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PM News Links: India and Pakistan leaders meet at cricket match, Likely Republican presidential contender Tim Pawlenty headlining Boston Tea Party rally, and more

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With careful diplomatic scripting, India and Pakistan began talking again this week.

India Pakistan Cricket MatchPakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, left, shakes hands with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh prior to the ICC World Cup semifinal cricket match between India and Pakistan in Mohali, India, Wednesday, March 30, 2011. The prime ministers of India and Pakistan, mixing business with pleasure, joined tens of thousands of cricket fans in a northern Indian stadium Wednesday to watch a key match between their rival nations.

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Your comments: Readers react to Inspector General's findings of free health care pool abuse

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Readers react to the Mass. Inspector General's findings of abuse of the free health care pool.

health care file photo, family practice doctor APA family practice doctor at work in Seattle, Friday, Feb. 4, 2011.

The Massachusetts Inspector General told the Boston Herald that the state’s Uncompensated Care Pool spent $414 million on emergency health care for nearly 1 million claims in 2009. The expenses “included $7 million for ineligible patients, such as nonresidents; $18 million for "medically unlikely" or "medically unnecessary" claims, such the X-rays and gynecological exams; and $6 million in duplicate claims,” according to an Associated Press article.

Here is what some of our readers had to say:

Massliveuser69 says: I thought everyone in Mass was required to have health ins. How could there be an uncompensated care claim this large? Especially since non-residents aren't eligible according to the article. I guess this is all for the small % of people who take the tax penalty rather than getting insurance?

Casualobserver says: No doubt fraud exists in the private insurance world (direct between customer and insurer), but to what degree? I don't have the data, but given my experience with insurance companies I would bet it is quite low. And what makes this especially noteworthy is the fact that a large argument by those who favor universal health care is the low cost of administration. Well, perhaps the trade off is higher levels of fraud. Six of one....?

Chase718 says: Follow the money. This is not the fault of the recipients. They have no control over the claims process. They must have some people there that are responsible for checking on whether a claim is valid. I would like to know who those people are. They all should be fired immediately. To assume that private companies do not have the same fraud problems, I disagree with. They can keep all their dirt secret. They make their employees sign confidentiality agreements. The Government is answerable to the people, that is why we even know about this. Insp. Gen. Sullivan ran to the Herald to tell the story, yet I didn't see anything regarding any fraud investigations by his office. This reads a little political to me. The HHSD policing itself? Give me a break.

Player01040 says: No. Nobody ever checks. Remember that story a while back about Masshealth claims that were bogus yet still were paid? The commonwealth should try to be a little more aggressive and sue to recover the money from the bogus claims and prosecute criminally the companies/people who submitted the bogus claims in the first place. A neighbor who has Masshealth had a chronic condition and had many doctor's appointments over the course of two years. In all that time he never got a bill or statement of any kind. From anywhere. It's easy to cheat and rob when you know nobody's watching.

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Closing arguments begin in Al Bruno murder trial of Fotios and Ty Geas

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Assistant U.S. Attorney Elie Honig called the brothers "scare guys" and "proven, willing mob killers."

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NEW YORK - Jurors in an ongoing mob murder trial in Manhattan which has highlighted an "epic spasm of violence" spearheaded by western Massachusetts gangsters have begun to hear closing arguments in the case in federal court.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Elie Honig gave a two-hour summation that lasted into the early afternoon, labeling defendant Fotios "Freddy" Geas, of West Springfield and his brother Ty Geas, of Westfield as "scare guys" for onetime Springfield Genovese boss turned government witness Anthony J. Arillotta. Honig said the brothers were "proven, willing mob killers."

Later in Honig's closing, he credited the Geases with at least being "willing to do the legwork" of murder and intimidation while their co-defendant, Arthur "Artie" Nigro, the reputed onetime acting boss of the Genovese crime family did nothing but sit back, give orders and let illegal proceeds from various schemes float up.

"He made money the real mob way," Honig said of Nigro.

The Geases are accused of carrying out the 2003 contract hit against the then-southern New England Genovese boss, Adolfo "Big Al" Bruno, who died in a hail of bullets outside his regular Sunday night card game on the eve of his 58th birthday. Nigro allegedly "green-lighted" the hit after his relationship with Bruno soured; there was a dispute over a $250,000 cigarette heist, and suspicions emerged that Bruno was "a rat" when a court document emerged stating that Bruno had spoken of another made member's status with an FBI agent in 2001.

Honig also led jurors a second time through the 2003 murder of Gary Westerman, a street criminal with a long and troubled history with the Geases and Arillotta. Westerman had ducked murder plots against him twice before, witnesses said, but was not so lucky on Nov. 4 of that year.

The Geases lured Westerman to a home in Agawam with the promise of a home invasion that would yield drugs and cash. Instead, Westerman was shot, beaten and dumped in an eight-foot hole in a wooded area where they dug up his remains -- complete with ski mask and stun gun six years later -- with Arillotta's assistance.

"They killed Westerman because he posed a threat to the Genovese family," Honig said during his closing, also rejecting the defense notion that admitted Bruno shooter Frankie Roche carried out a "one-man job."

"It was for the crew ... that they had carried out a hit for an acting boss of a powerful made guy. They took out a rat," Honig said, referring to Arillotta as Nigro's "star pupil."

Honig also noted that Arillotta had told jurors to he was to kill Roche after and cut off his hands to send a false message to the public that the Genovese family could not have been involved.

That didn't happen, and Roche was very available to testify for the government in this trial.

In addition to the murders, Honig outlined four extortionate schemes Arillotta and his "scare guys" went after once they took Bruno out and Nigro was urging them to bring in more money.

The defendants immediately ramped up shake-downs of James Santaniello, wealthy owner of the Mardi Gras strip club and a vending machine business in 2004, according to testimony.

The defendants face life in prison if convicted. Defense lawyers are expected to deliver three separate closing arguments through the afternoon in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. The case will likely be in the jury's hands Thursday morning.

Immigration authorities once again deny applications from same-sex couples

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A spokesman for the U.S. Citizenship and Services agency, said a law prohibiting the government from recognizing same sex marriages must be followed, despite the Obama administration’s decision to stop defending the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act.

WASHINGTON – After a brief reprieve, immigration authorities are once again denying applications for immigration benefits for same sex couples following a legal review.

Chris Bentley, a spokesman for the U.S. Citizenship and Services agency, said Wednesday that a review by lawyers from the Department of Homeland Security, it was concluded that a law prohibiting the government from recognizing same sex marriages must be followed, despite the Obama administration’s decision to stop defending the constitutionality of the law in court.

The law, the Defense of Marriage Act, defines marriage as being between a man and a woman.

Earlier this week, USCIS announced that applications from foreigners married to a U.S. citizen of the same sex would be held in “abeyance“ while the legal review proceeded. Bentley said Tuesday that the temporary hold on application decisions was not a change in policy.

In February, Attorney General Eric Holder announcement that the government would no longer defend the law, which gay rights activists have said is discriminatory.

Bob Deasy, of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said the latest ruling is a “disappointment.“

“The administration has the authority to put these cases on hold“ while the fate of the marriage law is decided in court, he said.

Holder’s announcement appears to have already had an impact on at least one immigration case.

Earlier this month a New York-based immigration judge decided to postpone a deportation order against an Argentine lesbian married to a U.S. citizen.

Following the ruling to adjourn the case until December, Monica Alcota’s lawyer, Noemi Masliah, praised the judge’s decision.

“The right thing to do, and this judge did do the right thing, is to adjourn this case and see what happens down the road,” Masliah said. “Given that the law is so up in the air ... it’s hard to enforce at this point in a negative way.“

Wednesday’s announcement did not have any immediate impact on Alcota’s case.

Obituaries today: David Laduzenski was mechanical engineer at Project Insight in Acton

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Obituaries from The Republican.

03_30_11_LaduzenskiCOLOR.jpgDavid Laduzenski

David Laduzenski, of Somerville, died Saturday. He was born in Springfield, attended West Springfield schools and graduated in 2000 from West Springfield High School, where he was a member of the swim team, setting records in breaststroke, and a charismatic drummer in the school band. He also was a member of the Screaming Terriers Jazz Ensemble and competed as a member of the Westfield Y Waves swim team. He graduated from Northeastern University in 2005 with a degree in mechanical engineering. He was currently employed as a mechanical engineer at Project Insight in Acton and worked evenings at AKA, a technology company, in Cambridge.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Former Springfield firefighter Angel Rosario gets year in jail for witness intimidation

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Judge Daniel ordered Rosario to be placed on probation for two years after the completion of his sentence.

Angel Rosario 2008.jpgAngel M. Rosario

SPRINGFIELD - A former Springfield firefighter was sentenced Wednesday to serve a year in jail after a Hampden Superior Court jury found him guilty last week on a charge of intimidating a witness.

Judge Daniel A. Ford sentenced Angel M. Rosario, who was a firefighter for 12 years until his lost his job while held in jail after being arrested in this case, to two years in the Hampshire County Correctional Center.

Ford ordered one year to be served and the other year suspended with two years probation.

Defense lawyer Vincent A. Bongiorni asked Ford to sentence Rosario to the Hampshire County facility because the brother of the victim in the case, Joseph Alvarado, is a correctional officer at the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow.

Bongiorni asked Ford to sentence Rosario to probation, saying the 2-3 minutes of Rosario’s behavior that resulted in the conviction should not outweight the rest of his client’s life.

He said Rosario, 46, of Springfield served in the military for his country then as a firefighter for the city, all the while raising a daughter as a single parent.

Assistant District Attorney Matthew J. Shea asked Ford to sentence Rosario to two to three years in state prison, saying the nature of the crime of intimidation of a witness goes to the very heart of the justice system.

He said Rosario intimidated Alvarado in the courthouse, right in front of a court officer.

The jury last week acquitted Rosario of armed assault with intent to murder, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury and threat to commit a crime.

He was accused of stabbing Alvarado, 48, of Springfield, outside Allen Park Road Apartments on July 11, 2008.

Defense lawyer Vincent A. Bongiorni had argued Alvarado, who has a number of convictions for drug crimes and acts of violence, was the aggressor in the July 2008 incident.

The intimidation of a witness charge was brought after Alvarado was in the hallway of District Court on an unrelated matter when Rosario spotted him, making a shooting gesture with his finger.

Rosario was in the courthouse to check in with a probation officer as required by his pre-trial bail conditions in the case stemming from the July 11, 2008, incident at Allen Park Road apartments.

Alvarado was being brought into a courtroom through the hall on a case in which he was charged with shooting at Angela Perez’ car as she drove it.

On Wednesday Alvarado gave a victim impact statement saying he wanted Ford to sentence Rosario to the maximum penalty allowed by law.

He said, “To the defendant I say, walk in the shadow of darkness for your deceit, betrayals and convictions. I shall take the high road and continue to walk in the light and blessings of the Lord for he is the ultimate judge and jury.”

Testimony at the trial showed Rosario started seeing Angela Perez while Alvarado, father of two of her children, was in prison for three years on a cocaine dealing charge.

On the night of July 11, 2008, Perez had twice called police on Alvarado, but he left before police arrived. It was the next morning when Alvarado was coming back to Perez’ apartment the incident occured between Alvarado, Rosario and another man that gave rise to the assault charges against Rosario of which he was acquitted.

Contrada: Taking a step back from the controversial South Hadley High School trip to Phoebe Prince's home country of Ireland

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The Phoebe Prince story continues to lay waste to all in its path, like Gen. William T. Sherman’s march to the sea in the American Civil War.

viens_carousel.jpgMembers of the "Count Me In" volunteer group are, from left, Michael L. Brouillette of Holyoke, Tanya L. Kopec of South Hadley and Stephanie A. Viens of Belchertown. Viens has been criticized for leading a school trip to Ireland.

Let’s see if we can get this straight. Some students from South Hadley High School have planned a school trip to Ireland and this is – international news?

Let’s color in the nuances.

South Hadley High School is where 15-year-old Phoebe Prince was studying as a freshman when she hanged herself in January 2010. Since her suicide, which followed a period of harassment by a few classmates, Prince has become the world-wide symbol for bullying and its victims.

Her appeal is undeniable. She was pretty, young, vivacious and vulnerable. Newly arrived from her native Ireland, she has a special place in the hearts of the Irish.

Six former South Hadley High School students have been charged with felonies in connection with Prince’s treatment, although not all the details have been spelled out. They are long gone from the school, having either withdrawn or been suspended.

As far as we know, no other students or, for that matter, school officials, have been charged with any crimes. It should also be pointed out that those who are charged have not yet been convicted, although in the arena of public opinion some already have them in orange jumpsuits and, in the cases of the two male students charged with statutory rape, jail-raped for poetic justice.

Now it has come to light that some students at South Hadley High are going to Ireland in April, a class trip that was planned before Prince killed herself, and the juggernaut that is the Phoebe Prince story continues to lay waste to all in its path like Gen. William T. Sherman’s march to the sea in the American Civil War.

As far as I can tell, the story had its genesis in the March 13 issue of The Sunday Independent, an Irish newspaper. According to reporter Donal Lynch, the trip is being seen as “yet another example of lessons not learned in the 14 months since the 15-year-old tragically took her own life.”

It’s unclear in the story who is doing this seeing.

Lynch quotes a single, unnamed parent at what is apparently South Hadley High School saying, “What kind of welcome do they imagine they are going to get in Ireland?”

The unnamed parent cites a federal investigation of the school that no one seems able to verify and adds, “They are now using school funds to travel thousands of miles to where the parents of the girl live. Are they trying to provoke them or something?”

It is pointed out in the story that Shannon Airport in Dublin, where the plane will land, is less than an hour’s drive from the house where Prince once lived and that the students might have the nerve to visit Oxford, England, where Prince’s father Jeremy studied.

A next day story on IrishCentral.com reported that Prince’s relatives were “shocked at yet another callous decision by the school authorities,” and we were off to the races.

The abominable class trip went viral. It was even reported that, if you can believe this, a teacher who has “come under fire for a perceived lack of support for Phoebe Prince,” is leading the trip to Ireland.

This teacher has already been identified in news accounts as the person referred to by Jeremy Prince as someone the family believes spread untruths about Phoebe on the Internet. In voicing his displeasure to a television reporter, however, Prince did not mention the teacher by name, saying he had no proof of this. She has been laid waste, anyway.

By the way, it’s also unclear which of Prince’s relatives are “shocked” by the “callous decision” to go ahead with the school trip, since both Jeremy Prince and Eileen Moore, Phoebe’s aunt, have publicly appealed to the Irish to give the South Hadley school kids a break.

A group of protesters is planning to be there at the airport when the plane lands, nonetheless. More laying waste will undoubtedly ensue.


Fred Contrada is a staff writer with The Republican. He can be reached at fcontrada@repub.com.

Springfield teen Naim Mafuz, Sabis student critically hurt in car crash, keeps faith

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Two upcoming fund-raisers are planned to help Mafuz, who is hopeful about the future.

naim mafuz.JPGNaim Mafuz in his home on Allen Park Road in Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD – From his bedside, 19-year-old Naim Mafuz is hopeful for the future.

Nearly a year ago, he missed attending his graduation from Sabis International Charter School; he was in critical condition at Baystate Medical Center, one of two Sabis students injured in a horrific car accident en route home from their senior prom on June 1.

Mafuz suffered major head trauma and is still in the process of recovery.

The accident in the city’s East Forest Park neighborhood drew an outpouring of support for the school and its soon-to-be 2010 graduates; a senior class awards event turned into a impromptu prayer service.

Police said excessive speed was to blame for the accident that occurred on Sumner Avenue near Allen Street and Harkness Avenue. There was no evidence that alcohol was involved.

Today, friends, family and community groups are raising funds to help Mafuz with the costs of his rehabilitation. Part of the effort is also aimed at purchasing a mobilized chair that will help make his home more accessible for Mafuz.

Upcoming fund-raisers include an afternoon rollerskating party at Interskate 91 in Wilbraham on Sunday and the 15th annual Having a Ball, Keeping the Faith dinner and auction set for April 15 at Oak Ridge Country Club in Agawam.

“I’m really excited,” Mafuz said of the fund-raising efforts on his behalf. “I hope they do good.”

Although he’s unable to walk and has limited mobility, Mafuz says he is helped by his faith and “good friends.”

One of those friends is Kasey Callendar, who was in the car with him on the night of the accident.

“It makes me feel happy. It’s the least I can do,” said Callendar of his contributions in the fund-raising efforts. “Naim is my best friend.”

Callendar, 19, is studying business at Holyoke Community College. He suffered a serious leg injury in the crash.

“I still have my tweaks and what not, but I’m good,” Callendar said of his recovery. “It’s nothing I can’t deal with.”

Mafuz, who was a passenger in the car that rolled over and hit a tree, says, “Faith has helped me a lot. I always had good faith, and I still have good faith.”

He’s hopeful that he will one day attend Fairfield University in Connecticut, where he had been awarded a full scholarship. The scholarship is being held for him whenever he is able to go to school.

“My drive is to become a writer,” Mafuz said. “I want to do sports writing.” Don’t ask him about the Boston Red Sox, though; “No, no, no,” he said. “I’m a Giants and Yankees fan.”

Calling “sleep time” the favorite part of his day, Mafuz enjoys attending art therapy sessions. “We sit and talk and do some art,” he said.

“His progress has been great since the accident,” said Connie Mafuz, his paternal grandmother and guardian. “The doctors at Baystate (Medical Center) call him the ‘miracle boy’.”

Financial stress, though, is providing a roadblock in the continuation of his progress, his grandmother said.

“Right now he’s not doing too well because Medicaid cut his therapy,” she said. “He only has 20 more hours left of therapy.”

“I don’t have any money, and everything is gone. Medicaid won’t pay any more,” she said. “He’s at a level right now where they don’t see any more progress.”

Mafuz’s grandmother still holds hope for the future and his recovery, though. “He couldn’t move his hands or feet after the accident, but as days went by he did,” she said. “He can’t walk yet because he has tremors. Doctors say it will take a couple years until that happens. He has short-term memory loss, but gradually it’s getting better.”

Mafuz said her grandson needs a “Step Glider” mobilized chair, the cost of which she approximates at $12,000. The chair will help him get up and downstairs in their home.

“I turned the living room into his bedroom because he can’t come upstairs,” she said. “There’s no privacy. I have to ask people to leave the room when he needs to be changed.”

In spite of hardships, “Naim makes you laugh,” his grandmother said. “He has a good sense of humor but due to medication he sometimes behaves aggressively.”

She is thankful each day for the help her family has received from friends. “I have never experienced anything like this,” she said. “Everyone has been so caring and helpful. It’s indescribable. I have a lot of gratitude for everybody.”

Having a Ball Keeping the Faith is a non-profit group with 15 community volunteers who have been assisting disabled and disadvantaged individuals since 1997.

Barbara Callendar, Kasey’s mother, is the organization’s president and Johnnie Johnson the treasurer.

“It’s a great to help somebody,” Johnson said of the organization’s annual benefit. “It’s a wonderful cause. We do it for someone who really needs something.”


UMass Amherst campus could become smoke-free in 2 years

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The smoke-free policy is similar the policies that have been adopted at more than 466 colleges and universities across the country.

WEBLEY.JPGUniversity of Massachusetts professor Wilmore C. Webley is a proponent of a smoke-free campus.

AMHERST - Smoking on campus at the University of Massachusetts could go the way of the Pontiac if the Faculty Senate adopts a proposal next week to make the campus smoke free beginning July 1, 2013.

UMass spokesman Daniel J. Fitzgibbons said the Faculty Senate Health Council supported a draft proposal March 11. The council will be presenting the report to the Faculty Senate April 7.

The Campus Leadership Council, comprised of the University of Massachusetts Chancellor Robert C. Holub and other top executives approved the proposal Monday, said professor Wilmore C. Webley who has been leading the campaign to make the campus smoke free. He is a member of the health council and presented the report to the leadership council along with Medical Director Alan J. Calhoun.

Webley teachers a class called “Biology of Cancer and AIDS” and has repeatedly conducted smoking surveys among students. He said students are overwhelmingly in support of the proposal as well.

UMass banned smoking in buildings 26 years ago.

“They’ve been talking about (expanding) it for a while,” Fitzgibbons said. The two year gap from adoption to implementation allows time for campus education. “They’re really hoping to do a big educational campaign beforehand.. to encourage smoking cessation program. To get people to embrace the whole issue, to get people to quit,” Fitzgibbons said.

All tobacco products would be banned, he said including smokeless tobacco. This would apply to anyone coming on campus including, staff, faculty, contractors and visitors and include parking lots, athletic events among others.

The policy is similar the policies that have been adopted at more than 466 colleges and universities across the country including at the universities of Florida, Kentucky, Oregon and Michigan.

Webley said UMass Worcester Medical School is smoke free as is Salem State College and Cape Cod Community College.

Webley said surveys taken in class show that just 14 percent of students smoke compared to about 21 percent several years ago.

He said students support the policy change, though, provided there is help for those who still smoke

“This is very exciting for me. If we’re going to train young people to go out and do great things ...we want them to be healthy we want them to be around as long as possible for them to do what we train them to do.”

Biology professor Tobais Baskin and chairman of the Health Council will present the report. He believes the Faculty Senate will approve it. “I think it’s the right time. In 10 years, every campus in the nation will be tobacco free. Do we want to be a leader or a follower,” he said.



Wall Street rallies following report that companies are adding workers

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The Dow Jones industrial average gained nearly 72 points.

Family Dollar 33011.jpgSharon Sexton of Waco, Texas, attempts to locate a baking item to match a coupon she clipped from her local newspaper at the Family Dollar store, in Waco, Texas, late last year. Family Dollar Stores Inc. reported Tuesday that its fiscal second-quarter net income rose 10 percent, helped by better traffic and a modest improvement in the value of the average customer transaction.

NEW YORK — Telecommunications companies led a broad stock rally Wednesday following a report that private companies are continuing to add workers.

All ten sectors of the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index rose. AT&T Inc. led the 30 stocks that make up the Dow Jones industrial average with a 2.2 percent gain.

The Dow gained 71.60 points, or 0.6 percent, to 12,350.61. The S&P index rose 8.82, or 0.7 percent, to 1,328.26. The Nasdaq composite rose 19.90, or 0.7 percent, to 2,776.79.

The ADP National Employment Report said 201,000 new private sector jobs were added in March. That is roughly in line with the 210,000 analysts had expected. Investors were encouraged by a strong gain in small business hiring, said Ryan Detrick, a strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research.

The report showed "that things are not as bleak as they seemed a few weeks ago," Detrick said.

The ADP report is seen as a precursor to the government's March payrolls report due Friday, but the two reports don't always paint the same picture of the overall labor market.

Cephalon Inc. surged 28 percent, the most of any stock in the S&P index, after Valeant Pharmaceuticals International offered to take over the biopharmaceutical company for $5.7 billion in cash. Valeant, based in Canada, rose 12 percent. The takeover bid is the latest in a string of deal-related news, another positive sign for investors.

"It shows that companies still think there are some good deals out there," said Detrick. "If they are willing to pay a premium, that's a good sign for the overall stock market."

The market plodded higher against a backdrop of unsettling international news. Concerns about European debt loomed as Portugal moved closer to needing a bailout and Spain's central bank forecast a lower growth rate and higher deficit than previously predicted.

Seawater near Japan's crippled nuclear facility tested at its highest radiation levels yet and the plant's owner publicly acknowledged that four of six nuclear reactors would have to be decommissioned. In Libya, NATO forces initiated a new wave of airstrikes against Gadhafi's troops.

Asset manager BlackRock Inc. gained 6.6 percent after Standard & Poor's said the company will replace Genzyme Corp in the S&P 500 index after the close of trading on Friday.

PPG Industries Inc. gained 5.9 percent after the industrial chemical company announced that its income forecast was well above Wall Street expectations.

Three stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume came to 3.9 billion shares.

Lynn Rivera of Springfield arrested after Springfield police spot her pushing baby carriage loaded with stolen power tools

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"Officers did a double take when the baby she was pushing resembled a power saw and a compressor," said police Sgt. John Delaney,



330lynnrivera.jpgLynn Rivera


SPRINGFIELD - A 26-year-old White Street resident was arrested Wednesday morning when police spotted her on Allen Street pushing a baby carriage loaded with what turned out to be stolen tools, police said.

"Officers did a double take when the baby she was pushing resembled a power saw and a compressor," said police Sgt. John Delaney, spokesman for police commissioner William J. Fitchet.

The tools, including two power saws and an air compressor, had apparently been stolen from a garage that had been broken into on Allen Street, Delaney said.

Lynn Rivera, 26, of 46 White St. was arrested and charged with receiving stolen property, he said.

When officers Troy Hufnagle and James Kelly asked Rivera where she got the tools, she told them she found them sitting in the stroller and decided to bring them home.

She denied the charges at her arraignment Wednesday in Springfield District Court. She was ordered held in lieu of $2,500 bail and is due back in court for a pre-trial conference on April 7.


Moammar Gadhafi's forces adapt to airstrikes, pound Libyan rebels

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Gadhafi's forces recaptured a strategic oil town and moved within striking distance of another major eastern city, nearly reversing the gains rebels made since international airstrikes began.

033011 libyan rebels.jpgLibyan rebels in a car and a truck with a mounted weapons system leave Ras Lanouf, Libya, Wednesday, March 30, 2011. Moammar Gadhafi's ground forces recaptured a strategic oil town Wednesday and were close to taking a second, making new inroads in beating back a rebel advance toward the capital Tripoli. The writing on the truck, in Arabic, reads: " Misrata is still free." (AP Photo)

By RYAN LUCAS

AJDABIYA, Libya — Moammar Gadhafi's ground forces recaptured a strategic oil town Wednesday and moved within striking distance of another major eastern city, nearly reversing the gains rebels made since international airstrikes began. Rebels pleaded for more help, while a U.S. official said government forces are making themselves harder to target by using civilian "battle wagons" with makeshift armaments instead of tanks.

Western powers kept up the pressure to force Gadhafi out with new airstrikes in other parts of Libya, hints that they may arm the opposition and intense negotiations behind the scenes to find a country to give haven to Libya's leader of more than 40 years.

Airstrikes have neutralized Gadhafi's air force and pounded his army, but his ground forces remain far better armed, trained and organized than the opposition.

The shift in momentum back to the government's side is hardening a U.S. view that the poorly equipped opposition is probably incapable of prevailing without decisive Western intervention — either an all-out U.S.-led military assault on regime forces or a decision to arm the rebels.

In Washington, congressional Republicans and Democrats peppered senior administration officials with questions about how long the U.S. will be involved in Libya, the costs of the operation and whether foreign countries will arm the rebels.

NATO is in the process of taking over control of the airstrikes, which began as a U.S.-led operation. Diplomats said they have given approval for the commander of the NATO operation, Canadian Gen. Charles Bouchard, to announce a handover on Thursday.

Gadhafi's forces have adopted a new tactic in light of the pounding airstrikes have given their tanks and armored vehicles, a senior U.S. intelligence official said. They've left some of those weapons behind in favor of a "gaggle" of "battle wagons": minivans, sedans and SUVs fitted with weapons, said the official, who spoke anonymously in order to discuss sensitive U.S. intelligence on the condition and capabilities of rebel and regime forces. Rebel fighters also said Gadhafi's troops were increasingly using civilian vehicles in battle.

The change not only makes it harder to distinguish Gadhafi's forces from the rebels, it also requires less logistical support, the official said.

The official said airstrikes have degraded Gadhafi's forces since they were launched March 19, but the regime forces still outmatch those of the opposition "by far," and few members of Gadhafi's military have defected lately.

The disparity was obvious as government forces pushed back rebels about 100 miles (160 kilometers) in just two days. The rebels had been closing in on the strategic city of Sirte, Gadhafi's hometown and a bastion of support for the longtime leader, but under heavy shelling they retreated from Bin Jawwad on Tuesday and from the oil port of Ras Lanouf on Wednesday.

Gadhafi's forces were shelling Brega, another important oil city east of Ras Lanouf. East of the city in Ajdabiya, where many rebels had regrouped, Col. Abdullah Hadi said he expected the loyalists to enter Brega by Wednesday night.

"I ask NATO for just one aircraft to push them back. All we need is air cover and we could do this. They should be helping us," Hadi said.

Gadhafi's forces also have laid land mines in the eastern outskirts of Adjabiya, an area they held from March 17 until Saturday, when airstrikes drove them west, according to Human Rights Watch.

The New York-based group cited the electricity director for eastern Libya, Abdal Minam al-Shanti, who said two anti-personnel mines detonated when a truck ran over them, but no one was hurt. Al-Shanti said a civil defense team found and disarmed more than 50 mines in what Human Rights Watch described as a heavily traveled area.

NATO planes flew over the zone where the heaviest fighting was under way earlier Wednesday and an Associated Press reporter at the scene heard explosions, but it was unclear whether any airstrikes hit the area. U.S. Marine Corps Capt. Clint Gebke, a spokesman for the NATO operation aboard the USS Mount Whitney, said he could not confirm any specific strikes but that Western aircraft were engaging pro-Gadhafi forces in areas including Sirte and Misrata, the rebels' last significant holdout in western Libya.

The retreat Wednesday looked like a mad scramble: Pickup trucks, with mattresses and boxes tied on, driving east at 100 mph (160 kilometers per hour).

And as the fighting approached Ajdabiya, residents there made an exodus of their own. The road to the rebels' de-facto capital, Benghazi, was packed with vehicles, most of them full of families and their belongings. Streets on the western side of Ajdabiya were deserted and silent.

Rebel military spokesman Col. Ahmed Bani said the rebels had made a "tactical retreat" to Ajdabiya and will set up defensive positions there. "Even with courage and determination, the forces need power to be able to fight back," he said.

Bani said he heard from three sources, including one in Chad, that 3,200 to 3,600 heavily armed members of the Chadian presidential guard were marching from Sirte toward Ajdabiya. The report could not be independently confirmed.

As Gadhafi's forces push rebels toward Benghazi, some 140 miles (220 kilometers) northeast of Brega, pressure is growing for NATO members and other supporters of the air campaign to do more.

Prime Minister David Cameron said Britain believes a legal loophole could allow nations to supply weapons to Libya's rebels — but stressed the U.K. has not decided whether it will offer assistance to the rebels.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Tuesday that Washington also believes it would be legal to give the rebels weapons. Asked whether the U.S. would do so, President Barack Obama told NBC, "I'm not ruling it out, but I'm also not ruling it in."

NATO officials and diplomats said the alliance had not considered arming the rebels. Any alliance involvement would require support from all 28 members, a difficult task, and an alliance official who could not be named under standing regulations said NATO "wouldn't even consider doing anything else" without a new U.N. resolution.

China, Russia and Germany oppose supplying weapons to the rebels, and France, one of the strongest backers of international intervention in Libya, agreed with NATO that a new U.N. resolution would be required.

Under the U.N. resolution authorizing necessary measures to protect civilians, nations supplying weapons would need to be satisfied they would be used only to defend civilians — not to take the offensive to Gadhafi's forces.

Chinese President Hu Jintao said the operation already had gone too far. He called for an immediate cease-fire and admonished French President Nicolas Sarkozy at a diplomatic meeting in Beijing. Hu called for peaceful efforts to restore stability, expressed China's concern that Libya may end up divided and said force would complicate a negotiated settlement.

Diplomats were attempting to persuade Gadhafi to leave without military force.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said negotiations on securing Gadhafi's exit were being conducted with "absolute discretion" and that there were options on the table that hadn't yet been formalized.

"What is indispensable is that there be countries that are willing to welcome Gadhafi and his family, obviously to end this situation which otherwise could go on for some time," he said. But the Italian diplomat insisted immunity for Gadhafi was not an option.

Libyan Foreign Minister Moussa Koussa left Tunisia for London after a two-day visit shrouded in secrecy, Tunisia's official news agency said. The report did not say why, and a spokesman for Cameron's Downing Street office said the report was "the first I've heard of it."

Uganda became the first country to publicly offer Gadhafi refuge. The spokesman for Uganda's president, Tamale Mirundi, told the AP on Wednesday that he would be welcome there.

Gadhafi has shown no public sign he might leave power, vowing to fight until the end. His forces were continuing to besiege Misrata, the rebels' main western holdout.

An activist in Misrata said there have been power outages, and water service was cut off so residents must rely on wells, but the biggest problem was a lack of medical supplies such as anesthesia and sterilizers, along with diapers and baby formula. Four people in the town were killed Tuesday, the activist said.

Libyan officials took journalists to the home of a family who said their 18-month-old son was killed in an airstrike Tuesday morning against an ammunition dump in the mountain village of Ghiryan, 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Tripoli. They say their home was hit by a stray missile when the dump was hit.

Their account could not be independently confirmed, but U.S. and European officials have said strikes had been carried out in the area.

British and other diplomats were involved in negotiations with the rebel leadership in Benghazi. Cameron's spokesman Steve Field said it was partly to gauge if the opposition would be trustworthy allies — "learning more about their intentions."

NATO's top commander, U.S. Navy Adm. James Stavridis, has said officials have seen "flickers" of possible al-Qaida and Hezbollah involvement with the rebel forces. Bani, the rebel military spokesman, dismissed accusations that al-Qaida elements are fighting with the rebels.

"If there are elements that were with al-Qaida in the past and they are now in Libya, they are now fighting for Libya, not for al-Qaida," he said, emphasizing the word "if."

Associated Press writers Ben Hubbard in Benghazi, Hadeel al-Shalchi in Tripoli, Robert Burns in Washington, David Stringer in London, Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Angela Charlton in Paris, Godfrey Olukya in Kampala, Uganda, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

Chad Blackak of Agawam pepper-sprayed by Springfield police during downtown disturbance outside Theodore's

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Police were called to Theodore's on Worthington Street in downtown Springfield for a report that a bartender had been punched by a drunken patron.

330chadblackakcrop.jpgChad Blackak

SPRINGFIELD - Police had to use pepper spray on a 39-year-old Agawam man who created a disturbance and assaulted a female bartender late Tuesday at Theodore's on Worthington Street, police said.

Chad Blackak of 76 Monroe St., Agawam, was charged with assault and battery, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and two counts of assault and battery on a police officer, said police Sgt. John Delaney, spokesman for Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet.

Police were called to Theodore's, 201 Worthington St. at about 11:30 p.m. for a report that a bartender had been punched by a drunken patron, Delaney said.

The bartender, whose name was not disclosed, told police she was trying to escort Blackak out of the bar when he turned and punched her in the face. She suffered a fat lip but declined medical attention, Delaney said.

She told police Blackak had not been at the bar that night but only wandered in moments earlier. She said Blackak walked up to her and asked her for a gun because there were people outside who were bothering him, Delaney said.

When officers Matthew Vickery and Daniel Billingsley tried to talk with Blackak, he was not cooperative and began to assault them, Delaney said. The officers used pepper spray to subdue him and take him into custody.

Blackak denied the charges at his district court arraignment Wednesday. He was released on his own recognizance and ordered to appear in court for a pre-trial conference on May 4.

Michael O'Rourke elected Ludlow assessor on write-in campaign

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There was no candidate on the ballot for the position.

LUDLOW – Michael O’Rourke was elected to the Board of Assessors in Monday’s town election on a write-in campaign.

There was no candidate on the ballot for the position.

O’Rourke received 140 write-in votes, to 88 for Teresa Chaves and 11 for Edward Mazur.

Voter turnout in Monday’s town election was 16 percent, or 2,036 of 13,087 registered voters.

Michael Carey, Laura Lacey of Montague arrested on drug charges after leading state police on chase from Holyoke to Sunderland

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State police found a bag containing crack cocaine, syringes and some heroin resident that was tossed from the vehicle during the chase.


SUNDERLAND - Two Montague residents were arrested early Wednesday and charged with possession of heroin and crack cocaine after leading state police on a 25-mile chase that began on Interstate 91 in Holyoke.

Michael D. Carey, 36, and Laura J. Lacey, 37, both of Montague, were taken into custody in Sunderland where Deerfield police used a Stop Stick to blow out their vehicle's right front tire, said State Police spokesman David Procopio. The vehicle continued to drive for about a mile on the rim after the tire blew out, he said.

Each was charged with possession of heroin and crack cocaine. Carey was also charged with failure to stop for police, negligent operation of a motor vehicle, driving with a suspended license, residing arrest, failure to stop for a red light, failure to use turn signals, speeding and two counts of having defective motor vehicle equipment.

State police attempted to pull Carey over on I-91 in Holyoke at about 1:30 a.m. because his Chevrolet Trailblazer had visible equipment violations.

The vehicle refused to stop, and at one point swerved into the breakdown lane when the trooper in pursuit saw something being thrown from the passenger window into the woods, Procopio said.

State Police later searched the area and found a bag containing a large chunk of crack cocaine, some hypodermic needles and bags that had residue believed to be heroin, he said.

The chase continued north to exit 18 where the Trailblazer drove over the Coolidge Bridge into Hadley, and then north on Route 47 toward Sunderland.

State police were assisted by police in Deerfield, Hadley and Sunderland, Procopio said.

Carey and Lucey were taken to the state police barracks in Northampton for booking, he said.

View State police chase from Holyoke to Sunderland in a larger map


Preliminary screening underway for Westfield school superintendent applicants

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Preliminary screening is being held in executive session; the school committee will select finalists.

WESTFIELD – A screening committee has begun work reviewing applicants for superintendent of schools and is expected to submit recommendations to the School Committee within two weeks.

The committee began its review earlier this week and will continue the process at a meeting scheduled for Thursday, School Committee member Laura K. Maloney said. Maloney serves as School Committee liaison to the superintendent search process.

“We are looking at the information provided by candidates in hopes of identifying those who have the potential to serve as superintendent here,” said Maloney.

Preliminary screening of applicants is being held in executive session, she said.

“The School Committee will select finalists for the position and the screening committee will submit names of several applicants for consideration to move to the interview process,” Maloney explained.

Superintendent Shirley Alvira announced last year her plans to retire in July, after four years as superintendent here. She currently earns $135,450.

The School Committee listed a salary range of $130,000 to $165,000 when it posted the position earlier this year. That is comparable to salary postings for new superintendents throughout the state. The salary range posted last year as part of West Springfield’s superintendent search was $125,000 to $145,000 annually and ranges posted by 16 communities across the state currently seeking applicants spread from $120,000 to $190,000.

“We expect to forward our recommendations by early April,” said Maloney, explaining 19 applications are under review.

The School Committee is expected to select more than two candidates for consideration, she said.

The School Committee recently completed public forums concerning characteristics and qualities Westfield’s new superintendent should have. The consensus is that he or she must be a visionary with budget experience, have ability to build staff and community support and be flexible in advancing Westfield’s public school system.

Screening committee members are: Westfield High School principal Raymond K. Broderick; Fort Meadow School principal Erin Fahey-Carrier; Westfield Education Association president Lori A. Hovey, WEA unit representatives Janet Snow, Sheila Conroy and Geana Delisle; parents Police Capt. Michael A. McCabe and Southampton Road School Parent-Teacher Organization president Ramon Diaz Jr.; and community representative Bette Babinski.

Prosecutor's closing argument in Al Bruno murder trial: Geas brothers, Artie Nigro involved in 'epic spasm of violence'

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Defense lawyers said the prosecution's prime witnesses were government cooperators who admitted to murder and other misdeeds in exchange for lighter prison sentences.

FotiosTyGeas.jpgFotios Geas, left, and his brother, Ty, are on trial in New York for the slayings of former mob boss Adolfo 'Big Al' Bruno and ex-convict Gary Westerman.

Updates a story posted Wednesday at 3:15 p.m.


NEW YORK - Lawyers for three defendants accused in an organized crime murder and racketeering case in lower Manhattan took their parting shots at the prosecution's prime witnesses: government cooperators who admitted to murder and other misdeeds on the stand in exchange for lighter prison sentences.

Standing trial are jailed Western Massachusetts alleged mob enforcers Fotios "Freddy" Geas, of West Springfield, Mass., and his brother Ty Geas, of Westfield, Mass., along with Arthur "Artie" Nigro, of Bronx, N.Y., the reputed onetime New York Genovese crime family boss. They stand accused of the 2003 murder plot against Springfield, Mass.,Genovese boss Adolfo "Big Al" Bruno, the attempted murder of a union boss the same year and a series of extortion attempts from Springfield to Hartford, Conn., and Manhattan.
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In his closing argument, Assistant U.S. Attorney Elie Honig told jurors that the defendants made their marks in the mob world through "an epic spasm of violence" that peaked in 2003, when the Geases and two other mobsters shot, bludgeoned and buried street criminal Gary D. Westerman in an eight-foot grave in Agawam, Mass.

The defense's prime target during closing arguments on Wednesday was Anthony J. Arillotta, of Springfield, Mass., a made man in the Genovese family and onetime sponsor of the non-Italian Geas brothers into the inner circle of the Mafia. Arillotta turned cooperating witness immediately after his arrest in 2010, and spent days on the witness stand telling the panel of a startling array of violence including the murder of Westerman in 2003, who had recently married Arillotta's wife's sister.

In a particularly cringe-inducing moment on the witness stand, Arillotta admitted he had sex with his sister-in-law on two occasions when he and his wife were "separated."

Bobbi Sternheim, a lawyer for Ty Geas, suggested Arillotta was jealous that Westerman had married the woman.

Arilllotta testifed that he, the Geases and a fourth man, Emilio Fusco, killed Westerman on Nov. 4, 2003, because they learned he was a police informant.

Frederick H. Cohn, a lawyer for Freddy Geas, said the notion that he client was part of the mob think tank plotting murders was "a bunch of nonsense," and that Bruno shooter Frankie Roche, who testified the Geases put him up to shooting Bruno, was "impulsive, nuts and proud of it."

Of Arillotta and Roche, Cohn told jurors: "Those slime bags who testified, they have no loyalty. They sell out their wives, their children ... you can't convict because of a general feeling of badness," Cohn said.

The defendants face life in prison if convicted on any of the murder counts.

The judge is expected to give jurors their instructions by late morning on Thursday and the panel will begin deliberations sometime Thursday.

Westfield planning new development at closed Whip City Speedway

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The property sits on Barnes Municipal Airport land; Westfield is willing to purchase the remaining 2 years of the speedway's lease.

whip city speedway.jpgAerial view of Whip City Speedway in Westfield.

WESTFIELDWhip City Speedway, which has hosted summer motor vehicle racing since 1995, has closed, and city officials are preparing a development plan to attract aviation-related business to the site.

The closing of the quarter-mile dirt track was announced Wednesday through its website and by co-owner David H. Pighetti.

“Westfield is interested in buying him (Pighetti) out of the remaining two years on his lease with the city,” said Westfield Advancement Officer Jeffrey R. Daley.

“This is a vital piece of land, and the city wants to create a development plan for that parcel,” Daley said.

The multi-year lease is with the city’s Airport Commission, and Barnes Municipal Airport manager Brian P. Barnes said “it is sad to see the raceway go, but the commission favors not renewing the lease."

“The city is interested in buying the remaining years of the lease and then proceed with additional aviation-related development there,” Barnes explained.

Commission chairman Gary M. Francis agreed.

City officials noted that the raceway sits on airport land adjacent to runway perimeter fencing just off North Road-Route 202.

“We are looking to change our (airport) entry way and redevelop the property to enhance Barnes Municipal Airport,” Barnes said.

Two large aviation firms, General Dynamics Aviation Services and Gulfstream Aerospace, are located near the speedway on Elise Street.

073104 whip city speedway racing.JPGDrivers make the turn around the dirt track in a qualifying heat in the 1200cc Division at the Whip City Speedway.

The speedway had been home to racers of Mini-Sprints, Quad-4 Midgets, Modified Lites, go-karts and other racing classes since it opened in 1995.

Pighetti said options aimed at keeping the speedway open, under different ownership among racing enthusiasts, are being considered.

Attendance and competitors have dwindled in recent years, but the track has “always showed a bit of profit,” the owner said.

But Daley said the city plans to initiate negotiations to purchase the lease back from track owners.

Staff reporter Jason Remillard contributed to this report.

OSHA probes death of Jimi Lee Gibb, 24, fatally injured in fall while clearing snow from roof of former Asylum nightclub

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The employer of the fatally-injured man failed to report the accident to OSHA, its area director said.

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SPRINGFIELD – The federal Occupational Safety & Health Administration is probing the death of a man who fell off the roof of the city-owned Asylum building while clearing snow nearly seven weeks ago.

Mary E. Hoye, area director of the Springfield OSHA office, confirmed Thursday that Jimi Lee Gibb died from injuries he suffered from a fall off the roof of the former nightclub on Main Street on Feb. 12.

“Our focus is to determine what happened and to determine if there was any violation of OSHA standards related to the fall,” Hoye said.

Gibb, 24, worked for Advanced Tree Services of Springfield.

Hoye said that the company, which is required to report such accidents within eight hours, failed to do so. A family member notified the OSHA of Gibb’s death some time later, she said.

OSHA initiated its investigation into the fatal fall on Feb. 24

“We had a very hard time concerning the details of when and where it happened,” Hoye said.

Thomas T. Walsh, spokesman for Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, said the city did not learn of the fatality until it was contacted by OSHA on Feb. 23.

Walsh said that Advanced Tree Service was under contract to clear snow from the property’s roof. A City Hall memo on the accident states that the victim “fell from the roof onto the company’s truck and was hospitalized, and later passed away after several days and surgeries.”

In a recently-released statement, Sarno said that he has directed the city Law Department to look into the incident and fully cooperate with authorities.

City Solicitor Edward Pikula said that the city’s internal investigation does not reveal any wrongdoing by city employees and that the city has contacted the vendor’s insurance agency to ensure they were on notice of the incident.

Advanced Tree Service could not be reached for comment Thursday.

The city purchased the building for $630,000 in 2009 and plans to demolish part of it to make room for a parking lot. The front section of the building will remain for retail and office use and possibly a ground-floor restaurant, officials said.

Ex-Cub Scout leader, Michael Cimmino of Braintree, denies sexual assault of 2 boys

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Cimmino, who works for the Boston Housing Authority, was also a religious education teacher at St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Church.

Cub Scout Logo.jpg

DEDHAM – A former Cub Scout leader and religious education instructor from Braintree has pleaded not guilty to sexually assaulting two young boys.

Michael Cimmino entered his plea Wednesday in Norfolk Superior Court to charges including indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, and single counts of kidnapping, open and gross lewdness and assault and battery.

He remains free on $15,000 bail. He denies the charges.

Cimmino is on administrative leave from his job as assistant director of finance and accounting for the Boston Housing Authority.

Prosecutors say both alleged assaults took place at his home. The alleged victims were friends of his children.

Cimmino was a Cubmaster and religious education teacher at St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Church. He has been suspended from both volunteer positions.

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