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Obituaries today: David Lee Guimond, 34, of Agawam; counselor at West Central Family and Counseling

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Obituaries from The Republican today.

12_30_11_GuimondCOLOR.jpgDavid L. Guimond

AGAWAM - David Lee Guimond, 34, died suddenly at home Tuesday. He was born on December 28, 1976 in Holyoke. He was educated at Chapin and Bellamy schools in Chicopee and later graduated from Chicopee Comprehensive High School in 1994. He graduated from Springfield Technical Community College in 1997 where he studied electrical robotics. He then attended Beaver College now Arcadia University where he graduated with his bachelor of arts degree in cognitive science and artificial intelligence. Most recently he was a graduate of Westfield State University with his master of arts degree in psychology. He recently completed his internship with West Central Family and Counseling in May and had begun working there as a full time counselor. He was a member of the American Counseling Association. He previously ran the bridal department at Macy's department stores in Holyoke and Springfield for over 10 years where he worked in event planning.



Obituaries from The Republican:


Computers, other electronics seized from professor in child porn on plane case

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Prosecutors said they feared suspect Grant Smith would have someone else destroy evidence.

grant smith.jpgGrant D. Smith, a University of Utah Professor, is accused of viewing child pornography during a weekend flight from Salt Lake City to Boston, where he was arrested by Massachusetts State Police after landing at Logan Airport on Saturday.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Investigators say they seized computers and other electronics from a University of Utah professor accused of viewing child pornography on a flight because they feared he'd have someone else destroy evidence.

Court filings Thursday in Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court list items seized in the Nov. 28 search of 47-year-old Grant D. Smith's home.

Smith was arrested Nov. 26 after fellow first-class passengers on a Delta flight from Salt Lake City to Boston's Logan International Airport said they saw him viewing child pornography on his laptop computer.

Smith has pleaded not guilty to child pornography possession.

Smith is a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Utah. The university has placed him on administrative leave.

Funeral planned for 3 of 5 Stamford, Conn. fire victims

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A funeral service open to the public will be held at at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Manhattan for 10-year-old Lily Badger and 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah Badger.

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STAMFORD, Conn. – A funeral service will be held in New York next week for three girls killed with their grandparents in a Christmas morning house fire in Connecticut.

Dominic Carella, vice president of the Frank Campbell Funeral Home, says a private wake will be held Wednesday at the funeral home in Manhattan.

A funeral service open to the public will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Manhattan for 10-year-old Lily Badger and 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah Badger. A private service will be held at Woodlawn Cemetery for all five victims.

Carella says funeral plans for the grandparents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson, are still being worked on.

Authorities say embers in a bag of discarded fireplace ashes started the blaze.

Massachusetts GOP Chair Robert Maginn defends donations to Democrats

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Mass. GOP Chair Robert Maginn said he has donated to Democrats in the past out of appreciation for their efforts in policy and philanthropy.

Bob Maginn.jpgView full sizeRobert Maginn said he has donated to Democrats in the past out of appreciation for their efforts in policy and philanthropy. (Photo courtesy of Maginnforchair.com.

BOSTON - Following a report detailing contributions made to Democrats such as Mass. Gov. Deval Partick and Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, the Bay State's GOP Chair Robert Maginn defended his donations, citing appreciation for charities and policies supported by the lawmakers from "across the aisle."

In 2009, Maginn donated $2,400 to Schumer's campaign, according to a Federal Election Commission records. In 2010, he gave $500 to Patrick's re-election campaign, the maximum amount allowable by state law.

Maginn said the Schumer donation was due to certain positions the New Yorker had taken on trade issues with China. The Patrick donation came after the Governor supported a charity which Maginn's board serves, he told the Boston Globe.

Although Maginn said he was criticized for the Schumer donation while running for chairman of the state's Republican Party, the Patrick donation just came to light due to a misspelling in the official campaign finance records.

The political blog Blue Mass Group criticized the delay, saying that Maginn should have disclosed the contributions while running for chair of the state's Republican Party.

Maginn said that his position as CEO of the Boston-based software firm Jenzabar and philanthropist activities sometimes bring him to support and even raise funds for Democratic candidates. He also pledged that as the head of the state's Republican Party, he would limit his fund raising activities to GOP candidates.

In late November, Maginn defeated former U.S. Attorney Frank McNamera by a margin of 30 votes to become the chairman of the Bay State's Republican Party.

Maginn said at the time of his victory that he planned to build the pool of Republican politicians from the local level up.

He also said that the reelection of Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, who currently has three Democratic challengers including Harvard Professor Elizabeth Warren, is a top priority.

As Mohegan Sun plans casino in Western Massachusetts, tribal owners warn about debt problem

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Mitchell Etess, chief executive of the authority, said that the warning is only a financial requirement of auditors.

casino 5.jpgGamblers, potential customers and staff mill around the craps tables at the Mohegan Sun casino in Connecticut in this photo from 2007.

BOSTON - The company proposing a casino for Palmer Friday said it still has yet to sign a deal to refinance $811 million in debt, but lenders have waived a possible default.

In a quarterly earnings report, the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority, which owns the Mohegan Sun casinos in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, said the uncertainty in refinancing fiscal 2012 maturities is among conditions and events that "raise substantial doubt about the authority's ability to continue as a going concern."

The Mohegan authority said it received a default waiver from its bank lenders Thursday.

Mitchell G. Etess, chief executive of the authority, told The Associated Press on Friday that the warning is only a financial requirement of auditors.

"Auditors have no choice," he said. "They must put in that language."

Etess cited the waiver as a vote of confidence by lenders and pointed to fourth-quarter income of $46.7 million, compared with a $26.3 million loss in the same quarter last year.

Etess said refinancing is taking a long time because of the weak recovery following a deep recession that has sharply reduced consumers' entertainment spending.

"Those impacts that have happened in the outside world have impacted our bondholders' thoughts as we go through the process," Etess said.

Mohegan is being advised by Blackstone Group LP and Credit Suisse Group AG as it tries to refinance much of $1.61 billion in debt owed as of Sept. 30, the report said.

The debt includes $535 million outstanding under a bank credit facility maturing March 9, and $250 million of senior subordinated notes due April 1.

Mohegan is “pleased with the progress made in recent weeks toward finalizing our refinancing plan,” Etess said Friday in a prepared statement.

Paul Burns, president of the Palmer Town Council, said he is concerned with reports about the Mohegan Sun’s difficulties with refinancing debt but he remains confident in the company's ability to fund the Palmer Casino project.

Burns said he expects that over the next few weeks the Mohegan will be able to resolve the refinancing issue and will soon be able to secure the funding necessary for the Palmer Casino.

Etess this week told The Republican that the company is confident that it can reach agreement with Palmer next year on a casino and put the issue up for a vote in town.

PM News Links: Kevin Garnett buys shares in Italian soccer club, UMass economists say corporate hoarders hurt economy, and more

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Economists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst said that corporations who sit on large chunks of cash hurt the rest of the economy.

Kevin GarnettBoston Celtics' Kevin Garnett dunks against the Miami Heat in the second quarter of an NBA basketball game in Miami, Sunday, April 10, 2011. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)

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

Springfield will use property liens to collect unpaid fiscal 2010 trash fees

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Third quarter property taxes are expected to be mailed Saturday.

2009 springfield trash fee.jpg

SPRINGFIELD – The city will process liens against properties with unpaid fiscal year 2010 trash fee bills, Stephen J. Lonergan, treasurer/collector, announced Friday.

The amount, as well as accumulated interest and fees, will appear on the fiscal year 2012 third and fourth quarter property tax bills. The trash lien is for services provided July 1, 2009 through June 30, 2010.

Third quarter fiscal year 2012 property tax bills are expected to be mailed out Saturday.

Lonergan said property owners should be aware that payments made toward the bill will first be applied to the lien, then to the accumulated interest, and last to the principal balance of the property tax.

He said failure to pay the bill in full on or before the due date will result in an outstanding balance on the property tax bill and the accumulation of interest at 14 percent annually.

Property owners can fill out a Trash Lien Dispute Form if they believe there is an error in their bill.

The dispute form is available at the City Collector’s Office (Room 112 in City Hall) or can be downloaded from the City’s website at www.springfieldcityhall.com.

Filing a dispute form does not exempt people from paying the bill in full on or before the due date, Lonergan said.

Residents with questions about the trash lien can call the Citizen Service Center by dialing 3-1-1 inside Springfield or (413) 736-3111 from outside of city limits.

Wall Street: Stocks end flat for year after big ups, downs

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The Dow Jones industrial average, which lost 69 points in the last session, ended up 5.5 percent for the year.

Wp bully 2.jpgRonald McDonald, the mascot of the McDonald's Corp., teaches children at the Highland Elementary School in Westfield a lesson in friendship during an anti-bullying program last week. McDonald's stock gained 31 percent this year.

NEW YORK — The stock market ended a tumultuous year right Friday where it started.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index closed 2011 a fraction of a point below where it started the year. The S&P closed at 1,257.60, up 5.42 points or 0.4 percent. It ended 2010 at nearly the exact same level, at 1,257.64. Its loss for the year is 0.04 point.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 69 points, or 0.6 percent, at 12,218. The Dow is up 5.5 percent for the year. The Nasdaq composite index fell 9 points, or 0.3 percent, to 2,605. It lost 1.8 percent for the year.

McDonald's Corp. was the biggest winner in the Dow this year with a gain of 31 percent. Bank of America Corp. was the worst, down 58 percent.

The conventional wisdom is the more risk, the greater the potential rewards. But the opposite is proving true this year: Investors playing it safe have gained the most.

The most dull and conservative of stocks — utilities — gained 15 percent, the largest gain of the ten industry sectors in the S&P 500 index. Other winning groups are consumer staples and health care companies, up 11 percent and 10 percent in 2011 respectively.

In Europe, many of the biggest markets ended down for the year. Britain's FTSE 100 lost 5.6 percent, Germany's DAX 14.7 percent.

Trading has been quiet this week with many investors away on vacation. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange has been about half of its daily average. Markets will be closed Monday in observance of New Year's Day.

Better news on the job market and home sales lifted stocks Thursday, pushing the Dow up 135 points. On Friday Ford reported that its sales topped 2 million this year for the first time since 2007. Ford fell 0.1 percent.

Rising and falling stocks were about even on the New York Stock Exchange. Volume was just 2.2 billion shares, about half of the recent daily average.

In other corporate news:

Sears Holdings Corp. fell 3 percent to $31.78 after Fitch Ratings downgraded the company's credit rating to "junk." Sears has plunged 30 percent this week after disclosing that it would close more than 100 Sears and Kmart stores because of weak holiday sales.

Diamond Foods Inc. jumped 2.4 percent to $32.27. Rumors have been circulating that the hedge fund manager David Einhorn has acquired a stake in the food company that makes Emerald Nuts.

AMR Corp., the parent company of American Airlines, fell 17 cents to 35 cents. The company filed for bankruptcy protection last month. Late Thursday the company said its stock would be delisted from the New York Stock Exchange next week.


New lead in Holly Piirainen case to be subject of DA Mark Mastroianni press conference

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With members of Piirainen's family by his side, Mastroianni will talk about recent forensic findings that resulted in the new lead.

AE_HOLLY_1_8556361.JPGClear Channel Outdoor donated space on its digital billboard on Interstate 93 in Medford this year encouraging anyone with information to contact State Police. There is also a $30,000 reward offered by Holly's family for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of Holly's killer.

SPRINGFIELD – Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni will hold a press conference Tuesday morning to talk about recent forensic findings that resulted in a new lead in the unsolved 1993 homicide of 10-year-old Holly Piirainen.

Mastroianni will be joined at the press conference by Capt. Peter Higgins and other investigators of the State Police detective unit assigned to Mastroianni’s office, and members of Piirainen’s family.

According to a release announcing the press conference, Mastroianni will “update the public on the status of the investigation, including recent forensic findings that have resulted in a new lead for the case.”

Piirainen was visiting her grandmother in Sturbridge when she disappeared in August 1993.

In March 2011, Holly’s aunt, Carla M. Piirainen Bourassa, said her niece was vacationing at her grandmother’s home on South Pond with her father and brothers.

Holly and her 5-year-old brother went to see the neighbor’s puppies.

“He returned back to the summer house without her. We don’t know if he saw something and blocked it out,“ Bourassa said.

Holly’s father sent her other brother, who was 8, to get her, but all he found was her shoe.

Police initially believed she was lost; hundreds of officers searched for her in the nearby woods. On Oct. 23, her body was found in Brimfield by a hunter, approximately five miles away.

DA Mark Mastroianni Piirainen Press Release

'Synthetic' marijuana 'Spice' is problem for U.S. military

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The easy-to-get herbal mix mimics a marijuana high, is hard to detect and can bring on hallucinations that last for days.

120611 military spice.jpgA poster warning of the effects of the drug known as 'Spice' hangs on a wall at the Naval Hospital, in San Diego. The U.S. Navy has kicked out a record number of sailors and Marines this year for smoking synthetic marijuana and is seeing a dramatic jump in emergency room visits of its users, including some who babbled or hallucinated for eight days. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

By JULIE WATSON

SAN DIEGO – U.S. troops are increasingly using an easy-to-get herbal mix called "Spice," which mimics a marijuana high, is hard to detect and can bring on hallucinations that last for days.

The abuse of the substance has so alarmed military officials that they've launched an aggressive testing program that this year has led to the investigation of more than 1,100 suspected users.

So-called "synthetic" pot is readily available on the Internet and has become popular nationwide in recent years, but its use among troops and sailors has raised concerns among the Pentagon brass.

"You can just imagine the work that we do in a military environment," said Mark Ridley, deputy director of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, adding, "you need to be in your right mind when you do a job. That's why the Navy has always taken a zero tolerance policy toward drugs."

Two years ago, only 29 Marines and sailors were investigated for Spice. This year, the number topped 700, the investigative service said. Those found guilty of using Spice are kicked out, although the Navy does not track the overall number of dismissals.

The Air Force has punished 497 airmen so far this year, compared to last year's 380, according to figures provided by the Pentagon. The Army does not track Spice investigations but says it has medically treated 119 soldiers for the synthetic drug in total.

Military officials emphasize those caught represent a tiny fraction of all service members and note none was in a leadership position or believed high while on duty.

Spice is made up of exotic plants from Asia like Blue Lotus and Bay Bean. Their leaves are coated with chemicals that mimic the effects of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, but are five to 200 times more potent.

More than 40 states have banned some of its chemicals, prompting sellers to turn to the Internet, where it is marketed as incense or potpourri. In some states, Spice is sold at bars, smoke shops and convenience stores.

Sellers based in the United States and Europe advertising the incense on the Internet did not respond to emails or calls seeking comment.

The packets often say the ingredients are not for human consumption and are for aromatherapy. They are described as "mood enhancing" and "long lasting." Some of the sellers' Web sites say they do not sell herbal mixes containing any illegal chemicals and say they are offering a "legal high."

Service members preferred it because up until this year there was no way to detect it with urine tests. A test was developed after the Drug Enforcement Administration put a one-year emergency ban on five chemicals found in the drug.

Manufacturers are adapting to avoid detection, even on the new tests, and skirt new laws banning the main chemicals, officials say.

"It's a moving target," said Capt. J.A. "Cappy" Surette, spokesman for the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.

The military can calibrate its equipment to test for those five banned chemicals "but underground chemists can keep altering the properties and make up to more than 100 permutations," Surette said.

Complicating their efforts further, there are more than 200 other chemicals used in the concoctions. They remain legal and their effects on the mind and body remain largely unknown, Navy doctors say.

A Clemson University scientist created many of the chemicals for research purposes in 1990s. They were never tested on humans.

Civilian deaths have been reported and emergency crews have responded to calls of "hyper-excited" people doing things like tearing off their clothes and running down the street naked.

Navy investigators compare the substance to angel dust because no two batches are the same. Some who smoke it like a marijuana cigarette may just feel a euphoric buzz, but others have suffered delusions lasting up to a week.

While the problem has surfaced in all branches of the military, the Navy has been the most aggressive in drawing attention to the problem.

It produced a video based on cases to warn sailors of Spice's dangers and publicized busts of crew members on some of its most-storied ships, including the USS Carl Vinson, from which Osama bin Laden's was dropped into the sea.

Two of the largest busts this year involved sailors in the San Diego-based U.S. Third Fleet, which announced last month that it planned to dismiss 28 sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan.

A month earlier, 64 sailors, including 49 from the Vinson, were accused of being involved in a Spice ring.

Many of the cases were discovered after one person was caught with synthetic pot, prompting broader investigations.

Lt. Commander Donald Hurst, a fourth-year psychiatry resident at San Diego's Naval Medical Center, said the hospital is believed to have seen more cases than any other health facility in the country.

Doctors saw users experiencing bad reactions once a month, but now see them weekly. Users suffer everything from vomiting, elevated blood pressure and seizures to extreme agitation, anxiety and delusions.

Hurst said the behavior in many cases he witnessed at first seemed akin to schizophrenia. Usually within minutes, however, the person became completely lucid. Sometimes, the person goes in and out of such episodes for days.

He recalled one especially bizarre case of a sailor who came in with his sobbing wife.

"He stood their holding a sandwich in front of him with no clue as to what to do," he said. "He opened it up, looked at it, touched it. I took it and folded it over and then he took a bite out it. But then we had to tell him, 'you have to chew.'"

An hour later when Hurst went back to evaluate him, he was completely normal and worried about being in trouble.

"That's something you don't see with acute schizophrenic patients," he said. "Then we found out based on the numbers of people coming in like this, that OK there's a new drug out there."

Hurst decided to study 10 cases. Some also had smoked marijuana or drank alcohol, while others only smoked Spice.

Of the 10, nine had lost a sense of reality. Seven babbled incoherently. The symptoms for seven of them lasted four to eight days. Three others are believed to now be schizophrenic. Hurst believed the drug may have triggered the symptoms in people with that genetic disposition. His findings were published in the American Journal of Psychiatry in October.

He said there are countless questions that still need answering, including the designer drug's effects on people with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or traumatic brain injuries.

What the research has confirmed, he said, is: "These are not drugs to mess with."

Springfield tornado victim Michael Bynum gets new modular home -- 7 months later

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Mark Giarrusso, president of Hybrid Built Home, said a model like what Bynam purchased costs $150,000 to $225,000 depending on add-ons and options.

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SPRINGFIELD – Seven months after the June 1 tornado literally threw Michael Bynum out of his Pennsylvania Avenue home and having it crash down around him, Bynum is just weeks away from moving into a whole new home with help from a Quincy modular home dealer.

“I look at it as being lucky,” Bynum said Friday. “I was on the second floor looking out when the tornado hit. I ended up on my neighbor’s front lawn.”

He was next to what had been part of his chimney, a heavy pile of bricks that could have just as easily ended up hitting him.

“Like I said, lucky,” Bynum, 50, a technician for the United States Postal Service's Bulk Mail Center in Indian Orchard, said.

Home dealer Hybrid Built Home of Quincy and manufacturer Excel Homes of Liverpool, Pa., were able to offer Bynum a series of discounts so the new home cost him the same amount he got in a settlement from his insurance company, said Hallie Pinta, vice president of Hybrid Built Home.

Hallie Pinta, vice president of Hybrid Homes.

“So that this situation ended up good fortune for him,” she said.

Mark W. Giarrusso, president of Hybrid Built Home, said a model like what Bynam purchased costs $150,000 to $225,000 depending on add-ons and options. Hybrid is stick-building Bynam’s second floor because it turns out to be cheaper. Hybrid also built Bynum’s porch on site because it worked out to be cheaper.

“We’ve gotten great P.R. and its a feel-good-thing,” Giarrusso said. “We are trying to pick up the megaphone and spread the word.”

Bynum’s new home is 1,600-square feet with a two-car garage and two full bathrooms. The storm damaged the foundation to Bynam’s old home, so he had to have a new one built.

Pinta said she knew she was on her way to Springfield the moment she learned of the tornado. A graduate of Tulane University in New Orleans, Pinta said she remembers being so frustrated watching coverage of Hurricane Katrina on television. She saw a city she loved suffer. She is in the construction industry and she couldn’t get to Louisiana to help.

“The tornado really struck a chord with me,” Pinta said.

At first she just walked through neighborhoods, helping people chose contractors or giving general advice to anyone who asked. She offered families tours of the Excel Homes factory. A few took her up on the offer and made the trip. Bynum is the only one who went ahead to get a house.

Of 577 structures that were damaged by the tornado in Springfield, 513 have been repaired, cleared or are in progress. Rebuild Springfield, a group created to lead the rebuilding effort, plans to release a rebuilding plan in late January.

Bynam said three homes in his neighborhood are still vacant lots and few other homeowners are starting to rebuild using traditional stick-built methods instead of modular construction.

“It will be revitalized,” he said. “The neighborhood will be better than it was before.”

Giarrusso said a modular home, where sections of house are built in a factory and assembled on site, are generally 15 percent or so cheaper than homes constructed from lumber on site. It also takes less time, which makes modular homes a good choice for people recovering form disaster.

“It’s also better for the environment,” Giarrusso said. “I used to build homes conventionally and I’m a little grossed out by what we used to do. All that lumber that had to be trimmed, a third of it ending up in a dumpster as scrap.”

Newt Gingrich weeps, Mitt Romney launches verbal attack on Ron Paul in Iowa

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Video: Gingrich's tears flowed as the former House speaker was responding to questions about his mother from a pollster and longtime political ally.

By DAVID ESPO and SHANNON MCCAFFREY

123011 newt gingrich.JPGRepublican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks during a campaign stop in Des Moines, Iowa, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

DES MOINES, Iowa – Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich wept Friday as he recalled his late mother's end-of-life illnesses, a moment of poignancy in a notably negative Republican presidential Iowa caucus campaign with four unpredictable days yet to run.

"I do policy much easier than I do personal," Gingrich told an audience of women as he tried to regain his composure. The tears flowed as the former speaker was responding to questions about his mother from a pollster and longtime political ally.

Gingrich's emotional moment came as his rivals engaged in traditional campaign tactics, and as polls suggested large numbers of Iowa Republicans could change their minds before caucuses Tuesday night provide the first test of the 2012 campaign.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney sought to marginalize his closest pursuer in most polls, saying, "I don't think Ron Paul represents the mainstream of Republican thought with regards to issues, particularly in foreign policy."

There was no immediate response from Paul, a Texas congressman who opposes the use of military force to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, claiming momentum based on recent polls, told reporters he recently had the best fundraising day of his candidacy. Yet he also drew criticism from Texas Gov. Rick Perry for advocating earmarks during two terms in the Senate.

Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann became the latest presidential hopeful to hold a campaign event with Iowa Rep. Steve King — and the latest to hear him say he wasn't ready to give his endorsement.

Whatever the impact of Gingrich's tears on the race for the White House, the episode seemed destined to be replayed endlessly on televisions, personal computers and hand-held devices.

That was the case nearly four years ago, when Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared to choke back tears while campaigning in New Hampshire a few days before the state's Democratic presidential primary. The episode also became the subject of intense political analysis. Clinton won the primary in an upset a few days later.

Gingrich was surging in the polls a little more than a week ago, but was hit by a barrage of negative ads and has been struggling in recent days. Normally a combative politician, he shed tears as he appeared before a group of mothers and responded to a question from Frank Luntz, a Republican pollster and longtime ally of the former speaker.

Asked about his mother and an event in his life that influenced his policies and views, Gingrich recalled her as happy and having friends before she ended up in a long-term care facility suffering from bipolar disease, depression and physical ailments.

"My whole emphasis on brain science comes in directly from dealing with the real problems of real people," he said, his face distorting as he began to cry. "And so it's not a theory. It's, in fact, my mother," he said.

Kathleen "Kit" Gingrich died in 2003. She was 77.

Romney, who leads in most polls in Iowa, criticized Paul in an interview with Fox News Channel.

"I don't think Ron Paul represents the mainstream of Republican thought with regards to issues, particularly in foreign policy," he said, referring to the Texan's statement that he would oppose military action to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

At the same time he said Paul was outside the GOP mainstream, Romney pledged to support whoever wins the party's nomination to oppose President Barack Obama in the fall.

After months of campaigning and millions of dollars in television commercials, the polls depicted a race as unsettled and unpredictable as any in the four decades since Iowa's caucuses became the kickoff event in presidential campaigns.

A pair of surveys in the last five days suggested upwards of a third of all potential caucus-goers had not firmly settled on a candidate of choice.

The same polls made Romney the front-runner, and his decision to leave for a quick trip to New Hampshire and then return to Iowa and stay through caucus night projected optimism.

Paul views on Iran have been called into question this week by numerous other contenders, and Gingrich went so far as to say he would not vote for the Texan.

To some extent, Paul stands alone in the field because of his libertarian-leaning views. He does not want the government to have the power to ban abortions, for example, and has called for the legalization of some drugs that are now outlawed.

That has left Santorum, Gingrich, Perry and Bachmann to vie for standing as Romney's chief opponent in the competition for evangelical voters and other conservatives.

Even before the caucuses, Romney and the rest of the field were looking ahead to New Hampshire's primary on Jan. 10 and the first two Southern contests later in the month, in South Carolina and Florida.

Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont and Kasie Hunt in Des Moines, Brian Bakst in Early and Mike Glover in Ames to this report.

2 popular Springfield clubs giving up liquor licenses

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The developments come as Mayor Domenic Sarno considers a 1 a.m. entertainment curfew for downtown nightclubs to reduce violence and disturbances at the 2 a.m. closing time.

march 2010 skyplex.jpgThe Skyplex Entertainment Complex at Sterns Square in downtown Springfield.
070110 sinners & saints.jpgA crowd gathers at Sinners & Saints on Bridge Street prior to a Stearns Square Bike Night concert.

SPRINGFIELD – Two of downtown’s best-known clubs, Skyplex and Sinners & Saints, will be ringing in the new year without liquor licenses.

The License Commission voted Thursday against renewing Skyplex’s license unless the Stearns Square club made $44,194 in overdue payments, including real estate taxes, police security detail payments and dues for the Business Improvement District.

The payments were due by 4:30 p.m. Friday.

Peter L. Sygnator, license commission chairman, said one of Skyplex’s owners notified the commission Friday that the bar is withdrawing its license renewal application for 2012.

No payments were made on the club’s $44,000-plus debt, Sygnator said.

Meanwhile, the liquor license for Sinners & Saints at 280 Bridge St. has been suspended for six days, and the owners have not submitted an application for a 2012 liquor license, Sygnator said.

The suspension was imposed after the commissioners reviewed a complaint that a patron had been mistreated by the club’s staff; the suspension runs through Saturday night, according to Sygnator.

The developments come as Mayor Domenic J. Sarno is considering a 1 a.m. entertainment curfew for downtown nightclubs to reduce violence and disturbances at the 2 a.m. closing time.

Under the plan, music, dancing or other forms of entertainment would cease at 1 a.m. unless the club obtains a late night entertainment license from the city.

If approved, the entertainment curfew, which was strongly criticized by club owners and employees at a public hearing last week, would not go into effect for several weeks. Sarno is expected to make a decision in the next few weeks.

“With both Sinners & Saints and Skyplex shuttered, the entertainment district should be substantially quieter,” Sygnator said.

“It may just quiet things down enough so that none of the other proposed measures need to be taken,” he added.

Skyplex, at 10 Stearns Sq., opened in 2006; previously, it was Club Rain. Owners Michael J. Barrasso and Steven C. Stein could not be reached for comment.

A message left with Sinners & Saints was also not immediately returned Friday.

New Year's Eve revelers in Holyoke, Northampton should see mild weather

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Holyoke Heritage State Park will throw its 15th annual First Night Jr., while Northampton celebrates its 27th annual First Night festivities.

123110 first night northampton.JPGFireworks light the sky during First Night festivities in Northampton last year.

New Year’s Eve revelers are in luck.

Although the National Weather Service is forecasting a chance of rain during the day, skies are expected to improve to partly cloudy this evening in what will be a continuation of unseasonably mild conditions.

Temperatures are expected to reach a high of 47 degrees during the day with a low of only 32 degrees overall.

Major New Year’s Eve celebrations are planned in both downtown Holyoke and downtown Northampton.

Holyoke Heritage State Park will throw its 15th annual First Night Jr. starting at 10 a.m. Families will get a chance to take part in games and other entertainment at the park , including at the Merry-Go-Round, the Children’s Museum at Holyoke, the Heritage State Park Visitors Center and the Volleyball Hall of Fame.

newyears.JPGView full sizeMark Zemelman of Haydenville, left, talks to New Year's Eve revelers in Northampton's Pulaski Park.

The Paper City shindig will culminate in a sparkling, disco-style ball dropping at 3:45 p.m. to celebrate the coming of the new year.

The Northampton Center for the Arts and PeoplesBank will kick off the 27th annual First Night festivities at noon.

Northampton will offer 20 different spots providing musical and other family entertainment. There will be fireworks at 6:15 p.m. from the municipal parking garage and a ball-raising from the top of the Hotel Northampton at midnight.

Tickets to events will be $20 for adults, $10 for seniors 65 and older, and $8 for children ages 2 through 10.

In Springfield, the restaurant Mama Iguana’s will offer a huge flat screen television broadcasting the festivities, ball drop and fireworks from New York City. The eatery will offer special dishes, staying open until 2 a.m. and providing music by a disc jockey.

And for those who overindulge in alcohol, Yellow Cab in Springfield will for the 31st straight year provide free taxi rides to city residents. To arrange for a ride, call Yellow Cab at (413) 739-9999.

West Springfield, former school superintendent Suzanne Marotta settle lawsuit

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Marotta said in her suit Mayor Edward J. Gibson sexually harassed her and the School Committee ignored the resulting hostile work environment.

suzanne marotta edward gibson.jpgA lawsuit in which former West Springfield School Superintendent Suzanne T. Marotta, left, claimed Mayor Edward J. Gibson, right, sexually harassed her and the School Committee ignored the resulting hostile work environment has been resolved out of court.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – A Hampden Superior Court lawsuit filed against the mayor and the School Committee by former School Superintendent Suzanne T. Marotta has been resolved out of court.

Marotta said in her suit Mayor Edward J. Gibson sexually harassed her and the School Committee ignored the resulting hostile work environment.

However, a confidentially agreement prevents either side from talking about the matter, Patricia M. Rapinchuk, the city’s legal counsel in the case, said Thursday.

“It would be improper to say more,” Rapinchuk said when asked if there was a financial settlement.

In a similar case, Hampshire District Court Judge Mary-Lou Rup ruled earlier this month the public has a First Amendment right to see the details of a settlement between South Hadley and the parents of Phoebe Prince, the high school student who committed suicide after being harassed at school. As result, the public learned that $225,000 had been paid to the parents of the 15-year-old.

Anne O’Brien and Jeremy Prince had filed a sexual harassment complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination before the settlement was reached.

In regards to the West Springfield case, Gibson said, “Neither I nor the School Committee had any wrongdoing in the matter. As far as I know the matter has been resolved.”

Gibson said he got word of the resolution in mid-December. The mayor said he does not know if a financial settlement had been made and, if so, whether it was covered by the city’s insurance carrier.

“There was not any town money involved,” Gibson said.

Neither Marotta nor her legal counsel in the matter, Gregory J. Angelini, of Leominster, could be reached for comment.

Marotta was the superintendent of city public schools from July 1997 through June 30, 2010, when her most recent employment contract expired.

She initially filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination March 24, 2010, stating Gibson, who chairs the School Committee, had created a “hostile and humiliating” work environment for her by his actions that included sexual advances.

In that complaint, she also accused Gibson of gender bias regarding women’s pay and competence. Marotta said the mayor made unwelcome sexual advances and requests. She contended that because he was rejected, Gibson engineered the School Committee’s decision to not renew her contract.

Gibson has denied the allegations and noted that Marotta did not file a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination until after the School Committee voted in February 2010 to start a search for a new school superintendent.

Marotta went on to file a civil lawsuit Feb. 3, 2011, in Hampden Superior Court.

Among the claims in the lawsuit were that Gibson sexually harassed Marotta, created a hostile work environment, and retaliated and interfered with her contract.

The lawsuit also states that the School Committee ignored the hostile work environment, aided and abetted Gibson’s unlawful harassment, breached Marotta’s contract and breached public policy by having “terminated” the agreement.


Warren police investigating fatal crash on Brimfield Road

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The operator of the car involved in the Route 19 crash has not been identified.

WARREN – Police are investigating a fatal car crash that happened early Thursday on Brimfield Road (Route 19).

Sgt. Joseph R. Laflower said the accident was reported just after midnight. He said he believes that speed was a factor.

The crash happened near the Evergreen Mobile Home Park. He said the driver was heading south and struck a utility pole. The car then went across the road and struck another pole. Wires came down on the car, a Chevrolet, causing a fire, police said.

The driver, who was alone in the car, has not been identified yet.

The state police accident reconstruction team also investigated. Seat belt use is unknown.

Palmer town councilor wants Mohegan Sun to reveal design plans for proposed casino site

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"We can't sit on our thumbs and wait for Mohegan Sun and the Gaming Commission to tell us what to do. We need the information in front of us," Councilor Blake Lamothe said.

PALMER – Town Councilor Blake E. Lamothe is clamoring for Mohegan Sun representatives to release site and design plans for their proposed casino project off Thorndike Street (Route 32), and also wants residents to have the opportunity to vote on the proposal at the June election.

071111 blake lamothe.jpgBlake Lamothe

Lamothe wrote a letter to Interim Town Manager Charles T. Blanchard about his concerns.

"It is my understanding that these plans have been completed for a long time and should now be shared with the town," Lamothe wrote. "It is important that the town maintain leader status that we have enjoyed, as further delays would benefit the competition."

"We need to stay ahead of the game," Lamothe said on Friday.

Blanchard on Friday said there are many details that need to be worked out through the host community agreement and gaming license application process, and he was doubtful everything would be ready for a June vote. As town manager, he is charged with negotiating with Mohegan.

He said he understands Lamothe's concerns, but said the negotiating process is not expected to be quick.

"I can't envision any scenario that would result in a vote as early as June," Blanchard said.

A summary of the host community agreement must be printed in a local newspaper, as well as posted online on the town's website before the election, so that residents will know what the project entails. The casino applicant must reimburse the town for the expenses related to the election, Blanchard said.

Blanchard said he also doubts that Mohegan would reveal detailed plans far in advance of its competition.

Lamothe maintains that Mohegan should be able to provide the town with more detailed designs of the casino, something more substantial than the artist rendering of the proposed casino's exterior that has been released.

"They've been talking about it for four years," Lamothe said.

Lamothe said the June vote could be either binding, or non-binding.

"We need to do something before we waste a lot of time. We need to know the town is behind this," Lamothe said.

The majority of Palmer voters – 54 percent – supported a casino in a non-binding vote in 1997.

"We can't sit on our thumbs and wait for Mohegan Sun and the Gaming Commission to tell us what to do. We need the information in front of us," Lamothe said.

Town Council President Paul E. Burns agreed that the design plans should be revealed.

"They need to lead the charge, not follow the herd," Burns said.

A representative from Mohegan could not be reached for comment. Earlier this week, Mitchell G. Etess, chief executive of the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority, expressed confidence that an agreement for a casino in Palmer will go before voters in the town next year.

Just a few weeks ago, Lamothe, along with Burns, was asking Mohegan for details on how it plans to finance the project. Mohegan officials said that would be revealed as part of the application process.

Burns acknowledged reports from the Associated Press and Bloomberg News regarding Mohegan Sun’s problems with refinancing its debt.

While Burns said the reports "are concerning," he continues to remain confident in Mohegan's ability to fund the Palmer casino project.

Mohegan Sun isn't the only casino operator looking to win the Western Massachusetts casino license: Ameristar Casinos, Inc. wants to build a casino at the former Westinghouse plant in Springfield; Hard Rock International is proposing a casino for Holyoke; and Penn National Gaming of Pennsylvania also is eyeing Western Massachusetts for a site. Property in Brimfield also is being marketed for a casino by landowner David Callahan.

White House domestic policy chief Melody Barnes points out accomplishments upon exit

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Barnes, who will be gone by Tuesday, is quick to point out that there have been many domestic achievements, even though the public is dissatisfied.

Melody Barnes, Barack ObamaThis Nov. 23, 2011 photo released by the White House shows President Barack Obama talking with Domestic Policy Council Director Melody Barnes following a meeting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. Except for a few pictures missing from the walls, there is little evidence that Barnes will be gone by Jan. 3. The buzz of activity in her tidy West Wing office is consistent with the way she started as President Obama's domestic policy team director in 2009. (AP Photo/The White House, Pete Souza)


By SUZANNE GAMBOA, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Melody Barnes is leaving as White House chief domestic policy adviser at a time when President Barack Obama's administration is getting little notice for its work on the home front to fix the struggling economy.

Barnes, who will be gone by Tuesday, is quick to point out that there have been many domestic achievements, even though the public is dissatisfied.

"I completely understand what the American public is feeling," she said in an interview in her tidy West Wing office. "Real people are hurting in a significant way. ... At the same time, I'm proud of the things we've been able to accomplish over the last few years."

Her office is wrestling with multiple thorny issues now just as it was when Barnes started as Obama's domestic policy team director in 2009.

Back then, the economy plunged into free-fall and the country was in its worst economic crisis since the 1930s. Jobs were being lost at a rate of about 750,000 a month — a number Barnes still finds so staggering she said she has to double-check it every time she says it.

Homes were being foreclosed, unemployment was skyrocketing and reaching double the national average in the black community. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan dragged on, an outbreak of H1N1flu virus became a pandemic, and a tsunami that hit Japan crippled a nuclear plant near Tokyo, to name some of the highlights.

Even her chance to play golf with the president, the first time a woman joined him, came at a time of a public image crisis for Obama. The president was getting flak for playing basketball with men, fostering complaints about a boys' club in the White House.

Melody BarnesFILE - In this Aug. 8, 2011 file photo, Melody Barnes, director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, speaks during the daily news briefing at the White House in Washington. Except for a few pictures missing from the walls, there is little evidence that Barnes will be gone by Jan. 3. The buzz of activity in her tidy West Wing office is consistent with the way she started as President Obama's domestic policy team director in 2009. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

Just before Christmas, the president and Congress wrangled over a two-month extension of a Social Security payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits. Obama won a victory when the proposal won bipartisan support in the Senate and finally was accepted by House Republicans under extreme pressure.

Barnes, a Richmond, Va., native with a career in government and private sector work, is bowing out of the political arena as Obama struggles with low approval ratings on his handling of the economy.

A majority of Americans do not think the president deserves a second term, according to the most recent Associated Press-GfK poll. But at the same time, the unemployment rate has dropped to 8.6 percent, the lowest level since March 2009. The president's overall approval rating stands at 44 percent, the lowest of his term in AP-GfK surveys.

His strong stance against House Republicans in the payroll tax standoff has caused an uptick in approval ratings in subsequent polls.

Barnes expects the list of legislative victories that she and others pulled off amid the hemorrhaging economy will become more clear in the coming year as the dark clouds of the economy disperse.

She tops that list with the early work to stabilize the economy, 21 months of consistent job growth and the president's long-term investments in education overhaul, an area that became her specialty.

"Our work on education reform, it'll be part of this president's legacy," she said.

Barnes said that with a fraction of what the federal government spends annually on education, about $100 billion, from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the administration tapped into an education reform movement taking place at the grass roots among governors and local communities frustrated with the prescriptive, one-size-fits-all mandates of No Child Left Behind, the Bush administration's education cornerstone.

Valerie Jarrett, Melody BarnesIn this Oct. 28, 2009, file photo, White House Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett, left, talks with White House Domestic Policy Council Director Melody Barnes, as they wait outside the East Room of the White House in Washington, before attending the signing of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 by President Barack Obama. Except for a few pictures missing from the walls, there is little evidence that Barnes will be gone by Jan. 3. The buzz of activity in her tidy West Wing office is consistent with the way she started as President Obama's domestic policy team director in 2009. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

Congress has yet to approve revisions to No Child Left Behind, states are using up the stimulus money, and Obama's Race to the Top grant program faces spending cuts. But Barnes said Obama has given a boost to education law changes that now allow such things as connecting student performance and teacher evaluations.

Barnes, chief counsel to the late Sen. Edward Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Obama also deserves credit for passage of a health care overhaul, legislation that she had worked on for eight years with Kennedy. The Massachusetts senator spent his career trying to restructure health care.

There's also the auto industry bailout, expansion of Pell grants to help fund college education, the end of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays and work to advance civil rights, she said.

"When you are worried about day to day, it's hard to step back and to take all those other things in," Barnes said. "Although at the same time, I'm literally in the grocery store and people come up to me and say, 'Hey, you work for the president. You keep on doing what you are doing.' "

Married a few months into the president's first year, Barnes plans to spend more time with family. She is considering offers in the private sector but hasn't disclosed what those are.

11 Pioneer Valley firefighters graduate from Massachusetts Firefighting Academy

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The graduating class had 71 members from 35 separate departments across the state.

fireacad1.jpgView full sizeThe most recent graduates of the Massachusetts Firefighting Academy pose for a class picture

STOW - Eleven firefighters from seven area departments were among the recent graduates of the MassachusettsFireighting Academy's Recruit Firefighter Program.

In all, the 193rd academy graduating class had 71 members from 35 separate departments across the state. The ceremony was last week at the state Department of Fire Services in Stow.

Local graduates were Marc A. Periera, Agawam, Michael J. Cachat Jr. and Andrew C. Eisch of Greenfield, Andrew J. Markt and Michael F. Northe of Longmeadow, Robert E. Dooley and Matthew R. Niles of Ludlow, Shawn P. Crimmins and Jeremy W. McPherson of Northampton, Trisha L.F. Mieczkowski of Turners Falls, and Matthew A. Pacinella of Westfield.

To graduate, students must demonstrate proficiency in various firefighting skills and tactics, including search and rescue, ladder operations, pump operation, and fire attack. Upon completion of the program, graduates have met national standards of National Fire Protection Association 1001 and are certified to the level of Firefighter I and II, and Hazardous Materials First Responder Operational Level by the Massachusetts Fire Training Council.

State Fire Marshal Stephen D. Coan said “This rigorous professional training provides our newest firefighters with the basic skills to perform their jobs effectively and safely."

Maine police say foul play a factor in disappearance of missing toddler Ayla Reynolds

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Police investigating the disappearance of a 20-month-old girl from her father's home two weeks ago said Friday they believe foul play was involved.

Missing ToddlerThis undated photo obtained from a Facebook page shows missing toddler Alya Reynolds. Police investigating the dissapearance of the 20-month-old girl from her father's home two weeks ago said Friday, Dec. 30, 2011 they believe foul play was involved. Waterville police announced the case "has evolved from the search for a missing child to a criminal investigation." (AP Photo/Obtained From Facebook)


By DAVID SHARP, Associated Press

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Police investigating the disappearance of a 20-month-old girl from her father's home two weeks ago said Friday they believe foul play was involved.

Waterville police Chief Joseph Massey announced Friday night the case "has evolved from the search for a missing child to a criminal investigation." In a statement, he said the conclusion was based on evidence gathered over the past two weeks. He didn't elaborate.

Ayla Reynolds was last seen on Dec. 16. Her father, Justin DiPietro, told police he put her to bed that night in his Waterville home. He reported her missing the following morning.

Police previously said they believed someone had taken the girl from the home. Police have received hundreds of tips as they've searched for her.

Ayla was wearing green pajamas with polka dots and the words "Daddy's Princess" on them and had a soft cast on her broken left arm. Extensive searches of woods, waterways, fields and private properties around Waterville, a city of 16,000 residents 20 miles north of Augusta, have failed to turn up anything.

Earlier Friday, police said DiPietro and Ayla's mother, Trista Reynolds, of Portland, were cooperating with investigators.


Investigators put up crime scene tape at the father's home last week, and two of the state's top homicide prosecutors were called in to get a look at the site. WABI-TV reported that a state police forensic team was back at the home on Friday.

Missing ToddlerMaine State Police investigators work with protective clothing while gathering evidence and clues Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011, at the home in Waterville, Maine where 20-month-old Ayla Reynolds lived and disappeared last Friday. (AP Photo/The Central Maine Morning Sentinel, David Leaming)

Ayla was placed in her father's care while her mother was in a substance abuse rehabilitation program, which she has finished.

Trista Reynolds, making an appeal on national television on Thursday, said DiPietro has not returned her calls since their daughter went missing, and she asked him to reach out. On Friday, she had no further comment, her sister said.

DiPietro, addressing the public for the first time early last week, said in a statement he had "no idea what happened to Ayla or who is responsible." He said his family and friends would do "everything we can to assist in this investigation and get Ayla back home."

Former FBI profiler Clint Van Zandt said the odds of finding a child lessen if he or she isn't found within the first day or two of disappearing. But he said there's some reason for optimism because there are rare cases of missing children who turn up years later in someone's care.

"If you don't get this child back real quickly, you know that it gets harder and harder," he said. "But you can't give up hope."

Ayla ReynoldsA collection of toys and mementos are placed on the lawn in front of the Violette Ave. home in Watervile, Maine, where police and the FBI are investigating the disappearance of 20 month-old Ayla Reynolds, Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2011. (AP Photo/Michael C. York) mementos

Scott Bernstein, founder of Child Recovery International, a New York City-based organization that helps find missing children, agreed the first hours of an investigation are key in tracking down missing children as young as Ayla. Although the situation looks bleak, there's still room for hope, he said.

"One percent hope — but I'll go for that 1 percent hope," he said.

After Ayla went missing, law enforcement officials likely divided their investigation into two parts, one team looking at people with access to her, such as relatives and family friends, and another group looking at the potential for an abduction by an outsider or stranger, Van Zandt said. Under both scenarios, he said, the odds are that the person who took Ayla knew her or her family.

Strangers' abductions of children do occur, but they're rare, accounting for only 105 to 115 children out of 750,000 to 900,000 missing-persons cases each year in the United States, Van Zandt said.

Van Zandt, who has worked similar cases, said Ayla's disappearance, which once had more than 80 searchers and law enforcement officers involved, has been difficult for law enforcers as well as for distraught family members.

"As an FBI agent working these cases, you never turn off the emotional porch light," he said. "You always leave on the light with the hope that the child will come home again."

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Associated Press writer Clarke Canfield contributed to this report.

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