five spunky cubs recently have joined the clan, adding to the tourist traffic.

"It's very important for people to remember that these are wild bears and that they are very protective," said Steve Cain, senior wildlife biologist at Grand Teton.

No. 399 has attacked before. In 2007, the year after she gave birth to a litter of three cubs, she bit a man who came across the four bears feeding on a just-killed elk.

This year, three more cubs were born to No. 399 and two to No. 610, who has been especially visible in recent weeks.

Around sunset on a recent Sunday, No. 610 caused a traffic jam while feeding on an elk calf just 70 feet from a road. About 30 cars lined up while tourists snapped photos of the 5-year-old grizzly and her cubs. A team of rangers and volunteers made sure people stayed behind their cars and didn't get too close.

June has been an especially busy for bear jams and the park's Wildlife Brigade, a team of about a dozen volunteers supervised by a park ranger. The brigade also checks campgrounds for improperly stored food that could attract bears.

"I think this is going to be the summer of bear-watching in Grand Teton, the way it's going," said park spokeswoman Jackie Skaggs.

Grand Teton has not just famous grizzly bears, but more grizzlies in general as the big bruins rebound in the Yellowstone region, which is under federal protection as a threatened species. Numbers are up from a couple hundred in the 1970s to perhaps as many as 1,000 or more.

"Twenty years ago, seeing a grizzly in Grand Teton was rare. Today it's common," Cain said. "It's necessitated a change in attitudes and culture."

The park encourages people to take care not to attract grizzlies to camp and to know what to do if they encounter a grizzly: Use binoculars or long lenses for viewing; stay at least 300 feet away; and never get between an adult and its offspring, among other measures.

No. 610 — the bears are numbered in the order they've been trapped for study — has been frequenting the same area where she grew up, and biologists say she's emulating her mother's roadside habits.

Few people have observed the grizzlies as much as wildlife photographer Tom Mangelsen, who lives near the park and a short drive from the territories of No. 610 and No. 399.

He thinks the opportunity for one photo in particular is only a matter of time, possibly while elk are calving and attracting grizzlies to the Willow Flats area not far from Jackson Lake Lodge.

"The ideal thing for me would be to see if they walk past each other and see if they greet and meet each other. Typically females will tolerate other females, and even more so with their own offspring," Mangelsen said.

Not all has been picture-perfect for No. 610's two siblings.

Wildlife authorities in 2008 trapped male No. 587 at a home development in Jackson Hole and moved him west of the Teton Range. Last year they trapped him again in the Upper Green River Basin in an area where grizzlies had killed cattle. They moved him back to Grand Teton.

In 2009, a hunter killed No. 610's sister, No. 615, not far from the park.

Prosecutors charged Stephen Westmoreland, of Teton Village, with illegally killing a grizzly. Westmoreland said he was covered in blood after gutting a deer and shot the bear from 40 yards out of fear she was about to attack. Hunters and bear advocates who debate whether people should defend against grizzlies with firearms or bear spray followed the trial closely.

A jury found Westmoreland guilty last year. A judge fined him $500; he had faced as much as a year in jail and a fine of $10,000.

Plenty of hunters encounter grizzlies in northwest Wyoming each fall. Wildlife managers relocate dozens every year to stop or prevent problems with people and property. Few grizzlies, though, have been as predictably visible at roadsides as these two moms and their cubs.

The theory that they're protecting their offspring is reasonable, Cain said.

"On the other hand, I would say that we have seen males courting both of these females during the mating season in close proximity to roads. So we do know that males will occasionally tolerate people," he said.

Either way, the big bears and their cubs are an extraordinary sight, even in a national park.

"We don't have any other animals reach rock-star status," Cain said.

AM News Links: Airport screeners under fire for making 95-year-old woman remove adult diaper; grizzly bear family a big tourist draw at Wyoming national park, and more

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A fatal shooting in Boston over the weekend, Wilco takes center stage at Berkshire music festival, and more of this morning's headlines.

lovely kate.jpgBritain's Duchess of Cambridge watches play on centre court at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon on Monday, June 27, 2011. Kate Middleton attended the match with her husband, Prince William, the Duke of Cambrdige.

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

Weekend news roundup: Western Mass kidnapping case involving $1 million in buried cash lands on 'America's Most Wanted'

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Included in the roundup: Former Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott launches a $350-per-hour consulting business and more.

Gallery preview

Rounding up some of the stories from the weekend of June 25-26, 2011.

Western Mass. man Jonah Fialkoff makes 'America's Most Wanted' for his role in Belchertown kidnapping
He hasn’t been on the lam as long as Whitey Bulger, but so far Jonah Fialkoff is the one who got away in a case involving $1 million in buried cash, kidnapping and all kinds of double-crosses. Read more »

Springfield named in lawsuit by Palmer Renewable Energy over biomass permit revocation
On May 23, the City Council voted to revoke the Palmer-based developer's special permit to build a $150 million biomass plant near the intersection of Page Boulevard and Cadwell Drive. The council's decision triggered cheers from project opponents and an expected legal challenge from the developer. Read more »


Springfield:

Springfield homeowners rebuild after tornado
Nearly a month later, many homeowners are dealing with insurance companies, contractors and even court dates while trying to move forward in their lives. Read more »

Springfield firefighters extinguish Hungry Hill house fire that left 15 people homeless
Springfield police were first to respond to the call, and officers were credited with safely removing residents from the burning building and surrounding structures. Read more »

Permit request for Sixteen Acres cyber cafe puts Springfield city council, city clerk at odds
The business on Cooley Street, known as Triple Sevens Cyber Center, has stated that it has no plans for illegal gambling and is mulling legal action to secure its special permit. Read more »


Holyoke:

Retired Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott now consultant
Anthony R. Scott has launched a $350-per-hour consulting business and counts the Hampden County district attorney’s office among his first clients. Read more »

Protesters, frustration mark final service at Mater Dolorosa Catholic Church in Holyoke
Mater Dolorosa will merge with Holy Cross Church starting July 1. The new parish, called Our Lady of the Cross, will be located at the former Holy Cross building on Sycamore Street. Read more »


Whitey Bulger:

James 'Whitey' Bulger era heads for history books
The Whitey Bulger era may be over, but the story is not. Details of Bulger’s alleged crimes – and information about those who assisted him – are yet to emerge. Those details are sure to stir up ugly memories. Read more »

This is how it ends for Whitey Bulger?
And so it ends not in an explosion, but in a whimper, bringing on the final speculation of what 16 years surrounded by money you can’t spend, firearms that bring no safety, acquaintances you can’t trust and a room you can barely leave sounds like. Read more »


Opinion & Commentary:

Tom Shea: About Mike Burke, Mario Elie, Keith Nash and other people too interesting to forget
Mike Burke was born in Enfield in 1916. The Gary Cooper movie, “Cloak and Dagger’’ was based on his life. He ran the Ringling Brothers, Barnum & Bailey Circus, worked for CBS, where he recommended the company underwrite a new musical called, “My Fair Lady,’’ and was president of the New York Yankees. Read more »

Viewpoint: Massachusetts 'Right to Repair' legislation unnecessary and unfair
The aftermarket parts makers have pushed for this legislation nationally and in several states throughout the country. Read more »

Buffalo teenager charged in fatal shooting of National Guardsman

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Authorities say a Buffalo teenager has been charged in connection with the May shooting death of a 21-year-old National Guardsman.

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Authorities say a Buffalo teenager has been charged in connection with the May shooting death of a 21-year-old National Guardsman.

Police in Buffalo said 17-year-old Joshua Nieves-Castro, a native of Puerto Rico, was taken into custody over the weekend and charged with the May 27 slaying of Jay Amelio Nieves, a member of the Army National Guard.

The suspect and the victim are not related.

Police said Nieves was killed after defending a friend who was in a bar fight hours before the shooting, and that Nieves-Castro had been involved in that brawl.

Nieves-Castro is being held without bail until arraignment Monday at a courthouse in Erie County, N.Y.

It couldn't be determined Monday morning if he has a lawyer.

Nieves-Castro was apprehended around 3:15 p. m. Saturday without incident inside a Buffalo residence, police said.

Police said they received information that Nieves-Castro was planning to flee the area, possibly to Puerto Rico.

Material from the Buffalo News was used in this report.

Asteroid 2011 MD travels past Earth Monday morning

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The 33-foot-long rock is expected to pass over the southern Atlantic Ocean.

As the Associated Press reported last week, a small asteroid is expected to travel past the Earth Monday morning, at approximately 9:30 EST.

The 33-foot-long rock, which has been named 2011 MD, will pass over the southern Atlantic Ocean about 7,500 miles above the earth's surface, according to the Associated Press.

Anyone imagining a 'Deep Impact' type catastrophe can rest easy. Discover Magazine writes that an asteroid this size poses little risk at any range:

Even if it did [hit the earth], it’s too small to impact the surface, and would instead break apart and burn up in the atmosphere. That would be exciting, and make quite a show, but that’s about it.

NASA's Asteroid Watch twitter account has linked to some animated images of the asteroid — here and here.

Unfortunately for photographers, the asteroid won't even provide much of a photo opportunity. Wired writes that the asteroid will only be visible from parts of southern Africa and Antarctica.

Scientists tell the Associated Press that rocks this size sail past the earth every six years, so there's always next time.

Connecticut high school student killed in Simsbury crash

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High school students in Simsbury are mourning the death of a classmate Tommy Tanski, who was killed in a car accident over the weekend. Tansk would have been a senior at Simsbury High School in the fall.

SIMSBURY, Conn. — High school students in Simsbury are mourning the death of a classmate killed in a car accident over the weekend.

Friends and the town's superintendent of schools say the victim of Sunday's early morning, one-car crash on Old Meadow Plains Road was Tommy Tanski, who would have been a senior at Simsbury High School in the fall. Three other people in the car are expected to recover.

Friends have posted a hand-painted sign outside the high school that says, "Rest in Peace Tommy — Forever Loved."

Police are still investigating the accident and have not released the names of the other people who were in the car. Tanski's friends say he was not the driver.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate area where a Simsbury High School student died in a car crash over the weekend:


View Larger Map

Sunrise Report: Forecast, poll and more for Monday June 27

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Today's Poll: Did the Springfield City Council do the right thing when they voted to revoke Palmer renewable Energy's permit to build a biomass plant in East Springfield?

Lake Wickaboag Sunset.jpgThe sun setting over Lake Wickaboag in West Brookfield, Mass. on Sunday June 26.

The Forecast

Today is looking like a relatively nice day with temperatures hanging in the upper 70s and lower 80s although there is a chance of rain in the afternoon.

The National Weather Service is forecasting:

A slight chance of showers after 2pm. Patchy fog before 9am. Otherwise, mostly sunny, with a high near 84. North wind between 3 and 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Tonight: Patchy fog after 5am. Otherwise, mostly clear, with a low around 62. South wind between 3 and 5 mph.

Find the full forecast here.




Today's poll

On Saturday, news broke that the city of Springfield is on the receiving end of a lawsuit from Palmer Renewable Energy, after the city council voted in May to revoke the energy development firm's permit to build a biomass plant in East Springfield.

City councilors Timothy Rooke and Kateri B. Walsh cast the only dissenting votes in favor of the energy project, whose opponents view a biomass plant in East Springfield as a potential environmental hazard to neighborhood residents.

City Councilor John A. Lysak, who voted with the majority of councilors to revoke the permit, said the lawsuit was "an expected legal maneuver," adding that Palmer Renewable Energy’s lawyers had threatened to sue "since the beginning of our discussions regarding their special permit."

Lysak, in a statement Saturday to The Republican, characterized the energy development firm's legal threats prior to the City Council vote as a "cheap and aggressive strategy" designed to "intimidate" councilors into supporting the project.

To read the latest report on the lawsuit and the issue of building a biomass plant in Springfield, click here.

The story on MassLive.com has sparked a passionate conversation from people on both sides of the fence, so we're asking where you stand.

Chime in below and let us know what you think.


Friday's results: On Friday we asked "Will James "Whitey" Bulger attempt to cut a deal with prosecutors by naming the public servants he once had on the payroll?" 26 people voted. 69.23 percent of you said Yes he will attempt to cut a deal and 30.77 percent said he will remain silent. Soon enough, we will see what Whitey does as teh court case is moving forward.




Sunday's Top 5

The top 5 headlines on MassLive.com on June 26 were:

  1. East Longmeadow man accused of assaulting his pregnant girlfriend

  2. Retired Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott now consultant

  3. Man found dead in portable toilet at UK music fest

  4. America's Got Talent: Landau Eugene Murphy nails a must see Frank Sinatra Audition (Video included)

  5. 9th Annual Founder's Day Car Show in Holyoke (Photo Gallery)





Quote of the Day

“It has been very difficult to see my home, which I took so much pride in, destroyed this way. I recently invested $60,000 in the house, putting in new floors, a new kitchen. I even purchased sod a few days before the tornado, and now it’s all gone.” ~ Armando Feliciano of Springfield recalling his East Forest park home following the June 1 tornado. To read the full story of Springfield homeowners rebuilding, click here.


Obituaries today: Frank W. Bernardara served in the Berlin Crisis

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Obituaries from The Republican

FWB.jpgFrank W. Bernardara

Frank W. Bernardara, 73, of Westfield, passed away on Saturday, June 25. Born in Meriden, Conn., on August 16, 1937, he was raised in Southwick and graduated from Westfield High School in 1956. Frank served in the 104th Mass. National Guard for 10 years, including one year of service in the Berlin Crisis. During his service, he was awarded many medals for marksmanship. Frank was an avid fisherman and hunter, and won four trophies for canoe racing on the Westfield River.

Obituaries from The Republican:

  • Albert, Lucille Anne (Morin)




  • Bernardara, Frank W.



  • Connors, Mary C.




  • Creamer, Frank C.



  • Hoynoski, Gregory William "Greg"


  • Korona, Estelle A. (Gelinas)




  • Leganza, John S.



  • Mongeon-Merwin, Janice M.




  • Putz, Stephanie V. (Niemiec)



  • Sicbaldi, Esther L. (Rheaume)


  • Smith Jr., Ernest D.




  • Business Monday from The Republican, June 27, 2011: Lit Mezze brings dress code to Amherst nightlife, Frontier Airlines leaves Bradley International Airport and more

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    Start your week informed with Business Monday from The Republican.

    062711worldmarkets.jpgA visitor looks at an electric stock board at the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo, Monday, June 27, 2011. Asian markets dropped early Monday amid fears of a spreading European debt crisis after a ratings agency placed Italian banks on a review for a possible downgrade. Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 0.9 percent to 9,595.18.

    In this week's Business Monday from The Republican:

    Lit Mezze Lounge and Nightclub seeks to bring big-city style to small-town Amherst
    Patrons will have a dress code to follow that he describes as “dress to impress” and “Bohemian chic.” That means no hats, flip flops, running shoes, tank tops or torn jeans. Read more »

    Denver-based Frontier Airlines checks out of Bradley International Airport
    The announcement comes a year after Frontier started offering twice-a-day, nonstop round-trip flights to Milwaukee on weekdays and one such flight each Saturday and Sunday. Read more »

    Many Connecticut manufacturers looking to hire, but worry skilled workers in short supply
    On average, the manufacturers surveyed expect their workforce to grow by 3 percent to 6 percent over the next five years. Thirty percent of the manufacturers said they plan to hire full-time employees, 6 percent plan to hire part-time workers, and 13 percent plan to hire temporary workers by the end of the year. Read more »

    Winklevoss brothers to accept $65 million settlement from Facebook founder Mark Zuckenburg, but Boston entrepreneur Wayne Chang claims half is his
    Chang states he and the Winklevoss twins had a business partnership that entitles the Boston entrepreneur to half of the Facebook shares and cash doled out in the Winklevoss’ settlement, which transferred ownership of ConnectU to Facebook Inc. Read more »

    More Business Monday:

    Voices of the Valley: Barbara Belz Brazee, Vivid Hair Salon & Spa, Westfield

    Hiring gains for men in Massachusetts suggest the 'man-cession' may be giving way to a 'he-covery'

    Children of Northampton merchants mind the store while parents take first time off in 5 years

    IndiGo airlines purchase of 180 Airbus jets means $1 billion in business for Connecticut-based Pratt & Whitney

    Women's Fund of Western Massachusetts honors graduates of Leadership Institute for Political Impact

    Survey shows more women than men feel stressed over finances

    Urban League sees Boston convention a chance to boost city's national reputation among minorities

    Business groups oppose NLRB ruling allowing streamlined union organizing

    Editorial: new cigarette warning labels represent newest offensive in big government's war on vice

    Commentary: Death, taxes and economic 'uncertainty'


    Notebooks:

    Boston Business Journal Business bits: Massachusetts 45th in income growth, dispute costs Biogen $50 million, BJ's Wholesale worth $3 billion, and more

    Business etc: MassDevelopment issues $2.6 million bond for Ashfield Stone, Wilbraham & Monson starts work on new athletic field, Newman's Own Foundation aids CHD Disability Resources, and more

    New England Mafia is weakened but still pursued

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    Some observers say the organized crime landscape that took shape during Whitey Bulger's 16 years on the lam is a shell of its former self.

    Gallery preview

    BOSTON — When James "Whitey" Bulger ruled the streets of South Boston, the New England crime scene was a battleground for a bloody turf war between the Italian Mafia and Irish street crews.

    But some observers say the organized crime landscape that took shape during Bulger's 16 years on the lam — ending with his capture days ago in California — is a shell of its former self, hobbling along with "old men in diapers" at the helm.

    "It's over," said Boston defense attorney Joseph J. Balliro Sr., who represented crime figures Vincent "Jimmy the Bear" Flemmi, an FBI informant believed to have killed at least eight people, and Henry Tameleo, the reputed consigliere of the New England Mafia.

    Flemmi and Tameleo both died in prison decades ago.

    A string of prosecutions, gang warfare and the march of time have sent many made men to prison or the grave. The ruthless crime syndicates powerfully depicted in movies including "The Godfather" and "The Departed" have seemingly lost much of their box office luster in real life. And even the chase of mobsters has been splintered by the terrorism focus put on law enforcement by the Sept. 11 attacks.

    "They got their hands full with terrorism," said former Bulger associate John "Red" Shea. "These mob families have been taken apart."

    Bulger, 81, was captured Wednesday in Santa Monica, Calif., where he apparently had been living for most of the time he was a fugitive. Bulger, who appeared Friday afternoon inside a heavily guarded federal courthouse in Boston to answer for his role in 19 murders, told a judge he could pay for a lawyer if prosecutors would give him back money seized from him.

    Carmen "The Cheeseman" DiNunzio, the reputed former underboss of the New England mob, pleaded guilty to federal bribery charges and is serving a six-year federal prison sentence. Another former boss, 83-year-old Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio, is locked up awaiting trial on charges he extorted thousands of dollars from strip clubs in Providence, R.I. Manocchio, who has denied the charges against him, was among 120 suspected mobsters and associates arrested in January.

    Gennaro "Jerry" Angiulo, who ran the rackets for the Patriarca crime family in Boston from the 1960s to the early 1980s, died in 2009 at age 90. The site of Marshall Motors in Somerville, which served as the headquarters for the Winter Hill Gang once led by Bulger, is now a church.

    "They keep chasing old men in diapers," said Rhode Island defense attorney and former Drug Enforcement Administration agent Raymond Mansolillo, who briefly represented Manocchio. "I think it's a waste of taxpayer resources."

    The Italian crime operation La Cosa Nostra, however, remains the top organized crime threat in New England, said FBI supervisory senior resident agent Jeffrey S. Sallet. The Rhode Island-based Sallet heads up organized crime investigations for the FBI's Boston division.

    Gallery preview

    "Because somebody is not a young man doesn't mean they are not dangerous and cannot order acts of violence," said Sallet, who arrested Bonnano family crime boss Joseph Massino in New York in 2003. Massino, who later was convicted of orchestrating a quarter-century's worth of murder, racketeering and other crimes, this year became the highest-ranking New York Mafia member ever to testify for the government.

    Sallet said law enforcement put a dent in the mob at the same time that sea changes in traditional Italian neighborhoods such as the North End and East Boston shrank the "talent pool." There are ethnic organized-crime groups with roots in Asia and Eurasia that have set up in Boston, Springfield and Lowell, but they haven't had the chance to get entrenched, Sallet said.

    "We gave (La Cosa Nostra) a substantial head start before we started putting them in jail," said Sallet, noting that racketeering laws were passed in the 1970s. "They've been in operation since the 1930s."

    Rhode Island state police Col. Steven G. O'Donnell said the poor economy and the tightening of legitimate credit markets are other reasons to keep the heat on organized crime.

    "Especially in a bad economy, they have dirty money working for them. They put it on the street at shylocking rates," said O'Donnell, who infiltrated Irish organized-crime crews in Massachusetts and Rhode Island as an undercover officer in the 1990s.

    "I don't think law enforcement would close the books until it's eradicated," O'Donnell said. "It will never be eradicated."

    Some critics of law enforcement's mob obsession say the public would be better served if attention were paid to lucrative drug operations in Mexico, the Dominican Republic and Colombia, street violence and emerging ethnic crime groups.

    "I think that's a lot of bluster on behalf of law enforcement to justify their budgets. The old days of so-called organized crime have been dead for some time," said Boston defense attorney Anthony Cardinale, who represented DiNunzio and Francis "Cadillac Frank" Salemme, a former Patriarca family boss believed to be in the federal witness protection program. "Instead of going after an old man for getting a couple hundred dollars a week from a strip club, they should be going after true criminal behaviors like drug cartels."

    Shea, 45, says the mob faltered in part because its members gradually gave up on their golden rule: a code of silence.

    "There was a code that, people today, they don't do that," said Shea, who now earns a living as an author. "It's a total lost cause today."

    In some ways, today's New England mob members aren't that different from the Hollywood producers who relish Mafia tales.

    "They want to tell their story," said Providence police Capt. Thomas Verdi, who led the department's organized crime unit for six years. "The reverence that they once had is virtually non-existent. They have nothing but their stories."

    International Criminal Court orders arrest of Moammar Gadhafi, son, key aide

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    The warrants turn the three men into internationally wanted suspects, potentially complicating efforts to mediate an end to intense fighting in Libya.

    gadhafi In this April 10, 2011 file photo, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi gestures to his supporters in Tripoli, Libya. The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants Monday June 27, 2011, for Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, his son and his intelligence chief for crimes against humanity in the early days of their struggle to cling to power.

    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — International judges ordered the arrest of Moammar Gadhafi on Monday for murdering civilians, as NATO warplanes pounded his Tripoli compound and world leaders stepped up calls for the Libyan leader to end his four-decade rule.

    The International Criminal Court said Gadhafi, his son Seif al-Islam Gadhafi and his intelligence chief Abdullah al-Sanoussi are wanted for orchestrating the killing, injuring, arrest and imprisonment of hundreds of civilians during the first 12 days of an uprising to topple Gadhafi from power, and for trying to cover up the alleged crimes.

    The warrants from the court in The Hague turn the three men into internationally wanted suspects, potentially complicating efforts to mediate an end to more than four months of intense fighting in the North African nation. The warrants will be sent to Libya, where Gadhafi remained defiantly entrenched.

    Presiding judge Sanji Monageng of Botswana called Gadhafi the "undisputed leader of Libya" who had "absolute, ultimate and unquestioned control" over his country's military and security forces. She said there were "reasonable grounds to believe" that Gadhafi and his son are both responsible for the murder and persecution of civilians.

    Gadhafi's regime did not immediately react Monday to the announcement, but rejected the court's authority even before the decision was read, accusing the court of unfairly targeting Africans while ignoring what it called crimes committed by NATO in Afghanistan, Iraq "and in Libya now."

    "The ICC has no legitimacy whatsoever ... all of its activities are directed at African leaders," government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim told reporters Sunday.

    Mohammed al-Alaqi, the justice minister in the Libyan rebel administration, picked up a copy of the warrant from the court but cast doubt on rebels' willingness to turn over Gadhafi if they did arrest him. He told reporters there was nothing to prevent the rebels from putting Gadhafi and his son on trial in Libya.

    "If they prosecute them in Libya it would be under the standards of this court," he said. "Let's decide later, after we arrest them, where we should prosecute them, here or there."

    Al-Alaqi said he hoped the warrants would persuade Gadhafi's forces to defect.

    "Maybe this decision will make the military brigades change their minds, because Gadhafi and his son have no future at all," he said.

    In Brussels, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the court's decision highlighted the increasing isolation of the Gadhafi's regime.

    "It reinforces the reason for NATO's mission, to protect the Libyan people from Gadhafi's forces," he said Monday, adding that the Libyan leader and his supporters need to realize that "time is rapidly running out for them."

    NATO air forces have been conducting daily air strikes against military targets in Libya for the past 100 days — a bombing campaign that has drawn increasing international criticism.

    In Tripoli, two loud explosions shook the area near Gadhafi's compound Monday, setting off a chorus of emergency sirens in the Libyan capital. Libyan officials said NATO fired two missiles targeting Gadhafi's personal bus, about 100 yards (meters) from the human shields the Libyan government keeps inside Gadhafi's Bab al-Aziziya compound.

    Journalists were taken to see a heavily damaged, burnt-out bus inside the compound two hours after the strike. It didn't appear to have been struck recently, however, since it was cool to the touch. No one was reported killed in the strike, though officials said two people were slightly injured.

    A coalition including France, Britain and the United States began striking Gadhafi's forces under a United Nations resolution to protect civilians on March 19. NATO assumed control of the air campaign over Libya on March 31 and is joined by a number of Arab allies.

    European nations praised the warrants.

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague said they "demonstrate why Gadhafi has lost all legitimacy and why he should go immediately. His forces continue to attack Libyans without mercy and this must stop."

    In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said "after 41 years of dictatorship, it is perhaps time to stop, for him to leave power."

    The Foreign Ministry of Italy, Libya's former colonial ruler, said the warrants confirmed that Gadhafi had "lost all legitimacy, political and moral" in both his own country and the international scene. "As such, he can have no role to play in Libya's future," it said.

    Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, however, warned that military action alone won't resolve the crisis in Libya, and said his nation backs attempts to reach a political solution in the North African nation.

    "Foreign troops may be able to win war in a place, but they can hardly win peace. Hard lessons have been learned from what has happened in the Middle East and Afghanistan," Wen told reporters Monday in London.

    Monageng said evidence presented by prosecutors showed that following popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, Gadhafi and his inner circle plotted a "state policy ... aimed at deterring and quelling by any means — including by the use of lethal force — the demonstrations by civilians against the regime."

    Hundreds of civilians were killed, injured or arrested, she said.

    Prosecutors said the three suspects should be arrested quickly "to prevent them covering up ongoing crimes and committing new crimes."

    "This is the only way to protect civilians in Libya," said the statement from the office of Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo.

    It's unclear how the warrant could restrict Gadhafi's travels within Africa, since many African states are not ICC signatories and others have declined to act on an ICC arrest warrant for another African leader, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. The Sudanese leader was on his way to China at Beijing's invitation when the warrant was announced for Gadhafi.

    The African Union has said al-Bashir's arrest would dangerously imperil the fragile peace process in Sudan and had asked the U.N. to defer the warrant for one year. The AU's host country of Ethiopia is not an ICC member.

    Gadhafi regularly attends AU summits. The AU will hold a summit later this week in Equatorial Guinea, which is also not an ICC member.

    Michele Bachmann announces bid for Republican presidential nomination

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    The congresswoman, formerly a Democrat, calls herself a "bold choice" for the GOP presidential nominee.

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    WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) -- Outspoken congresswoman and tea party favorite Michele Bachmann cast herself as the "bold choice" for the Republican presidential nomination as she formally kicked off her campaign Monday in her Iowa home town.

    Outside a historic mansion in Waterloo, Bachmann said she is waging her campaign "not for vanity," but because voters "must make a bold choice if we are to secure the promise of the future."

    As a new Iowa poll this past weekend signaled she'll be a force in the state that opens the GOP nomination contest, Bachmann hopes to reshape the GOP field and how she's viewed by voters. After the formal Iowa kickoff, she planned to shift her focus to New Hampshire and South Carolina, other early voting states with traditions of separating the viable contenders from the political also-rans.

    Bachmann, 55, has many wondering if the edgy side that turned her into a conservative star will be the one she shows on the presidential campaign trail. Her say-anything approach has earned her a loyal following but also plenty of guff from detractors who see her as a fringe politician. Past missteps have only redoubled her me-against-the-world view of politics.

    "Her trick is going to be to maintain that boldness and to somehow rein it in and discipline it so it works for her and not against her," said GOP pollster Mike McKenna, who isn't working for any 2012 presidential candidates.

    In March, she famously flubbed Revolutionary War geography. She told a group of students and conservative activists in Manchester, N.H. "You're the state where the shot was heard around the world in Lexington and Concord." Those first shots of the Revolutionary War were fired in Massachusetts, not New Hampshire. She later admitted she made a mistake.

    For this campaign, she has surrounded herself with no-nonsense veterans of national politics, some of whom have deep ties to the political establishment Bachmann typically eschews. They include a trio of Eds: campaign manager Ed Rollins, pollster Ed Goeas and consultant Ed Brookover. In Iowa and New Hampshire, she's recruited aides who worked on the campaigns of previous presidential hopefuls Mike Huckabee and John McCain.

    Bachmann, a three-term Minnesota lawmaker, insists the larger political stage won't mean a new, less-provocative style.

    "I've been consistent, nothing but consistent," she said. "I don't say things for political value. I'm authentic in what I say."

    Michele Bachmann.JPGRep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., speaks to supporters during her formal announcement to seek the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, Monday, June 27, 2011, in Waterloo, Iowa. Bachmann, who was born in Waterloo, will continue her announcement tour this week with stops in New Hampshire and South Carolina.

    Bachmann's unswerving style provides a sharp contrast with the more measured way of 2012 rivals, such as former Govs. Mitt Romney, Tim Pawlenty and Jon Huntsman and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Others vying for the nomination are ex-Sen. Rick Santorum, Texas Rep. Ron Paul and businessman Herman Cain.

    Possible late entrants include Texas Gov. Rick Perry and 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin.

    A Des Moines Register poll published Sunday showed Bachmann and Romney far out front of the others in Iowa.

    Bachmann's own climb has been swift, brushing off a school board race defeat just 12 years ago and moving rapidly from Minnesota's state Senate to Congress. In Washington, Bachmann vaulted to prominence by trying to block and now promising to repeal President Barack Obama's health care law. She has also tangled with GOP House leaders over her concerns they are too timid on federal spending cuts.

    She's staunchly conservative on social issues, too, calling for more abortion restrictions and constitutional amendments to ban gay marriage.

    In her latest national introduction, Bachmann has played up a softer side by highlighting her role in raising five children and 23 foster kids. But she's also gone hard at Obama, laying federal debt and deficits at his feet and accusing him of pushing the nation toward socialism.

    David Strom, a Republican long involved in Minnesota politics, said it would be a mistake for Bachmann to sand down her edginess.

    "She's not a maneuverer. At the end of the day she is going to distinguish herself by going out there and trying to draw people to her. I don't think she will try to become more nuanced as politicians tend to do," he said.

    Those who have opposed Bachmann say she doesn't budge on her views, even in tough races.

    Democrat Elwyn Tinklenberg, who lost to her in a 2008 congressional race, said he was frustrated that the more controversial Bachmann came off, the stronger she seemed to get. Her comments often fuel a fundraising machine that netted her $13.5 million for her last election.

    "She can say something that's just outrageous and just completely wrong and move on and never skip a beat," Tinklenberg said.

    Given the rise of the tea party movement, there may be even less reason for her to slide toward the political middle. Tea party members are seeking purity from the GOP candidates and have reacted skeptically to those largely linked to the party power brokers, particularly Romney.

    "Truthfully, she's a hell of a lot closer to where the party is right now than where they are," McKenna said.

    Connecticut police arrest 4 in knife fight that injured police dog

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    Four people were arrested Saturday following a knife fight in Norwalk, Connecticut that left a police dog injured.

    264031_10150232644388641_91930453640_7180612_6890090_n.jpgOfficer Frank Reda and his K9 partner CZAR were recently awarded with the Daniel Wasson Memorial Canine Award by the Connecticut Police Work Dog Association. The award was presented at the June Connecticut Chief's of Police Association meeting, and "exemplifies the highest tradition of police canine law enforcement". The team was recognized for the tracking and apprehension of an armed murder suspect.

    NORWALK, Conn. (AP) — Four people were arrested Saturday following a knife fight in Norwalk that left a police dog injured.

    Sgt. Andre Velez of the Norwalk Police Department says the dog bit a man wielding two knives in the abdomen as he charged at a police officer.

    Velez said the assailant dropped one knife but used the other to slash the dog's muzzle, causing injuries to the animal's tongue and mouth.

    Officials say the dog then bit the man in the groin and the police officer disarmed the man with a punch to the face.

    The 3-year-old Belgium shepherd named Czar was treated by his handler and taken to a veterinarian.

    The four men arrested in Saturday's fight have been charged with carrying a dangerous weapon, first-degree assault and resisting arrest.

    Police expected to have a better idea about Czar's condition after a followup visit to the veterinarian's office this week.

    PM News Links: Greenfield lawyer allegedly stole $186,000 from clients, Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' jacket sells at auction, and more

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    Apple will release two new iPhone models in September

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



    Army Specialist Michael Benjamin Cook Jr. laid to rest in Western Massachusetts

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    U.S. Army Specialist Michael Benjamin Cook Jr. was laid to rest in Agawam on Monday. He died in a rocket attack in Iraq on June 6.

    West Springfield, 6/26/11, Staff Photo by John Suchocki - The casket of Spec. Michael Benjamin Cook Jr. is carried from services at St. Thomas Church on Pine St. by the Honor Guard. He is to be buried at the Veterans Cemetery in Agawam. Cook was killed in action June 6th in Iraq.

    WEST SPRINGFIELD - Specialist Michael Benjamin Cook Jr., 27, of Liberty Township, Ohio, was killed in action at a joint Iraqi-US base in Baghdad on June 6, 2011 serving during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

    The Massachusetts native's family and friends gathered in at St. Thomas Church in West Springfield on Saturday to remember the young man who will be laid to rest at the Veteran's Cemetery in Agawam.

    Cook was killed along with Spc. Robert P. Hartwick, 20, of Rockbridge, Ohio; Spc. Emilio J. Campo Jr., 20, of Madelia, Minn.; Spc. Christopher B. Fishbeck, 24, of Victorville, Calif.; and Pfc. Michael C. Olivieri, 26, Chicago on June 6 when rockets slammed into a base in a Shiite neighborhood of Baghdad. The attack caused the largest, single-day loss of life for U.S. forces in Iraq in two years.

    A full report will be published on MassLive.com later today and appear in Tuesday's edition of The Republican.

    White House: 'Significant' deal on debt possible

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    President Barack Obama made his first direct foray into the deficit negotiations Monday.

    062711debt.jpgHouse Republicans leave the White House in Washington, Wednesday, June 1, 2011, after their meeting with President Barack Obama regarding the debt ceiling.

    WASHINGTON — The White House said Monday that a "significant" deal with Republicans on cutting government spending and raising the nation's debt limit is still possible, even as the administration hardened its stance on the need for increased tax revenue to be part of any agreement.

    President Barack Obama made his first direct foray into the deficit negotiations Monday. He met with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in the Oval Office for about 30 minutes Monday morning, and planned to meet with Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell in the early evening.

    White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama's meeting with Reid was "constructive" and the president concluded that there are still opportunities for a deal to be reached. But he said the only way to achieve that objective would be to include tax increases or the elimination of tax breaks for big companies and wealthy individuals.

    "It's the only way to get it done," Carney said.

    The White House has proposed raising about $600 billion in new tax revenue, including ending subsidies to oil and gas companies, an idea that failed in the Senate.

    The administration also would tax private equity or hedge fund managers at higher income tax rates instead of lower capital gains rates, change the depreciation formula on corporate jets and limit itemized deductions for wealthy taxpayers. It also has called for repealing a tax benefit for an inventory accounting practice used by many manufacturers.

    But Republicans are demanding huge cuts in government spending and insisting there be no tax increases.

    Ahead of his meeting with Obama, McConnell said Democrats' calls for tax increases do not amount to a "serious" position.

    "It is my hope that the president will take those off the table today so that we can have a serious discussion about our country's economic future," McConnell wrote in an editorial that appeared Monday on CNN.com.

    Absent an agreement that cuts long-term deficits, Republicans say they will not vote to increase the nation's borrowing, which will exceed its $14.3 trillion limit on Aug. 2. The administration has warned that if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling, it could mean the first U.S. financial default in history and send economic shockwaves around the world.

    Carney wouldn't set a deadline for a deal Monday, saying he didn't want to name a "token timetable." He said Obama and Vice President Joe Biden would hold additional meetings with congressional lawmakers, though there were none scheduled at this point.

    The president made his move to get personally involved in the negotiations on Friday, after bipartisan talks led by Biden stalled when Republican lawmakers abandoned the negotiations, saying the issues still on the table must now be addressed by the president.

    Many economists and government analysts say the government needs to get control of its long-term debt by taming its deficits. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office last week called the nation's budget outlook "daunting" and said that without major changes in policies, an aging population and rising health care costs would result in a surging federal debt.

    Your Comments: Readers react to the new graphic FDA warning labels on cigarettes

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    Readers react to the new graphic warnings which will soon be appearing on cigarette packs.

    fda warnings.jpgDo you think graphic warning labels like these will make a difference in the smoking rates? Chime in below and let us know what you think.

    In the most significant change to U.S. cigarette packs in 25 years, the Food and Drug Administration announced last week that new warning labels that depict in graphic detail the negative health effects of tobacco use will soon be on every pack of smokes.

    The labels will take up the top half — both front and back — of a pack of cigarette packs and include images such as the corpse of a smoker, diseased lungs, and a mother holding her baby with smoke swirling around them.

    Canada introduced similar warning labels in 2000. Since then, its smoking rates have declined from about 26 percent to about 20 percent. How much the warnings contributed to the decline is unclear because the country also implemented other tobacco control efforts.

    Mandates to introduce new graphic warning labels were part of a law passed in 2009 that, for the first time, gave the federal government authority to regulate tobacco, including setting guidelines for marketing and labeling, banning certain products and limiting nicotine.

    While some people have hailed the government implementation of the new labels, others feel it is overreaching.

    Here is what some of our readers had to say:

    bdx2 says: How about we start putting pictures of twisted and mangled bodies on the side of six packs of beer also considering that alcohol does just as much if not more damage to society.

    413guy says: this is such a radical practice they're doing. if people want to smoke, let them smoke. i thought this was a free country, where people may do as they please without any government intrusions.

    dontbeignerint says: I think I have the right to not pay for you, as a smoker, to make bad decisions all your life. Not one penny. That's the biggest infringements of rights in this situation.

    papineau says: We should take care of the druggies and drunks with Social Security Disability for life, but we can't provide a little end of life care for taxpayers who legally purchased and consumed tobacco products? Remember dontbe... these smokers paid taxes on every single pack they smoked, some in excess of forty years worth of taxes.

    player01040 says: as far as the tobacco industry goes, big government is talking from both sides of their mouths. they take the money and perks offered by tobacco lobbyists while at the same time putting out ads for people to quit and restricting free speech by trying to force a certain content for cigarette pack ads and text.

    Jim Kinney says: I think everyone can agree that any action that keeps a young person from smoking is a good thing. Whatever it takes to make sure no one else picks up the habit. I'm curious as to why these photos won't make people quit.

    Laura Merwin says: As a new non-smoker (it's been exactly 103 days, 18 hours and 31 minutes ... but who's counting?) I can tell you right now, those photos will have no effect what-so-ever in getting people to quit. It is called an addiction for a reason. It IS an addiction and no matter how scary a photo you place on the package.

    Lisa Evans37 says: I lost two men I loved, my father and my uncle, to smoking. They were among the millions who became addicted thanks to the government putting packs of cigarettes in their field rations in World War II.

    What is your take on the new warning labels that will soon be on cigarette packs? Chime in below and let us know what you think.

    Investigators piece together Nevada Amtrak crash that killed at least 6

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    Investigators struggled Monday to piece together how a truck driver who plowed into an Amtrak train in the Nevada desert failed to notice the crossing gates and blinking lights that should have been visible a half-mile away.

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    By GARANCE BURKE & SCOTT SONNER, Associated Press Writers

    SPARKS, Nev. (AP) — Investigators struggled Monday to piece together how a truck driver who plowed into an Amtrak train in the Nevada desert failed to notice the crossing gates and blinking lights that should have been visible a half-mile away.

    At least six people were killed and five people are unaccounted for after the fiery crash that gutted two rail cars and left the semi-truck buried inside one. On Monday, the Nevada Highway Patrol identified the trucker as Lawrence R. Valli, 43, of Winnemuca.

    The NHP also released the names of two passengers who were killed — 58-year-old Francis Knox and her 18-year-old daughter, Karly Knox, of Seward, Neb. — as investigators continued to try to identify other victims from the crash.

    Trooper Chuck Allen said authorities would consider all factors as they investigated the cause of the accident, including fatigue, driver inattention, and drugs or alcohol, with toxicology and autopsy results due within days.

    "Was he talking to his buddies behind him? If so, was he looking in the side-view mirror and not looking at the road ahead?" Allen said. "I don't think we'll ever know for sure."

    The fire burned so intensely that investigators were delayed in searching the wreckage and hampered in their ability to locate victims in the burned out rubble. Autopsies are expected on all victims.

    National transportation officials have sent the same forensics team that helped recover victims of a deadly plane crash near Buffalo, N.Y., two years ago.

    It could take up to a year to pinpoint the cause of the crash that killed the truck driver, a conductor and four others on the train. The semi-trailer truck hit the California Zephyr at a highway crossing about 70 miles east of Reno.

    Forensic anthropologists Dennis Dirkmaat and Steven Symes were to lead a team from Mercyhurst College in Pennsylvania to the scene, and be there until at least Thursday. The same team helped authorities after a plane plunged into a home in suburban Clarence, N.Y., in 2009, killing the home's owner and all 49 people aboard the plane.

    Earl Weener, a National Transportation Safety Board member, said flashing lights at the crossing were set to blink 25 seconds before a train approaches.

    Investigators planned to meet with the company Tuesday and review the driver's medical history, training and experience, Weener said. He also has said the driver's professional commercial driving record "is an area we will be taking a very close look at."

    Three days after the accident, a variety of factors remained unknown, including how fast the driver was going, Weener said.

    Two other truck drivers in the convoy and the train's engineer watched the semitrailer skid the length of a football field before crashing into the train. The other drivers stopped when they saw the gates come down and the warning lights go off as the California Zephyr approached, Weener said. The driver of the big rig in the lead did not.

    The train's engineer slammed on the emergency brakes, but the train, which was going about 78 mph in an 80-mph zone, traveled a half-mile more before it finally stopped, Weener said. The man watched "the collision in a rearview mirror. He was hoping the train was not going to derail."

    The driver was working for John Davis Trucking Co. in Battle Mountain, Nev. Its website said it was family owned and specialized in hauling ore from local mines, as well as moving gravel and sand. The company did not immediately return a call or email Sunday.

    Federal records reviewed by The Associated Press showed the Nevada Department of Public Safety has cited the company for crashes, unsafe driving, and most seriously, operating a truck with tire treads so exposed that it had to be taken off the road.

    In that January inspection, authorities deemed the rig an imminent hazard to public safety. The company was also cited for two crashes in the last two years, including one in February 2010 that injured a person in Washoe County. Federal records do not detail who was at fault.

    Weener said the company had received seven violations since 2010 and that one of them forced a truck to be taken out of service, but he provided no other details. It was difficult to say whether the company's record was significant or atypical in the industry, he added.

    The federal records showed the other citations were for issues such as oil leaks and inoperative lamps, a company driver who didn't use a seat belt, and lane restriction and cargo violations. They were not deemed sufficiently serious to order the vehicle off the road.

    Allen said it was not unusual for state public safety officials conducting spot roadside inspections to take trucks out of service for unsafe driving practices or discrepancies in travel logs.

    ___

    Burke reported from San Francisco.

    Springfield fugitive Marcus Parks, wanted for 2008 shooting, captured in Louisiana

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    Parks was identified by Springfield police as a suspect in a Six Corners shooting on June 28, 2008 that left two injured.

    marcusparks.JPGMarcus Parks

    SPRINGFIELD - U.S. Marshals on Friday arrested Springfield native Marcus Parks, wanted for a 2008 shooting in Six Corners that injured two, after tracking him to a relative's house in a small town in Louisiana just south of the Arkansas line.

    Parks, who was on the Massachusetts State Police's Most Wanted Fugitives list, was taken into custody by deputy marshals Friday in Bernice, La. as he walked out of a house.

    The marshals were acting on behalf the state police Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section, which had learned that Parks could be in the area. Marshals set up surveillance of a house on Plum Road, and moved in when they spotted Parks.

    Police were focused on Bernice, a town of 1,800 people 13 miles south of the Arkansas line, after state trooper Norman Shink of the Violent Fugitive Apprehension Section learned that Parks had a relative from Springfield who moved there.




    Parks was being held at the Union Parish Sheriff's Department jail in Farmersville, La, and was scheduled to appear in court Monday. Massachusetts officials are working to arrange his rendition to Springfield where he will be charged with two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and other weapons charges.

    According to Springfield police, Parks fired several shots into a crowd outside the Pizza King restaurant on Walnut Street at 2:30 a.m. June 28, 2008. A 23-year-old man was struck in the stomach and a 22-year-old woman hit in the leg. Both survived their injuries. A car was also hit multiple times.

    An investigation by Springfield police led to Parks being identified as a suspect, and police obtained a warrant for his arrest.

    According to state police, Parks is also wanted for several warrants in Massachusetts for armed robbery, receiving a stolen motor vehicle and motor vehicle charges. He is also wanted in South Carolina for possession of a stolen gun and unlawful carrying of a pistol.

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