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Firefighter killed in Watertown blaze identified as Joseph Toscano

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Officials have identified the firefighter killed Friday after battling a 2-alarm blaze in Watertown.

Officials have identified the firefighter killed Friday after battling a 2-alarm blaze in Watertown.

Authorities identified the firefighter as Joseph Toscano, 54, of Randolph.

Toscano died of a medical emergency that he suffered during the fire, according to a statement from Randoph Police Chief William Pace.

"Earlier today, the public safety community lost one of its own and the Town of Randolph lost a resident," Pace said.

"On behalf of the Randolph Police Department and the entire community, I offer my most sincere condolences to the Toscano family, including Joseph's wife and five children," he continued.

Toscano was a member of the Watertown Fire Department for more than 20 years.

The blaze broke out at a Merrifield Avenue home at 10:30 a.m. A firefighter was injured and taken to Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, CBS Boston reported.

Toscano died shortly after noon. He may have had a heart attack.

 

Agawam man indicted for drunken driving, causing serious injury in Springfield crash

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James Miller of Agawam faces two charges of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol causing serious bodily injury.

SPRINGFIELD -- An Agawam man has been indicted by a Hampden Superior Court grand jury on two counts of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol causing serious bodily injury.

Each of those two March 15 indictments against James Miller, 30, of 140 Meadowbrook Road, names a different woman as victim.

Miller was also indicted on charges of driving without a license, resisting arrest and assault and battery on a police officer.

According to the Springfield police arrest book, Miller was arrested at 3:45 a.m. at 834 Worthington St. on Sept. 11, 2016.

Sixteen Acres' Saray II Turkish Restaurant cited for expanding without OK from Springfield License Commission

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A five-day license suspension was issued to Saray Turkish Restaurant in Springfield, but the penalty was held in abeyance and will be dismissed in one year if there are no additional violations.

SPRINGFIELD -- The License Commission has ruled that a Sixteen Acres restaurant expanded without its approval, resulting in a five-day license suspension that will be held in abeyance for one year and then dismissed if there are no further violations.

The move will allow Saray Turkish Restaurant at 1374 Allen St. to stay open, commission Chairman Peter Sygnator said.

Saray expanded into a portion of an abutting storefront that previously housed Allen Produce. The expansion was approximately 350 square feet, with alcohol stored in that area, Sygnator said.

Restaurant review: Saray II in Springfield

"A licensee cannot increase or decrease the size of their licensed premises without review of the Planning Board and approval of the Board of License Commissioners and the ABCC," Sygnator said, citing state law.

"Ignorance of that law is no excuse and the board takes a dim view of violation of any of the laws governing our licensed premises," Sygnator said. "As such, the licensee now has a five-day suspension hanging over their head for one year. This should serve as a strong message to all of our licensees in Springfield."

The restaurant is listed as owned by Ogun Inc., and the manager is listed as Ruklye Kilic, according to city records.

The violation was listed as "alteration of a licensed premises without License Commission approval."

Giant shamrock painted on High Street in Holyoke on St. Patrick's Day (photos, video)

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Armed with long-handled paint rollers, Holyoke Grand Colleen Margaret Walsh and her court -- Rachael Dearman, Maya Birks, Lara McGeer and Caitlyn Hoschtetler -- continued a Holyoke St. Patrick's Day tradition of painting a large shamrock on the parade route. Watch video

HOLYOKE -- Winter Storm Stella made it a little bit more difficult for the streets of Holyoke to be wearing green on St. Patrick's Day.

As dump trucks full of snow passed the orange traffic cones at the intersection of High and Dwight streets Friday, Department of Public Works employee Mike Gallagher was using a giant blow torch to help dry out the area.

Armed with long-handled paint rollers, Holyoke Grand Colleen Margaret Walsh and her court -- Rachael Dearman, Maya Birks, Lara McGeer and Caitlyn Hoschtetler -- continued a Holyoke St. Patrick's Day tradition of painting a large shamrock on the parade route. 

After a brief ceremony the group, along with Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse and colleen coordinator Kathy Dulchinos, walked to City Hall to raise the Irish flag.

The 65th annual Holyoke St. Patrick's Parade will take place on Sunday.  

Trial date Monday for retired Springfield Police Detective Kevin Burnham, accused of stealing nearly $400,000 from evidence room

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Retired Springfield Police Officer Kevin Burnham has denied charges alleging he stole nearly $400,000 from the department's evidence room over four years.

SPRINGFIELD -- Monday is the trial date for retired Springfield Detective Kevin Burnham, accused of stealing nearly $400,000 from the Police Department's evidence room over four and a half years.

Burnham's trial date previously has been moved several times.

If Burnham were to opt to go to trial it would not start Monday but would be assigned to a judge's session for scheduling by that judge. If Burnham decides to plead guilty, the plea could be taken Monday.

The 43-year veteran of the police force pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of larceny at his arraignment in January 2016. Charges were brought by the state attorney general's office after a lengthy investigation of the retired officer, who was 66 at the time.

The discovery of missing money prompted widespread reforms of accounting for cash seized during drug investigations within the Police Department.

Burnham was released on his own recognizance with conditions that he surrender his passport, not leave the state without permission from the Probation Department, turn his firearms over to defense lawyer Charles Dolan and turn his firearms license and FID card over to Police Commissioner John Barbieri.

The case is being prosecuted by the office of Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey. Burnham is charged with six counts of larceny over $250 and one count of larceny under $250.

The case alleges Burnham stole the cash from envelopes stored in the evidence room. The money had been seized in the course of investigations involving 162 defendants, according to a spreadsheet released by the attorney general's office in connection with the case. The alleged thefts, beginning Dec. 4, 2009, ranged from as little as $11 to tens of thousands of dollars. Burnham retired in the summer of 2014.

According to Healey's office, in some instances, Burnham allegedly "shorted" the cash count by taking money when he recounted it. Burnham also allegedly replaced money he stole from various evidence envelopes with previously seized counterfeit money or with newer money that was put into circulation after the original seizure date.

Bodies of missing snowshoers from Boston recovered in Canada

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The bodies of two snowshoers reported missing in the Canadian Rockies have been recovered.

The bodies of two snowshoers reported missing in the Canadian Rockies have been recovered, Canadian officials said Friday. 

"The thoughts of all Parks Canada staff are with the family and friends of those involved," Parks Canada spokesperson Tania Peters said in a statement.

The man and the woman from Boston were reported missing after failing to check out of their hotel in Alberta on Tuesday. The pair had spent the day snowshoeing near Lake Louise. 

Their car was located this week in in Banff National Park on the Icefields Parkway.

Neither have been identified while their families are notified. 

Man suspected of robbing banks in Pittsfield and South Hadley arrested

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A man suspected of robbing multiple banks was taken into custody on Thursday morning.

PITTSFIELD - A man suspected of robbing banks in both Pittsfield and South Hadley was arrested on Thursday. 

42-year-old Mike Bedford was taken into custody by Pittsfield police early Thursday morning, according to Sgt. John Soules of the Pittsfield Police Department. 

A search warrant was also executed at Bedford's North Street residence in Pittsfield at approximately 1:38 a.m., Soules said. 

Authorities believe Bedford committed armed robbery at the North Street branch of Greylock Federal Credit Union in Pittsfield.

He is also suspected of committing two armed robberies at the Berkshire Bank located on Lamb Street in South Hadley. The robberies occurred in 2016.

Bedford is now charged with three counts of armed robbery while masked.

Investigation into Bedford's activities was conducted by both the Pittsfield and South Hadley police departments, as well as by the Berkshire County Special Response Team.    

Court records show investigation into missing money followed drug arrest of Daniel Maurer, former East Longmeadow HS athletic director

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In the months before police tailed and arrested former Longmeadow High School Athletic Director Daniel Maurer upon his leaving a known drug den, money kept disappearing from school athletic accounts.

In the months before police tailed and arrested former East Longmeadow High School Athletic Director Daniel Maurer upon his leaving a known drug den, money kept disappearing from school athletic accounts, according to a new criminal complaint obtained by MassLive. 

Annual athletic fees paid by students and stored in a main office lockbox vanished. The lion's share of the cash portion of funds school cheerleaders paid to go to camp and purchase new apparel: gone, as well. 

Maurer, in charge of selling 100 tickets to a Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame event -- valued at $600 -- returned nothing to the school, police say. 

Finally, after repeated inquiries by Athletic Treasurer John Courtney, Maurer wrote a personal check to the school for $246, saying he had only been able sell 41 of the Hall of Fame tickets, and gave away four others. 

"Mr. Courtney believes he asked Maurer for the money for the tickets at least 50 times," East Longmeadow Det. Joseph Barone wrote in a Feb. 22 report following an investigation he conducted. "(He) believes the 55 tickets were sold by Maurer and he kept the money."

Barone adds, "The school had to take $354 from the athletic account to combine with the $246 check provided by Maurer, in order to pay the Hoop Hall the $600 to remain in good standing."

Daniel Maurer, former East Longmeadow HS athletic director, accused of stealing money raised by students

Following an exhaustive set of interviews with the school's administration, secretaries and athletic staff, Barone concluded that $2,006 "is unaccounted for from the school athletic account" -- $1,235 of which he could link to Maurer. 

On Friday, East Longmeadow Public Schools Superintendent Gordon C. Smith told MassLive the school and Maurer reached a separation agreement some time ago, and that Maurer no long works for the district.

Among other circumstantial evidence uncovered by Barone, staff found cash envelopes and receipts in Maurer's desk following the administrator's departure that "should never have been" there.

But Smith initially resisted Barone's investigation, saying in a Jan. 6 email to the detective that the school "has already looked into this matter and did not request an investigation," according to Barone's report. 

In the same message, Smith asked Barone to submit records requests for the documents he sought, "so they can be evaluated pertaining to the state Public Records Law," the report adds. 

On another occasion reported to Barone, Courtney gave Maurer $80, ostensibly to have keys cut for school coaches, while asking that Maurer return with a receipt.

No receipt was logged, no keys were made and the $80 never paid back.

"(Courtney) said he is aware that money is missing and knows Dan Maurer is responsible for it," Barone notes. 

It was not the school, but Town Manager Denise Menard and Town Council President Kevin Manley who requested police investigate the missing money on Dec. 23 -- long after Maurer's Aug. 29 arrest for possession of opiate pills upon leaving a known drug dealers house being investigated by undercover police. 

Following Maurer's arrest, the school put him on paid administrative leave, before the separation agreement was reached.

Maurer appeared in Palmer District Court on Friday, where his arraignment on a charge of larceny over $250 was continued until Monday. 

Meanwhile, Maurer remains on pretrial probation for the earlier charge of possession of a class B substance. That charge will not appear on his record providing he meets the terms of probation. 


Seen@ St. Patrick's Day Party at Brennan's Place in Holyoke

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Brennan's Place of Holyoke was the place to be on St. Patrick's Day.

To serve larger than normal crowds, a giant outdoor tent helped accommodate what will likely be many thousands who will visit through Sunday. The tent has a stage, a full-service bar, a beer bar with multiple taps, and a replica of an Irish pub.

A small army of bartenders worked inside the main building as well as the tent serving a crowd that would end up growing to capacity. Brennan's kitchen was busy churning out corned beef sandwiches with heaping portions as well as their more traditional fare like wings and burgers.

Friday's musical groups featured one of New England's premiere Celtic bands in "Boston Blackthorne" as well as Springsteen tribute band  "E Street Shuffle". Boston Blackthorne will also perform Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. British invasion band "Union Jack" will hit the stage Saturday afternoon.

'This is ridiculous' judge tells Agawam man arrested twice in 6 hours

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In the lockup, Henchey flooded two cells by blocking up toilets and repeatedly flushing them, the report said.

SPRINGFIELD - After reading two arrest reports involving the same defendant on the same day, Judge Thomas Estes did not sound happy.

"This is ridiculous," he told Keith Henchey, 29, of Agawam, who was back in Springfield District Court for the second time in 24 hours. "You just can't stop yourself from getting arrested."

Arrest number one took place outside a Cumberland Farms in West Springfield around 11:30 a.m. on March 9 after Henchey allegedly got into an argument with two men and threatened them with a crow bar, according to the police report.

Arrest number two occurred six hours later, after Henchey had been released on bail and returned to West Springfield police headquarters to demand his car back.

"I've been in court all day because you arrested me and I don't know where my (obscenity) car is," he shouted at a dispatcher and police captain who were busy handling calls about a shooting at Memorial Field, according to the second arrest report.

He continued "ranting uncontrollably" for several minutes, ignoring requests to lower his voice and calm down; after being ordered to leave the station, he stood in the foyer of Town Hall, yelling so loudly that town employees seemed "shocked and alarmed" by his behavior, the report said.

When he was eventually arrested and handcuffed, Henchey requested a favor, the report said. "He asked me to take the handcuffs off so he could fight me," Capt. Robert Duffy wrote.

Later, after spending an hour in the "prisoner restraint" chair, Henchey was taken to the lockup, where he flooded two jail cells by blocking up toilets and repeatedly flushing them, the report said.

In court the next day, a prosecutor asked for $250 bail on the police-station related charges, and asked the judge to revoke Henchey's release in the crow bar-related case.

Estes, after admonishing Henchey for his lack of impulse control and common sense, set bail at $250 in the second case, but refused to revoke his release in the first one, in which he was freed on personal recognizance.

The judge also approved $500 for defense lawyer Timothy Macri to hire a private investigator to help prepare Henchey's defense.

Henchey is due back in court for pretrial hearings in both cases on May 2.

Bestiality charge dismissed against Easthampton man

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In October, the self-employed roofer allegedly made a video of his dog engaging in sex act with him and sent it to a woman he met on a Boston Bruins' fan website, according to a complaint filed by Easthampton police.

SPRINGFIELD -- A judge has dismissed a bestiality charge against an Easthampton man who allegedly filmed himself engaging in a sex act with his dog.

At the prosecution's request, Judge Patricia Poehler dismissed the charge against defendant Joshua Swift following his arraignment March 1 in Springfield District Court.

In a court filing, the Hampden district attorney's office stated that it "does not chose to go forward at this time" with the charge. No further explanation was offered, and District Attorney Anthony Galluni had no comment on the decision Friday.

The dismissal was requested by defense lawyer Nicholas J. Raring, who claimed the state's bestiality law was too ill-defined to support a prosecution.

"It is an impermissibly vague statute," Raring said.

In October, the self-employed roofer allegedly made a video of his dog engaging in sex act with him and sent it to a woman he met on a Boston Bruins' fan website, according to a complaint filed by Easthampton police.

Questioned by investigators, he admitted making the video, but said the woman encouraged him to do it. When Swift broke off their relationship, the woman sent the video to Blandford police, the complaint said.

Claiming he was "wasted, lonely and in a bad state of mind" when the video was filmed, Swift assured investigators it was "not something he would normally do," the complaint said. An investigator for the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals visited Swift's apartment and concluded that the dog was healthy and showed no signs of abuse.

Swift, 32, was scheduled for arraignment Dec. 13, but was arrested in Easthampton the night before in an unrelated assault warrant. He will be held at the Hampshire County Jail and House of Correction until December in that case, a court official said.

At his arraignment on March 1, Swift pleaded not guilty and bail was set at $1,000. At the time, a prosecutor requested a bind-over hearing on April 5, suggesting the case would be transferred to superior court, where defendants face potentially longer sentences if convicted. The case was dismissed five hours later, court records show.

Chicopee elections starting: 27 take out papers to run

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Two people have taken out papers to run for City Council in Ward 1. Incumbent Adam Lamontagne announced he will not run again.

CHICOPEE - The election season is off to a slow start with 27 people, mostly long-term incumbents, having taken out papers to run for five different offices.

But some of the incumbents will likely to see challenges if newcomers do turn in election papers.

People could start taking out nomination papers in February. The last day to take out papers is July 28 and candidates must turn in completed papers to the Registrar of Voters by Aug. 1 to appear on November's ballot.

All candidates, except those running for mayor, need to collect 50 signatures from registered voters to be placed on the ballot. Mayoral candidates need 250 signatures.

So far Mayor Richard J. Kos has not taken out papers to run for another term. No challengers have taken papers either.

One month into the election season there are challenges in at least three and possibly four races for City Council.

In Ward 1 Joel McAuliffe, former communications director for Mayor Richard J. Kos and current district director for State Sen. Eric Lesser, has returned papers to run for City Council. Dino Brunetti, who served as city councilor in the ward for 10 years before being defeated in 2013, has also taken out nomination papers.

Incumbent Ward 1 City Councilor Adam D. Lamontagne announced he would not run for re-election about three weeks ago. He has been provisionally appointed as a patrolman to the Chicopee Police Department and said he would be focusing on completing the six-month intensive Police Academy training instead.

All four incumbents for the at-large City Council seats, Frank Laflamme, James Tillotson, Robert Zygarowski and Gerard (Jerry) Roy have taken out papers to run for the seats. W. Kaween Fernando, who unsuccessfully ran for an at-large Council seat two years ago has also taken out papers to run again.

There could also be a repeat of the Ward 5 City Council race since Miguel A. Roldan-Castro Jr. has taken out papers to challenge Frederick Krampits, the incumbent who also plans to run. Two years ago Roldan-Castro unsuccessfully challenged Krampits.

Newcomer Derek Dobosz, a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals, has also taken out papers to run for City Council. He lives in Ward 6 but did not say if he would run in the ward or for an at-large seat. Ward 6 incumbent Timothy S. McLellan has not taken out papers yet.

So far no one has taken out papers to run for City Council in Ward 4. Incumbent Councilor William Zaskey announced he will not run for re-election after serving for 28 years on the board.

Others who have taken out nomination papers for City council are: Ward 3 incumbent and City Council President John L. Vieau, Ward 7 incumbent Councilor William Courchesne, Ward 8 incumbent Councilor Gary Labrie and Ward 9 incumbent Councilor Stanley Walczak.


Nine incumbent School Committee members have also taken out papers. They are: Chester Szetela, at-large; Dana Cutter, Ward 1; David Barsalou, Ward 2; Sandra Ann Peret, Ward 4; Deborah Styckiewicz, Ward 5; Susan Szetela Lopes, Ward 6; Donald Lamothe, Ward 7; Sharon Nawrocki, Ward 8 and Mary-Elizabeth Pniak-Costello, Ward 9.

Szetela and Cutter have already returned their papers with the required signatures, said Janina Surdyka, the registrar of voters.

Others who have taken out papers are incumbent assessors Laura McCarthy and Brian Suchy, Treasurer Marie Laflamme and Tax Collector Stanley Iwanicki.

Chicopee to hold annual Easter egg hunt and other contests

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The event is limited to 300 children aged 10 and under.

CHICOPEE - The city's annual Easter egg hunt for children 10 and under will be held April 15 in Szot Park.

The event, which will begin at 10 a.m., will include a coloring contest, an Easter bunny feet contest and a visit from the Easter Bunny. Each child will also be given a goody bag.

The egg hunt is organized by age with children 3 and under starting at 10:25, followed by children ages 4 to 7 and ending with children ages 8 to 10. Children will collect plastic egg that are scattered across different fields. Each egg will be filled with candy and some will have a special ticket which can be redeemed for a prize.

Parents and guardians must register their children ahead of time at the Parks and Recreation Department offices, 687 Front St. The hunt is limited to 300 children and registrations will close on April 13 or sooner if the event is full. The cost is $5 for residents and $7 for non-residents. Coloring sheets can be picked up at the time of registration.

The event is sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Department, the First Central Bible Church, Peoples Bank, the Valley Blue Sox and Burger King.

The Dupont Middle School will be used as an alternative location in the case of rain or snow. For more information contact the Parks Department at 594-3481.

How a school bomb-scare case sparked a fight between the media and the FBI

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The 2007 case left a troubling question that is unanswered to this day: How often do FBI agents impersonate members of the news media?

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The young hacker was told in no uncertain terms: You are safe with me.

"I am not trying to find out your true identity," AP journalist Norm Weatherill assured the teenager in an online chat. "As a member of the Press, I would rather not know who you are as writers are not allowed to reveal their sources."

But Norm Weatherill was no reporter. He was FBI agent Norman B. Sanders Jr., and the whole conversation was a trap. Within hours, police descended on the 15-year-old hacker's home and led him away in handcuffs for making a week and a half of emailed bomb threats at his high school in Washington state. He eventually confessed and was sentenced to 90 days in a juvenile detention center.

The 2007 bust would put an end to the bomb scares and save graduation at the school but would also raise a troubling question that is unanswered to this day: How often do FBI agents impersonate members of the news media?

The answer is important, says one expert who played a key role in revealing the bureau's subterfuge, because sources need to know journalists won't turn them in.

"Journalists play a very similar role to doctors in our society in that we trust them," Christopher Soghoian, former chief technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union, said earlier this year. "And without trust they cannot operate."

Two weeks ago, a federal judge rejected a lawsuit from The Associated Press and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press demanding more detail from the FBI about the practice of posing as journalists. The two media organizations are appealing.

Meanwhile, the AP has drawn on hundreds of pages of records and interviews with a dozen people to piece together the story of how the computer-savvy sophomore's end-of-year prank escalated into a confrontation between the Justice Department and the media.

FBI Impersonation of _Stin (1).jpgThis image provided by the Lacey Police Department shows a June 13, 2007, photo with the words "boom 8:30am" scrawled across a boy's bathroom at Timberline High School in Lacey, Wash. (Lacey Police Department via AP) 

Using hijacked servers in Europe, the teenager, who was assigned the pseudonym Charles Jenkins by the FBI, emailed grandiose, profane bomb threats almost daily to teachers and administrators at Timberline High, forcing repeated evacuations at the 1,500-student school in Lacey, a middle-class suburb of Olympia.

FBI Impersonation of _Stin (2).jpgAn email from a report obtained via public records request shows the words: Dear Mr. Principle (sic) ENJOY YOUR LIFE ENDING." (Lacey Police Department via AP) 

In one message, he told his principal: "ENJOY YOUR LIFE ENDING." Other messages instructed high school staff to say, "Have a nice explosive day."

Students quickly became annoyed at the threats.

"There was just no learning because everybody was waiting for another bomb threat to happen," said Meggan Dowd, who was a Timberline sophomore at the time.

Parents were getting panicky, and police were at wits' end. They had a multitude of suspects and lots of possible leads generated by the high school rumor mill, but nothing solid. And because of the hoaxer's use of proxy servers, investigators were unable to zero in on his location.

"It's more difficult to track email than you might think, if you have computer savvy on the internet" Lacey Police Chief Dusty Pierpoint told parents at a meeting.

It was about then that "AP Staff Publisher Norm Weatherill" emailed Jenkins for comment on the threats. Weatherill -- that is to say, Sanders -- promised anonymity.

Jenkins agreed to chat, and the FBI agent sent him a couple of links related to an AP article he was supposedly putting together. The links were booby-trapped. When Jenkins clicked, malicious code ran on his computer, broadcasting his internet protocol address back to law enforcement.

Six hours later, Lacey police were at his door. Jenkins later pleaded guilty to harassment, making bomb threats and identity theft. In an interview with the AP a decade later, he said he had no particular motive beyond "feeling powerful."

A decade later, the AP is still seeking information about the FBI's practice of masquerading as journalists. The AP and the Reporters Committee have obtained documents from the bureau, but no solid answers about how often it happens.

"AP is calling for the release of all FBI documents related to the impersonation of any and all journalists in order to make the public aware of this deceptive practice and its breadth," Executive Editor Sally Buzbee said in a statement.

The FBI declined to comment on the case or its fallout and refused to make its agent available for an interview.

Back in Lacey, even some of those who were pleased with the FBI's work allowed that the bureau's methods raised eyebrows.

Dave Lehnis, Timberline's principal back then, said the bureau caught Jenkins in the nick of time -- less than two days before graduation ceremonies.

"We were glad it ended when it did," he said. "But using the press? Certainly if I were a journalist that would piss me off some."

Morning fire damages home on Michael Drive in Westfield

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A Saturday morning fire damaged a single family home on Michael Drive, city fire officials have reported.

WESTFIELD -- A Saturday morning fire damaged a single family home on Michael Drive, city fire officials have reported. 

The Westfield Fire Department responded to reports of a fire at a home located at 62 Michael Drive around 7:30 a.m. Firefighters extinguished the flames, but remained on scene just before 10 a.m.

The fire caused "considerable damage" and displaced the home's occupants, officials said.

No injuries were reported in connection to the fire. 

Fire Chief Mary Regan told Western Mass News that firefighters had trouble in getting water to the site due to an issue with a fire hydrant. 

"Apparently, one of the hydrants was taken out by a plow truck. So there was a delay in getting the water that we needed on the fire," she told the news outlet.

The Westfield Fire Department and State Fire Marshall's Office are investigating the blaze.

This is a breaking news story and will be updated as more information becomes available.


Health insurance information session set for March 23

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Commonwealth Care Alliance will hold an informational session about One Care, an insurance option for disabled individuals who qualify for both MassHealth and Medicare coverage, on March 23 at 8 a.m. at Friends of the Homeless Resource Center, 755 Worthington St.

SPRINGFIELD - MassHealth will hold an informational session about One Care, a health insurance option for patients with complex medical issues who qualify for both MassHealth and Medicare coverage, on March 23 at 8 a.m. at Friends of the Homeless Resource Center, 755 Worthington St. in Springfield.

One Care allows such individuals, who are between the ages of 21 and 64, access to covered services with the help of a care coordinator.

One Care Plans, which includes one offered in this area by Commonwealth Care Alliance, are required to cover certain services and may offer additional services.

Besides age, other requirements to be eligible for One Plan include having Medicare parts A and B; qualifying for Medicare Part D (drug coverage); having MassHealth Standard or MassHealth CommonHealth; not having any private health insurance (like health insurance from my job); not participating in a Home and Community Based Services (HCBS) waiver, and living in the area the plan covers.

Benefits and services are covered by Medicare and MassHealth, although CommonHealth members who pay a MassHealth premium must continue to pay that premium if they switch to CCA, according to CCA.

One Care, through which members have one card, one phone number, and one person to coordinate their care, was initially launched as a pilot program through MassHealth in October 2013 to streamline care for individuals eligible for services from both Medicare and Medicaid. CCA has offered its One Care program since the beginning, and is reportedly the largest provider of One Care in the state.

"Our members touch the health care system far more frequently and far more in depth than most people ever will. They have multiple chronic health conditions, often including significant physical or developmental disabilities, and many struggle with behavioral health problems and substance abuse. Some are homeless; some are homebound," said Chris Palmieri, CCA's president and chief executive officer.

"One Care brings the full set of benefits and services provided by MassHealth and Medicare together in one, integrated health plan. When people join One Care through CCA, they have a single care manager and point of contact to coordinate their care, including mental health, long-term and community services and support, delivered through a unique team-based approach that ensures that their individual needs are met."

According to CCA, its One Care plan covers some 3,635 individuals in the Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties, some 3,297 of them in Hampden County. It is estimated that there are 20,000 people in Hampden, Franklin and Hampshire counties who are eligible, but not enrolled in One Care.

A MassHealth representative will be available to help with enrollment at the March 23 event. Interested individuals should bring their MassHealth and Medicare cards.

The resource center provides a variety of services including a men and women's overnight shelter, meals and an on-site clinic operated by Mercy Medical Center's Healthcare for the Homeless.

CCA's area clinical affiliate, Springfield - Commonwealth Community Care, is located at 3550 Main St., and has a partnership with Baystate Brightwood Health Center/Centro de Salud, a service of Baystate Medical Center.

Cooley Dickinson Physician Hospital Organization recently agreed to contract with CCA's Senior Care Options program for individuals ages 65 and older who have Medicare and MassHealth Standard or just MassHealth Standard alone. The affiliation allows CCA's SCO members access to the organization's physicians and services.

CDPHO includes some 285 physician members,and approximately 100 Advance Practice Nurse Clinicians within affiliated member practices.

Man seriously injured after being shot in neck at Connecticut bar

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One person sustained serious, but non-life-threatening injuries following an early Saturday morning shooting inside a Connecticut bar and restaurant, police have reported.

MERIDEN, CONN. -- One person sustained serious, but non-life-threatening injuries Saturday following an early morning shooting inside a Connecticut bar and restaurant, police have reported. 

Officers parked near 105 Colony Street responded to reports of a shooting at nearby 105 Restaurant and Lounge around 1:45 a.m. after being approached by several unidentified individuals, according to Meriden Police. 

Officers confirmed that a 29-year-old male, whose identity was not released, had been shot one time in the neck inside the establishment and transported by an unknown individual to Midstate Medical Center.

He was later transported via LifeStar to an area trauma center, according to Meriden Police.

The victim's injuries were listed as serious, but non-life-threatening, police said. No one else appears to have been injured in the incident.

The investigation into the reported shooting is on-going.

Meriden Police ask anyone with information on the event to contact Det. Erik Simonson at 203-630-6318.

Taxi passenger killed in I-95 crash caused by drunken driver

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As of 12 p.m., troopers were still on the scene investigating the collision. The right travel lane and the breakdown lane are closed until further notice.

Update: The alleged drunken driver is charged with motor vehicle homicide.

ATTLEBORO - A drunken driver rear-ended a taxi at "extremely" high speed early Saturday morning on I-95, killing the taxi's passenger.

Massachusetts State Police said they arrested the driver of a 2014 Kia Cadenza that crashed into a 2015 Toyota Camry taxi at around 1 a.m. just prior to Exit 2.

Investigators are withholding the name of the victim and the taxi company for now, and plan to identify the 41-year-old suspect later Saturday.

The suspect is a man from Roslindale, according to state police. Exact charges are pending, but he is accused of operating under the influence and motor vehicle offenses.

Nearly twelve hours after the crash, investigators were still on the scene. The right travel lane and the breakdown lane are closed until further notice.

 

Homicide charges for alleged drunken driver who hit taxi on I-95, killing passenger

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Investigators said the early-morning crash on Saturday in Attleboro killed a 39-year-old man from Warwick, R.I.

ATTLEBORO - A man from Roslindale is charged with motor vehicle homicide for allegedly driving drunk and rear-ending a taxi on I-95 at "extremely" high speed, killing the taxi's passenger.

Michael Spinale, 41, also faces drunken driving, speeding, negligent operation and other charges in Saturday's crash near Exit 2, according to Massachusetts State Police.

Investigators said a 2014 Kia Cadenza crashed into a 2015 Toyota Camry taxi at around 1 a.m., killing a 39-year-old man from Warwick, R.I. The taxi's driver, a 50-year-old Brockton man, was taken to Rhode Island Hospital for treatment of minor injuries.

State police are withholding the name of the victim until his family is notified.

Spinale is held on $10,000 bail pending arraignment on Monday in Attleboro District Court.

Note: The victim was said to be a female, but has now been identified as a male from Warwick, R.I. This story has been updated accordingly.

 

US rejects free trade statement at G20 economic summit

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By rejecting language that would have said the United States is opposed to protectionism, the White House sent a clear signal that it would not accept existing trade norms and could pursue a more antagonistic approach with trading partners around the world. Such language has been considered ordinary and uncontroversial in recent meetings of the Group of 20.

BADEN-BADEN, Germany - The Trump administration on Saturday rejected a statement from other leading economies that warned against the perils of trade protectionism, the latest sign of how the administration's more combative approach to diplomacy could create rifts with U.S. allies and leave traditional partners in the dark about the direction of U.S. policy.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, appearing at a gathering of economic ministers and central bankers from the 20 largest economies, rebuffed multiple entreaties from German officials to include in the meeting's joint statement language stressing the importance of free trade and that it should be conducted in a "rules based" manner, following existing standards and agreements.

By rejecting language that would have said the United States is opposed to protectionism, the White House sent a clear signal that it would not accept existing trade norms and could pursue a more antagonistic approach with trading partners around the world. Such language has been considered ordinary and uncontroversial in recent meetings of the Group of 20.

"I understand what the president's desire is and his policies and I negotiated them from here, and we couldn't be happier with the outcome," Mnuchin said at a news conference Saturday.

Trump made opposition to free trade a cornerstone of his presidential campaign and pulled the United States out of a sweeping Asia trade deal shortly after taking office, but has not yet followed up with other concrete steps to revamp the terms of America's economic relationship with the world. He has threatened tariffs and other measures to correct what he says are other countries' unfair advantages in their trade relationships with the United States, mostly taking aim at China and Mexico.

For many years, the United States has been the country rallying other nations to the cause of free trade and common language in the communiques that follow meetings of economic ministers and central banks. Several European officials and one former U.S. official who had attended past G20 meetings said it was the first time the United States had blocked such an effort.

The move follows new strains in the U.S. relationship with Britain and Germany, traditionally two of America's most steadfast allies.

The White House on Friday cited an uncorroborated Fox News report to accuse a British spy agency of surveilling him - an accusation the agency said was baseless.

Then Trump launched a pair of tweets Saturday morning accusing Germany of failing to fulfill its obligations after several negative headlines about his meeting Friday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Washington.

"Despite what you have heard from the FAKE NEWS, I had a GREAT meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel," Trump said on Twitter. "Nevertheless, Germany owes vast sums of money to NATO & the United States must be paid more for the powerful, and very expensive, defense it provides to Germany!"

(Germany does not owe vast sums of money to NATO, the defense alliance. Member nations are expected to spend 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense spending, but Germany only spends 1.2 percent. It's unclear what Trump is referring to when he says the United States must be paid more for its defense of Germany, which hosts a major U.S. Air Force base.)

German economic officials spoke Saturday in Baden-Baden about the same time Trump sent the accusatory tweets.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said the United States was at an "impasse" with others about what they should say on trade protectionism, so they decided to say nothing at all. He also accused the Trump administration of not having a firm view on what it was seeking in terms of a trade policy.

"Obviously he had no mandate to talk about any definitions or interpretations of what the U.S. administration means by 'fair trade,' and that is something we have to accept for the time being," Schauble said.

Schauble said that the finance ministers struggled to reach a consensus on how to approach trade.

"We have agreed on some wording and language on trade policy which may be helpful or not," he said at a news conference.

He added that "sometimes at such meetings you cannot reach all the results that you may want to achieve because you cannot force partners to go along with wording they are not [okay] with."

The Germans had tried to get Mnuchin on board. Sensing opposition to the initial language from the Trump administration, German officials had watered it down several times but Mnuchin resisted.

Finally, about 1 p.m. Saturday, Germany's top central banker, Jens Weidmann, told his colleagues that the efforts to reach an agreement on the trade talks had failed.

Mnuchin then spoke up and asked whether they could agree on more generic language that said the countries wanted to "strengthen the contribution of trade." Several other finance ministers balked, saying such watery language was meaningless.

Still, a version of Mnuchin's proposal ended up in the final agreement, which contained just a brief generic reference: "We are working to strengthen the contribution of trade to our economies."

The new language was markedly different from last year's, when the finance ministers issued a joint statement that said, "We will resist all forms of protectionism."

"We believe in free trade. We are one of the largest markets in the world. We are one of the largest trading partners in the world. Trade has been good for us and good for other people," Mnuchin said at the news conference. "Having said that, we want to reexamine certain agreements. . . . To the extent that agreements are old agreements and need to be renegotiated, we will consider that as well."

The G20 first met during the George W. Bush administration, and its purpose is to try to get global agreement on common issues that face each of the countries, such as trade, taxes, financial regulation and national security.

Trump was elected in part because he vociferously rejected existing trade agreements, and the message Mnuchin delivered on behalf of the White House was that it planned to follow through on his campaign-trail promises.

Gary Schmitt, co-director of the Center for Security Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, said Trump could be sending a signal to other leaders that this is a negotiation, and the actions by Mnuchin at the meeting are an opening bid.

"You make people come to you by laying out a strident position," Schmitt said, summing up the approach Trump has used for years in real estate and business. "But over the long term, it's much harder to hold to that. These are people who lead countries and have other trade agreements. The U.S. is going to learn it's not as in-the-driver-seat as they think."

Joint statements issued after G20 meetings are difficult to finalize and are only as meaningful as the countries want them to be. They aren't formal treaties, but they do signal whether where there is consensus. Many world leaders are trying to determine how Trump's "America First" mantra will affect existing and future trade agreements, which dictate how goods and services are imported and exported around the world. The U.S. economy is the world's largest, and changes the way it buys and sells goods will have global ramifications.

The White House has said it thinks existing U.S. trade deals are unfair to American workers because it allows countries to lure away American jobs and send their goods to the United States at unfairly low prices. In addition to scrapping the Asian trade deal, Trump has also said he will renegotiate - or scrap - the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Critics of this approach have said it could isolate the U.S. economy, make goods more expensive for Americans, and hurt American companies that rely on exporting their goods around the world.

The angst about Trump's approach quickly became the backdrop at the Baden-Baden meeting, and many foreign officials came seeking more clarity from Mnuchin, whom most had never met. Mnuchin had spent his career in part at Goldman Sachs, starting a hedge fund and working as a Hollywood producer. They wanted to know whether he would veer from Trump on some of the economic nationalism they had heard coming from the White House.

He wouldn't, they quickly learned.

During a closed-door meeting Friday with other finance ministers and central bankers, Mnuchin delivered the same message that Trump had made for months, just slightly softer, according to attendees who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reveal internal discussions: The United States would unapologetically work to redraft trade practices in a way that helps American workers. He said trade agreements need to be "free and fair" and balanced. He also said an overhaul of the U.S. tax code was overdue and that the United States would rethink regulations put in place after the Great Recession.

Mnuchin made clear again and again that what's good for America's economy is good for global growth.

"My primary focus is on economic growth in the United States," Mnuchin said after meeting with Schauble in Berlin. "I think that economic growth in the United States is good for us and good for the other major economies in the world."

The message was not unexpected, but for many of the officials it was the first time they had heard it in person from a member of Trump's Cabinet.

Mnuchin quickly became the "center of attention," Canadian Finance Minister William Morneau said in an interview. Many sought one-on-one meetings with Mnuchin to explain their position and hear his views. The trade language in the joint statement served as a test to see how dug in Mnuchin - and ultimately Trump - was willing to be on trade.

Still, Mnuchin agreed to numerous meetings as he said he wanted to develop more relationships with his foreign counterparts. He met with top officials from France, South Korea, Japan, China, Saudi Arabia, the European Central Bank, Britain, Germany and Argentina, among others. His first international trip was a blizzard of bilateral discussions, with everyone trying to size up the new treasury secretary.

Despite the reservations about a variety of Trump's positions, numerous officials said they were impressed with Mnuchin's presentation and command of issues. So far, he is one of the only members of Trump's Cabinet who has sought to develop relationships with other foreign leaders. They still don't know whether they will be able to influence his thinking, but they feel he has a willingness to listen, several G20 attendees said.

"To a person, they have said they have been pleased with the way he is coming at issues," Morneau said. "He is very constructive and talking about good relationships with all of his international counterparts."

Two European officials described Mnuchin as friendly but "tough." They also said the U.S. delegation at the G20 was routinely checking back with its counterparts in Washington on certain issues, leading some Europeans to wonder with whom they were negotiating, Mnuchin or Trump. But one of the European officials said this was not uncommon for a new administration, which was still formalizing its viewpoint on an array of complicated matters.

The G20 finance ministers' meeting is the precursor to a gathering of the G20 heads of state this summer in Hamburg. Many expect the discussions on trade will only intensify by then, but now they know where the United States stands.

(c) 2017 The Washington Post. This story was written by Damian Paletta.

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