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

Massachusetts unemployment rate drops to 6.5 percent

$
0
0

The Massachusetts economy showed more signs of recovery last month as the unemployment rate dropped to 6.5 percent and the state added 8,700 jobs.

boston job fairIn this Feb. 27, 2012, photo, job seekers line up to speak to Trilogy's Regional Vice President Tom Elkins, far right, at a job fair in Boston. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

BOSTON (AP) — The Massachusetts economy showed more signs of recovery last month as the unemployment rate dropped to 6.5 percent and the state added 8,700 jobs.

The unemployment rate dropped in March from the 6.9 percent rate reported in February. The national unemployment rate for March was 8.2 percent.

The state Office of Labor and Workforce Development announced Thursday that including March's numbers, Massachusetts has added nearly 30,000 jobs this year.

The biggest gain came in the professional, scientific and business services sector, which added about 4,900 jobs. The trade transportation and utilities, and the education and health service sectors also added jobs.

The construction, leisure and hospitality, and government sectors lost jobs.


Springfield police identify man whose body was found inside a Loring Street residence earlier this year as Ramon Colon, 45

$
0
0

Colon's body was found inside 26 Loring St. on Feb. 22.

SPRINGFIELD – Police have identified a 45-year-old man whose body was found inside a Loring Street home nearly two months ago as Ramon L. Colon.

Colon’s death is not considered suspicious, said Officer Richard Rodrigues, a spokesman for Springfield Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet. His last known address was 769 Worthington St.

Colon is survived by his 15-year-old son, Juwan Colon, who lives in Springfield and remains under the care of his mother, Rodrigues said.

The elder Colon’s body was discovered at 26 Loring St. on Feb. 22. It took police some time to identify the man because he did not possess any identification, Rodrigues said.

Gov. Deval Patrick starts 3-day West Coast fundraising swing for President Obama

$
0
0

The governor left Thursday for a three-day West Coast swing that will include fundraisers in Los Angeles, Seattle and Portland.

BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick is embarking on another political trip to promote President Barack Obama's re-election effort.

The governor left Thursday for a three-day West Coast swing that will include fundraisers in Los Angeles and Seattle for Together PAC, a political action committee that was created by Patrick to finance his travels on behalf of the president.

The governor is also slated to deliver the keynote address at a Democratic party dinner in Portland, Ore., on Saturday night.

A report filed with the Federal Election Commission shows Together PAC raised about $253,000 in the first three months of the year, while spending about $122,000 during the period. The PAC had $380,000 in its account at the end of March.

Holyoke Veterans Services Department offers hundreds of vets access to vendors of health care, college, jobs

$
0
0

Veterans got to speak in person with officials from government and social service agencies.

vetsforum.JPGArea veterans gather at the War Memorial in Holyoke on Wednesday afternoon for an information forum with health care, job and education booths featured.


HOLYOKE – World War II naval veteran Joseph Lajoie got what he came for, an appointment scheduled at the federal veterans office in Northampton.

Ian Ortensi, a Navy veteran of the Iraq War, needs a job and hoped to get some leads.

City Veterans Services Director Debbie Malek said that’s what she had in mind for a veterans outreach forum Wednesday, former members of the armed forces from all eras getting help.

“We are doing this because we’re trying to capture veterans that don’t know that all of these services are available to them,” Malek said.

She hoped a few hundred veterans would attend the four-hour forum at the War Memorial, 310 Appleton St., she said.

Dozens of representatives of health care, job counselors, colleges and social service and government agencies were at tables in the auditorium.

They offered discussion, referrals and brochures, as well as free pens, bag clips, tote bags, pill boxes and other items bearing their organization’s logos.

Spokesman John Paradis of the Veterans Administration Central Western Massachusetts Healthcare System (commonly known as the Northampton VA) said he was telling veterans a lot of information is online.

The VA will help them secure accounts on which they can communicate with doctors and request prescriptions, he said.

Lajoie, 86, of Granby, said his service in the Navy came in the South Pacific. The forum gave him a chance to speak with staff from the Northampton VA and set an appointment, he said.

“We needed information and I wanted to see some of the office people from the VA. Very informative. The guys can get a lot out of it. It was very nice. I enjoyed it,” Lajoie said.

Ortensi, 24, of South Hadley, said he left the Navy in November 2010 after serving in the Persian Gulf. He is taking classes at Holyoke Community College without a clear idea of what he wants to do, he said.

He planned to speak with the folks at the CareerPoint table, he said.

“This is my first time coming to one of these. I need a job. I’m going to school to try to figure out what I want to major in,” Ortensi said.

At the Project New Hope table, Tina Brohman said the program is run by volunteers and provides retreats free of charge to war veterans and their families.

The three-day getaways can include yoga, accupuncture, message, meditation and child care, with the goal of helping veterans and their families with sometimes hard transitions, she said.

In Massachusetts, retreats are at Barton Camp, in North Oxford, The Elm Hill Center Mansion, in Brookfield, and Grotonwood, in Groton.

“This is 100 percent donations and it’s all done by volunteers,” Brohman said.

For information visit projectnewhopema.org

The city Veterans Services office can be reached at (413) 322-5630.

Others at the forum included the city offices of Community Development and Board of Health, Navicare health plan, Holyoke Soldiers’ Home, HAPHousing, O’Connell Senior Living, Holyoke VNA Hospice Life Care, Valley Opportunity Council, WestMass ElderCare, Food Bank of Western Massachusetts, Veteran Homestead Inc. and Soldier On.

Massachusetts unemployment rate falls to 6.5 percent

$
0
0

The private sector added 8,900 jobs in March, a gain offset by losses in government jobs.

UMass professor Robert Nakosteen says the national economic recovery has taken hold, but job growth is too slow to make much a dent in unemployment.

SPRINGFIELD - Massachusetts added 8,700 jobs in March, according to figures released Thursday by the state Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development and the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The private sector added 8,900 jobs in March, a gain offset by losses in government jobs. The gains were mostly in the categories of professional, scientific and business services; trade, transportation and utilities and education and health services.

The statewide unemployment rate fell to 6.5 percent for March, the lowest statewide unemployment rate since November of 2008 when it was 6.4 percent, according to records kept by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“This tells me the state is continuing its recovery,” said Robert A. Nakosteen, a professor of economics and statistics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Isenberg School of Management. “There is no doubt in my mind that the national recovery is now firmly established.”

But Nakosteen cautioned that the recovery is simply not creating jobs fast enough to get the large number of currently unemployed people back to work.

According to the state, Massachusetts has added 29,800 jobs so far this year. The private sector has added 31,200 jobs, but that figure was also offset by losses in government employment.

Of the gains, professional scientific and business services added 4,900 jobs in the month and 17,000 since March 2011.

“It’s consulting. It’s research and development. It’s software development,” Nakosteen said. “It’s the tip of spear in the high tech industry.”

The state said trade, transportation and utilities added 2,800 on the month and 8,100 jobs on the year. Education and health services is up 2,500 on the month, but for the year its only up a net 2,300 figuring in losses earlier over the past 12 months.

Manufacturing added 300 on the month and 1,700 on the year, mostly in durable goods.

Construction; leisure and hospitality, financial activities; government and information all lost jobs.

Nakosteen said that with so many sectors gaining he is confident that many of those jobs are in Western Massachusetts which has lagged the Boston area in job creation.

New local employment figures will not be out until next week. But in February, Springfield’s unemployment rate fell to 11.7 percent in February from 12.3 percent in January.

These job gains comes on the heals of disappointing revised job figures for 2011 showing that the state added only 2,300 jobs in the first nine months of 2011.

But Nakosteen and his fellow researchers with MassBenchmarks at the University of Massachusetts Donahue Institute there were really 36,600 jobs were created in that time period and the state’s economy was really doing well the whole time.

The problem is, Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs figures, like those released Thursday, are based on a survey of employers. Nakosteen believes the Bureau of Labor Statistics got a bad sample of employers, and talked to too many that are not doing well.

What Nakosteen and his colleagues did was look at data from the Unemployment Insurance system. Every employer has to report to that system, but the data takes a long time to analyze.

Also Thursday, The Conference Board said its Leading Economic Index for the U.S. increased 0.3 percent in March to 95.7 following a 0.7 percent increase in February, and a 0.2 percent increase in January. This The Leading Economic index has increased the sixth consecutive month, The Conference Board said in a news release. The index signals continued economic momentum despite relatively weak data on jobs, home building and output, The Conference Board, an independent research organization, said in a news release.

What's the best golf course in Western Massachusetts?

$
0
0

With dozens of courses just a short drive from Springfield, Pioneer Valley golfers are treated to incredible variety.

Gallery preview

Although some Western Massachusetts golf courses took advantage of the mild weather to remain open throughout the winter, it's traditionally April when the region's courses get into full, er, swing.

With dozens of courses just a short drive from Springfield, Pioneer Valley golfers are treated to incredible variety and good options for every level of player -- from well-maintained municipal courses to challenging destination courses.

As part of Summer-Fall 2012 Reader Raves, we're looking for the region's "must-play" course. Vote for your favorite and help spread the word about the great golf courses in the area.

Click here to browse a photo gallery of Pioneer Valley golf courses »

Click here to vote for Best Golf Course and other categories in the Reader Raves: Sports group.

• What is Reader Raves? Click here.

• How do I vote? Click here.

• Visit ReaderRaves.com to find a full list of voting categories.

Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross aids those displaced from apartment building fire in Springfield's South End

$
0
0

The Springfield Arson and Bomb Squad determined the blaze was sparked by a carelessly discarded cigarette.

Gallery preview

SPRINGFIELD – The Pioneer Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross is assisting the 13 people who were displaced Wednesday night after fire swept through their three-story apartment building in the South End.

None of the residents were injured, but one firefighter had to be treated for an eye injury, said Dennis Leger, aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant. Several pets were killed in the blaze.

The Springfield Arson and Bomb Squad determined that a cigarette, carelessly discarded on a couch on the second floor’s front exterior porch, sparked the blaze, Leger said. It was reported at 45-47 Rutledge St. at about 9 p.m.

Dawn M. Leaks, director of communications for the Pioneer Valley Chapter of the Red Cross, said personnel were on scene to provide financial aid for food, shelter and clothing to those displaced.

“As always, we provided information and referrals for recovery,” she said. “We will be in touch with them in the coming days to help them to recover.”

Leger said the second floor apartment was supposed to be vacant but was apparently in use by people not authorized to be there.

Tenants on the third and first floors were displaced because the building was declared uninhabitable from the fire, smoke and water damage.

The estimated cost of damaged was more than $80,000, Leger said.

A building next door sustained an estimated $10,000 damage when the heat from the flames caused its vinyl siding to melt, Leger said.

Lawmaker: More firings likely at US Secret Service

$
0
0

So far, three people involved in the Secret Service prostitution scandal have lost their jobs.

041912peterking.jpgIn this March 10, 2011 file photo, House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington.

WASHINGTON — A top lawmaker briefed on the investigation into a Secret Service prostitution scandal predicted more firings would follow the forced ouster of three agency employees.

"I wouldn't be surprised if you saw more dismissals and more being forced out sooner rather than later," Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., said Thursday. King is being updated on the investigation by Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan.

The Secret Service is moving quickly to quell the scandal that erupted late last week, when at least some of 11 agency employees implicated in the incident brought prostitutes back to their hotel in Cartagena, Colombia, where they were setting up security for a visit by President Barack Obama.

So far, three people involved have lost their jobs. The service said Wednesday that one supervisor was allowed to retire, and another will be fired for cause. A third employee, who was not a supervisor, has resigned.

The two supervisors are in the agency's uniformed division; one is a sergeant, according to a person familiar with Secret Service operations and refused to be identified because he was not authorized to discuss the matter.

The team under investigation includes members of the agency's "jump teams," which are sent to sites ahead of the president's arrival to set up security. Others involved are on counter-assault and counter-sniper teams. The majority of those involved are believed to be based in the Washington area.

Eight other Secret Service employees remain on administrative leave and have had their top-secret clearance revoked.

Sullivan has offered the agents under investigation the opportunity to take a polygraph test, though the agents can refuse.

The scandal also involved about 10 military service members and as many as 20 women.

King said agency investigators in Colombia still have not been able to talk to the women who were brought back to the hotel. The investigators do, however, have the names, addresses and pictures of the women, said King, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, which oversees the Secret Service.

In Washington and Colombia, separate U.S. government investigations are already under way. In addition to the Secret Service investigators in Colombia, King said he has assigned four congressional investigators to the probe. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, led by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., sought details of the Secret Service investigation, including the disciplinary histories of the agents involved.

In a letter to the Secret Service director, Issa and Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the committee's senior Democrat, said the agents "brought foreign nationals in contact with sensitive security information." The lawmakers have demanded that Sullivan provide them by May 1 with detailed information about the incident, including a full timeline of the events that unfolded in Colombia and assurances that none of the women involved were under the age of 18.

King said Sullivan took employment action against "the three people he believes the case was clearest against." The lawmaker said the agency was "reasonably confident" that drug use was not an issue with the three agents who have been forced out. But he said Secret Service investigators would continue to look into whether drugs played a role in the incident as they talk to the other eight agents involved.

Hotel workers told Secret Service investigators they found no drugs or drug paraphernalia in the rooms where the agents stayed, according to a person familiar with the investigation. The person was not authorized to discuss the probe publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, the senior Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said news of the three agents leaving the Secret Service was a positive development.

"I've always said that if heads don't roll, the culture in a federal agency will never change," the Iowa lawmaker said in a statement.

The episode took a sharp political turn Wednesday when presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney said he would fire the agents involved.

Romney told radio host Laura Ingraham that he'd "clean house" at the Secret Service.

"The right thing to do is to remove people who have violated the public trust and have put their play time and their personal interests ahead of the interests of the nation," Romney said.

While Romney suggested to Ingraham that a leadership problem led to the scandal, he told a Columbus, Ohio, radio station earlier that he has confidence in Sullivan, the head of the agency.

At least 10 military personnel who were staying at the same hotel are also being investigated for misconduct. The troops are suspected of violating curfews set by their commanders.

Two U.S. military officials have said they include five Army Green Berets. One of the officials said the group also includes two Navy Explosive Ordinance Disposal technicians, two Marine dog handlers and an Air Force airman. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is still under way.

The Secret Service's Office of Professional Responsibility, which handles that agency's internal affairs, is investigating, and the Homeland Security Department's inspector general also has been notified.

Sullivan, who this week has briefed lawmakers behind closed doors, said he has referred to the case to an independent government investigator.


Obituaries today: Raymond Jackson had long career as veterinarian

$
0
0

Obituaries from The Republican.

04_19_12_JacksonCOLOR.jpgRaymond Jackson

Raymond Thomas Jackson, 80, of West Springfield, passed away on Sunday. He grew up in Denver, and attended Lakewood High School, and having received a basketball scholarship, he went to Colorado State University. He graduated in 1957 from CSU veterinary school. He moved to Massachusetts and joined the SPCA, and subsequently started the Boston Road Animal Hospital. He then partnered with Clyde Shouse and began the Agawam Animal Hospital and later the West Springfield Animal Hospital. He retired in 1998 from veterinary medicine. He served on the boards of WGBY , AAA and the West Springfield Board of Health.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Starbucks to stop using 'crushed bug' dye in drinks

$
0
0

Cochineal dye is widely used in foods and cosmetics products such as lipstick, yogurt and shampoo.

starbucks crushed bug dyeShown is a Starbucks Coffee store on the Embarcadero in San Francisco, Friday, April 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

NEW YORK (AP) — Starbucks Corp. says it will stop using a red dye in its drinks that is derived from crushed bugs.

The Seattle-based coffee chain said in a blog post on its website that it made the decision to reformulate its drinks after feedback from consumers prompted a "thorough" evaluation.

The company says it will swap out cochineal extract, which is made from the juice of a tiny beetle, and instead use lycopene, a tomato-based extract.

Cochineal dye is widely used in foods and cosmetics products such as lipstick, yogurt and shampoo. Starbucks had used the coloring in its strawberry flavored mixed drinks and foods like the raspberry swirl cake and red velvet whoopie pie.

The company says the items will be reformulated by the end of June.

Emilio Fusco mob trial: Defense lawyer begins cross-examination of Anthony Arillotta

$
0
0

Fusco's lawyer began peppering Arillotta with questions about his plea deal with the government, breaking his oath to the Mafia and generally attempting to portray him as a gun-slinging, double-crossing opportunist.

Gallery preview

NEW YORK — A defense lawyer for mob murder defendant Emilio Fusco on Thursday began battering prosecution witness Anthony J. Arillotta in an ongoing trial in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

Arillotta, 44, of Springfield, was once a mob soldier in Western Massachusetts before his arrest for the 2003 contract hit on his onetime boss, Adolfo "Big Al" Bruno. He entered the Witness Protection Program shortly after and has been a central witness in prosecutions of gangsters from the Pioneer Valley to New York City.

Over just about three days of direct testimony, Arillotta told jurors that he and Fusco plotted and carried out the murders of Bruno and police informant Gary D. Westerman the same year, plus myriad shakedowns of local business owners, street lotteries and illegal gaming schemes.

cryarillotta.jpgAnthony Arillotta

Fusco, 43, of Longmeadow, a previously convicted loan shark and a "made man" in the New York-based Genovese organized crime family, which historians say is the most powerful and feared of the city's five crime Italian Mafia crime families.

Under a plea deal with prosecutors, Arillotta has readily admitted a startling history of violence – including the hit on Bruno, the attempted fatal shooting of a union official on a Bronx street in 2003 and the grisly shooting and bludgeoning of Westerman the same year.

Fusco has denied any involvement in the Bruno and Westerman murders. He is not charged in connection with the attempt on the union boss' life.

Fusco's lawyer, Richard B. Lind, late this morning began peppering Arillotta with questions about his plea deal with the government and his breaking of his oath to the Mafia. Generally Lind attempted to portray him as a gun-slinging, double-crossing opportunist. Specifically, Lind asked Arillotta about $80,000 to $100,000 in cash that remained hidden in his basement from his now-ex-wife after his arrest in 2010.

"This is the mother of your three children? You never told her where that money was ... and she had to go on food stamps?" Lind asked, prompting Arillotta to give a hedged answer indicating that it wasn't necessary for his wife to seek government assistance after the illegal profits stopped rolling in.

"So why did she go on food stamps then, as a new experience?" Lind asked, forcing Arillotta to admit he passed along money to his mistress in 2010 while his ex-wife struggled to support their children.

Cross-examination of Arillotta is expected to continue through Thursday afternoon. Testimony will suspend Friday and resume in federal court on Monday.

Rice farm stand could reopen on Main Street in Wilbraham

$
0
0

The Rice family owned Rice Fruit Farm for more than 100 years; the project needs approval of a zoning amendment at the annual Town Meeting.

2004 rice fruit farm stand.JPGDominic Maloni of Agawam wants to reopen the former Rice Fruit Farm agricultural farm stand in Wilbraham and sell the same things that Jesse Rice sold for many years, including apples, ice cream, pies, muffins, cookies and Christmas trees.

WILBRAHAM — Anthony and Cynthia Maloni of Agawam and their son, Dominic Maloni of Wilbraham, plan to reopen the Rice farm stand at 757 Main St. if a zone change is approved at the May 14 annual Town Meeting.

The Malonis currently operate Cindy’s Drive In on Route 202 in Granby, which sells burgers and ice cream.

The Rice farm stand has been closed for three years. Jesse Rice, the longtime owner of Rice Fruit Farm, died in November 2010 at the age of 91. The Rice family owned Rice Fruit Farm for more than 100 years. A large portion of the property has been preserved as Rice Nature Preserve.

Dominic Maloni said he wants to reopen the agricultural farm stand and sell the same things that Jesse Rice sold for many years, including apples, ice cream, pies, muffins, cookies, and Christmas trees.

Maloni said he is talking to the Rice family’s baker about coming back to work.

Planning Board member Richard Butler said he has heard a lot of “grassroots support” in town for getting the farm stand up and running.

“Everybody is for it,” Butler said. “There is universal support.”

A zone change will be brought to the May 14 annual Town Meeting seeking approval of a zoning amendment for a heritage farm stand mixed use development.

If the zone change is approved, the Malonis will seek site plan approval for the reuse of the farm stand from the Planning Board.

At a public hearing on the proposed zoning amendment on Wednesday, Frederic Fuller said the heritage farm stand use calls for agricultural products to be sold from the region. Other uses such as greenhouse uses, food services and an art gallery also would be permitted.

Frederick Coolidge of Main Street, an abutter to the property, said the only proposed use he would oppose would be a blacksmith shop on the property because it would be “noisy and smoky.”

“We will strike that use,” Butler said.

Maloni said there is very little business on Main Street, so he believes the farm stand will be a welcome use.

The earliest the farm stand will open is September, Maloni said.

Sen. John Kerry honors Kathy Kerrigan of Springfield, future US Tax Court judge

$
0
0

On her last day of work for his office in Washington, U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., honored Springfield native Kathy Kerrigan, as she embarks on her next life chapter as a U.S. Tax Court Judge.

Kathy Kerrigan U.S. Tax JudgeView full sizeSpringfield native Kathy Kerrigan, center, sits with her husband Patrick at her confirmation hearing before the Finance Committee on Nov. 11, 2011. (Photo courtesy of Whitney Smith/Sen. John Kerry's office)

On her last day of work for his office in Washington, U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., honored Springfield native Kathy Kerrigan, as she embarks on her next life chapter as a U.S. Tax Court Judge.

Kerrigan, a daughter of former Springfield mayor William C. Sullivan, was nominated to the position in May 2011 by President Barack Obama. Almost a year later on March 29, the U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed her nomination.

Kerrigan has worked for the United States Congress for 14 years, including six years for Kerry's office.

During a speech on the Senate floor on Thursday, Kerry spoke highly of Kerrigan's character, reflecting on how she reacted when the June 1 tornadoes ripped through the Bay State last year.

"Last summer, when deadly tornadoes ripped through her hometown of Springfield, the first thing Kathy did was to make sure her parents were safe," Kerry said. "But the second thing she did was get in the car and drive to work. Instead of coming home to Massachusetts, she came to work in the Senate, on a bright Sunday morning. And she got busy, working on disaster tax legislation to help her friends and family and neighbors. She didn't see arcane tax legislation, she saw bricks and mortar, lumber and nails, to help her community put their lives back together."



Kerry said that Kerrigan's dedication to her work and her desire to do the right thing will make her a "phenomenal tax judge."

"Everything I admire about Kathy as a public servant really is written into her DNA, literally. It's the result of growing up in Springfield, Massachusetts, where her father, Bill Sullivan, served as mayor," Kerry said in a statement. "As much as I admire the special energy Kathy brought to her job, what I admire the most about her is her moral compass – her commitment to public service. I will miss the energy, creativity, and dedication she brought to my office. But I know she will bring those same qualities -- heart and head both – to the federal bench."

Kerrigan earned her B.S. from Boston College and her J.D. from the University of Notre Dame. Before arriving in Congress, she was a Partner at Baker and Hostetler LLP, working in the government affairs practice group. She also previously served as legislative director for Congressman Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield.

Restraining order: Chicopee shooter Carlos Laguer, wielding gun, held woman hostage 7 hours in prior incident

$
0
0

The woman, in her request for a restraining order against Laguer, wrote that she and her children feared for their lives.

Gallery preview

CHICOPEE — Chicopee shooter Carlos Laguer, wielding a gun, held a woman hostage for seven hours in her home late last year, according to information in a restraining order that she subsequently took out against him.

The 41-year-old Laguer violated that restraining order last Friday morning when he entered the same woman's current apartment on the first floor at 102 West St., setting off a violent chain of events that saw a quiet neighborhood riddled with gunfire, the wounding of a state trooper and his own death by gunfire – perhaps by his own hand.

Trooper John Vasquez, the first to respond to a report of a domestic disturbance at the West Street apartment, suffered gunshot wounds to his hand and lower left leg. He was admitted to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield and is now recuperating at home.

Hampden County District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni issued an update on the investigation this afternoon. The report can be viewed below.

The woman wrote in her affidavit for the restraining order, filed in Springfield District Court on Nov. 17, that Laguer threw a plate of food at her, threw bedroom furniture down the stairs, punched her in the right thigh, aggressively held her down and slapped her and held her hostage for seven hours in her bedroom with a gun.

She wrote that Laguer threatened her in front of her two children “putting fear in their hearts. I am in so much fear of my life and my children.”

She wrote that Laguer was not employed, but received Supplemental Security Income.

She asked for and got the order to say Laguer could have “no contact with my kids.”

The restraining order went into effect on Nov. 21 and would have expired on Dec. 5 of this year. In the restraining order, the man is referred to as Carlos Gonzalez-Laguer.

Hampden DA Press Release on Carlos Laguer Chicopee Shooting

Laguer had a long history of domestic abuse, illegal gun possession and assaults against police officers and others in Western Massachusetts, according to his conviction summary, provided by the state Department of Criminal Justice Information Services.

That history yielded at least 11 convictions in Springfield, Holyoke and Northampton district courts and numerous jail sentences served.

Information in a court file pertaining to Laguer’s most recent convictions, in Springfield District Court in 2004, shows that three women had taken out restraining orders against him for short periods of time. One of them had taken out restraining orders a number of different times against him.

PM News Links: Boston College trustee resigns over sex abuse case, Boston University graduate student killed in shooting and more

$
0
0

A New Hampshire police chief killed in the line of duty was remembered as a hero who put fellow officers' lives first, a devoted family man and a dear friend, during funeral services.

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


Levon Helm, key member of The Band, dies at 71

$
0
0

Levon Helm, a key member of the seminal rock group The Band who lent his distinctively Southern voice to classics like "The Weight" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," has died at age 71.

Levon HelmFILE - In this Dec. 3, 2007 file photo, musician Levon Helm appears on the new "Imus in the Morning" program at New York. A message posted Tuesday, April 17, 2012 on the 71-year-old musician's website by his family says "Levon is in the final stages of his battle with cancer." Helm was diagnosed with throat cancer in 1998 and the illness reduced his voice to a whisper. But he still continued to sing on albums and at rollicking concerts at his Woodstock home. Helm was a key member of The Band and lent his distinctive Southern voice to classics like "The Weight" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." (AP Photo/Richard Drew, file)

MICHAEL HILL
Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Levon Helm, The Band's commanding drummer and singer, whose solid beat and Arkansas twang helped define classics from the tragic "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" to the playful "Up on Cripple Creek," died Thursday. He was 71.

Helm, who was found to have throat cancer in 1998, died peacefully Thursday afternoon, according to his website. On Tuesday, a message on the site said he was in the final stages of cancer.

Helm and his band mates — Rick Danko, Garth Hudson, Robbie Robertson and Richard Manuel — were musical virtuosos who returned to the roots of American music in the late 1960s as other rockers veered into psychedelia, heavy metal and jams. The group's 1968 debut, "Music From the Big Pink," and its follow-up, "The Band," remain landmark albums of the era, and songs such as "The Weight," ''Dixie Down" and "Cripple Creek" have become rock standards.

Early on, The Band backed Bob Dylan on his sensational and controversial electric tours of 1965-66 and collaborated with him on the legendary "Basement Tapes," which produced "I Shall Be Released," ''Tears of Rage" and many other favorites.

It was a quintessential American band, but only Helm came from the U.S.

The son of an Arkansas cotton farmer, he was just out of high school when he joined rocker Ronnie Hawkins for a tour of Canada in 1957 as the drummer for the Hawks. That band eventually recruited a group of Canadian musicians who, along with Helm, spent grueling years touring rough bars in Canada and the South.

They would split from Hawkins, hook up with Dylan and eventually call themselves The Band — a conceit they well lived up to.

In some ways, The Band was the closest this country ever came to the camaraderie and achievement of the Beatles. Each of the five members brought special talents that through years of touring, recording and living together blended into a unique sound.

The tall, lanky Robertson was an expert blues-rock guitarist and the group's best lyricist, his songs inspired in part by Dylan and by the stories Helm would tell him of the South. The baby-faced Danko was a fluid bassist, an accomplished singer and occasional writer. The bearish Hudson was a virtuoso and eccentric who could seemingly master any instrument, especially keyboards, while the sad-eyed Manuel's haunting falsetto on "Whispering Pines," ''Tears of Rage" and others led Helm to call him the group's lead singer.

But for many Band admirers, that honor belonged to the short, feisty Helm, whose authoritative twang once was likened to a town crier calling a meeting to order. He not only sang "Dixie Down," he inhabited it, becoming the Confederate Virgil Caine, "hungry, just barely alive," his brother killed by the Yankees, the South itself in ruins. It was the kind of heartbreaking, complicated story and performance that had even Northerners rooting for the proud and desperate Virgil.

"The Weight" and many other songs were true collaborations: Helm's voice was at the bottom, Danko's in the middle and Manuel on top. Helm — the group's musical leader on stage — played drums loose-limbed and funky, shoulders hunched and head to the side when he sang.

But the group, especially Manuel, struggled with drugs and alcohol. While Danko and Manuel shared songwriting credits in the early years, Robertson was essentially the lone writer for the last few albums. By the middle of the decade, Robertson, especially, was burned out and wanted to get off the road.

They bid farewell to live shows with a bang with the famous "Last Waltz" concert in 1976. Eric Clapton, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell and Dylan were among the stars who played the show in San Francisco, filmed by Martin Scorsese for a movie of the same name, released in 1978.

"The Last Waltz" is regarded by many as the greatest of concert films, but it also helped lead to a bitter split between Robertson and Helm, once the best of friends.

Robertson became close to Scorsese during the production, and Helm believed the movie was structured to make Robertson the leader and advance his own movie career. They rarely spoke after, despite efforts by Hawkins and others to intervene.

While Helm would accuse Robertson of being on a star trip, Helm, ironically, was the more successful actor, with acclaimed roles in "Coal Miner's Daughter," ''The Right Stuff" and other films. And no one who watched "The Last Waltz" could forget Helm's performance of "Dixie Down," shot mostly in closeup, his face squeezed with emotion.

In his memoir, "This Wheel's on Fire," Helm said some hard feelings about Robertson also included his getting songwriting credits on Band songs that other members considered group efforts. Robertson would deny the allegations. On his Facebook page this week, he revealed that he had been devastated to learn of Helm's illness and visited him in the hospital.

"I sat with Levon for a good while, and thought of the incredible and beautiful times we had together," Robertson wrote.

Without Robertson, The Band reunited in the 1980s but never approached its early success. Manuel hanged himself in a Winter Park, Fla., hotel room in 1986. Danko died in his home near Woodstock in 1999, a day after his 56th birthday.

Highlights from the '90s did include The Band playing at a Dylan tribute concert at Madison Square Garden in 1992 and a collaboration among Helm, Danko and Keith Richards on the rocker "Deuce and a Quarter."

While Helm's illness reduced his voice to something close to a whisper, it did not end his musical career. Beset by debt, in 2004 he began a series of free-wheeling late night shows in his barn in Woodstock that were patterned after medicine shows from his youth. Any night of the bi-weekly Midnight Rambles could feature Gillian Welch, Elvis Costello or his daughter Amy on vocals and violin.

He recorded "Dirt Farmer" in 2007, which was followed by "Electric Dirt" in 2009. Both albums won Grammys. He won another this year for "Ramble at the Ryman."

Original members of The Band were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

___

Associated Press writer Hillel Italie in New York contributed to this report.

DA's preliminary report: Chicopee shooter Carlos Lageur had 206 bullets available

$
0
0

Lageur had 206 rounds of ammunition, in addition to the ammunition loaded into the weapons found at the 102 West St. scene, available to him.

Gallery preview

SPRINGFIELD — Hampden District Attorney Mark Mastroianni released the preliminary results of the investigation into the shootout in Chicopee last Friday that left the shooter, Carlos Lageur, dead and a Massachusetts State Police trooper and a Springfield woman injured.

The report states that Lageur had at least two handguns, an assault rifle and 206 rounds of ammunition, in addition to the ammunition loaded into the weapons found at the 102 West St. scene, available to him.

According to the report, an autopsy showed that Lageur died of a self-inflicted gunshot to the head.

Read Mastroianni's full report here:

Hampden DA Press Release on Carlos Laguer Chicopee Shooting

West Springfield Town Council to take up bonding for library project at May 7 board meeting

$
0
0

City officials are not slated to meet with the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners about a project involving the West Springfield Public Library early June..


WEST SPRINGFIELD – A special Town Council meeting set for Monday on the issue of bonding for a West Springfield Public Library building project has been canceled and the subject will be taken up at the board’s next meeting instead.

The council’s next meeting will be at 7 p.m. May 7 in the municipal building.

The special meeting had been set for Monday to accommodate the fact that the Massachusetts Board of Library Trustees had been expected to meet with city officials May 3 about the undertaking.

However, Town Council President Kathleen A. Bourque said Thursday that officials have learned they will not be meeting with the state board then, but will speak with trustees during their June 7 meeting instead.

The council has had a request for bonding $7.1 million for a new library before it since before former Mayor Edward J. Gibson left office in early January.

The state board last year awarded the city a $6.3 million grant to build a new library on the site of Mittineague School. However, city officials scotched that $13.4 million plan because the city did not get grant money from the Massachusetts School Building Authority to expand Tatham School to accommodate Mittineague students.

The state library board had originally given the city until Jan. 30 of this year to get local funding in place for that proposal. However, it later gave the city until June 30 to get funding in place for a revamped library project.

The city’s New Library Ad Hoc Committee is currently eyeing renovating and expanding the current library. It is a Carnegie-funded structure constructed in 1916 at 200 Park St. and that was added onto in 1958 and 1978.

In keeping with the procedure for funding such projects, Gibson’s request did not taken into account a $2 million fund-raising campaign for the proposal by local library officials.

Mayor Gregory C. Neffinger has said he likes the idea of keeping the library at its current site, but wants to make sure bonding for any project would not result in spikes in the annual amount the city pays to cover its bonding.

He noted that the city still has yet to float bonds for the new $107.1 million high school under construction as well as the $10.6 million Southwick well field transmission water main project.

The mayor said he wants to keep the proportion of the city budget used to pay down bonds about the same from year to year.



Monson maintenance department proposal opposed by Parks and Recreation commissioners

$
0
0

“The way (parks and recreation) runs now works for many reasons . . . You’re trying to disassemble something that works,” Parks and Recreation Commissioner Stephen O’Shea said. “If it’s not broken, what are we trying to fix?”

MONSON – An attempt by town officials to improve efficiency by creating a maintenance department encompassing the cemetery and parks and recreation departments prompted concerns from two parks and recreation commissioners who oppose the proposal. They expressed concern that the recreation budget would suffer.

The maintenance department issue was discussed at the April 10 selectmen’s meeting, which parks and recreation commissioners Stephen P. Slozak and Stephen P. O’Shea attended.

“The way (parks and recreation) runs now works for many reasons . . . You’re trying to disassemble something that works,” O’Shea said. “If it’s not broken, what are we trying to fix?”

“You’re not even open to the possibility that things could work better,” Selectmen Chairman Richard Smith said.

Smith explained that they are looking to eliminate redundancy and save money by combining the departments. O’Shea said the town hasn’t bought equipment for the parks department in a decade, and asked how recreation programs would be affected. O’Shea said they would support having the cemetery superintendent position absorbed by the parks and recreation director. Paul B. Lovell Sr., the former cemetery superintendent, died in February, and his position has not been filled. O’Shea also suggested just creating a “recreation director.”

Selectman Edward A. Maia said he thinks something is broken, as taxpayers are supporting two departments that “are really seasonal departments.”

“We’re elected by the people in this town to preserve recreation,” said O’Shea, adding that they are concerned that in these tough budgetary times, recreation will be the first on the “chopping block” if the maintenance department proposal goes through.

“We were elected to look after the whole town. Just like you’re sticking up for recreation, we’re sticking up for the entire town,” Smith said.

There was a plan to bring the maintenance department proposal before annual Town Meeting voters on May 14, but Town Administrator Gretchen E. Neggers said that is doubtful now, given the opposition to it. She added that when they approach the budget process, they intend to distribute cuts evenly, and there is no intent to “gut recreation.” Neggers said there have been widespread reductions throughout town departments, and said parks and recreation has not experienced a layoff.

Neggers also looked into statements that the commissioners made regarding recreation user fees being used to pay for lawn mowers. At the April 17 meeting, she said that wasn’t the case. Neggers said a lot of maintenance duties fall to her, and if there were a department, it could deal with lights being out, boilers breaking and animals in buildings. She added that the cemetery commission was “open-minded” to the maintenance proposal.

Parks and recreation has a director, part-time secretary, a full-time laborer and seasonal help. Cemetery usually has a superintendent and one laborer. A part-time maintenance worker had their hours increased to help the cemetery department now that there is no superintendent.

Emilio Fusco's lawyer tries to erode star prosecution witnesses' credibility in federal mob case

$
0
0

Fusco, of Longmeadow, is facing a life sentence if convicted of racketeering and murder charges after what is expected to be a three-week trial in federal court in Manhattan,

This is an updated version of a story posted at 2:03 this afternoon.


Emilio Fusco 91311.jpgEmilio Fusco

NEW YORK – A defense lawyer for mob murder defendant Emilio Fusco began trying to erode the star prosecution witness’ credibility on Thursday in U.S. District Court, highlighting a history of broken promises, murderous intentions and a beholden status to the government.

Fusco, of Longmeadow, Mass., is facing a life sentence if convicted of racketeering and murder charges after what is expected to be a three-week trial in federal court in Manhattan, listened to nearly three days of testimony by Mafia turncoat Anthony J. Arillotta, who testified he and Fusco once toasted a brotherhood with cognac after helping bludgeon a police informant to death in 2003. Fusco is accused in that slaying, the contract murder of Springfield, Mass., mob boss Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno the same year, plus drug-dealing and extortions he allegedly forged with Arillotta.

In exchange for his testimony in this trial and one previously, Arillotta may face very few years behind bars, Fusco’s lawyer was quick to point out to jurors during a cross-examination that began just before noon on Thursday and continued throughout the afternoon.

“So you could get five years or three years or time served?” defense attorney Richard B. Lind asked Arillotta, who conceded that it is a possibility at sentencing, which has yet to be scheduled.

Arillotta, of Springfield, turned government witness shortly after his own arrest in the Bruno case in 2010. He testified last year in a trial against two of his most trusted enforcers, Fotios “Freddy” Geas and Ty Geas, both formerly of West Springfield, Mass., and the onetime acting boss of the New York-based Genovese crime family, Arthur “Artie” Nigro, of Bronx, N.Y. Those three were convicted of murder and other crimes and are serving life sentences in prison.

Lind began peppering Arillotta with questions about his plea agreement with federal prosecutors early on in questioning, emphasizing that the government became Arillotta’s only escape from a potential death penalty or life behind bars after his arrest in this case.

“(Otherwise) you could have had Clarence Darrow arguing your case and it wouldn’t have made any difference, right?” Lind said.

“I don’t know who Clarence Darrow is,” Arillotta replied, after a pause.

However, if Arillotta is not an American legal scholar, he sounded on the witness stand like a Mafia scholar and has proven to be a supremely composed witness, in the previous trial and so far in this one. Under days of direction examination by Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel S. Goldman, Arillotta schooled jurors on Mafia captains versus soldiers, “shylock” schemes, mark-up practices on drug deals and the many ways he and others plotted to take out Bruno amid a power play in 2003.

With the green-light from Nigro and other New York mob bosses, Arillotta testified that he, Fusco, the Geases and fellow Western Massachusetts gangster Felix Tranghese plotted several potential ways to kill Bruno before he was actually shot dead by a paid gunman on Nov. 23, 2003. Tranghese has pleaded guilty in connection with Bruno’s murder and is cooperating with the prosecution.

They contemplated luring him on a car ride to New York City, killing him at a dinner party, or with a “car squisher” one of Fusco’s friends owned, but rejected a suggestion by Tranghese that they shoot Bruno outside Arillotta’s baby daughter’s baptismal party in Southwick, Mass.

It was ultimately deemed that Bruno should be shot “cowboy style” in public in a dark parking lot in Springfield by paid gunman Frankie Roche, also scheduled to testify in this trial next week.

Lind spent most of the afternoon trying to trip Arillotta up on dates and details, although Arillotta remained fairly unflappable. Lind also highlighted for jurors that Arillotta left his now-ex-wife to apply for food stamps for their children once he was arrested in 2010, while funneling cash he had stashed in his basement to his mistress. Arillotta also conceded he almost immediately broke his oath to Mafia bosses by telling family members and close friends he had gotten “made” in August of 2003.

His cross-examination is scheduled to continue on Monday. Testimony will suspend Friday.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images