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Westfield officials get tour of new Armbrook Village assisted living facility

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Mayor Daniel Knapik said the the new community at 551 North Road is another key factor in the city’s redevelopment efforts.

Tadd McClellan 12513.jpg Tadd M. McClellan, exeuctive vice president of management for Armbrook Village, stands in the kitchen of one of the faciltiy’s upgraded apartments during a tour for community members Friday.  

WESTFIELD – Developers led a tour Friday of the $19.4 million Armbrook Village senior independent/assisted living housing project, which is scheduled to open April 1.

Mayor Daniel M. Knapik said the the new community at 551 North Road is another key factor in the city’s redevelopment efforts.

“Armbrook Village is a vital addition to the Westfield in the contribution it is making to the growing economy in the region by adding more than 75 new full-time and part-time jobs,” he said.

There will be a job fair at the site on Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. for new employees who are to be trained and in place by mid-March.

Tadd M. McClellan, executive vice president of management for parent company Senior Living Residences, touted the personal connection he and developer Michael F. McCarthy have had in the project, and will continue to have.

“We know how our own families could have benefited from a place like this,” he said.

The 109,000-square-foot facility offers a program dedicated to Alzheimer’s patients within its Compass Memory Support Neighborhood, which is affiliated with Boston University’s School of Medicine’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center.

The inspiration for the development and its memory-care unit came from McCarthy’s late mother, Jean, whose influence continues at Armbrook where a second-floor arts, media and computer room abuts Jean’s Kitchen, a kitchen that will be used for cooking demonstrations and projects for the residents.

Among the 122 studio, single and double apartments are a dining room, a private dining room, a fitness center, putting green, patio garden, a theater, an Internet café, a pub, a chapel and even something just for the men – a room equipped with a big screen television, card tables and furnished in rich leather.

The project has received tax-increment financing from the city and the state that should save the project $1.3 million in property taxes over five years.

McClellan said prices at Armbrook will vary depending on the amount of care require and the apartment. Independent living units will range from $2,250 a month for a studio to $3,280 a month for a two-bedroom; assisted living will range from $3,850 to $4,995 and month; and memory-care starts at $4,980 and goes up to $7,500 a month for double-occupancy, typically used by a husband and a wife with memory problems.


Improv Asylum to headline Holyoke public schools comedy night fundraiser

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The event begins at 6 p.m. and the show goes on at 9 p.m.

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HOLYOKE - A show of sketch comedy and improvisation by Boston's Improv Asylum is set for Feb. 22 in a fund-raiser for the public schools.

The event will begin at 6 p.m. with hors d’oeuvres, specialty food stations and cash bar. The show will start at 9 p.m. at the Log Cabin Banquet and Meeting House, 500 Easthampton Road, according to a prepared statement issued by the Friends of the Holyoke Public Schools Inc.

Tickets are $50 each and available at The Log Cabin website at www.logcabin-delaney.com

Barnes, Otis Air National Guard employees seek payment over claims of lost wages, benefits

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Currently, Barnes has about 50 civilian workers, including 15 security officers; the total number of civilians at Otis was not available. Watch video

 

WESTFIELD — Dozens of state employees at Barnes and Otis Air National Guard hope to be compensated for benefits they say they lost while being incorrectly classified as civilians.

Raul C. Santos, a security officer and union representative, said guards, engineers, maintenance workers and other employees at the two bases were made state employees in 2010 following unrelated state and federal audits of the Massachusetts National Guard.

The audit revealed that civilians working at Barnes and Otis should be classified as state workers, not private-sector employees, Santos said.

“We should have been public employees and should have received the benefits of public employees,” said Santos, steward for Local 888 of the Service Employees Union, which represents about 30 security officers at Barnes and Otis.

“We just want what we were entitled to all along,” he added.

A spokesman for the Massachusetts National Guard said the guards are negotiating a contract and would not comment on their claims. “We don’t want to negotiate in public,” said Major Lisa M. Ahaesy, public affairs officer.

A union steward at Barnes, William Matthieson, declined to comment.

Santos said the current and former employees at Barnes and Otis will consider a class action lawsuit suit to recover lost wages and benefits.

Santos estimated the several hundred former civilian employees were never able to contribute to pension plans, leaving them with nothing when they retired.

“We’re not going to sue them for $100 million, but they were responsible for this,” he added.

Civilian employees at both bases are paid with federal funds. Currently, Barnes has about 50 civilian workers, including 15 security officers; the total number of civilians at Otis was not available Friday.

Slain New Mexico family remembered during crowded service

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More than 2,000 people gathered to honor the memory of a New Mexico family gunned down in their home last week.

1 26 13 nehemiah griego new mexico shooting.jpg This undated photo provided by Eric Griego shows Nehemiah Griego, who is charged with killing his father, mother and three youngest siblings in Albuquerque, N.M., on Jan. 19.  

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – The waves of emotion brought tears, laughs and prayerful reflection Friday as more than 2,000 people gathered to remember five members of a New Mexico family gunned down in their home last weekend.

Following a police escort, fellow chaplains and members of the Albuquerque Fire Department lined the procession for the memorial service held at one of the city's largest churches. Bagpipes played and the urns of former pastor Greg Griego, his wife Sarah and their three young children were carried into the church.

Family members recalled Greg Griego's lumbering walk, his hearty laugh and his endless commitment to helping others to turn their lives around. His wife, known for her cooking, and their children were just as much a part of that ministry. The family was always a front-row fixture at church services.

The crowd prayed for the Griegos and for their 15-year-old son, Nehemiah, who remains in custody after being charged with the killings.

Annette Griego, one of Greg Griego's adult daughters, told those at the service that her father was a man whose heart was after God.

"My dad never gave up on me. He never gave up on any of us. He never stopped giving us Jesus and so I know he would want us to do the exact same thing for our brother, Nehemiah," she said. "So if you wonder where we stand, we stand alongside our brother."

"We stand confident that God will take this tragedy and use it for something good," she said.

News of the slayings has reverberated throughout the community, where Greg Griego – a former gang member turned pastor – was known for his work with jail inmates, his service at local rescue missions and his spiritual guidance for firefighters and members of the military.

Friends said Griego and his teenage son went on missions to Mexico and that the boy was a talented drummer who played with the church's youth band.

On Friday, family, friends and members of the Calvary Albuquerque church who watched the boy grow up continued to struggle, trying to make sense of the tragedy.

Nehemiah Griego was just a normal teen to Vince Harrison, a former police officer who had known the family for about 10 years through his security work at the church.

"He did not fit the criteria of a kid who was crazy into guns and wanted to hurt people. That's absolutely false," Harrison said.

The question of how and why such a tragedy could happen to the Griegos haunts family members and fellow churchgoers as lawmakers across the country debate whether more gun control laws would keep another shooting from happening, even though the signs of brewing tragedy are often impossible to spot.

Public defender Jeff Buckels said in a statement that it's too early for anyone to rush to judgment about the teen's mental state, motives or plans. He accused the Bernalillo County Sheriff's Department of parceling out limited bits of information that have led to "sensational headlines that threaten to finish Nehemiah's case in the public mind before it has fairly begun."

Sheriff Dan Houston has said he stands by the facts as presented in the investigation.

Griego is facing murder and child abuse charges in the deaths of his parents and three younger siblings – all found shot to death inside their rural home south of Albuquerque on Jan. 19.

Detectives were at the home for two days collecting evidence. They also have been reviewing text messages and calls between Griego and his 12-year-old girlfriend and security video from Calvary, where the teen apparently spent much of the day following the early morning shootings.

After the killings, authorities allege that Griego reloaded his parents' two semi-automatic rifles and put them in the family van and planned to gun down Wal-Mart shoppers. Houston has said investigators have no information that Griego actually went to a Wal-Mart that day.

Buckels, the defense attorney, promised he will consult with mental health experts and investigate the effects of violent video games. Authorities have said Griego liked to play "Modern Warfare" and "Grand Theft Auto."

Ware firefighters on scene of East Street blaze; 5 people displaced

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The fire was blamed on an overloaded electrical circuit.

WARE - Firefighters are on the scene of an apartment building fire at 50 East St., along a section of Route 9 just past the center of town.

The fire, reported just before 8 p.m., was extinguished before 10 p.m. but firefighters were still at the scene cleaning up, according to fire officials.

The Pioneer Valley chapter of the American Red Cross was dispatching a team to offer assistance at the scene. Five people were displaced by the fire.

CBS 3 Springfield, the media partner of The Republican and Masslive.com, reports from the scene that the fire caused up to $20,000 damage. A preliminary investigation is leading investigators to term it an accidental fire caused by an overloaded circuit.

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Long Island teenager charged with Twitter threat to blow up rival high school's gym

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Steven Taggert was arrested on a false-reporting charge.

ISLIP, N.Y. – Police say a Long Island teenager’s Twitter threat to blow up a rival high school’s gym has spurred his arrested and prompted school officials to bar all students from the two schools’ basketball game.

Steven Taggert was arrested Friday on a false-reporting charge. Police say he wasn’t actually poised to attack Kings Park High School. A man who answered the phone at Taggert’s Islip home declined to comment and hung up.

Suffolk County police say Islip and Kings Park students were trash-tweeting ahead of Friday’s matchup.

Police say the 16-year-old Taggert tweeted that he’d gotten a bomb to blow up the Kings Park gym.

Sgt. James Murphy says Kings Park ultimately decided not to let any students into the game.

Principal Lino Bracco didn’t immediately answer an email message.

Massachusetts ending popular stove upgrade program

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The state Department of Energy Resources said the program is running out of funds and can’t take new applications after this weekend.

BOSTON – Massachusetts is winding down a popular program to encourage people to get rid of inefficient wood or coal stoves after giving out nearly $1 million in rebates.

The state Department of Energy Resources said Friday the popular program is running out of funds and can’t take new applications after this weekend. Written applications must be postmarked by Saturday and online applications submitted by 5 p.m. Sunday.

Low income residents who qualify could receive a $2,000 voucher to buy newer, lower-polluting models. Other residents are eligible for a $1,000 rebate.

The pilot program was launched in late December with $100,000. Another $800,000 was put into the program this month, and that’s almost spoken for. A $250,000 pledge from the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center is expected to cover the final applications.

White House, senators launching immigration push

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The proposals from President Obama and lawmakers will signal the start of what is expected to be a contentious and emotional process with deep political implications.

1 25 13 jay carney white house press secretary.jpg White House press secretary Jay Carney at a news briefing.  

By ERICA WERNER and JULIE PACE

WASHINGTON – Reviving an issue that has languished for years, President Barack Obama will launch a campaign next week aimed at overhauling the nation's flawed immigration system and creating legal status for millions, as a bipartisan Senate group nears agreement on achieving the same goals.

The proposals from Obama and lawmakers will mark the start of what is expected to be a contentious and emotional process with deep political implications. Latino voters overwhelmingly backed Obama in the 2012 election, leaving Republicans grappling for a way to regain their standing with an increasingly powerful pool of voters.

The president will press his case for immigration changes during a trip to Las Vegas on Tuesday. The Senate working group is also aiming to outline its proposals next week, according to a Senate aide.

Administration officials say Obama's second-term immigration push will be a continuation of the principles he outlined during his first four years in office but failed to act on. He is expected to revive his little-noticed 2011 immigration "blueprint," which calls for a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants that includes paying fines and back taxes; increased border security; mandatory penalties for businesses that employ unauthorized immigrants; and improvements to the legal immigration system, including giving green cards to high-skilled workers and lifting caps on legal immigration for the immediate family members of U.S. citizens.

"What has been absent in the time since he put those principles forward has been a willingness by Republicans, generally speaking, to move forward with comprehensive immigration reform," White House press secretary Jay Carney said. "What he hopes is that that dynamic has changed."

The political dynamic does appear to have shifted following the November election. Despite making little progress on immigration in his first term, Obama won more than 70 percent of the Latino vote, in part because of the conservative positions on immigration that Republican nominee Mitt Romney staked out during the GOP primary. Latino voters accounted for 10 percent of the electorate in November.

The president met privately Friday morning with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus to discuss his next steps on immigration. Among those in the meeting was Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., who said Obama told lawmakers "immigration reform is his number one legislative priority."

That could bump back the president's efforts to seek legislation enacting stricter gun laws, another issue he has vowed to make a top second-term priority.

The Senate immigration group is also pressing for quick action, aiming to draft a bill by March and pass legislation in their chamber by August, said the aide, who requested anonymity in order to discuss private deliberations. The Republican-controlled House would also need to pass the legislation before it went to the White House for the president's signature.

Senate lawmakers working on the immigration effort include Democrats Charles Schumer of New York, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Robert Menendez of New Jersey; and Republicans John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Marco Rubio of Florida, according to Senate aides.

Democrat Michael Bennet of Colorado, and Republicans Jeff Flake of Arizona and Mike Lee of Utah have also been involved. It's not clear whether all those involved will sign on to the principles the group hopes to roll out next week.

Those principles are expected to include a process toward legalizing the status of unauthorized immigrants already in the country; border security; verification measures for employers hiring workers and ways for more temporary workers to be admitted into the country.

It's unclear whether the group will back the pathway to full citizenship that the president is seeking. Schumer and Graham have previously supported requiring illegal immigrants to admit they broke the law, perform community service, pay fines and back taxes, pass background checks and learn English before going to the back of the line of immigrants already in the system in order to legalize their immigration status.

Several of the senators negotiating the immigration principles are veterans of the failed comprehensive immigration reform effort under then-President George W. Bush. That process collapsed in 2007 when it came up well-short of the needed votes in the Senate, a bitter outcome for Bush and the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the Democrats' leader on the legislation.

Some Republicans still lament that result as a missed opportunity for the party that could have set the GOP on a different path to reach more Latino voters.

Rubio is a relative newcomer to Senate negotiations on the issue, but he's seen as a rising star in his party and a potential 2016 presidential candidate. As a charismatic young Hispanic leader his proposals on immigration have attracted wide notice in recent weeks. And as a conservative favorite, unlike McCain or Graham, his stamp of approval could be critical to drawing in other conservative lawmakers.

A Republican aide said that Rubio has made it clear in his interactions with the Senate group that he couldn't agree to proposals that deviated from the principles he himself has been laying out in recent media interviews, including border security first, a guest-worker program, more visas for high-tech workers and enforcement in the workplace.

As for the illegal immigrants already in the country, Rubio would have them pay a fine and back taxes, show they have not committed crimes, prove they've been in the country for some time and speak some English and apply for permanent residency. Ultimately citizenship too could be in reach but only after a process that doesn't nudge aside immigrants already in line, and Rubio hasn't provided details on how long it all might take.


Obituaries today: Pedro Navarro had 4-decade career at National Metal Industries in West Springfield

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
012613-pedro-navarro.jpg Pedro Navarro  

Pedro Navarro, 70, of Springfield, died Thursday. He was born in San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico, and grew up in Enfield, Conn. He lived in West Springfield before moving to the North End of Springfield 38 years ago. He retired from National Metal Industries in West Springfield in 1998 after 40 years. He was a communicant of All Souls Church and was a huge New York Yankees fan.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Rep. Paul Ryan says GOP need to pick its fights with Pres. Obama

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Ryan said Republicans needed to guard against a debt crisis for the country that would undermine the economy.

7b9ed5438c413f02270f6a706700de0b.jpg Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., arrives at the ceremonial swearing-in for President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)  
WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Paul Ryan said Saturday that Republicans need to stick together and pick their fights during President Barack Obama's second term, rejecting some White House proposals outright and trying to infuse others with conservative principles.

In a speech to conservatives, the GOP's 2012 vice presidential nominee said Obama would attempt to divide Republicans but that the party must avoid internal squabbles as it seeks to rebound from a second straight presidential loss.

"We can't get rattled. We won't play the villain in his morality plays. We have to stay united," Ryan said at the National Review Institute event. "We have to show that if given the chance, we can govern. We have better ideas."

The Wisconsin congressman outlined a pragmatic approach for a party dealing with last November's election defeats and trying to determine whether to oppose Obama's agenda at every turn or shape his proposals with conservative principles.

With a surging minority population altering the electorate, Republican leaders have discussed the need to attract more women and Hispanics while at the same time standing firm to the values that unite conservatives.

The party's future was a major theme during the three-day meeting of conservatives activists, who expected to hear from Govs. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, Bob McDonnell of Virginia, and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.

Ryan rejected the notion that Republicans were "in the wilderness," noting that the party controls the House and most statehouses. But he said Obama's victory over Mitt Romney meant that Republicans would need to recalibrate their approach to deal with the new political realities.

"If we want to promote conservatism, we'll need to use every tool at our disposal," Ryan said. "Sometimes, we will have to reject the president's proposals — that time may come more than once. And sometimes we'll have to make them better." He said Republicans should have two main goals for the next four years, namely "to mitigate bad policies" and "to advance good policy wherever we can."

Ryan acknowledged that "we all didn't see eye to eye" on the recent "fiscal cliff" vote to deal with a combination of spending cuts and higher taxes that were set to take effect at the start of the year. He defended his support for the bill, saying it was the only way to avoid sweeping tax increases and prevent the economy from going into a free-fall.

As chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan said Republicans needed to guard against a debt crisis for the country that would undermine the economy. He said he would promote changes to Medicare and Medicaid and would propose a budget "that will balance and pay down the debt."

But November's election results still linger. Ryan said he was "disappointed" by the outcome, saying he was "looking forward to taking on the big challenges" while living at the vice president's residence. "My kids were looking forward to having a pool," he joked.

Gun control march draws thousands to Washington Monument

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Thousands of people, many holding signs with names of gun violence victims and messages such as "Ban Assault Weapons Now," joined a rally for gun control on Saturday, marching from the Capitol to the Washington Monument.

WASHINGTON  — Thousands of people, many holding signs with names of gun violence victims and messages such as "Ban Assault Weapons Now," joined a rally for gun control on Saturday, marching from the Capitol to the Washington Monument.

Participants were led by Mayor Vincent Gray and other officials Saturday morning, and the crowd stretched for about two blocks along Constitution Avenue. Police blocked off half the road.

Participants held signs reading "Gun Control Now" and "Stop NRA," among other messages. Other signs were simple and white, with the names of victims of gun violence.

About 100 residents were expected from Newtown, Conn., where a gunman killed 20 first-graders and six teachers at a school in December. The rally was organized in response to that shooting.

Once the crowd arrived at the monument, speakers called for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition.



Gun Control March


People walk from the U.S. Capitol to the Washington Monument in Washington, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013, for a march on Washington for gun control. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)




     

Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the crowd it's not about taking away Second Amendment gun rights, but about gun safety and saving lives. He said he and President Barack Obama would do everything they could to enact gun control policies.

"We must act, we must act, we must act," Duncan said.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.'s non-voting representative in Congress, said the gun lobby can be stopped. The crowd chanted back, "Yes, we can."

Norton said the nation didn't act after previous mass killings, but she said "we the people," won't give up this time.

"We are all culpable if we do nothing now," Norton said

Participant Kara Baekey of Norwalk, Conn., said that when she heard about the Newtown shooting, she immediately thought of her two young children. She said she decided she must take action, and that's why she joined the march.

"I wanted to make sure this never happens at my kids' school or any other school," Baekey said. "It just can't happen again."

James Agenbroad, 78, of Garrett Park, Md., carried a handwritten sign on cardboard that read "Repeal the 2nd Amendment." He called it the only way to stop mass killings because he thinks the Supreme Court will strike down any other restrictions on guns.

"You can repeal it," he said. "We repealed prohibition."

Molly Smith, the artistic director of Washington's Arena Stage, and her partner organized the march. Organizers said that in addition to the 100 from Newtown, they expected buses of participants from New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia. Others are flying in from Seattle, San Francisco and even Alaska.

While she's never organized a political march before, Smith said she was compelled to press for a change in the law. The march organizers support President Barack Obama's call for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines as well as for universal background checks for gun sales. They also want lawmakers to require gun safety training for all buyers of firearms.

"With the drum roll, the consistency of the mass murders and the shock of it, it is always something that is moving and devastating to me. And then, it's as if I move on," Smith said. "And in this moment, I can't move on. I can't move on.

"I think it's because it was children, babies," she said. "I was horrified by it."

After the Connecticut shootings, Smith posted something on Facebook and drew more support to do something. The group One Million Moms for Gun Control, the Washington National Cathedral and two other churches eventually signed on to co-sponsor the march. Organizers have raised more than $46,000 online to pay for equipment and fees to stage the rally.

Lawmakers from the District of Columbia and Maryland were scheduled to speak Saturday. Actress Kathleen Turner was expected to appear, along with Marian Wright Edelman of the Children's Defense Fund and Colin Goddard, a survivor from the Virginia Tech massacre.

Smith said she supports a comprehensive look at mental health and violence in video games and films. But she said the mass killings at Virginia Tech and Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, Conn., all start with guns.

"The issue is guns. The Second Amendment gives us the right to own guns, but it's not the right to own any gun," she said. "These are assault weapons, made for killing people."

Associated Press writer Brett Zongker authored this report.

Castelli and Shnapir overcome error to win U.S. pairs figure skating title

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The veteran pair had a huge enough lead from the short program to win.

OMAHA, Neb. – Say this for Marissa Castelli and Simon Shnapir. No one will forget their first pairs title.

Castelli and Shnapir won Saturday despite a mistake so unusual and awkward it was almost painful to watch. Shnapir caught a toepick as he and Castelli were entering their side-by-side combination spin, and he stopped in order to keep himself from falling. But with no way to catch up, Shnapir could only stand there – and stand there and stand there and stand there some more – until Castelli finished.

“That was a very long moment,” Castelli said. “I didn’t know if he was going to catch up or what.”

“I didn’t realize how long that spin was, either,” Shnapir added.

Though they got no credit for the element and dropped to third in the free skate, it didn’t matter. They had such a big cushion after the short program that their spot at the top of the overall standings was never really in danger.

Castelli and Shnapir finished with 180.61 points, almost eight ahead of Alexa Scimeca and Christopher Knierim. Felicia Zhang and Nathan Bartholomay dropped from second after the short program to third.

The dance and ladies titles will be decided later Saturday.

“(The mistake) was unfortunate,” Shnapir said. “But it was still a really strong program.”

And one that was a long time coming.

Shnapir and Castelli have been skating together for almost seven years, since they were novices. They didn’t really like each other for much of that time, and, after a disappointing fifth-place finish at last year’s nationals, they spent about a month deciding whether to stick it out for one last go-around.

“We’re definitely fiery Leos,” Shnapir said. “We definitely butted heads – or we did in the past.”

Not only did the two decide to stay together, they decided to try getting along. A breakout season has been the result.

“It feels amazing,” Castelli said. “I never thought we’d be at this spot right now, but we’ve worked so hard this year.”

Despite their lead, they attacked every element in their program, skating with power and confidence. Their split triple twist was so big the folks in the first few rows had to look up to see her.

Scimeca and Knierim don’t yet have the chemistry or electricity that makes a successful pair – no surprise, really, considering they just started skating together in April – but their tricks are first-class.

Scimeca was already grinning before their music stopped, and she was so giddy she hopped up and down on the ice several times.

The only bummer is that their second-place finish isn’t likely to come with a trip to the world championships. Worlds, which are March 10-17 in London, Ontario, are the qualifier for next year’s Sochi Games, and the Americans can’t risk sending two inexperienced teams or they might wind up with only one pair for the Olympics.

Scimeca and Knierim are likely to get bumped in favor of last year’s U.S. champions, Caydee Denney and John Coughlin, who missed nationals while he recovers from hip surgery. Denney and Coughlin have petitioned for a spot on the world team, and it’s a no-brainer to send them if he’s healthy because they’re the only Americans with a real chance of cracking the top five.

Penguin Plunge has 150 hitting Hampton Ponds waters in Westfield as children's museum fundraiser

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From the veteran plungers to the first-timers, one sentiment was equally shared – the temperature of the water was warmer than the air – at least until they exited the water and faced not only the 21-degree air, but faced it dripping wet.

WESTFIELD – More than 150 men, women and children left common sense on the shore Saturday as they jumped into the icy waters of Hampton Ponds on a bitterly cold day to raise funds for the Amelia Park Children’s Museum.

Diana L. McClean, president of the organization’s board of directors, said she could not yet put a number on the total amount raised for charity through pledges each human penguin received, but organizers went into the event with a lofty goal of $40,000, $30,000 more than was raised last year.

“We set a really high goal this year,” she said. “I don’t know yet if we achieved that goal, but everything we raise is for the museum operating budget to basically keep our doors open.”

Of one thing she is sure; the number of participants for this year’s Ninth Annual Penguin Plunge nearly doubled the amount of plungers who turned previously.

“We are very happy with the show of support and appreciate the community getting behind us,” McClean said.

From the veteran plungers to the first-timers, one sentiment was equally shared – the temperature of the water was warmer than the air – at least until they exited the water and faced not only the 21-degree air, but faced it dripping wet.

“The water was warmer than the air,” said Brittany L. Hutchison, of Westfield, a member of Team Lemur who took the plunge Saturday for the fifth consecutive year. “This was definitely the coldest year.”

Makayla L. Tyler, of Westfield, also a member of Team Lemur, said her first motivation for jumping into the numbingly cold water was to prove others wrong.

“No one thought I would really do it,” she said. “But I’d still do it again. It’s for a good cause.”

Her thoughts on the below-freezing temperature? “This was bad, this was really bad.”

Team Lemur was led by perennial plunger Rich Barry, uncle of Brittany Hutchison and her little sister, Ashley R. Hutchison, 10, who said she braved the cold weather and water at the request of Barry.

“I was scared at first when I was walking to the water – I was just standing there freezing. I even started to cry, but I did it.”

For Lynne I. Clarke and her daughter, Kayla C. L. Artz, taking the plunge was not only a way to support the children’s museum, but to celebrate Artz’s birthday. This year marked the sixth year of taking the Penguin Plunge for both women.

“Doing this is like having a baby,” Clarke observed. “Once it’s done, you forget about the pain.”

The title of “Penguin Excelsior” was awarded to plunger Charles Kelly of Webster's Flowers, for raising the most money as an individual, while Team Lemur collected about $2,000 for the charity.

For being the group that raised the most money, Team Lemur was awarded a frozen yogurt sundae party sponsored by MoFroYo Frozen Yogurt, of Westfield, although the team had no plans to cash in on that prize anytime soon.

Feds: Connecticut priest 'Monsignor Meth' dealt drugs, bought sex shop

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Monsignor Kevin Wallin was arrested on federal drug charges this month for allegedly having methamphetamine mailed to him and making more than $300,000 in drugs sales out of his apartment in Waterbury, Conn.

127meth x.jpg Monsignor Kevin Wallin speaks May 4, 2006, at the Catholic Center, headquarters of the Diocese of Bridgeport, in Bridgeport, Conn. Wallin, of Waterbury, Conn., awaits a March 2013 trial on federal charges of shipping methamphetamine from California to his apartment and making more than $300,000 in drug sales in the second half of 2012. He was one of five people arrested and indicted by a grand jury in January 2013.  

By DAVE COLLINS

HARTFORD, Conn. — To onlookers, Monsignor Kevin Wallin's fall from grace at his Connecticut parish was like something out of "Breaking Bad," the television series about a high school chemistry teacher who becomes a methamphetamine lord.

The suspended Roman Catholic priest was arrested on federal drug charges this month for allegedly having methamphetamine mailed to him from co-conspirators in California and making more than $300,000 in drugs sales out of his apartment in Waterbury in the second half of last year.

Along the way, authorities said, he bought a small adult video and sex toy shop in the nearby town of North Haven named "Land of Oz & Dorothy's Place," apparently to launder all the money he was making. He has pleaded not guilty, and jury selection in his trial is scheduled to begin March 21.

On social media sites, people couldn't help but compare Wallin with Walter White, the main character on "Breaking Bad" who was making so much cash that he and his wife bought a car wash to launder their profits. He has also been dubbed in some media as "Monsignor Meth."

Wallin, 61, was the pastor of St. Augustine Parish in Bridgeport for nine years until he resigned in June 2011, citing health and personal problems. He previously served six years as pastor of St. Peter's Church in Danbury until 2002.

He was granted a sabbatical in July 2011. The Diocese of Bridgeport suspended him from public ministry last May.

Diocesan officials become concerned about Wallin in the spring of 2011 after complaints about his appearance and erratic behavior, diocese spokesman Brian Wallace told the Connecticut Post.

Some reports of his behavior were startling.

"We became aware that he was acting out sexually — with men — in the church rectory," Wallace told the newspaper, adding that church officials deemed the sexual behavior unbecoming of a priest and asked Wallin to resign.

Wallace didn't return several messages left by The Associated Press.

"News of Monsignor Kevin Wallin's arrest comes with a sense of shock and concern on the part of the diocese and the many people of Fairfield County who have known him as a gifted, accomplished and compassionate priest," the diocese said in a statement on Jan. 16 after learning about Wallin's arrest. "We ask for prayers for Monsignor Wallin during the difficult days ahead for him."

Wallin's arrest called attention to larger problems within the church, said Voice of the Faithful in the Diocese of Bridgeport, one of many local chapters of the lay organization formed in response to the sexual abuse crisis in the church.

"Catholics have to ask whether the mandatory obligation of celibacy imposes a harmful burden on priests and whether women ought to be admitted to the priesthood," the group said in a statement. "The steady decline in the number of priests, the aging of priests, the terrible sin of pedophilia among priests, and the downfall of Monsignor Wallin are all signs of a sickness in the priesthood. It is time to seek a remedy for this awful malady that threatens the Eucharist, the center of Catholic life."

Elizabeth Badjan, a member of the St. Augustine congregation, told The New York Times that Wallin needed the prayers of parishioners.

"This is all the work of evil," she said as she left Mass last weekend. "He was not close enough to God. He was tempted by the devil."

Wallin's case has drawn comparisons to that of the Rev. Ted Haggard, a well-known evangelical megachurch pastor in Colorado who was forced out of his job in 2006 after a male escort alleged Haggard had paid him for sex and bought crystal meth.

Federal agents arrested Wallin on Jan. 3, and a grand jury indicted him and four other people on drug charges on Jan. 15. All are charged with one count of conspiracy to distribute 500 grams or more of a substance containing methamphetamine and 50 grams of actual methamphetamine, a crime that carries 10 years to life in prison upon conviction.

Wallin is also charged with six counts of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

Last July, Drug Enforcement Administration agents in New York told agents in the New Haven office that there was an unidentified Connecticut-based drug trafficker distributing methamphetamine in the region. Two months later, an informant told the DEA that the trafficker was Wallin, according to an affidavit by agent Jay Salvatore in New Haven.

The Connecticut Statewide Narcotics Task Force was also investigating Wallin.

Authorities said an undercover officer with the state task force bought methamphetamine from Wallin six times from Sept. 20 to Jan. 2, paying more than $3,400 in total for 23 grams of the drug.

Federal agents also say they learned through wiretaps and informants about other sales Wallin was making.

Connecticut U.S. Attorney David Fein said federal and state authorities worked together in "the dismantling of what we allege was a significant methamphetamine distribution organization that spanned from California to Connecticut."

Also charged in the case were Kenneth Devries, 52, of Waterbury; Michael Nelson, 40, of Manchester; Chad McCluskey, 43, of San Clemente, Calif.; and Kristen Laschober, 47, of Laguna Niguel, Calif. Authorities say McCluskey and Laschober were involved in the shipping of methamphetamine to Wallin.

Messages by the AP were left lawyers for Wallin, McCluskey and Laschober. Wallin is being detained without bail at the Bridgeport Correctional Center, state records show.

Trying to unlock secrets of dead serial killer Israel Keyes

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For years Israel Keyes lived two different lives: one, a below-the-radar father and carpenter, the other, by all indications, a meticulous serial killer.

127serial001.JPG State police investigators pause to allow a dog to inspect dirt and debris April 12, 2012, at a dig site off Vermont 15 near Lang Farm in Essex, Vt., in what Essex Police Chief Brad LaRose described as part of the ongoing investigation into the disappearance of Bill and Lorraine Currier, who went missing June 2011. After confessing to killing a 18-year old woman in Alaska, Israel Keyes is suspected of killing Bill and Lorraine Currier. Keyes was found dead in his cell on Dec. 2, 2012. Investigators have used Keyes' financial and travel records to piece together a timeline of his whereabouts from Oct. 4, 2004, to March 13, 2012. He traveled throughout the United States and made short trips into Canada and Mexico. (AP photo by Ryan Mercer, Burlington Free Press)  

By RACHEL D'ORO and SHARON COHEN

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The suspect, hands and feet shackled, fidgeted in his chair, chuckling at times as he confessed to a brutal killing.

Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he described in merciless detail how he'd abducted and strangled an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. As the two prosecutors questioned him, they were struck by his demeanor: He seemed pumped up, as if he were reliving the crime. His body shook, they said, and he rubbed his muscular arms on the chair rests so vigorously his handcuffs scraped off the wood finish.

The prosecutors had acceded to Keyes' requests: a cup of Americano coffee, a peanut butter Snickers and a cigar (for later). Then they showed him surveillance photos, looked him in the eye and declared: We know you kidnapped Samantha Koenig. We're going to convict you.

127israel_keyes.JPG Israel Keyes  

They aimed to solve a disappearance, and they did. But they soon realized there was much more here: a kind of evil they'd never anticipated.

Confessing to Koenig's killing, Keyes used a Google map to point to a spot on a lake where he'd disposed of her dismembered body and gone ice fishing at the same time. He wasn't done talking, though. He declared he'd been "two different people" for 14 years. He had stories to tell, stories he said he'd never shared. He made seemingly plural references and chilling remarks such as, "It takes a long time to strangle someone."

As prosecutors Kevin Feldis and Frank Russo and investigators from the FBI and Anchorage police listened that day in early 2012, they came to a consensus:

Israel Keyes wasn't talking just about Samantha Koenig. He'd killed before.

In 40 hours of interviews over eight months, Keyes talked of many killings; authorities believe there were nearly a dozen. He traveled from Vermont to Alaska hunting for victims. He said he buried "murder kits" around the country so they would be readily accessible. These caches — containing guns, zip ties and other supplies used to dispose of bodies — were found in Alaska and New York.

At the same time, incredibly, Keyes was an under-the-radar everyday citizen — a father, a live-in boyfriend, a respected handyman who had no trouble finding jobs in the community.

127serial002.JPG This image taken Dec. 4, 2012, in Anchorage, Alaska, shows video surveillance footage of Samantha Koenig, 18, making a cup of Americano coffee for Israel Keyes, shortly before he abducted her Feb. 1, 2012, and then killed her. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed the 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before. Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell. (AP Photo/Mark Thiessen)  

Keyes claimed he killed four people in Washington state, dumped another body in New York and raped a teen in Oregon. He said he robbed banks to help finance his crimes; authorities corroborated two robberies in New York and Texas. He confessed to burning down a house in Texas, contentedly watching the flames from a distance.

Though sometimes specific, he was often frustratingly vague. Only once — other than Koenig — did he identify by name his victims: a married couple in Vermont.

Israel Keyes wanted to be in control. Of his crimes. Of how much he revealed. And, ultimately, of his fate.

In December, he slashed his left wrist and strangled himself with a sheet in his jail cell. He left two pages of bloodstained writings. And many questions.

Investigators are now left searching for answers, but they face a daunting task: They're convinced the 34-year-old Keyes was a serial killer; they've verified many details he provided. But they have a puzzle that spans the U.S. and dips into Mexico and Canada — and the one person who held the missing pieces is dead. FBI agents on opposite ends of the country, joined by others, are working the case, hoping a timeline will offer clues to his grisly odyssey.

But they know, too, that Israel Keyes' secrets are buried with him — and may never be unearthed.

___

Authorities aren't certain when Keyes' crime spree began or ended. But they have a haunting image of his last known victim.

Snippets of a surveillance video show the first terrifying moments of Koenig's abduction. Keyes is seen as a shadowy figure in ski mask and hood outside Common Grounds, a tiny Anchorage coffee shack then partially concealed from a busy six-lane highway by mountains of snow.

It's Feb. 1, 2012, about 8 p.m., closing time. Koenig is shown handing Keyes a cup of coffee, then backing away with her hands up, as if it's a robbery. The lights go out and Keyes next appears as a fuzzy image climbing through the drive-thru window.

Authorities outlined his next steps:

Keyes forced Koenig to his Silverado; he'd already bound her hands with zip ties and gagged her. He hid her in a shed outside his house, turned on loud music so no one could hear if she screamed, then returned to the coffee shack to retrieve scraps of the restraints and get her phone.

On Feb. 2, Keyes raped and strangled Koenig. He left her in that shed, flew to Houston and embarked on a cruise, returning about two weeks later.

He then took a photo of Koenig's body holding a Feb. 13 newspaper to make it appear she was alive. Keyes wrote a ransom note on the back, demanding $30,000 be placed in her account. He texted a message, directing the family to a dog park where the note could be found. Her family deposited some money from a reward fund.

On Feb. 29, Keyes withdrew $500 in ransom money from an Anchorage ATM, using a debit card stolen from Koenig's boyfriend (the two shared an account). The next day, $500 more was retrieved from another ATM.

Then on March 7, far away in Willcox, Ariz., Keyes withdrew $400. He traveled to Lordsburg, N.M., and took out $80. Two days later, a withdrawal of $480 in Humble, Texas. On March 11, the same amount from an ATM in Shepherd, Texas.

By then, authorities had a blurry ATM photo and a pattern: Keyes was driving along route I-10 in a rented white Ford Focus. On March 13, nearly 3,200 miles from Anchorage, police in Lufkin, Texas, pounced when they spotted Keyes driving 3 mph above the speed limit.

Inside his car was an incriminating stash: Rolls of cash in rubber bands. A piece of a gray T-shirt cut out to make a face mask. A highlighted map with routes through California, Arizona and New Mexico. The stolen debit card. And Samantha Koenig's phone.

Monique Doll, the lead Anchorage police investigator in the Koenig case, and her partner, Jeff Bell, rushed to Texas for a crack at Keyes.

Doll showed Keyes the ransom note.

"I told him that the first couple of times that I read the ransom I thought that whoever wrote the note was a monster and the more I read it —it must have been 100 times — the more I came to understand that monsters aren't born but are created and that this person had a story to tell."

Keyes' response, she says, was firm: "I can't help you."

Two weeks later in custody back in Alaska, he changed his mind.

He told another investigator, Doll says, to relay a message: "Tell her she's got her monster."

___

To Monique Doll, Keyes was a Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde personality, but she saw only the diabolical side.

"We knew him as a serial killer," she says. "That's how he spoke to us. We didn't know ... the father, the hard-working business owner."

Keyes warned investigators that others might mischaracterize him.

"There is no one who knows me — or who has ever known me — who knows anything about me really. ... They're going to tell you something that does not line up with anything I tell you because I'm two different people basically...," he says in one snippet released by the FBI.

"How long have you been two different people?" asks Russo, one of the prosecutors.

Keyes laughs. "(A) long time. Fourteen years."

Authorities suspect Keyes started killing more than 10 years ago after completing a three-year stint in the Army at what is now Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash.

Sean McGuire, who shared a barracks with Keyes, says they developed a camaraderie while spending some time together during grueling training in Egypt. But he says he was disturbed by a dark side that sometimes surfaced. When Keyes was offended by his buddy's comments, he'd drop his head, McGuire recalls, knit his brow, lower his voice and say, "'I want to kill you, McGuire.'"

Keyes, the second eldest in a large family, was homeschooled in a cabin without electricity near Colville, Wash., in a mountainous, sparsely populated area. The family moved in the 1990s to Smyrna, Maine, where they were involved in the maple syrup business, according to a neighbor who remembered Keyes as a nice, courteous young man.

After leaving the Army, Keyes worked for the Makah Indian tribe in Washington, then moved to Anchorage in 2007 after his girlfriend found work here. A self-employed carpenter and handyman, he was considered competent, honest and efficient.

"I never got any bad, weird, scary, odd vibe from him in any way, shape or form," says Paul Adelman, an Anchorage attorney who first hired Keyes as a handyman in 2008.

Keyes' live-in girlfriend also was floored to learn of his double life, according to David Kanters, her friend. "He had everyone fooled," Kanters told The Associated Press in an email. "THAT is the scary part. He came across as a nice normal guy." (She did not respond to numerous requests for comment.)

Keyes blended in easily. "He was not only very intelligent," Doll says. "He was very adaptable and he had a lot of self-control. Those three things combined made him extraordinarily difficult to catch."

Keyes also was meticulous and methodical, flying to airports in the Lower 48, renting cars, driving hundreds of miles searching for victims, prowling remote spots such as parks, campgrounds and cemeteries. The Koenig case was an exception; it was in his community.

In one recorded interview, Keyes discussed his methods:

"Back when I was smart, I would let them come to me," he said, adding that he would go to isolated areas far from home. "There's not much to choose from ... but there's also no witnesses."

Keyes was proud he'd gone undetected so long. When asked for a motive, Anchorage police officer Bell recalls, Keyes said, "'A lot of people ask why and I would be like: Why not?'"

"He liked what he was doing," says FBI Special Agent Jolene Goeden. "He talked about getting a rush out of it, the adrenaline, the excitement."

Goeden says Keyes provided information for eight victims, some more specific than others. He also alluded to other victims, and said he killed fewer than 12 people altogether. In one case, he claimed a body was recovered and the death ruled accidental; he wouldn't say more.

Investigators say they independently verified almost everything he told them. "It would have been impossible to make some of these details up," prosecutor Feldis says.

They tried to get Keyes to identify more victims. But he balked at even providing their gender.

There was an exception.

Shortly after Keyes confessed to Koenig's murder, the prosecutors told him they knew he'd killed others and said his computers were being searched. Keyes knew he'd stored information in them about two victims.

It was time to clear up a mystery in a small town 3,000 miles away.

___

It was about 8 p.m. on April 6, 2012, and police Lt. George Murtie was home in Essex, Vt., when a local FBI agent called.

Nearly 10 months had passed since Bill and Lorraine Currier, a couple in their 50s, had disappeared. They were presumed dead. Leads were still trickling in, but Murtie was surprised to hear authorities in Alaska had a man in custody who'd confessed to killing the couple and disposing of their bodies in an abandoned farmhouse.

An Essex officer for 28 years, Murtie knew every inch of his community, including the location of that farmhouse. He headed out there that night with another detective, only to discover it had been demolished. They checked some nearby buildings but found nothing.

Several weeks later, when Murtie questioned Keyes by phone, he found him matter-of-fact when discussing how he'd killed the Curriers.

"I would describe it as if I was talking to a contractor about the work I was going to have done and he was describing the work he had done in the past," Murtie recalls. "There was no emotion or anything. Just flat."

Keyes confirmed details of a nightmarish sequence of events later outlined by Vermont authorities:

On June 2, 2011, Keyes flew into Chicago, intending to kidnap and kill. He carried a gun and silencer. He drove more than 750 miles to Essex, a bedroom community just outside Burlington. He checked into a motel he'd stayed at in 2009 — he buried weapons and supplies in the area at that time — and began scouting a house that suited his purposes: No children or dogs. No car in the driveway. A place he could be reasonably sure of where the bedroom was located.

In the early moments of June 9, Keyes cut the phone lines and removed a window fan to enter the garage. Grabbing a crowbar, he smashed a window into the house and, wearing a headlamp to navigate the darkness, rushed into the Curriers' bedroom. He forced them into their Saturn and bound them with zip ties.

They drove a few miles to the farmhouse where Keyes tied Bill Currier to a stool. Going back to the car, he saw Lorraine Currier had broken her restraints and was running toward the road: Keyes chased and tackled her, forcing her back to the building.

Bill Currier had somehow broken the stool and was shouting, "Where's my wife?" Keyes hit him with a shovel, then shot him. He sexually assaulted and strangled Lorraine Currier and put both bodies in garbage bags. He then drove into New York state, and dumped the Curriers' stolen gun and parts of the weapon he'd used into a reservoir in Parishville, N.Y. FBI dive teams recovered both. Authorities were unable to find the Curriers' bodies.

Murtie was struck by Keyes' confidence.

"There was an enormous risk he had to take to go into a neighborhood he's unfamiliar with, into a house of people he's unfamiliar with and remove them in their own vehicle," he says. "A rational-thinking person would think the chances of getting caught are very high."

During the interviews, Keyes sometimes clammed up and threatened to stop talking if publicly identified as a suspect in the Curriers' murders. Vermont authorities held off as Alaska investigators pressed for more information.

"Why don't you give us another name?" asked Russo, a federal prosecutor.

Keyes was conflicted — he wanted his story out there, but worried about the impact it would have on friends and family (he has a daughter believed to be 10 or 11), says Goeden, the FBI agent. He rebuffed all appeals to bring peace to others.

"Think about your loved ones," Doll urged. "Wouldn't you want to know if they're never coming home?"

He mulled it over and returned another day with his answer.

"I'd rather think my loved one was on a beach somewhere,' he said, "other than being horribly murdered."

__

Israel Keyes never provided another name.

He was found dead Dec. 2, three months before his scheduled trial in the Koenig case. The FBI is analyzing his two bloodstained pages, with writing on both sides, but they apparently don't contain victims' names.

His suicide leaves investigators and Koenig's family disappointed, angry and frustrated.

"We deserved our day in court and we didn't get it," says James Koenig, Samantha's father.

Months before Keyes' past was disclosed, Koenig believed his daughter was not his only victim. He and volunteers set up a Facebook page called, "Have You Ever met Israel Keyes? Possible Serial Killer." It includes photos of Keyes and maps.

Meanwhile, investigators have used Keyes' financial and travel records to piece together a timeline of his whereabouts from Oct. 4, 2004, to March 13, 2012. He traveled throughout the United States and made short trips into Canada and Mexico.

The FBI is seeking the public's help. On Jan. 16, a Dallas bureau press release stated Keyes was "believed to have committed multiple kidnappings and murders" across the country starting in 2001. It's looking for anyone who had contact with him on Feb. 12-16, 2012, when he was believed to be in various Texas cities.

More appeals are expected in other places.

FBI agents in Seattle and in Albany, N.Y., also are working with state and local authorities to try to verify tips from people who reported seeing Keyes. Unsolved homicides are being checked, too, to determine if Keyes was in the area at the time.

But definitive evidence? That'll be hard to come by.

Feldis, the prosecutor who heard Keyes' first confession, says it's likely the true scope of his crimes will never be known.

"There's a lot more out there that only Israel Keyes knows," he says, "and he took that to his grave."

AP National Writer Sharon Cohen reported from Chicago. Also contributing to this report were AP reporters Mark Thiessen in Anchorage, Alaska, Nicholas K. Geranios in Colville, Wash., and Wilson Ring in Montpelier, Vt.


Holyoke Firefighters extinguish fire on Race Street

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No one was injured.

2003 holyoke fire truck  

HOLYOKE - Firefighters cleared the scene at about 8 p.m. Saturday after putting out a two-alarm fire at the Caribbean Nightclub, 268 Race St.

They’d been called to the scene shortly before 7 p.m. with reports of smoke and fire in the building.

No one was injured and the cause of the fire was not determined Saturday night, said
Holyoke Fire Department spokesman Lt. Thomas G. Paquin.

The incident required a total of 17 firefighters, including a mutual aid engine and ladder
company from Chicopee.

The scene is between Appleton and Cabot streets.

Do penalties for smokers and the obese make sense?

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Faced with the high cost of caring for smokers and overeaters, experts say society must grapple with a blunt question: Instead of trying to penalize them and change their ways, why not just let these health sinners die prematurely from their unhealthy habits?

127smoker.JPG A man smokes in Omaha, Neb. Annual health care costs are roughly $96 billion for smokers and $147 billion for the obese, the government says. These costs accompany sometimes heroic attempts to prolong their lives, including surgery, chemotherapy and other measures. But despite these rescue attempts, smokers tend to die 10 years earlier on average, and the obese die five to 12 years prematurely, according to various researchers' estimates.  

By MIKE STOBBE

NEW YORK — Faced with the high cost of caring for smokers and overeaters, experts say society must grapple with a blunt question: Instead of trying to penalize them and change their ways, why not just let these health sinners die prematurely from their unhealthy habits?

Annual health care costs are roughly $96 billion for smokers and $147 billion for the obese, the government says. These costs accompany sometimes heroic attempts to prolong lives, including surgery, chemotherapy and other measures.

But despite these rescue attempts, smokers tend to die 10 years earlier on average, and the obese die five to 12 years prematurely, according to various researchers' estimates.

And attempts to curb smoking and unhealthy eating frequently lead to backlash: Witness the current legal tussle over New York City's first-of-its-kind limits on the size of sugary beverages and the vicious fight last year in California over a ballot proposal to add a $1-per-pack cigarette tax, which was ultimately defeated.

"This is my life. I should be able to do what I want," said Sebastian Lopez, a college student from Queens, speaking last September when the New York City Board of Health approved the soda size rules.

Critics also contend that tobacco- and calorie-control measures place a disproportionately heavy burden on poor people. That's because they:

  • Smoke more than the rich, and have higher obesity rates.

  • Have less money so sales taxes hit them harder. One study last year found poor, nicotine-dependent smokers in New York — a state with very high cigarette taxes — spent as much as a quarter of their entire income on smokes.

  • Are less likely to have a car to shop elsewhere if the corner bodega or convenience store stops stocking their vices.

    Critics call these approaches unfair, and believe they have only a marginal effect. "Ultimately these things are weak tea," said Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a physician and fellow at the right-of-center think tank, the American Enterprise Institute.

    Gottlieb's view is debatable. There are plenty of public health researchers that can show smoking control measures have brought down smoking rates and who will argue that smoking taxes are not regressive so long as money is earmarked for programs that help poor people quit smoking.

    And debate they will. There always seems to be a fight whenever this kind of public health legislation comes up. And it's a fight that can go in all sorts of directions. For example, some studies even suggest that because smokers and obese people die sooner, they may actually cost society less than healthy people who live much longer and develop chronic conditions like Alzheimer's disease.

    So let's return to the original question: Why provoke a backlash? If 1 in 5 U.S. adults smoke, and 1 in 3 are obese, why not just get off their backs and let them go on with their (probably shortened) lives?

    Because it's not just about them, say some health economists, bioethicists and public health researchers.

    "Your freedom is likely to be someone else's harm," said Daniel Callahan, senior research scholar at a bioethics think-tank, the Hastings Center.

    Smoking has the most obvious impact. Studies have increasingly shown harm to nonsmokers who are unlucky enough to work or live around heavy smokers. And several studies have shown heart attacks and asthma attack rates fell in counties or cities that adopted big smoking bans.

    "When you ban smoking in public places, you're protecting everyone's health, including and especially the nonsmoker," said S. Jay Olshansky, a professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago's School of Public Health.

    It can be harder to make the same argument about soda-size restrictions or other legislative attempts to discourage excessive calorie consumption, Olshansky added.

    "When you eat yourself to death, you're pretty much just harming yourself," he said.

    But that viewpoint doesn't factor in the burden to everyone else of paying for the diabetes care, heart surgeries and other medical expenses incurred by obese people, noted John Cawley, a health economist at Cornell University.

    "If I'm obese, the health care costs are not totally borne by me. They're borne by other people in my health insurance plan and — when I'm older — by Medicare," Cawley said.

    From an economist's perspective, there would be less reason to grouse about unhealthy behaviors by smokers, obese people, motorcycle riders who eschew helmets and other health sinners if they agreed to pay the financial price for their choices.

    That's the rationale for a provision in the Affordable Care Act — "Obamacare" to its detractors — that starting next year allows health insurers to charge smokers buying individual policies up to 50 percent higher premiums. A 60-year-old could wind up paying nearly $5,100 on top of premiums.

    The new law doesn't allow insurers to charge more for people who are overweight, however.

    It's tricky to play the insurance game with overweight people, because science is still sorting things out. While obesity is clearly linked with serious health problems and early death, the evidence is not as clear about people who are just overweight.

    That said, public health officials shouldn't shy away from tough anti-obesity efforts, said Callahan, the bioethicist. Callahan caused a public stir this week with a paper that called for a more aggressive public health campaign that tries to shame and stigmatize overeaters the way past public health campaigns have shamed and stigmatized smokers.

    National obesity rates are essentially static, and public health campaigns that gently try to educate people about the benefits of exercise and healthy eating just aren't working, Callahan argued. We need to get obese people to change their behavior. If they are angry or hurt by it, so be it, he said.

    "Emotions are what really count in this world," he said.

  • Davis and White win fifth straight U.S. ice dancing championship

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    Four other U.S. couples have won five dancing titles.

    By NANCY ARMOUR

    OMAHA, Neb. – With a world title and an Olympic silver medal of their own already, Meryl Davis and Charlie White were quite happy to share this latest accomplishment.

    Davis and White won their fifth straight ice dance crown at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships on Saturday, matching a record held by four other couples. As the audience stood and cheered, Davis knelt close to the ice for several seconds, her head bowed.

    “Being in such an elite group of American ice dancers from the past and seeing
    that we belong with them, it’s special,” White said. “All the hard work and our families and their dedication, our support group – you need a lot of things to come together to make that happen, including staying healthy. There are a lot of little things. I’m proud of us for being able to stick with it, and our continuing love for the sport has helped a lot.

    “I’m pleased and I couldn’t be more proud.”

    Judy Schwomeyer and James Sladky (1968-72); Judy Blumberg and Michael Seibert (1981-85); Naomi Lang and Peter Tchernyshev (1999-2003); and Tanith Belbin and Ben Agosto (2004-2008) also won five titles.

    The Olympic silver medalists and 2011 world champions had such a big lead after the short dance they had to do little more but step on the ice to win. But they did so much more than that with their dramatic and powerful routine to “Notre Dame de Paris,” setting personal bests for both overall score (197.44 points) and free dance (118.42).

    They finished more than 20 points ahead – yes, you read that right – of Madison Chock and Evan Bates (175.91). Maia and Alex Shibutani were docked a point for an extended lift and finished third (174.21).

    Earlier Saturday, Marissa Castelli and Simon Shnapir overcame a big mistake to win their first pairs title.

    “Coming to the U.S. Championships is a good time and there’s always a positive energy,” Davis said. “It’s such an honor to come here. I think being able to perform really well pushes us to put out a better performance, and we are honored to get the results that we did.”

    For generations, Americans weren’t even an afterthought in ice dance. They were so far below the world powerhouses it’s a good bet the Russians and British didn’t even know their names.

    But that has changed in the last 10 years, and Davis and White now set the standard in the sport. Their rivalry with Canada’s Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir is the best thing going, with the training partners playing a game of “Can you top this?” Virtue and Moir edged the Americans at the Vancouver Olympics, as well as at the 2010 and 2012 world championships. The Americans won the world title in 2011, as well as the last four Grand Prix finals.

    Though they have no peers in the United States, that doesn’t mean they coast when they come to nationals.

    Far from it.

    “That energy only pushes us and makes us feel even more excited,” Davis said.

    Their performance was spellbinding, so intense no one in the arena dared breathe. Every inch of the ice, every nuance of music was filled with intricate and elegant moves, one more difficult than the next. Their skating skills have always been superb, their edge quality so fine that coaches pop in DVDs of them to show their students.

    But it is the way they combine the athletic strengths with the beauty and elegance of a dance that makes them so breathtaking. They are a sporting event and a theater show rolled into one. Their lifts can barely be described they were so intricate and innovative. In one, White twirled Davis like a rifle and whipped her from his front to back, all while skating and turning at full speed.

    They oozed emotion, using the tips of their eyelashes all the way down to the toes of their feet to express the character of the dance, and the audience was as exhausted as Davis and White when they finished.

    Chock and Bates and the Shibutanis have the misfortune of trying to compete with that, and there was no way they could come close. At least, not now.

    Chock and Bates’ lifts are filled with unique positions, and they were done with great speed and control. But it was the love story they displayed to “Dr. Zhivago” that was so delightful. Close your eyes, and you could almost see the horses and the sleigh in the falling snow.

    “It’s been such a great season,” Chock said. “We have been working very hard, and we hope to keep getting better and better from here.”

    The Shibutanis’ routine to “Memoirs of a Geisha” was seamless, the elements flowing from one to the other so perfectly it was impossible to tell where one ended and the next began. The siblings opened with a pairs spin that was better than anything seen during the actual pairs competition earlier in the afternoon, and it lasted for what seemed like forever – no easy feat to maintain that speed and momentum.

    Their twizzles – traveling spins – are, simply, exquisite. They are done in perfect unison, right down to the raising of their arms while they spin. Their big flaw was that he held his sister too long on a lift, a mistake they also made in the short dance.

    Hospital: 61 killed in Venezuela prison riot

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    Varela said during a news conference that officials decided to evacuate all inmates from the prison in order to "close this chapter of violence." She did not provide any estimates of the numbers killed and injured, and instead criticized Venezuelan news media at length for their coverage of the violence.

    riot.jpg An injured prison inmate is carried into the hospital in Barquisimeto, Venezuela, Friday, Jan. 25, 2013. A bloody riot erupted at the Uribana prison in the central Venezuelan city of Barquisimeto Friday when National Guard troops clashed with inmates. Venezuelan media reported that dozens were killed. It was the latest in a series of bloody riots in the country's prisons.  

    JORGE RUEDA
    Associated Press

    CARACAS, Venezuela — The death toll has risen to 61 following fierce gunbattles between inmates and National Guard troops at a Venezuelan prison, a hospital director said Saturday. About 120 more people were wounded in one of the deadliest prison riots in the nation's recent history.

    Penitentiary Service Minister Iris Varela said Saturday that officials had begun evacuating inmates from the Uribana prison in Barquisimeto and transferring them to other facilities, but she did not provide an official death toll.

    However, Dr. Ruy Medina, director of Central Hospital in the city of Barquisimeto, told The Associated Press that the number of dead had risen to 61. He initially told Venezuelan news media after the Friday uprising that about 50 were killed.

    Medina said that nearly all of the injuries were from gunshots and that 45 of the estimated 120 people who were wounded remained hospitalized. Some underwent surgeries for their wounds.

    Relatives wept outside the prison during the violence, and cried at the morgue Saturday as they waited to identify bodies.

    Nayibe Mendez, the mother of a 22-year-old inmate in the prison, told the AP that she was able to talk by phone with her son and he was uninjured.

    "What they say is that there were shots all over the place, and they don't know where they came from," Mendez said. "It was a massacre. A full list hasn't come out of the dead and injured."

    Mendez spoke by telephone from the morgue, where she said she went out of solidarity. "We're all hurt. No matter what, a prisoner has a right to live," she said, demanding that the authorities fully investigate what happened.

    Varela said during a news conference that officials decided to evacuate all inmates from the prison in order to "close this chapter of violence." She did not provide any estimates of the numbers killed and injured, and instead criticized Venezuelan news media at length for their coverage of the violence.

    Vice President Nicolas Maduro called the bloodshed tragic and said Prosecutor General Luisa Ortega Diaz and National Assembly President Diosdado Cabello would lead the investigation.

    "The prisons have to be governed by law," Maduro said on television early Saturday.

    The riot was the deadliest in nearly two decades. In 1994, more than 100 inmates died in the country's bloodiest prison on record, at a prison in the western city of Maracaibo. In 1994, about 60 inmates were killed in a riot in a Caracas prison.

    Varela said that the violence erupted at Uribana prison on Friday when groups of inmates attacked National Guard troops who were attempting to carry out an inspection.

    She said the government decided to send troops to search the prison after receiving reports of clashes between groups of inmates during the past two days.

    Douglas Briceno said his nephew, who is held at the prison, was wounded in the foot during the shooting. "I think he's out of danger," Briceno told the AP. "I haven't been able to communicate with him because they don't let me pass to the prison."

    Opposition leader Henrique Capriles condemned the government's handling of what he and many other critics call a growing crisis in the country's prisons.

    "Our country's prisons are an example of the incapacity of this government and its leaders. They never solved the problem," Capriles said on his Twitter account. "How many more deaths do there have to be in the prisons for the government to acknowledge its failure and make changes?"

    The riot at Uribana prison was the latest in a series of bloody clashes in the country's severely overcrowded prisons, where inmates often freely obtain weapons and drugs with the help of corrupt guards. Venezuela currently has 33 prisons built to hold about 12,000 inmates, but officials have said the prisons' population is about 47,000.

    The Venezuelan Prisons Observatory, a watchdog group, said in a statement that in 2007 the Costa Rica-based Inter-American Court of Human Rights had ordered the government to seize weapons that inmates had in their possession at Uribana prison and to take measures to avoid deaths in the facility. The group called for the government to release a list with the names of the dead and wounded in Friday's violence, as well as details about weapons seized in the search.

    "No one doubts that inspections are necessary procedures to guarantee prison conditions in line with international standards, but they can't be carried out with the warlike attitude as (authorities) have done it," said Humberto Prado, an activist who leads the prison watchdog group.

    "It's clear that the inspection wasn't coordinated or put into practice as it should have been. It was evidently a disproportionate use of force," Prado told the AP.

    His group says Uribana prison was built to hold up to 850 inmates but currently has about 1,400.

    Similar though less deadly clashes have flared repeatedly during the past few years.

    In April and May, a prison uprising in La Planta prison in Caracas blocked authorities from going inside for nearly three weeks. One prisoner was killed and five people were wounded, including two National Guard soldiers and three inmates.

    Two months later, another riot broke out at a penitentiary in Merida, and the Venezuelan Prisons Observatory reported 30 killed.

    In August, 25 people were killed and 43 wounded when two groups of inmates fought a gunbattle inside Yare I prison south of Caracas.

    President Hugo Chavez's government has previous pledged improvements to the prison system, but opponents and activists say the government hasn't made progress.

    Varela, the prisons minister, said news media including Globovision and a local newspaper had run reports on the inspection by authorities, which she said had in fact been a "trigger for the violence."

    Prado denied that, saying: "The problem isn't the work of the media. The problem is that the government hasn't disarmed the prison population."

    Associated Press writers Vivian Sequera and Camilo Hernandez in Bogota, Colombia, and Fabiola Sanchez in Caracas contributed to this report.

    U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin won't seek 6th Senate term

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    Harkin has long aligned with the Senate's more liberal members, and his signature legislative accomplishment is the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. He also served as a key salesman of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul to the wary left.

    harkin.jpg In this Monday, Oct. 25, 2010 photo, U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, speaks to reporters following a rally in support of three Iowa Supreme Court justices who are up for retention votes in the November election, in Des Moines, Iowa. Harkin says he will not seek re-election in 2014, The Associated Press reported Saturday, Jan. 26, 2013.  

    THOMAS BEAUMONT
    Associated Press


    CUMMING, Iowa — U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin said Saturday he will not seek a sixth term in 2014, a decision that eases some of the burden the national Republican Party faces in retaking the Senate.

    Harkin, chairman of an influential Senate committee, announced his decision during an interview with The Associated Press, saying the move could surprise some.

    The 73-year-old cited his age — he would be 81 at the end of a sixth term — as a factor in the decision, saying it was time to pass the torch he has held for nearly 30 years, freeing a new generation of Iowa Democrats to seek higher office.

    "I just think it's time for me to step aside," Harkin told the AP.

    Harkin, first elected in 1984, ranks seventh in seniority and fourth among majority Democrats. He is chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, and chairman of the largest appropriations subcommittee.

    Harkin has long aligned with the Senate's more liberal members, and his signature legislative accomplishment is the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. He also served as a key salesman of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul to the wary left.

    "I'm not saying that giving this up and walking away is easy. It's very tough," Harkin said at his rural Iowa home south of Des Moines. "But I'm not quitting today. I'm not passing the torch sitting down."

    Harkin's news defied outward signals. Besides being beloved in his party, Harkin has $2.7 million in his campaign war chest, second most among members nearing the end of their terms, and was planning a fundraiser in Washington, D.C., next month featuring pop star Lady Gaga.

    Obama released a statement saying Harkin will be missed and thanking the senator for his service. "During his tenure, he has fought passionately to improve quality of life for Americans with disabilities and their families, to reform our education system and ensure that every American has access to affordable health care," Obama said.

    Although members of his family have been diagnosed with cancer, Harkin said his health is good — and reported a recent positive colonoscopy. But he said "you never know," and that he wanted to travel and spend his retirement with his wife, Ruth, "before it's too late."

    He also nodded to his political longevity: "The effect of that cascades down and it opens a lot of doors of opportunity" for future candidates.

    But by opening a door in Iowa, Harkin has created a potential headache for his party nationally.

    Democrats likely would have had the edge in 2014 with the seat, considering Harkin's fundraising prowess and healthy approval. A poll by the Des Moines Register last fall showed a majority of Iowans approved of his job performance.

    Democrats hold a 55-45 advantage in the Senate, requiring Republicans to gain six seats to win back the chamber. But Democrats have more seats to defend in 2014 — 20 compared with only 13 for Republicans. Historically, the president's party loses seats in the midterm elections after his re-election.

    In GOP-leaning West Virginia, five-term Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller recently announced he would not seek re-election. And on Friday, Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss, a Republican, announced that he wouldn't seek a third term.

    Democratic incumbents also face tough re-election races in Arkansas, Louisiana, Montana, North Carolina and Alaska — all carried by Republican Mitt Romney in November's presidential election.

    Harkin's move opens a rare open Senate seat Iowa. Harkin, Iowa's junior senator, is outranked by Sen. Charles Grassley, who has held the state's other seat since 1980.

    Attention will turn to U.S. Rep. Bruce Braley, a fourth-term Democrat from Waterloo who has long been mentioned as a possible Harkin successor. Braley, who was traveling in Iowa, did not immediately return requests by the AP for comments beyond an emailed statement calling Harkin a "mentor" and "progressive force" who leaves "a legacy few will ever match."

    Harkin held open the possibility of endorsing a Democrat before the primary if the candidate "is a pragmatic progressive."

    Although no Republicans have stepped forward, Harkin's news gives the GOP's private huddles new life.

    "There are lots of conversations, but it's very early still," said Nick Ryan, an Iowa Republican campaign fundraiser.

    U.S. Rep. Tom Latham of Clive is a seasoned Republican congressman, a veteran House Appropriations Committee member and a robust fundraiser who has won 10 consecutive terms. Aides to Latham declined to comment beyond a statement saying the congressman "respects Sen. Harkin's decision (and) looks forward to continuing to work with him."

    Since November, Harkin has stepped up his role as one of the Senate's leading liberal populists.

    He was a vocal opponent late last year of Obama's concession to lift the income threshold for higher taxes to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff. Harkin instead supported raising taxes on all earners making more than $250,000 a year.

    He also endorsed Obama's call for banning assault rifles and larger ammunition magazines after the Connecticut school shooting.

    Despite Harkin's strong political position, he has faced questions about his and his wife's role in developing a namesake policy institute at Iowa State University, Harkin's alma mater. The Harkins and their supporters have been pushing for the institute to house papers highlighting his signature achievements, including the ADA and shaping farm policy as the former chairman of the Agriculture Committee.

    Harkin has avoided questions about fundraising for the institute after disclosure reports showed some of its largest donors are firms that have benefited from his policies.

    Harkin dismissed that those questions had any bearing on his decision.

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