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

20-year-old Wilbraham man with 5-page arrest record jailed after 2nd gun arrest in year

$
0
0

"He has a five-page record despite being only 20 years old," Assistant District Attorney Cary Szafranski said.

SPRINGFIELD -- A Wilbraham man is being held without bail following his arrest on a second illegal gun charge in the past year.

Tahj McCormick, 20, pleaded not guilty in Springfield District Court on Thursday to carrying a firearm without a license.

McCormick and two others -- Daquan Jefferson, 18, and Tan'ea Bess, 20, both of Springfield -- were arrested following a traffic stop on Bristol Street on Wednesday night.

The car, a 2006 Kia, was not registered, and neither Bess, the driver, nor her two passengers had licenses to drive, Assistant District Attorney Cary Szafranski said.

A search turned up a Taurus .380 caliber handgun wedged into the pocket behind the driver's seat. None of the passengers had a license for that either, the prosecutor said.

She asked for $15,000 bail for each defendant, and requested that McCormick's bail on an illegal firearms charge from 2015 and a related case be revoked.

"He has a five-page record despite being only 20 years old," Szafranski said.

She also asked Judge William Boyle to revoke Bess's release in a case involving a charge of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

Defense lawyer Jeffrey Peck opposed revoking McCormick's release in the open cases, and asked for $5,000 bail on the new charges.

McCormick was riding in the front passenger seat while the gun was behind the driver's seat, Peck said, adding his client "had neither dominion nor control" over the weapon -- two elements prosecutors must prove to win a conviction.

His client would be willing to wear a GPS tracking bracelet and report daily or weekly to the Probation Department as conditions of his release, Peck said.

McCormick works as a landscaper and "wants to keep his job," Peck added.

Defense lawyer David Keller said Bess did not own the car she was driving, and knew nothing about the gun allegedly found behind her seat.

"When asked if she had a FID card, she said 'What's that?," Keller said, adding his client had a learner's permit and was planning on getting her driver's license.

She attends classes at Brandford Hall and is pursuing a degree as a medical assistant, Keller said.

Jefferson's lawyer, Kelly Auer, said her client was a victim of circumstance. "He was in the back seat, getting a ride," Auer said.

Despite a difficult upbringing, which included periods of homelessness and living in foster homes, Jefferson has enrolled in job training classes and is pursuing a GED.

"He has been doing a good job of getting his life in order," said Auer, who also requested $5,000 bail.

Boyle set bail at $15,000 for each defendant, and revoked McCormick's bail in both cases, ordering him to spend the next 90 days in jail. He did not revoke Bess's release.

The three defendants are due back in court for a pretrial hearing on Nov. 29.


What will Chicopee school administrators earn this year after raises?

$
0
0

The 2 percent raises are consistent with the salary increases teachers and other union employees received this year.

CHICOPEE -- The School Committee has approved raises for principals, administrators, department heads and directors for this school year.

The raises were approved in 9-0 votes.

"This is the 2 percent increase that everyone else received. It is only fair," Superintendent Richard W. Rege Jr. said.

Teachers and most other unionized school employees are in the final year of a three-year contract that granted them a 1 percent raise the first year, a 2 percent raise last year and a 2 percent raise for this school year.

Typically Rege asks that he and the other administrators are awarded raises only after lower-paid employees that they supervise receive salary increases.

School Committee members raised no objections and agreed that principals and department heads are among some of the most important employees because they have day-to-day contact with teachers, students and top administrators.

"We have one of the longest-serving superintendents in the state and it is important to have that stability," School Committee member David G. Barsalou said, adding it was important to ensure Rege is paid fairly so he will remain.

This year the schools have again seen improvements on MCAS and PARCC standardized test scores. Barsalou said students are receiving a good education due to steady leadership from Rege and other principals and administrators.

The only question about the raises came from School Committee Vice Chairwoman Marjorie A. Wojcik, who asked if the money was in the tight budget. Rege said the funds were set aside to give nonunion employees raises.

The following is a list of the administrators, department heads and other nonunion employees and their new salaries including the 2 percent raise.

  • Richard W. Rege Jr., superintendent, $171,491
  • Alvin W. Morton, assistant superintendent, $124,238
  • Stephen N. Nembirkow, director of budget and human resources, $123,607
  • Lynn A. Clark, assistant superintendent, $120,360
  • Roland R. Joyal Jr., principal of Chicopee High School, $118,719
  • Derek J. Morrison, principal of Comprehensive High School, $113,155
  • Norman Burgess, principal of Herbert V. Bowie School, $110,140
  • Irene Lemieux, principal of Fairview Veterans Elementary School, $106,651
  • Matthew T. Francis, principal of Edward Bellamy Middle School, $105,671
  • Ken Widelo, director of career and technical education, $104,864
  • David T. Drugan, principal of Patrick E. Bowe School, $102,234
  • Kristopher Theriault, principal of 1st Sgt. Kevin Dupont Middle School, $102,000
  • Samuel A. Karlin, principal of Belcher School, $101,907
  • Ginger Coleman, principal of Gen. John J. Stefanik School, $101,275
  • January Wilson, principal of Hugh Scott Streiber School, $101,275
  • John G. Leonard, principal of Chicopee Academy, $99,817
  • Janet L. Reid, principal of Szetela Early Childhood School, $99,790
  • Ronald Simard, director of maintenance, $98,825
  • Rebecca Bouchard, legal compliance officer, $98,318
  • Jonathan Endelos, principal of Anna Barry School, $96,900
  • Elizabeth Masse, principal of Sgt. Robert Litwin School, $96,900
  • William Holt, principal of Lambert-Lavoie School, $93,806
  • Joanne Lennon, director of cafeterias, $92,251
  • Rose Y. Blais, assistant to the superintendent for technology, $92,201
  • Cynthia Schonagel, assistant for English Language Leaners, $91,061
  • Jill Chapdelaine, assistant for curriculum, $90,509
  • Karen Turmel, director of nurses, $88,442
  • Scott Chapdelaine, assistant director of maintenance, $71,967
  • Sarah Hoar, administrative assistant to the superintendent, $66,314
  • Courtney Fitzgerald, middle to high school readiness specialist, $60,707
  • Stacy Fitzpatrick, middle to high school readiness specialist, $60,707
  • Kenneth Parsons, transportation manager, $59,692
  • Jill Fijal, homeless liaison, $53,000

Spencer woman killed in Mass Pike crash in Westborough

$
0
0

Massachusetts State Police are investigating an early morning crash on Interstate 90 that killed a 26-year-old Spencer woman.

WESTBOROUGH ‒ Massachusetts State Police are investigating an early morning crash on Interstate 90 that killed a 26-year-old Spencer woman.

Troopers responded to reports of a single-vehicle crash on the westbound side of the Massachusetts Turnpike in Westborough around 1:30 a.m. on Saturday.

Preliminary investigation of the crash suggested that a 2005 Mercury Mountaineer was traveling westbound when the driver, a 20-year-old Worcester man, lost control, left the right side of the roadway and struck a rock ledge, according to state police.

The driver and three occupants were reportedly ejected from the vehicle as a result of the crash.

A 26-year-old Spencer woman, who was among those ejected, landed in the roadway, where she was subsequently struck by multiple vehicles, state police reported.

Police have yet to identify the woman, who was pronounced dead at the scene.

The other five occupants -- an 18-year-old Shrewsbury woman, a 21-year-old Charlton man, a 35-year-old Spencer man, a 36-year-old Worcester man and the driver -- were transported to UMass Medical Center in Worcester for treatment of serious injuries, state police reported.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation and no charge have yet been filed.

US Rep. Richard Neal to stump for Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvania this weekend

$
0
0

Congressman Richard Neal, D-Springfield, will hit the campaign trail for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvania this weekend, adding his name to the growing list of surrogates set to rally voters in the final days before the November general election.

Congressman Richard Neal, D-Springfield, will hit the campaign trail for Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvania this weekend, adding his name to the growing list of surrogates set to rally voters in the final days before the November general election.

Despite being up for reelection himself, Neal, who recently stumped for the former secretary of state in New Hampshire, will make the case for Clinton during organizing and get-out-the-vote events in Pittston, Wilkes-barre and Scranton, Pennsylvania on Saturday.

He will then head to Philadelphia on Sunday for an afternoon canvass launch at Clinton's field office, according to officials.

Neal said his visits will seek to encourage campaign volunteers as Clinton's ground game kicks into high gear.

"We'll be doing rallies, canvassing and we're speaking to volunteers and helping them with their talking points as they connect door-to-door with voters," he said in a telephone interview.

The congressman's Pennsylvania visits will come as Clinton's campaign launches a final blitz across several key battleground states.

Polls give the Democrat a 5-point advantage over Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in Pennsylvania with just over a week left before the November election, according to RealClearPolitics' averages.

Recent news of the FBI's renewed look into the former secretary of state's use of a private email server, however, could make for a tighter race in the important battleground state as the campaign heads into its final days.

James Comey says FBI investigating new evidence related to Hillary Clinton's emails

While Neal stumps for Clinton in Pennsylvania, other Massachusetts Democrats will also hit the campaign trail.

U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, will promote the Democratic presidential nominee during the League of Conservation Voters' Clean Tech Party canvass in Manchester, New Hampshire on Saturday.

U.S. Reps. Joe Kennedy III, D-Brookline, and Stephen Lynch, D-South Boston, will also head north to campaign for Clinton at different events in New Hampshire on Saturday.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, meanwhile, campaigned alongside Clinton in the Granite State earlier this week.

Elizabeth Warren at NH rally: 'Nasty women' have had it with Donald Trump

Aside from Massachusetts lawmakers, President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, former President Bill Clinton and others are scheduled to campaign for the Democratic nominee in several key swing states this week.

Clinton, herself, is also expected to criss-cross the country in the final days before the November election, with campaign stops scheduled in: Ohio, Florida, Arizona and North Carolina.

Good riddance, Campaign 2016: You put the 'ugh' in ugly

$
0
0

Headed for history books a week from Tuesday, the duel between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump became a battle of "nasty women" and "bad hombres" vs. "deplorables" and voters who are "irredeemable."

WASHINGTON -- Good riddance to Campaign 2016, the election that put the "ugh" in ugly.

Big league.

Headed for history books a week from Tuesday, the duel between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump became a battle of "nasty women" and "bad hombres" vs. "deplorables" and voters who are "irredeemable."

A beauty queen, a Gold Star family, an ex-president and his baggage, the FBI director, even the pope were drawn into the fray.

At times, the campaign rhetoric has been so raunchy it's forced middle-school civics teachers to censor their lesson plans. Thank Trump for that.

But Americans can't say they weren't warned about what lay ahead.

On June 16, 2015, mere minutes into a rambling campaign announcement speech, Trump was labeling Mexican immigrants as rapists and criminals, and pledging to build "a great, great wall" to keep them out.

He's been horrifying and-or delighting people with his provocations ever since.

Eleven Republicans were already in the race when Trump joined the field, with five still to come -- a boatload of current and former governors and members of Congress among them. It was reasonable to view the impolitic nonpolitician Trump as, at best, an improbable choice to win the Republican nomination.

Clinton, by contrast, strode into the Democratic race two months earlier with a commanding resume and a sunny announcement video that instantly made her the presumed heir apparent for her party's nomination.

She looked poised to finish the business of shattering "that highest, hardest glass ceiling" she couldn't quite reach in a 2008 race against Barack Obama.

This time, it was Bernie Sanders who crashed her party and put the lie to the conceit of a cakewalk to the nomination. (Three more Democrats later joined the field, too, but without much impact.)

And thus the table was set for one of the nastiest, soul-crushing presidential campaigns in history.

In the end, no matter who wins, the next president will be one of the most unpopular ever.

"If the central promises of modern politics are peace and prosperity, we really haven't had either for a long time," said William Galston, a Brookings Institution scholar and former official in Bill Clinton's administration. "That created an atmosphere of discontent and protest that affected both political parties this year."

And how.

Campaign 2016 The Ugly ElectionFILE - In this June 16, 2015, file photo, Donald Trump, accompanied by his wife Melania Trump, is applauded by his daughter Ivanka Trump, right as he's introduced before his announcement that he will run for president in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York. 

The Republican primaries of Campaign 2016 gave us "Jeb!" Bush and Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz and Ben Carson and Carly Fiorina and so many others that the GOP debates had to be divided into two segments to cram everyone on a stage. John Kasich was the sleeper who hung in there till the end.

Democrats felt the Bern, even if Sanders' fire eventually flickered out.

The primaries gave us taco bowls, penis jokes, penis boasts and schoolyard nicknames.

Forget debating the issues. People debated whether Trump was prone to blurting out "bigly" or "big league." (It's the latter.)

It wasn't just Trump who went low in the primary scramble.

Rubio ("Little Marco" to Trump) mocked the New York businessman's "small hands." And that triggered Trump's eye-popping reassurances during a nationally televised debate that there were no problems with his genitals.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie predicted he would beat Clinton's "rear end" if he met her in a debate. Bush called Trump a liar, a whiner and a jerk. Cruz ("Lyin' Ted" to Trump) mocked the GOP front-runner for his "Trumpertantrums."

And so it went.

None of it could trump Trump, with his never-ending fusillade of insults and bluster.

He dissed Sen. John McCain's history as a Vietnam prisoner of war, mocked Fiorina's face, and deemed Pope Francis' criticism of building walls "disgraceful."

He proposed a "total and complete shutdown" of immigration by an entire religious group -- Muslims -- to fight terrorism, only later morphing the idea into a call for "extreme vetting."

For all of that, it turned out that it was Trump, incongruent in his suit and red ball-cap, who best channeled the anger and disaffection percolating among Americans fed up with establishment politics.

Remember when Barbara Bush said the country had had enough Bushes? Her son ("Low-energy Jeb" to Trump) would've saved a lot of heartbreak and expense if he'd just listened to mom.

Trump drove the direction of the campaign, said GOP consultant Kevin Madden, "because he went out and took it, blocking the sun from his opponents while they were busy announcing their latest slate of endorsements of local sheriffs or pushing a policy white paper around."

On the left, it was Sanders, a grumpy socialist, who stirred passions with his promise of a political "revolution" against the entrenched, monied interests on Wall Street. The young voters who'd powered Obama's campaigns gravitated to Sanders. To Clinton, not so much.

Clinton was busy scrambling to explain her use of a private email setup and what the FBI director called her "careless" handling of classified information.

While Clinton tried to play down the email controversy in public, beneath the surface her aides fretted and fussed over damage-control strategies.

"There Is Just No Good Answer," Clinton adviser Philippe Reines wrote in March 2015 in one of hundreds of emails flying back and forth in the Clinton campaign on the subject.

We know that courtesy of WikiLeaks, which released tens of thousands of private emails from the Clinton campaign that U.S. intelligence officials said were hacked by the Russians. Never before had the innards of a campaign-in-motion spilled out like this.

That didn't seem to bother Trump, whose campaign has been one big, long friendly overture to Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

Through it all, Clinton soldiered on, even if she didn't always excite.

The groundbreaking notion of electing the first woman as president had its appeal, but never generated the electricity attached to the election of the nation's first black president.

Millennials seemed to take the idea of a female president as a given.

Once the voting started in the Democratic primaries, Sanders and his zealous supporters managed to claim victory in 22 states but never could find a pathway to the nomination.

Before the voting started in the Republican primaries, people questioned whether Trump's lead in the polls was for real.

Would people really cast ballots for the provocateur whose promise to "Make America Great Again" was so light on details?

In a word, yes.

Hillary ClintonIn this photo taken July 28, 2016, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton gives her thumbs up as she appears on stage during the final day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.  

It turns out that Trump really is just who he seems to be.

The businessman and reality TV star who kept promising to be "more presidential" when the time was right never really got there.

After claiming the nomination at his Cleveland convention, Trump picked a fight with an American Muslim family whose son was killed while serving in Iraq. He questioned the fairness of an American-born judge of Mexican heritage. He made flip comments about what gun-rights advocates might do to Clinton if her Secret Service agents weren't armed.

Clinton made her own errors. She dismissed half of Trump's supporters as a "basket of deplorables," and "irredeemable," and only partly backed down when the comments became public. Maybe her quantities were off, Clinton reasoned, but not her sentiments. It didn't help that she'd made the remarks before a snickering audience of wealthy supporters at what was supposed to be a private fundraiser.

Her September stumble in the heat after attending a memorial for the victims of the 9-11 terror attacks fed into Trump's questions about her stamina, particularly when she vanished from public view for 90 minutes. It turned out she had pneumonia, a diagnosis she'd kept hidden from nearly all of her staff.

Trump saw something suspect in that. Supporters said it showed her determination to power through no matter what.

The denouement of the campaign amounted to one long, wearying October surprise.

Tom Hanks drew knowing laughs in a "Saturday Night Live" skit about the final presidential debate when he explained: "Tonight is going to be a lot like the third 'Lord of the Rings' movie: You don't really want to watch. But, hey, you've come this far."

The three debates were the proverbial train wreck that voters couldn't look away from, setting records for viewership.

In Round 1, Trump dismissed Clinton as lacking "the look" or stamina to be president. Clinton was primed to pounce, reciting Trump's track record of biting commentary about women's looks, like when he called a former Miss Universe "Miss Piggy" because she gained weight. Trump was left to ask: "Where did you find this? Where did you find this?"

A new bombshell dropped just in time for Debate 2: jaw-dropping 2005 video of Trump making predatory comments about groping women's genitals and kissing women without asking.

"When you're a star, they let you do it," he boasted in the tape.

Trump apologized, but waved off his comments as "locker-room banter" and said he'd never really done what he'd claimed in the video.

But a parade of women came forward to accuse him of making unwanted sexual advances.

And then came a parade of skittish Republicans bailing on Trump, some withdrawing endorsements, others calling for Trump to drop out of the race.

Trump's response was to go nuclear against Clinton. In the front row for the second debate, Trump seated three women who had accused Bill Clinton of rape or sexual impropriety, and the nominee used the forum to claim with thin evidence that "Hillary Clinton attacked those same women and attacked them viciously."

In the final debate, Trump came out with his stunning refusal to say he would accept the results of the election, renewing his complaints that the election was being "rigged" against him.

It amounted to an attack on the fundamentals of democracy.

Clinton called it "horrifying."

Obama's blunt message for Trump: "Stop whining."

Over its long and tawdry path, the campaign added a slew of new entries (and expletive-deleted items) to the political lexicon: Talk of home-brew servers, pigs, slobs, Tic Tacs, the alt-right, the woman card, locker-room banter, and much more.

As Clinton's edge strengthened in late campaign polls, Democrats dared to begin to exhale. Then the FBI announced that yet more emails had emerged, this time through a separate investigation into the estranged husband of a top Clinton aide -- and were also being examined for possible classified material.

Less than half of voters still had a favorable opinion of Clinton. And ever fewer were impressed with Trump.

A Clinton win, said Galston, the former Bill Clinton aide, would be "a victory for competence, qualification, hard work, preparation." But not, he said, for inspiration or a clear message.

Princeton historian Julian Zelizer said the toxicity of the campaign will be remembered not simply as a fluke wrought by the Trump phenomenon but as part of a trend.

"More and more of the electorate sees themselves as almost living in two separate worlds," Zelizer said. "And when this happens, you tend to vilify the opponent. It's not simply another view, it's an intolerable view."

Madden, the Republican consultant, warned that in thinking about the future of the Republican Party, "everything has to be with the understanding that Trump is not going away" even if he loses.

"He tapped into a discontent among voters that has to be dealt with," Madden said.

As the campaign hurtled to its end, a yard sign spotted in Arlington, Virginia, spoke to the ordeal that it has been.

It didn't promote a candidate but rather an earth-shattering natural disaster: "Giant Meteor, 2016, Just end it already."

New Mass Pike gantries record 200,000-plus transactions in first 10 hours

$
0
0

The state's new tolling system on the Massachusetts Turnpike has already recorded more than 200,000 transactions since going live around 10 p.m. on Friday, state officials reported Saturday.

The state's new all-electronic tolling system on the Massachusetts Turnpike has already recorded more than 200,000 transactions since going live around 10 p.m. on Friday, state officials reported Saturday.

Gov. Charlie Baker announced via Twitter that the 16 gantries installed along Interstate 90 had recorded 215,000 transactions as of 8 a.m. -- 10 hours after the Massachusetts Department of Transportation activated the all-electronic tolling.

The switch, which ends the use of toll booths and cash payments along the Mass Pike, came after years of planning.

With toll booths now obsolete, Massachusetts Department of Transportation officials began work for toll plaza demolitions early Saturday.

Under all-electronic tolling, motorists traveling under the highway's gantries will be scanned for a transponder and be charged a set toll for each location. Vehicles without transponders will have a photo taken of their license plates and a paper bill will be issued to the registered owner.

Mass. Pike has officially ceased collection of tolls at booths; Demolition of plazas has begun

The change in tolling also impacts toll rates. The new structure favors Massachusetts-issued transponders and charges a slightly higher rate for those issued out-of-state. Those issued paper bills, meanwhile, will also payer higher rates.

Report: Justice officials warned James Comey's update to Congress on Clinton case not consistent with agency policy

$
0
0

Justice Department officials reportedly warned the Federal Bureau of Investigation that Director James Comey's decision to inform Congress Friday about a renewed investigation into Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton's private email server was not consistent with agency practices.

Justice Department officials reportedly warned the Federal Bureau of Investigation that Director James Comey's decision to inform Congress Friday about a renewed investigation into Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton's private email server was not consistent with agency practices.

Justice officials, whom Comey informed about his decision, reportedly told the FBI director that the agency does not "comment on an ongoing investigation" and does not "take steps that will be viewed as influencing an election," the Washington Post reported Saturday.

"Director Comey understood our position. He heard it from Justice leadership," the unidentified justice official told the newspaper. "It was conveyed to the FBI, and Comey made an independent decision to alert the Hill. He is operating independently of the Justice Department. And he knows it."

The FBI director announced in a Friday letter to congressional leaders that his agency would look into whether additional classified information was contained in emails sent over Clinton's private email server during her tenure as secretary of state.

James Comey says FBI investigating new evidence related to Hillary Clinton's emails

The announcement, which came just over a week before the November general election, drew praise from Republicans, including GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump.

Clinton's campaign, however, questioned the FBI announcement and urged Comey to release further details about the scope of the investigation.

Comey, in a memo to FBI employees, reportedly said he felt an obligation to examine new information related to the closed investigation.

"Of course, we don't ordinarily tell Congress about ongoing investigations, but here I feel an obligation to do so given that I testified repeatedly in recent months that our investigation was completed," he wrote, according to the Washington Post. "I also think it would be misleading to the American people were we not to supplement the record. At the same time, however, given that we don't know the significance of this newly discovered collection of emails, I don't want to create a misleading impression."

Emails sparking the renewed FBI probe were reportedly discovered after the agency seized electronic devices belonging to top Clinton aide Huma Abedin and her husband, Anthony Weiner.

Weiner, who separated from Abedin in August, has been under FBI investigation for allegedly exchanging sexually explicit texts with a 15-year-old girl.

The FBI closed its investigation into Clinton's controversial use of a private email server in July without recommending charges.

Although Comey called the former secretary of state's use of the server "extremely careless" and noted that "there is evidence of potential violations of the statutes regarding the handling of classified information," he argued that the FBI believed "no reasonable prosecutor would bring such a case" against her.

Worcester County Sheriff's Department cruiser hits abandoned Jeep on I-290

$
0
0

A Worcester County corrections officer is expected to be okay after his cruiser slammed into an abandoned Jeep parked on Interstate 290 early Saturday.

WORCESTER ‒ A Worcester County corrections officer is expected to be OK after his cruiser slammed into an abandoned Jeep parked on Interstate 290 early Saturday.

Worcester County Sheriff's Office Superintendent David Tuttle told the Telegram and Gazette that Officer Peter Campo was "bruised up and sore, but...will be OK," following the 6:15 a.m. crash near Exit 13 on I-290 East.

Campo was reportedly on his way to work at the Worcester County Jail and House of Correction with his dog when his Ford Crown Victoria hit the rear of a Jeep Wrangler parked in the middle travel lane, according to Tuttle.

The Jeep, which was reportedly uninsured and unregistered, had run out of gas, Tuttle said. Campo had been driving around 60 mph at the time of the crash.

"It's still a little dark out then and the guy had no lights on in the" Jeep, Tuttle told the newspaper.

Campo was transported to UMass Memorial Medical Center's University Campus following the crash. His bloodhound, Mia, was unharmed in the incident.

State Police did not say whether any charges will be filed in relation to the crash.


Sanderson Academy to hold Sunday gathering for 9-year-old killed by school bus in Plainfield

$
0
0

Sanderson Academy will hold a gathering Sunday afternoon to offer support for those impacted by the death of a 9-year-old girl who was reportedly killed while exiting a school bus in Plainfield.

Sanderson Academy will hold a gathering Sunday afternoon to offer support for those impacted by the death of a 9-year-old girl who was reportedly killed while exiting a school bus in Plainfield.

Mohawk Trail Regional School District Superintendent Michael Buoniconti announced the gathering for the victim, who has been identified as a Sanderson Academy student, in a Saturday statement, the Greenfield Recorder reported.

"While the investigation of this tragedy takes place, our school community is focusing on supporting one another," he said. "Tomorrow from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., there will be a gathering of our school community at Sanderson Academy to begin offering such support. Our hearts go out to the family suffering this terrible terrible loss."

According to Massachusetts State Police, the girl was in the process of getting off the school bus near South Central Street around 4 p.m. on Friday when it began to drive away.

The unidentified victim, police said, may have become caught in the door and was dragged a short distance before being struck by the bus.

9-year-old girl killed after being struck by school bus; Massachusetts State Police investigating

State Police Detectives are investigating and are in the process of interviewing the man who was driving the bus at the time of the incident. His identity has not been released at this time.

Police say that further information will be released by the District Attorney's office when it becomes available and is deemed appropriate.

Spooky Safari draws families to Forest Park Zoo

$
0
0

The zoo was decked out for Halloween. A chicken roamed around a graveyard, gorillas (fake ones) handed out candy, and the fennec fox shared its home with an angry zombie.

SPRINGFIELD - A day of spoooooky fun brought trick-or-treating families to the Forest Park Zoo on Saturday.

The zoo was decked out for Halloween. A chicken roamed around a graveyard, gorillas (fake ones) handed out candy, and the fennec fox shared its home with an angry zombie.

From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., families were invited to dress up and "have a safe and fun trick-or-treating experience," said Amanda Bligh, one of the event's organizers, who dressed as a deer.

A fire juggler dazzled some kids while a stilt walker lifted others high in the air. Batman and Superman played games under a big tent.

Bligh said the zoo was happy with the turnout and grateful the weather cooperated, especially after Thursday's snow.

The zoo has put on the Spooky Safari for about 10 years.

The zoo is getting ready to roll out its new 2017 membership packages, and although the 2016 season is winding down, they offer year-round birthday parties and the popular "Zoo On the Go." A new booth at the Holyoke Mall, featuring live animals, will open soon to offer more information.

9-year-old girl killed by bus identified by authorities; Massachusetts State Police still investigating

$
0
0

The 9-year-old girl who was killed by a school bus in Plainfield on Friday has been identified by authorities.

PLAINFIELD, Ma — The nine-year-old girl who was killed after being struck by a bus in Plainfield on Friday has been identified by authorities.

Summer Steele, a resident of Plainfield and a student at Sanderson Academy, is the victim of Friday's tragic incident, said Mary Carey, spokesman for the Northwestern District Attorney's Office.

Carey said the driver who was operating the bus at the time of the incident works for F.M. Kuzmeskus, Inc.--a private transportation company based out of Gill. The man was in the process of taking students home from Sanderson Academy when the girl became stuck in the vehicle's door and was dragged and struck by the bus.

The young victim was quickly taken to the Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield for treatment, but was declared dead at 4:50 p.m.

Authorities, including the Massachusetts State Police and the Plainfield police, are still investigating the incident that took Summer's life, said Carey.

Efforts are also being made to comfort the surrounding community, with counseling services being offered to students and staff at Sanderson Academy.

Northwestern District Attorney David E. Sullivan commented on the incident, calling the death of Summer Steele an "unimaginable" loss to her family and community.

"We send our deepest condolences to her family, friends, and all those who were touched by her joy and kindness," said Sullivan.

 

Wife of Millbury cop allegedly fakes home burglary, blames Black Lives Matter

$
0
0

The wife of a police officer from Millbury, Massachusetts, allegedly faked a home burglary and blamed it on Black Lives Matter activists.

MILLBURY, Ma — The wife of a Massachusetts police officer appears to have faked a burglary at the couple's residence in Millbury, and attempted to blame the incident on Black Lives Matter activists, according to The Boston Globe.

Authorities say that Maria Daly--wife of police officer Daniel Daly--contacted the local police station on Oct. 17, alleging that the family's house had been broken into and that money and jewelry had been taken.

Additionally, the initials "BLM" had been spray-painted onto the side of the house, an acronym that usually references the Black Lives Matter movement.

However, after a lengthy investigation, police determined that Daly's claims had been "fabricated," according to Millbury Police Chief Donald Desorcy.

"Something wasn't quite right," said Desorcy. "I think that was pretty obvious and as a result of that investigation, the officers did their due diligence and followed through with the investigation that we had."

Police say that, on Tuesday, Daly admitted to officers that her claims had been false and that she had spray painted "BLM" on her own house.

Desorcy further claimed that the rationale behind Daly's sham had been "financial difficulties," but didn't elaborate further.

Daly has now been charged with misleading a police investigation and filing a false police report. Daniel Daly hasn't been implicated in the incident and faces no charges.

 

Little boy struck by car in Hadley while crossing the street

$
0
0

A little boy was struck by a Jeep while crossing the street in Hadley on Friday night.

HADLEY — A 12-year-old boy was struck by a car in Hadley on Friday evening, according to police.

The boy was unaccompanied by an adult and was attempting to cross Route 9 during a period of "heavy traffic," when he was struck by a Jeep, said a Hadley police officer.

Authorities were called to the scene at approximately 6:30 p.m., where it was discovered that the boy had suffered a head laceration and may have broken several bones, said the officer.

The boy was subsequently transported to Bay State Medical Center for treatment and is recovering, according to police. "He may have been let out already," said the officer, further commenting that the wounds were not life-threatening.

 

Seen@ The Oktoberfest finale at Chicopee's Munich Haus

$
0
0

The Munich Haus celebrated the finale of Oktoberfest 2016 on Saturday evening with music provided by the Vagabonds.

CHICOPEE - The Munich Haus celebrated the finale of Oktoberfest 2016 on Saturday evening with music provided by the Vagabonds.

The menu consisted of a pig roast, chicken, and traditional German food that included sauerbraten, sausage, spatzle, sauerkraut, schnitzel, and much more. A variety of authentic German beers were readily available for guests to enjoy.

For 20 years, The Vagabonds have entertained fans throughout Southern New England. Their style of German-American music including Beer Barrel Polka, the Chicken Dance, the Sound of Music, and a mix of modern tunes has made them popular.

The band comprises of Thomas Botthof on accordion, Claudia Botthof on electric guitar, and Ray Tougas on acoustic guitar.

The Student Prince in Springfield concluded its Oktoberfest celebration earlier this month.

For more information about the Munich Haus visit http://www.munichhaus.com.

For more information on the Vagabonds visit http://vagabondsmusic.com/index.html.

65-year-old man killed in Sutton crash; State Police investigating

$
0
0

A man was killed during a fatal crash in Sutton on Saturday night.

SUTTON, Ma — A 65-year-old man was killed in a fatal crash in Sutton on Saturday evening, according to Massachusetts State Police.

Police say the crash occurred when the man's 2001 Chrysler PT Cruiser veered off of Route 146 south and crashed. The reason for the crash is still under investigation, police said.

The man was entrapped in the vehicle and had to be extricated by members of the Sutton Fire Department before being taken to UMass Medical Center for treatment.

The man was pronounced dead at the hospital, police said.

The identity of the victim has not been released at this time, pending familial notification.

 

Springfield shooting injures at least one

$
0
0

At least one person was brought to the hospital.

SPRINGFIELD - Police are currently on the scene investigating a shooting Sunday morning.

The shooting happened at about 10:30 a.m. at 30 Jardine St. Police called for an ambulance and at least one person was taken to the hospital.

Police currently have part of the side street of single-family homes cordened off and are examining a car with Florida license plates that is parked in the middle of the road. The Springfield Police forensic van has also just arrived.

Resident Lucy Santiago said she arrived at her home on Jardine Street to find more than a dozen police officers a few houses down the street.

"It is so nice here. I was very disappointed to see something like this," she said.

Santiago said she has lived on the street for 26 years and has never seen any serious crime there.

This is a breaking story. Masslive will update as more information becomes available.

Highway officials warn Monday's Mass. Pike commute could be backed up due to toll plaza demolition

$
0
0

Drivers using the Massachusetts Turnpike to get to work this week might simply want to find another way to get there, highway officials said Sunday as they discussed the progress of all-electronic tolling in the state. Watch video

This story is part of ongoing MassLive coverage into the state's October 2016 launch of all-electronic tolling on the Mass. Pike and the elimination of toll plazas.

BOSTON -- Drivers using the Massachusetts Turnpike to get to work this week might simply want to find another way to get there, highway officials said Sunday as they discussed the progress of all-electronic tolling in the state.

"Tomorrow (Mon. Oct. 31) is going to be a heck of a lot different than Saturday and Sunday," Thomas Tinlin, the state's highway chief, said. "We're asking you to look at the way you travel and maybe make a difference. Use the MBTA if that's an option to you. This would be a really good week to do that."

Tinlin said people might want to change their work schedules and come in later or earlier, if that is also an option.

He pointed out there was a one-mile backup at the Allston-Brighton plaza Saturday at 10 p.m. The very unusual backup is a hint of how bad Monday's commute could be, officials said.

"We're stressing that alternative schedule, alternative mode might be the best bet for tomorrow (Monday) morning," he said.

Roughly 318 people and 107 pieces of equipment were out over the weekend as the state worked to remove toll plazas at 23 different locations across Massachusetts. All-electronic tolling began Friday night.

People will see active demolition at all 23 locations beginning Sunday evening and until the process ends. Toll plazas were powered down over the weekend and utilities were capped and cut.

"There is a lot of work that needs to be done," Tinlin said. "There will be a lot of inconvenience."

Stephanie Pollack, the state's secretary of transportation, said state officials have not made any projections about commute times for Monday and this week.

Highway officials will monitor activity in real-time and make adjustments as needed.

Massachusetts State Police Major Terry Hanson said across the state there have been two minor accidents in toll plaza work zones. State Police will have an increased presence Monday on the Mass. Pike.

Authorities reminded people to obey the 15-mile-per-hour speed limit at the plazas in order to keep people safe.

As of Sunday morning at 8 am., a little less than one-and-a-half million transactions have been read at the plazas with 76 percent involving E-Z Pass transponders. Pollack said another 24 percent will involve bills being mailed to drivers, but she reminded people about the grace period to get a transponder.

1 injured, 1 arrested in possible Amherst home invasion

$
0
0

Police are searching for three more people believed to have been involved in the crime.

AMHERST - One person was injured after being attacked in a possible home invasion early Sunday morning.

One suspect has been arrested and police are searching for three other possible suspects, said Mary Carey, spokeswoman for Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan.

The crime happened in the early hours of Sunday morning on South East Street. Police are currently calling it an armed robbery or home invasion, she said.

One victim suffered cuts to the arm and was taken to Baystate Medical Center by ambulance with non-life threatening injuries. The person was attacked with an unknown weapon, she said.

"Police believe it was a targeted incident and that members of the public are not at risk," she said.

The crime is being investigated by Amherst Police, Massachusetts State Police assigned to the Northwestern District and State Police Crime Scene Services, she said.


This is a breaking story. Masslive will update as more information becomes available.

Man injured in Greenfield house fire

$
0
0

Greenfield Fire Department and the State Fire Marshal's office is investigating the cause of the fire.

GREENFIELD - One man was injured in an early Sunday morning fire at a three-family home.

The fire was reported at 3:38 a.m., Sunday at 267 Federal St. One man was brought to the hospital with injuries, said Jennifer Mieth, spokeswoman for the State Fire Marshal's office.

The cause of the fire is being investigated jointly by the Greenfield Fire Department and the State Fire Marshal's office, she said.

No information was available about the victim's injuries, but Mieth said investigators are waiting until they can interview him.

Springfield investigating homicide in Liberty Heights neighborhood

$
0
0

The victim was shot six times at about 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD - The victim in a Sunday morning shooting in the Liberty Heights neighborhood has died.

The shooting happened at about 10:30 a.m. in front of 30 Jardine St. Police closed a part of the street with crime tape so detectives could collect collect evidence in the crime.

Sgt. John Delaney, spokesman for the Springfield Police Department confirmed the victim was shot six times and has died, according to Western Mass News.

Police and Massachusetts State Police remain at the scene investigating the shooting. The Springfield Police forensic van arrived while police were examining the scene and a K9 officer searched the neighborhood.

An older car with a Florida license plate was parked in the middle of the street at the scene with a piece of blood-stained cloth next to the driver's side compartment.

Resident Lucy Santiago said she arrived at her home on Jardine Street to find more than a dozen police officers investigating the crime that happened few houses away from her home.

"It is so nice here. I was very disappointed to see something like this," she said.

Santiago said she has lived on the street for 26 years and has never seen any serious crime on her street of single-family homes.

The most recent Springfield homicide happened on Oct. 11 when police found Yonaides Pichardo, 28, shot to death inside a car on Sycamore Street.

Police continue to investigate the killing of the father of three.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images