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New Springfield Council President Orlando Ramos supports mayor's decision to choose new fire commissioner in 2018

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Springfield City Council President Orlando Ramos said he backs the decision by Mayor Domemic Sarno to not renew the contract of Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant when it expires in January of 2018.


SPRINGFIELD -- New City Council President Orlando Ramos said Monday he supports a decision by Mayor Domenic J. Sarno to not renew the contract of Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant when it expires in January of 2018.

In addition, Ramos said, in a prepared release that he is hopeful that Sarno will conduct a national search for Conant's replacement.

"I commend Mayor Sarno for taking a stern position on residency," Ramos said. "I agree with his decision not to renew the fire commissioner's contract; and I look forward to working together with him and his administration to strengthen the city's residency ordinance."

Sarno announced Sunday that he will not renew Conant's contract when it expires on Jan. 23, 2018, and did not rule out selecting a commissioner from outside the Fire Department.

Sarno's decision followed news on Friday that Conant was not going to discipline Deputy Fire Chief Glenn Guyer for failing to move to Springfield within one year of his promotion to deputy chief, said by city officials to be required under the city's residency ordinance.

Guyer's lawyer has stated he is not obligated to move to Springfield because his initial employment preceded the residency requirement. Sarno strongly criticized Conant for failing to discipline Guyer after a closed hearing on the matter, and stated he would consider options including disciplinary action against Conant as a result.

Ramos issued a statement supporting Sarno's decision shortly after the council's organizational meeting for 2017 when Ramos was unanimously selected by his council colleagues as its president for the New Year.

Ramos had stated during the meeting that the city's residency requirement was also one of his top priorities in 2017, and pledged to work with the mayor and his administration to find ways to strengthen the residency ordinance.

"I'm glad to see that the mayor takes this matter just as seriously as we do, and I look forward to working together towards progress," Ramos said.

Conant was not immediately available for comment Monday. He received written notice of the mayor's decision, according to a Sunday press release.

Conant was sworn in as fire commissioner on Jan. 24, 2103. He was initially hired in 1987.


Hartford sees region's 1st homicide in 2017; most New England cities saw murder counts decline in 2016

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With the exception of Boston, every major city in the region either saw fewer homicides or had the same number from 2015.


Hartford became the first city in the region to record a homicide this year with the shooting death early Sunday of a 28-year-old woman who was sitting in a car on Park Street, according to reports.

The shooting death comes after the city ended the year with what Hartford police say was the fewest homicides - 14 - in any year on record. In 2015, Hartford recorded a total of 31 homicides, which was second that year only to Boston among New England cities.

According to the Hartford Courant, police said a uniformed officer on patrol witnessed the shooting and a suspect was quickly apprehended. Ulises Robles has been charged with murder in the death of Luz Rosado.

Hartford police have not disclosed possible motives.

A recap of murders in WMass in 2016

Deputy police Chief Brian Foley told the Courant that the police had additional patrols out for New Year's Eve but it was not enough to prevent a homicide.

"We had an officer in the right place at the right time in uniform, visible and the homicide still happened. It's difficult," he said.

Coincidentally, the first homicide in Hartford in 2016 also occurred when a 20-year-old man was stabbed to death minutes after midnight on Jan. 1.

Across the region, the number of homicides in large cities declined in 2016 from 2015.

A recap of Worcester's 2016 murders

Boston, the largest New England city, appears to be the only major city in the region that saw an increase

According to the Boston Herald,
there were 46 homicides in Boston in 2016, an increase of six from 2015. That works out to a swing of 15 percent.
In 2014, Boston tallied 54 homicides.

In Springfield, Hartford, New Haven, and Providence, Rhode Island, homicide deaths declined. Worcester broke even.

Springfield had 12 homicides. In 2015, there were 18. Twelve homicides in one year is a 5-year low for Springfield. It also ties 2012 for the fewest homicides since 2002 when there were 11.

If Springfield is an example, homicide numbers can fluctuate greatly from one year to the next for a variety of reasons.

Over the last 5 years, Springfield's homicide numbers were 19 in 2011, 12 in 2012, 20 in 2013, 14 in 2014, 18 in 2015 and now 12 last year.

Worcester had 8 homicides in 2016, the same as for 2015. Pittsfield in 2016 also broke even with 3 homicides, the same number as in 2015.

Providence saw 10 homicides in 2015, a decline from 14 the previous year, according to Providence Police Department records.

According to the New Haven Register, New Haven saw its homicide totals decline slightly to 13 from 15 in 2015.
The 2016 total for that city are more than half of what it was five years ago when there were a total of 34 homicides in 2011.

8 questions as investigation continues into Holyoke fire that killed 2

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The identifies of the two people killed and the cause of the fire in a Holyoke, Massachusetts blaze are among questions remaining about the New Year's Day fire at Northeast and East Dwight streets.

HOLYOKE -- These are among the questions remaining as the investigation continues into the New Year's Day fire at 106 Northeast St. that has left two people dead:

  • Who are the people who died? Officials said Sunday that one was a woman who died after jumping from the burning building. It was unclear if the second victim was a male or female, adult or child.
  • Where was the second victim found? Holyoke Fire Chief John A. Pond said a second body was discovered Sunday night, but officials declined to say on which part of the premises the body was found. "I'm not going into any specifics right now," Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni said at a press conference at the site Monday.
  • Is there still one person unaccounted for? Officials had said Sunday that 49 people in 25 families were known to have been living in the building and that two of those people were unaccounted for. Does discovery of a second body mean there remains just one person missing?
  • What caused the fire? The blaze and some ensuing demolition chewed up the upper part of the five-story brick building at Northeast and East Dwight streets. Fire Department Capt. Anthony Cerruti said smoke alarms were installed in the building and functioning.
  • What does the investigation into the fire entail at this point? Gulluni said that the investigation is not a criminal investigation but that additional information would be released later Monday. "The facts as we know now, this is not a criminal investigation....There is at this juncture no reason to believe that any criminal act was the cause of or contributed to the fire or any resulting injuries or deaths," Gulluni said.
  • Did all the pets get out safely from the fire? One cat was saved, Cerruti said. Pond said "unconfirmed" when asked at the press conference whether there were dogs, cats or other pets known to have been living in the building and unaccounted for.
  • Demolition appears to be the long-term plan for the fire-gutted building, but what is the schedule? "It is difficult to determine the timeline since the investigation of the fire is ongoing," Holyoke Building Commissioner Damian Cote said in an email. "Typically a building of this size and complexity will take 30 days to complete from start to finish." No final determination has been made, but the fire's severity means the building probably is not salvageable, he said.
  • Who will pay for the building's demolition? Cote estimated the cost to raze the structure at $250,000 to $400,000. Mayor Alex B. Morse and Cote said the city likely would contact the insurance company that represents the building owner for reimbursement.

2nd death from Holyoke fire confirmed as investigation into cause continues, but not criminal probe: officials

As new year begins, Amherst firefighters call for more staff

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As the new year begins, Amherst firefighters continue to express their concerns about staffing levels.

AMHERST -- As the new year begins, firefighters continue to express concerns about staffing levels. Meanwhile, a study to assess whether the Fire Department has adequate staffing has not been finished.

"Less than 16 hours into the new year and we are already relying on our neighboring communities to pick up where Amherst's staffing has failed," Amherst Firefighters Local 1764 said on its Facebook page. "Fire department staffing is not even sufficient to handle the normal daily call volumes."

The union said personnel from other departments were needed to cover Amherst fire stations because all Amherst firefighters were out responding to calls.

Earlier this year the Carlson Group of Andover was commissioned to study Fire Department staffing. The consultant has completed studies for Southampton and Somerville, among other communities. The former town manager said in July the study would take about four months.

Asked about the delay, current Town Manager Paul Bockelman would only say that "there are a lot of elements to the study." Fire Chief Tim Nelson deferred comment to Bockelman.

"Amherst Fire is not suffering from the occasional busy day," the union said in a Thursday Facebook post. "'High call volumes' are now the standard."

The union said the Fire Department serves a population of nearly 100,000. "However, Amherst chooses to only staff the fire department with enough personnel to protect a population of around 35,000. Therefore, crews are overwhelmed by normal day-to-day emergency traffic," the post states.

The Fire Department provides fire services not only to the town but also to Hampshire and Amherst colleges and the University of Massachusetts. It also provides ambulance services to Pelham, Hadley, Leverett and Shutesbury.

The Fire Department responded to 6,363 emergencies in 2015, topping its busiest year by 350 calls, according to the union. Nelson said calls increase by 1 to 1.5 percent a year.

Numbers for 2016 are not yet available.

The department last year applied for a $1.08 million grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency's Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response grant program, also known as SAFER, but was rejected.

"My take is that if you look at the municipalities that received the SAFER grants in Massachusetts, they were quite similar," Nelson said in an email. "Holyoke, Lynn, Lowell, Fall River, Taunton and Sandwich. These are cities and towns that historically have a high number of fires.

"Frankly, our needs aren't as sexy as the needs of the other municipalities," Nelson continued. "That doesn't make our needs any less critical or important."

The grant would have paid for eight additional firefighters for two years, including six firefighters for front-line service, one for prevention and another for training.

The town would have had to accept the grant and agree to continue funding the positions. The Fire Department hasn't increased staff in 10 years, since the last time the town applied for the same grant.

Town officials in 2013 increased minimum staffing from seven to eight, except during winter, spring and summer breaks at the colleges as one way to address staffing issues without hiring additional firefighters.

Should testing on live animals be banned?

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Critics argue technology provides viable alternatives to animal testing.

Critics of live animal testing say the practice is cruel and unnecessary. Instead, researchers can use alternatives like computer modeling to conduct their research. Researchers say animal testing is essential to accurately assess the effects of a drug or vaccine. Computer models cannot capture the complexity of a live animal. What do you think?

PERSPECTIVES

Critics argue technology provides viable alternatives to animal testing. Computer models are able to accurately replicate complex systems. In vitro methods allow scientists to see the mechanisms and effects of a substance. There are few good reasons to test on animals.

Today -- because experiments on animals are cruel, expensive, and generally inapplicable to humans--the world's most forward-thinking scientists have moved on to develop and use methods for studying diseases and testing products that replace animals and are actually relevant to human health. These modern methods include sophisticated tests using human cells and tissues (also known as in vitro methods), advanced computer-modeling techniques (often referred to as in silico models), and studies with human volunteers. These and other non-animal methods are not hindered by species differences that make applying animal test results to humans difficult or impossible, and they usually take less time and money to complete.

Animals have contributed to major advances in science and medicine. The alternatives put forward by critics are unable to truly replicate an animal's biological system. The case for using animals in medical research: 

Primate research has been the bridge from the lab to the clinic for a number of groundbreaking treatments, including vaccines for mumps, measles, yellow fever, anthrax and hepatitis B.Yet critics of animal research claim that such testing is unnecessary. They argue that computer models can effectively replace animal models.They're delusional. Consider, for example, the complexity of the human brain, which has about 100 billion neurons and 1 quadrillion synapses.In 2014, researchers in Japan attempted to simulate brain activity by using a supercomputer with over 700,000 processor cores. It took the computers 40 minutes of whirring to effectively replicate what the brain does in one second.Primates, on the other hand, can effectively imitate human brains. And that fact has led to numerous treatments.

Here are perspectives from people who want to see animal testing ended for good.

Here are perspectives from people who think animal testing is necessary.

The Tylt is focused on debates and conversations around news, current events and pop culture. We provide our community with the opportunity to share their opinions and vote on topics that matter most to them. We actively engage the community and present meaningful data on the debates and conversations as they progress. The Tylt is a place where your opinion counts, literally. The Tylt is an Advance Digital, Inc. property. Join us on Twitter @TheTylt or on Facebook, we'd love to hear what you have to say.

Trial delayed for Suzanne Hardy, charged in Brimfield crash that killed young brothers

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Brothers Dylan Riel, 4, and Jayce Garcia, 1, of Southbridge, were killed in a crash June 20, 2014.

SPRINGFIELD -- A trial date of April 7 has been set for Suzanne Hardy, who is charged with manslaughter in connection with a car crash that killed two young brothers who were passengers in her car.

Dylan Riel, 4, and Jayce Garcia, 1, of Southbridge, were killed in the crash June 20, 2014, in Brimfield. Hardy, 24, of Holland, was Dylan's aunt.

The case was scheduled for a motion hearing Dec. 30, but Hampden Superior Court Judge John S. Ferrara allowed a defense motion to postpone. The new trial date of April 7 was also set.

A group of family members of the victims were in the courtroom Dec. 30, as they have been for each of Hardy's court dates.

Hardy is free awaiting trial. She was not in court Dec. 30 and Ferrara waived her presence.

She was indicted by a Hampden County grand jury in June 2015.

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Ferrara set a February date by which Williams must disclose to Assistant District Attorney James Forsyth the content of what her expert witnesses will discuss at trial.

Williams previously asked to delay the trial in light of the more than 5,000 pages of cellphone records provided by prosecutors, who allege Hardy was texting at the time of the crash.

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Hardy has pleaded not guilty to all the charges against her, including two counts of manslaughter and two counts of motor vehicle homicide by negligent operation for the deaths of the boys -- meaning she could be founded guilty of either manslaughter or motor vehicle homicide.

A manslaughter conviction carries a sentence of up to 20 years, while a motor vehicle homicide conviction carries a sentence of up to 15 years.

Hardy also faces three counts of reckless endangerment of a child. Forsyth said Dylan, Jayce and another 4-year-old who survived the crash were not properly restrained.

The crash occurred in the afternoon in the area of 345 Sturbridge Road (Route 20). Prosecutors allege Hardy, heading east, attempted to pass on the right a landscaping truck that was stopped to make a left turn. Her car clipped the guardrail, spun out of control into the westbound lane and crashed into an SUV. Her car was then stuck head-on by another car in the westbound lane. The two occupants of that car also were seriously injured.

A charge against Hardy of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (motor vehicle) lists the victim as Lyndsey O'Connor, one of the people in the other car.

The three occupants of the SUV, the driver and two children, were not injured.

The crash closed Route 20 from the junction of Holland and East Brimfield roads to Route 148 in Sturbridge for more than three hours, and the emergency response included two medical helicopters and multiple ambulances.

Defendant brought up on fresh charges in 2013 death of 5-month-old in Springfield

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Miguel Fonseca-Colon is charged with murder in the death of a 5-month-old child in Springfield in January 2013.

SPRINGFIELD -- A Hampden Superior Court grand jury has indicted Miguel Fonseca-Colon again for murder in the death of a 5-month-old child in Springfield in January 2013.

Fonseca-Colon, 34, was first indicted in August 2014, and has been held in jail awaiting trial ever since. But on Oct. 14, a Hampden Superior Court judge dismissed the indictment.

Judge Tina S. Page, in her ruling, said prosecutors failed to present to the grand jury videotaped statements from the baby's mother, Diana Llanos, and aunt. She said the prosecution "simply presented select statements and elicited testimony from the two women that supported its theory of the case."

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Assistant District Attorney Jane Mulqueen then secured a Springfield District Court warrant charging Fonseca-Colon with the murder again. She said once the indictment was dismissed there was no basis to keep him in jail.

Fonseca-Colon denied the murder charge in October in Springfield District Court. The Dec. 29 indictments bring the case back to Hampden Superior Court.

Grand jury proceedings are not public, so information about what was presented to the grand jury this time is not available.

When Fonseca-Colon was arrested on the District Court warrant in October, defense lawyer David P. Hoose argued his client should be released on personal recognizance with GPS monitoring.

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Springfield District Court Judge William J. Boyle ordered that Fonseca-Colon continue to be held without right to bail. Hoose appealed that decision to a higher court as permitted by law. Hampden Superior Court Judge Edward J. McDonough also ordered Fonseca-Colon held without right to bail.

At the bail hearing, Hoose attacked the strength of the prosecution's case, criticized the investigation into the death of the 5-month-old and said his client has been held 26 months already awaiting trial.

Mulqueen urged McDonough to keep Fonseca-Colon in prison without right to bail.

"This is a brutal, vicious murder of a helpless 5-month-old," she said.

She said the baby, Jadamier Cintron, had a fractured skull, 32 rib fractures, a lacerated spleen and other injuries.

"How long is it fair to ask Mr. Fonseca to sit in jail while the commonwealth does its investigation?" Hoose asked McDonough. If released, Hoose said, Fonseca-Colon would live with his sister in Westfield.

Page wrote in her ruling dismissing the original indictment, "Fonseca-Colon points to many potentially exculpatory statements that were not introduced to the grand jury that support his argument that the commonwealth presented false or deceptive evidence 'knowingly and for the purpose of obtaining an indictment.'"

She said the prosecution's failure to present the recorded interviews, which are inconsistent with grand jury testimony, presents a distorted picture of not only Fonseca-Colon's relationship with the baby, but also about the baby's relationship with his brother.

Page said the two women's "equivocal statements, inconsistent statements and shifting timelines gravely distorted the presentation to the grand jury and may have had an impact on the grand jury's decision to indict."

Granby school deficits of nearly $400K focus of special town meeting

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Voters will be asked to appropriate money to balance fiscal 2016 line items for school choice, special education, and the lunch program

GRANBY — Reconciling budget deficits totaling $398,654 in three separate school department spending accounts will be the focus of next week's special town meeting.

According to the warrant, voters will be asked to appropriate money to balance fiscal 2016 line items for school choice, special education and the lunch program.

The articles show $178,113.50 is being requested "for the purpose of funding the School Lunch deficit," $122,501.29 "for the purpose of funding the School Special Education Circuit Breaker deficit," and $98,039.79 "for the purpose of funding the School Choice deficit as of June 30, 2016."

The Jan. 9 meeting at the high school gymnasium starts at 7 p.m.

STM01-09-17warrant by The Republican/MassLive.com on Scribd


What to expect as prosecutors try to persuade jurors to sentence Dylann Roof to death

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Prosecutors on Tuesday will begin their bid to convince jurors that Dylann Storm Roof, the man who gunned down nine parishioners of Charleston's historic Mother Emanuel church in hopes of starting a race war, should be sentenced to death.

Federal prosecutors on Tuesday will begin their bid to convince jurors that Dylann Storm Roof, the man who gunned down nine parishioners of Charleston's historic Mother Emanuel church in hopes of starting a race war, should be sentenced to death.

Roof, 22, was convicted last month of federal hate crimes, and because prosecutors are seeking a death sentence, the same men and women who declared him guilty of 33 criminal charges must now decide his punishment. The so-called penalty phase of any trial in which a person's life is on the line is difficult to forecast, but in Roof's case, it is especially hard to predict.

Roof has asked that the lawyers who worked on his behalf during the trial's guilt phase no longer represent him, apparently because of a disagreement over whether mental health evidence should be offered. He reportedly plans to offer an opening statement, though he has said he does not plan to offer evidence or call witnesses. On Monday, at the request of Roof's former defense attorney, a judge conducted a non-public hearing to assess Roof's competency, though the judge indicated before the hearing began he did not anticipate delaying the start of the penalty phase.

Over the next few days, Roof could question the witnesses called by prosecutors, including the relatives of those he killed. Or he could mostly remain silent.

"I think people are afraid that this mentally impaired guy is going to get up and turn it into a circus," said Christopher Adams, a Charleston defense attorney who is not involved in the case. "But what I suspect will happen is he just won't do anything - that he'll watch the witnesses, that he won't put up any meaningful evidence on his own."

Jurors have only two options: sentence Roof to life in prison without the possibility of release or consign him to die. Prosecutors will set out to convince them that the case presents the factors necessary to warrant the most severe penalty in the American justice system. The Justice Department is seeking a death sentence for more than half of the 33 counts Roof was convicted of last month.

Federal death sentences are a rarity. There are 59 federal inmates facing such sentences, according to the Bureau of Prisons. The most recent addition was Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, sentenced to death in 2015 for his role in the Boston Marathon bombings. Since the federal death penalty statute was reinstated in 1988 and expanded in 1994, the government has taken a little more than 200 such cases to trial, according to the Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel Project. Juries deciding sentences handed down punishments of life in prison about twice as often as the death penalty.

The Justice Department has executed only three inmates in the modern death penalty era, and the last such execution was in 2003.

When they revealed to the court in May that they would seek the death penalty - a decision that was opposed even by then-U.S. Attorney Bill Nettles and Vanita Gupta, the Justice Department's assistant attorney general for the civil rights division - prosecutors highlighted Roof's substantial planning and premeditation of the crime, his racial motivation, his lack of remorse and the vulnerability of his victims. The federal death penalty statute states that the punishment is more warranted when a victim is "particularly vulnerable" because of being notably young or old; three of the Mother Emanuel victims were between the ages of 70 and 87.

Jurors already have seen haunting evidence about the nature of the crime and the impact it had on the families' of those whose loved ones were killed. In their opening statement, prosecutors flashed pictures of each victim and outlined brief biographies of the lives that were taken.

Jurors would later see a video of Roof confessing to the crime - "Well, I killed them, I guess," he said - and offering a racist rationale.

"I had to do it because somebody had to do something," Roof said. "Black people are killing white people every day on the street, and they are raping white women. What I did is so minuscule to what they're doing to white people every day all the time."

For his part, Roof could present what is known as mitigating evidence, or reasons that jurors would not want to see him executed. That might have included testimony about his mental health evidence, though Roof told a court last month he would call no experts and offer no evidence on that subject. Adams said Roof could also tell jurors about his life and background, and how miserable his existence might be in a federal prison, in hopes that it might convince the group to spare his life.

But Adams said Roof would face a tall order.

"This work is really hard. It's very technical, and it involves a lot of emotion and a lot of technical skill," Adams said. "For a guy who's a high school dropout, it's almost impossible. And I think, for any defendant, no matter how smart, it would be impossible to hit the right emotional tones for the jurors."

Roof had offered to plead guilty in exchange for a life sentence - an indication that he does not likely want to die, as some facing the prospect of life behind bars do. If jurors sentence him to life in prison, he faces the possibility of another death sentence at his state trial, expected to begin later this year. But South Carolina has not executed a death row inmate since 2011. Like many other states, it has no lethal injection drugs, and it does not appear likely it will obtain any in the immediate future.

(c) 2017, The Washington Post.  Matt Zapotosky and Mark Berman wrote this story.

Fatal Holyoke apartment building fire: 8 questions that remain

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Following Sunday's fatal fire in Holyoke, here is a rundown of what is known so far and what remains unknown.

3rd dead body found at Holyoke fire site as officials identify previous two victims: Maria Cartagena, 48, and Jorge Munoz, 55

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Maria Cartagena, 48, and Jorge Munoz, 55, were identified Monday as the victims of the New Year's Day fire at 106 Northeast St. in Holyoke, Massachusetts by authorities who also said rescuers found the remains of a third victim.

HOLYOKE -- Maria Cartagena, 48, and Jorge Munoz, 55, were identified as the victims of the New Year's Day fire at 106 Northeast St. by authorities who also said Monday rescuers found the remains of a third victim.

"Authorities are working to identify the victim and notify the deceased's family," said a press release from the office of Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni.

The fire in the five-story brick apartment building began early Sunday and displaced 49 people.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation, Gulluni and other officials said earlier Monday at a press conference.

"This is an on-going investigation being jointly investigated by the Holyoke Fire and Police departments and the Massachusetts State Police assigned to both the Office of the State Fire Marshal and the Office of Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni," the press release said.

This is a developing story and details will be added as reporting continues.

Fire damages home on Lakeview Avenue in Ludlow

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Fire Chief Mark Babineau said the fire started in the kitchen and worked its way into the attic. He said the home may not be habitable.

LUDLOW - Fire heavily damaged the upper floors of a home on Lakeview Avenue on Monday afternoon.

Firefighters were called to 94 Lakeview Ave. just after 4 p.m. and saw smoke upon arrival at the scene. They quickly knocked down the flames.

Fire Chief Mark Babineau said the fire started in the kitchen and worked its way into the attic.

The homeowner was inside at the time, but no one was injured.

Babineau said there was no immediate estimate on the value of the property damage.

"I haven't been inside, but I'm guessing it won't be habitable," he said.

State Police Airwing finds 5-time OUI offender lying in Wareham woods after crashing car

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The vehicle was partially on the ramp and shoulder, perpendicular to the roadway. The 2000 Nissan Quest also had two different license plates.

WAREHAM - The Massachusetts State Police Airwing located a four-time OUI offender who had crashed his car and abandoned it on Route 195 on New Year's Eve.

After troopers found John Layton 45, of Boston, he was charged with his fifth OUI, and a long list of related offenses.

At 8 p.m. on Dec. 31, a state trooper assigned to the Bourne barracks responded to a single-vehicle crash on the ramp of Route 25 eastbound from Route 195 eastbound in Wareham. The vehicle was partially on the ramp and shoulder, perpendicular to the roadway.

The 2000 Nissan Quest also had two different license plates, state police said in a news release.


Witnesses gave the trooper descriptions of the driver, who had fled into nearby woods. State police personnel from Troop D, Airwing and K9 units, along with members of the Wareham Police Department, assisted in the search.

The Airwing found Layton lying face down on the ground about 30 feet into the wood line.

He was arrested and booked on the following charges: Operating a motor vehicle with a revoked license as a habitual traffic offender; OUI liquor, fifth offense; OUI with a suspended license for OUI; driving an unregistered and uninsured motor vehicle with improper plates; larceny under $250; receiving stolen property under $250; leaving the scene of a property damage accident; and negligent operation of a motor vehicle.

State police did not explain the larceny charges and said no further details will be released at this time.

Layton is being held at the Plymouth House of Correction pending his arraignment in Wareham District Court on Tuesday.

 

Days after Methuen baby exposed to fentanyl, police seize $1.2M worth of deadly drug

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Robinson Rojas-Rosario, 32, of Queens, N.Y., was arrested while sitting in a taxi with a duffel bag allegedly containing 15 kilos of the powerful opioid.

METHUEN - Police took more than $1 million worth of fentanyl, a potent opioid playing a fatal role in the nation's heroin overdose crisis, off the city's streets on Monday.

Robinson Rojas-Rosario, 32, of Queens, N.Y., was arrested while sitting in a taxi with a duffel bag allegedly containing 15 kilos of the powerful drug. Police estimated the value at $1.2 million.

The arrest came at around 9 a.m. when Methuen Police received a 911 call reporting a man with a gun sitting in a taxi on Glen Avenue, police said in a news release announcing the arrest. The caller said the man had emerged from the taxi, taken a gun out of a duffel bag and stored it on his person, then got back into the vehicle.

Responding officers found the drugs and placed Rojas-Rosario under arrest on charges of major fentanyl trafficking.

"Our streets are safer now," said Mayor Stephen Zanni. "Any effort we can make in fighting the opioid epidemic is progress, but removing such a large amount of this deadly substance from our streets is a huge success."

Police Chief Joseph E. Solomon praised the 911 caller, saying the arrest is "a great example of why we tell people to say something if they see something."

"Thanks to the keen observations of this witness and the quick response from police, we were able to take an extremely large amount of fentanyl off of our streets," said Solomon.

The arrest comes three days after Methuen police officers and Lawrence General Hospital staff saved the life of a 10-month-old baby who was exposed to fentanyl. The child was flown by medical helicopter to Tufts Medical Center for further treatment and is now in state custody.

These two cases do not appear to be related.

Rojas-Rosario is being held on $100,000 bail pending his arraignment at Lawrence District Court.

Help for 25 families displaced in Holyoke fire to get outlined

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Tenants left homeless after the New Year's Day fire at 106 Northeast St. in Holyoke, Massachusetts can get referrals and other help from the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency, the Red Cross and city agencies at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2017 at the War Memorial at 310 Appleton St.

HOLYOKE -- Information about long-term housing and other forms of help will be available for the 25 families who lost their homes in the New Year's Day blaze at 106 Northeast St. at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the War Memorial at 310 Appleton St.

"All of the families displaced are invited," Mayor Alex B. Morse said.

Representatives of the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) will be there to provide help and answer questions, as will those from the Red Cross and city agencies, he said.

Also, owners of buildings with vacant apartments have been asked to attend the recovery effort meeting, he said.

Three people, including Maria Cartagena, 48, and Jorge Munoz, 55, have died in the fire that began Sunday morning in the five-story, red-brick apartment building at Northeast and East Dwight streets, officials said.

3rd dead body found at Holyoke fire site as officials identify previous two victims: Maria Cartagena, 48, and Jorge Munoz, 55

The office of Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni identified Cartagena and Munoz and said Monday authorities were working to identify the third victim and notify the person's family.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation, officials said, though Gulluni said what authorities have learned so far in probing the blaze means that it is not a criminal investigation.

MEMA, Red Cross and city representatives will hold case management discussions at the War Memorial with those displaced by the fire to help them find long-term homes or arrange for furniture and other belongings to be moved, Morse said.

Places to stay have been found for all of the 49 people displaced by the fire, though some have been placed in hotel rooms. The hotel costs will be paid by the owner of the building damaged by the fire and the owner of an adjacent building evacuated for safety reasons, he said.

The property at 106 Northeast St. is owned by Naviah Investments, a limited liability company based in Brookline. Morse said the property owners have been cooperative with city and state officials.

In some cases, those former tenants of the fire-ravaged building who have been placed in apartments have been able to transfer rental agreements and security deposits to the new units, he said.

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"People who are in an apartment, the intention is that they're going to be in that apartment for good," Morse said.

Morse also has established the "Mayor's Fire & Emergency Relief Fund." Donations can be made online to help the people who lost homes and belongings in the fire at gofundme.com/holyoke-mayor-fire-relief-fund

The campaign had raised $26,073 of its $100,000 goal as of 7 p.m. Monday.

Part of the building had to be demolished as firefighters battled the blaze and it is likely that the remainder will be razed once state and city officials complete the investigation into the cause of the fire, Building Commissioner Damian J. Cote said.

The building is 112-years-old. It has 25 units and 95 total rooms and the property had an assessed value of $607,900, according to online records of the Holyoke Board of Assessors.


Obituaries from The Republican, Jan. 2, 2017

Thomas Dupre, former Springfield bishop indicted on child rape charges, dead at 83

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Dupre left his position in disgrace after The Republican confronted him with accusations that he raped two children. In 2004, he was indicted on child sex abuse charges, but never went to trial.

SPRINGFIELD -- Thomas L. Dupre, a former bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield who left his position in disgrace amid The Republican's reporting of child sex abuse allegations, died Friday at the age of 83.

Dupre was bishop from 1995 to 2004, when accusations made by the mother of an alleged abuse victim became public.

He retired the day after The Republican sought his response to detailed written accounts of alleged child rape. The diocese claimed the timing was a coincidence, saying the pope had allowed Dupre's months-old request to retire five years early due to failing health.

On Sept. 27, 2004, about seven months after Dupre retired, he was indicted by a Hampden County grand jury on charges that he sexually assaulted two altar boys, ages 12 and 13, more than three decades prior. The same day, then-District Attorney William Bennett announced the case would not go to trial because the statute of limitations had expired on some charges and the grand jury declined to indict on others.

Dupre was the first Roman Catholic bishop to be indicted in a nationwide wave of sexual abuse accusations against priests and other church leaders.

The alleged abuse occurred while Dupre was a parish priest in Chicopee and West Springfield in the 1970s, according to The Republican's reporting. He allegedly showed his victims pornography, gave them alcohol and took them on trips out of the country.

When Dupre was elevated to auxiliary bishop in 1990, and again when he took the top job in 1995, Dupre allegedly called his victims to make sure they wouldn't disclose the abuse.

Mark Dupont, spokesman for the diocese, acknowledged Dupre's death in a brief statement Monday night.

"The Diocese of Springfield has been informed of the passing of Thomas L. Dupre, former Bishop of Springfield. He was 83 at the time of his death on December 30. He passed away outside the diocese and all funeral arrangements have been scheduled to be private," said Dupont.

Contemporary reporting from The Boston Globe's famed Spotlight investigative team said Dupre was also criticized for failing to appropriately respond to the case of the Rev. Richard L. Lavigne, a pedophile priest "who had been convicted of abusing boys in 1992 and is a suspect in the 1972 murder of Springfield altar boy Daniel Croteau."

Dupre defrocked Lavigne 11 years after his conviction and eight years after taking over as bishop. Lavigne was never charged with Croteau's murder, which remains unsolved. He is a Level 3 registered sex offender, considered the most dangerous category by the state, and resides in Chicopee.

Hadley police welcome in new year with look at 2016

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It was another year of growth for the police department which celebrated the start of 2017 with a Facebook posting of a handful of stats from 2016.

HADLEY -- It was another year of growth for the Police Department, which marked the start of 2017 with a Facebook post listing a handful of stats from 2016.

Police answered 11,597 calls, up from 10,981 calls in 2015, or about a 5.3 percent increase.  

They responded to 517 motor vehicle crashes, up from 440 in 2015, a 14 percent increase.

Police also made 395 arrests, up about 8 percent from 363 the previous year.

Officers also took in 585 reports and issued 1,385 citations.

Three new positions have been added to the department to help it address the growing need for police services.

With the new positions, police were able to assign four officers to newly created positions -- the town's first ever detective, as well as designated school resource, community outreach and traffic safety officers.

Seen@ The 2016 Springfield citywide Kwanzaa Celebration

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On Friday, crowds gathered for Springfield's 9th Annual Citywide Kwanzaa Celebration at UMass Springfield in Tower Square.

SPRINGFIELD - On Friday, crowds gathered for Springfield's 9th Annual Citywide Kwanzaa Celebration at UMass Springfield in Tower Square.

The celebration, which honors African heritage in the African-American culture, is observed from December 26 to January 1 and culminates with a feast and gift-giving. Kwanzaa has seven core principles (Nguzo Saba). It was created by Dr. Maulana Karenga and first celebrated in 1966-67.

The keynote speaker was former state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson.

The event was presented by the Springfield Mayor's Office, Association of Black Business & Professionals, PAHMUSA Museum, and AC Consulting.

Massachusetts Black and Latino Legislative Caucus: Communities of Color Agenda

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The Communities of Color Agenda helps build consensus on key pieces of legislation and develop a strategy to maximize community support.

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