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Springfield officer Gregg Bigda takes Fifth instead of testifying in gun case

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Gregg Bigda declined to testify in a gun case in Hampden Superior Court on May 24, asserting his Fifth Amendment rights. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- City police officer Gregg Bigda declined to testify in a suppression hearing on a gun case Wednesday, and instead asserted his Fifth Amendment rights from the witness stand in Hampden Superior Court.

It appeared to be the first time Bigda -- who was caught on video last year threatening two teenage suspects with violence and false charges -- has been on the stand in Hampden Superior Court since the controversy began.

WARNING: Some videos in playlist contain profanity.


When Bigda got settled on the witness stand Wednesday, he told Judge Mark D. Mason he was advised by his lawyer to invoke his Fifth Amendment rights and not testify. He said no more than that.

Bigda had been called to the stand by lawyer Joe Smith III, who represents one of the three codefendants in the case.

Bigda said his lawyer is Thomas Rooke, who was not at the courthouse. Mason requested that Rooke appear Thursday at 9 a.m. for a hearing on whether the court would accept Bigda's assertion of his Fifth Amendment rights.

Mason said told Bigda he was surprised Rooke would "send you in alone" to assert the Fifth Amendment rights.

He said in his time on the bench he has not seen that happen.

In the video footage from the Palmer police station, obtained by The Republican and published on MassLive in early November, Bigda is seen interrogating two teenagers accused of stealing an unmarked police vehicle. The footage shows Bigda threatening to beat both suspects and threatening to kill and plant drug evidence on one of the boys if he doesn't cooperate. 

The questioning took place after a police pursuit that began in Wilbraham and ended in Palmer. Springfield detectives showed up at the scene of the arrest, uninvited, when they heard of the pursuit over the scanner. The interrogation took place at the Palmer police station.

Bigda was suspended for 60 days over the incident and now is assigned to the records division, according to police. 


Tentative January trial date for Soknang Chham, suspect in killing of Jose Rodriguez in Amherst

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A tentative trial for Soknang Chham - the man charged with fatally shooting Jose "Joselito" Rodriguez in Amherst last year - could be held in January.

NORTHAMPTON -- The trial for Soknang Chham, the man charged with fatally shooting Jose "Joselito" Rodriguez in Amherst last year, has been tentatively scheduled for January.

Chham returned to Hampshire Superior Court on Wednesday for a pretrial hearing.

More than a dozen family members and friends of Rodriguez, who was 31, attended the hearing. Afterward they got an update from Assistant Northwestern District Attorney Matthew Thomas.

Some wore T-shirts with Rodriguez' photo that read "Southside We Outside" and his dates of birth and death.

Chham, 35, of New Salem, has denied charges including murder, armed assault with intent to murder, assault and battery with a firearm, assault with a dangerous weapon (firearm), illegal possession of a firearm (subsequent offense) and illegal possession of a firearm with two prior convictions for violent crimes in connection with the killing at South Point Apartments.

A second man was shot in the Oct., 15 incident at Southpoint Apartments but survived.

A charge of being an accessory after the fact against alleged accomplice Soksot Chham, 33, was dropped in February.

A status hearing for Soknang Chham has been scheduled for July 24, giving Thomas and defense attorney William O'Neill a chance to review evidence and consider motions. Thomas said forensic work from Chham's computer and phone is still being conducted. O'Neill said he might make a motion to suppress evidence in the case.

A final pretrial hearing will be held Nov. 10 to determine whether the case can go to trial in January.

Jorge Rodriguez, the older brother of Jose Rodriguez, was one of the family members who attended the hearing. As Chham was taken from the courtroom, he said, "F------ coward."

Before the hearing, Jorge Rodriguez, who lives in Amherst, said the family was staying strong. "It's the only option," he said.

He said he wanted to attend the hearing to find out anything he could about the case. "I just want to look him (Chham) in the face. It's the only chance I get before the trial."

"I feel so much anger," he said.

Jorge Rodriguez said his brother and Chham were friends and he doesn't know why Chham allegedly shot him.

"It's a senseless act." He said his brother was shot in the back.

Authorities have not revealed what they believe to be the motive in the killing.

Chham is being held at the Hampshire Jail and House of Corrections without the right to bail. He did not speak at the hearing and stayed seated before Judge John Agostini.

Date set for closing of Sears at Dedham Mall; liquidation sale underway

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The store began its liquidation sale on May 12. A spokesman said the auto center at that location will remain open.

DEDHAM -- The Sears department store in the Dedham Mall will be closed by late July, Sears spokesman Howard Riefs said Wednesday.

The store began its liquidation sale on May 12. Riefs said the auto center at that location will remain open.

The Eastfield Mall Sears in Springfield, the location in the Holyoke Mall in Holyoke and the Kmart locations in Holyoke, Springfield and Palmer will remain open, Reifs said Wednesday afternoon via email.

He did not give the number of jobs lost in Dedham, but said associates from the Dedham location can apply for jobs at other Sears stores.

Seras doesn't announce closings. A list of 30 doomed locations appeared in USA Today.

In January, Sears shut down its Enfield Square Mall location in Connecticut along with Kmart locations in Fairhaven, Great Barrington and South Attleboro and a Sears Auto Center in Swansea.

Sears announced that it lost more than $2 billion last year. 

Riefs wrote: "We have been strategically and aggressively evaluating our store space and productivity, and have accelerated the closing of unprofitable stores as previously announced. We often hear from our members who are disappointed when we close a store, but our Shop Your Way membership platform, websites and mobile apps allow us to maintain these valued relationships long after a store closes its doors." 

Poll: About half of voters think President Donald Trump is abusing his power

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As President Donald Trump faces pushback over his firing of FBI Director James Comey and allegations of collusion with Russian meddling in the 2016 election, a new poll has found that just over half of voters think the Republican is abusing his power.

As President Donald Trump faces pushback over his firing of FBI Director James Comey and allegations of collusion with Russian meddling in the 2016 election, a new poll has found that just over half of voters think the Republican is abusing his power.

According to a Quinnipiac University national survey released Wednesday, 54 percent of American voters believe Trump has abused the powers of his office, including nearly nine in 10 Democrats, half of independents and 12 percent of Republicans. 

Forty-three, by contrast, rejected the idea of Trump abusing his presidential powers, including 86 percent of GOP voters, 45 percent of independents and 10 percent of Democrats, the poll found. 

Voters, however, split 49 to 47 percent when asked if they considered the president's recent decision to fire Comey an abuse of power -- an essential tie given the poll's 3 percent margin of error. 

FBI Director James Comey fired by President Donald Trump

Although respondents were divided on whether the move represented an "abuse," just 36 percent, said they approved of Trump's decision to fire Comey and two-thirds said they disapproved of how the administration has handled the situation, according to poll results.

More than half, or 55 percent, of voters further said they believe Trump dismissed Comey in an attempt to disrupt the FBI investigation into possible coordination between the Republican's campaign and Russian government officials. 

A similar margin, meanwhile, said they believe reports that the president asked Comey to drop an investigation into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, the survey found.

Trump asked Comey to shut down investigation into Michael Flynn, report says

Quinnipiac University Poll Assistant Director Tim Malloy said while the poll found low approval of the president's performance, among other things, "by far the most alarming determination is that President Trump is abusing his office."

The poll surveyed more than 1,400 voters nationwide via telephone from May 17 to 23.

Last coal plant in Massachusetts to close for good June 1

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Brayton Point owner Dynegy in 2014 said the plant was no longer economically viable.

SOMERSET -- Brayton Point  -- the largest coal-fired power plant in New England and the last remaining coal plant in Massachusetts -- will close for good as of June 1, owner Dynegy announced Monday.

The decision to close the 1,500-megawatt plant was made by former owner Energy Capital Partners in January 2014. The private equity firm had failed to secure an agreement with ISO New England, the operator of the six-state power grid, the Providence Journal reported at the time.

The closure decision came months after ECP agreed to pay the Virginia-based Dominion $650 million for Brayton Point and two power plants in Illinois.

Located in Somerset on Mount Hope Bay, Brayton Point's concrete cooling towers form a distinctive landscape element along the Southeastern Massachusetts shoreline near Fall River. The plant's four generators, when firing at full capacity, can power 1.5 million homes.

Dominion owned the 1960s-vintage plant from 2005 to 2013, and invested more than $1 billion in pollution control technology before market and regulatory forces undermined the facility's profitable operation. The plant started operating less and less often.

Environmental and public health advocates, including the Conservation Law Foundation, had long called for the plant's closure, once identified as a leading source of air pollution in New England.

Coal-fired plants are shutting down around the country, faced with the high cost of running aging facilities, air pollution disincentives, state policies favoring renewables, and competition from natural gas generators.

Coal currently generates a little more than 2 percent of the region's power mix, according to ISO New England, which projects major coal, oil, and nuclear power plant retirements in the coming years.

Dynegy in February acquired a portfolio of U.S. power generators owned by ENGIE, the French energy firm, in a $3.3 billion deal. The company now runs 50 power plants totaling 31,000 megawatts, enough to power 25 million homes, including four natural gas plants in Massachusetts.

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com

Rev. Edward Fitzgerald, pastor at All Saints Parish in Ware, to retire after 58 years as priest

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Many Ware parishioner affectionately refer to him as "Father Fitz," and in recent conversations, said they will dearly miss him.

WARE -- When Rev. Edward Fitzgerald was appointed pastor at All Saints Church in Ware, in 1988, he had already served the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield for nearly three decades.

Ordained in 1959 at the Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel in Springfield, the long-serving priest will officiate his final weekend Mass during Sunday's 8 a.m. All Saints service, prior to retiring officially on May 31.

Many All Saints parishioner affectionately refer to him as "Father Fitz," and in recent conversations, said they will dearly miss him.

Some also expressed concern that, with their pastor departing, the diocese may opt to merge All Saints with St. Mary's Parish, also in Ware, but that is not being planned, the diocese said.

A spokesman for Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski said the organization is currently in the process of naming a replacement for Fitzgerald to serve as the All Saints pastor, meaning the town would continue to be served by the two parishes. The appointment could come as early as next month.

In a written statement, the bishop praised the work of Fitzgerald, 83, who was born in Holyoke.

"Last fall I had the opportunity to spend a full day visiting All Saints Parish in Ware and seeing firsthand the fruits of Father Edward Fitzgerald's gentle and caring pastoral ministry. How blessed the Ware community has been to benefit almost 30 years from his priestly vocation, a model of humility and dedicated service, working well past the time when he could have retired. I wish him all God's blessings in his well earned retirement," Rozanski wrote.

Prior to being ordained at age 25, Fitzgerald, at 18, began preparation for the priesthood.

From 1951 to 1953, he studied classics at St. Thomas Seminary in Bloomfield, Connecticut, philosophy from 1953 to 1955 at Seminary of Philosophy in Montreal, and then theology from 1955 to 1959 at Saint Mary's Seminary in Baltimore.

After being ordained by then-Bishop Christopher J. Weldon, Fitzgerald served as assistant at four Western Massachusetts parishes from 1959 to 1978: Blessed Sacrament and St. Michael, in Springfield, Immaculate Conception, in Easthampton, and St. Agnes, in Dalton.

During that period, he also served as chaplain with the military in Vietnam and stateside at Mount St. Vincent Home in Holyoke and Our Lady of Providence Children's Center in West Springfield.

He then served a decade as pastor at Immaculate Conception.

Fitzgerald was appointed pastor at All Saints Parish on Jan. 23, 1988.

The departing priest declined a request to be interviewed, but confirmed Sunday morning's 8 a.m. Mass would be his last and that he would participate in remembering the nation's deceased soldiers, offering prayers on Memorial Day in Ware.

Woman pretended to be blind then robbed Friendly's waitress at knifepoint, police say

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When a woman walked into a Friendly's restaurant in Quincy Sunday night, she told a waitress she partially blind and needed help. The woman then pulled out a knife and robbed the waitress, police said.

When a woman walked into a Friendly's restaurant in Quincy Sunday night, she told a waitress she partially blind and needed help. Then she pulled out a knife and robbed the waitress, police said.

Quincy Police are now looking for the suspect.

The woman entered the restaurant, located at 699 Hancock St., around 8 p.m. Sunday and approached the waitress.

"The suspect approached a waitress and asked the waitress to lead her to the restroom, as she was partially blind," police said. "As they reached the bathroom door, the suspect pulled out a black knife and demanded the victim's money."

The victim handed over cash and the suspect left. Witnesses thought the woman was under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

Police described the suspect as white with a medium build and dark hair. She wore black pants and a black jacket.

 

Prosecutor: Don't hold Springfield police officer Luke Cournoyer responsible for actions of officer Gregg Bigda

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Defense lawyers want to use a videotape of an interrogation of juveniles to question the credibility of police officers Gregg Bigda and Luke Cournoyer. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- A prosecutor argued Wednesday that city police officer Luke Cournoyer did not participate as officer Gregg Bigda threatened two juvenile suspects during a controversial interrogation last year.

"You cannot impugn Detective Cournoyer for Detective Bigda's own actions," Assistant District Attorney Mary A. Sandstrom said. The interrogation was videotaped, and Cournoyer is shown standing "silently crossing his arms" and looking down, Sanderson said. 

The prosecutor made her comments at a hearing on a motion to suppress evidence in an unrelated gun case against three co-defendants.

Timothy Farris, lawyer for defendant Jose Sosa, argued that he should be allowed to ask about the interrogation video if he calls Cournoyer to the witness stand when the case goes to trial. Judge Mark D. Mason took the matter under advisement.

Joe Smith III, lawyer for defendant Paul Finnegan, called Bigda to the stand Wednesday as part of the hearing on the motion to suppress evidence. Bigda invoked his Fifth Amendment right not to testify.

Bigda said his lawyer is Thomas Rooke, who was not at the courthouse. Mason requested that Rooke appear Thursday at 9 a.m. for a hearing on whether the court would accept Bigda's assertion of his Fifth Amendment rights.

Mason told Bigda he was surprised Rooke would "send you in alone." The judge said in his time on the bench he has not seen that happen. 

Sandstrom reported Cournoyer was in the Hampden district attorney's office with his lawyer, former Hampden District Attorney William M. Bennett. Cournoyer was not called to the stand Wednesday.

Farris said he had summoned Bigda and Cournoyer to be at the court available to testify.

Mason asked Farris why he was arguing Cournoyer was complicit with Bigda for things Bigda said to the juveniles. Farris read from a transcript of the interview, citing places where Bigda used the word "we" in threats. He said Cournoyer was aiding and abetting Bigda in a joint venture.

One of Bigda's statements on the tape, read by Farris as an example, said, "We'll f---ing bring the dog back. Let him f---ing go after you."

Bigda was suspended for 60 days over the videotaped incident and now is assigned to the records division.

In the wake of the video, cases against some drug defendants collapsed or ended in plea deals as prosecutors said Bigda would not be available as a witness.

Bigda was the sole witness at the grand jury that indicted Sosa, Finegan and Marquies Johnson.

In the interrogation video, Bigda is seen confronting two teenagers accused of stealing an unmarked police vehicle. Bigda threatens to beat both suspects and threatens to kill and plant drug evidence on one of the boys if he doesn't cooperate.

The footage was obtained by The Republican and published on MassLive in early November.

The questioning took place after a police pursuit that began in Wilbraham and ended in Palmer. Springfield detectives showed up at the scene of the arrest, uninvited, when they heard of the pursuit over the scanner. The interrogation took place at the Palmer police station Feb. 27, 2016.


West Springfield Mayor Will Reichelt wants to hire 8 new cops before MGM Springfield opens

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MGM Springfield is expected to debut in fall 2018, "so the idea is to get all these officers online, trained, and on the streets before the casino opens," says Mayor Will Reichelt, who supports hiring eight new cops in West Side.

WEST SPRINGFIELD -- With the MGM project rapidly transforming Springfield's streetscape, the reality of the casino's anticipated debut in fall 2018 is seeping in across the region, prompting some communities to plan for an expected spike in public safety calls.

Just over the Connecticut River in West Springfield, freshman Mayor William C. Reichelt, who is seeking re-election, wants his city to be prepared. To that end, he has proposed hiring eight new police officers, increasing the city's total number of officers to 70. 

"They're opening about 800 yards from our border in the fall of '18," Reichelt told the Town Council at its last meeting, "so the idea is to get all these officers online, trained, and on the streets before the casino opens."

Reichelt's plan to fund the new officers is included in his proposed budget for fiscal year 2018, which begins July 1. The Town Council is expected to vote on the spending plan June 5.

The officers could be hired and trained before the casino opens, according to Reichelt.

West Springfield is among the surrounding communities that is receiving mitigation money from MGM Springfield to help offset the impact of casino-related costs on the municipality.  

As the "crossroads of New England," as Reichelt refers to his native city, West Side currently gets a lot of traffic, so the addition of the casino is only projected to further tax the city's public safety resources.

"We are the cut-through community," the mayor said earlier this month, during a live, online overview of his proposed $94.3 million budget for fiscal 2018. "So we get a lot of excess that comes through," he said, "and unfortunately things happen in our community, and we need to be able to address that."

Reichelt and Sharon Wilcox, the city's chief financial officer, gave a presentation on the budget at a public hearing conducted by the Town Council on May 15.

The additional officers will allow the Police Department "to police our streets on a regular basis," Reichelt said, adding that the city hasn't budgeted for a large-scale police hiring "in at least the past 20 or so years."

Budget office: 23 million more uninsured, lower premiums for less coverage under GOP House-passed health care bill

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The Congressional Budget Office says an estimated 51 million people under age 65 would be uninsured in 2026 under the latest version of the House Republican health care bill.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Congressional Budget Office says an estimated 51 million people under age 65 would be uninsured in 2026 under the latest version of the House Republican health care bill.

That compares with 28 million under age 65 who would lack insurance that year under the current health law signed by President Barack Obama.

And it's only a tiny improvement from the original version of the House bill, which would have resulted in an estimated 52 million people under 65 uninsured by 2026, according to the nonpartisan budget office.

The information is in the so-called "score" released Wednesday of the legislation the House passed earlier this month. It's been eagerly awaited but shows little change on insurance coverage compared with the earlier version of the health bill, which collapsed.

Congressional estimates show that the tax cuts in the House Republicans' health care package have shrunk by $69 billion.

The bill still contains almost $1 trillion in tax cuts, mainly for the wealthy.

The nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation says the reduction is mainly because the bill delays the repeal of the 0.9 percent payroll tax until 2023. The tax is applied to wages over $200,000 for an individual and over $250,000 for a married couple.

The Congressional Budget Office says the health care bill Republicans pushed through the House this month would leave 23 million additional people uninsured in 2026, compared with Obama's health care law.

The nonpartisan office also says that compared with Obama's 2010 overhaul, average premiums for people buying individual policies would be lower. The report says that is partly because insurance on average would cover less of people's health care costs.

It was the budget office's first analysis of the bill that passed the House May 4 with only GOP votes.

Democrats have criticized Republicans for pushing people off coverage. Many Republicans have said their top goal is lowering premiums.

Senate Republicans have been holding closed-door meetings to try writing their own health care overhaul.

Retired Connecticut cop testifies about years spent searching for identity of 'Jane Does' in Tolland, New Britain

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Robert Honsch is charged with murder in the 1995 fatal shooting of his wife, Marcia Honsch, whose body was found in Tolland State Forest. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- Jurors in the murder trial of Robert Honsch on Wednesday heard a retired police detective from New Britain, Connecticut, testify about the years he worked trying to find the identity of a young woman whose body was found in that city in 1995.

Larry Betterini talked about "the years I put in to try to find out who this person was."

It wasn't until 2014, after Betterini retired, that the body was identified through DNA testing as that of 16-year-old Elizabeth Honsch, Robert Honsch's daughter. That same year, a body found in Tolland State Forest in 1995 was identified as that of Elizabeth's mother and Robert's wife, Marcia Honsch, 53, of Brewster, New York.

Robert Honsch was arrested in July 2014 in Dalton, Ohio, where investigators said he was living under an assumed name with a new wife and three children.

Although the trial before Hampden Superior Court Judge Constance M. Sweeney is for the killing of Marcia Honsch, Sweeney has allowed the prosecution to present evidence about Elizabeth Honsch's killing.

Elizabeth Honsch's body was found behind a New Britain shopping plaza on Sept. 28, 1995. Betterini on Wednesday identified in photos shown to the jury the two sleeping bags in which her body was wrapped. The sleeping bags were covered with trash bags.

He said he began meeting with Massachusetts State Police in 1995 about the Tolland "Jane Doe."

Betterini said there were similarities between the two women, such as the fact both were shot in the head. He said the Tolland body was near a campground and the New Britain body was wrapped in sleeping bags. Neither woman had any identification, he said.

"We were hopeful that if we shared information we'd both be able to solve these homicides," he said.

He said the young woman's body in New Britain was "left there so someone could find her." He said she was wrapped carefully and placed there, "not just dumped."

Defense lawyer Paul Rudof asked Betterini about an interview with a man from the Subway at the shopping plaza who told investigators he was sitting outside and saw a light blue Buick Skylark drive toward the back of the plaza.

Betterini acknowledged that the first time he asked the Connecticut Registry of Motor Vehicles for a listing of Buick Skylarks was 1998. Betterini said he didn't follow up on that list.

Robert Honsch's trial continues Thursday.

Springfield police confirm identity of body pulled from Watershops Pond

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The body pulled from Watershop Pond on Monday has been identified, according to Springfield police.

SPRINGFIELD - The body pulled from Watershops Pond on Monday has been identified as 17-year-old Luis Gomez, according to John Delaney of the Springfield Police Department. 

The teen had been the subject of a search by law enforcement ever since he went missing Saturday while swimming in the pond. 

Gomez had been swimming with some friends around 6 p.m. Saturday, when he reportedly went under water and was not seen to resurface.

The body of Gomez was found at approximately 3 p.m. Monday near an area of the pond near a tire swing hanging from the center of the trestle. 

State police divers and teams of Springfield police and firefighters assisted with scouring the pond Sunday night and Monday while searching for the missing boy. 

Seven more rural hilltowns win state broadband grants

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Charlemont, Colrain, Cummington, Heath, New Salem, Otis, and Rowe will build high-speed networks - joining Ashfield, Leyden, Mt. Washington, Plainfield, Shutesbury, and Windsor.

Republican Gov. Charlie Baker has released state broadband grants to six more rural towns that plan to build their own high-speed fiber-to-the-home networks.

Announced Wednesday were $6.8 million in direct infrastructure grants to Charlemont, Colrain, Cummington, Heath, New Salem, Otis, and Rowe. Earlier this month, the Baker-Polito administration awarded $4.6 million to Ashfield, Leyden, Mt. Washington, Plainfield, Shutesbury, and Windsor.

The grants will fund approximately two-thirds of the cost of any network build, and the towns will borrow money to pay for the rest. The infrastructure will be owned by the municipalities, which will contract with qualified third parties for design, construction, and operation services.

The grants are from a pot of money previously held by the Massachusetts Broadband Institute, a quasi-public agency formed by the state Legislature in 2008 to bridge the digital divide. MBI was originally given $50 million to bring internet service to 45 unserved towns and a handful of towns partially served by DSL or cable.

Baker's Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development clawed back $20 million earlier this year after hearing from local officials who were frustrated with the pace of progress at MBI, which initially planned on providing all professional services to the communities in-house.

The new infrastructure grants are for towns that are ready, willing and able to move ahead with their broadband projects. A number have expressed interest in working with Whip City Fiber, a division of Westfield Gas & Electric, a municipally-owned utility that is developing its telecom branch.

The MBI and EOHED will also work with a short list of towns offered turnkey solutions by Comcast and Charter Communications. The cable companies will receive incentive grants to expand their networks, and the communities will not have to raise local taxes. Households will simply subscribe to data, voice, and/or video services.

MBI will continue to provide design and engineering services to municipalities that prefer to work with them to build networks using a range of technologies.

A year ago, Baker revamped MBI's "Last Mile" program and hired a new leadership team. Since then, cable expansions were funded in nine "partially served" towns and grants were approved in more than a dozen communities.

A few other small towns are still stuck in neutral, according to a report recently issued to Western Massachusetts legislators. Not every community has the capacity or willingness to borrow money, or the time and energy to handle complex projects, officials have said.

But for local governments that have been chomping at the bit to bring high-speed internet service to their homes and businesses, the grants represent good news.

Towns receiving grants in this round are: Charlemont, $960,000; Colrain, $1.3 million; Cummington, $840,000; Heath, $820,000; New Salem, $750,000; Otis, $1.7 million and Rowe, $440,000. 

Massachusetts House votes to prevent out-of-state use of inmate labor

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The House on Wednesday voted to prevent the use of inmate labor beyond the borders of Massachusetts over the objections of Republicans who argued that existing law addresses the issue and questioned why it was a priority.

By KATIE LANNAN

The House on Wednesday voted to prevent the use of inmate labor beyond the borders of Massachusetts over the objections of Republicans who argued that existing law addresses the issue and questioned why it was a priority.

Massachusetts prisons and jails have never sent inmates to work on projects in another state, lawmakers said. Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson sparked controversy in January when he proposed sending inmates in his jail to help construct President Donald Trump's proposed Mexican border wall.

"It makes it very clear what can and cannot be done," Rep. Antonio Cabral, the bill's sponsor, told the News Service. He said, "This is really about state money being spent on state programs, and that's really the message."

Minority Leader Brad Jones, a North Reading Republican, said the bill sought to solve a problem that did not exist and that the Legislature should instead be addressing "existing, ongoing, real-life, today problems" that affect cities and towns.

"Quite frankly, I'm somewhat stunned that this has become one of the priority bills to do," he said.

On votes that closely tracked party lines, Democrats defeated two separate bids by Jones to gather more information about out-of-state inmate labor. His attempt to send the bill to the Ways and Means Committee for an analysis of potential cost savings or avoided expenses was rejected 36-113. A Jones amendment creating a commission to study the bill's cost and effectiveness was shot down 38-117.

After close to three hours of debate, the bill (H 3034) passed on a 120-35 vote. Rep. Susannah Whipps of Athol was the only Republican to vote yes, and Reps. Brian Murray of Milford and Jonathan Zlotnik of Gardner were the Democrats who voted no. The bill now moves to the Senate.

Rep. David Vieira, a Falmouth Republican, read aloud a section of state law that allows work release programs "within the commonwealth" and another allowing inmates to provide services for "municipalities within the county," saying those provisions would make it illegal for a sheriff to send inmates beyond state borders.

"This is much ado about nothing," he said. "Our laws already protect it."

Rep. Ruth Balser of Newton countered that the Legislature often takes steps to make things explicit even though they can be implied. She said Hodgson's proposal gives the Legislature a "real reason" to act and "save the step of someone suing that sheriff" if his plan came to be.

Hodgson said in a statement Friday that passing the bill -- and another that had been teed up for Wednesday targeting his office before a vote was postponed -- would "show once again that personal political agendas are more important than keeping our citizens and legal residents safe."

The House had planned to take up another Cabral bill preventing state money from being used to execute agreements where state and local law enforcement are trained to act as federal immigration agents, but Democratic leaders postponed the vote after members raised a number of unspecified questions about the bill.

Cabral, who also sponsored that bill (H 3033), said its possible some adjustments will be made to the legislation by the Ways and Means Committee, but he would not specualte on how soon it could resurface for debate. "It's probaby good that it's not done in the same session so we don't mix the issues," Cabral said.

Cabral said the decision to hold the bill was made before House Democrats caucused on Wednesday, and he was not clear on the specific questions raised by members prompting the delay. "I'm sure they have questions because there is a lot of misinformation and alternative facts. It has nothing to do, as the opponents would have you beleive, with sanctuary cities," Cabral said.

State House News Service reporter Matt Murphy contributed reporting.

British investigators explore Manchester bomber's links to larger terror cell network

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British investigators are hunting for potential conspirators linked to the bombing that killed 22 people in a search that is exploring the possibility that the same cell linked to the Paris and Brussels terror attacks was also to blame for the Manchester Arena attack, two officials familiar with the investigation said Wednesday.

LONDON -- British investigators are hunting for potential conspirators linked to the bombing that killed 22 people in a search that is exploring the possibility that the same cell linked to the Paris and Brussels terror attacks was also to blame for the Manchester Arena attack, two officials familiar with the investigation said Wednesday.

Investigators were also assessing whether Salman Abedi, the suspected bomber in the attack Monday on a pop concert in Manchester, may have been connected to known militants in the northern English city. Abedi, a 22-year-old British citizen born to Libyan parents, died in the attack.

Abedi's father, Ramadan Abedi, was allegedly a member of the al-Qaida-backed Libyan Islamic Fighting group in the 1990s, according to a former Libyan security official, Abdel-Basit Haroun. The elder Abedi denied that he was part of the militant group and told The Associated Press that his son was not involved in the concert bombing and had no connection to militants.

"We don't believe in killing innocents. This is not us," the 51-year-old Abedi said in a telephone interview from Tripoli.

He said he spoke to his son five days ago and he was getting ready for a religious pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. He said his son visited Libya a month and a half ago and was planning to return to Libya to spend the holy month of Ramadan with the family. He also denied his son had spent time in Syria or fought with the Islamic State group, which claimed responsibility for the concert bombing.

"Last time I spoke to him, he sounded normal. There was nothing worrying at all until ... I heard the news that they are suspecting he was the bomber," the elder Abedi said.

He confirmed that another son, Ismail, 23, was arrested Tuesday in Manchester. A third son, 18-year-old Hashim, was arrested in Tripoli late last night, according to a Libyan government spokesman, Ahmed bin Salem. The elder Abedi was arrested shortly after speaking to the AP, Salem said.

The anti-terror force that took Hashim Abedi into custody said that the teenager had confessed that both he and his brother were members of the Islamic State group and that he "knew all the details" of the Manchester attack plot.

Ramadan Abedi fled Tripoli in 1993 after Moammar Gadhafi's security authorities issued an arrest warrant. He spent 25 years in Britain before returning to Libya in 2011 after Gadhafi was ousted and killed in the country's civil war. He is now a manager of the Central Security force in Tripoli.

The Abedi family has close ties to the family of al-Qaida veteran Abu Anas al-Libi, who was snatched by U.S. special forces off a Tripoli street in 2013 for alleged involvement in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa, and died in U.S. custody in 2015. Al-Libi's wife told the AP that she went to college in Tripoli with the elder Abedi's wife and that the two women also lived together in the U.K. before they returned t Libya.

British police said Wednesday they had not yet found the bomb maker in the Manchester Arena attack, indicating Salman Abedi was part of a larger cell.

"It's very clear this is a network we are investigating," Chief Constable Ian Hopkins said.

In Washington, the chairman of the U.S. House's Homeland Security Committee said the bomb used in the attack suggested a "level of sophistication" that might indicate its maker had foreign training. Rep. Mike McCaul told The Associated Press that the bomb used the explosive TATP, the same one used in the deadly November 2015 attacks in Paris and the March 2016 attack in Brussels carried out by Islamic State extremists.

McCaul also said the evidence so far suggested that "we're not dealing with a lone wolf situation."

British authorities were exploring whether the bomber, who grew up in Manchester, had links with other cells across Europe and North Africa, according to two officials familiar with the case who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the ongoing investigation.

They said one thread of the investigation involves pursuing whether Abedi could have been part of a larger terror cell that included Mohamed Abrini, otherwise known as "the man in the hat," with connections to the Brussels and Paris attacks. Abrini visited Manchester in 2015.

Investigators were also looking into possible links between Abedi and Abdalraouf Abdallah, a Libyan refugee from Manchester who was shot in Libya and later jailed in the U.K. for terror offenses, including helping Stephen Gray, a British Iraqi war veteran and Muslim covert, to join fighters in Syria.

Other Manchester connections under investigation, the officials said, include a 50-year-old former Guantanamo Bay detainee, Ronald Fiddler, also known as Jamal al-Harith. The Briton blew himself up at a military base in Iraq in February. He was one of 16 men awarded a total of 10 million pounds ($12.4 million) in compensation in 2010, when the British government settled a lawsuit alleging its intelligence agencies were complicit in the torture of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

Another possible link under investigation is whether Abedi had ties to Raphael Hostey, a jihadist recruiter who was killed in Syria, the officials said.

The sweeping investigation has caused friction between U.S. and British security and intelligence officials.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd, who said Abedi had been known to British security officials, complained Wednesday about U.S. officials leaking sensitive information about Abedi to the media, saying that could hinder Britain's security services and police.

"I have been very clear with our friends that that should not happen again," she said. It was unclear whether Abedi was under surveillance as recently as the attack.

U.S. Homeland Security Department spokesman David Lapan declined to say Wednesday if Abedi had been placed on the U.S. no-fly list. Under normal circumstances, he said, Abedi may have been able to travel to the United States because he was from Britain, a visa-waiver country, but he would have been subjected to a background check via the U.S. government's Electronic System for Travel Authorization, or ESTA.

Lapan said the Homeland Security Department has shared some information about Abedi's travel with the British government, but declined to offer specifics. Customs and Border Protection has access to a broad array of air travel information through the U.S. government's National Targeting Center.


Family, friends mourn Luz Vazquez, victim of Springfield homicide

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Around 20 friends and family gathered Wednesday evening to remember Luz Vazquez, who was killed May 21 in the city's fifth homicide of the year.

SPRINGFIELD -- Around 20 friends and family gathered Wednesday evening to remember Luz Vazquez, who was killed May 21 in the city's fifth homicide of the year.

Wednesday's vigil took place on Amore Street near where police say Vazquez was found lying in the street by a pizza delivery driver. Mourners lit votive candles, let cigarettes smolder and poured out cans of beer at a makeshift memorial on the curb. As the sun set, the group joined hands in a semicircle for a prayer.

Vazquez, 42, leaves four grown children and two grandsons, ages 4 and 8, said her eldest daughter, Amanda Vargas.

"She was what she was," Vargas said. "A lot of people knew her out here on the streets. She had a good heart and she cared for all of her kids."

Vargas said her mother lost custody of her children years ago. The siblings went to different homes but remained close with each other and their mother.

"She wasn't the best at times, but that's not what matters," Vargas said tearfully as her sister, Crystal, and brother Raymond held and comforted her. "What matters is that she was our mom."

Maria Perez said she's known Vazquez's children for about five years and became their unofficial foster mother after some of them lived on property she manages at High and School streets.

"They loved her no matter what she did," Perez said. "That lady was tough, believe me. I'm sure she didn't go down without a fight."

Police allege Vazquez was stabbed to death by Jose Gonzalez, 32. Both victim and suspect lived on the third floor of a boarding house on Westminster Street, according to court documents. Gonzalez, who was arrested hours after the killing, has pleaded not guilty and is being held without bail. 

Vargas said there will be a memorial service for Vazquez on Saturday.

"I know she's looking down right now," Vargas said. "She happy. She's happy that we came together."

Powerball numbers: Did you win Wednesday's $249.1 million jackpot?

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Here are the winning numbers in Wednesday's Powerball drawing.

Feeling really lucky? Then let's hope you plunked down $2 this week for a Powerball lottery ticket.

Wednesday's jackpot is worth about a quarter of a billion dollars.

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Here are the winning numbers:

28-32-33-38-62, Powerball: 15, PowerPlay: 2X

The estimated jackpot is $249.1 million. The lump sum payment before taxes will be about $154 million. If there is no jackpot winner, the amount grows even larger for the next drawing.

The amount has been creeping up since a $435.3 million jackpot was won Feb. 22 by a graduate of Purdue University who asked to remain anonymous.

Powerball is held in 44 states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

A $2 ticket gives you a one in 292.2 million chance at joining the hall of Powerball champions.

The drawings are held at 10:59 p.m. Eastern Wednesdays and Saturdays. Deadline to purchase tickets is 9:45 p.m.

1 sent to the hospital after car crashes into building in Springfield

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One person was hospitalized after a car crashed into a building in Springfield on Wednesday night.

SPRINGFIELD - One person was sent to Mercy Hospital for treatment after a car ran into a building in Springfield on Wednesday night, police said. 

Police were called to the area of 247-249 Union Street at approximately 10:20 p.m. Wednesday night, where they found a red Mitsubishi Mirage crashed into the front steps of the apartment building, said an officer at the scene. 

The car appears to have been headed down Union Street towards Maple Street when, for reasons not yet known, the driver lost control of their vehicle, struck a parked car, and "bounced" off of it into the apartment building, said the officer. 

The driver, who was the only one hurt in the incident, was taken to the hospital with "minor injuries," said the officer. 

At the site of the crash, an ambulance could be seen leaving the scene. 

Police blocked off portions of Union Street while a tow truck worked to remove the car from the street. 

Obituaries from The Republican, May 25, 2017

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View obituaries from The Republican newspaper in Springfield, Massachusetts.

When will it start raining in Massachusetts on Thursday?

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It's going to be a rainy day throughout New England.

It's going to be a rainy day throughout New England. 

Rainy is likely across Massachusetts on Thursday through Friday evening. It's expected to fall first in southern portions of the state, heading north. 

From Great Barrington and Springfield to New Bedford, the National Weather Service anticipates rain starting to fall around 8 a.m. Thursday. Worcester is expected to see rain an hour later and around 10 a.m. in Boston. 

Less than an inch of rain is expected to fall in Western Massachusetts while Central and Eastern Massachusetts will see between one and two inches. 

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