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

Ruben Flores-Marzan is Ware's new director of planning and community development

$
0
0

Flores-Marzan was planning and development director in Providence, Rhode Island, from 2013 to 2015, and was a base community planner from February 2015 to July 2016 for the U.S. Air Force, according to his resume.

WARE -- By a 4-1 vote, selectmen on Tuesday confirmed the town manager's selection of Ruben Flores-Marzan as the municipality's new director of planning and community development.

He begins work on Thursday, with an annual salary of $64,000, Town Manager Stuart Beckley said.

Selectman John Desmond, who voted against Flores-Marzan, alluded to the fiscal condition of the town, and said, "The last thing we need to do is hire more people."

Desmond also questioned whether a planning director would "inspire" economic activity. "We haven't seen any growth and I don't see that changing," the selectman said.

"Our applicant is extremely inspiring," Beckley said.

In an interview following the vote, Flores-Marzan said he resides in Springfield. Asked if he might move to Ware, Flores-Marzan said, "not right now."

Flores-Marzan was planning and development director in Providence, Rhode Island, from 2013 to 2015, and was a base community planner from February 2015 to July 2016 for the U.S. Air Force, according to his resume. It shows he earned a master's degree in urban planning at the University of Akron, Ohio, in 1999.

The planning director's position had been unfilled since July, when Karen Cullen resigned.

The planning director wields significant authority, according to Ware's town charter. "The Director of Planning and Community Development will be responsible for supervision and operation of the Planning and Community Development Department," a summary of the charter, amended in 2014, says.

That department, the amendment says, consists of the "Planning Board, Zoning Board of Appeals, Community Development Authority, Tax Increment Financing Committee, and a Planning and Community Development Advisory Committee, and groups these boards and entities within the Planning and Community Development Department in order to increase their efficiency and coordinate their functions."


President-elect Donald Trump picks David Shulkin for Veterans Affairs secretary

$
0
0

President-elect Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he has selected David Shulkin, a physician and current VA undersecretary, to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs in his incoming administration.

President-elect Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he has selected David Shulkin, a physician and a current VA under secretary for health, to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs in his incoming administration.

Trump, who has named his picks for all but a few cabinet positions with less than 10 days left before taking office, told reporters he believes Shulkin "is going to do a fantastic job" of leading his administration's efforts to overhaul the agency and how it connects veterans to health care.

"He's fantastic, he will do a truly great job," he said. "One of the commitments I made is that we're going to straighten out the whole situation for our veterans -- our veterans have been treated horribly, they're waiting in line for 15, 16, 17 days -- cases where they go in for a minor early stage for of cancer, they can't see a doctor, by the time they get to the doctor they're terminal. That's not going to happen. David will do a fantastic job."

The incoming president added that his team will also be talking to other people who will help Shulkin in these efforts, offering that major hospitals, like the Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic, plan to align with the VA.

"We're going to straighten out the VA for our veterans, I've been promising that for a long time, and it's something I feel very strongly about," Trump said.

If confirmed, Shulkin would be the first VA secretary to not serve in the military, the Washington Post reported. He was confirmed unanimously for the undersecretary post in June 2015.

Prior to becoming the chief executive of the Veterans Health Administration, Shulkin served as president at Morristown Medical Center, Goryeb Children's Hospital, and Atlantic Rehabilitation Institute, and the Atlantic Health System Accountable Care Organization.

Trump said he and his transition team interviewed at least 100 people for the position of VA secretary. Former Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown was among those rumored for the cabinet spot.

Gov. Charlie Baker and former rival U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., both voiced support for Brown taking over the federal agency.

Springfield police arrest suspect in shooting of 10-year-old girl getting off school bus

$
0
0

Wilson Garcia is accused of firing several shots at a woman on June 6. The woman and a young girl were stuck by gunfire.


SPRINGFIELD - Police on Tuesday arrested a city man who is a suspect in a June 9 shooting on Belmont Avenue where two people were struck by gunfire including a 10-year-old girl getting off a school bus, police said.

111 spd garcia.jpgWilson Garcia 

Police spokesman Sgt. John Delaney said Wilson Garcia, 24, of 155 Allen St., was arrested by detectives Bobby Bohl and Robert Mancini of the Warrant Apprehension Unit on Tuesday morning at his apartment. There had been a warrant issued previously for Garcia's arrest, he said.

Garcia is charged with discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a dwelling, assault with a dangerous weapon, attempted assault and battery with a firearm, malicious damage to a motor vehicle, possession of a firearm without a permit, and possession of ammunition without a firearms identification card.

He is accused of firing several shots at a 22-year-old woman on June 9 at Belmont Avenue and Euclid Avenue at about 4:30 p.m. The woman was stuck in the buttocks.

A 10-year-old girl who was getting off a school bus was struck in the calf by a stray bullet, police said. Neither was seriously injured.

Earlier reports had that as many as eight shell casings were recovered at the scene.
Delaney said Major Crimes Unit detective Misael Rodriguez, the lead investigator in the shooting, identified Garcia as a suspect in the shooting and a warrant was issued for his arrest.

Garcia is scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday in Springfield District Court.

Palmer Council's review of Town Manager Charles Blanchard concludes he's doing a good job

$
0
0

The seven town councilors evaluating Blanchard gave him near-perfect score on policy execution -- 4.86 out of a maximum of 5 points.

PALMER -- The Town Council's annual performance review of Town Manager Charles Blanchard concluded that, overall, he continues doing a good job on behalf of the community.

The seven Palmer town councilors evaluated Blanchard according to 11 criteria. The averaged numerical results gave him a nearly perfect score on policy execution -- 4.86 out of a maximum of 5 points.

The council's scaling system defines 1 as unacceptable performance, 2 as poor, 3 as acceptable, 4 as good and 5 as excellent.

Blanchard's cumulative performance average was 4.21, the Town Council said.

District 1 Councilor Philip J. Hebert gave Blanchard a perfect score of 5.0, saying the town manager did an excellent job in all 11 categories.

At-large Councilor Mary Salzmann, the Town Council's vice president, gave Blanchard the lowest marks, with an overall rating of 3.18.

The evaluation by Council President Barbara A. Barry, who represents District 2, was 4.23.

Blood-spitting man who threatened to burn bar down to serve six months in jail

$
0
0

A 34-year-old Chicopee man will serve six months in jail after "flipping out" in an Easthampton bar and spitting and wiping his blood on arresting officers, a police cruiser and just about everything else in his proximity.

 


A 34-year-old Chicopee man will serve six months in jail after "flipping out" in an Easthampton bar and spitting and wiping his blood on arresting officers, a police cruiser and just about everything else in his proximity.

William A. Brbovic of Adams Street visited the Brass Cat on Oct. 26, where he began "throwing items" and "yelling" after a bartender, deeming him "extremely intoxicated" and refused to pour him a shot of liquor, according to a report by Easthampton Police Officer William D. Mielke.

"(Brbovic) stated that he was going to 'burn this entire place down,'" Mielke said the bartender told him.

Staff responded to the disturbance by calling police.

Several members of the Easthampton Police Department located Brbovic outside the bar, questioned him and began patting him down for weapons, whereupon Brbovic turned on officers, issuing threats of violence and initiating a scuffle.

"Patrons began to come outside from the Brass Cat as there was a large commotion from Brbovic yelling and struggling with us," Mielke's report stated.

Brbovic kicked at the arresting officers as they attempted to cram him into a cruiser, prompting one to deploy a shot of pepper spray to Brbovic's face.

During the ride to the station, Brbovic "bashed his head on the cage of the cruiser and wiped blood" everywhere, necessitating a "biohazard cleanup," the report states.

Officers attempting to escort Brbovic into the station needed to cover his head with a "spit hood" because "he was spitting everywhere nonstop" and continued "spitting every time we attempted to take the spit hood off."

One officer required medical evaluation after accidentally putting his hand on blood Brbovic had spat on the station's booking room door. Brbovic was treated at Cooley Dickinson Hospital, where his blood alcohol concentration was recorded at .24.

"It should be noted that it was discovered later that Brbovic was arrested by this department in 2011 for causing a disturbance in the same bar and subsequently fighting officers, acting in the same demeanor," the report adds.

In Northampton District Court on Tuesday, Brbovic admitted to sufficient facts on three counts of threatening to commit a crime, one count disorderly conduct and one count vandalism with a noxious/filthy substance.

Western New England University announces business scholarship

$
0
0

The $2,000 award is open to students from Hampden, Hampshire and Worcester counties enrolled in the College of Business starting in the fall of 2017.

SPRINGFIELD -- Western New England University announced this week its $2,000 Business Impact Scholarship to students from Hampden, Hampshire and Worcester counties who are enrolled as new students in the College of Business starting in the fall of 2017.

"We think we have an outstanding product and we want to make Western New England university as affordable as we can to people in our region," said Bryan Gross, vice president for enrollment management at Western New England University. "We've gained a lot of positive momentum."

The $2,000 a year would be in addition to an incoming student's academic merit scholarship, which will range up to $20,000 per year, Western New England University said.

Gross said the sticker price at Western New England University is $37,000 and totals $49,000 a year for students who live on campus and pay for room and board. 

But because of Western New England's academic merit scholarship and other programs, the average cost to a family out of pocket is $12,000 a year, Gross said. That amount doesn't include the new Business Impact Scholarship, which doesn't begin until next year.

Besides encouraging local high school seniors to apply to be freshmen in the new academic year, Gross said the Business Impact Scholarship will aid the economy here because graduates will be more likely to stay local and take local jobs.

"Again, we're noticing new businesses and a lot of excitement in the Western Massachusetts region," he said. "Business is very competitive these days."

Western New England University estimates that 70 incoming freshmen will enroll in the College of Business this fall from the three eligible counties, at a scholarship cost of $140,000 in the first year.

Gross said Western New England University works on a rolling admissions system and will continue to accept applications through the summer.

The university's website is here.

Ware selectmen to seek external candidates for police chief

$
0
0

The town manager said it would cost the town $2,000 per applicant to fund the assessment for each external police chief hopeful.

WARE — Selectmen voted unanimously at Tuesday's meeting to seek candidates outside of the town's police department in the search for a permanent chief.

But that will come with a price, Town Manager Stuart Beckley told the board.

He said selectmen had the choice of considering five internal candidates eligible to apply for chief of police, using an assessment program costing $6,300 to evaluate them.

Beckley said that according to civil service rules, which the town must abide by, current Ware officers are required to have at least one year of service on the job to be eligible to apply for the chief's position.

He said the rules for external candidates are different, according to civil service, and require at least five years of managerial experience in police operations.

Beckley also said it would cost the town $2,000 per applicant to fund the assessment for each external police chief hopeful. He said applicants would pay a $250 fee to apply and undergo the assessment center regimen.

When selectmen asked the manager how many might apply for chief, Beckley said if there are many candidates, the board could then decide if it would be cost prohibitive to test them all.

"I want the best candidate. I don't want to spend $100,000 to find it," selectman Alan Whitney said.

Selectmen, who also act as the town's police commissioners, approved a motion to seek outside candidates for the job, but the motion also reserved for the board the right to back out of that process if a large number apply.

Selectmen did not say what the process would be to select a new police chief.

Former chief Dennis Healey announced his retirement in February 2015.

The board then appointed Kenneth Kovitch chief. Kovitch retired in July, but resumed work as interim chief in September, at the request of selectmen, who signed a contract with him through June while the board searches for a permanent chief.

Mass. woman sentenced to prison for firing shotgun at estranged wife, friend

$
0
0

When Deborah Armstrong's estranged wife and her friend came to pick up some belongings at the house, Armstrong shot at at their truck.

A 54-year-old Rehoboth woman was sentenced to up to 5 years in prison after pleading guilty to firing a shotgun at her estranged wife and a friend in the driveway of the couple's home in April.

Deborah Armstrong pleaded guilty in Fall River Superior Court on Friday to two counts of armed assault with intent to murder and two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon, according to the office of Briston District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III.

Judge Raffi Yessayan ordered Armstrong to serve 4 to 5 years in prison, to be followed by 10 years probation.

According to Quinn's office, Armstrong's estranged wife had arranged for a friend to help her move items from the couple's home on April 14. But when they began placing boxes in the back of a pickup truck, Armstrong appeared with a pump-action shotgun and fired at the vehicle.

No one was hit, but the shot blew out the truck's rear window on the driver's side. Both women told police they ran away when they saw Armstrong chamber another round.

According to the Taunton Daily Gazette, when Armstrong was arrested, she told police she shot at the car ""I did it"My wife never loved me. She's divorcing me. I fired the gun at her because I wanted to hurt her and kill her."


Have you seen this man? Springfield police searching for credit card thief

$
0
0

Springfield police are hoping to identify a man believed to be responsible for a recent credit card theft.

SPRINGFIELD — Springfield police are asking for the public's help in identifying a man believed to have recently stolen a credit card and used it to buy hundreds of dollars worth of merchandise.

Police say that on Jan. 5 an employee at a local hospital discovered that someone had gone through her purse and stolen her wallet, said John Delaney of the Springfield Police Department, in a statement.

Later that day, the man who stole the card used it to buy $300 worth of merchandise at the Walmart located on Boston Road, Delaney said.

The store's surveillance cameras captured images of the man as he purchased the items.

If anyone believes they have can identify the suspect or has any information related to the incident they have been encouraged to contact the city's Major Crime Unit at 413-787-6355.

Beleaguered Chestnut Towers in downtown Springfield gets new management

$
0
0

Related Companies are taking on the Chestnut Towers project through its Boston-based Related Beal subsidiary and its national Related Affordable subsidiary.

SPRINGFIELD -- Related Companies, a New York City real estate company, plans to take over management "very soon" of the beleaguered Chestnut Towers housing and retail complex overlooking the city's downtown with an eye toward improving it while keeping it as affordable housing.

"We will make initial structural improvements to the building and parking garage, then aim at broader improvements," said Jessica L. Scaperotti, vice president of corporate communications for Related Companies. "And then we will work with both the city and the state to make Chestnut Towers more attractive while keeping it affordable and to enhance the entire community."

Related Companies has had an ownership stake in the complex since 1996, but was not managing it.

Scaperotti described Related as a "passive minority" partner in Chestnut Towers up until this point. It's taking on an active management role. But she said it is too early to talk about how its ownership status will change.

Scaperotti had few details to share Wednesday. But Related Companies executives were in Springfield Wednesday afternoon meeting with Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, Chief Economic Development Office Kevin Kennedy and others.

The complex totals 489 apartment units across three buildings. It includes Springfield's tallest residential tower, a 34-story structure between Dwight and Chestnut streets at State Street.

Related Companies are taking on the Chestnut Towers project through its Boston-based Related Beal subsidiary and its national Related Affordable subsidiary.

Related Affordable has 55,000 units of affordable and workforce housing around the country. In the past, Related has improved housing complexes by building fields for the neighborhood grammar school or adding community rooms and computer labs for families. This is on top of making mechanical improvements to building systems and renovating the apartments themselves.

"It depends on who lives there and what the needs are," Scaperotti said.

Opened in 1976 as a modern, mixed income housing for downtown Springfield, the Chestnut Towers complex has deteriorated over the years with residents complaining of elevators that don't work and criminal activity in the area.

Kennedy said Related has a very good reputation when it comes to property management. But it is  too early to know how much money Related plans on investing in the property.

"They spoke with us about the intimidate needs of property," Kennedy said. "We see it as another significant investment in downtown Springfield. It's good news."

In an emailed statement, Sarno compared the prospects of an improved Chestnut Tower with housing complexes in Springfield that have already been improved in recent years.

"This has been on my radar screen for a while. Kevin Kennedy and I are in discussions with Related to make a significant investment to not only improve the physical plant and adjacent areas, but more importantly to improve the management of the complex," Sarno said.  "As we have done before in creating a better housing mix for our city - you can look at the successful transformation projects such as Outing Park, Longhill Gardens and SilverBrick Lofts to name a few."

In April, Related Companies announced that is was buying 17 properties totaling 3,000 units in Illinois and had plans to invest $262 million in renovations.

The deal includes 1,500 units in the City of Chicago, including the 628-unit Marshall Field Garden Apartments.

At Marshall Field Garden Apartments in Chicago, Related Companies announced improvements for the individual units and common area improvements including the construction of a new fitness center, laundry room and enhanced community room. Related also added enhanced  of after-school programming and other services for residents.

Related photo gallery:

Gallery preview 

Driver injured after ice-related crash in Deerfield

$
0
0

A driver was injured in a crash in Deerfield on Wednesday that police say was ice-related.

DEERFIELD — A woman was injured after a crash in Deerfield on Wednesday morning that police say was ice-related.

Police were called to Upper Road near West Deerfield at approximately 10:30 a.m., where a car had flipped over, injuring the driver.

Officer Adam Sokoloski of the Deerfield Police Department said that the crash appears to have occurred after the driver lost control of her vehicle and swerved from the southbound lane to the northbound lane.

The vehicle ended up hitting an embankment, which caused it to roll over, said Sokoloski.

The driver was taken by private transport to a local hospital for treatment. Her injuries are not considered to be life-threatening, Sokoloski said.

Black ice is believed to have been a factor in the crash, according to police.


Professor who played with Dizzy Gillespie, Liza Minnelli to speak at Martin Luther King Jr. breakfast in Holyoke

$
0
0

Professor Willie Hill has performed with the likes of Liza Minnelli and Dizzy Gillespie and on Friday, Jan. 13, 2017 at 8 a.m., the University of Massachusetts teacher will be the speaker at the Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Breakfast at Slainte Restaurant at 80 Jarvis Ave. held by the Greater Holyoke Council for Human Understanding.

HOLYOKE -- Professor Willie Hill from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst Fine Arts Center will be guest speaker at 8 a.m. on Friday at the Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Breakfast at Slainte Restaurant, 80 Jarvis Ave.

"The breakfast aims to celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr by featuring a guest speaker who has done extraordinary work," said a press release from the Greater Holyoke Council for Human Understanding.

The event is open to the public and admission is $15, the press release said.

King, 39, a clergyman and civil rights leader, was assassinated April 4, 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee. He would be 88 Sunday.

Hill is a professor in music education at UMass. As a woodwind specialist, he has performed with Sammy Davis Jr., Dizzy Gillespie, Liza Minnelli, Lena Horn, Johnny Mathis, Lou Rawls and others, the press release said.

hill.jpgProfessor Willie Hill 

He is a member of the national board of directors of Young Audiences Arts for Learning and a trustee for the Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts.

In the Denver/Metro area, Hill was a member of the Denver Broncos Jazz Ensemble and a regular performer at the Denver Auditorium Theater, the press release said.

The breakfast will include a musical performance by the Holyoke High School Madrigals directed by Mark Todd, the press release said.

The role of the Greater Holyoke Council for Human Understanding is to improve the quality of human development in the greater Holyoke community, its website said. The group also holds an annual Holocaust commemoration and awards student scholarships.

For more information, contact the Council for Human Understanding at councilforhumanunderstanding@gmail.com

Belchertown earns EPA award for operations at municipal wastewater plant

$
0
0

In a letter made public at Monday's selectmen's meeting, the EPA praised treatment plant Superintendent Rollin DeWitt and his staff.

 

BELCHERTOWN -- The federal Environmental Protection Agency recently awarded the town an award for outstanding operations at the municipal wastewater treatment facility.

In a letter made public at Monday's Board of Selectmen meeting, the EPA praised treatment plant Superintendent Rollin DeWitt and his staff.

The EPA letter, signed by agency manager Mark Spinale, is dated Dec. 23 and was addressed to Belchertown Town Administrator Gary Brougham. Spinale invited DeWitt to an awards luncheon at the Boston Marriott/Copley Place Hotel on Jan. 25.

The Spinale letter says the Belchertown facility was nominated by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.

Mortgage foreclosures up in Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin counties

$
0
0

Hampden County Register of Deeds Donald E. Ashe reported that the total amount of money spent on real estate in 2016 was $1.63 billion.

SPRINGFIELD -- Mortgage foreclosures were up 48 percent in Hampden County last year, according to figures released Wednesday by Hampden County Register of Deeds Donald E. Ashe.

There were 521 foreclosures in 2015 and 770 in 2016, Ashe said Wednesday during his semiannual report on the county's real estate market. He reported the number of foreclosure deeds, the final stage of a mortgage foreclosure.

Ashe also reported that the total amount of money spent on real estate in the county in 2016 was $1.63 billion, up 21 percent from the $1.34 billion spent in 2015. The dollars transacted last year was the highest amount since $1.9 billion was spent on real estate in 2005, two years prior to the Great Recession and ensuing real estate downturn.

"We have a healthy market," Ashe said. "When you see $1.63 billion spent on real estate, I don't care who you are, that's a lot of money."

The total amount of money spent on real estate includes all the money spent on real estate transactions totaling more than $1,000. It includes land, commercial property and housing.

[enhanced link]

"Homes are appreciating," Ashe said. "The low inventory is driving the prices up on homes."

Ashe's Hampden County numbers fit with those reported this week by the Register of Deeds offices in Hampshire and Franklin counties.

Hampshire County

In Hampshire County, completed mortgage foreclosure deeds were up 61 percent from 82 filed in 2015 to 132 filed last year.

The total amount spent on real estate in Hampshire County was up 10.8 percent from $616.23 million in 2015 to $682.53 million in 2016.

[enhanced link]

Franklin County

In Franklin County, foreclosures were up 19 percent from 84 foreclosure deeds in 2015 to 100 foreclosure deeds filed in 2016.

The total amount spent on real estate in Franklin County fell 2.2 percent from $259.43 million to $253.59 million.

The mortgage foreclosure data fit in with statewide figures released recently by The Warren Group, a Boston-based company that collects and disseminates real-estate data. The Warren Group said that through November there had been 5,698 deeds recorded in Massachusetts, a 45 percent increase from the 3,930 filed through November 2015.

But the number of early-stage foreclosure filings was down, indicating that fewer foreclosure proceedings are starting.

[enhanced link]

"Foreclosure starts have slowed in the second half of 2016," said Timothy Warren, CEO of The Warren Group, in a press release. "After sizable increases in foreclosure starts for two and a half years, we have seen double-digit decreases in each of the past three months."

Ashe said foreclosure numbers had fallen in Massachusetts due to state laws passed in recent years that slowed the process. Those laws gave homeowners more time to catch up. But it also created a backlog of foreclosure cases that is only now clearing through the courts.

Hampden County, Massachusetts real estate by Jim Kinney on Scribd

Friendly's restaurants raising money to help Holyoke fire victims

$
0
0

Friendly's restaurants in Holyoke, Westfield, South Hadley, West Springfield and Ludlow on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2017 will donate 20 percent of sales to victims of the New Year's Day fire at 106 North East St.

HOLYOKE -- The Friendly's restaurants at 1745 Northampton St. and four other locations will donate 20 percent of sales on Thursday to the victims of a New Year's Day fire here.

"We are hosting a fundraiser for the fire victims tomorrow," Friendly's General Manager Ben Toro said Wednesday.

The restaurants here and in South Hadley, Westfield, West Springfield and Ludlow will donate 20 percent of sales that occur between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. to the Holyoke Mayor's Fire Relief Fund for victims of the fire at 106 North East St., he said.

Three people were killed and 25 families' homes were destroyed in the fire on the morning of Jan. 1 at a five-story apartment building. The cause of the fire was a problem at an electrical wall outlet, officials said.

Holyoke fire survivor says Trevor Wadleigh saved his life before perishing

The Friendly's participating in the fundraiser are at 489 Newton St. in South Hadley, 21 Southampton Road in Westfield, 1094 Riverdale St. in West Springfield and 471 Center St. in Ludlow, Toro said.

Also pitching in will be Chipotle at 235 Whiting Farms Road with a fundraiser on Monday where 100 percent proceeds from noon to 9 p.m. will be donated to Holyoke Mayor's Fire Relief Fund.

Mayor Alex B. Morse established the relief fund online at gofundme.com the day of the fire with a goal of raising $100,000. As of about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, the fund had raised $65,005.

friendly's.png 

Lee resident charged with vehicular homicide after fatally striking Lenox man

$
0
0

A Lee man has been charged with vehicular homicide in connection with a Lenox man's death.

LENOX — A man from Lee has been charged with vehicular homicide after fatally striking a Lenox man with his car in November, according to The Berkshire Eagle.

32-year-old Patrick H. Kelly was standing across the street from his Housatonic Street home in Lenox on November 30, retrieving mail from his mailbox, when Jared Gonzalez drove by and struck him with his 2002 Buick sedan.

Gonzalez, who had worked for a Great Barrington cab company at the time, was driving his cab at the time of the accident.

Though Lenox firefighters and Lee medical workers attempted to revive Kelly, he was ultimately pronounced dead at the scene.

Lenox Police Chief Stephen O'Brien said that Kelly was struck "certainly through no fault of his own."

O'Brien further stated that police have been able to "confidently say that this accident was caused by negligent operation of the motor vehicle."

Gonzalez is now facing a misdemeanor charge of motor vehicle homicide by negligent operation. If he is convicted, he could face up to two and a half years in the House of Correction or a fine of up to $3,000.

 

Palmer man testifies he only planned to view child pornography, not share it; judge agrees

$
0
0

A judge agreed with Kevin Cavanaugh, who was sentenced to four to five years in a Massachusetts state prison for possession of child pornography.

SPRINGFIELD — Kevin Cavanaugh took the witness stand Wednesday in Hampden Superior Court and freely admitted he has been downloading and viewing some heinous child pornography from his Palmer home.

kev.jpgKevin Cavanaugh 

He was fine with a conviction on two counts of possession of child pornography. In fact he had been willing to plead guilty to those crimes in a previous hearing.

But Cavanaugh, 53, was fighting two counts of dissemination of child pornography.

At the end of a jury-waived trial, Judge Richard J. Carey's verdict supported the defense argument that Cavanaugh didn't intend to share the files he downloaded: Carey found Cavanaugh guilty of the two counts of possession of child pornography and not guilty of dissemination of child pornography.

Carey sentenced Cavanaugh to four to five years in state prison on one of the possession of child pornography counts and 10 years probation after the state prison sentence on the second count.

There are a number of conditions of probation, such as no contact with children under 16, sex offender counseling and no use of the internet.

Cavanaugh had been out of prison about five years after serving a 20- to 25-year sentence from 1987 for rape. The state Sex Offender Registry Board, where Cavanaugh is listed as an offender in the category deemed most likely to reoffend, also lists 1986 convictions of assault of a child with intent to commit rape and aggravated rape.

Assistant District Attorney Jane E. Mulqueen said in her closing argument Cavanaugh was not a credible witness when he said he didn't know files he downloaded on his computer could be accessed by other people who have the eMule file sharing application.

He had testified he downloaded eMule onto his computer and that's how he accessed child pornography.

Mulqueen said Cavanaugh would know other people could download files he had put on his computer because of the nature of file sharing applications. She said he would have known eMule is a "peer to peer" application.

"He knew he could get and he could give," Mulqueen said.

Cavanaugh testified he knew he could get content through eMule but he did not know other people could access files he had downloaded on his computer.

Defense lawyer Joe A. Smith III in his closing argument said child pornography is "one of the most unpopular and detested" matters that come before a court.

"This appetite he admits is wrong," Smith said of Cavanaugh's viewing of child pornography.

He said in all interviews with police as well as in court, Cavanaugh never admitted he had the intent to disseminate the child pornography. Smith said under the prosecution's theory, any person who downloads child pornography through a file sharing network would be guilty of dissemination. Carey had questioned Mulqueen as to how she could prove intent to disseminate in the case.

State Police Lt. Michael Hill testified at the trial he discovered files in March 2015 that had been downloaded by a certain computer that was ultimately traced back to the house in which Cavanaugh lived. Among those files was a 53-minute video depicting a girl of about 8 to 12 years old with adult men performing various sex acts upon her. The testimony by Hill gave graphic details of the content of the video.

State Police Trooper Jeffrey Perry testified about his part in the investigation and about questioning Cavanaugh on the night of May 5, 2015 with Trooper Robert Smith.

When police first got to the home on Main Street in the Bondsville section of Palmer, Cavanaugh waived his Miranda rights and agreed to talk with the two troopers.

Audio recordings of two separate interviews that night were played as evidence at the trial.

At first, Cavanaugh is heard saying he downloaded adult pornography. He said he types in "just basic anal/oral" in the search category. He said he does large downloads and looks at the files later, deleting what he doesn't want.

Cavanaugh then said he possibly types in "young" as a search word, looking for pornography with girls 18 or 19 years old.

He said he didn't view child pornography, saying there are some "pretty disgusting things" available for download.

Cavanaugh, told by the troopers they would see what search words he entered, said he typed in "raped," kidnapped," "defiled," and "tortured." He said he typed in "PTHC," (preteen hard core), but did not know what it stood for until recently.

Asked by the troopers if he was abused as a child, Cavanaugh said he was but he did not want to talk about it.

"How much trouble an I in?" he asked the troopers, who told him it was serious.

As the troopers relayed to him other search words they saw Cavanaugh had entered, which were clearly a search for child pornography, Cavanaugh said, "I get a little curious (about) what's on there."

Springfield's 'most wanted': police seek man wanted in connection to multiple break-ins, larcenies

$
0
0

Springfield police are still on the look out for a man wanted in connection to numerous crimes throughout the city.

SPRINGFIELD — 21-year-old Travis Lewis is still Springfield's "most wanted," police said in a statement on Wednesday.

Lewis has numerous warrants out for his arrest for a long list of crimes, including breaking and entering, receiving stolen property, larceny of a firearm, larceny from a building, and larceny by single scheme.

He is wanted in connection with a number of break-ins to houses throughout the city, said Sgt. John Delaney of the Springfield Police Department.

"Mr. Lewis has a long criminal history and we believe he is still in the Springfield area," said Delaney in a statement. "Let's get this guy before he breaks into another home in Western Massachusetts."

Anyone who has any information on the whereabouts of Lewis has been encouraged to contact the city's Major Crime Unit at 413-787-6355.

Massachusetts judge orders ExxonMobil to comply with AG Maura Healey's investigation

$
0
0

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey requested documents related to what the oil company knew when about fossil fuels and climate change.

A Suffolk County Superior Court judge has ordered ExxonMobil to comply with Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey's investigation into what the oil company knew about fossil fuels and climate change.

"In today's order directing Exxon to comply with our investigation, the court affirmed the longstanding authority of the Attorney General to investigate fraud," said Healey spokeswoman Chloe Gotsis. "Exxon must now end its obstructive tactics and come clean about whether it misled Massachusetts consumers and investors about what it knew about climate change, its causes and effects." 

Healey began the investigation in April, demanding extensive documents and testimony from ExxonMobil to determine whether the oil company knew and lied to the public and investors about the impact of burning fossil fuels on climate change.

ExxonMobil challenged the order in courts in Texas and Massachusetts. The company argued that Healey's investigation is politically motivated, and she is using her law enforcement power at the behest of environmental activists to obtain Exxon's internal documents.

The Texas case is still pending.

On Wednesday, however, Suffolk County Superior Court Judge Heidi Brieger ruled that Healey can compel ExxonMobil to provide the documents.

Brieger wrote that under state law, Healey only needs to show that she has a belief that a person or company is engaged in unfair or deceptive acts in the course of commerce in order to investigate potential violations of the state's consumer protection law. Brieger said ExxonMobil has not proven that Healey acted arbitrarily or capriciously. Rather, Brieger wrote, Healey has sufficient grounds, due to her concerns about ExxonMobil's representations to Massachusetts consumers, to launch an investigation.

ExxonMobil also argued that Healey's demands were too broad. Healey asked for copies of documents dating back to 1976 about Exxon's research on carbon emissions and their impact on climate. Her letter asked for backup documents related to statements by Exxon officials, including Exxon Chairman and CEO Rex Tillerson; information about changes Exxon made to its operations to prepare for rising sea levels; advertisements Exxon has run; lawsuits the company is involved in; presentations to investors; investigations by regulators; and massive amounts of other documents and research relating to Exxon products and climate change.

Tillerson is now President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for U.S. Secretary of State.

Brieger ruled that "an effective investigation requires broad access to sources of information," and noted that ExxonMobil already provided similar documents to investigators in New York. She said the parties should discuss reasonable limits for the document request and submit a joint status report.

Bradley Campbell, president of the pro-environment Conservation Law Foundation, said in a statement that the decision "sends a strong signal that no corporation is above the law."

"ExxonMobil has spent decades deceiving the public and gambling the health and safety of communities across the state, and Maura Healey has not just the right but the responsibility to investigate the full extent of the company's wrongdoing," Campbell said.

6 VW employees from Germany indicted in US for emissions-cheating scandal; VW fined $4.3B

$
0
0

Six high-level Volkswagen employees from Germany were indicted in the U.S. on Wednesday in the VW emissions-cheating scandal, while the company itself agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges and pay $4.3 billion -- by far the biggest fine ever levied by the government against an automaker.

WASHINGTON -- Six high-level Volkswagen employees from Germany were indicted in the U.S. on Wednesday in the VW emissions-cheating scandal, while the company itself agreed to plead guilty to criminal charges and pay $4.3 billion -- by far the biggest fine ever levied by the government against an automaker.

In announcing the federal charges and the plea bargain, Justice Department prosecutors detailed a large and elaborate scheme inside the German automaker to commit fraud and then cover it up, with at least 40 employees allegedly involved in destroying evidence.

"Volkswagen obfuscated, they denied and they ultimately lied," Attorney General Loretta Lynch said.

Prosecutors may have trouble bringing the executives to trial in the U.S. German law generally bars extradition of the country's citizens except within the European Union. Privately, Justice Department officials expressed little optimism that the five VW executives still at large will be arrested, unless they surrender or travel outside Germany.

Still, the criminal charges are a major breakthrough for a Justice Department that been under pressure to hold individuals accountable for corporate misdeeds ever since the 2008 financial crisis.

U.S. authorities are still investigating just how high the scheme went, and held out the possibility of charges against more VW executives.

"We will continue to pursue the individuals responsible for orchestrating this damaging conspiracy," Lynch said.

VW admitted installing software in diesel engines on nearly 600,000 VW, Porsche and Audi vehicles in the U.S. that activated pollution controls during government tests and switched them off in real-world driving. The software allowed the cars to spew harmful nitrogen oxide at up to 40 times above the legal limit.

U.S. regulators confronted VW about the software after university researchers discovered differences in testing and real-world emissions. Volkswagen at first denied the use of the so-called defeat device but finally admitted it in September 2015.

Even after that admission, prosecutors said, company employees were busy deleting computer files and other evidence.

The fines easily eclipse the $1.2 billion penalty levied against Toyota in 2014 over unintended acceleration in its cars. VW also agreed to pay an additional $154 million to California for violating its clean air laws.

The penalties bring the cost of the scandal to VW in the United States to nearly $20 billion, not counting lost sales and damage to the automaker's reputation. Volkswagen previously reached a $15 billion civil settlement with U.S. environmental authorities and car owners under which it agreed to repair or buy back as many as a half-million of the affected vehicles.

Although the cost is staggering and would bankrupt many companies, VW has the money, with $33 billion in cash on hand.

As for why the fine was so big, "the premeditation here was very significant and that was at a very high level in the company," said Leslie Caldwell, an assistant U.S. attorney general.

"Lower-level people actually expressed concern along the way about the fact these defeat devices were being used and questioned whether they should be used. And higher-up people decided to use them," Caldwell said. "Volkswagen also lied to the regulators and the Department of Justice once our investigation had started. That's what distinguishes this."

Volkswagen pleaded guilty to conspiracy, obstruction of justice and importing vehicles by using false statements. Under the agreement, VW must cooperate in the investigation and let an independent monitor oversee its compliance for three years.

The six supervisors indicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit were accused of lying to environmental regulators or destroying computer files containing evidence.

All six are German citizens, and five remained in Germany. The only one under arrest was Oliver Schmidt, who was seized over the weekend in Miami during a visit to the U.S.

Schmidt was in charge of VW's compliance with U.S. environmental regulations. Those indicted also included two former chiefs of Volkswagen engine development and the former head of quality management and product safety. Prosecutors said one supervised 10,000 employees.

All six were charged with conspiracy to defraud the U.S. by making false statements to regulators and the public. Three were also charged with fraud and clean-air violations.

Government documents say one engine development supervisor asked an assistant to search another supervisor's office for a hard drive that contained emails between them. Then another assistant was asked to throw it away, prosecutors said.

Authorities said the scheme began when VW officials realized new diesel engines wouldn't meet U.S. 2007 emissions standards. Acting on instructions from their supervisors, VW employees borrowed the defeat device idea from VW's Audi luxury-car division, which was developing different engines with similar software.

In November 2006, some employees raised objections about the defeat device to the head of VW-brand engine development, prosecutors said. That official allegedly directed the employees to continue and warned them "not to get caught."

In 2014, VW employees learned about a West Virginia University study that found emissions discrepancies in VWs. Three of the supervisors and other employees decided not to disclose the defeat device to U.S. regulators, prosecutors said.

In August 2015, a VW employee ignored instructions from supervisors and told U.S. regulators about the device.

VW also faces an investor lawsuit and a criminal investigation in Germany. In all, some 11 million vehicles worldwide were equipped with the software.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images