Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

Inmates helping clean up snow storm debris in Somers, Conn. and other communities

$
0
0

Prison inmates have been helping a few towns in northern Connecticut clean up debris from the October snow storm.

Connecticut storm 11211.jpgA town of Vernon Connecticut firefighter throws a branch into a pile of limbs at Talcott Park in the Rockville section of Vernon, Conn. following the October snowstorm that rocked southern New England. The fire department was assisting the town's public works crews in getting the parks in town cleaned up after the October snowstorm that brought down trees and limbs, knocking out power to most of the residents in north central Vernon area.

SOMERS, Conn. (AP) — Prison inmates have been helping a few towns in northern Connecticut clean up debris from the October snow storm.

Somers First Selectman Lisa Pellegrini said a crew from the nearby Willard-Cybulski prison spent last Sunday picking up tree limbs, raking leaves and cleaning storm debris from municipal property around town hall.

She says another crew will be coming out this weekend to clean the over 50 cots that were used at the town's shelter.

Correction Department spokesman Brian Garnett says the department provides supervised minimum-security inmates on a weekly basis to its host towns for maintenance work.

He says this was a bit unusual because the crews were requested for the weekend, but he says they are always willing to help in a time of need.


Robert and Richard Simmons of Enfield, Conn. arrested after being doused with toxic oil from stolen electrical transformer

$
0
0

It wasn't the fitness guru and a distant relative, however, but rather two Enfield, Connecticut brothers who police say picked up the transformer with hopes of selling it for scrap metal.

Simmons Brothers.jpgRichard Simmons, left, and his brother Robert, both of Linda Lane in Enfield, were arrested after confessing that they stole an electrical transformer with the hopes of selling it for scrap metal. (South Windsor police booking photos)

SOUTH WINDSOR, Conn. - Robert and Richard Simmons are facing charges after they were caught this week driving their truck with a stolen electrical transformer inside.

It wasn't the fitness guru and a distant relative, however, but rather two Enfield, Connecticut brothers who police say picked up the heavy and toxic machine from a road in their town with the hopes of selling it for scrap metal.

A utility crew with Northeast Utilities, the parent company of Connecticut Light and Power, reportedly spotted the due driving on Route 5 in South Windsor with the large transformer in the rear of their old Ford Ranger pickup truck. According to published reports, the utility workers stopped the men and called the police to investigate. The utility workers remained at the scene, detaining the men until South Windsor police arrived.

Police said the Simmons brothers grabbed the transformer, valued at roughly $4,000, on Tuesday after coming across it on Green Valley Road in Enfield. The transformer fell during the October 29 snow storm that rocked the northeast and was scheduled to be picked up by a contractor this week.

Enfield truck.jpgPolice say Robert and Richard Simmons were found driving this old Ford Ranger truck with the stolen electrical transformer sitting unsecured and uncovered in the rear. (Photo courtesy of the South Windsor Police Department)

As the brothers were driving, the unsecured transformer tipped over, leaking a highly toxic and carcinogenic oil on the men and in their truck.

Once taken into custody, police had to decontaminate the men at the police station before they could be properly booked.

NBC Connecticut reports that the utility company hired a private environmental clean-up company to decontaminate the patrol cars used to transport the suspects, their truck and the road where the spill occurred.

The Simmons brothers were charged with third-degree larceny and released to appear in court on Nov. 17 at 10 a.m.

In other storm-related arrests, false reports and threats landed three other Connecticut residents in hot water following the storm and extended power outage.

The Associated press reported that on Nov. 4, Orahan Cirikovic, 39, of Avon, called Connecticut Light and Power saying that he was electrocuted when he drove over live wires in his driveway.

Following a full-scale response by police, firefighters, paramedics and the utility company, it was determined that the report was bogus and an attempt to get utility workers at his house faster in order to reconnect service.

Cirikovic was charged with falsely reporting an incident.

On Tuesday, 63-year-old Riki Motes called the utility company saying she had a gun to her head and was going to pull the trigger because she still didn't have electricity.

Police responded and later said it was a hoax because she was frustrated after more than a week without electricity. Motes was charged with disorderly conduct.

That same day, 33-year-old Zachary Budman allegedly called Connecticut Light and Power saying he was going to shoot any utility workers he saw in the area.

His threat, although later determined to be hollow, prompted the utility company to pull out all crews from the area, delaying restoration of service to the customers who didn't make threats against line workers.

Police charged Budman with second-degree breach of peace and second-degree harassment.

Budman, Motes and Cirikovic are scheduled to be arraigned on Nov. 19.

To follow any of the aforementioned court cases through the court system, visit the Connecticut Criminal Case Database online and click on "pending cases."

Jeffrey Rivkin's point of view in Agawam results in Day 1 winner of 5th annual Fall Photo Contest

$
0
0

Nearly 350 people entered the 2011 contest, sponsored by Hunt's Photo and Video.

110911 fall photo contest winner.jpg"I like to capture the beauty around us from a point of view most of us don't take the time to embrace," said 2011 Fall Photo Contest Day 1 winner Jeffrey Rivkin of Agawam. He photographed this leaf at a tobacco field in Agawam. To see all of the more than 300 entries in this year's contest, visit www.masslive.com/fall-foliage.

Jeffrey Rivkin of Agawam takes a different approach to photography.

It’s a winning one.

Rivkin’s photo of a leaf floating in an Agawam tobacco field is today’s winner in the fifth annual Fall Photo Contest run by The Republican, MassLive.com and El Pueblo Latino.

“I mainly shoot outdoor/nature scenes using a Canon Powershot SD750. Most of my shots are shot close to the ground using the macro lens,” Rivkin wrote on his entry form. “I like to capture the beauty around us from a point of view most of us don’t take the time to embrace.”

The contest is sponsored by Hunt’s Photo and Video, which has stores in Hadley, Boston, Cambridge, Hanover, Melrose, Providence, R.I., Manchester, N.H., and South Portland, Maine.

“I’m very fond of Western Massachusetts. There are lots of great things to photograph in terms of the scenery and the serenity of the area,” said Richard Yagjian, a former Springfield resident who is Hunt’s executive vice president.

Rivkin was among 345 people who submitted photographs of scenes in Western Massachusetts and beyond in the popular contest, which has generated more than 136,000 page views on MassLive.com since the 2011 edition opened in October. Reached at home Wednesday night, Rivkin said he’s enjoyed photography as a hobby for about five years.

“I do a lot of hiking and bring my camera wherever I go,” he said.

The top seven entries will be shown on consecutive days on the front page of The Republican, starting today with Rivkin’s photo. Winners will also be awarded a plaque of the page. There are also an assortment of runner-up photos each day inside the paper. Today’s are on Page A11. Readers can do their own judging of all the contest photos at www.masslive.com/fall-foliage. Comments can be made on each photo.

Shawn Davis, Hunt’s Hadley store manager, said digital photography and the accessibility of platforms to edit photos has resulted in a significant increase in the population of photo hobbyists in Western Massachusetts.

“Who do you know these days who doesn’t have a computer? Before you had to have a darkroom, construct space in your house for the darkroom. Now, depending on what you want spend, it’s between $100 and $700 dollars for photo editing software,” Davis said.

Davis said with digital photography, amateurs also don’t have to wait to find out how a photo came out.

“It’s instant feedback," Davis said. "You go out and shoot, you get back home and now you're looking at those images on a nice large monitor rather than waiting to develop film.”

Davis said among Hunt’s customers in Hadley, nature is among the most popular subjects - an observation supported by the popularity of the Fall Photo Contest.

"People seem to like trees, plants and flowers; other folks really love the wildlife, especially birds – some folks these days are getting bears in the yard,” Davis said. “Wildlife is always a popular subject, and folks are grabbing the telephoto lenses. We do a good mixture with the wide angles, but the next lens they want is the telephoto lens because they want to shoot those things that they can’t get close to.

“Fall photography was a little bit off this year, because it went from being summer directly to winter,” Davis said. “There were points in time when the colors were there, but definitely not what we were accustomed to.”


Thursday's runner-up photos:

"The leaves on the climbing vine coupled with the mural and the fire hydrant was both unusual and beautiful," entrant George Hall of Springfield wrote about his photo taken on a side street in Shelburne Falls on Columbus Day 2010.
See George Hall's photo »

In the entry submitted by Anthony Mateus of Belchertown, a seed lifts off from this pod on Columbus Day 2011 at Northampton Airport.
See Anthony Mateus' photo »

Fall colors are in abundance in Lenox, in the Housatonic river area, on a "late afternoon when the sun was perfectly low," contest entrant Jeffrey Kaufman of Longmeadow wrote about this photo he took in fall 2007.
See Jeffrey Kaufman's photo »

Richard Marszalek of Chicopee's photo was taken at the Stebbins Conservation Area in Longmeadow MA in early October 2011. It was a cool foggy morning with the sun just breaking through.
See Richard Marszalek's photo »

Western Massachusetts will mark Veterans Day with parades and ceremonies

$
0
0

State Sen. Stephen M. Brewer said it is important to protect and serve veterans when they return home.

Gallery preview

Veterans Day ceremonies will be taking place in several communities in the Pioneer Valley over the next few days, and state Sen. Stephen M. Brewer, D-Barre, said these occasions are appropriate times not just to honor those who served in war but to concentrate on protecting and serving them as they come back home.

Most events will take place Friday, Nov. 11, which has been the nation’s official Veterans Day since 1954 and was known as Armistice Day for decades before that. Armistice Day recognized the armistice that ended World War I at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918.

Springfield, Amherst, Palmer, Northampton, Holyoke, Ludlow, Agawam, West Springfield, Wilbraham, Belchertown and Westfield are among the communities with Veterans Day ceremonies Friday.

The town of Ware will have its ceremonies Sunday, Nov. 13.

Ware’s events will include a parade that will start at American Legion Post 123 on Maple Street at 1 p.m. then travel down South Street and Main Street to Veterans Park, where a program is scheduled to begin at 1:15 p.m.

Al Albrecht, the oldest active member of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2577, will be parade marshal in Ware, and Jack McQuaid will be master of ceremonies at the park program.

Senator Brewer and state Reps. Anne M. Gobi, D-Spencer, and Todd M. Smola, R-Palmer, will take part in the Ware ceremony, and Patriots Pen contest winner Courtney Jacques will read her award-winning essay.

Following the Ware veterans observances, members of the town’s 250th Anniversary Committee will read a proclamation closing the anniversary events and thanking residents for their participation.

The Springfield parade will start at 11 a.m., Friday, at Springfield Technical Community College and proceed to Court Square and City Hall for a ceremony.

The Springfield Veterans Activities Committee is coordinating the city’s events, which will include placing a wreath at the War Monument.

In Amherst, there will be a ceremony Friday at 10:45 a.m. in front of Town Hall.

Westfield will have a parade at 10:30 a.m. from the intersection of Chapel and Elm streets down Broad Street to West Silver Street, where there will be a ceremony at Parker Memorial Park.

In Palmer there will be a parade starting at 10:30 a.m. from the Thorndike Post Office to the Lake Junction Memorial Boulder for the ceremony, followed by a reception at the St. Joseph’s Club.

Chicopee will celebrate Veteran’s day with several events on Friday. There will be a memorial Service at Doverbrook Road at 8:30 a.m. It will be followed by a memorial Mass at 10 a.m. St. Anthony of Padua Church on 56 Anthony St.

At 11 a.m. there will be the laying of the wreath at Chicopee Veterans’ Plaza on Front Street.

The Chicopee Veterans’ advisory Board and the Department of Veterans’ Services will also hold a veterans forum from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Nov. 19 at the Charles Kennedy Post 275, on Robbins Road.

More than 30 vendors will offer a variety of information to veterans and their spouses about benefits and entitlements. Those attending should show a copy of their military or DD214 identification.

Northampton’s Friday events will start with an 11 a.m. parade starting at Lampron Park on Bridge Street and will proceed down Main Street to Memorial Hall next to Pulaski Park.

Gerry Clark, president of the Veterans Council of Northampton, Ellenor Rennell, Mayor David Narkewicz and others will speak during the program.

The Belchertown ceremonies will start with a 9:30 a.m. march from Town Hall to the Town Common Friday to honor veterans and will also feature an 11 a.m. program of music and speeches at Belchertown High School.

In Holyoke there will be a ceremony Friday at the War Memorial at Appleton and Maple streets, starting with a 9 a.m. social hour. At 10 a.m. the names of Holyoke veterans who died in the past year will be read.

Agawam veterans groups will hold a ceremony at 10:45 a.m. Friday at Veterans Green by Phelps School. They will also take part in 9:30 a.m. service with West Springfield veterans on the Agawam-West Springfield bridge.

In West Springfield, a parade will step off from the parking lot of St. Thomas School at 11 a.m. Friday and march to American Legion Post 207 on Park Avenue.

The Ludlow Veterans Day Ceremony which had been scheduled for Friday at 9 a.m. at the Exit 7 Theater on Chestnut Street in Ludlow has been moved to the Ludlow High School auditorium at Chapin Street in Ludlow.

Veterans Day ceremonies in Wilbraham will be Friday at 11 a.m. at Crane Park on Main Street. Rev. Brian Tracy, pastor of Evangel Assembly of God Church on Stony Hill Road, will deliver the invocation. Kathy Dion, a student at Minnechaug Regional High School, will sing the Star Spangled Banner.

Veterans Agent Richard Prochnow will deliver the welcome. Prochnow will be honored for 25 years of service as veterans agent.

Senator Brewer said that in addition to the ceremonies in the next few days, the month of November has been designated as “Hire a Veteran Month” in Massachusetts.

“Just as our nation vows to honor our soldiers, Massachusetts has also made a vow to protect and serve our troops coming home,” Brewer said.


Peter Goonan, Lori Stabile, Mike Plaisance, Suzanne McLaughlin, Jeanette Deforge, Sandy Constantine, Fred Contrada, Diane Lederman and Ted Laborde contributed to this story.

2 Longmeadow residents killed in Hamden, Connecticut traffic accident

$
0
0

Two Longmeadow residents died Wednesday afternoon following an accident on the Wilbur Cross Parkway in Connecticut.

HAMDEN, Conn. — Two Longmeadow residents died Wednesday afternoon following an accident on the Wilbur Cross Parkway in Connecticut.

Connecticut State Police reported that just before 4 p.m. Wednesday, a white van owned by a Hartford company struck the guard rail on Route 15 near exit 60 and rolled over.

The driver, 22-year-old Firas Oadeh and passenger 42-year-old Timothy Fagan, were both ejected from the vehicle and killed, police say.

According to a report by WFSB.com, one of the men was sent flying into the oncoming lane where he was struck by another vehicle, and ultimately killed.

Both victims were pronounced dead at the scene. The van, owned by Advanced Caulking and Restoration LLC. out of Hartford, was destroyed, police said.

Traffic was backed up for several hours Wednesday as police worked to determine what caused the crash and the investigation is ongoing as of Thursday morning.

Monson selectmen hear October snowstorm costs

$
0
0

The snowstorm that wreaked havoc around the region and the Northeast came 5 months after a tornado slammed Monson, causing approximately $6.4 million in damage.

103111 monson snowstorm.JPGView full sizeTornado devastation in Monson takes on a different look under a blanket of snow.


MONSON
- Town Administrator Gretchen E. Neggers pegged the cost of the Oct. 29 snowstorm at $1 million, and told selectmen at their meeting Tuesday night that the town is running out of money to cope with devastating natural disasters.

The snowstorm that wreaked havoc around the region and the Northeast came five months after a tornado slammed Monson, causing approximately $6.4 million in damage.

While the town is expected to receive a 75 percent reimbursement from the Federal Emergency Management Agency toward the tornado costs, it still must pay the remaining 25 percent, unless the state steps in and provides funding.

The problem with the latest storm, officials said, is that there is plenty of debris removal that needs to be done, and waiting for another presidential declaration that would open the town up to more FEMA funding could take months.

"We had a small stabilization fund and there's going to be nothing left. There just isn't enough money and at some point it's going to impact town services," Neggers said.

There is $613,000 in the stabilization fund.

Selectmen heard from Highway Surveyor John R. Morrell about the ongoing clean-up due to the snowstorm. Morrell said the storm not only downed tree branches, but left behind "hangers," broken tree branches balancing on limbs, or nearly broken branches that need to be removed because they are hazardous.

"So how are the roads looking?" Selectmen Chairman Richard Smith asked Morrell.

"We're getting there," he replied.

Morrell said there is approximately 20,000 cubic yards of debris on public ways. The town also is not picking up debris from the snowstorm from private property because it still has outstanding costs from the tornado. Morrell said residents need to hire a private contractor to haul away their debris.

Selectmen approved a contract with AshBritt Environmental, Inc. to remove public debris from public property; this will be monitored by O'Brien's Response Management, and officials cautioned that if private debris is picked up, FEMA will reject reimbursement, requiring the town to pay all costs. Removal of the debris from public property could take four weeks, officials said.

"We hope people understand we're not just being a group of meanies up here saying, 'We're not going to pick up your sticks,' " Selectman John F. Goodrich II said.

"We don't have the money," Selectman Edward A. Maia said.

Rick Perry says his campaign won't end following major misstep at GOP debate

$
0
0

Perry says others have made similar mistakes and that the screw up will humanize him.

rick perry department oopsRepublican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry points his head as he speaks during a Republican Presidential Debate at Oakland University in Auburn Hills, Mich., Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. At right is Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas.

BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. — Rick Perry says he "stepped in it" during Wednesday night's Republican presidential debate, but insisted that it won't force him out of the presidential race.

"Oh, shoot, no," Perry told The Associated Press Thursday morning, a day after he stood on stage unable to remember the third federal department he would cut. He was asked if his campaign, struggling to regain traction, could survive. "This ain't a day for quitting nothing."

Perry says others have made similar mistakes and that the screw up will humanize him. "The president of the United States said there were 57 states one time. Everybody makes mistakes," he said.

With a blitz of early morning interviews and TV appearances, the Texas governor was looking to stem any fallout Thursday from a major misstep he made the night before during a GOP presidential debate.

In Wednesday debate, Perry said he would eliminate three federal agencies but struggled to name them.

"Commerce, Education and the — what's the third one there? Let's see," the Texas governor said.

Perry's rivals tried to bail him out, suggesting the Environmental Protection Agency.

"EPA, there you go," Perry said, seemingly taking their word for it.

But that wasn't it. And when pressed, the candidate drew another blank.

"Seriously?" moderator John Harwood, one of the CNBC debate hosts, asked. "You can't name the third one?"

"The third agency of government I would do away with — the Education, the Commerce. And let's see. I can't. The third one, I can't," Perry said. "Oops."

Later in the debate, Perry revisited the question and said he meant to call for the elimination of the Energy Department.

On Thursday, Perry said he just couldn't think of it.

"There were so many federal agencies that come to mind, that I want to get rid of, that the Energy Department would not come out," he said in an interview taped for ABC's Good Morning America.

In an appearance on the Fox News Channel, Perry said, "If anybody's looking for the slickest politician or the smoothest debater, I readily admit I'm not that person. But what Americans do know is that my committed conservative values has helped lead one of the most influential states in this nation for the last 10 years."

And on NBC's "Today" show, Perry seemed to try to make the best of the gaffe, telling an interviewer that forgetting the names of all the agencies he believes should be eliminated makes the "core point" of his campaign — that there are too many agencies.

The immediate fallout has been brutal — at least on Twitter.

"Perry response will be on highlight reels for years to come," business legend Jack Welch tweeted.

"Off screen, Dr. (Ron) Paul is sadly administering the last rites to Rick Perry," Republican strategist Mike Murphy added. "Dr. Paul filling out paperwork as they haul Perry away. He's ruling it a suicide."

"Rick Perry just lost the debate. And the entire election. You only had to name three," Tim Albrecht, the top spokesman for Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, who is unaligned in the GOP race, tweeted from his personal account.

After the debate, Perry appeared to be in damage control mode.

He's already blasted an email out to his supporters asking them, "what part of the Federal Government would you like to forget about the most?" His website now asks supporters to vote for one.

In dramatic fashion, he bee-lined it to the "spin room" where a crush of reporters were gathered to interview campaign surrogates — and he immediately indicated that he knew he had made a really bad mistake. The first words out of his mouth as reporters crowded around: "I'm glad I had my boots on because I really stepped in it tonight."

Still, Perry almost seemed to minimize the impact, adding: "People understand that it is our conservative principles that matter."

"We all felt very bad for him," Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman also running for the nomination, said after the debate, calling the moment uncomfortable.

The next few days will shed light on whether voters care about the misstep — and punish him for it.

Over the past two weeks, Perry has sought to prove he's still a credible challenger to Mitt Romney by rolling out detailed policy proposals. But he's found himself dogged by suggestions that he had been drinking or taking drugs when he gave an animated speech in New Hampshire. It went viral online, prompting Perry to state that he was not, in fact, under the influence of a substance.

NBC's "Saturday Night Live" did a Perry parody last weekend that was widely viewed.

In recent days, the candidate started to take his message directly to the voters by running sunny biographical television ads in early primary states like Iowa and New Hampshire. It's an effort to reintroduce himself to Republican primary voters in a safer setting that circumvents the news media.

Wednesday's was the latest tough debate for the GOP candidate who has struggled in the national spotlight since entering the race in August, the last time he was at the top of polls. His standing has fallen throughout the fall, and he's fighting to gain ground less than two months before the leadoff Iowa caucuses.

He has committed to four more debates in a year when the GOP electorate is clearly tuned into them, but his advisers are considering skipping future ones.

Presidential debates have offered pivotal moments for decades, from Al Gore's audible sighs in 2000 to Michael Dukakis' tepid answer about the death penalty in 1988.

A statement by Gerald Ford in a 1976 presidential debate is among the most memorable, however. Ford famously baffled audiences when he said, "There is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe." Later pressed by the moderator, he refused to back down. The moment haunted the rest of his losing campaign.

Publicly, Perry aides sought to downplay Wednesday night's shaky answer.

"We had a stumble of style and not substance," insisted Ray Sullivan, Perry's top communications adviser. "He still named two more agencies than this president" would eliminate.

Perry had no public schedule on Thursday and planned to raise money privately at events in Tennessee. His next public campaign stops were scheduled in South Carolina on Friday — a day before yet another debate.

Nixon's long-secret Watergate testimony coming out

$
0
0

Historians dared hope that the testimony would form Nixon's most truthful and thorough account of the circumstances that led to his extraordinary resignation.

richard nixon watergate testimony In this Aug. 9, 1974, file photo, Richard Nixon says goodbye to members of his staff outside the White House in Washington as he boards a helicopter for Andrews Air Force Base after resigning the presidency in Washington.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Richard Nixon's grand jury testimony about the Watergate scandal that destroyed his presidency is finally coming to light.

Four months after a judge ordered the June 1975 records unsealed, the government's Nixon Presidential Library was making them available online and at the California facility Thursday. Historians dared hope that the testimony would form Nixon's most truthful and thorough account of the circumstances that led to his extraordinary resignation 10 months earlier under threat of impeachment.

"This is Nixon unplugged," said historian Stanley Kutler, a principal figure in the lawsuit that pried open the records. Still, he said, "I have no illusions. Richard Nixon knew how to dodge questions with the best of them. I am sure that he danced, skipped, around a number of things."

Nixon was interviewed near his California home for 11 hours over two days, when a pardon granted by his successor, Gerald Ford, protected him from prosecution for any past crimes. Despite that shield, he risked consequences for perjury if he lied under oath.

It was the first time an ex-president had testified before a grand jury and it is rare for any grand jury testimony to be made public. Historians won public access to the transcript over the objections of the Obama administration, which argued in part that too many officials from that era are still alive for secret testimony involving them to be made public.

The library is also releasing thousands of pages of other Watergate-era documents, several oral histories from that time and 45 minutes of recordings made by Nixon with a dictating machine.

The recordings include his dictated recollections of an odd episode late one night in May 1970 when Nixon impulsively had the Secret Service take him to the Lincoln Memorial so he could meet anti-war protesters there. He lingered with the astonished crowd and, according to accounts of that time, asked the protesters to "keep it peaceful. Have a good time in Washington, and don't go away bitter."

On the grand jury testimony, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth sided with the historians in his ruling in July. He decided that with the investigation long over, Nixon dead for 17 years and most of the surviving Watergate figures having written or talked about the scandal at length, the historical importance of the transcript outweighed arguments for secrecy. "The court is confident that disclosure will greatly benefit the public and its understanding of Watergate without compromising the tradition and objectives of grand jury secrecy," he wrote.

Even so, certain portions of the testimony that deal with people still living or that are considered still relevant to national security will remain classified for now, possibly to come out after further review, said the National Archives, which operates the Nixon library and 12 other presidential libraries.

One of the topics covered with Nixon in the grand jury probe was the famous 18 ½-minute gap in a tape recording of a June 20, 1972, meeting between the president and his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman. The meeting came three days after the break-in at Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate complex by burglars linked to Nixon's re-election committee.

The questions of what Nixon knew and when were at the core of the investigation of the Watergate cover-up that ultimately implicated the president and brought him down.

Kutler expressed doubt Wednesday that people will learn much more about Watergate from the new records. "The grand jury after that testimony had a chance to sit and indict but they did not," he said, "so I don't expect it to be that important." But he said the opening of grand jury records is a milestone by itself, "another precedent for opening up secretiveness in public life."


Lynn, Mass. police officer gets 90 days in jail for road rage attack

$
0
0

Officer Geovanni Ruano was sentenced on Wednesday to two years in jail with all but 90 days suspended on a witness intimidation charge.

SALEM, Mass. (AP) — A Lynn police officer has been sentenced to 90 days in jail in connection with an off-duty road rage incident.

Officer Geovanni Ruano was sentenced on Wednesday to two years in jail with all but 90 days suspended on a witness intimidation charge.

He was found guilty in September, but acquitted of more serious assault and battery charges in connection with a confrontation with another driver in July 2010.

Authorities allege Ruano threw the other driver onto the hood of his SUV.

The witness intimidation charge came from Ruano's alleged visit to the other driver's home with a request to "hush" the incident. Ruano's lawyer says there was no attempt at intimidation.

Ruano will be allowed to remain free pending his appeal.

Motor vehicle stop by Holyoke police on Interstate 391 yields arrest of Lishaira Rios, 20-year-old woman from Chicopee

$
0
0

Charges against the suspect include trafficking heroin.

1999 holyoke police car.jpg

HOLYOKE – A motor vehicle stop by police on Interstate 391 Wednesday night yielded the arrest of a 20-year-old Chicopee woman on heroin charges.

Lishaira Rios, of 882 Chicopee St., Apt. 3R, Chicopee, was charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, trafficking heroin (14-28 grams) and violation of a drug-free zone, police documents state.

Police stopped Rios, who had been driving south, shortly before 9:30 p.m. Additional information was not immediately available.

AM News Links: Firefighter sues Pittsfield, Wilson Ramos kidnapped in Venezuela, Rick Perry in his latest debate misstep, and more

$
0
0

Berlusconi resignation rumor - Private bank accounts could be raided by new Italian government, Police make drug arrests outside Furthur concert at Mullins Center, and more

rick perry department oopsRepublican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry points his head as he speaks during a Republican Presidential Debate at Oakland University in Auburn Hills, Mich., Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. At right is Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas.

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

Gerald Dolloff to be honored as 2011 Springfield veteran of the year

$
0
0

Dolloff has long been active in supporting deployed soldiers, veterans and their families.

dolloff.JPGGerald Dolloff

SPRINGFIELD – City resident Gerald W. Dolloff has been quietly working to support deployed soldiers, their families and fellow veterans since the first Gulf War.

Dolloff, now 63-years-old, in the Army Reserve at the time, began helping the families of local military personnel who were deployed overseas.

Those deployments marked the first large-scale mobilizations of Natioal Guard and reserves personnel since the Korean War.

“They were citizen-soldiers that got mobilized,” Dolloff said. “It was a big shock for everybody, I think.”

At about the same time, Dolloff, a Maine native and Springfield resident for about 30 years, began working for the Veterans Administration in Newington, Conn.,which increased his appreciation for the difficulties that veterans can face.

Dolloff then joined the Springfield Elks, got involved with the Vietnam Memorial Moving Wall project, took over the veteran’s committee at the lodge, fielded a crew of volunteers to place flags on the graves at Veterans' Memorial Cemetery in Agawam.

“I do a little bit for each organization as I can,” Dolloff, a Vietnam combat veteran, who served active duty with the Army for eight years and the Army Reserves for another 20. “I try to spread it around.”

“Jerry has been doing these things for quite some time,” said Richard Tyrell, chairman of the city’s Veterans Activities Committee, Inc. “It’s not just service to his country, it’s service to his community.”

In honor of Dolloff’s work, the Springfield Veterans Activities Committee has named him the 2011 Springfield Veteran of the Year.

“It’s quite an honor when you think of the competition,” Dolloff said.

Dolloff served in the 1st Calvary Division in Vietnam in 1966. He is a member of the Disable American Veterans and the American Legion.

Both Dolloff and Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, who is this year’s Veterans Day parade marshal, will be honored Thursday at 3 p.m. in the City Hall Council Chambers. The public is invited.

This year’s parade steps off from Springfield Technical Community College at 11 a.m. on Friday and proceeds to the steps of City Hall where a ceremony will be held.

Rep eyes Penn State scandal as impetus for change in Massachusetts law

$
0
0

Rep. Kevin Kuros intends to file a bill that would require any state employee “who sees or learns of a situation as egregious as that” to report to police.

Gallery preview

By KYLE CHENEY
State House News Service

In the wake of a percolating sex abuse scandal surrounding the Penn State football team, a freshman Republican in the Massachusetts House plans to file legislation that would clarify Massachusetts laws on mandatory assault reporting.

Rep. Kevin Kuros, a Penn State graduate who lives in Uxbridge, told the News Service he is uniquely positioned to explore a change in Massachusetts law because of his connection to the school.

Kuros’s remarks came shortly after Penn State football coach Joe Paterno announced he planned to step down at the end of the football season, following criticism he’s received for his role in the scandal. Paterno reportedly opted against notifying the police of allegations that an assistant coach, Jerry Sandusky, had sexually assaulted someone in a school shower. Sandusky allegedly assaulted eight boys over a 15-year stretch.

“I’ve met Mr. Sandusky personally several times. I’ve actually donated to the Second Mile Foundation, which is his charity,” Kuros said. “This actually strikes a pretty dissonant chord with me.”

Kuros said that in Pennsylvania, Paterno was not legally obligated to report the allegation of assault.

“I did a little research on the commonwealth. I’m most likely going to be issuing an amendment to the law that will require all state employees to be mandatory reporters of crimes against children,” he said. “Right now, not all state employees are mandatory reporters.”

Kuros said he intends to file a bill that would require any state employee “who sees or learns of a situation as egregious as that” to report to police. “We’ve doing the research right now,” he said.

According to the Department of Children and Families, mandatory reporters of abuse or neglect include: physicians and other medical personnel, EMTs, dentists, nurses, chiropractors, podiatrists, optometrists, osteopaths, teachers, educational administrations, guidance counselors, child care officials, social workers, foster parents, probation officers, clerks magistrate, parole officers, firefighters, police officers, truant officers, mental health and human services professionals, clergy members and the state child advocate.

Springfield police seek public's help in identifying jogger, hit by vehicle backing out of St. James Avenue driveway, now in critical condition

$
0
0

Police urge those who may know the man's identity to give them a call


View Larger Map

SPRINGFIELD – Police are seeking the public’s help in identifying a male jogger who was hit by a vehicle backing out of a St. James Ave. driveway Thursday morning and is now in critical condition at Baystate Medical Center.

Sgt. John M. Delaney said the jogger was struck about 7:30 a.m. at 1206 St. James Ave.

The jogger is described as white male with a dark complexion, in his late 50s or early 60s, about 160 pounds. He was wearing a black varsity jacket, shorts, black jogging shoes and gloves and wears glasses.

The victim has close-cropped gray hair with a slight mustache.

Neighbors in the area state that man always jogs or runs on St. James Avenue near the Plaza. He runs with a “funny limp”. He might live in Chicopee or on Hungry Hill.

Police need to reach the man’s family as soon as possible, Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

Those with information about the man are urged to contact the Springfield Police Department’s Traffic Bureau at (413) 787-6333 or the main number at (413) 787-6305.

Delaney said the driver of the vehicle, who remained at the scene, is cooperating with police. Charges have not been filed.

Massachusetts Senate Therese Murray president touts bill that calls for Parole Board reforms

$
0
0

Murray said the fatal shooting of Woburn police oofficer Jack Maguire by a parolee is one of the driving forces behind this bill.

Therese Murray 2010.jpgTherese Murray

BOSTON - Senate President Therese Murray raised the case of Dominic Cinelli, the paroled repeat offender who fatally shot Woburn police office Jack Maguire last December, as one of the driving forces behind an omnibus crime bill marked for Senate debate Thursday afternoon.

“He was released on parole. He never should have been paroled,” Murray said during an interview on Boston area radio station WATD-FM Thursday morning.

“They should have gone through his life’s work, if I could say it that way, his record before they considered him and they did not," she said. "They didn’t notify anyone. And he went out and killed a police officer. And that has happened more often than not.”

Maguire’s death led to five members of the Parole Board resigning and being replaced by appointees of Gov. Deval L. Patrick.

Murray said the bill before the Senate will create a committee to recommend eligible Parole Board nominees to the governor.

She credited district attorneys for raising amounts of heroin and cocaine required to trigger mandatory minimum sentences on possession charges, a change she said would affect non-violent drug offenders.

“They’ve upped the amounts that you have to have in possession to be convicted of that,” Murray said.

She also highlighted provisions in the bill that credit prisoners with “good time” served if they attend programs while incarcerated and address their substance abuse issues.

“We worked on it all summer and the district attorneys were at the table the entire time,” Murray said.

The bill would make changes to laws governing parole eligibility for repeat violent offenders, drug and gun crimes, wiretapping and sentencing. Members filed 76 amendments to the proposal, including an amendment that would classify the designer drug known as “bath salts” as an illegal substance.

Under the bill, violent criminals would lose parole eligibility on their third conviction and individuals convicted of crimes punishable by two and a half years or more in state prison would be prohibited from possessing firearms. Mandatory minimum sentences for certain drug crimes would be reduced and applied to current inmates, making them eligible for parole if they've served the new reduced sentence. The area around schools marked for tougher sentences for anyone convicted of selling drugs would shrink from 1,000 feet to 500 feet, under the bill.

The bill also requires mandatory post-release supervision for state prison inmates who previously would not have been supervised after their release, supervision that senators believe the parole system can take on without any additional costs to taxpayers. Any inmate serving multiple life sentences would not be eligible for parole, and parole decisions for those serving life sentences must be approved by two-thirds of the parole board, instead of a majority of the board. Critics of the bill argue it will cost tens of millions of dollars to implement and will harm, rather than help, public safety. Other provisions of the bill include:

• The Parole Board "to the extent practicable" must post its decisions online and the board must include a tally of members voting for or against parole;

• Increasing drug weights for possession of cocaine and possession of heroin;

• Establishing the crimes of assault and battery by discharging a firearm, assault with a firearm, murder for hire and strangulation;

• Treating larceny by check under $250 as a civil offense;

• Increasing punishment for second, third and fourth convictions for illegal possession of guns;

• Requiring the trial court and probation department to notify the state lab when a defendant has been required to provide a DNA sample. Creates criminal liability for anyone who has been ordered to provide a DNA sample who has failed to do so, effective Jan. 1, 2013.

• Increasing the amount of good credit inmates can accrue per program per month from 2.5 to 5 days;

• Allowing for medical release of terminally ill inmates.


Former candidate for lieutenant governor, Richard Tisei, plans run for Congress

$
0
0

If elected, the former Senate minority leader said, he would attempt to repeal ObamaCare.

BakerTisei1123.jpgFormer state Sen. Richard Tisei, right, campaigns with gubernatorial candidate Charles D. Baker during the last governor's race. Tisei is now eying a run for Congress.

BOSTON - Richard Tisei, former minority leader of the Massachusetts Senate and the GOP candidate for lieutenant governor last year, plans to officially launch a 2012 bid for Congress from his hometown of Wakefield on Tuesday, the longtime legislator told the said this week.

“It’s something I’ve always been interested in,” he said. “I look at the direction that the country’s headed in right now. We’re heading in the wrong direction. We’re in a situation where we have a stagnant economy, it’s not creating jobs. The Congress is spending us into oblivion, we have massive debt and our social safety net is collapsing right now.”

Tisei declined to name a member of Congress he would model himself after but said he intended to strike a conciliatory note with Democrats.

“What I would want to do is what I did in the state Legislature, and that is to be able to work with both Democrats and Republicans,” he said. “I see the extremes represented but not the mainstream and not enough people who are willing to sit down and try to move the country forward.

"Even though my job as the minority leader was, sometimes I ended up being a thorn in the majority’s side, I still count a lot of the people in the Senate among my closest friends," he said. "I think there’s a way you can work to get things done even if you don’t always agree.”

A supporter of the 2006 Massachusetts health reform law, Tisei also said he would seek to repeal the national health care law – known to critics as ObamaCare – as a member of Congress.

"I think that ObamaCare does need to be repealed. The health care profession -- it’s already had a chilling effect," he said.

Tisei would challenge incumbent Democrat John Tierney for the seat. Tisei, 49, served 20 years in the House and Senate before trying to make the jump into the executive branch last year. He owns Northrup Realtors in Lynnfield.

Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry to appear on David Letterman show, talk about 'brain freeze'

$
0
0

During a debate in Michigan, he promised to eliminate three federal agencies if elected, but could only come up with two names.

Rick Perry 111911.jpgRepublican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry looks at his notes during a Republican Presidential Debate at Oakland University in Auburn Hills, Mich., Wednesday.

NEW YORK – Republican presidential contender Rick Perry will laugh about his debate performance with David Letterman.

The Texas governor is scheduled to appear on the “Late Show with David Letterman” on Thursday to talk about his brain freeze a day earlier on stage with his GOP rivals. He promised during the debate to eliminate three federal agencies if elected but could only come up with two names.

Perry later said he would eliminate the commerce, education and energy departments.

He also acknowledged that he had “stepped in it” during the debate in Michgan.

“Oh, shoot, no,” Perry said on Thursday morning, the day after making the error during a GOP debate. Asked whether his campaign, which is struggling to regain traction, could survive, Perry replied: “This ain’t a day for quitting nothing.”

Perry says others have made similar mistakes and that the screw-up will humanize him. “The president of the United States said there were 57 states one time. Everybody makes mistakes,” Perry said.

During a May 2008 campaign stop in Beaverton, Ore., then-candidate Barack H. Obama said he had spent the past 15 months visiting every corner of the U.S. “I’ve now been in fifty – seven states? I think one left to go. Alaska and Hawaii, I was not allowed to go, even though I really wanted to visit but my staff would not justify it.” News accounts at the time chalked it up to fatigue during an exhausting stretch of campaign travel.

Perry hoped to stem any fallout from his own gaffe through a blitz of early morning interviews and TV appearances. He added an appearance on the “Late Show with David Letterman” for Thursday evening.

His glaring mistake was by far the worst in a series he’s made over the course of six presidential debates. The pattern plays into stereotypes that the Texas governor isn’t smart enough or qualified enough to be president – particularly as Mitt Romney, the Republican candidate to beat, has stood on the same stages and performed almost flawlessly.

It also raised questions about whether Perry can take on not just his Republican rivals but also Obama.

In the early morning after the debate, Perry tried to cast the mistake as a humanizing one that shows voters he isn’t the “slickest” politician but someone who makes mistakes like everyone else. In the AP interview, he insisted that he is more qualified than Romney to be president.

“More so,” he said when asked if was as qualified as the former Massachusetts governor. “Almost 11 years of chief executive experience of an entity a lot bigger than anything that he ever ran, and created more jobs, taking our four years and overlapping them as governors. The success that Texas was going through between 2002 and 2006 far overshadowed Massachusetts. So absolutely.”

“If Americans are looking for the slickest politician, the smoothest debater, I readily admit, I’m probably not their guy,” Perry said.

But while Perry’s earlier flubs brought him down from the top of the polls and forced a shift in campaign strategy, this one has prompted questions about whether he can even continue in the race. Donors were privately nervous – or even panicking, though Perry’s advisers said Thursday that they already have the cash they need to run through to South Carolina.

And Perry himself is defiant. “The chattering class and the political pundits will try to guide this campaign,” Perry said. “I’m going to be out talking to the people in South Carolina and Florida and New Hampshire and Iowa, those early primary states, about our vision for the country.”

Still, the extended debate exchange is destined for endless television replay and will provide easy fodder for attack ads.

In the debate, Perry said he would eliminate three federal agencies but struggled to name them.

“Commerce, Education and the – what’s the third one there? Let’s see,” he said.

Perry’s rivals tried to bail him out, suggesting the Environmental Protection Agency.

“EPA, there you go,” Perry said, seemingly taking their word for it.

But that wasn’t it. And when pressed, he drew another blank.

“Seriously?” asked moderator John Harwood, one of the CNBC debate hosts. “You can’t name the third one?”

“The third agency of government I would do away with – the Education, the Commerce. And let’s see. I can’t. The third one, I can’t,” Perry said. “Oops.”

Later in the debate, Perry revisited the question and said he meant to call for the elimination of the Energy Department.

On Thursday, Perry said he just couldn’t think of it.

“There were so many federal agencies that come to mind, that I want to get rid of, that the Energy Department would not come out,” he said in an interview taped for ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

He’s trying to turn it to his advantage. On NBC’s “Today” show, Perry sought to make the best of the gaffe, saying that forgetting the name of one of the agencies illustrated the “core point” of his campaign – that there are too many agencies. He’s already blasted an email to supporters asking them, “What part of the Federal Government would you like to forget about the most?” His website now asks them to vote for one.

The immediate fallout has been brutal.

“We all felt very bad for him,” Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman also running for the nomination, said after the debate.

“Rick Perry just lost the debate. And the entire election. You only had to name three,” Tim Albrecht, the top spokesman for Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, who is unaligned in the GOP race, tweeted from his personal account.

“Perry response will be on highlight reels for years to come,” tweeted businessman Jack Welch.

His campaign obviously recognized just how bad it was. In dramatic fashion, Perry bee-lined it to the “spin room,” the place where reporters gather to interview campaign surrogates, and immediately indicated that he knew he had made a really bad mistake. The first words out of his mouth as reporters crowded around were: “I’m glad I had my boots on because I really stepped in it tonight.”

The next few days will shed light on whether voters care about the misstep – and punish him for it.

Over the past two weeks, Perry has sought to prove he’s still a credible challenger to Romney by rolling out detailed policy proposals. But he’s found himself dogged by suggestions that he had been drinking or taking drugs when he gave an animated speech in New Hampshire. It went viral online, prompting Perry to state that he was not, in fact, under the influence of a substance.

NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” did a widely viewed Perry parody last weekend.

In recent days, the candidate started to take his message directly to voters by running sunny, biographical television ads in early primary states like Iowa and New Hampshire. It’s an effort to reintroduce himself to Republican primary voters in a safer setting that circumvents the news media.

Wednesday’s was the latest tough debate for the GOP candidate who has struggled in the national spotlight since entering the race in August, the last time he was at the top of polls. His standing has fallen throughout the fall, and he’s fighting to gain ground less than two months before the leadoff Iowa caucuses.

He has committed to four more debates in a year when the GOP electorate is clearly tuned into them, but his advisers are considering skipping future ones.

Presidential debates have offered pivotal moments for decades, from Al Gore’s audible sighs in 2000 to Michael Dukakis’ tepid answer about the death penalty in 1988.

A statement by Gerald Ford in a 1976 presidential debate is among the most memorable, however. Ford famously baffled audiences when he said, “There is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe” and refused to back down when pressed by the moderator. The moment haunted the rest of his losing campaign.

Perry canceled private fundraisers in Tennessee and instead headed to New York for another round of interviews, including the appearance with Letterman. His next public campaign stops were scheduled in South Carolina on Friday – the day before yet another debate.

Sierra Club calls for tougher emission standards at Mt. Tom power plant in Holyoke

$
0
0

Sierra Club organizer Drew Grande said emissions from the Mt. Tom power plant can make people sick.

Mount Tom power plant 2002.jpgThe coal burning Mt. Tom power plant is seen along the banks of the Connecticut in Holyoke.

HOLYOKE - Saying they have concerns about emissions from the coal burning power plant at Mt. Tom and potential health effects on Holyoke and Northampton, organizers led by the Sierra Club are trying to get the state to impose tougher standards on the plant's operation.

"Big coal does make us sick. We are asking that the Mt. Tom plant stop making money by making us sick,'' the Sierra Club's Drew Grande said at a press conference Thursday near the Holyoke YMCA building.

Grande said he believes the plant, owned by First LIght Power Resources, which is owned by GDF Suez, based in Paris, France, is legally operating under the terms of its permit but would not meet newer, stricter federal emission standards.

Plant manager Michael Gwyther the plant is operating under the terms of its permit, and said newer standards Grande refers to have not yet been implemented.


More details coming in The Republican.

PM News Links: Amherst home valuations said decreasing, China mocks U.S. political model, and more

$
0
0

Does Our Tax Code Push Jobs Overseas?, Growth outlook for eurozone worsens, and more

paterno.jpgIn this Jan. 1, 2003 file photo, Joe Paterno, Oenn State head football coach, walks along the sideline during the Capital One Bowl against Auburn, in Orlando. Auburn won, 13-9. Penn State administrators on Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011 canceled Paterno's weekly news conference, in which he was expected to field questions about a sex-abuse scandal involving former defensive coach Jerry Sandusky.

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

Judge rules murder case against Luis Rivera, allegedly high on angel dust at the time of a Holyoke shooting, is 2nd-degree case

$
0
0

Judge said grand jury testimony was that Luis Rivera was high on angel dust when Leroy Cortes was shot.

AE___MURDER__7578957.JPGLuis Rivera, left, is seen during is arraignment last year with lawyer David Hoose

SPRINGFIELD – A Hampden Superior Court judge has ruled that a Holyoke slaying in a car full of men high on angel dust is a situation warranting a second-degree – but not a first-degree – murder charge.

On Sept. 13, 2010, Leroy Cortes was fatally shot in the head as he sat in the front passenger seat of a 2001 Lincoln Continental in Holyoke.

One of the men sitting in the back seat, 25-year-old Holyoke resident Luis Rivera, was arrested and charged with murder in the killing of the 20-year-old Greenfield man.

Judge Richard J. Carey ruled late last month Rivera may be tried for second-degree murder, but should never have been indicted for first-degree murder.

The driver and another passenger painted for the grand jury a picture of four men smoking lots of angel dust, with Rivera already high when he was picked up, according to Carey's written decision.

Their accounts differ from then on, Carey said, but he ruled there was no evidence presented that Rivera committed the killing with premeditation or extreme atrocity and cruelty.

Carey heard arguments from defense lawyer David P. Hoose in September saying the grand jury did not hear evidence supporting any murder charge. Hoose said the two witnesses accounts differed widely and there was no evidence of animosity between Cortes and Rivera.

Assistant District Attorney Richard B. Morse argued a first-degree murder charge was correct.

Carey wrote the grand jury heard testimony "the four men had smoked two bags of angel dust and that the defendant was already high and unresponsive when (Santos) Bones picked him up. Inside the car, the defendant was 'seeing things' where there was nothing."

They heard evidence that the defendant was "totally out of it" as he ran down the street after the killing, pulling the trigger of his empty gun, Carey wrote.

He went on to say the grand jury "also heard that the defendant took off his shirt and disassembled his gun while being chased by Officer (Manuel) Rivera."

Carey said the grand jury "could not reasonably infer from this evidence that the defendant could have intended to kill the victim and did so after deliberate premeditation."

A second-degree murder charge can stand because among other things, Carey wrote, "the act of bringing along a loaded gun, while smoking angel dust inside a vehicle, could establish a conscious disregard for human life."

Carey wrote the question of whether Rivera's use of substances affected his ability to act with the malice required for second-degree murder is for a jury to decide.

According to the case background in Carey's ruling, Bones said he and Cortes went to Holyoke for Cortes to buy angel dust and picked up Rivera, and later a man named Joffrey Collazo.

Collazo and Bones said they all smoked the angel dust Rivera obtained. Bones said Rivera took out a gun from his backpack and Collazo struggled in the back seat with Rivera and Rivera had the gun when Cortes was shot.

Collazo said he saw Rivera in the car with a gun in his hand, told him to put it away, then got out of the car, heard the shot, and looked back and saw Rivera with a gun in his hand.

The killing happened at about 2 p.m. in the car parked behind an apartment building at North Bridge and Mosher Streets, police said. Holyoke Police Officer Manuel Rivera was working an off-duty job when (Luis) Rivera was running down North Bridge Street with a gun.

A conviction of first-degree murder carries with it a sentence of life in state prison without the possibility of parole.

A second-degree conviction carriers with it a sentence of life in state prison, but the person can apply for parole after 15 years.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images