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State police probe fatal rollover on Massachusetts Turnpike in West Springfield

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Four other victims were taken to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield for treatment.

State Police file art

WEST SPRINGFIELD –State police remain on the scene of a rollover crash that took a life in the eastbound lanes of the Massachusetts Turnpike Thursday morning.

The crash was reported about 10:40 a.m. and four other victims were taken to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, according to a release issued by state police

One eastbound lane remains open and traffic has backed up some 3 to 4 miles. Additional information was not immediately available.



Obituaries today: Janet Risch, 65, of Springfield; certified nurse assistant

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Obituaries from The Republican.

Janet Risch 72811.jpgJanet M. Risch

SPRINGFIELD - Janet M. (McCarthy) Risch, 65, died Monday in Springfield. She was born in Springfield on Nov. 22, 1945 to the late John G. and Georgianna (Booth) McCarthy. Raised in Springfield, she attended local schools and lived in the city for many years. She later lived in Agawam, Chicopee and Barnstable before moving back to Springfield in 2004. She was employed as a certified nurse assistant and had previously worked at Willimansett East in Chicopee and the former Meadowood Nursing Home in South Hadley. She was a communicant of Sacred Heart Church in Springfield.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick offers compromise on casinos, predicts approval of expanded gambling

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Earlier this month, the governor said casinos were not a high priority.

Deval Patrick 7811.jpgDeval L. Patrick

BOSTON - Gov. Deval L. Patrick shifted his position on casinos Thnursday, saying that casinos will likely be approved and renewing his offer to support one slot license for race tracks.

"I think it will," Patrick said when asked if expanded gambling would be approved. "It’s really important to the speaker, and the jobs and revenue are really important to us as a Commonwealth.”

Patrick made the comments on WTKK-FM in Boston, which does not reach Western Massachusetts. Patrick makes a regular monthly appearance on the radio show to take questions from listeners.

Earlier this month, when he signed the state budget for the new fiscal year, Patrick told reporters that casinos were not a high priority for him. "Gaming is not at the top of my list," he said in early July.

He has also talked in the past about how casinos suck "all the oxygen" out of the Statehouse.

Patrick said he is willing to compromise to reach a casino deal with House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo and Senate President Therese Murray.

"If it helps get a deal, I will accept one slot parlor that is competitively bid anywhere in the commonwealth. I've been clear about that with the leadership, and I think that is the framework for an agreement on those principles," Patrick said.

In response, former two-term Attorney General and casino opponent L. Scott Harshbarger issued a statement today, condemning "secret, ongoing negotiating sessions“ among the governor and legislative leaders. Harshbarger said they are not looking at ways casinos will hurt the state.

"Legislative leaders and the governor need to have this debate in the light of day and must openly address the many issues that have changed since the last true analysis of casino impacts was done - from economic costs and benefits to public safety, law enforcement and regulatory structures," said Harshbarger, founder of the nonprofit educational group Citizens for a Stronger Massachusetts. " Ramming through a misguided proposal with little true debate will only worsen public mistrust in state government.”

Murray and DeLeo said the state Legislature plans to take up a casino bill in September after Labor Day.

Patrick rejected a casino bill last year when it included two slot licenses for race tracks. Patrick said the two licenses amounted to no-bid licenses for two tracks in the eastern part of the state.

Patrick sounded hopeful about the fate of casinos this year. Patrick has never wavered in his support for three casino resorts for the state. He is currently holding closed-door meetings on casinos with the speaker and the Senate president.

"We are past the point where there is or is not going to be expanded gaming," Patrick said on the radio show. "We're talking about how."

Two casinos are proposed for Western Massachusetts, one by the Mohegan Sun in Palmer and another by a group called Paper City Development in Holyoke.


Material from the Statehouse News Service was used in this report.

PM News Links: UMass Minutemen line up first Bowl game at Foxboro, stabbing stuns Franklin residents and more

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Western Massachusetts Electric Co. needed nearly 24 hours to restore power to thousands of local homes and businesses, but the cleanup of tree debris from this week's big storm could take two weeks, Pittsfield officials say.

Debt Showdown GOP 72811.jpgFreshmen House members raise their hands during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, as they respond to a reporter's question as to how many previously opposed the bill on raising the debt ceiling proposed by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, have now switched to support it. Click on the report, at left, for a report from the New York Times.

NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.

Ryan Chunglo, Alexander Viands, Lauren Chunglo get probation in alleged Northampton methamphetamine scheme

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Because the defendants neither entered a not guilty plea or admitted to sufficient facts for a guilty finding, they will have no record of the charges if they successfully complete their probation periods.

Bowen2010.jpgEdmund L. Bowen

NORTHAMPTON – The drug case that started with a bang ended with a whimper Thursday as three of the four defendants in an alleged methamphetamine scheme got pre-trial probation without acknowledging any guilt.

Ryan Chunglo, 18, and Alexander Viands, 20, agreed to serve 18 months of pre-trial probation without entering a plea on charges of manufacturing a Class B substance and conspiracy to violate the controlled substance act.

Lauren Chunglo, 20, Ryan Chunglo’s sister, will serve a year of pre-trial probation on a charge of conspiracy to violate the controlled substance act. Because the defendants neither entered a not guilty plea or admitted to sufficient facts for a guilty finding, they will have no record of the charges if they successfully complete their probation periods.

Earlier this month, Edmund L. Bowen, 28, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to produce methamphetamine and was sentenced to 18 months in jail. Police had described Bowen as the driving force behind a meth lab at 227 Bridge St., where the Chunglos lived.

Last October, police and fire officials converged on the house, along with members of the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, after the owner of the building reported noxious fumes. The owner and a friend were cleaning the attic after the Chunglos moved out when her friend accidentally knocked over a bottle. Both women began gagging on the fumes from the bottle.

As police described the scenario, Bowen, a homeless man, manufactured the drug, teaching his skills to the Chunglos and Viands, Lauren Chunglo’s boyfriend. He also sent the others out to buy pseudoephedrine and other materials used to manufacture the drug and gave them meth for their personal use, according to a police report. All four defendants originally pleaded innocent to the charges.

Mark Tanner, a Northampton lawyer who represents Lauren Chunglo, called the agreement involving his client “a fair disposition.” An investigator hired by one of the defendants determined that no methamphetamine was found in the home. As conditions of their probation, all three must refrain from taking drugs and submit to random drug screenings.

Arrest warrants issued for 2 suspects in Springfield homicide of 36-year-old Hartford resident William Jones

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The arrest warrants were result of a joint investigation between Massachusetts and Connecticut investigators.

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SPRINGFIELD – A 39-year-old man, wanted for a murder that investigators say occurred in Springfield in January 2010, was arrested Wednesday in Bloomfield, Conn.

The U.S. Marshals Service Fugitive Task Force took Demery Williams, of Hampden, Conn., into custody Wednesday in New Haven and turned him over the Bloomfield Police Department where he was arrested as a fugitive from justice, according to a press release issued by Bloomfield police.

Bloomfield police said that Williams’ arrest follows the discovery of 36-year-old William Jones of Hartford dead inside an abandoned car in that town on Jan. 23, 2010. Police said they believe the homicide occurred in Springfield.

Williams is slated to be arraigned in Hartford Superior Court on Thursday, pending extradition by Massachusetts authorities.

A warrant against Williams and a second suspect for murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, was issued on July 22 out of Springfield District Court.

The arrest warrant for the second suspect, Curtis Coombs, 34, of Hartford, has been lodged in the Cheshire (Conn.) Correction Institute in Storrs, Conn. where he is serving a sentence stemming from a probation violation in March 2010 upon an October 2007 conviction for burglary, 1st degree.

Jones, formerly of Bloomfield, was reported missing from Hartford and Bloomfield police, acting on information that he may be driving a white Saturn SUV in that town, found him dead inside that vehicle in a retail parking lot.

On scene indications suggested foul play, and a subsequent autopsy by the Medical Examiner’s Office ruled the death a homicide.

Upon the completion of rendition proceedings, both Williams and Coombs will be arraigned in Springfield District Court, Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said.

Williamsburg shooting range neighbors complain about 'unbearable' sounds of shooting, explosions

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Hodgkins acknowledged Thursday that he and others have been shooting on the property, but maintains he has not violated the zoning board’s ruling.

Hodgkins gestures 2010.jpgWilliamsburg shooting range owner Robert C. Hodgkins III gestures during an appearance in Northampton District Court last year,

WILLIAMSBURG – A local shooting range is back in the legal cross-hairs as zoning officials are revisiting a ban on weapons fire that both sides say is unenforceable.

Neighbors of the property at 74 Village Hill Road are up in arms after what one described as seven hours of “unbearable” shooting and explosions on the property Wednesday.

“The noise was so loud, my house was shaking,” said Erica Verrilo, who lives on nearby Nichols Road.

In February, reacting to complaints from Verrilo and other abutters, the town’s zoning board voted to ban commercial and group use of the shooting range, along with the use of automatic weapons. The land is owned by the Hodgkins family, which has used part of it for shooting since the 1930s. For years, the range co-existed peacefully with the neighborhood, but abutters say the situation began to change several years ago after Robert Hodgkins, who co-owned the property with his brother Thomas C. Hodgkins, died and left his half to his three children.

At the zoning hearing in February, neighbors maintained that Robert C. Hodgkins III, one of the late Robert Hodgkins’ children, was using the range commercially in connection with a security company he owns in New Hampshire. Several people told the board that, instead of the rifle and shotgun fire they tolerated for decades, they were being subjected to automatic weapsons fire and explosions. A lawyer representing Verrilo even played videos from the Web sites of a weapons dealer that purportedly showed people firing automatic weapons on the land.

The zoning board’s decision limited use of the range to the level of use in 2003, when the current zoning went into effect, and said shooting could only occur between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. Verrilo said she heard only single-shot fire following the ruling. Beginning on July 4, however, she began hearing the sound of automatic weapons again, she said. It climaxed with seven hours of heavy gunfire on Wednesday, according to Verrilo.

“I called the police more than once,” she said.

Verrilo also called Brenda Church, the zoning enforcement officer for Williamsburg. Church works in the office of the Northampton Building Department, which assumed responsibility for zoning enforcement in Williamsburg last year. The Northampton Building Commissioner, who is also the Williamsburg building commissioner, is reportedly on vacation and is not scheduled to return until August.

Verrilo said that, after speaking with Church, she believes the complainants must start the process all over again.

“The zoning order is incomprehensible,” she said. “It doesn’t speak to the 2003 levels.”

Although she has not yet studied the Williamsburg zoning order, Church said, “It does seem not to be laid out clearly.”

Church said she has received complaints from three separate parties about the noise on Wednesday but added that she needs to have them in writing before she can proceed.

Hodgkins acknowledged Thursday that he and others have been shooting on the property, but maintains he has not violated the zoning board’s ruling.

“What they put out is unenforceable,” he said. “As long as I’m not breaking any laws, I don’t see the problem.”

In April, Hodgkins said he would put the property up for sale because he was weary of the zoning board’s “idiocy.” He said Thursday that his family has sold a small piece to a local farm, but the rest remains on the market for $795,000. Hodgkins called complains about the recent gunfire “pouting” on the part of neighbors.

Waste Management Inc. adds incentive for well-owners on a Granby Street to switch to water line

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The company's offer is in response to a small amount of the chemical 1,4 dioxane, which was found about two years ago in four wells on Morgan Street.

Waste Management logo.jpg

GRANBY – Waste Management Inc., the company that owns the Granby landfill, has offered to pay $5,000 to each of the 24 homeowners on Morgan Street if they agree to replace their wells with piped-in water, according to Michael Pandora, chair of the Granby Board of Health.

That adds up to about 10 years’ worth of water bills. Waste Management would also cover the costs of installing a pipe, and would add the cash after the whole project was finished, according to Pandora.

“You’d be crazy not to jump on the deal,” said Donald Dusseault, a Morgan Street resident. Dusseault cites testing and pump replacement costs, and in some cases low water pressure, as reasons he would abandon his well.

Waste Management’s offer is in response to a small amount of the chemical 1,4 dioxane, which was found about two years ago in four wells on Morgan Street.

The amount is small enough that in some states it would not be a problem, but Massachusetts has unusually high standards, said Pandora.

It was discovered because Morgan Street is located next to the landfill, and for this reason Waste Management tests wells routinely. “The site has a comprehensive environmental monitoring station,” said Bob Magnussen, a spokesman for the company.

In addition to testing, Waste Management has also been supplying bottled water to the four affected homes since 2009.

At a meeting of residents with members of the Granby Board of Health and Selectboard last week, people seemed eager for the water line work to proceed, said Magnussen.

“The residents have been very receptive to our surveyors and engineers,” he said.

Fifteen residents have signed up, and Waste Management has been trying to get in touch with the others.

“The hope is to have all 24 households hooked up to the water pipe,” said Pandora, who next meets with his board on August 1.

"We’re very anxious for it to start,” said Joanne Tremblay, a Morgan Street resident.


Springfield police charge city couple Luis Santiago and Maribel Franco with trafficking heroin and cocaine

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Luis R. Santiago, 40, and Maribel Franco, 33, both of 65 Grand St., were charged with trafficking heroin, trafficking cocaine and violation of a drug-free school zone following an investigation by the Springfield police Narcotics Division.

Franco Santiago arrest.jpgLuis R. Santiago and Maribel Franco

SPRINGFIELD - A Springfield couple was arrested on Thursday following an investigation into drug sales around the area.

Luis R. Santiago, 40, and Maribel Franco, 33, both of 65 Grand St., were charged with trafficking heroin, trafficking cocaine and violation of a drug-free school zone following an investigation by the Springfield police Narcotics Division.

According to police, detectives were watching the couple and their home for an unspecified amount of time, under the direction of Sgt. Robert Tardiff. Police say that Santiago and Franco would sell drugs out of the house and make deliveries around the city.

65 Grand Street.jpgSpringfield police allege that Santiago and Franco were selling large quantities of heroin and cocaine out of the Forest Park home they purchased in 2004. (Photo courtesy of Springfield Assessor's Office)

On Thursday morning, officers were about to execute a search warrant at the Grand Street house when Santiago was seen leaving to allegedly deliver some product. He was pulled over on High Street and police say they found 95 bags of heroin and six grams of cocaine in his possession.

Around the same time, the raid team entered the house, which Santiago purchased in 2004 for $129,000, arresting Franco and seizing a sizable amount of illegal narcotics. Police say they found 44 grams of cocaine, 16 grams of heroin and 756 bags of heroin packaged for sale. Packaging materials, scales and drug paraphernalia were also found, police said.

Detectives also seized two cars they allege were used to deliver narcotics around the area.

Santiago and Franco were held awaiting arraignment in Springfield District Court.

Missing Fall River teen Amanda Swift found unharmed in drug store

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Fall River police reported that missing teen Amanda Swift was spotted in a Walgreens Pharmacy early Thursday morning and brought home a short time later.

Amanda Swift.JPGAmanda Swift, 17, was returned to her parents unharmed on Thursday after being spotted in a Walgreens Pharmacy by an observant clerk. (Photo courtesy of Fall River Police Department)


This updates a story posted at 7 a.m. Thursday


FALL RIVER, Mass. - A 17-year-old girl who hadn't been seen since Monday was found alive and well on Thursday.

Fall River police reported that missing teen Amanda Swift was spotted in a Walgreens Pharmacy early Thursday morning.

A clerk who recognized Swift from pictures circulated by the local media took action, reporting the potential sighting.

Police said that employee called the police while having another employee speak with the girl, keeping her occupied until officers could arrive.

Police showed up and once they verified the teen's identity, they took her back to her parent's house.

Body found in Cape Cod Pond identified as Pittsfield native Michael Clark

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Police have identified the man found deceased in Johns Pond in Cape Cod Wednesday as disabled Pittsfield native Michael Clark.

223600_127928270632578_127922993966439_196041_6209377_n.jpgMichael Clark

MASHPEE, Mass. - Police have identified the man found deceased in Johns Pond in Cape Cod Wednesday as disabled Pittsfield native Michael Clark.

Clark, 26, was last seen on June 19 in a truck in the parking lot of the Barnstable County Fair in East Falmouth. Since then, police have been searching the area around Route 151 while his family put up posters in the area requesting information.

His parents said he was living in Mashpee in a supportive living program for the past four months and had offered a cash reward following his disappearance. They also started a Facebook page to increase awareness of their son's disappearance.

Around 5 p.m. on Wednesday, a boater on Johns Pond in Mashpee discovered a man's body in the water.

Clark had a prosthetic leg and was missing several fingers on one hand, police said. He was last seen wearing a blue T-shirt, dark-colored pants, high-top sneakers with red laces, and a baseball cap.

Mashpee police have said that the description of the man's body matched that of Clark.

Prosecutors say preliminary investigations suggest that foul play was not a factor in Clark's death.

James Durfer says he won't run for mayor of Northampton, after all

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This leaves City Councilors David Narkewicz and Michael Bardsley as the only two declared candidates for mayor.

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NORTHAMPTON - James E. Durfer, one of three candidates who have taken out nomination papers for mayor of Northampton, said Thursday he will not be returning those papers.

Durfer said he still plans to seek a seat on the city’s Community Preservation Act committee, but that health issues preclude him running for mayor. He said he has ALS, also known as Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

That leaves City Councilors David Narkewicz and Michael Bardsley as the only two declared candidates.

Six-term incumbent mayor Mary Clare Higgins announced in May that she will not run for re-election. When she resigns in September to direct a human services agency in Greenfield, Narkewicz will become acting mayor. Bardsley unsuccessfully challenged Higgins for mayor two years ago.

The deadline for nomination papers is Aug. 9. The election is Nov. 8.

Massachusetts watchdog group discloses new names of accused priests

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Victims of clergy sex abuse say a public airing of an alleged abusers name is a vital step toward healing.

Sean O'MalleyCardinal Sean O'Malley, seen during a news conference in 2006, is yet to release the list of suspected pedophile priests. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki)

By JAY LINDSAY, Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — A watchdog group frustrated that Boston Cardinal Sean O'Malley hasn't released a promised list of suspected pedophile priests disclosed the names Thursday of nine previously unnamed suspected abusers.

The group, BishopAccountability.org, also sent a letter to the head of a powerful lay advisory committee urging her to pressure O'Malley to release the list, saying it was a matter of public safety and healing for victims.

O'Malley broke a vow of greater transparency "with no explanation or apology," said the letter to Mary Jane Doherty, chair of archdiocese's review board.

"How many reported priests' names is he keeping from the public? Dozens? Scores? A hundred? This is a silence of epic proportions — irresponsible, immoral, and dangerous," read the letter from BishopAccountability's co-directors, Anne Barrett Doyle and Terence McKiernan. "Because the archbishop will not break his silence, we are asking you to break yours."

The abuse crisis erupted in the archdiocese in 2002, then spread, creating what bishops have called the worst crisis in American Catholicism.

The independent review board advises the cardinal on child protection policies and if a child sex abuse allegation is credible. In an e-mail Thursday, Doherty said O'Malley isn't breaking any promises "but proceeding with care for all concerned."

"As someone who has worked in the trenches since 2002 to help the church develop policies and practices of child protection, I know that he and his appointed staff have consistently followed the principle of 'victims first' and sought child safety and justice for those who suffered abuse," she said.

Doherty said she's been in regular contact with O'Malley about the list and believes it's "very close" to release.

The archdiocese said Thursday it's made "substantial progress" on the list, but didn't indicate when it might be released.

Early this year, a prominent Boston attorney for clergy sex abuse victims, Mitchell Garabedian, released 17 new names of accused priests and urged other attorneys to do the same.

The new names disclosed by BishopAccountability were priests accused in Boston-area cases between 1951 and 1980. Each resulted in a settlement with the archdiocese, according to attorney Carmen Durso, who brought the claims. All nine priests are believed to be dead.

BishopAccountability.org, which tracks clergy sex abuse cases nationally, discovered the newly disclosed names while reviewing two publicly filed lawsuits brought by Durso, one from 2002 and the other from 2007. The names include Donald McGurrin, Alphonse B. Jansonis, Charles F. Dewey, Benedict Mawn, Septimo Basso and John J. Gallagher. Three other religious order brothers' full names weren't given in the complaint: Brother Leonard Xavier and Brother Albert, both Marists, and Brother Cuthbert, a Xaverian.

The ease with which her group found the names is a sign to Doyle that many more names are unreleased and not as easily found. She worries the archdiocese will lowball the total and said the continued delay only protects abusive priests and their superiors.

"(O'Malley) projects the image of a healer, but his actions are those of a secretive bureaucrat," she said.

The archdiocese has consistently said compiling the list is a complex job, citing concerns about due process for priests who have never been convicted of a crime.

Doyle said her group it's trying to hold O'Malley to a vow in March 2009 letter, when he wrote he was considering improving policy on releasing information about accused clergy. A year later, minutes from an archdiocesan meeting indicated the list was being compiled and would have 155 names, including 40 previously undisclosed names.

But BishopAccountability.org said it now has more than 240 names of priests or other religious workers who have substantive abuse accusations against them and worked at some point in Boston. Doyle estimated there are at least 350 such priests in Boston, based on the percentages from other dioceses that have fully disclosed their numbers of accused priests.

Victims of clergy sex abuse say a public airing of an alleged abusers name is a vital step toward healing.

"Once the betrayal happens, almost always, nothing changes in the victim's life. There's no arrest. ... There's not even an acknowledgment that, 'Yes, you've been deeply, deeply hurt," said David Clohessy, of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. "At least seeing the perpetrator's name in public, it's a validation and consolation."

Springfield police investigating reported armed robbery at Walgreens store on Sumner Avenue

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Police are looking for a man suspected of robbing the Walgreens Pharmacy on Sumner Avenue at The X Thursday evening.

SPRINGFIELD - Police are looking for a man suspected of robbing the Walgreens Pharmacy on Sumner Avenue at The X Thursday evening.

Around 6:45 p.m., the robbery was reported and police arrived within seconds.

The suspect is described as an older, dark-skinned black man, approximately 6-feet tall, with a scar on the right side of his face starting near his lip. He was wearing a black Red Sox hat with a white B, blue jeans and was last seen on foot traveling south on Dickinson Street toward Longmeadow.

It in unclear if the man actually got away with money or merchandise.

Springfield police have obtained surveillance footage from the store and are working to identify the suspect.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Springfield police Detective Bureau at (413) 787-6355.

Those who wish to remain anonymous may text a tip via a cell phone by addressing a text message to “CRIMES,” or “274637,” and then beginning the body of the message with the word “SOLVE.”

Springfield school board subcommittee votes to recommend asking superintendent Alan Ingram to return $30,000 signing bonus

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Subcommittee members contend the payment was designed specifically for a down payment on a home in Springfield; Ingram has yet to buy a house in the city.

083010 alan ingram crop.jpgSpringfield schools superintendent Alan Ingram.

SPRINGFIELD – A School Committee subcommittee Thursday unanimously voted to recommend the full board ask Schools Superintendent Alan J. Ingram to repay a little-known $30,000 signing bonus they contend was designed specifically for a down payment on a home in Springfield because Ingram has yet to buy a house here three years into his contract.

The payment became public recently after member Antonette Pepe recently began asking questions about the totality of his compensation package. Ingram was originally hired at $190,000 annually under the state-run Springfield Finance Control Board. City records show he also received a $650 monthly car allowance, a $15,000 annuity, up to $16,000 in temporary housing costs for the first eight months and other relocation and travel expenses.

His salary this year was bumped up to $202,000.

The $30,000 "market differential" payment has sparked debate because the members by and large believe it was struck surreptitiously in a "side letter" signed only by the Oklahoma-based Ingram and Stephen Lisauskas, onetime executive director of the Finance Control Board.

"I think he owes (repayment ) to the citizens of Springfield. It was done behind their backs," committee member Christopher Collins said during the meeting of the Legislative and Contracts Subcommittee at the School Department's offices at 1550 Main St.

Ingram, who did not attend the meeting, told The Republican that the side letter authorized him to spend money on general living expenses and he was not required to use the $30,000 as a down payment on a house.

June 30, 2008 Side Letter From Springfield Finance Control Board to Alan Ingram

"The agreement said it 'may' be used for a down payment," Ingram said in a previous interview. He said he never moved his family from Oklahoma City to Springfield for personal reasons, and said he made no move to hide the payment and had no plans to repay it. "It was a legally binding contract. It was negotiated and executed in good faith."

Ingram has lived in an apartment in Stockbridge Court in the city's South End since he took the schools post here. The city reimbursed Ingram for $1,229 monthly for rent and for his electric bills in 2008 and 2009, records show.

Lisauskas sent an email to The Republican in which he said he worked with other members of The Finance Control Board on Ingram's contract, including Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, and that the $30,000 payment helped to bring Ingram on board.

"While $30,000 is a large sum of money, even including this one-time payment placed Dr. Ingram's compensation well below the market for school superintendents in communities of Springfield's size and complexity," Lisauskas wrote.

More details will be added later tonight on MassLive.com; the full story will appear on Friday in The Republican.


Rhode Island Gov. attempts to save murder suspect from death penalty in case where 2 Springfield residents also indicted

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Federal prosecutors say Jason Pleau — along with his co-defendants Jose A. Santiago and Kelley M. Lajoie, both of Springfield, Mass. — hatched a plot to rob Main at least two days before the killing.

Shot Outside BankThis undated inmate photo released by the Rhode Island Department of Corrections shows Jason Pleau, charged in the fatal shooting of a man outside a bank in Woonsocket, R.I., in September 2010. A federal appeals court in Boston is set to hear arguments Thursday, July 28, 2011, in a possible death penalty case against a Pleau, who is at the center of a custody battle over state and federal jurisdiction in the trial. (AP Photo/Rhode Island Department of Corrections)

By LAURA CRIMALDI, Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee on Thursday asked a federal appeals court to grant him a more prominent role in a legal tug-of-war over a murder suspect who could face the death penalty.

In a court filing, Chafee asserts he needs the authority to fight the decision to surrender Jason Pleau to federal officials because the move would weaken the governor's power.

Pleau, 33, is battling federal prosecutors who may seek the death penalty if he is convicted of murdering a gas station manager outside a bank last September. Prosecutors and attorneys for Pleau and Chafee argued the case on Thursday before the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston. The panel has yet to rule Chafee's request which was filed after the hearing.

"Since the governor seeks to vindicate an important sovereign interest of the state of Rhode Island that cannot be adequately represented by any other party, he requests to intervene as an appellant," wrote Claire Richards, Chafee's chief legal officer. Chafee currently has minimal legal standing in the case.

The appeals panel must decide whether to turn Pleau over to federal authorities or honor Chafee's decision to keep him in state custody, where he has offered to plead guilty to the Sept. 20, 2010, shooting of David Main, 49. Rhode Island does not have a death penalty.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Donald C. Lockhart said prosecutors believe Chafee does not have the legal right to join the case.

"The governor can try to intervene later today. We would oppose that," Lockhart said while arguing the case Thursday morning.

The battle began last month after Chafee rejected a request from prosecutors to surrender Pleau to federal officials, citing the state's longtime opposition to the death penalty. Pleau has agreed to plead guilty to state murder charges and serve life in prison without parole.

After Chafee's denial, prosecutors asked U.S. District Court Judge William E. Smith to have Pleau surrendered. Smith sided with prosecutors, but Pleau's federal court arraignment was cancelled after the appeals court granted a stay of the transfer order.

Richards told the appeals panel the court must honor Chafee's decision as the final word on Pleau's custody because his action was made under a federal statute that puts states on equal footing as the federal government. Richards and Pleau's defense attorneys assert Chafee's decision was the first time a governor has refused to transfer a prisoner under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers.

Pleau's defense attorney, Robert B. Mann, said the federal government can't take "two bites at the apple" to get custody of Pleau. He argued the federal government does not have the authority to circumvent the decision Chafee made by using a different federal law to request the outcome it seeks.

"The governor has a right to decline to turn Mr. Pleau over," Mann said. "I think that under the act he clearly has a right not to be transferred now the governor has declined to turn him over."

Lockhart asserted Pleau hasn't proved he shouldn't stand trial in federal court.

If the appeals court denies Pleau's request to halt proceedings to transfer his custody to federal officials, his lawyers are asking the panel to extend the stay it has already granted so an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court can be prepared.

Pleau was indicted along with two others in federal court last year in the shooting death of Main as he approached a bank in Woonsocket to deposit receipts from the nearby Shell station where he worked.

Prosecutors say a masked Pleau chased and shot Main multiple times as he approached the bank. Officials say Pleau then made off with a bank deposit bag containing more than $12,000. He is serving an 18-year sentence in state prison for violating his parole in a separate case.

Federal prosecutors say Pleau — along with his co-defendants Jose A. Santiago and Kelley M. Lajoie, both of Springfield, Mass. — hatched a plot to rob Main at least two days before the killing. They say Santiago drove the getaway car and that Lajoie acted as a lookout.

The court has entered pleas of not guilty for Santiago and Lajoie.

Springfield to hire firm to repair tornado-damaged roads and sidewalks

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The work will range from significant sections of roads and sidewalk damaged by uprooted trees to minor work such as small sections of sidewalk.

SPRINGFIELD – The city, assisted by federal disaster aid, will be hiring a contractor in August for an estimated $750,000 project to repair roads, sidewalks and other public infrastructure damaged in the June 1 tornado.

The bids are due Aug. 10 and the work will begin Aug. 22, according to the Request for Bids. The project must be completed by Dec. 1, in advance of the winter.

The project was preceded by a detailed, time-consuming inventory of all public infrastructure damaged by the tornado, City Engineer Christopher M. Cignoli said Thursday.

The work will range from significant sections of roads and sidewalk damaged by uprooted trees to minor work such as small sections of sidewalk, Cignoli said.

“It’s very straight-forward work,” Cignoli said. “We need to get a lot of it done before school starts for the safety of people using the sidewalks.”

The Federal Emergency Management Agency will fund 75 percent of the cost, Cignoli said. In addition, work on main roads should be covered 100 percent under the Federal Highway Administration, he said.

The work was delayed until public roadways could be fully cleared, the inventory completed, and the sites approved, Cignoli said. The city will select the lowest responsible bid, under the solicitation for bids.

There is various work at approximately 500 locations, including road paving and repairs, sidewalks and curbing, and tree stump removals, according to the bid documents. The city estimates the project will entail 200 tons of pavement, 4,000 square yards of sidewalk, 4,000 linear feet of curbing, and 100 tree stumps.

The work will target just the section of the infrastructure that was damaged, rather than repave entire streets, he said.

An example of repairs needed is along Island Pond Road and Allen Street where there are “major sections of curbing, sidewalks, and damaged roadways,” Cignoli said.

FEMA allocates funds for crisis outreach program for tornado victims

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The "MassSupport Program" will supplement regular community services and will include sending specially trained workers into tornado-impacted communities.

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The Federal Emergency Management Administration has allocated $98,330 for a crisis outreach program for tornado victims in Hampden and Worcester counties.

“Disasters are stressful and draining for survivors,” said Kurt Schwartz, state coordinating officer and director of the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency. “But help is available for people who feel overwhelmed, exhausted or unable to cope.”

The “MassSupport Program” will supplement regular community services and will include sending specially trained workers into tornado-impacted communities, where they go door to door and visit community centers and civic groups.

“If this disaster caused added stress for you or a loved one, or even if you want someone to talk to, please don’t hesitate to call,” said Nick Russo, FEMA’s federal coordinating officer.

In the aftermath of the tornado, a recently appointed Rebuild Springfield Advisory Committee has scheduled a “listening tour” to hear from homeowners, residents and businesses about how they envision their neighborhoods to be rebuilt.

The first stop of the tour is Tuesday, Aug. 2, from 6 to 8 p.m., at the Milton Bradley School, 22 Mulberry St., in Springfield.

There is no cost to use the program. For more information, call (781) 915-8047 or 2-1-1. All calls are confidential.

Teenager killed in morning accident on Mass. Turnpike in West Springfield

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A 15-year-old boy was killed Thursday morning when he was partially ejected from a car during an accident on the Massachusetts Turnpike.

This is an update of a story posted at 11:45 a.m. Thursday.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – A 15-year-old boy was killed Thursday morning when he was partially ejected from a car during an accident on the Mass. Turnpike.

Around 10:40 a.m., state troopers working at the Westfield barracks were called to assist with a one-car accident involving an SUV on I-90.

According to state police, a 1998 Ford Expedition driven by Amanda Jean Lariviere, 17, of East Otis, was traveling east with three other 17-year-old girls and the 15-year-old boy who was killed.

State police said she was in the far right lane when she attempted to pass a vehicle. As she entered the lane to her left, Lariviere saw a truck was already in that lane and she tried to move back into the right lane.

As she did, she apparently over-steered and lost control of the SUV, police said. The Ford entered the shoulder on the right side of the road and rolled over three or four times before coming to rest on its roof in the breakdown lane.

The 15-year-old boy, who wasn't identified by police because of his age, was partially ejected from the car and pronounced dead at the scene.

Police said he was not wearing a seat belt.

Lariviere and the three other girls in the car were taken to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield for treatment of minor injuries. Police said they are residents of Great Barrington and Monterey.

The crash remains under investigation by theState Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section and the State Police Crime Scene Services Section.

Troopers were assisted at the scene by the Springfield Fire Department, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and the Department of Transportation’s Highway Division.

During the investigation, the far right travel lane was closed for approximately four and a half hours and morning traffic was delayed for several miles.

Massachusetts Senate approves sales tax holiday, new state rebate program off to smooth start

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Consumers gobbled up nearly 20 percent of funds for state rebate program on air conditioners and refrigerators.

BOSTON – The Massachusetts Senate on Thursday approved a sales tax holiday for Aug. 13 and 14, after a long debate over its merits.

In a separate effort for consumers, a new state rebate program for refrigerators and air conditioners enjoyed a positive launch on Thursday, a press secretary said. By early last night, consumers had reserved about $500,000 in rebates, or nearly 20 percent of available funds for $150 rebates for a Energy Star refrigerator and $50 for a room air conditioner, according to the program's website.

The Senate voted 28-9 to approve the sales tax holiday weekend. The state House of Representatives on Wednesday also overwhelmingly approved the two-day suspension of the state's 6.25 percent sales tax.

Both branches are planning to vote Friday for final approval of the tax holiday and send the bill to Gov. Deval L. Patrick. The governor said he will sign it.

gale.jpgSen. Gale Candaras

During Senate debate, Sen. Gale D. Candaras, a Wilbraham Democrat, said the tax holiday will be an opportunity for people in Western Massachusetts to replace appliances, furniture and other possessions ruined in the June 1 tornado or during a powerful microburst that struck on Tuesday.

"It will be a great form of relief for tornado-stricken people of Western Massachusetts to have a sales tax holiday," Candaras said.

Echoing opponents in the state House of Representatives, critics in the Senate said a tax holiday costs revenues that could be used for state services for the needy. Opponents also questioned whether a tax holiday helps the economy, saying that any sales during the event are just timed for the tax break and would occur anyway.

Sen. Marc Pacheco, a Taunton Democrat, said legislators could prevent a lot of heartache for the mentally ill and others with the $20 million in state revenues that will be lost during the tax holiday weekend.

"We could save a lot of people with that money," Pacheco said.

But Sen. Michael R. Knapik, a Westfield Republican, said taxpayers deserve a tax holiday as a reward for their hard work over the past year.

oct 2010 michael knapik.jpgMassachusetts State Sen. Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield

"This is a very bright day for the citizens of Massachusetts," Knapik said. "This is keeping $20 million of their hard-earned dollars in their pockets."

Under a sales tax holiday , consumers are exempt from the state's 6.25 percent sales tax on most items worth $2,500 or less.

Massachusetts doesn't put a sales tax on groceries, clothing priced less than $175 or prescription drugs.

Massachusetts held five straight sales tax holidays until 2009, when legislators and the governor instead raised the sales tax from 5 percent to 6.25 percent. This year's tax-free weekend will be the seventh in eight years.

At the Manny's TV & Appliances in West Springfield, a tax holiday is "very, very popular" with customers, said George Rodriguez, the store manager.

"It seems to be one of the single-most successful programs I've experienced," Rodriguez said over the phone. "It's a big shot in the arm to any retailer."

Rodriguez said his store also received a lift from the rebate program that began on Thursday. He said the store sold as many refrigerators on Thursday as it usually does in a week.

Catherine Williams, a press secretary for the state Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, said the rebate program went smoothly on Thursday.

Under the program, people must first buy a refrigerator or air conditioner from a registered retailer and then fill out a rebate application, either online or over the phone. A completed application puts a hold on the rebate.

Before buying an item, people can check how much rebate money is available by going online to www.MassEnergyRebates.com. A list of participating retailers can also be found at this site. People can also call a toll-free customer service center at (877) 574-1128.

The program, partly financed by a federal stimulus grant, is expected to fund approximately 20,000 rebates worth $2 million and is estimated to save enough annual energy to power 250 homes for a year, state officials said.

Connecticut is also holding a sales tax holiday. A tax -free week in Connecticut will be Aug. 21 to 27 and will apply to clothing and shoes priced less than $300. Connecticut's sales tax is 6.35 percent.

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