Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

Consultant tells South Hadley selectmen town's phone system needs major upgrade

$
0
0

The consultant's preliminary work has cost $4,200 so far, and town meeting will be asked to allocate an additional $15,000 to complete the next phase of the project

SOUTH HADLEY - A consultant, Mike Ebner, told the selectboard at its November meeting that, following a rigorous operational audit, the telephone system used by municipal agencies and departments is largely outdated and an upgrade is in order.

Exact details of what should be done remain incomplete, as discussions continue involving what is the best overall fix, and what that might cost.

The town is expected to solicit bids soon, and those would guide them to decide how best to proceed.

Town Administrator Michael Sullivan told the board that Ebner, President of Concept Telecom, is not affiliated with any companies that may try to sell systems or equipment to the town.

Ebner said there are multiple systems in use, in addition to the one used at town hall.

"We are looking to make it one big network for all the buildings," he said.

The consultant's preliminary work has cost $4,200 so far, and town meeting will be asked to allocate an additional $15,000 to complete the next phase of the project.

Current estimates to upgrade the municipal system range from $100,000 to $250,000.


Gov. Charlie Baker issues statement on Parisian terror attacks

$
0
0

Baker said there has been no credible threat to the state, but government officials are coordinating with federal and local law enforcement to ensure safety is maintained.

Gov. Charlie Baker issued a statement on Saturday condemning the Paris terror attacks, believed to have been carried out by ISIS, but offered reassurance for Massachusetts residents.

"Our hearts go out to the people of Paris after a horrendous night of sheer terror and senseless violence that tragically took the lives of innocent people. Lauren and I continue to keep the victims and their loved ones in our thoughts and prayers," the statement reads. "Here at home, the State Police and our homeland security team remain vigilant and will closely monitor all activity in the Commonwealth. While there has been no credible threat to our state, law enforcement teams will remain in constant contact with federal and local officials to ensure the safety and security of our citizens."

The Massachusetts State Police on Friday issued a statement indicating they were tightening security at the Statehouse and Logan International Airport even though there were no specific threats in play.

News outlets are reporting that at least 128 were killed in six coordinated attacks, but the death toll is expected to rise "significantly," according to Parisian officials.

An estimated 112 were killed at a concert hall where a U.S.-based alternative band called "Eagles of Death Metal" was scheduled to perform. Witnesses say the attackers there stormed the theater firing pump rifles and shouting "Allah akbar," or "God is great" in Arabic.

Week in Review: Western Mass. police & fire news, Nov. 7-13

$
0
0

Weekly roundup of the most-read police and fire stories in The Republican / Masslive for the week of Nov. 7 - 13.

Amherst College President Biddy Martin addresses student protesters during library sit-in

$
0
0

Several hundred Amherst College students met with Amherst College President Biddy Martin in the campus' Robert Frost Library Friday night, continuing a sit-in protesting racism on campus that began Thursday evening. Watch video

Several hundred Amherst College students met with Amherst College President Biddy Martin in the campus' Robert Frost Library Friday night, continuing a sit-in protesting racism on campus that began Thursday evening.

The group, Amherst Uprising, issued a series of demands to the administration on Thursday. Among them were the renouncement of Lord Jeffrey Amherst, known for endorsing the use of small pox blankets against American Indians, as the school's mascot, and mandatory cultural sensitivity training for students who put up anonymous posters criticizing anti-racism protests at the University of Missouri.

The student protesters also demanded apologies for histories of racial injustice from Martin and the Board of Trustees and a zero-tolerance policy for hate speech.

Martin, who met with organizers earlier Friday evening and spoke briefly at the sit-in at 8 p.m., told MassLive that the mascot question would not be decided until a January board of trustees meeting due to commitments to alumni.

"We as a college committed to our alumni that we wanted to hear their views as well as our students' views before coming to a decision," Martin said.

Martin said she expected to release a more detailed statement Saturday about the protest, as demanded by the sit-in's leadership. In her remarks to the students, Martin said she supported student activism but could not immediately give a position on the list of demands.

Gallery preview 

The sit-in on Friday evening saw students speak about racial bias, listen to jazz and hip-hop performances on the library's lower floor and distribute posters across campus urging the school to drop Lord Jeff from its sports teams and branding. The sit-in was organized with the support of faculty, the Frost Library and the Amherst College Police Department, organizers said.

The sit-in was organized in support of anti-racism protests that have swept across campuses nationwide. Amid the sleeping bags and boxes of fruit, signs supporting protests at the University of Missouri and Yale University lay scattered on the library floor.

In Missouri, students protesting racist incidents on campus, including the painting of a swastika in feces on a bathroom wall, called for and received the resignation of Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin and system president Tim Wolfe. Student Jonathan Butler sparked the demonstrations by starting a hunger strike, and the dispute gained national attention after dozens of the school's football players refused to play in protest.

Similar discussions have roiled the campus of Yale University in recent weeks, with students demanding the resignation of administrators over past racial incidents and an email that questioned whether the school should discourage students from wearing offensive Halloween costumes. Those administrators, Erika Christakis and her husband, Nicholas Christakis, both still have their jobs.

The protests at both universities led to discussion of what protesters describe as unaddressed racial exclusion on campus. They also led to tense, sometimes aggressive confrontations between demonstrators, school officials and the media.

A twitter account, @AmherstUprising, appeared to call on protesters to block media from the Frost Library, writing "If you are outside the student center & see media trying to sneak in please stop them. We have most of the doors covered," in a post.

But organizers said the account was unaffiliated with the group, and did not object to MassLive shooting photographs or conducting interviews.

One demand that drew unflattering press attention was that Martin issue a statement condemning students who anonymously placed posters on campus saying that the true victim of the Missouri protests was freedom of speech. The group demanded that Student Affairs notify students that they could go through a formal disciplinary process for their role in the posters, which organizers described as racially insensitive harassment, and could be required to go through sensitivity training.

Mercedes MacAlpine, an Amherst Uprising organizer, said the goal was to educate students and provide administrative support for students who felt threatened or harassed by the posters. MacAlpine would not weigh in on whether she thought the posters were speech protected by the school's code of student conduct, but argued that requiring racial sensitivity training would not conflict with students' First Amendment rights.

"What we're saying is that words can be a form of violence, too," MacAlpine said. "We in no way believe that freedom of speech should be taken away, but we do believe that students should be made to recognize in a very concrete and administration-supported way the effects that their words have on others."

MacAlpine also said that the group was willing to work with Martin on changing the school's mascot and understood that the timeline could stretch until January. The group plans to protest the Lord Jeff at today's football game against Williams College.

The sit-in was sparked by the shared experiences of students who felt discriminated against on campus, MacAlpine said, as well as recent incidents on campus, like the papering-over of "Black Lives Matter" posters with anti-abortion messaging that said "All Lives Matter."

"The turning point and why it got so large is that multiple students of all sorts of background recognized a feeling of feeling marginalized, or feeling invisible or  feeling isolated in some important way," MacAlpine said. "It really took off just being to come together and talk about those experiences."

As of 9 p.m. Friday, the sit-in had proceeded without incident; an Amherst College Police Department sergeant said that there had been no disturbances.

Paris attacks: 129 dead, 352 injured in rampage, prosecutor says

$
0
0

Three teams of extremists carried out the coordinated gun-and-suicide bombing attacks across Paris that left 129 people dead and 352 injured, a French prosecutor said Saturday.

PARIS (AP) -- Three teams of extremists carried out the coordinated gun-and-suicide bombing attacks across Paris that left 129 people dead and 352 injured, a French prosecutor said Saturday.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said 99 of the injured were in critical condition after the "act of barbarism." He said the attackers in the Bataclan concert hall, where 89 people died, mentioned Syria and Iraq during their deadly rampage.

French President Francois Hollande has vowed that France will wage "merciless" war on the Islamic State group, after the jihadists claimed responsibility for the attacks Friday night.

Grief, alarm and resolve spread across Europe on Saturday as officials raced to piece together information on the seven attackers. Officials said one was a young Frenchman known to the authorities. In addition, a Syrian passport found near the body of another attacker was linked to a man who entered the European Union through a Greek island last month.

Attackers launched gun attacks at Paris cafes, detonated suicide bombs near France's national stadium and killed hostages inside a concert hall during a rock show -- an attack on the heart of the pulsing City of Light.

"These places are the places we visit every week," said Ahsan Naeem, a 39-year-old filmmaker who has lived in Paris for seven years. "Streets we walk every day ... All those places will have been full of my people. My friends. My acquaintances."

Hollande, who declared three days of national mourning and raised the nation's security to its highest level, called the carnage "an act of war that was prepared, organized, planned from abroad with internal help."

The president said France would increase its military efforts to crush IS. He said France -- which is part of a U.S.-led coalition bombing suspected IS targets in Syria and Iraq and also has troops fighting militants in Africa -- "will be merciless toward the barbarians of Islamic State group."

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility in an online statement in Arabic and French circulated by supporters. It was not immediately possible to confirm the authenticity of the admission, which bore the group's logo and resembled previous verified statements from the group.

The statement mocked France's involvement in air attacks on suspected IS bases in Syria and Iraq, noting that France's air power was "of no use to them in the streets and rotten alleys of Paris."

Many of Paris's top tourist attractions closed down Saturday, including the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre Museum and the Disneyland theme park east of the capital. Some 3,000 troops were deployed to help restore order and reassure a frightened populace.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve announced that all public demonstrations would be banned until Thursday and local governments would have the option to impose nightly curfews.

The attacks, on an unusually balmy November Friday evening, struck at the heart of Parisian life: diners in cafes, concertgoers watching a rock band, spectators at a soccer match.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said the places attacked are ones Parisians love -- and ones where they celebrate diversity.

"It is this Paris that was hit. Probably because this example of living together, which is so strong in our city, is unbearable for fanatical people," she said.

RELATED: Cal State Long Beach student killed in Paris, report says

Parisians expressed shock, disgust and defiance in equal measure. Some areas were quiet, but hundreds queued outside a hospital near the Bataclan concert hall to donate blood. As a shrine of flowers expanded along the sidewalk, a lone guitarist sang John Lennon's peace ballad "Imagine."

Authorities said eight attackers died, seven in suicide bombings, a new terror tactic in France. Police said they shot and killed the other assailant.

Molins, the prosecutor, said all the suicide attackers wore identical explosives vests.

Authorities in Belgium conducted raids in a Brussels neighborhood Saturday and made three arrests linked to the Paris attacks. Justice Minister Koen Geens told the VRT network that the arrests came after a car with Belgian license plates was seen close to the Bataclan theater.

MORE: 'More than one' arrested in Belgium in connection with Paris attacks

Officials in Greece said the Syrian passport found in Paris had shown its owner entering in October through Leros, one of the islands that tens of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in Syria and elsewhere have been using as a gateway into the European Union.

If the attack does involve militants who traveled to Europe amid millions of refugees from the Middle East, the implications could be profound.

Poland's prospective minister for European affairs, Konrad Szymanski, said that in light of the attacks, Poland would not comply with an EU plan to accept refugees unless it received "guarantees of security."

The attack brought an immediate tightening of borders as Hollande declared a state of emergency and announced renewed border checks. Germany also stepped up border checks.

The militants launched six gun and bomb attacks in rapid succession on apparently indiscriminate civilian targets.

Three suicide bombs targeted spots around the national Stade de France stadium, in the north of the capital, where Hollande was watching a France-Germany soccer match. Fans inside the stadium recoiled at the sound of explosions, but the match continued.

A look at the targets around Paris

Around the same time, fusillades of bullets shattered the clinking of wine glasses in a trendy Paris neighborhood as gunmen targeted a string of crowded cafes.

The attackers next stormed the Bataclan concert hall, which was hosting the American rock band Eagles of Death Metal. They opened fire on the panicked audience and took members hostage. As police closed in, three detonated explosive belts, killing themselves, according to Paris police chief Michel Cadot.

Another attacker detonated a suicide bomb on Boulevard Voltaire, near the music hall, the prosecutor's office said.

Video shot posted by newspaper Le Monde Saturday captured some of that horror as dozens of people fled from gunfire outside the Bataclan.

At least one person lies writhing on the ground as scores more stream past, some bloodied or limping. The camera pans down the street to reveal more fleeing people dragging two bodies along the ground. A woman and two others can be seen clinging to upper-floor balcony railings in an desperate bid to stay out of the line of fire.

Le Monde said its reporter Daniel Psenney filed the scene from his apartment balcony, and was shot in the arm when he went downstairs to help someone who had collapsed.

A tall, sturdy 38-year-old concert-goer named Sylvain collapsed in tears as he recounted the attack, the chaos and his escape during a lull in gunfire.

"First I heard explosions, and I thought it was firecrackers," he said.

"Very soon I smelled powder, and I understood what was happening. There were shots everywhere, in waves. I lay down on the floor. I saw at least two shooters, but I heard others talk. They cried, 'It's Hollande's fault.' I heard one of the shooters shout, 'Allahu Akbar,'" Sylvain told The Associated Press.

He spoke on condition that his full name not be used out of concern for his safety.

The Paris carnage was the worst in a series of attacks claimed by the Islamic State in the past three days. On Thursday, twin suicide bombings in Beirut killed at least 43 people and wounded more than 200, and 26 people died Friday in Baghdad in a suicide blast and a roadside bombing that targeted Shiites.

The militant group also said it bombed a Russian plane that crashed in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula on Oct. 31, killing 224 people.

IS also suffered significant reversals this week, with Kurdish forces launching an offensive to retake the strategic Iraqi city of Sinjar and the U.S. military saying it had likely killed Mohammed Emwazi, the masked British-accented militant known as "Jihadi John" who is seen in grisly IS beheading videos.

France has been on edge since January, when Islamic extremists attacked the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which had run cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and a kosher grocery. Twenty people died in those attacks, including three shooters.

French authorities are particularly concerned about the threat from hundreds of French Islamic radicals who have traveled to Syria and returned home with skills to mount attacks.

"The big question on everyone's mind is: Were these attackers -- if they turn out to be connected to one of the groups in Syria -- were they homegrown terrorists or were they returning fighters?" said Brian Michael Jenkins, a terrorism expert.

Photos: Santa visits Holyoke and Eastfield Malls to kick off holiday shopping season

$
0
0

The Jolly Old Elf himself arrived at the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside by Holyoke fire truck and then traveled to the Eastfield Mall in Springfield to meet up with old friend, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.

SPRINGFIELD - Santa helped strike up the bands and deck the malls in two appearances on Saturday morning.

The Jolly Old Elf himself arrived at the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside by Holyoke fire truck and then traveled to the Eastfield Mall in Springfield to meet up with old friend, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.

Saint Nick was greeted by the Holyoke High School band with youngsters donning paper Santa hats for the procession in the mall. The Santa parade in the Eastfield Mall in Springfield was led by the Paul R. Baird Middle School band from Ludlow.

Joining Rudolph in the Eastfield parade were two groups- the Mary Ann School of Dance of Springfield and the Colby Academy of Dance of Ware.

Pentagon: Top Islamic State leader in Libya likely killed by American airstrike

$
0
0

An American airstrike has targeted and likely killed a top Islamic State leader in Libya, in a strike that happened just as the Paris terrorist attacks were underway, the Pentagon said Saturday.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- An American airstrike has targeted and likely killed a top Islamic State leader in Libya, in a strike that happened just as the Paris terrorist attacks were underway, the Pentagon said Saturday.

Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said the U.S. strike targeted Abu Nabil, also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al Zubaydi, an Iraqi national who was a longtime al-Qaida operative and the senior Islamic State leader in Libya. This was the first airstrike against an Islamic State leader in Libya and comes on the heels of a U.S. and British operation late last week in Syria that officials believe likely killed Islamic State militant Mohammed Emwazi. Emwazi was a Kuwaiti-born British citizen known as "Jihadi John," who appeared in several videos depicting the beheadings of U.S. and Western hostages.

A senior U.S. official said that the latest airstrike in Libya struck a command and control center near the eastern port city of Darnah and likely killed Nabil and others with him. Officials are still assessing the results of the strike but called Nabil's death strongly probable.

The official says the strike by an F-15 fighter jet took place shortly after the Paris terrorist attacks were underway, but had been planned for some time. The aircraft were in the air when the attacks began in France.

The official was not authorized to discuss the strike publicly so spoke anonymously.

Cook said that Nabil also may have been the spokesman in the video of the February 2015 mass killings of Coptic Christians in Libya, also likely by Islamic State militants. He said that Nabil's death "will degrade ISIL's ability to meet the group's objectives in Libya, including recruiting new ISIL members, establishing bases in Libya, and planning external attacks on the United States." Cook used an alternative acronym for the militants.

State Police continue heightened presence in wake of Parisian terror attacks

$
0
0

Massachusetts State Police have reiterated that there are no specific threats but they will continue to maintain a heightened presence at key sites around the commonwealth.

BOSTON - State police have provided an updated statement in the wake of the Parisian terror attacks.

The full text of the statement is below:

"The Massachusetts State Police and our law enforcement partners at the Commonwealth Fusion Center and on the Joint Terrorism Task Force continue to monitor the investigation into and intelligence surrounding the Paris terror attacks.

At this time we are aware of no specific credible threats to Massachusetts.

State Police will emphasize regular patrols near critical infrastructure sites around the state and continue enhanced high visibility patrols near the State House.

State Police have a comprehensive and multi-layered security package is in place at Logan Airport.

Troopers across the state will maintain heightened awareness for any potential suspicious activity in their patrol areas.

Members of the public are reminded to call police immediately if they see anyone or anything that appears suspicious."


Lowell woman wins legal right to wear pasta strainer on her head for license photo, cites 'religious reasons'

$
0
0

The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster promotes its beliefs that humans evolved from pirates, and that 'heaven' holds a beer volcano and stripper factory, according to its website.

A Lowell woman has won a legal battle to wear a pasta strainer on her head for her license photo, citing her devotion to the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Also known as a "Pastafarian," Lindsay Miller relied on her religious beliefs when she waged a legal battle against the Registry of Motor Vehicles in order to force the agency to waive its restriction on hats for license photos.

Miller told the Associated Press that she "absolutely loves the history and the story" of Pastafarians, which have existed in secrecy for hundreds of years and entered the mainstream in 2005, according to its website.

"With millions, if not thousands, of devout worshipers, the Church of the FSM is widely considered a legitimate religion, even by its opponents - mostly fundamentalist Christians, who have accepted that our God has larger balls than theirs," the site reads.

Its devotees apparently believe humans evolved from pirates, not primates, it continues.

"No one knows what the afterlife really holds, but we are told FSM Heaven has a Beer Volcano and Stripper Factory," the site reads, adding that there is no formal membership process and the religion does not collect money from its members.

The website notes that there are "true believers" and those who see the religion as satire.

A spokeswoman for the RMV told the Associated Press the agency prohibits wearing hats in license photos, with only medical and religious exceptions.

When Miller initially applied for her driver's license, she was denied the ability to wear the colander, according to a report by CBS Boston.

A friend of Miller contacted the American Humanist Association on her behalf, and the group helped file an administrative appeal.

State health, law officials warn about especially lethal strain of heroin in Springfield-area

$
0
0

Following a spike in suspected opiate-related medical emergencies in the last three days, state officials have advised the public to be aware of a potentially more lethal strain of heroin being distributed in the area.

SPRINGFIELD ‒ Following a spike in suspected opiate-related medical emergencies in the last three days, state officials have advised the public to be aware of a potentially more lethal strain of heroin being distributed in the area.

Baystate Health, Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni and Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan said late Saturday that the hospital's emergency rooms across western Massachusetts have seen a large amount of suspected overdoses, several of which were fatal, over the last 72 hours.

Baystate Medical Center spokesman Brendan Monahan said the health system has seen around 25 suspected heroin overdoses spread across its various emergency rooms since Thursday, including five at Baystate's Level 1 trauma center between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturday.

Typically, he said, the center sees just one to two suspected heroin overdoses a day.

Monahan would not say how many of the suspected overdoses resulted in fatalities, but offered that there have been several deaths.

"We want the word to get out, whether it's a bad strain or whatever, that people are dying and lives are being forever changed and it's happening a lot this weekend," he said.

While the hospital's staff are prepared to treat patients if the high number of opiate-related medical emergencies should continue, Gulluni said the public should use extraordinary caution.

The DA further stressed that the so-called "Good Samaritan Law," will protect those who call 911 to report an overdose will not be charged with possession or use of opiates.

The Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit is conducting an investigation into the heroin strain. Anyone with information is being asked to contact the Springfield Police Department at 413-787-6310, the Massachusetts State Police's Springfield Barracks at 413-736-8390 or to anonymously text a tip by texting "crimes," or 274637, and beginning with the word "solve."

Massachusetts congressional delegation members offer support for French people following Paris terror attacks

$
0
0

Following a series of coordinated gun and suicide bombing attacks in Paris that left a reported 129 people dead and 352 injured late Friday, Massachusetts lawmakers offered their support and sympathy for the French people.

SPRINGFIELD Ᾰ Following a series of coordinated gun and suicide bombing attacks in Paris that left a reported 129 people dead and 352 injured late Friday, Massachusetts lawmakers offered their support and sympathy for the French people.

While members of the state's congressional delegation were unanimous in standing with the victims, some went farther, calling for military action to take down the so-called Islamic State, which has claimed responsibility for the attacks.

In wake of the attacks, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., pledged to stand with the French people and called for America to "rise to the defense of Paris, France and all those who value human life."

"As individuals, as cultures and as nations, we are all one people and we will never allow hate and terror to triumph over life, tolerance and freedom," he said in a statement.

Congressman Seth Moulton, D-Salem, meanwhile, said the attacks underscore the need to bring down ISIS.

"As I have emphasized for months, ISIS is a national security threat to us and to our allies, and their ambitions clearly extend well beyond the Middle East. We must have a serious, long-term strategy to defeat ISIS," he said. "Putting a few troops on the ground without a comprehensive plan to ensure the peace will never be sufficient."

U.S. Rep. Bill Keating, D-Bourne, also raised concerns about what he called "escalation of ISIS's ability to extend its external arm of terrorism in a way they haven't before."

"While we still await confirmation as to whether these terrorists were foreign fighters, it should not change our resolve and commitment," he said. "Now, more than ever, we need both a unified, global approach to dealing ISIS and greater information sharing so the tide of foreign fighters is stopped."

Congressman Joe Kennedy III, D-Brookline, praised the global response to the Paris attacks, adding that "as the international community works to respond to these horrific acts of terror, our hearts are with those we lost, the loved ones that grieve them and the people of France."

U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas, D-Lowell, took to Twitter following the attacks to express her support for the victims. "

"Our hearts are in #Paris & w/ all of France. We pray for those lost to this heinous act of terror & their families," she wrote.

Congressman Stephen Lynch, D-South Boston, tweeted similar sentiments.

"Keeping the victims, their families, and the entire city of #Paris in my thoughts and prayers following tonight's horrific events," he said.

"Our hearts and prayers are with the people of #Paris tonight. They stood with us after 9/11. We stand with them now," U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Worcester, tweeted.

Paris attacks: Not everyone in US is beefing up security in response

$
0
0

Consulates in New York and Boston received extra security along with French-owned sites in Washington. But elsewhere, like Minnesota's Mall of America, it was business as usual.

NEW YORK -- Times Square, French consulates and sports stadiums saw increased security Saturday, but authorities noted the stepped-up patrols were out of an abundance of caution following the Paris terror attacks that killed more than 120.

Consulates in New York and Boston received extra security along with French-owned sites in Washington. But elsewhere, like Minnesota's Mall of America, it was business as usual.

"I think like all New Yorkers, we feel solidarity, we know how this feels; it hits home personally," said Ronnie De La Cruz, who was born in Paris, but has lived in the United States since the 1960s. After leaving a floral tribute at the French Consulate on Fifth Avenue, across from Central Park, he shrugged off any concerns about security.

"I think that certainly here in New York is probably about as best as it can be," he said.

Sports venues were mindful of security in response to the attacks, which included suicide bombings outside the Stade de France during a soccer match between France and Germany.

Guards at the Naval Academy's game against Southern Methodist randomly selected people to screen with metal detectors and fans were asked to unzip their coats before entering Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. Police in Los Angeles said they would beef up patrols for UCLA's game against Washington State at Rose Bowl Stadium and at a cricket match at Dodger Stadium.

The NFL said it had been in contact with the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI and planned increased security inside and outside stadiums on Sunday. League officials discouraged fans from bringing bags.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the State Police, National Guard and other agencies were on a heightened state of alert. The New York Police Department deployed its "Critical Response Command" -- officers equipped with heavy weapons and other tactical equipment -- to important locations including transportation hubs and the Broadway theater district. Officers with radiation detectors and bomb-detecting equipment were sent to subway stations and were randomly conducting bag checks.

"This is not the kind of thing that is a wakeup call to New York City," John Miller, the department's deputy commissioner for intelligence and counterterrorism, said of the Paris attacks during a news conference Saturday afternoon. "We've been awake about this for a long time."

In Washington, D.C., additional law enforcement officers were deployed to French-owned sites and other high-profile locations out of "an abundance of caution," said police spokesman Officer Sean Hickman. In Boston, the Massachusetts State Police said there was "a comprehensive and multi-layered security package" in place at Logan International Airport and enhanced patrols near the State House.

There was no visible security increase at downtown Chicago's major transportation and tourist hubs, though police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said the police department was actively monitoring events in Paris and keeping in contact with federal law enforcement partners.


In Minnesota, a Bloomington police official said there were no plans to increase security at the Mall of America, which sees some 40 million visitors each year. In February, a video purportedly made by al-Qaida-linked rebels urged Muslims to attack shopping malls and specifically mentioned the Mall of America. Authorities said at the time there was "no credible" evidence suggesting such an attack was in the works.

Los Angeles police said there were no known threats against the city, but the department beefed up patrols at what it called critical sites, including a Snoop Dogg concert.

Police didn't say if additional officers would be on hand at the Motion Picture Academy's annual Governors Awards on Saturday night, but noted it was the type of event that would typically get extra attention from police and private security details.

"It's just a reminder when out there doing our common routine stuff there's always this element lurking," said Sgt. Mark Cohan. "It's the unknown factor. That could be anything with police work, but particularly with terrorism."

Paris attacks: How 3 teams of attackers unleashed terror around the city

$
0
0

Here is how it happened, based on accounts from French authorities and witnesses.

PARIS (AP) -- The attackers worked in three synchronized teams, wearing matching suicide vests and carrying the same weapons. In an excruciating half-hour, they unleashed their terror.

One suicide bombing after another at the national stadium, sprays of gunfire in the crowded restaurants and streets of central Paris, and finally a hostage standoff that drenched a 19th-century dance hall with the blood of dozens of young people out for a night of rock music. Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said three suicide attackers died near the stadium, three in the concert hall, and one further south on the same boulevard.

Here is how it happened, based on accounts from French authorities and witnesses.

9 p.m.

Kickoff of the France-Germany soccer match at the French national stadium and the beginning of the rock show at the Bataclan concert hall. Both packed with fans, the match includes French President Francois Hollande among spectators. In the audience at the Eagles of Death Metal show is the sister of French striker Antoine Griezmann, who started in Friday night's game.

France Paris ShootingsSupporters invade the pitch of the Stade de France stadium at the end of the international friendly soccer match between France and Germany in Saint Denis, outside Paris, Friday, Nov. 13, 2015. 

9:20 p.m.

A man with a Syrian passport and an explosives vest blows himself up at Gate D of the stadium, killing himself and a bystander. The match continues.

France Paris AttacksPeople react in front of the Carillon cafe and the Petit Cambodge restaurant in Paris Saturday Nov. 14, 2015, a day after over 120 people were killed in a series of shootings and explosions. 

9:25 p.m.

Gunmen in a black rented Seat Leon open fire on a bar and a restaurant -- Le Carillon and Petit Cambodge -- killing 15 people and leaving more than 100 shell casings of different calibers, including 7.62 mm, strewn at the scene. When the shooting starts, Emilio Macchia, an Italian book designer visiting for a publishing fair, starts to run from the Carillon. "A girl opened the door to her building and let us in. We hid inside with 10 or 15 other people. I still remember one girl, she said she'd seen one huge man shooting. That's when I realized it was a terror attack."

9:30 p.m.

A second suicide bomber approaches Gate H of the stadium, blowing himself up but claiming no other victims.

9:32 p.m.

Gunmen in a rented Seat Leon open fire on a La Bonne Biere bar on La Fontaine au Roi street, just around the corner from the restaurant shootings. Five people are killed. About a hundred shells are left on the ground of different caliber, including again 7.62 mm.

9:36 p.m.

Hollande presses the cell phone to his ear inside the glass-lined booth overlooking the soccer field, absorbing the horror tearing into the French capital for the second time this year. The digital clock above him ticks away the seconds in red: 21:36:49.

Just then, gunmen in a black Seat car attack Charonne street, killing 19 people. Sebastien Jagreau, a witness who arrives shortly afterward, says the bodies of the dead and wounded were sprawled on tables and the ground. "We saw a lady on the first table. I thought she had bump and then we realized it was a bullet in her head and not a bump. She was stretched on the table with her beer next to her. Then I see a guy crying because his wife was dead. Then we go on and we realize we are in the middle of a pond of blood." Again, about 100 shell casings are left on the ground, including 7.62 mm.

France Paris AttacksAn investigator works outside the Bataclan concert hall, Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015 in Paris.  

9:40 p.m.

A black Volkswagen Polo parks outside the Bataclan concert hall on Boulevard Voltaire, and three people emerge, opening fire as they enter the packed venue. Eagles of Death Metal is several songs into their show and playing to a full house. The attackers enter, apparently unnoticed over the loud music, armed with automatic weapons, their bodies wired with explosives.

Among the hostage-takers is a Frenchman, one week shy of his 30th birthday, convicted eight times between 2004 and 2010 for minor crimes and flagged for ties to Islamic radicals. In a brief communication with security forces, the hostage-takers invoke Syria and Iraq. As shots ring out, people escape from side doors of the venue, some dragging bodies with them. One woman clings to a second-story window, trying to get out of the line of fire. Among those to escape is Griezmann's sister.

At that moment, a suicide bomber detonates his vest further down Boulevard Voltaire. The bomber is the only victim.

9:53 p.m.

A suicide attacker about 400 meters (yards) from the stadium detonates his vest, identical to those of the others with TATP explosives. No one else is killed.

12:20 a.m.

Security forces storm the Bataclan. Two of the attackers detonate their suicide vests; a third is shot by law enforcement and the vest explodes. Eighty-nine people are killed, and many remain critically injured. Philippe Juvin, an emergency room doctor at the Georges Pompidou hospital, said he has never had to care for so many victims at once. "The majority were gunshot wounds inflicted with weapons of war, of high caliber, in the thorax, the abdomen, their legs and arms. Also, the psychological trauma. The people that witness these kinds of events are deeply affected, even if some may not be physically injured, it hurts their soul. That is why we had a psychiatrist with us."

Gallery preview 

Obituaries today: Daniel Fitzgerald was Massachusetts State Police trooper

$
0
0

Obituaries from The Republican.

 
20151114_daniel_fitzgerald.jpgDaniel Fitzgerald 

Daniel Martin Fitzgerald, 70, of Westfield passed away on Friday. He was born in and grew up in Springfield, and graduated from Classical High School, where he starred on the basketball team. He moved to West Springfield, where he lived most of his life before settling in Westfield 28 years ago. He served as a Massachusetts State Police trooper for 32 years. He worked in Troop E for most of his career and retired in 2004. He was a U.S. Army combat veteran of the Vietnam War. He received a BA in history and a master's degree in criminal justice from AIC. He was an avid New York Giants and Boston Red Sox fan.

Full obituary and funeral arrangements for Daniel Fitzgerald »


To view all obituaries from The Republican:

» Click here>

Bataclan concert hall attack survivor Isobel Bowdery: 'It wasn't just a terrorist attack, it was a massacre'

$
0
0

A 22-year-old woman's Facebook post about how she pretended to be dead as terrorists massacred people inside the Bataclan concert hall in Paris has captivated the world as over 575,000 people have shared her message on Facebook. Isobel Bowdery said she watched as the gunman meticulously shot at people.

A 22-year-old woman's Facebook post about how she pretended to be dead as terrorists massacred people inside the Bataclan concert hall in Paris has captivated the world as over 575,000 people have shared her message on Facebook.

Isobel Bowdery, who said she studied at the University of Cape Town in South Africa, wrote she was at the Eagles of Death Meta concert (an American band) with her boyfriend when armed gunman came through the front entrance and began shooting.

"It wasn't just a terrorist attack, it was a massacre," she wrote in her post, which included a picture of her bloodstained shirt.

Isobel Bowdery facebook shirt 

The gunmen killed over 80 people. ISIS has claimed responsibility for the series of attacks in Paris. Bowdery said people were dancing and smiling before the horrific attacks. She thought the shooting was part of the show. She realized it wasn't.

"Dozens of people were shot right in front of me," she wrote. "Pools of blood filled the floor."

Bowdery said grown men cried aloud and held people around them.

"Shocked and alone, I pretended to be dead for over an hour, lying among people who could see their loved ones motionless," Bowdery wrote. "Holding my breath, trying to not move, not cry - not giving those men the fear they longed to see. I was incredibly lucky to survive. But so many didn't."

It was supposed to be a night of fun for everyone at the packed concert hall, the young woman wrote. She said the image of the men "circling us like vultures" would haunt her forever.

The attacks didn't seem real to Bowdery. She said the gunmen meticulously aimed at people inside the concert hall.

She added hope in her message on Facebook. She talked about the man who comforted her during the shootings and the couple who expressed words of love near her. She talked about the police who stormed inside and rescued people and the strangers who picked her up from the road and consoled her while she believed her boyfriend was dead.

Bowdery told all the people who sent caring messages of support that they make her believe the world "has the potential to be better."

"But most of this is to the 80 people who were murdered inside that venue, who weren't as lucky, who didnt get to wake up today and to all the pain that their friends and families are going through," she wrote. "I am so sorry. There's nothing that will fix the pain."

Bowdery believed she was going to be killed as she saw bodies around her. She thought about all the people she loved and whispered, "I love you" over and over as she reflected about her life.

"Last night, the lives of many were forever changed and it is up to us to be better people," she wrote. "To live lives that the innocent victims of this tragedy dreamt about but sadly will now never be able to fulfil. RIP angels. You will never be forgotten."


Paris attacks: French police launch manhunt, release photo of suspect

$
0
0

French police have issued a wanted notice with a photo of a man suspected in the Paris attacks.

PARIS (AP) -- A French man believed directly involved in Friday's attacks in Paris that killed 129 people is on the run and the subject of a manhunt, French security officials said Sunday.

The man, one of three brothers believed involved in the killings in central Paris, rented a black Volkswagen Polo used by a group of hostage-takers that left at least 89 people dead inside the Bataclan concert hall, one official said.

The manhunt is believed to involve at least one suspect, another official said. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. One of the suspect's brothers has been arrested in Belgium and another brother died in the attack, the first official said.

Seven people were detained Sunday in Belgium in connection with deadly attacks in Paris as the city entered three days of mourning for the 129 people killed in the worst violence in France in decades.

French troops deployed by the thousands and tourist sites were shuttered in one of the most visited cities on Earth as more details of the investigation emerged.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for Friday's gun and bomb attacks on a stadium, a concert hall and Paris cafes that also wounded 350 people, 99 of them seriously.

As many as three of the seven suicide bombers who died in the attacks were French citizens, as was at least one of the men arrested in neighboring Belgium.

A French police official said a suicide attacker identified by a skin sample was believed to be living in the Paris suburbs before the attacks. A Belgian official said two of the seven people wired with suicide vests were French men living in Brussels, and among those arrested was another French citizen living in the Belgian capital.

The new information stoked fears of homegrown terrorism in a country that has exported more jihadis than any other in Europe. All three gunmen in the January attacks on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a kosher supermarket in Paris were French.

This time, three teams of attackers were involved and seven suicide bombers blew themselves up -- three near the stadium, three at the concert hall and one not far from it, authorities said.

A Brussels parking ticket found inside the Volkswagen Polo parked outside the Bataclan concert hall led to one of the men arrested in Belgium, according to a French police official.

Three Kalashnikovs were found inside the other car known to have been used in the attacks, a Seat found in Montreuil, a suburb 6 kilometers (nearly 4 miles) east of the French capital, according to the police official, who could not be named because the investigation is ongoing.

Another official in Belgium said the seven people detained would learn later Sunday whether they would be held in custody longer. Three other people were arrested there Saturday.

That official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the ongoing investigation, also said two of the seven attackers who died in Paris on Friday night were French men living in Brussels. He said one was living in the Molenbeek neighborhood, which is considered a focal point for religious extremism and fighters going to Syria.

Security was heightened across France, across Europe's normally open borders, even across the ocean in New York, and how to respond to the Paris attacks became a key point among U.S. Democratic presidential hopefuls at a debate Saturday night.

President Barack Obama on Sunday called the terror attacks in Paris an "attack on the civilized world."

Obama, speaking at the G-20 summit in Turkey focusing on fighting terrorism, pledged U.S. solidarity with France in the effort to hunt down the perpetrators and bring them to justice.

At the request of France, the European Union will hold a special meeting of its interior and justice ministers Friday to assess the impact of the Paris attacks.

Paris attacks likely to alter US strategy on Islamic State

In Paris, the shining sun and warm air felt cruelly incongruous.

Streets, parks and commerce were unusually empty for such a mild, clear day, and several city monuments were closed for security reasons or to express the city's grief.

Some Parisians and tourists defied the high security, walking past heavily-armed soldiers in body armor to take pictures beneath the Eiffel Tower.

In its statement claiming responsibility, the Islamic State group called Paris "the capital of prostitution and obscenity" and mocked France's air attacks on suspected IS targets in Syria and Iraq.

A French survivor of the rampage at Paris' Bataclan concert hall said he was struck by how young the attackers were.

Julien Pearce, journalist at Europe 1 radio, was at the Bataclan concert hall on Friday to attend the concert by the American rock band Eagles of Death Metal. He said when the three attackers stormed in "it took me few seconds to realize it was gunshots."

Pearce and his friends immediately got down on the floor to avoid the random shots, then ran and crawled into a tiny dark room next to the stage.

"There was no exit, so we were just in another trap, less exposed, but still a trap," he said.

Pearce said he could discreetly look out and see one of the assailants. He says "he seemed very young. That's what struck me, his childish face, very determined, cold, calm, frightening."

Once the attackers paused to reload, his group ran across the stage to the emergency exit, helping a wounded woman out. Looking back, he saw "dozens and dozens of entangled, bullet-riddled bodies in a pool of blood." Eighty-nine people were killed at the hall.

Film producer David Pierret, who survived the attack, said he was sitting on the terrace of the Carillon bar with friends when assailants suddenly started firing Kalashnikov assault rifles.

"By some miracle I was on the far side. My neighbor will have been killed," he said. "Immediately we ran down to the Canal Saint Martin. But they followed. It must have been in a car. We didn't look back. They were firing in the direction of the canal. We ran all the way round to the McDonald's, they were firing at McDonald's. We ran around again back to the Carillon and that's when I saw the bodies on the ground," he said.

"I didn't know if they were male or female. There was a very strange long silence, and then screaming."

President Francois Hollande has said that France, which is already bombing Islamic State targets in Syria and Iraq in a U.S.-led coalition, would increase its military efforts to crush IS and be "merciless" against the extremists.

The investigation sprawled well beyond France's borders, since Paris Prosecutor Francois Molins said some attackers mentioned Syria and Iraq.

Gallery preview 

French authorities are particularly concerned about the threat from hundreds of French Islamic radicals who have traveled to Syria and returned home, possibly with dangerous skills.

Details about one attacker began to emerge: 29-year-old Frenchman Ismael Mostefai, who had a record of petty crime and had been flagged in 2010 for ties to Islamic radicalism. He was identified from fingerprints found on a finger amid the carnage from a Paris concert hall, the Paris prosecutor said. A judicial official and lawmaker Jean-Pierre Gorges confirmed his identity.

Police detained his father, a brother and other relatives Saturday night, and they were still being questioned Sunday, the judicial official said.

Struggling to keep his country calm and united after an exceptionally violent year, Hollande met Sunday with opposition leaders -- conservative rival and former President Nicolas Sarkozy as well as increasingly popular far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who has used the attacks on Paris to advance her anti-immigrant agenda.

On the streets, the entire nation was enveloped in mourning. Flags were lowered and Notre Dame Cathedral -- closed to tourists like many Paris sites -- planned a special church service later Sunday for victims' families. Well-wishers heaped flowers and notes on a monument to the dead in the neighborhood where attackers sprayed gunfire on cafe diners and concert-goers.

Quentin Bongard said he left one of the targeted cafes after a fight with his girlfriend just moments before the attacks. They both narrowly escaped because she had gone inside to pay and hid behind a couch.

"Those are all places that I go often to," the Paris resident said, still shaken. "We just want to come here, bring flowers, because we don't want to be terrorized ... but it is frightening."

Even in their grief, residents were defiant about maintaining the lifestyle that has made their city a world treasure. Olivier Bas was among several hundred who gathered late Saturday at the site of the Bataclan hall massacre. Although Paris was quiet and jittery, Bas intended to go out for a drink -- "to show that they won't win."

Meanwhile, refugees fleeing to the continent by the tens of thousands feared that the Paris attacks will prompt EU nations to put up even more razor-wire border fences and other obstacles to their quest to start a new life.

A Syrian passport found next to the body of one of the men who attacked France's national stadium suggested that its owner passed through Greece into the European Union and on through Macedonia and Serbia last month. It's a route tens of thousands of people fleeing war and poverty in Syria and elsewhere have been using.

A top European Union official insisted Sunday that the bloc's refugee policy doesn't need to be overhauled in the wake of the Paris attacks and urged world leaders not to start treating asylum-seekers as terrorists.

"Those who organized these attacks, and those who carried them out, are exactly those who the refugees are fleeing," European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters at the G-20 summit in Turkey. "There is no need to revise the European Union's entire refugee policy."

How 3 teams of attackers unleashed terror in Paris

New Jersey State Police increase presence at MetLife Stadium for New England Patriots game

$
0
0

New Jersey State Police have increased the number of troopers at MetLife Stadium for Sunday's 4:25 p.m. game between the New England Patriots and New York Giants. The decision to increase a police presence at the stadium came after the deadly attacks in Paris Friday.

New Jersey State Police have increased the number of troopers at MetLife Stadium for Sunday's 4:25 p.m. game between the New England Patriots and New York Giants. The decision to increase their presence at the stadium came after the deadly attacks in Paris Friday.

"This plan is revised if the available intelligence warrants changes," New Jersey State Police said on Facebook. "Although there are no credible threats at this time, we have increased the number of troopers working this week's game."

The notice said authorities continue to learn more about the tactics used by terrorists in the Paris shootings and attacks and that information will be used to enhance safety plans at the stadium.

People attending the game are asked to call the terrorism tip line at (866) 4-SAFE-NJ if they see any suspicious people or activity.

New Jersey State Police

Third suspect in Chicopee & South Hadley crimes turns himself in

$
0
0

The three men are believed to have an addiction problem, police said.

CHICOPEE - A third suspect wanted for a number of larcenies here and in South Hadley turned himself into police this weekend.

Nicholas Remillard, 30, is currently being held on warrants. He is scheduled to be arraigned in court Monday, said Michael Wilk, public information officer for the Chicopee Police Department.

On Wednesday Chicopee and South Hadley Police put out a call for help in locating Remillard, Timothy Choate, 30, and Jeremy Thompson, 28. All three are from Chicopee, believed to be homeless and staying in local hotels.

That night Holyoke Police arrested Choate and Thompson at Chestnut Street Park.

There were active warrants out for each of the three men for larcenies in South Hadley. They are also wanted for questioning in several other cases in Western Massachusetts, including a larceny at the Pines Motel on 1508 Memorial Drive, Wilk said.

They are also believed to have an addiction problem and police urged them to turn themselves in so they could get help.

Iraq warned of imminent Islamic State assaults before Paris terror attacks

$
0
0

However, a senior French security official told the AP that French intelligence gets this kind of communication "all the time" and "every day."

BAGHDAD (AP) -- Senior Iraqi intelligence officials warned coalition countries of imminent assaults by the Islamic State group just one day before last week's deadly attacks in Paris killed 129 people, The Associated Press has learned.

Iraqi intelligence sent a dispatch saying the group's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, had ordered an attack on coalition countries fighting against them in Iraq and Syria, as well as on Iran and Russia, "through bombings or assassinations or hostage taking in the coming days."

The dispatch said the Iraqis had no specific details on when or where the attack would take place, and a senior French security official told the AP that French intelligence gets this kind of communication "all the time" and "every day."

However, six senior Iraqi officials corroborated the information in the dispatch, a copy of which was obtained by the AP, and four of these intelligence officials said they also warned France specifically of a potential attack. Two officials told the AP that France was warned beforehand of details that French authorities have yet to make public.

Among them: that the Paris attacks appear to have been planned in Raqqa, Syria -- the Islamic State's de-facto capital -- where the attackers were trained specifically for this operation and with the intention of sending them to France.

The officials also said a sleeper cell in France then met with the attackers after their training and helped them to execute the plan.

French police launch manhunt, release photo of suspect in Paris attacks

There were 24 people involved in the operation, they said: 19 attackers and five others in charge of logistics and planning.

The officials all spoke anonymously because they are not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility on Saturday for the gun and bomb attacks on a stadium, a concert hall and Paris cafes that also wounded 350 people, 99 of them seriously. Seven of the attackers blew themselves up. Police have been searching intensively for accomplices.

Iraq's Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, also told journalists in Vienna on Sunday that Iraqi intelligence agencies had obtained information that some countries would be targeted, including France, the United States and Iran, and had shared the intelligence with those countries.

Officials in the French presidential palace would not comment, and U.S. officials didn't immediately comment when contacted by The AP.

Every night, the head of French counterintelligence goes to bed asking 'why not today?' the French security official said.

The Iraqi government has been sharing intelligence with various coalition nations since they launched their airstrike campaign against the Islamic State group last year. In September, the Iraqi government also announced that it was part of an intelligence-sharing quartet with Russia, Iran and Syria for the purposes of undermining the militant group's ability to make further battlefield gains.

A third of Iraq and Syria are now part of the self-styled caliphate declared by the Islamic State group last year. U.S.-led coalitions in Iraq and Syria are providing aerial support to allied ground forces in both countries, and they are arming and training Iraqi forces. The U.S. said it is also sending as many as 50 special forces to northern Syria.

Paris attacks likely to alter US strategy on Islamic State

Gov. Charlie Baker and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren participate in moment of silence after Paris attacks

$
0
0

Hundreds gathered on Boston Common on Sunday for a moment of silence to remember the victims of Friday’s terrorist attacks on Paris. “We stand with France,” Gov. Charlie Baker told Valery Freland, the consul general of France in Boston. Watch video

BOSTON - Hundreds gathered on Boston Common on Sunday for a moment of silence to remember the victims of Friday's terrorist attacks on Paris.

"We stand with France," Gov. Charlie Baker told Valery Freland, the consul general of France in Boston, after the moment of silence at the Boston Common bandstand. "We stand with Paris. There's simply no question about that."

Both France and the U.S. have a "shared history" and both suffered "the tragedy of terrorism," Baker said.

"Vive la France," Baker added.

"All the French community is moved," Freland said.

At the Boston Common bandstand, Freland and Baker stood with U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh.

Walsh called the French people "strong" and pointed to Boston's response to the 2013 Marathon bombings.

"People thought they were going to take Boston to its knees and actually it did the opposite," Walsh said. "And that's what's going to happen in France."

After the moment of silence, Baker and other Massachusetts elected officials walked with Freland to the Lafayette Mall near Park Street MBTA Station. The mall is named after the French soldier who aided the colonists fighting the British in the American Revolutionary War.

As the elected officials walked away from the bandstand and towards Lafayette Mall, the crowd started to sing the French national anthem, "La Marseillaise."

Paul Bruemmer, a 68-year-old resident who lives in Watertown, was in the crowd with a sign with the American and French flags, and the word, "Solidarite!"

Bruemmer said he has friends in Paris who are angry and dismayed at the attacks. The Islamic State, or ISIS, has claimed responsibility.

"It has to stop," Bruemmer said.

Gallery preview 
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images