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Boston boy survives 3-story drop from burning home

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The 6-year-old was dropped by his grandparents into the arms of waiting Boston firefighters.

BOSTON — A 6-alarm arson fire tore through a large apartment building, including the apartment of a couple on the third floor who dropped their young grandson into the arms of a waiting firefighter, officials said. A man who came to a hospital with burns and claimed he started the fire was arrested, police said.

Firefighters rescued at least 15 people, including the 6-year-old grandson of Herbert and Judith Lamb, who live on the third floor of the apartment building and said they were woken by an explosion and smoke.

The Lambs broke a window and dropped their 6-year-old grandson into the arms of waiting Boston firefighters.

"I had to drop him out the window," Judith Lamb told The Boston Globe. "The firemen caught him."

Boston Fire Lieutenant Glenn McGillivray told the newspaper he was the one who caught the child.

"I knew she wouldn't be able to hold him until we got help, so they dropped him, and I caught him in my arms from the third floor," McGillivray said. "Thank God I caught him. I've never had to do that before, and I hope I never have to do it again."

He said firefighters used a ladder to rescue Judith Lamb.

The blaze damaged or destroyed more than two dozen apartments in the large, U-shaped building on Wardman Road in the city's Roxbury neighborhood.

Residents who escaped said they heard an explosion at about 1 a.m.

A short time later, fire department spokesman Steve MacDonald told the Associated Press a man showed up at a hospital and said he started the fire.

"He walked into Boston Medical Center with burns and admitted certain things to investigators, so he was placed under arrest for arson of a dwelling," MacDonald said.

The man's name was not immediately released. It was not clear if he lived in the building or was visiting, MacDonald said, and no motive was known.

MacDonald said the windows and frame were blown out in one corner of the building and bricks were littering the street.

Ten residents of the building were taken to hospitals, most suffering from smoke inhalation. Two firefighters and a police officer were also treated for what were believed to be minor injuries, MacDonald said.

Firefighters said all residents were accounted for, though MacDonald cautioned that crews had not yet been able to enter the building.

About 160 firefighters were called to the scene and they were still pouring water on the building several hours after the blaze started.

A temporary shelter was set up in the city for residents displaced by the blaze.

MacDonald could not immediately confirm initial reports that the fire may have been started after a gas line to a stove was cut.


Eric Denson murder trial: Live updates during day 7 of testimony

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Eric Denson, 22, is charged with first degree murder and two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon in the death of Conor Reynolds.

The Republican's Buffy Spencer is following the murder trial of Eric B. Denson live from Hampden Superior Court.

Read Jack Flynn's recap of Friday's testimony and follow the courtroom proceedings during day 7 of the trial below.

Springfield police charge 34-year-old Mark Alexander with stealing copper from South End building

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The suspect attempted to steal 150 feet of copper from the basement of 75 Oswego St.

markalexander34crop.jpgMark Alexander

SPRINGFIELD – Police arrested a 34-year-old city man Thursday afternoon after construction workers spotted him emerging from the basement of a South End construction site with 150 feet of copper tubing.

Sgt. John M. Delaney said police arrested the suspect after the construction workers at 75 Oswego St. dialed 911.

Police arrested the suspect, Mark Alexander, 34, of 95 Louis St., shortly before 3 p.m. He was charged with breaking and entering in the daytime with intent to commit a felony, larceny from a building and malicious damage to a building.

Such thefts have been on the rise in recent years due to the high costs of scrap metal. Last week, one or more thieves stole a large section of copper from the roof of an historic home on Route 20 in West Springfield.

The www.metalprices.com website lists scrap copper as currently going for about $3.39 a pound.

Lowe's to close 20 stores, cut 1,950 jobs

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See the full list of Lowe's locations that are closing.

lowes-stores-close.jpgThis file photo taken July 8, 2009, the logo of the Lowe's home improvement center in Springfield, Ill.

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Home-improvement retailer Lowe's Cos. says it will close 20 underperforming stores in 15 states and cut 1,950 jobs in a move that it says will allow it to focus on more profitable locations.

Ten locations were closed Sunday; the other 10 will close in a month.

Before the closures Lowe's operated 1,725 stores.

Lowe's, based in Mooresville, N.C., also says it will only open 10 to 15 stores in North America annually beginning in 2012. Previously the company expected to open 30 stores per year. It will open 25 stores this year.

Lowe's says the moves will cost it 17 cents to 20 cents per share in 2011.

In August, Lowe's said volatile weather and shoppers' worries about the economy hurt demand. Its net income was nearly flat in the second quarter and the company lowered its yearly sales forecast.

Here are the stores set to be closed:

CALIFORNIA

Los Banos

Westminster

COLORADO

Denver

ILLINOIS

Aurora

Oswego

LOUISIANA

Chalmette

MAINE

Biddeford

Ellsworth

MASSACHUSETTS

Haverhill

MICHIGAN

Ionia

MINNESOTA

Rogers

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Claremont

Hooksett

Manchester

NEW JERSEY

Old Bridge

NEW YORK

Batavia

RHODE ISALND

N. Kingstown

VIRGINIA

Emporia

WASHINGTON

S. Tacoma

WISCONSIN

Brown Deer

Business Monday from the Republican, October 17, 2011: Wireless firm GAW and Kringle Candle expand business in Western Mass., and more

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Start the week informed with Business Monday from The Republican.

Farm Table.JPG10-13-11 - Bernardston- Republican staff photo by Don Treeger - The Kringle Candle Company is opening their Christmas Barn and Farm Table Restaurant. Here, Michael Kittredge III, founder and president of the Kringle Candle Company, (right) talks with his father, Michael Kittredge II (left) and Chef Brent Menke in the Farm Table Restaurant.


Start the week informed with Business Monday from The Republican:


Springfield's Rocky's Ace Hardware celebrates 85 years of nuts and bolts
The company is still family-owned. James Falcone, son of Rocco Sr., is chairman of the company. Rocco Sr.’s daughter, Claire Falcone, is the vice president. Read more »


Rural wireless firm Great Auk Wireless of Enfield takes on big leagues
GAW has expanded to provide digital Internet, television and phone service on its wireless network to more than 30,000 customers. Read more »


Boston Mayor Thomas Menino too lenient with Occupy Boston protesters
Occupy Boston protesters have abused the patience they’ve been shown and overstayed their welcome. Read more »


Boston firm used military influence to promote Solyndra, the now-bankrupt solar company
RockPort Capital Partners was the fourth largest investor in Solyndra, which filed for bankruptcy protection in September. Read more »


Kringle Candle in Bernardston expands, adding restaurant, Christmas shop
The Farm Table is located in an old farmhouse that has been renovated and expanded to 4,325 square feet. Amherst-based Kuhn Riddle Architects estimated it created 150 construction jobs and will add 25 permanent jobs. Read more »


More Business Monday:

Voices of the Valley: Chris Hoch, owner, National Fiber

Springfield Technical Community College and Holyoke Communtiy College join forces for worker training

5th Annual Latino Expo set for Oct. 22

Green incentives are driving Massachusetts' solar energy industry

Connecticut's declining foreclosure rate bodes well for the state's housing market

Pratt & Whitney to boost jet engine investment

Demolition work continues in West Springfield's tornado zone

What do you call a jobs bill that begets no jobs?

Business bits: Tom and Gisele's condo going cheap, fired Bank of America execs get big golden handshakes, and more

Occupy Wall Street shows muscle, raises $300K

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There are signs of confidence, but also signs of tension among the demonstrators at Zuccotti Park.

101711occupystorage.jpgSupplies fill a storage space housed in an unused space donated by the United Federation of Teachers to support the camp of Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York, Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011.

NEW YORK (AP) — The Occupy Wall Street movement has close to $300,000, as well as storage space loaded with donated supplies in lower Manhattan. It stared down city officials to hang on to its makeshift headquarters, showed its muscle Saturday with a big Times Square demonstration and found legions of activists demonstrating in solidarity across the country and around the world.

Could this be the peak for loosely organized protesters, united less by a common cause than by revulsion to what they consider unbridled corporate greed? Or are they just getting started?

There are signs of confidence, but also signs of tension among the demonstrators at Zuccotti Park, the epicenter of the movement that began a month ago Monday. They have trouble agreeing on things like whether someone can bring in a sleeping bag, and show little sign of uniting on any policy issues. Some protesters eventually want the movement to rally around a goal, while others insist that isn't the point.

"We're moving fast, without a hierarchical structure and lots of gears turning," said Justin Strekal, a college student and political organizer who traveled from Cleveland to New York to help. "... Egos are clashing, but this is participatory democracy in a little park."

Even if the protesters were barred from camping in Zuccotti Park, as the property owner and the city briefly threatened to do last week, the movement would continue, Strekal said. He said activists were working with legal experts to identify alternate sites where the risk of getting kicked out would be relatively low.

Wall Street protesters are intent on hanging on to the momentum they gained from Saturday's worldwide demonstrations, which drew hundreds of thousands of people, mostly in the U.S. and Europe. They're filling a cavernous space on Broadway a block from Wall Street with donated goods to help sustain their nearly month-long occupation of the private park nearby.

They've amassed mounds of blankets, pillows, sleeping bags, cans of food, medical and hygienic supplies — even oddities like a box of knitting wool and 20 pairs of swimming goggles (to shield protesters from pepper-spray attacks). Supporters are shipping about 300 boxes a day, Strekal said.

The space was donated by the United Federation of Teachers, which has offices in the building.

Close to $300,000 in cash also has been donated, through the movement's website and by people who give money in person at the park, said Bill Dobbs, a press liaison for Occupy Wall Street. The movement has an account at Amalgamated Bank, which bills itself as "the only 100 percent union-owned bank in the United States."

Strekal said the donated goods are being stored "for a long-term occupation."

"We are unstoppable! Another world is possible!" Kara Segal and other volunteers chanted in the building lobby as they arrived to help unpack and sort items, preparing them to be rolled out to the park.

While on the streets, moments of madness occasionally erupt in the protest crowd — accompanied by whiffs of marijuana, grungy clothing and disarray — order prevails at the storage site.

It doubles as a sort of Occupy Wall Street central command post, with strategic meetings that are separate from the "general assembly" free-for-alls in the park. One subject Sunday was data entry: protesters are working to get the names and addresses of donors into a databank, to thank them for their gifts.

The movement has become an issue in the Republican presidential primary race and beyond, with politicians from both parties under pressure to weigh in.

President Barack Obama referred to the protests at Sunday's dedication of a monument for Martin Luther King Jr., saying the civil rights leader "would want us to challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing those who work there."

Many of the largest of Saturday's protests were in Europe, where those involved in long-running demonstrations against austerity measures declared common cause with the Occupy Wall Street movement. In Rome, hundreds of rioters infiltrated a march by tens of thousands of demonstrators, causing what the mayor estimated was at least €1 million ($1.4 million) in damage to city property.

U.S. cities large and small were "occupied" over the weekend: Washington, D.C., Fairbanks, Alaska, Burlington, Vt., Rapid City, S.D., and Cheyenne, Wyo. were just a few. In Cincinnati, protesters were invited to take pictures with a couple getting married; the bride and groom are Occupied Cincinnati supporters.

More than 70 New York protesters were arrested Saturday, more than 40 of them in Times Square. About 175 people were arrested in Chicago after they refused to leave a park where they were camped late Saturday, and there were about 100 arrests in Arizona — 53 in Tucson and 46 in Phoenix — after protesters refused police orders to disperse. About two dozen people were arrested in Denver, and in Sacramento, Calif., anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan was among about 20 people arrested after failing to follow police orders to disperse.

Activists around the country said they felt that Saturday's protests energized their movement.

"It's an upward trajectory," said John St. Lawrence, a Florida real estate lawyer who took part in Saturday's Occupy Orlando protest, which drew more than 1,500 people. "It's catching people's imagination and also, knock on wood, nothing sort of negative or discrediting has happened."

St. Lawrence is among those unconcerned that the movement has not rallied around any particular proposal, saying "policy is for leaders to come up with."

"I don't think the underlying theme is a mystery," he said. "We saw what the banks and financial institutions did to the economy. We bailed them out. And then they went about evicting people from their homes," he said. He added that although he is not in debt and owns his own home, other people in his neighborhood are suffering and "everyone's interests are interconnected."

In Richmond, Va., about 75 people gathered Sunday for one of the "general assembly" meetings that are a key part of the movement's consensus-building process. Protester Whitney Whiting, a video editor, said the process has helped "gather voices" about Americans discontent, and that she expects it will eventually take the movement a step further.

"In regards to a singular issue or a singular focus, I think that will come eventually. But right now we have to set up a space for that to happen," Whiting said.

Some U.S. protesters, like those in Europe, have their own causes. Unions that have joined forces with the movement have demands of their own, and on Sunday members of the newly formed Occupy Pittsburgh group demanded that Bank of New York Mellon Corp. pay back money they allege it overcharged public pension funds around the country.

New York's attorney general and New York City sued BNY Mellon this month, accusing it of defrauding clients in foreign currency exchange transactions that generated nearly $2 billion over 10 years. The company has vowed to fight the lawsuit and had no comment about the protesters' allegation about pensions.

Lisa Deaton, a tea party leader from southern Indiana, said she sees some similarities between how the tea party movement and the Wall Street protests began: "We got up and we wanted to vent."

But the critical step, she said, was taking that emotion and focusing it toward changing government.

The first rally she organized drew more than 2,500 people, but afterward, "it was like, 'What do we do?'" she said. "You can't have a concert every weekend."

The Wall Street protesters' lack of leadership and focus on consensus-building has help bring together people with different perspectives, but it's also created some tension.

"Issues are arising — like who is bringing in sleeping bags without permission," said Laurie Dobson, who's been helping a self-governed "working group" called "SIS" — for Shipping, Inventory and Supplies.

Sleeping bags were among items cited by Zuccotti Park's owner, Brookfield Properties, as not allowed on the premises — along with tents, tarps and other essentials for the encampment. By Sunday, all those items were back.

Strekal didn't see that as a problem. Protesters could do it, he said, "because we're winning the PR war."

Around his neck hangs a tiny silver Liberty Bell — a symbol of American independence given to him by a fellow activist.

Jonathan Hart has innocent plea entered in East Brookfield District Court on charges related to the stabbing death of his uncle, Joseph Cernauskas

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Barre resident Jonathan Hart is being held without bail at Worcester County Jail on a charge of murdering his uncle, Joseph Cernauskas of Hardwick.

jonathan hart.jpegJonathan D. Hart

EAST BROOKFIELD - Innocent pleas were entered Monday for 21-year-old Jonathan Hart of Barre who is charged with murdering his elderly uncle, Joseph Cernauskas at his home in Hardwick and burning down the house in an effort to cover up the crime.

Hart is being held without bail at Worcester County Jail, pending a Nov. 4 pre-trial conference.

At his arraignment in East Brookfield District Court, Judge Magaret Guzman entered not guilty pleas for the charges of murder, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, home invasion, arson of a building and larceny of a vehicle.

Also charged with murdering Cernauskas on Sept. 6 is Hart's friend, Jason F. Lopez, 19, of 24D Highland Village, apt. D in Ware.

Assistant District Attorney Christopher P. Hodgens, who is handling both prosecutions at this time, has said Lopez admitted to his participation in the stabbing death of Cernauskas, burning down the victim's house and disposing of the victim's body.

A statement of facts filed with the court states that Lopez and Hart drove to Florida after the murder in a 1996 Dodge Stratus stolen from Hart's grandmother, Helen Hart of North Brookfield.

Police said Lopez was hospitalized in Florda after he tried to commit suicide by jumping in front of a moving car.

Lopez has since been returned to Massachusetts and arraigned on the murder and other charges.

At Hart's arraignment Monday, Judge Guzman appointed attorney Christopher P. LoConto of Worcester to represent him and said she would assess no fee for the legal service to Hart.

"We expect to mount a vigorous defense on his behalf,'' LoConto said.

Prosecutors said Hart was arrested in Florida, where he waived his right to block extradition and was returned Friday to Massachusetts.

Prosecutors said that because murder charges must be tried in superior court and not in district courts, they expect Hart to be indicted by a grand jury on the charges he faces.

Police outnumber protestors participating in 'Occupy Springfield' at Court Square

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A "Take Back Springfield" event is set for Monday at 5:30 p.m. in front of City Hall.

IMAG0140.jpgAn 'Occupy Springfield' demonstration at Court Square, sparsely attended when it first kicked off Monday morning, increased to over 40 by early afternoon.

UPDATE: As of about 1:20 p.m., the number of demonstrators had swelled to over 40.

SPRINGFIELD – Police, as of mid-Monday morning anyway, easily outnumbered demonstrators participating in “Occupy Springfield” at Court Square.

Some 6 or 7 demonstrators gathered on the sidewalk fronting Main Street, garnering the occasional wave or beep or support from passers by.

Springfield police officers, meanwhile, clustered in small groups along Court Street, which was closed from Main Street to East Columbus Ave., and nearby on Main Street. About a half-dozen more, city and state police, gathered in front of the Bank of America branch about two blocks away.

Demonstrators included city resident Glen Barr, who wore a hard hat and dust mask as he stood with the others. Barr, who carried a sign, “Jobs Not Cuts - Save the American Dream,” said it was time that Springfield area residents to join the protests that have sparking up across the nation.

“This is important,” said Barr. “Now, by golly, Springfield is a part of this, thanks to me and seven other people.”

Barr said he wore the hard hat and dust mask because he was fearful that he could be fired from his job if his employer saw that he was participating in the demonstration.

South Hadley resident Beverly Burns, who has also participated in the “Occupy Northampton” demonstrations, said she was doing so for the sake of her two little boys.

Occupy Springfield10.17.2011 | SPRINGFIELD - Protesters gather at Court and Main streets for the planned "Occupy Springfield" event at Court Square.
“I want them to have fair shot at a real future,” said Burns, adding that she owns her own business, that both she and her husband work multiple jobs. “Yet, we are stuck.” Burns carried a sign that read “We the People Are the 99%.” She said she believes the movement is starting to resonate throughout the nation, but added was disappointed that turnout here Monday morning was so sparse.

"I think the general public has lots of good ideas but we are not heard,: Burns said.

A “Take Back Springfield” event set for later today at 5:30 p.m. in front of City Hall.

Police Sgt. John M. Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said Court Street will likely remain closed all day as a precaution.

“We just want to make sure that everyone’s rights are preserved and that everything is peaceful,” Delaney said.

Several of today’s protesters declined to give their names. One man said he showed up to lend support to the “Occupy” movement which began in New York City one month ago today.

“To say I am angry would be an understatement,” said the man, who carried a sign reading “When 1% 99% We Need a New Equation. “I am angry about democracy being usurped by corporations.....I am not against capitalism. I am against corporations have a larger say in government than I do.”

Last Monday, a demonstration sponsored by MoveOn.org, drew more than 50 people outside outside Sen. John Kerry’s office at 1550 Main St. Participants said they were upset about the lack of jobs, home foreclosures and possible cuts to health care and Social Security.


Gasoline price average rises 1 cent in Massachusetts

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Last year at this time, self-serve regular was selling at $2.78 in the Bay State.

BOSTON – The average price for gasoline in Massachusetts is up slightly after falling for several weeks.

The American Automobile Association of Southern New England said Monday that its latest weekly survey found self-serve regular selling for an average of $3.42 per gallon, a penny higher than a week ago.

The increase is the first since Sept. 12.

The current average remains 4 cents below the national average of $3.46 per gallon.

Last year at this time, self-serve regular was selling at $2.78 in Massachusetts.

Northampton mayoral candidates talk about homelessness

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The bottom line on homeless for both candidates is jobs.

northampton mayoral candidates.jpgMichael Bardsley, left, and David Narkiewicz, right, are candidates to succeed Mary Clare Higgins as mayor of Northampton.

NORTHAMPTON – David J. Narkewicz and Michael R. Bardsley both see homelessness as part of a bigger picture that includes the need for jobs and affordable housing. They have differing views on how successful the city has been in creating those two things.

The abundance of panhandlers downtown has created tension between the business community and City Hall over the last several years. While merchants have called for measures to clear the sidewalks of loiterers, former mayor Mary Clare Higgins and the local police have been reluctant to violate the Constitutional rights of street people. Both mayoral candidates agree that there is a need to address homelessness, but neither feels the street scene is a good indicator of that need.

“There are things people see on the streets that make them uncomfortable,” Bardsley said. “I don’t think a lot of what we see is homelessness.”

Although he said the drugs and alcohol that fuel the downtown street scene are problems that need to be addressed in themselves, Bardsley sees homelessness from a different direction.

“I think there’s a housing problem,” he said.

“We need a wide range of options, because there are a lot of people who want to stay here but don’t benefit from housing initiatives.”

Narkewicz, like Bardsley, represented Ward 4 on the City Council, a sector that includes part of downtown. He also sees the downtown scene as a separate problem.

“In many cases I think we’re dealing with a different set of folks who aren’t part of the shelter system,” he said. “There are lots of First Amendment rights involved. It’s not clear to me that (some of the proposed measures to prevent loitering) would pass legal muster in Massachusetts.”

Narkewicz believes that Northampton has been in the vanguard on homelessness, citing its wealth of single-room-occupancy buildings and shelters.

“I think the city has been a leader in terms of addressing homelessness,” he said. “The new model is the housing first model. It’s the next wave of what has to happen.”

Initiatives like “Yvonne’s House,” where chronically homeless people have secure, long-term living arrangements, and Habitat for Humanity, which creates low-cost housing and financing, have augmented the housing stock for low-income people, Narkewicz said.

Bardsley credits Higgins with doing a good job on affordable housing, but says the city has dropped the ball on several projects.

Village Hill has, overall, not lived up to its potential,” he said, referring to the
residential/commercial development at the former Northampton State Hospital campus that was initially hailed as a model for mixed housing development. Bardsley does not believe the project lived up to that billing.

Narkewicz disagrees, maintaining that Village Hill has a good mix of affordable and market-rate housing.

“The true measure is, you can drive around and not tell what’s affordable and what’s not,” he said. “It’s well integrated.”

Although the large number of single-room-occupancy units in downtown Florence has created a situation similar to the one in downtown Northampton in the eyes of some Florence merchants, neither Bardsley nor Narkewicz sees it as a public safety problem. Bardsley, whose campaign headquarters is in Florence, said he has never observed threatening or violent behavior in the area.

“Several people have come in here and we’ve needed to set limits sometimes,” he said.

Narkewicz said that some people have an instinctual fear of the subsistence-level boarders who occupy those rooms, but added, “Once we get past those fears, the reality is that it’s a good thing.”

The bottom line on homeless for both candidates is jobs.

“It’s a difficult economy with high unemployment,” Narkewicz said.

“A person can’t keep a home if they don’t have a job,” said Bardsley.

Defense for accused murderer Jesus Gilberto Garcia rests following testimony on violent video games

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Undisputed testimony in the case showed the attacks happened after victim Valerie Girouard's 15-year-old daughter rebuffed Garcia following a tumultuous, long-term courtship.

082310 jesus gilberto garcia.JPGJesus Gilberto Garcia

SPRINGFIELD - A defense lawyer for Jesus Gilberto Garcia, accused of killing his ex-girlfriend's mother in 2010, asked jurors in an ongoing trial in Hampden Superior Court to acquit his client of first-degree murder in order to honor the victim's fierce maternal instincts.

It was an unusual argument in an unusual defense on behalf of Garcia, 20, of Springfield, charged with fatally stabbing Valerie Girouard, 47 of Hampden, on July 30, 2010, and seriously wounding her live-in boyfriend during the same incident.

Undisputed testimony in the case showed the attacks happened after Girouard's 15-year-old daughter rebuffed Garcia following a tumultuous, long-term courtship. Garcia returned to the tiny house at 90 Main St. nine days after breaking in once before and holding a knife to Mariah Girouard's neck "to teach her the world wasn't safe," the teen girl testified at trial.

The first incident prompted Valerie Girouard to vow that Garcia "would have to go through her first" if he tried to get to her daughter again, Mariah Girouard told jurors. And, defense lawyer Paul Rudoff told the panel on Monday that is precisely how the attacks played out.

"Valerie Girouard was determined to do everything in her power to protect her daughter ... doesn't it make sense to you that she would pick up that kitchen knife?" Rudoff asked jurors, adding that his client only wanted to see Mariah Girouard and didn't intend to hurt anyone.

He asked jurors to find Garcia of lesser counts of which he is clearly guilty, but to acquit his client on the most serious charge of first-degree murder to "accurately represent the full extent of those heroic efforts that (Valerie Girouard) made," when she attacked Garcia to protect her daughter.

However, Assistant District Attorney James Forsyth countered that Garcia rode a borrowed bicycle 7.5 miles to the Girouard's home because he intended to rape Mariah Girouard and "finish what he started" during the previous assault, when he stopped short of doing any serious harm.

Distance and locked doors were no obstacle for Garcia, Forsyth argued.

"Only one obstacle left: Valerie," the prosecutor said.

After four days of prosecution witnesses, the defense put on just one: Dr. Bruce Bartholow, a professor of psychology at the University of Missouri and an expert in the potential effects of video game violence on adolescent males.

The theory has rarely been raised as a defense in a criminal case, and is even more infrequently allowed as testimony. Judge Mary Lou Rup allowed Bartholow to testify after discussing the legitimacy of his laboratory studies in court on Monday morning.

While on the witness stand, he told jurors that repeated studies of brain waves in young males with a history of playing violent video games as many as 40 hours per week desensitized many of them to violent imagery and made them more prone to behave aggressively.

Several witnesses testified Garcia and his nephews often engaged in marathon video game sessions, playing at being killer Ninjas and other characters for days on end.

Jurors were expected to begin deliberations in the case on Monday afternoon.


More details coming on MassLive and in The Republican.

Electrical fire in Springfield's Liberty Heights neighborhood displaces 8 residents

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No injuries were reported in the late Monday morning blaze at 281-283 Chapin Terrace.


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SPRINGFIELD – An electrical contractor replacing an electrical panel in the basement of a two-family home in the Liberty Heighs neighborhood inadvertently touched off a blaze late Monday morning that displaced 8 people and caused over $25,000 in damage, Fire Department spokesman Dennis G. Leger said.

No injuries were reported in the blaze at 281-283 Chapin Terrace. It was reported shortly before 11:15 a.m.

Somehow, Leger said, a ground wire went bad and it started energizing parts of the building. “Even the water pipes were cherry red,” he said.

The Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross is aiding those displaced.

Easthampton Prevention Task Force announces mini-grant program to reward good behavior in young people

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Certain groups can apply for up to $300 to fund programs for publicly recognizing and rewarding positive actions.

EASTHAMPTON – The Easthampton Prevention Task Force is fighting risky behavior in young people by awarding mini-grants to groups that recognize their good works.

Schools, government agencies, non-profits and religious organizations that work with youths ages 11 to 21 can apply for up to $300 to fund programs for publicly recognizing and rewarding positive actions.

The Task Force is part of the Strategic Planning Initiative for Families & Youth (SPIFFY), a county-wide program administered by the Collaborative for Educational Services.

Prevention specialist Heather Warner said it’s important to point out what a young person does right. Effort is as praiseworthy as achievement, she said, and such reinforcement has been shown to help prevent and treat substance abuse.

This method is also designed to help kids and teens succeed in school and to prevent teen pregnancy and dangerous behavior, said Warner.

SPIFFY’s 2011 Prevention Needs Assessment Survey shows a decline in substance use in most categories and school grades surveyed in Hampshire County. The majority of figures are below the national average. Antisocial behavior like drunk driving and school suspensions show similar trends.

At the same time, more 8th graders and 12th graders said they’ve used marijuana this year than in 2007 and 2009. Amphetamine use is on the rise among 10th and 12th graders while alcohol use is dropping quickly in all three grades, according to the survey.

The percentage of young people who feel rewarded for their good behavior has dropped from 50 percent in 2009 to 40 percent in 2011, the survey indicates. Warner said she hopes the mini-grant program will reverse that slide.

“Young people are a tremendous asset and I think it’s wonderful to slow down and really look at the value they bring to the community,” she said.

Grantees are encouraged to single out youths who aren’t normally recognized, such as someone who spent the summer trying to improve academically.

“Every young person deserves to be valued and recognized,” Warner said. “This should be the norm.”

Applications are accepted in two rounds. The first deadline is Nov. 15 and the second is Feb. 6.

The application is available at SPIFFYCoalition.org and can be emailed to HWarner@collaborative.org. It can also be sent to Heather Warner, SPIFFY, 97 Hawley St., Northampton, MA 01002.

Holyoke $168 million high performance computing center taking shape at the canals

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The center's computers will do fast research into everything from climate change to medicine and the arts.

hpcc.JPGConstruction proceeds on the computing center site on Bigelow Street in Holyoke in late August.

HOLYOKE – Foundations for the buildings of the $168 million high performance computing center have been dug on Bigelow Street at the first-level canal, officials said.

“They’re pouring concrete as fast as they can,” John T. Goodhue, executive director of the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center, said last week.

In days, he said, construction will begin on new water, sewer, electrical and telecommunications lines.

The academic research center is being built at the former Mastex Industries between Cabot and Appleton streets in the Downtown Neighborhood.

Construction began Aug. 25. A two-story, 90,000-square-foot complex of brick, precast concrete and glass is expected to be done by late 2012, officials said.

The project is being built here because the consortium of colleges that has planned and searched for such a facility needed a plentiful and cheap power source, and the Holyoke Gas and Electric Department owns the hydroelectric dam and canals.

Partners in the center are the University of Massachusetts, Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston University, Northeastern University, EMC Corp., of Hopkinton, an information storage, back-up and recovery firm, and Cisco Systems Inc., a California-based internet network equipment maker.

The center’s numerous computers will crunch data at high speeds into areas such as designing drugs, doing immune system models, the weather and the arts, officials said.

“The (center) provides a path to grow university research computing significantly beyond what is possible in the commonwealth and in New England today,” according to the center’s website, mghpcc.org/

The $168 million consists of costs to acquire the property, build the facility and stock it with computers and other equipment, with the funds coming from the partners, officials said. Gov. Deval L. Patrick also committed $25 million to the project to ensure construction began this fall.

The center itself will employ only about 25 people. But officials say the city will benefit from the drawing power of such a unique facility to bring in new businesses that want to be near the center, revenue and jobs.

The deed for ownership of the property was transferred Oct. 7 from the Gas and Electric Department to the Computing Center, department Manager James M. Lavelle said.

The cost for demolition, cleaning contaminants such as oil and asbestos that have soiled the site from decades of industrial use and acquisition of the property is $3.98 million. Money is being paid to the department over a period of months as progress continues, he said.

Demolition on the site began in May and took nearly four months. A 150,000-square-foot mill building made of brick and a 60,000-square-foot metal building were torn down, Lavelle said.

A lot of the brick was crushed and re-used at the site as filler, said Timothy J. Shannon, superintendent of the gas division of the Gas and Electric Department.

Four thousand tons of debris, 4,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil and 22,000 tons of asbestos were hauled away, he said.

Finance Director Sanford Pooler expecting fiscal 2013 budget to be drama-free

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The town is not expecting to use town reserves or ask for a Proposition 2 ½ property tax override.

030911 Amherst Town Hall VerticalAmherst Town Hall

AMHERST – The town’s Finance Director is expecting fiscal 2013 to be a "no drama" budget.

The town is not expecting to use town reserves or ask for a Proposition 2 ½ property tax override.

The town approved an override in 2009 for a $1.68 million hike, an increase levied over two years.

Fiscal realities, though, mean that budgets must be held to a 2.8 percent increase, enough to continue to provide the same services. But there will be no service expansions, said Sanford Pooler, who met with the Select Board, finance and school committees, school and library officials as well as the Jones Library Board of Trustees recently to outline the early projections.

These annual meetings are intended to help department heads plan for the upcoming fiscal year. The town manager must present his budget to the town no later than Jan. 16. Because that date falls on the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, the budget will be presented Jan. 13.

Providing the same level of service requires a 2.8 increase in the overall budget – a $1.7 million increase in the town’s current $64.2 million budget.
Any more than that would leave the town with a deficit.

Department budgets must be kept to a 2.8 increase as well. Those budgets have to take into account cost hikes.

“Health care continues to be a real pressure on us,” Pooler said, however the town has been able to contain costs in recent years.

He also said the town has seen a reduction in staff, but staff “will continue the tradition of a high quality (of service.)”

The town’s capital budget, however, will be held to a 1.8 percent hike based on 6.5 percent of the tax levy. At one point, officials had hoped to use 10 percent of that levy. “It’s the new fiscal reality,” he said.

Pooler is expecting to see a 1.9 percent increase in all state aid. The town could also see a 2.5 percent hike in vehicle sales tax, as car sales have been by about 5 percent statewide, he said.

The Lord Jeffrey Inn is expected to reopen later this fall and could boost the local option hotel/motel and meals excise tax receipts by about 8.5 percent or $50,000 according to preliminary projections.

But Pooler also said officials will be watching to see what happens in Washington with the federal budget. If the federal budget is cut, the state might have to compensate for those cuts, which could cut state aid to local communities.

The town’s Budget Coordinating Group will hold its first meeting Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in Town Hall to in part set financial goals.



'Occupy Springfield' demonstration gathers momentum in Court Square

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"A "Take Back Springfield" event is set for 5:30 p.m. in front of City Hall.

IMAG0140.jpgAn 'Occupy Springfield' demonstration at Court Square, sparsely attended when it first kicked off Monday morning, increased to over 40 by early afternoon.

This updates a story originally filed at 11:44 a.m.

SPRINGFIELD – An ‘Occupy Springfield’ demonstration, off to a slow start Monday morning in Court Square, swelled to over 40 by early afternoon.

Demonstrators, chanting “We are 99 percent, you are 99 percent,” gathered on the sidewalk along Main Street. Cheers sporadically erupted from the gathering crowd as honks of support came from passing motorists.

One of the demonstrators, Springfield resident Eugene Colemen, said he is having a hard time surviving in this economy. “We are just trying to keep afloat,” he said. “We are just talking about food, shelter and clothing.”

The wording on signs carried by the demonstrators included “Eat the Rich,” “Housing Now! and “46 million in poverty.”

For much of the morning, police easily outnumbered the 6 or 7 demonstrators on scene. Police gathered in small groups across Main Street, along Court Street - which has been shut-down for the day - and in front of the Bank of America branch about two blocks away.

A “Take Back Springfield” event set for later today at 5:30 p.m. in front of City Hall.

Police Sgt. John M. Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said Court Street will likely remain for the remainder of the day as a precaution.

“We just want to make sure that everyone’s rights are preserved and that everything is peaceful,” Delaney said.

Last Monday, a demonstration sponsored by MoveOn.org, drew more than 50 people outside outside Sen. John Kerry’s office at 1550 Main St. Participants said they were upset about the lack of jobs, home foreclosures and possible cuts to health care and Social Security.

Massachusetts Port Authority donates hundreds of windows, doors to tornado victims

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The doors and windows are valued at roughly $300,000.

Surplus windows 101711.jpgWalleska Quinones, left, speaks with David S. Mackley, interim Chief Executive Officer of the Massachusetts Port Authority, and Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, right, following a press conference in front of her damaged Clark Street home Monday. The press conference was called to announce the gift of $300,000 worth of surplus windows and doors from MassPort to local residents whose properties sustained damage in the June 1 tornadoes.

SPRINGFIELD – The ongoing effort to rebuild Springfield in the aftermath of the June 1 tornado has received a unique and large helping hand from 90 miles away.

During a press conference on Monday, representatives of the Massachusetts Port Authority announced the donation of hundreds of new doors and windows for tornado victims in the Greater Springfield area, valued at roughly $300,000. The surplus doors and windows were donated to Habitat for Humanity of Greater Springfield, which will distribute them to victims of the tornado.

The approximate 450 windows and 150 doors came from Massport’s surplus inventory which was used for sound-proofing of homes near Logan Airport in Boston.

U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield, praised Massport for its “community spirit and expression of good will” in helping the area in its devastation. The donated inventory was 80 percent federally funded.

The announcement occurred outside the destroyed home of Waleska Quinones, at 44 Clark St., in Six Corners, where her family’s home is being rebuilt. The donation of the doors and windows to her family, the first family chosen, will help fill the gap between the family’s insurance and the cost of rebuilding.

Quinones said the tornado struck quickly, leaving her family trapped and homeless and her neighborhood in devastation. She and her family have a temporary place to stay until the home is rebuilt.

“It took our home, but it didn’t take us,” she said.

Mayor Domenic J. Sarno and representatives of HAP Housing also attended the event, and thanked Massport for its donation. HAP Housing is working with many of the victims of the tornado.

Victims of the tornado in need of the doors or windows can contact Greater Springfield Habitat for Humanity at 104 Memorial Ave., West Springfield, MA, 01089. The organization can be reached at (413) 739-5503.


More details coming in The Republican.

Obituaries today: Tara Pagnoni, 26, of Holyoke; was MRI technician at Franklin, Holyoke medical centers, volunteer for American Cancer Society

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Obituaries from The Republican today.

Tara Pagnoni 101711.jpegTara L. Pagnoni

HOLYOKE - Tara L. Pagnoni, 26, of Holyoke, died Thursday at Holyoke Medical Center. She was born in Springfield, daughter of Stephen J. and Rebecca J. (Clow) Pagnoni, both of Holyoke. She was a graduate of Holyoke High School and Holyoke Community College. She worked as an magnetic resonance technician technician for the Shield's Health Care Group at Baystate Franklin Medical Center in Greenfield and for Holyoke Medical Center. She was also a volunteer for the American Cancer Society.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Agreement close between Palmer and Monson over Monson's use of Palmer's wastewater treatment plant

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It remains to be seen whether Monson will be responsible for paying the $300,000 that it owes Palmer for use of the wastewater treatment plant.

062011 charles blanchard.jpgCharles T. Blanchard

PALMER – An ongoing dispute between the towns of Palmer and Monson over Monson’s use of Palmer’s wastewater treatment plant is expected to be resolved soon.

Interim Town Manager Charles T. Blanchard announced that an agreement in principle has been reached with the Monson Water and Sewer Commission regarding the wastewater cost sharing agreement.

This has been an issue for more than three years. Monson did not pay some of its bills to use the plant because officials there disagreed with how costs were being calculated.

When Palmer’s government switched to a Town Council and town manager form six years ago, the town manager at the time started charging Monson ancillary costs, such as paying portions of salaries for Palmer officials involved some way in the wastewater operation.

Monson always has been required to pay part of the overall operation of the joint wastewater treatment plant, ever since the agreement was signed in 1974.

Blanchard was praised at the Town Council meeting on Oct. 11 for resolving the long-standing issue. The document has been sent to Monson officials and it is expected to be approved soon.

“I appreciate all of Charlie’s efforts and the efforts of the people of the town of Monson to come to a resolution on this long-standing issue,” Town Council President Paul E. Burns said.

Monson Water and Sewer Superintendent Craig W. Jalbert said he did not want to comment until the agreement is finalized.

Said Wastewater Treatment Plant Superintendent Gerald Skowronek, “They made some very good points and concessions were made on both sides.”

According to the formula, he said Monson pays approximately 24 percent of the wastewater treatment plant’s operating budget, including maintenance for the pump stations. Jalbert said approximately 4,000 users are connected to the town sewer system.

Blanchard said the new agreement clarifies where the “flow” (or sewage) from Monson into Palmer should be measured. An existing sewer on State Street will be that measuring point.

There also will be annual meetings between the Palmer town manager, wastewater treatment plant officials and Monson water and sewer commissioners, something that never happened regularly before.

The agreement between the two towns expires in 2024, Blanchard said.

Monson owes Palmer approximately $300,000 in unpaid bills for use of the wastewater treatment plant - $63,488.23 from the fiscal 2008 fourth quarter, $116,286.37 from the fiscal 2009 fourth quarter and $119,090.20 from the fiscal 2010 fourth quarter, according to the treasurer-collector’s office. The fourth quarter bill for fiscal 2011 has not been calculated yet.

It remains to be seen how much money Monson will end up paying.

Veteran West Springfield Town Councilor George Kelly running for re-election

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Kelly is a retired U.S. Marshal and is active in community groups..

george kelly.JPGGeorge R. Kelly

WEST SPRINGFIELD - Town Councilor George R. Kelly has announced he is seeking a fifth term on the Town Council in the Nov. 8 election, saying he wants to continue being a financial watchdog.

“I believe I can do something for the community. I’m very interested in the decisions that are made,” Kelly, 72, said Friday. “My family lives in the community and I think I can bring a lot to the table to make West Springfield a better place.”

The candidate wants to continue serving the community in which he has lived his entire live, according to a recently issued press release.

Kelly, now in his fourth term on the council, ran unsuccessfully for mayor in 2007.

The candidate stated he will work for the improvement of schools, parks and recreation, the library and other municipal facilities that enhance the quality of life in the community. He will also try to make government on the local level open and accountable to residents, according to his campaign statement.

The last two years, the candidate has been vice chair of the council’s budget subcommittee, and chair of the human resources and traffic committees. He is active in many civic organizations such as the Rotary Club, the West Springfield-Agawam Elks and the West Springfield Veterans Council. Kelly is also vice president of the St. Patrick’s Committee of West Springfield.

The candidate has been involved in Parents Without Partners for many years and is a communicant of St. Thomas the Apostle Church.

The owner of B&G Realty Trust, Kelly lives on Tatham Hill Road. He is a retired U.S. Marshal and a veteran of the Army military police.

Kelly is the father of Anne Kelly Lacienski and the late Nicholas Kelly and says he enjoys spending time with all his grandchildren.

He welcomes any concerns or questions and may be reached at (413) 736-5697.

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