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UMass students set to strike Friday as part of national day of action

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On Friday a day after businesses closed to show the impact of immigrants on the country, activists are calling for a national strike including those at the University of Massachusetts.

AMHERST -- On Friday, a day after many businesses closed to show the impact of immigrants in the country, activists are calling for a national strike, including one at the University of Massachusetts.

Strike4Democracy is organizing more than 100 strike actions across the United States including three in Boston, according to its Facebook page. 

The purpose of the strikes, the Facebook post states, is "to stand up for America's democratic principles. As the nation suffers through ICE raids, travel bans, Trump's mobilization on the border wall, as well as attacks on the rights of workers, women, people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, and our environment, February 17th provides a beacon to those who are searching for a way to protect and defend our shared humanity."

 

The UMass Amherst Sanctuary Campus Movement at UMass is calling for a related strike to hold a teach-in addressing immigration issues.  

According to its Facebook post announcing the event, the group wants students to "educate ourselves on resisting the continued and intensified oppression immigrants face in the United States. We will learn how to join and strengthen existing direct action networks, how to establish and maintain one here on campus, and how to make our community a real sanctuary."

The group is asking that students refrain from "financially supporting UMass, with the exception of the People's Market and Earth Foods."

The UMass Amherst Sanctuary Campus Movement has been calling on the university to become a sanctuary campus since November following the election of Donald Trump as president.

A federal appeals court has upheld a freeze on Trump's controversial travel ban on nationals from seven predominantly Muslim nations. The Trump administration is looking at other options.

On Jan. 27, Trump signed an executive order barring nationals from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the U.S. for 90 days. The order also banned refugees from entering the country for 120 days, and halted the entry of Syrian refugees indefinitely.

According to the Sanctuary Campus Movement Facebook post, more than 100 people are going and another 200 are interested in the strike.

Organizer Anna-Claire Simpson said those who teach and other labor union members are not allowed to strike, which might limit the numbers.

And she said the weather is limiting an outdoor rally or march. "It's bringing people together for education," she said of the day's intent.

"We're still pressuring our administration -- the whole UMass system (to create a sanctuary campus)," she said.

"(The Trump policies) have a huge impact on our school," she said. "There's a lot of fear." Students who have green cards are afraid to leave the state even though they have legal documentation.

She praised Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamy for his response Feb. 2 to the campus and the creation of the Angel Fund to help immigrants with financial needs.

"I remain committed to the welfare and success of all members of our community, whether they be student, faculty or staff, and pledge to do everything within our legal and moral authority to protect them, no matter their national origin, race, religion, socioeconomic status, sexual identity, disability or immigration status," Subbaswamy wrote.

But Simpson said the Sanctuary Campus Movement wants to "put pressure on for a more tangible commitment."

Some on campus don't agree with the movement. Daily Collegian columnist Bradley Polumbo wrote, "If UMass was to take steps to defy federal law in an effort to protect such a small group of students, the potential of losing some or all federal funding could be absolutely disastrous for all members of the UMass community, regardless of their legal status."

Trump has threatened to pull funding in a variety of arenas including the University of California at Berkeley following violent protests there Feb. 1.

Simpson said the threat is making people afraid, but she wrote: "I wish it wasn't necessary to articulate this, but I know the school is stoking a lot of fear right now. 

"Please don't fall the for the line that Sanctuary campuses (cities, etc.) are dangerous because they might invite federal retaliation of some sort. The real danger is racism, xenophobia, and the oppressive policies and laws which make movements (like Sanctuary) necessary."

Students will gather at 10 a.m. in the Student Union.


Mary Hurley decries fellow Governor's Council member's 'terror' as clash over judicial appointments continues

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If Governor's Councilors slung mud at one another during an unhinged meeting last week, then on Wednesday they hurled bricks, with many councilors taking aim at Watertown Democrat Marilyn Devaney.

By Andy Metzger
State House News Service

BOSTON -- If Governor's Councilors slung mud at one another during an unhinged meeting last week, then on Wednesday they hurled bricks, with many councilors taking aim at Watertown Democrat Marilyn Devaney.

"It is time that we stood up to the terror that she has rained upon this council and the nominees that come before this body," said Councilor Mary Hurley, an East Longmeadow Democrat, who said she left last week's meeting "sick to my stomach because of the way (Devaney) treats people."

Councilors' unchecked rage at one another was on display for the second straight week, following a disagreement over its decision to confirm Salim Rodriguez Tabit for a Superior Court judgeship last Wednesday following a confirmation hearing that began Feb. 1 and continued in the hours leading up to the vote.

Last week's vote took Councilor Robert Jubinville and Devaney by surprise, and both excoriated their colleagues before casting the lone votes against the Methuen attorney's nomination.

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The eight-member elected council serves as a check on the governor's power to appoint judges. Tabit's confirmation was a departure from standard council protocol in two respects. After meeting with the council earlier in the month, he was brought back a week later to answer more questions from Jubinville about a Board of Bar Overseers complaint that had been dismissed relatively quickly. Tabit notified the Judicial Nominating Commission of the complaint, but councilors did not receive that notice until midway through his interview. Then, rather than taking the traditional route of voting on the nominee in its regular noontime meeting a week later, the council called in Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito to preside over a vote immediately after concluding the interview with Tabit last week. The nominee could hear the outbursts ahead of the 5-2 vote confirming him for the judgeship.

"This is a travesty of justice on all counts. If people knew all the facts about this appointment, the unethical way this nominee was voted, with so many unanswered questions, the lack of transparency, I would understand why people are saying the Governor's Council should be abolished, and that hurts to say," Devaney said Wednesday, kicking off the debate with a roughly 13-minute speech.

The discussion devolved into a scene that would fit right in on reality television, as accusations flew back and forth. Many charges were publicly leveled against Devaney, as her colleagues claimed she harangued staff, made baseless statements, and asserted "the Devaney set of rules."

"The legacy of this council as a laughing stock is a legacy that Councilor Devaney, in my opinion, you own," said Oxford Republican Jennie Caissie, a general practice attorney. "The lack of respect that this body gets ... is a reputation that you have developed over a decade and a half as a member of this council."

"Stop bullying me, and stop bullying me with texts from the 21st Amendment," Devaney interrupted, referring to a bar across the street from the Statehouse.

Devaney last week had accused Caissie of spending part of Tabit's hearing at the establishment, which also serves lunch. On Wednesday, Caissie said Devaney owes her and others an apology for the "absolute utter lie."

Tabit is the son of two parents from Cuba. The attorney ran for office twice as a Republican, and represented the controversial former Lawrence Mayor Willy Lantigua and his successor Dan Rivera, both Democrats. Devaney said she had met with Tabit for four hours and protested when Hurley said it seemed Devaney has a "bias against people like Sal Tabit, and I wonder why."

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Tabit will be the only Latino judge on the Superior Court, a councilor noted last week. During the interview with Tabit last week, Devaney hearkened to her family's immigrant background, saying she is "sensitive to that."

"I'm asking for more Asians, too. Where are the Asians, too?" Devaney asked during Tabit's interview.

Devaney's strongest ally on the council is Jubinville, a Milton Democrat, former state trooper and criminal defense lawyer who is outspoken in his contention that other councilors too often approve of Baker's nominees.

When a cellphone rang midway through Jubinville's remarks Wednesday, Polito attempted to move the discussion along but Jubinville would have none of it.

"Saved by the bell," Polito interjected.

"The only rules I follow is this one: When I get up to speak nobody's stopping me. I'll tell you that much right now," replied Jubinville, before continuing. Jubinville said the vote on Tabit looked like a "bag job," and said he "didn't like it rammed down my throat at 5 o'clock."

Later when Councilor Joe Ferreira, a Somerset Democrat and former police chief, announced that he was sickened by Jubinville allegedly asking him to vote against a nominee to "send a message to the governor," Jubinville disparaged him in front of the rest of the council.

"You're a bootlicker. And you're a rubber stamp," Jubinville said, as Councilor Christopher Iannella, a Boston Democrat and personal injury lawyer, called for adjournment of the raucous meeting.

A longtime councilor, Iannella was the only member absent from last week's meeting. He told the News Service he does not know how he would have voted on Tabit, and expressed his disappointment to the council with the proceedings.

"This cannot continue. I've been here a long time," said Iannella, a councilor for roughly three decades. "We can't go after councilors like this ever, ever again. It's a new low."

Councilor Terrence Kennedy, a Lynnfield Democrat, said he didn't think Polito knew what she was walking into when she presided over last week's meeting and formally proposed a committee to adopt rules for the council. The council approved Kennedy's motion.

"If there were ever a time that we needed civility and propriety, it is now," said Hurley, who has also recommended adopting rules.

Jubinville was the only councilor to vote against Kennedy's motion. During the voting Devaney said she believes the council goes by Robert's Rules of Order. That parliamentary procedure was developed after Army Engineer Henry Martyn Robert lost control of a church meeting while stationed in New Bedford during the Civil War, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

"I have already started looking at rules. There were rules adopted in 1999, but nobody's got a copy of them. There were rules adopted in 1991. Nobody has a copy of them," said Hurley, who said she has a rules proposal.

Massachusetts Senate Democrats propose criminal justice reforms, including eliminating mandatory minimums

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State senators will consider a range of proposals to reform the state's criminal justice system this session, from eliminating mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug offenses to expunging juvenile criminal records.

BOSTON -- Massachusetts senators will consider a range of proposals to reform the state's criminal justice system during this legislative session, from eliminating mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent drug offenses to expunging juvenile criminal records.

"The criminal justice system, from the front end to the back end, is broken," said Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, D-Boston.

A group of Democratic state senators involved in criminal justice reform laid out a multitude of proposals at a press conference Thursday. Some of the proposals previously passed the Senate but never made it through the House. It remains unclear which of the myriad bills will actually get through the legislative process.

"What we're doing today is starting a conversation," said Sen. Will Brownsberger, D-Belmont, chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

A separate review of the criminal justice system by the Council of State Governments, which is expected to focus on reducing recidivism primarily through inmate education and post-release supervision, is due out next week.

The Senate proposals go further than the Council of State Governments is likely to go. Senators say they hope the release of that study, combined with new focus and public attention on criminal justice reform, will result in many of the bills becoming law during the current legislative session.

"All the prep work's been done ... now is the two-year window for action," said Sen. Michael Barrett, D-Lexington.

Here's a look at some of the proposals:

Eliminating mandatory minimum sentences

Some lawmakers have been pushing for years to eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug crimes.

Advocates of the change say mandatory minimums remove discretion from judges and result in sentences that are too long for less serious crimes.

"Judges ought to have the ability to look at all the facts when they do sentencing," said Sen. Cynthia Creem, D-Newton.

State prosecutors oppose eliminating mandatory sentences, which they say avoid disparities in sentencing practices and tend to be applied only to more serious crimes.

Expanding diversion opportunities

Today, someone under 17 charged with certain crimes can be diverted away from the court system into programs like substance abuse or mental health treatment. No such opportunities exist for adults.

A bill sponsored by Creem by would expand diversion opportunities to young adults ages 18 to 22 who have no criminal record. Creem said if a young adult who commits a minor offense can avoid getting a permanent criminal record, "We hope one's whole life might change."

Expungement of juvenile records

Currently, juvenile criminal records are sealed after three years. But some employers, college admissions officers and landlords can still access limited case information.

Sen. Karen Spilka, D-Ashland, filed a bill that would let someone petition the court to have a record of a felony committed before they turned 21 expunged, as long as they completed their sentence and had no new convictions. A misdemeanor would be automatically expunged, or erased from their record, when someone finished serving their sentence.

"Over the years, we've heard story after story of young adults being prevented from getting jobs or housing or scholarships from college because of a prior criminal record that happened when they were a juvenile," Spilka said. "Kids deserve a second chance."

Bail reform

Many people today end up in jail for minor offenses because they cannot afford bail.

Sen. Ken Donnelly, D-Arlington, is introducing a bill that would move away from a cash bail system toward a risk-based one. Under his bill, the state would develop a new system to evaluate how likely a defendant is to show up in court or commit another crime.

Decisions on the level of bail and release conditions would be based on that analysis. The bill would limit the use of cash bail and replace it with pretrial release with oversight.

Donnelly said the goal is to change the current situation where a drug dealer might be released because he can obtain $100,000, while a homeless drug addict remains in jail on $100 bail.

"We need to make sure people who deserve to be in (jail) are in, people who don't deserve to be in are not in," Donnelly said. "It shouldn't be how much money you have."

On a similar note, Barrett is sponsoring a bill to require that anyone threatened with incarceration have access to a lawyer. The goal would be to limit the practice of jailing someone for failing to pay court fees and fines if they are unable to afford the fines.

"Inability to pay should not result in your going to jail, and today in Massachusetts that fundamental principle of fairness is violated more times than we'd like to think," Barrett said.

Medical release

There are currently numerous geriatric prisoners in state and county jails. Sen. Pat Jehlen, D-Somerville, wants to let those who are seriously ill be released.

Her bill would let prisoners who are terminally ill or permanently incapacitated become eligible for medical release.

Jehlen said these inmates no longer pose a threat to society, and releasing them could save the state money. Someone in nursing home care could be eligible for Medicaid money from the federal government. And there is no reason for someone who is incapacitated in the hospital to be accompanied by 24-hour armed guards, she said.

Solitary confinement reforms

Advocates for prisoners have been pushing for changes to Massachusetts' use of solitary confinement.

A bill introduced by Sen. Jamie Eldridge, D-Acton, would require a hearing after someone is in solitary confinement for 15 days; provide those inmates with exercise outside their cell; and ensure they get mental health treatment.

Other priorities

In addition to these bills, Sen. Linda Dorcena-Forry, D-Boston, said she would like to see more training for police on dealing with communities and de-escalating violence. She advocated for better training and workforce education opportunities for inmates statewide. She would like to see more attention on providing services to families to help keep people out of jail -- for example, tracking truant students or providing better mental health or substance abuse treatment.

Jehlen wants to move certain pre-trial inmates from county jails into community corrections facilities. This would let offenders live in the community under supervision and get treatment for mental health or substance abuse problems.

Chang-Diaz wants to revive a bill to lift the threshold for felony larceny from $250 to $1,500 so someone could not face a penalty of up to five years in prison and a $25,000 fine for stealing something small, like a cell phone.

Do you know this person? West Springfield seek to identify larceny suspect

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Authorities in West Springfield are asking for the public's help in identifying a suspect in a recent larceny.

WEST SPRINGFIELD - Police in West Springfield are asking for the public's help in identifying a larceny suspect. 

The woman pictured above entered an office building on Union Street and is believed to have stolen a wallet and a cell phone from an employee there, said West Springfield police in a statement. 

Anyone who believes they can identify the suspect, or has information about the case, should contact the West Springfield detective bureau at 413-263-3210. 

Agawam Superintendent William Sapelli retiring at end of school year

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The Agawam School Committee has accepted a letter of retirement from Superintendent William P. Sapelli, whose last day on the job will be June 30, according to Mayor Richard A. Cohen.

AGAWAM -- The School Committee has accepted a letter of retirement from Superintendent William P. Sapelli, whose last day on the job is June 30, according to Mayor Richard A. Cohen.

"The School Committee voted to be the search committee for a new superintendent of schools," Cohen told The Republican on Thursday.

Sapelli, who is in his early 60s, has been the school district's leader since December 2011.

His retirement marks the end of a 40-year career with Agawam Public Schools, including stints as a teacher, vice principal, principal, assistant superintendent of curriculum and instruction, and interim superintendent, a position he held before being appointed to the permanent position.

The seven-member School Committee will conduct an external search for a replacement for Sapelli, who earns over $167,000 annually. All job candidates will be interviewed during public sessions.

WMass lawmakers well represented on House Ways and Means committee

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There are several Western Massachusetts representatives on a new committee that will review marijuana policy.

BOSTON -- State Rep. Stephen Kulik, D-Worthington, will keep his powerful post as vice chairman of the Ways and Means Committee this year, serving for another session under House Chairman Brian Dempsey, D-Haverhill.

The committee is in charge of writing the state budget and reviewing all bills that have a fiscal impact. Other Democratic members of the committee representing Western Massachusetts are state Reps. Brian Ashe of Longmeadow, Tricia Farley-Bouvier of Pittsfield and Carlos Gonzalez of Springfield.

House Speaker Robert DeLeo, D-Winthrop, announced committee assignments on Thursday. Generally, there were few changes to the top leadership spots.

Rep. Ron Mariano, D-Quincy, retained his leadership position as House majority leader. No Western Massachusetts representatives are on DeLeo's leadership team.

House leaders as well as committee chairmen and vice chairman all get additional salary stipends.

Several Western Massachusetts representatives were chosen to lead committees:

  • Rep. Paul Mark, D-Peru, chairman of the committee on redistricting.
  • Rep. Thomas Petrolati, D-Ludlow, chairman of the committee on steering, policy and scheduling.
  • Rep. Angelo Puppolo, D-Springfield, chairman of the committee on technology and intergovernmental affairs.
  • Rep. Joseph Wagner, D-Chicopee, chairman of the committee on economic development and emerging technologies.
  • Rep. Gailanne Cariddi, D-North Adams, chairwoman of the committee on environment, natural resources and agriculture.
  • Rep. John Scibak, D-South Hadley, chairman of the committee on higher education.
  • Farley-Bouvier, chairwoman of the committee on labor and workforce development.
  • Rep. Peter Kocot, D-Northampton, chairman of the committee on administration and regulatory oversight.

Western Massachusetts representatives with committee vice chairmanships include:

  • Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli, D-Lenox, vice chairman of the committee on post audit and oversight.
  • Rep. Aaron Vega, D-Holyoke, vice chairman of the committee on children and families.
  • Ashe, vice chairman of the committee on elder affairs.
  • Rep. Michael Finn, D-West Springfield, vice chairman of the committee on financial services.
  • Rep. John Velis, D-Westfield, vice chairman of the committee on veterans and federal affairs.

One committee likely to attract a fair amount of attention this legislative session is tasked with reviewing legislation related to marijuana policy. The committee will be led by Rep. Mark Cusack of Braintree. The committee includes three Western Massachusetts representatives: Finn, Vega and Velis.

Senate President Stan Rosenberg announced Senate committee assignments on Wednesday.

Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito says Baker administration to continue building on Pittsfield's economic development successes

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Pointing to various projects that aim to revitalize the city's downtown, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito said Thursday that Gov. Charlie Baker's administration will continue looking at ways to drive economic development in Berkshire County.

PITTSFIELD -- Pointing to various projects that aim to revitalize the city's downtown, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito said Thursday that Gov. Charlie Baker's administration will continue looking at ways to drive economic development in Berkshire County.

Polito, who joined Pittsfield Mayor Linda Tyer to tour a handful of downtown businesses, touted the work that's underway to create market-rate housing and spur economic growth, adding that state officials are committed to moving those efforts forward.

"I feel very encouraged by my visit today and it gives our administration something to build on," she told reporters following a tour of the Hotel on North. "You will see soon (Economic Development) Secretary Jay Ash and others on our team come back to take next steps."

Those steps, the lieutenant governor said, include doing more of what's already been proven effective, like promoting public-private partnerships and using the Housing Development Incentive Program.

Polito, who toured a downtown historic building that was redeveloped for market-rate housing, said the Baker administration will continue to work through similar initiatives in Pittsfield.

The state, she added, will also be open to partnering with private developers who are interested in a business or housing opportunity in the city.

"Public-private partnerships do work," the lieutenant governor said. "Public dollars can't drive this experience alone, so we are good at collaborating, we are good at putting infrastructure dollars in place and, in this case, housing development incentive dollars in place to attract private developers to actually make hotels and have market-rate housing happen."

Aside from those efforts, Polito said the state is also looking at how to capitalize on the region's educational assets and build on its advanced manufacturing industry to enhance job growth.

"If we can graduate kids and people with the right skills that will connect to that industry, that also will be an economic engine for this area," she said.

In addition to meeting with Pittsfield leaders and economic development officials, Polito signed community compacts with Lanesborough and Windsor, and announced local awards through the Municipal Small Bridge program in Lenox during her Berkshire County swing.

Springfield City Council names committee to explore improvements in police-community relations

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Springfield city councilors and members of a new citizens committee have begun a year-long task to explore ways to improve police-community relations.

SPRINGFIELD -- City councilors and new members of a citizen committee that will work to improve police-community relations said Thursday that a key to its success will be listening to the public and police and forming recommendations that will benefit all.

City Council President Orlando Ramos announced appointments to the council's Committee on Police & Community Relations during a press conference at City Hall and praised the diversity and experiences of the group.

"I am very impressed with the passion and talent on this committee," Ramos said. "Our goal is to identify ways we can strengthen the relationship between the police department and the community of the city of Springfield. These men and women will hold meetings across the city, speak to residents, speak to law enforcement and make recommendations to the full council and to the mayor's administration as to how we can accomplish that goal."

Ramos announced plans for the committee in January, saying some people believe there is a fractured relationship.

The goal is to have recommendations within one year and then determine additional steps, Ramos said.

Councilor Thomas Ashe, who was appointed by Ramos to chair the committee, said the group will begin meetings soon and will reach out to the community and law enforcement.

In addition to Ashe, other members were announced, as follows:

  • Bud L. Williams, city councilor and state representative (council appointment)
  • Brian O'Brien, business owner and Hampden Sheriff's Department, (Ramos appointment)
  • Yolanda Cancel, community activist, criminal justice degree and law enforcement experience (Ramos appointment)
  • Shawn Kearney, Springfield police detective, (patrolmen's union appointment)
  • Bishop Talbert Swan, president of Greater Springfield NAACP and pastor, (NAACP appointment)
  • Horacio Rodriguez, business analyst, (Ward 1 appointment)
  • Kelli Moriarty-Finn, project manager and member of neighborhood council. (Ward 2 appointment)
  • Jynai McDonald, regional manager of nonprofit helping at-risk population (Ward 3 appointment)
  • Ben Swan Jr., IT consultant, chairman of Planning Board, (Ward 4 appointment)
  • Christine Tetreault, former assistant district attorney, (Ward 5 appointment)
  • Matthew Forte, former director of police academy training human resources at police department in New Jersey, (Ward 6 appointment)
  • Warren Barnett, II, corrections and probation officer, corrections counselor, (Ward 7 appointment)
  • Zaida Govan, social worker and president of the Indian Orchard neighborhood council, (Ward 8 appointment)
  • A pending appointment to be made by Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni

Ramos said the police department, the commissioner and the mayor have done some great things and made some great efforts on how they can keep a good relationship between the police and the city.

"However, this is something you can never get enough of," Ramos said. "We want to do whatever we can as a legislative branch of the city of Springfield to help strengthen that relationship."

He hopes the recommendations will turn into a policy or legislation that can be created through the council.

Committee members said they look forward to the mission.

"I think that right now my concern is that the police feel the community doesn't appreciate them," Govan said. "I want to figure out a way to let them know that the community does appreciate them and like we all said here, that we can strengthen the relationships ... and to help to make everyone feel appreciated because I think that's lacking right now."


Chicopee drug defendants arraigned in bizarre hearing

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Two of the men arrested in a drug raid argued with their court-appointed lawyers. Watch video

CHICOPEE -- One of five people arrested during a drug raid argued with a judge Thursday, constantly interrupting him and demanding to be allowed to tell his side of the story.

Three defendants who were charged following the Wednesday raid on 50 Springfield St. were held overnight and arraigned in Chicopee District Court.

"I am not concerned about making things worse or better," one of the defendants, Rockylane Lewis, told the judge. "I want to make a statement."

After a lengthy investigation into a suspected drug dealing operation, the Chicopee Police Special Response Team and narcotics officers armed with a warrant raided a second-floor apartment at 5:30 a.m. and arrested the five people inside.

Lewis, 27, Jamaal Dwyer, 27, Akeem Sherriffe, 21, Ashleigh Thomas, 27, and Tishawna Kirkland, 19, are all charged with trafficking in cocaine, conspiracy to violate drug laws and possession of ammunition without a firearms permit.

Dwyer, who is a suspect in a shooting in Philadelphia, was also arrested on a fugitive warrant out of Pennsylvania.

The two women arrested were arraigned on Wednesday and bail was set at $10,000 cash or $100,000 surety for each.

Arraignments for the three men were postponed a day because enough lawyers could not be found. Judge Matthew Shea decided to hold the arraignments separately on Thursday because two of the defendants were having disagreements with their court-appointed lawyers.

At first David Lemasa asked to withdraw as Dwyer's lawyer, saying the two could not agree on his defense. When Dwyer said he would like to be represented by counsel, Shea told him to talk with Lemasa in private again to see if they could settle issues.

They eventually returned to open court for the arraignment. At that time, Assistant District Attorney James Roux asked that Dwyer be held without right to bail at least until the next hearing in March.

The charges are significant and the Pennsylvania warrant complicates the case, Roux said. He added that police during the raid found at least 27.5 grams of cocaine, a large amount of packaging materials and substances used to dilute drugs, as well as ammunition and a bulletproof vest.

"I want to note it was throughout the apartment that these items were found," Roux said.

After a protracted discussion with Lewis, which also included sending him back to talk to a lawyer in private, Shea set bail at $100,000 cash or $1 million surety.

When Shea asked Lewis if we wanted to represent himself instead of accepting the advice of appointed lawyer John McKenna, Lewis vacillated. After further conferring, McKenna said the two had reached an impasse and he withdrew as counsel, leaving Lewis to argue for his own bail.

"I would like a lawyer, but if a lawyer is not going to do what I want to do, I will represent myself," Lewis said.

Roux asked for $100,000 cash bail or $1 million surety, saying the charges were significant and Lewis also had a 19-page record from New York as well as an open criminal case in Springfield.

"I have five kids to take care of and I never ran on any of my previous 19-page-long rap sheet," Lewis said, asking for a lower bail.

Shea rejected Lewis' argument and set bail at $100,000 cash.

Lewis also argued with Shea when the judge said he would enter not guilty pleas on Lewis' behalf, which is routine. Lewis instead demanded he be allowed to plead guilty to the firearms charge and not guilty to the cocaine charge, speaking over Shea when he was trying to give instructions.

Shea tersely denied the motion.

The third man, Sherriffe, was held on $50,000 cash or $500,000 surety.

Lawyer Robert Rzeszutek argued for Sherriffe to be released on his own recognizance while Roux initially asked for $75,000 cash bail.

Rzeszutek said his client was sleeping on the couch and there was no evidence that he had knowledge of the drug dealing operation, even though about 7 grams of cocaine was found between the couch cushions.

He said Sherriffe, of Springfield, is a senior at American International College and is expected to graduate in the spring with his bachelor's degree in health care management.

"I don't sell drugs, I work a job. ... I work at Olive Garden in Springfield," Sherriffe said during the hearing.

All five cases have been continued to March 14.

On Wednesday, lawyers appointed to represent Kirkland and Thomas argued the two women were not involved in the drug operation. Neither has a criminal record and the money found in their bedrooms was cash they had been saving from their jobs, the lawyers argued.

Thomas is three credits shy of earning her associate's degree, is currently a case worker for the Center for Human Development and from 2010 to 2014 worked at Square One. At one time she worked for both agencies at the same time, said Mark Leclair, who was appointed as her lawyer for the arraignment and bail hearing.

At the same hearing, lawyer Beth George said Kirkland recently moved from Philadelphia and works six days a week as a hair stylist at the 10/20 Beauty Bar in Chicopee. The money in her bedroom was from tips she earned in her job, George said.

Worcester-Boston express train should accommodate 9-to-5 workers, Mayor Joe Petty and City Manager Ed Augustus say

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The Worcester-Boston express train, meant to get commuter rail passengers into the MBTA's South Station in about an hour, should focus on serving 9-to-5 workers, Mayor Joe Petty and City Manager Ed Augustus said in a letter to Gov. Charlie Baker's transportation chief.

The Worcester-Boston express train, meant to get commuter rail passengers into the MBTA's South Station in about an hour, should focus on serving 9-to-5 workers, Mayor Joe Petty and City Manager Ed Augustus said in a letter to Gov. Charlie Baker's transportation chief.

The "Heart-to-Hub" service, launched in May 2016, operates twice a day: The train leaves Worcester's Union Station at 8:05 a.m. and arrives in South Station at 9:07 a.m., and in the evening, leaves South Station at 7:35 p.m. and arrives in Union Station at 8:40 p.m.

An internal MBTA working group has proposed changing up the schedule and adding stops to the express train.

Currently, the express train runs on the busy Framingham-Worcester line and skips stops in Newton, Wellesley, Natick, Framingham, and Grafton, among others. The concept, pushed by members of the Worcester business community and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, R-Shrewsbury, is aimed at strengthening ties between Boston and Worcester, as well as boosting economic development.

The MBTA's commuter rail system is run by Keolis, a French firm.

"Rather than adding additional stops along the Heart-to-Hub line, we respectfully request the MBTA and Keolis deliver a schedule that better serves the needs of the growing workforce traveling between Worcester and Boston every day," Petty and Augustus wrote in their letter to Stephanie Pollack, the CEO of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation.

6 things you should know about the Worcester-Boston express train

"Current Heart-to-Hub scheduled times are not ideal and ridership suffers because of this," they added. "Worcester needs to have non-stop train service that will accommodate a 9-5 work schedule and deliver passengers to work on time in the morning and home for dinner in the evening. Taking a step backward from this reality is a move in the wrong direction and towards less efficient service."

After the launch of the service last year, transportation officials said they plan to review the express train after a year and see the ridership level. Pollack said the train was meant to draw millennials into Worcester, with city officials telling, "We want millennials to live in Worcester, take advantage of the lower housing costs, hop on the train and get to a job in Boston."

Asked about the letter, a Massachusetts Department of Transportation spokesman said the MBTA had recently finished a series of public meetings to gather public comment on potential schedule changes.

"Meeting the demands of all the line's riders with available resources is a major concern, and the MBTA will continue to evaluate how any schedule changes are working and whether additional adjustments to the system are needed in the future," the spokesman, Jason Johnson, said in an email.

In their letter, Petty and Augustus also said they're "anxious" to see track improvements and a second platform at Union Station in order to improve train speeds and efficiency.

Mass. officials plan to re-evaluate popularity of non-stop service between Worcester and Boston after a year

55-year-old woman killed in fatal car crash in Bourne

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A woman was killed in a fatal car crash in Bourne on Thursday.

BOURNE, Ma - Massachusetts State Police are investigating a deadly car crash that killed a 55-year-old New Bedford woman on Thursday.

State Troopers were called to the area of Route 25 West at Exit 3 in Bourne at approximately 2:30 p.m., where a 2004 Pontiac Aztek had veered off the road.

Police say the vehicle was using the exit to enter Route 25 when, for reasons not yet known, it ran off the road and struck a snowbank--which caused the vehicle to roll over.  

Police say that several passerby stopped and attempted to perform CPR on the woman--who was driving the car--as well as on her passenger. 

The woman was subsequently taken to Tobey Hospital in Wareham for medical treatment, where she was pronounced dead.   

The identity of the victim has not been made public at this time pending familial notification. 

No details have been given on the status of the vehicle's passenger. 

 

Chicopee man arraigned after drug raid: Watch video

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Judge Matthew Shea set bail at $100,000 cash or $1 million surety. Watch video

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CHICOPEE - One of the five people arrested during a drug raid by police Wednesday, argued with the judge, constantly interrupted him and demanded to be allowed to tell his side of the story during his arraignment.

The three men charged in the raid on 50 Springfield St. were held overnight and arraigned in a bizarre hearing Thursday in Chicopee District Court that included back-and-forth disputes with court appointed lawyers.

"I am not concerned about making things worse or better," Rocyklane Lewis, one of the defendants said. "I want to make a statement."

After a lengthy investigation into a suspected drug dealing operation, Chicopee Police Special Response Team and narcotics officers armed with a warrant raided a second floor apartment at 5:30 a.m. and arrested the five people in the apartment.

Lewis, 27, Jamaal Dwyer, 27, Akeem Sherriffe, 21, Ashleigh Thomas, 27 and Tishawna Kirkland, 19, are all charged with trafficking in cocaine, conspiracy to violate drug laws and possession of ammunition without a firearms permit.

Dwyer, who is a suspect in a shooting in Philadelphia, was also arrested on a fugitive from justice warrant out of Pennsylvania.

The two women arrested were arraigned on Wednesday and bail was set at $10,000 cash, $100,000 surety for each.

Arraignments for the three men were put off a day because enough lawyers could not be found. Judge Matthew Shea decided to hear the arraignments on Thursday separately because two of the defendants were having disagreements with their court-appointed lawyers.

At first David Lemasa asked to withdraw as Dwyer's lawyer saying the two could not agree on his defense. When Dwyer said he would like to be represented by counsel, Shea told them to talk in private again to see if they could settle issues.

Springfield judge dismisses Bill Cosby lawsuit; several others related to sexual assault allegations continue

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The lawsuit is one of many faced by Bill Cosby from women who say he raped them over a 50-year period.

SPRINGFIELD -- U.S. District Judge Mark Mastroianni dismissed Thursday one of many lawsuits facing Bill Cosby, saying the comedian didn't defame an actress by denying her claims that Cosby raped her.

But Cosby still faces a separate federal lawsuit in Springfield brought by eight  other women who say they were raped or abused by Cosby since the 1960s. They are among more than 50 women who say that Cosby raped or abused them.

Cosby is facing criminal sexual assault charges in suburban Philadelphia. He also faces ongoing litigation with his insurance company over what, if any, responsibility it has to defend him in court.

Cosby owns a home in Shelburne Falls, which is why he faces lawsuits here in Springfield federal court.

The plaintiff in the suit dismissed Thursday was actress and casting director Katherine Mae "Kathy" McKee of Las Vegas. 

McKee told her story to the New York Daily News in 2014. A lawyer for Cosby wrote a letter to the Daily News saying the rape McKee alleged did not happen. McKee sued Cosby in 2015, saying Cosby and his camp defamed her with the letter, causing her to lose business as a casting director.

Lawyers representing Cosby argued in federal court that a letter sent on the Cosby's behalf to the Daily News was not trying to smear the woman's reputation as much as it was to demand better journalism.

McKee, a onetime girlfriend of entertainer Sammy Davis Jr., said in court papers  said she met Cosby, creator of  "Fat Albert," in 1964, when she was working an aspiring actress and showgirl in Las Vegas.

In 1971, McKee appeared as an actress on "The Bill Cosby Show." The show, which aired from 1969 until 1971, featured Cosby as high school gym teacher Chet Kincaid.

McKee said in court papers that she met up again with Cosby in 1974 in Detroit. Cosby asked McKee to get some ribs from a local restaurant and then pick him up at his hotel. He promised that he would then take McKee to a party on a friend's boat docked on the Detroit River.

But according to McKee's narrative, when she arrived at the hotel room, Cosby invited her in wearing wearing a bathrobe and a knit wool cap.

To quote the court papers:

"Ms. McKee stepped a few steps into the hotel room when she was immediately set upon and physically attacked by Cosby. Cosby snatched the ribs from her hands and tossed them aside. Cosby was wild and aggressive, and was acting nothing like the man Ms. McKee had known professionally. Cosby violently and forcefully grabbed Ms. McKee and then spun Ms. McKee around so that she was facing away from Cosby and toward the door. Cosby violently lifted her dress and pulled down her panties. Cosby intimidated, terrified and terrorized Ms. McKee with pain and overwhelming physical force. Cosby proceeded to forcibly rape Ms. McKee while both were still standing very near the door. The rape was an unprovoked and violent attack. The rape was shocking, scary and horrible."

Obituaries from The Republican, Feb. 16, 2017

Education Commissioner expresses support for new charter school in Westfield

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Mitchell D. Chester has recommended that the education board give charters to a number of groups hoping to open new charter schools in Massachusetts.

MALDEN - Mitchell D. Chester, Commissioner for the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, announced on Thursday that he will recommend that the Board give charters to groups that want to open several new charter schools across the state--including one in Westfield.

The Hampden Charter School of Science would open next year in Westfield and would serve 252 students from Holyoke, Agawam, West Springfield, and Westfield. The school would be for grades 6-9 and would have a heavy focus on science and math.  

Chester also said he supports giving charters to groups seeking to open regional charter schools in Sturbridge and Plymouth. 

"We have reviewed the charter applications carefully. I believe these recommended proposals would be strong additions to the range of school options available to families," Chester said. "I look forward to discussing these proposals with the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education later this month."

The Commissioner also recommended that the Board approve expansion requests for the Alma del Mar Charter School in New Bedford, the Community Charter School of Cambridge, and the Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion Charter School.


Massachusetts State Police bomb squad investigating incident in Easthampton; 1 man arrested for possession of explosives

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An Easthampton man has been arrested for possession of explosives.

EASTHAMPTON - An Easthampton man was arrested on Thursday morning for charges related to an incident involving explosives that occurred over Super Bowl Sunday. 

Bryan Desmarais, 41, of Ridgewood Terrace, was taken into custody on Thursday for illegal possession of ammunition and explosives, according to a statement released by Public Information Officer Chad Alexander of the Easthampton Police Department. 

The current investigation stems from an incident that occurred on February 5, in which several explosions occurred near Lower Mill Pond, according Alexander.

At the time, the incident spurred an investigation by a number of local and federal forces, including the Massachusetts State Police and the FBI. Several explosives were discovered at the scene of the incident.

As a result of investigation into the incident, authorities raided Desmarais's apartment on Pleasant Street on Thursday, finding bomb making materials and home-made explosives, as well as "other illegal contraband," said Alexander.

Now a number of law enforcement agencies--including Easthampton Police, representatives of the State Fire Marshal's Office, and the Massachusetts State Police--are investigating an area near Demarais's home, according to 22-News.

Desmarais faces a number of charges, including throwing or exploding explosives, possession of an incendiary device, and possession of ammunition without an F.I.D card.

 

STCC President John Cook welcomed by Latino community at reception (photos)

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A Hispanic Serving Institution must have at least 25 percent Hispanic students making up the total student population.

SPRINGFIELD -- With more than 25 percent of the students at Springfield Technical Community College identifying as Hispanic / Latino, the school's Hispanic Association in Higher Education held a reception for new college President John B. Cook to introduce him to local Latino leaders.

"For him to have a connection with the Latino community is extremely important given the fact that more than 25 percent of our student body is Latino," said Irma Garcia-Zingarelli, chair of the association, which hosted the event on campus Thursday night along with businessman and chairman of Partners for Community Heriberto Flores.

"This is not about Latinos, African-Americans or Hispanics, this is about Americans. At the end of the day, we all have to work together (to succeed)," Flores said.

Garcia-Zangarelli said it is also an opportunity for the community to get to know Cook.

"We want people to know that he is very approachable and that this partnership is of extreme importance both to the community and the school," she said.

Cook, who took over as president last summer, met with dozens of Latino community leaders as well as local politicians including State Rep. Jose Tosado, D-Springfield, Springfield City Council President Orlando Ramos, Ward 1 City Councilor Adam Gomez and Holyoke City Councilor Jossie Valentin.

"I don't speak Spanish, but I think I speak community," Cook said. "If I'm not speaking community, I know you will let me know, and that's the most important thing I can offer."

The federal government has designated STCC as a Hispanic Serving Institution every year since 2013. An HSI must have at least 25 percent Hispanic students making up the total student population. Hispanics make up 27.6 percent of the student population at STCC.

"This is a tremendous institution. We are a designated Hispanic Serving Institution, which brings with it a certain amount of not just recognition, but obligation," Cook said.

The event included comments from the college staff and the community.

"This reception gave Dr. Cook and members of his administration a chance to meet some of the many leaders in the Latino community," said Arlene Rodriguez, vice president of Academic Affairs at STCC. "It's a chance to nurture current partnerships and build new ones."

Bittersweet ending to Converse Middle School as Palmer School Committee votes to close it

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School officials said $1.2 million in capital improvements would be needed in the short-term at Converse, and there is no money available to fund them

PALMER -- The school committee voted 4-1 Thursday night to close Converse Middle School in June, with the majority and school superintendent Patricia Gardner saying the town does not have the money needed to properly maintain it.

School officials said $1.2 million in capital improvements would be needed in the short-term at Converse, and there is no money available to fund that.

They said closing the school now would also save $200,000 in annual operating expenses.

The board also voted to relocate the sixth and seventh grade students served by Converse to Palmer High School.

Asked about the school board's decision to close the building, Converse Principal David Stetkiewicz declined to comment.

"I would defer to the superintendent," he said in response to a question about whether he would remain as a school principal in the district.

At a public forum Wednesday night, Gardner said she could not disclose that information, saying it was a personnel matter when asked about Stetkiewicz' future status with the district by a parent.

"As for personnel, I can't discuss," the superintendent said.

Converse faculty who also attended Thursday night's school committee meeting declined comment.

Former Palmer Town Councilor Donald Blais said he reluctantly supported the closure. He stated he would have preferred that sixth graders be relocated to Old Mill Pond School instead of the high school. OMP serves kindergarten through grade five.

The closure of Converse "is a sad day for our community," Blais said in an interview.

"It's sad to see a part of our community for nearly a century come to an end," he said.

Built in 1923, the aging building housed the high school until 1991.

The Palmer School Committee rejected a plan to close Converse back in 2010.

Twin tragedies give survivor a new face and second chance at a normal life

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He'd been waiting for this day, and when his doctor handed him the mirror, Andy Sandness stared at his image and absorbed the enormity of the moment: He had a new face, one that had belonged to another man.

ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) -- He'd been waiting for this day, and when his doctor handed him the mirror, Andy Sandness stared at his image and absorbed the enormity of the moment: He had a new face, one that had belonged to another man.

His father and his brother, joined by several doctors and nurses at Mayo Clinic, watched as he studied his swollen features. He was just starting to heal from one of the rarest surgeries in the world -- a face transplant, the first at the medical center. He had the nose, cheeks, mouth, lips, jaw, chin, even the teeth of his donor. Resting in his hospital bed, he still couldn't speak clearly, but he had something to say.

He scrawled four words in a spiral notebook:

"Far exceeded my expectations," he wrote, handing it to Dr. Samir Mardini, who read the message to the group.

"You don't know how happy that makes us feel," Mardini said, his voice husky with emotion as he looked at the patient-turned-friend he had first met nearly a decade earlier.

The exchange came near the end of an extraordinary medical journey that revolved around two young men. Both were rugged outdoorsmen and both just 21 when, overcome by demons, they decided to kill themselves: One, Sandness, survived but with a face almost destroyed by a gunshot; the other man died.

Their paths wouldn't converge for years, but when they did -- in side-by-side operating rooms -- one man's tragedy offered hope that the other would have a second chance at a normal life.

Andys New FaceIn this June 18, 2016 photo provided by the Mayo Clinic, Dr. Samir Mardini checks on his patient, Andy Sandness, days after leading a team that performed the first face transplant surgery at the medical center. (Eric M. Sheahan/Mayo Clinic via AP)

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It was two days before Christmas in 2006 when Andy Sandness reached a breaking point.

He'd been sad and drinking too much lately. That night after work while "super, super depressed," he grabbed a rifle from a closet. He stared at it for a while, then put a round in the chamber. He positioned the barrel beneath his chin, took a deep breath and pulled the trigger.

Instantly, he knew he'd made a terrible mistake. When the police arrived, an officer who was a friend cradled him in his arms as Sandness begged, "Please, please don't let me die! I don't want to die!"

He was rushed from his home in eastern Wyoming, treated at two hospitals, then transferred to Mayo Clinic. When he woke, his mother was holding his hand. She'd always been a strong woman but that day, her face was a portrait of unfathomable pain. The bullet had obliterated his mouth, so he motioned for a pen and paper.

"I'm sorry," he wrote.

"I love you," she replied. "It's OK." But all Sandness could think about was how he'd hurt his family -- and just wonder what was next.

The answer came quickly when he met Mardini, a plastic surgeon whose specialty is facial reconstruction. As a newcomer at Mayo, the doctor was on call Christmas Eve. Over the next few days, he reassured Sandness that he'd fix his face as best he could.

"I just need you to be strong and patient," he said.

It would take time and much surgery. And despite their skills, the doctors couldn't miraculously turn him back into that guy with the orthodontist-perfected smile.

Andys New FaceThis undated photo provided by his wife, Lilly, shows Calen "Rudy" Ross. In June 2016, he died of a self-inflicted gun shot. (Courtesy Lilly Ross via AP)

Sandness couldn't bear to see himself, so he covered his hospital room mirror with a towel. He had no nose and no jaw. He'd shot out all but two teeth. His mouth was shattered, his lips almost non-existent. He'd lost some vision in his left eye. He needed breathing and feeding tubes at first.

Mardini and his team removed dead tissue and shattered bones, then connected facial bones with titanium plates and screws. They reconstructed his upper jaw with bone and muscle from the hip; they transferred bone and skin from a leg to fashion the lower jaw. They used wires and sutures to bring together his eyelids, which had been spread apart because of the powerful blast.

They made progress, even if it didn't always look that way.

After about eight surgeries over 41/2 months, Sandness returned home to Newcastle, Wyoming, a hamlet of 3,200, where friends and family embraced him. He worked at a lodge, in the oil fields and as an electrician's apprentice.

But his world had shrunk. When he ventured to the grocery store, he avoided eye contact with children so he wouldn't scare them. Occasionally, he heard them ask their mothers why he looked that way.

He sometimes lied when folks asked what had happened. "I would tell them it was a hunting accident," he says. "I felt like they didn't need to know."

He had almost no social life; on a rare night out to shoot pool, a guy taunted him about his appearance. He retreated to the hills, where he could hunt elk and fish walleye, unseen.

"Those were real tough times for him,' says his father, Reed. "He was insecure. Who wouldn't be?"

Andys New FaceThis undated photo provided by Andy Sandness shows him before his injuries in 2006. (Courtesy Andy Sandness via AP)

Sandness learned to adapt. His mouth was about an inch wide -- too small for a spoon -- so he tore food into bits, then sucked on them until he could swallow the pieces. He wore a prosthetic nose but it constantly fell off outdoors; he carried glue to reattach it. It discolored often, so he had to paint it to match his skin.

"You never fully accept it," he says. "You eventually say, 'OK, is there something else we can do?'"

There was, but the prospect of 15 more surgeries Mardini had mapped out scared him. He didn't want more skin grafts, more scars or dental implants Even then, he'd still look deformed.

Over the next five years, Sandness made yearly visits to Mayo. Then in spring of 2012, he received a life-changing call.

Mardini told him it looked like Mayo was going to launch a face transplant program and Sandness might be an ideal patient. The doctor had already begun traveling to France, Boston and Cleveland to meet doctors who'd done face transplants.

Mardini tried to temper his patient's enthusiasm. "Think very hard about this," he said. Only about two dozen transplants have been done around the world, and he wanted Sandness to understand the risks and the aftermath: a lifelong regimen of anti-rejection drugs.

But Sandness could hardly contain himself. "How long until I can do this?" he asked.

He followed Mardini's advice to research the surgery. It was far more complicated than he'd imagined, but he was undeterred.

"When you look like I looked and you function like I functioned, every little bit of hope that you have, you just jump on it," he says, "and this was the surgery that was going to take me back to normal."

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Three more years passed as Sandness waited.

By then, Mayo Clinic had completed a long internal review to get the face transplant program approved. Sandness had to undergo a rigorous psychiatric and social work evaluation to address, among other things, a key question: Should this surgery be performed on someone who'd attempted suicide?

Several factors were in his favor: His resilience and motivation, a strong support network of family and friends, a long-standing rapport with Mardini and a gap of several years since the shooting. Doctors also noted others with self-inflicted injuries, such as excessive drinkers, have received liver transplants.

Andys New FaceThis undated photo provided by his wife, Lilly, shows Calen "Rudy" Ross. In June 2016, he died of a self-inflicted gun shot. (Courtesy Lilly Ross via AP)

"I don't think there's anybody who doesn't deserve a second chance," Mardini says.

Asked by the doctors what he expected from the transplant, to make sure he had realistic goals, Sandness said he wanted a working nose, the ability to bite, swallow, chew, and to "get good stares as opposed to bad stares."

These incremental steps benefited everyone, says Dr. Hatem Amer, Mayo's medical director of reconstructive transplantation.

"He wasn't rushing us, and we weren't rushing him," he says. "He really understood what he was embarking upon."

Sandness says he was concerned both about the possibility of rejection and potential side effects of anti-rejection drugs, including skin cancer, infection, diabetes and weakening of the bones.

Mardini and his team devoted more than 50 Saturdays over 31/2 years to rehearsing the surgery, using sets of cadaver heads to transplant the face of one to another. They used 3-D imaging and virtual surgery to plot out the bony cuts so the donor's face would fit perfectly on Sandness.

In January 2016, Sandness' name was added to the waiting list of the United Network for Organ Sharing.

Mardini figured it would take up to five years to find the right donor: a man with matching blood and tissue types, roughly the same size as Sandness, within a 10-year age range and a close skin tone.

But just five months later, Mardini got a call: There might be a donor. He phoned Sandness, cautioning it was just a possibility.

The next day, Mardini got the final word: The donor's family had said OK.

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The decision came from a 19-year-old newlywed mourning the sudden loss of her husband.

In early June, Calen "Rudy" Ross fatally shot himself in the head. His devastated widow, Lilly, was eight months pregnant.

Andys New FaceIn this June 10, 2016 photo provided by the Mayo Clinic, Dr. Samir Mardini shows Andy Sandness photos of his children on his smartphone before Sandness' face transplant surgery in Rochester, Minn. Over the years, the two say they've become as close as brothers. (Eric M. Sheahan/Mayo Clinic via AP)

Despite her grief, she was committed to carrying out her husband's wishes: On his driver's license, Ross, who lived in Fulda, Minnesota, had designated he wanted to be an organ donor. Lilly met with a coordinator from LifeSource, a nonprofit group that works with families in the upper Midwest to facilitate organ and tissue donation.

Since Ross had been healthy and just 21, his heart, lungs, liver and kidneys could be donated. But additional screening determined he could do even more: He was a good match for a man awaiting a face transplant at Mayo Clinic.

In a second conversation, LifeSource broached the idea to Lilly.

"I was skeptical at first," she says. "I didn't want to walk around and all of a sudden see Calen." She was reassured the donor had his own eyes and forehead and would not be recognizable as her husband. After consulting with her husband's best friend, she gave her consent.

A CT scan, other tests and a photo sent to Mardini by LifeSource confirmed the two men were a good match. Mardini said when the doctors studied Ross' photo, "we got chills when we actually saw how close they were in hair color, skin -- just the overall look. It could be his cousin."

Late on June 16, Sandness was wheeled into surgery, accompanied by Mardini, who was showing him photos of his two small children. Over the years, the two say they've become as close as brothers.

"There was not a second of doubt that everything was going to go well," Sandness says.

"Everybody went into this totally knowing their role, knowing what to expect," Mardini recalls. "Every step has been thought out 1,000 times."

Mardini had a parting message: "We're looking forward to seeing you with a new face."

In adjoining operating rooms, some 60 surgeons, nurses, anesthesiologists and others had gathered for what would be a 56-hour marathon.

Andys New FaceIn this July 3, 2016 photo provided by the Mayo Clinic, Dr. Samir Mardini shaves the face of his patient, Andy Sandness, days after leading a team that performed the first face transplant surgery at the hospital. Over the years, the two say they've become as close as brothers. (Eric M. Sheahan/Mayo Clinic via AP)

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The surgery that started shortly before midnight Friday was over early Monday morning.

It took about 24 hours to procure the donor's face, which involved taking bone, muscle, skin and nerves, and almost the same time to prepare Sandness. His entire face was rebuilt below his eyes, taking an additional 32 hours. The medical team rotated, many taking four-hour breaks through the weekend.

One of the most intricate parts of the surgery was identifying facial nerve branches on both men and stimulating them with an electric current to determine their function. That allowed doctors to make the correct transfers, so when Sandness thinks about smiling or closing his eyes, for example, those movements actually happen.

After the surgery ended, Mardini proclaimed it "a miracle."

Sandness, who was sedated for several days, wasn't allowed to see himself immediately. His room mirror and cell phone were removed. His father, Reed, served as his eyes.

"I said, 'Andy, I've never lied to you. I'm telling you you're going to be happy with what you see,'" he recalls. "He was quizzing me and the nurses all the time."

Three weeks later, when he finally did see his face -- a scene captured on a Mayo video -- his father says it "was just a real tearful, hard-to-hold-back time ... beyond our wildest dreams.".

Sandness was overwhelmed. "Once you lose something that you've had forever, you know what it's like not to have it," he says. "And once you get a second chance to have it back, you never forget it."

Just having a nose and mouth are blessings, he says. "The looks are a bonus."

Months earlier, both he and Lilly Ross had expressed interest in learning about each other. She particularly wanted him to know about her husband, an adventurous, spontaneous guy.

Last fall, she wrote to Sandness and the five others who received her husband's organs. She described Ross, her high school sweetheart, as a "giving person" who loved hunting, trapping and being with his dog, Grit. "I am filled with great joy knowing that he was able to give a little of himself to ensure a better quality of life for someone else," she wrote.

As for the face transplant, she thought of her baby son when she agreed to it. "The reason that I decided to ... go through with it was so that I can later down the road show Leonard what his dad had done to help somebody," she said in a video produced by LifeSource.

Lilly was given photos of Sandness before and after the transplant. That's when she learned of uncanny similarities between the two men -- not just their passion for the outdoors, but the way they stood in their hunting photos. "It was amazing how good he looked and how well he's doing,'" she says of Sandness. "I'm excited for him that he's getting his life back."

She also noticed one small detail -- a small bare patch in the middle of his bearded chin, just as on her husband's face.

Both she and Sandness hope to meet one day. For now, he wrote her a letter of appreciation. Referring to her husband's favorite things, he said: "He's still going to continue to love hunting and fishing and dogs -- through me."

Andys New FaceIn this Jan. 24, 2017, photo, face transplant recipient Andy Sandness attends a speech therapy appointment at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

___

Andy Sandness can pinpoint the day he looked normal.

About three months after the transplant, he was in an elevator when a little boy glanced at him, then turned to his mother without appearing scared or saying anything. "I knew then," he says, "that the surgery was a success."

Last December, he had follow-up surgery to tighten skin on his face and neck and build up bone around his eyes so they're not so recessed.

His facial muscles are growing stronger. He received speech therapy to learn to use his tongue in a new mouth and jaw, and enunciate clearly.

He's thrilled to smell again, breathe normally and be eating foods that were off-limits for a decade: apples, steak and pizza that he shared with his doctors.

His transformation isn't just visible. After the shooting, he says, when he dreamed, he still had his old face. Now, his new face appears in his dreams.

Sandness, now 31, plans to return to Wyoming, work as an electrician and, he hopes, marry and have a family someday.

For now, he savors his anonymity. Recently, he attended a Minnesota Wild game. He bought some popcorn. He watched some hockey. He didn't see any stares or hear any whispers.

He was, as he says, "just another face in the crowd." Just thinking about that makes him smile.

Obituaries from The Republican, Feb. 17, 2017

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