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Jeremiah Salamon of West Springfield gets nearly 20 years in 'staggering ... unprecedented' child porn case

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In the basement of the home where Salamon lived with his parents, investigators found files were organized under labels including "pics," "vids," "babies" and "bondage."

2009 springfield federal courthouse summertime.jpgThe federal courthouse in Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD – The banner on his website beckoned: “Welcome & Enjoy!”

Users allowed access to the site, run by home repair business owner Jeremiah “Jay” Salamon, were able to view tens of thousands of meticulously organized files featuring children from infancy to just a few years old subjected to rape and sexual abuse, according to court records.

The vast library of images, which a prosecutor called “staggering ... and unprecedented” in federal child porn prosecutions statewide, won the West Springfield man nearly 20 years in federal prison at his sentencing on Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge Michael A. Ponsor also ordered that the defendant pay $300,000 in restitution to two young women, children when they were abused on film and now circulating the global Internet as the “Vicky files” and the “Misty files,” with Vicky and Misty being aliases.

The move was somewhat controversial in that restitution for child pornography victims in the wake of the web boom has been debated in courts across the country. Salamon’s restitution - which Ponsor conceded was largely symbolic since the defendant has no assets - will be added to the millions the two women have been awarded since they began litigating their cases.

The victim in the Misty series, known only under the pseudonym “Amy,” has made more than 350 requests for restitution at child pornography sentencings where the images depicting her as an 8-year-old are included in the defendants’ collections.

Lawyers for the victims and the government asked Ponsor to award $4 million in restitution; the judge noted awards across the country have ranged from 0 to $3 million “with several stops in between.”

He said they are difficult to calculate because the law requires judges draw a causal link between individual perpetrators and the victims, and essentially put a price tag on each instance of file-sharing and the harm it caused.

“In some ways, it’s an important gesture of respect to the victims to consider the issue of restitution,” Ponsor said.

Salamon, 34, owner of “Honey Do Projects,” was arrested by police at a job site in Springfield in 2009 after an FBI agent posing as an Internet troller tapped into his collection.

In the basement of the home where Salamon lived with his parents, investigators mined his laptop during a search and found his files were carefully organized under labels including “pics,” “vids,” “babies” and “bondage.”

Under a plea agreement with prosecutors, Salamon avoided being exposed to a sentence of 30 years to life in prison because of the sheer number - 240,000 files - agents discovered on his laptop and external hard drive. Salamon was sentenced Wednesday to 19 years and 11 months in prison after pleading guilty in December to possessing, advertising and distributing child pornography.

“The unfortunate nature of this crime is truly viral,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven H. Breslow told Ponsor.

Defense lawyer Thomas J. Rooke told the judge his client had a “dark side” and became unraveled when his marriage fell apart. He said Salamon is eager to be rehabilitated.

After a brief apology to his parents and the judge for taking up the court’s time, Salamon resumed his seat without any mention of the victims featured in the computer files he shared with untold Internet users.


Your comments: Readers react to Hartford teacher's suspension for making students clean the bathroom after using it

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Readers weigh in after a Hartford teacher is suspended for making students clean the classroom bathroom after using it.

toilet.jpg

HARTFORD, Conn. - Art teacher Catherine Saur was suspended this week after parents complained about a two-year practice of making students clean the bathroom in the classroom after using it.

One parent told the school board that her son's hands were irritated from cleaning the toilets. Another parent said her 7-year-old daughter went to the bathroom in her pants because she didn't want to have to clean the bathroom.

Superintendent Peter Dart spoke out against Saur and the practice but not everyone believes she was out of line.

Nancy Moreaux, secretary of the school's parent-teacher organization said that she supported the practice, or at least the idea behind it.

"If you sprinkle when you tinkle, please be neat and wipe the seat," she said.

Here is what some of our readers had to say:

mayfieldit says: Teacher of the year. We need more like her. Too many P C cowards. If the parents raised them right there would not be a problem with cleaning the toilet. Don't surrender the school, we have given them the city.

underyourbed says: Kids should be doing chores. But, even I won't clean a public toilet. Sounds like no one wore gloves, the kids could have gotten sick if they inhaled bleach or mixed it with ammonia. Let the kids sweep or wash the chalkboards.

travis_bickle says: I totally remember putting our chairs on our desks at the end the day, helping the teacher throw out the wastebaskets and different kids being chosen to clap out the blackboard erasers outside. I also remember if you were well behaved and a good student you'd be chosen to raise the American flag in the morning. Do kids even DO THIS anymore??? It's not the kids faults. It's the ADULTS turning them into irresponsible WIMPS.

larryhovis says: anybody in support of this teacher would be playing a diff tune if it was their kid who came home with rashed up hands. im not against kids doin chores, but bleach?.....letting children use a toxic chemicals?....there are milder disinfectants. not a very smart person, and shes teachin kids is the scary thing. if i was the supe, id fire her.

gtrucks says: This teacher should be elevated to Superintendant of Hartford Schools!

What do you think? Is this teacher a model for modern education or did she overstep her bounds? Visit the original story here to chime in and join the conversation
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AM News Links: Mass teen pleads not guilty in texting-while-driving death, new leak suspected at Japanese nuclear plant and more

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A Mass. teen pleads not guilty in texting-while-driving death, new leak suspected at Japanese nuclear plant and more of the morning's headlines.

Mideast Israel Palestinians EgyptA Palestinian man waits before crossing into Egypt through the Rafah border crossing, southern Gaza Strip, Thursday, May 26, 2011. Egypt's decision to end its blockade of Gaza by opening the only crossing to the Hamas-ruled Palestinian territory this weekend could ease the isolation of 1.4 million Palestinians there. (AP Photo/Eyad Baba)

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

Holyoke Ward 5 City Councilor Linda Vacon announces reelection campaign

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Vacon is in her first 2-year term, and said her plain-speaking ways on issues would continue in a new term.

vacon.JPGLinda L. Vacon, Holyoke Ward 5 city councilor

HOLYOKE – Ward 5 City Councilor Linda L. Vacon, who has announced her campaign for reelection, has a way of cutting through clutter.

This is ridiculous,” Vacon said last month, when a councilor questioned a testimonial dinner for the former police chief.

“I believe we are subjecting the city to liability by leaving this person (in office),” Vacon said in February about former Tax Collector Robert F. Kane.

Vacon, 57, is in her first term and is seeking another two years in the seat in the fall election. Each councilor is paid $10,000 a year.

Vacon wrote in an email May 14 she sees her job as a ward councilor as helping the city grow by welcoming new business while safeguarding neighborhoods’ quality of life.

“The focus of my position has been constituent service, common sense and clear communication,” Vacon said.

“It has been an honor and a privilege to represent the people of Ward 5 and the city of Holyoke. I remain as committed as ever to work for you, for Holyoke as we enter a new campaign season,” she said.

Vacon is executive director of the Auburn Visiting Nurse Association.

She is on the council Redevelopment Committee and the Public Service Committee. She belongs to the Greater Holyoke Chamber of Commerce and Holyoke Taxpayers Association.

Also, Vacon is on a task force of taxpayers, business owners and officials Mayor Elaine A. Pluta appointed in March to find ways to reduce property taxes.

Election day is Nov. 8.

A preliminary election would be held Sept. 20 to narrow the field of some races if necessary.

Giles LaPlante of Granby wakes up sleeping family as garage fire rages on Batchelor Street

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"This story could have had a very different ending," said Granby Fire Chief Russ Anderson.

HOCT fire rescue05.25.2011 | Photo by Dave Roback / The Republican | Giles LaPlante of Granby was returning from a service call with Hampshire Towing when he spotted flames coming from a garage on Batchelor Street in Granby Tuesday evening.

GRANBY - Had it not been for the actions of 20-year-old Granby resident Giles LaPlante Tuesday night, one local family may have lost much more to a fire than their garage.

LaPlante, a driver with Hampshire Towing, was on his way back from a service call in Chicopee just before 11 p.m. when he ended up becoming a hero as he alone spotted a fire on Batchelor Street as the entire neighborhood slept.

"I was coming down School Street and it was so foggy out I could barely see," he said. "I slowed way down and almost came to a stop. I smelled smoke and at first I thought maybe someone was having a camp fire. Then I turned onto Batchelor Street and I saw the flames."

Flames were coming from the garage behind the home at 380 Batchelor St. The house happens to belong to a friend of LaPlante's father.

"I stopped the truck with the flashers on and ran up to the house and started knocking. I've known him ever since I was a kid and he is good friends with my father," LaPlante recalled. "Everyone in the neighborhood was asleep but my truck is kind of loud and the lights were going. I think that got some people's attention and they started coming outside."

The fire had already destroyed much of the garage and melted the siding off the house 20 feet away when it was threatening to claim the homeowner's truck, which was parked next to the burning structure. But LaPlante's timing was on point enough for the owner to grab his keys, jump into the driver's seat and move it out of harm's way.

"They are very fortunate that he (LaPlante) spotted the fire when he did," said Granby Fire Chief Russ Anderson. "The danger of a nighttime fire like that is the flames can make their way into the soffit and then up to the attic, well above the smoke detectors and the family sleeping inside."

The fire ended up destroying the garage and causing extensive damage to a neighboring pool house, but LaPlante's 911 call as he pulled up made the difference in limiting the damage and potentially saving the family's life.

The garage also doubled as a workshop, as the homeowner is a carpenter, according to LaPlante.

"If I would have been later it could have been a lot worse," LaPlante said. "It's sad that he lost his workshop but you can rebuild a garage -- not a person."

The Granby Fire Department along with Belchertown and South Hadley firefighters extinguished the blaze within a few minutes of arriving, according to the Granby Police Department.

The fire, investigated by the Granby fire and police departments along with the Massachusetts Office of the State Fire Marshal, was ruled accidental and attributed to discarded painting materials, according to Anderson.

"It was a hot, fast-moving fire," Anderson said. "This story could have had a very different ending had he not been there when he was and called when he did."


Sexual Minorities Educational Foundation hopes to establish center in Northampton

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The foundation’s board members include poets, activists and local college professors and represents the spectrum of the gay community.

052411 bet power.JPGBet Power stands with some of the archives for The Sexual Minorities Education Foundation.

NORTHAMPTON – A newly formed foundation is hoping to bring information about the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender worlds all the way out of the closet into a dedicated facility that will serve as a resource for the entire East Coast.

The Sexual Minorities Educational Foundation, Inc. already boasts one of the most extensive archives on gay life, history and art in the country, but since 1979 its has been confined to the Northampton home of Bet Power, the president of the foundation’s board of directors. With the recent establishment of the 12-member board and a pending application for non-profit status, the foundation is hoping to take the long-awaited next step and set up shop in a new, accessible location where the archives can be readily accessible to the public.

“It’s always been my intention to have it open to the public,” said Power, who has hosted a steady parade of students and scholars at his home for decades. “I wanted to organize and give it a structure.”

Power, 61, got involved with the archives in 1974, when it was in its infancy. Now a transgender man, Power was living in Chicago then and coming out as a lesbian. He volunteered to sell books in a lesbian bookstore and came upon a collection of books in the back of the store. A literature major in college, Power was astounded by the wealth of material on gay life. The Chicago store closed in 1977.

“The woman who started it left for Boston,” Power recalled. “I asked if she was going to take the collection. She said no and looked at me.”

When Power moved to Northampton in 1979, he took the material with him. The archive grew in leaps and bounds as members of the gay community donated books, magazines and art.

“In 1983, it filled one room,” Power said. “Now it’s my whole house.”

That house is presently bursting with more than 6,000 books, 700 periodicals, file cabinets full of newspaper clippings, DVDs, posters, paintings and other materials that chronicle the gay culture and all its sub groups. There’s even a “queer vinyl” collection that includes lesbian-themed albums produced by companies such as Olivia Records.

Power has been willing and eager to share the material. Entire classrooms from local colleges have visited his house, and a Smith College students gets a stipend from the college to help Power with projects. But the archives has outgrown its bounds and Power believes the time is right to go house-shopping for a permanent home for the collection.

“More than a third of it can’t be exhibited because there’s no room in my house,” he said. “We need to keep it in the control of the gay community instead of having it at a university archive. This is very important, because it’s direct education of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender life by LGBTs.”

Power, who has dealt with his share of abuse over the years because of his sexuality, believes that hatred and oppression arise from ignorance and lack of education. He wants the new foundation to work with area colleges to develop curriculum on gay life.

“We have the content to do that,” he said “This is the wave of the future.”

Power noted that the California state senate recently approved a bill that would mandate the teaching of gay and lesbian history in public high schools. That trend, he believes, will spread across the country. When it comes to Massachusetts, the Sexual Minorities Educational Foundation will be ready.

“We’re the only national archives on the East Coast,” he said.

The foundation’s board members include poets, activists and local college professors and represents the spectrum of the gay community. Power said the group hopes to start a capital campaign to raise the approximately $500,000 needed to buy a building near the center of Northampton.

“I’ve been saying 10 years, but it could happen in a few years,” he said.

Sunrise report: Forecast, poll and more for Thursday May 26

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Today's poll: Should the Massachusetts sales tax holiday happen every year?

05.25.2011 | SPRINGFIELD - James J. Mahoney, investigator for the City of Springfield Department of Veterans' Service, and Charly N. Woehlke (behind at left), Deputy Director of the department, flag some of veterans' graves at St. Michael's Cemetery Wednesday. Find a summary of the Valley's Memorial Day observances here.

The Forecast

Memorial Day may be the unofficial start to summer, but the season may have started even more unofficially yesterday.

Today, it continues: lots of sun with a high in the mid-80s.

As for the weekend ahead, ABC 40 / Fox 6 meteorologist Dan Brown writes:

As Memorial Day Weekend draws closer heat and humidity will start to build in making for some great cookout weather. An area of high pressure will set up off shore and a southwesterly flow will take over. This flow will bring in a stream of warm, muggy air. It will also keep a cold front off to our west just about all weekend long. This means the focal point for showers and thunderstorms will stay away, likely across the mid-west.

Find the full forecast here.





Today's Poll

The Massachusetts Senate's debate over the $30.5 billion state budget is underway.

On Wednesday, the Senate rejected an amendment that would have made a permanent annual event out of the "sales tax weekend" that has taken place in August during several recent years.

The AP reports:

Sales tax holidays are popular with shoppers and merchants, but critics say the state can't always afford the loss of tax dollars.

During last year's sales tax holiday on August 14 and 15, the state lost an estimated $19.9 million in potential sales taxes, which instead went as savings for consumers.

What do you think -- should the sales tax holiday happen every year? Vote in our poll and check back tomorrow for the results.

Wednesday's results: Yesterday we asked, "Should major nonprofits offer payments in lieu of taxes to the cities and towns they call home?" 12 people voted. 66.67% said "Yes"; 33.33% said "No".




Wednesday's Top 5

The top 5 headlines on MassLive.com on May 25 were:

  1. Your photos: Bears in Easthampton [photo gallery]

  2. 2011 High School of Commerce prom[photo gallery]

  3. 2011 Dean Tech Prom [photo gallery]

  4. The 2011 Gateway Regional High Prom [photo gallery]

  5. Springfield ranked 12th 'most dangerous' city in U.S., but some question validity of list



Quote of the Day

“Unless there are significant improvements in the school’s academic, fiscal and operational health over the next 20 months, I will consider non-renewal of the New Leadership Charter School’s charter in January 2013.”
&mdash Massachusetts Education Commissioner Mitchell Chester. Read Jack Flynn's story here.

Sarah Palin signals ambition, reluctance for White House

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There are reports Palin bought a home in Arizona that could be a campaign headquarters if she goes forward.

sarah palin arizona housen this May 2, 2011, file photo, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin waves during a fundraiser at Colorado Christian University in Lakewood, Colo. Palin has authorized a feature-length film about her rise, added staff and recently said she has "that fire in the belly" for a presidential bid, all steps that fuel speculation she's inching toward a White House run.

JUNEAU, Alaska — Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has authorized a feature-length film about her rise, added staff and recently said she has "that fire in the belly" for a presidential bid — all steps that fuel speculation she's inching toward a White House run.

Her supporters are putting together a campaign-in-waiting in Iowa, the lead-off nominating caucus, in the hopes the Republicans' 2008 vice presidential nominee decides to join the race.

There are even reports she bought a home in Arizona, not far from her daughter's, which aides have suggested could be a campaign headquarters if she goes forward.

Clearly Palin will be part of the conversation on Republican presidential contenders, but it's not certain she wants to be a candidate. With near-universal name recognition, loyal supporters and nearly unrivaled fundraising potential, Palin remains the biggest unknown in the presidential field and could wait longer than most to answer that question.

Palin is weighing her family's privacy against advice from a growing circle of political advisers. She rehired two former aides to help plan her events, suggesting she is ready to travel extensively again, and shuffled other advisers as she steps up her public appearances.

"I want to make sure that we have a candidate out there with tea party principles," she said recently.

That doesn't mean she's rushing to be that person.

Although Palin has made no obvious moves on her own behalf in early nominating states, California lawyer Peter Singleton has been meeting with county GOP organizations in Iowa since last winter. Working with Singleton, a group of Palin supporters has been building an independent, statewide organization this year at the ready should Palin decide to run.

"I don't know where Sarah's mind is, I don't think anyone knows that," said Meg Stapleton, who served as Palin's spokeswoman in the governor's office and after. "I think at this point in time, it's only within her heart and her mind and she's keeping it that way."

The GOP field is starting to set, with candidates making official their White House plans in recent or coming weeks. None, however, has truly engaged the party's base, and polls indicate likely primary voters and caucus-goers are dissatisfied and looking for other options. Should she run, Palin could fill that hunger and quickly galvanize a party eager to campaign against President Barack Obama but uncertain who their best warrior would be.

"I do have that fire in the belly," Palin told Fox News Channel.

She hasn't signaled how long that fire might burn, however. Palin's star power means she might not have to enter the race as early as the others. A late entry could build excitement for her, an online fundraising burst could quickly pay for the campaign and her social media prowess could trump a traditional campaign.

Palin also would come to the 2012 campaign with serious hurdles. She has a loyal following among conservatives and tea-party activists, but she remains a divisive figure among the wider public. Polls show more people have an unfavorable opinion of her than not, and her abrupt resignation from the governor's office two years ago is the open question for many Republicans.

Palin supporters hope an upcoming documentary about her rise and time as Alaska's governor will calm their worries. "The Undefeated," set to premiere next month in Iowa, is stoking speculation she wants to reframe how that period is characterized.

"This film is a call to action for a campaign like 1976: Reagan vs. the establishment. Let's have a good old-fashioned brouhaha," Stephen Bannon, the filmmaker, said in a statement.

Palin asked an aide to reach out to Bannon about making videos on her time as Alaska's governor; Bannon wound up making a movie instead, reported on the website Real Clear Politics, which broke the news of the film.

Stapleton, the former spokesperson, said she has seen a rough cut, which she said married interviews with Palin insiders with media accounts from that time to provide an "accurate portrayal of her record."

News of the film comes as a former member of Palin's inner circle published a scathing tell-all. Frank Bailey's "Blind Allegiance to Sarah Palin: A Memoir of Our Tumultuous Years" was based on tens of thousands of emails he collected. In it, he paints an unflattering portrait of Palin as someone who wanted to quit the governorship even earlier than her surprise resignation on the July 4, 2009, holiday weekend.

It also comes amid reports that the family purchased a $1.7 million home in Scottsdale, Ariz., where advisers have suggested a campaign could be based. Alaska's distance from the lower 48 states would be a major hurdle should she run, and trips to New Hampshire would consume entire days if she wanted to get home to spend time with one of her five children.

Scottsdale is an hour's drive from Maricopa, where Palin's 20-year-old daughter, Bristol, purchased a home.

Palin advisers would not comment on the Arizona properties. The New York Times, citing two people familiar with the details of the real estate transaction, said the Palins used a shell company that hid their identity.

It's not clear, though, whether the Republicans' 2008 vice presidential nominee, will ultimately decide to join the race. She commands six-figure sums for her speeches, earns a paycheck as a Fox News Channel contributor and is a best-selling author.

Should she run, she'd have to give up that income. Should she lose the primary, she'd give up some of her cache. And it's not as if she lacks for attention right now.

Whereas other potential candidates struggle for the limelight, Palin fires off 140-character missives on Twitter to her more than 525,000 followers. Her Facebook page offers her more serious opinions on the day's news to her almost 3 million supporters.
Ivan Moore, a pollster based in Anchorage, thinks Palin will run — but for the notoriety, not the job.

"She's achieved what she's achieved in terms of earning money so far based on a failed vice presidential run," said Moore, who works for Republicans and Democrats alike. "Imagine what she could do from a presidential run."


How they voted: Senators John Kerry, Scott Brown reject GOP budget proposal that would alter Medicare

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Both Brown and Kerry criticized the plan this week, but Brown had strong words for Congressional Democrats as well.

John-Kerry-Scott-Brown.JPGMassachusetts' U.S. Senators John Kerry, a Democrat, and Scott Brown, a Republican, confer in this AP file photo.

Both of Massachusetts' U.S. Senators joined Democrats Wednesday in rejecting a House GOP budget proposal that would significantly alter Medicare. Five Republicans, Sen. Scott Brown among them, also voted against the measure.

Sen. John Kerry, a Democrat, made clear his opposition to the proposal authored by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan during a speech in Dorchester Monday.

"We can balance the budget. We can reduce the deficit. We can get rid of the debt. And we can do it while still investing in the future of our country and not do it at the expense of seniors and children," Kerry said, according to the State House News Service.

(Still confused about what the Ryan proposal would do to Medicare? The Christian Science Monitor took a close look back in April.)

For his part, Brown published an op-ed in Politico earlier this week, arguing that "seniors should not have to bear a disproportionate burden" of Congressional budget cuts. Read Brown's op-ed »

Although Brown was among the five Republicans and two Independents to oppose the bill (Read the roll call vote here), afterward he strongly criticized Democratic leadership for not putting forth an alternative plan.

In a statement, Brown said:

Majority Leader Reid should stop playing divisive political games with our nation’s financial future and allow us to work on a bipartisan budget that is fiscally responsible and can pass the Senate. We are in a financial emergency right now: the national debt is more than $14 trillion, the annual deficit is pushing $1.5 trillion and we just hit our debt ceiling. This is no time for partisan politics. The American people deserve better.

The Associated Press reports that Vice President Joe Biden is brokering compromise meetings between senior lawmakers from both parties, as they attempt to reach consensus ahead of an Aug. 2 deadline for raising the nation's debt ceiling.

Clinton: US working to remove Yemeni president

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The U.S. had previously backed President Ali Abdullah Saleh in exchange for cooperation against a branch of al-Qaida.

yemen president, APYemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, reacts while delivering a speech to his supporters, during a rally in his support in Sanaa, Yemen, Friday, May 20, 2011.

PARIS — U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the United States is troubled by political intransigence in Yemen amid ongoing violence there.

Clinton says Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh has repeatedly "reneged" on promises to step down, and she says the U.S. and other countries are trying hard to get him out. The U.S. had backed Saleh in exchange for cooperation against a branch of al-Qaida headquartered in Yemen, but Washington withdrew its support as Saleh pressed a violent crackdown on protesters this spring.

Intense battles spread across Yemen's capital Thursday. At least 28 people were killed as the four-day death toll neared 110.

The State Department on Wednesday ordered nonessential U.S. diplomats to depart Yemen and urged all Americans there to leave as security conditions deteriorated.

23-year-old-Vincent Surprenant in critical condition at Baystate Medical Center following motorcycle crash on Boston Road in Springfield

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Police, who continue to probe the crash, said speed was a factor.

bostoncop.jpgA Springfield police officer looks at the wreckage of a motorcycle involved in a Boston Road crash while an onlooker takes a photo with her cell phone. After impact the motorcycle continued for another 100 feet into the parking lot of a Boston Road shop.
bostoncop2.jpgA Springfield police officer takes a photo of the debris field from a Boston Road accident. A motorcycle clipped the front end of a car, seriously injuring the motorcyclist

SPRINGFIELD – A 23-year-old motorcyclist, seriously injured Wednesday night after he lost control on Boston Road and collided with a car, was listed in critical condition Thursday at Baystate Medical Center.

Police have identified the victim as Vincent Surprenant of Newbury Street.

The crash occurred shortly before 8 p.m. as Surprenant rode east in the area of 600 Boston Road at high rate of speed, police said.

Sgt. John M. Delaney said Surprenant apparently lost control rounding a curve and the bike skidded into the westbound lane where it clipped the front end of 2000 Maxima driving by Jorge Mendez, 36, of Morton Street.

Sgt. Neil Maloney of the Springfield Police Traffic Bureau told The Republican shortly after the crash that there were reports from witnesses that the motorcycle had been doing wheelies just before losing control, but he said those had not yet been confirmed.

Delaney said the accident report has no mention of wheelies. He said, however, that the crash remains under investigation. Charges have yet to filed, he said.

The impact ripped the right front bumper off the car, and the motorcycle skidded for another 100 feet or so, coming to rest by the front door step of Dezi’s Jewelry Exchange and Pawn Shop.

Several pieces of the motorcycle were torn off, including the gas tank and engine, and were lying in the road.

Massachusetts Senate works on plans to overhaul criminal defense program

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In addition to tightening the indigency verification process, the Senate plan would seek to transfer a greater proportion of the public defense caseload onto state attorneys.

By MATT MURPHY

BOSTON - The Senate on Wednesday pushed forward with plans to overhaul the state’s criminal defense program, agreeing to shift the number of cases handled by public attorneys and proposing an increase in the fees paid by indigent defendants for legal services.

In addition to tightening the indigency verification process, the Senate plan would seek to transfer a greater proportion of the public defense caseload onto state attorneys, reducing the number of private bar advocates paid with tax dollars to represent the poor in court.

Critics of the current system say escalating costs have gotten out of control and need to be reined in.

“Like everything, this was a way of balancing the financial need with providing the best legal services for everyone,” said Sen. Cynthia Creem, the co-chair of the Judiciary Committee who helped draft the amendments.

The Senate plan to reform the Committee for Public Counsel Services, approved Wednesday night without debate, calls for public defenders to handle 30 percent of the cases involving indigent clients by the end of fiscal 2012, up from the current 10 percent. Billable hours for private bar advocates tapped to handle the remaining caseload would be capped at 1,400 per year per attorney.

The proposal goes further than House, which recommended hiring an additional 200 public defenders to increase the caseload to 20 percent for an estimated savings of $53 million.

The Senate also agreed to an amendment sponsored by Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr to increase the fees paid by clients for public legal counsel to $200, up from $150.

According to Creem, shifting a greater number of cases onto public defenders will require hiring an estimated 200 or more new state attorneys.

“If it doesn’t save money, we’ll have to look at it again,” Creem said after the vote.

After going through several redrafts, the amendments approved by the Senate stopped well short of the initial budget proposal released by Senate Ways and Means that called for moving toward a 50-50 split for cases handled by public defenders and private bar advocates over the next two years, and capping billable hours for private attorneys at 1,200 per year per attorney.

Creem and Senate Republicans had expressed doubts about the amount of savings that could be achieved by adding a significant number of new state employees to the payroll, and Creem said she worried that 50 percent would create the potential for too many conflicts of interest for public defenders representing private clients.

Both the House and Senate, in their budgets, have also rejected Gov. Deval Patrick’s push to entirely scrap the network of 3,000 private attorneys who handle 90 percent of the caseload of indigent clients in need of legal services in favor of hiring 1,000 state lawyers and 500 support staff into a new public defender agency.

Administration and Finance Secretary Jay Gonzalez has said the shift to a fully staffed public defender program would save $60 million a year and allow the administration and the Legislature to budget for legal services once a year without concern that costs would grow.

The governor recently signed a supplemental budget that included $42.2 million for the state’s public defense program that was in jeopardy of running out of money before the end of May. According to the Patrick administration, the cost of public counsel services soared to a projected $208 million this fiscal year, up from $118 million in fiscal 2005.

The Senate budget also proposes a restricting of the CPCS board, reducing the membership from 15 to 11 and creating two appointments that would be handed out by the governor, one by the Speaker of the House and one by the Senate President. Currently, the Supreme Judicial Court makes all appointments to the CPCS board.

The amendments approved by the Senate altered the initial budget proposal to reduce the board to nine members by adding two SJC appointments back to the board.

After debating tax amendments on Wednesday, the Senate on Wednesday evening whipped through 273 of the 599 amendment filed to the budget, though many of those amendments, including those dealing with municipal health insurance, were placed on hold and could be considered on Thursday.

Other notable actions taken by the Senate Wednesday night:

• The Senate unanimously adopted an amendment offered by Sen. Benjamin Downing, of Pittsfield, and Sen. Stanley Rosenberg, of Amherst, boosting the line-item for Chapter 71 regional school transportation by $3 million.

Downing said that despite making a promise to regional school districts to fully fund transportation, the state’s commitment has dropped from a “high-water mark” of 91 percent in 2008 to 44 percent in fiscal 2012 without the additional funding.

• Sen. Robert Hedlund won near unanimous support for his amendment authorizing the inspector general to hire outside consultants to audit Chapter 40B affordable housing projects.

Hedlund cited a 2007 report from Inspector General Gregory Sullivan detailing $8 million in excess profits collected by developers on 11 projects that should have been returned to cities and towns. Under his plan, the audits would be paid for with 5 percent of the excess profits recovered, with the remainder being returned to host communities. The amendment passed, 37-1, with Sen. Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton) opposed. Pacheco said Housing Secretary Greg Bialecki was already taking steps to enforce the laws around excess profits from 40B developments.

Though Hedlund called Bialecki probably his “favorite secretary” in the Patrick administration, he said the taxpayers have been waiting since 2007 for stronger enforcement. Hedlund also said the inspector general’s office has the auditing experience and legal knowledge to recoup money for cities and towns.

Holyoke police charge 26-year-old Juan Perez with knife assault, victim, who bled heavily, refuses to admit he was stabbed

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The suspect was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

1999 holyoke police car.jpg

HOLYOKE – A 23-year-old city man, treated by ambulance personnel on Appleton Street for a bloody knife wound to his arm Wednesday afternoon, refused to admit to police that he had been stabbed.

“No, I just fell,” said Capt. Arthur R. Monfette, quoting the injured man from a narrative on the incident in a report filed by police.

The victim, who bled quite a bit, Monfette said, stuck to his story even after a 26-year-old suspect, found with a bloody knife in his pocket, admitted to the stabbing, Monfette said.

Police were summoned to the area of 365 Appleton St. for a report of a stabbing and arrested the suspect, Juan C. Perez, of 374 Maple St., first floor. He was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

Monfette said he believed the victim was treated a hospital but had no further information.

Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan's brother, Mark, gets maximum sentence in assault that lead to death of father

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Nancy Kerrigan broke down and cried earlier as she asked the judge to send her brother home instead of to jail.

Mark Kerrigan 52511.jpgView full sizeMark Kerrigan stands in court before the jury left for deliberations at Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn, Wednesday. The jury acquitted Mark Kerrigan of manslaughter but guilty of assault and battery in the death of his father Daniel Kerrigan. Daniel Kerrigan died of a heart attack after the two had a fight at their family home.

WOBURN – A Massachusetts judge sentenced the brother of Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan to the maximum two and a half years in jail on Thursday after he was convicted of assault in the death of their 70-year-old father.

Six months of the sentence for Mark Kerrigan will be suspended, and he will be required to get anger management and alcohol treatment, and serve two years of probation.

Nancy Kerrigan broke down and cried earlier as she asked Judge S. Jane Haggerty to send Mark Kerrigan home instead of sending him to jail.

Mark Kerrigan was convicted of assault, but acquitted of manslaughter, Wednesday in his father’s 2010 death.

Prosecutors alleged that Mark Kerrigan caused his father’s death during a physical altercation at the family’s home in Stoneham, just north of Boston. They said Mark Kerrigan put his hands around Daniel Kerrigan’s neck with such force that he broke cartilage in his father’s larynx and triggered his heart failure.

The defense argued that Daniel Kerrigan died because he had severely blocked coronary arteries and that Mark Kerrigan was not responsible.

Nancy Kerrigan  52611.jpgView full sizeFormer Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan arrives at Middlesex Superior Court, in Woburn Thursday morning.

Nancy Kerrigan told the judge that the large Kerrigan family supported her brother. She called his prosecution in the death of their father “a long and trying experience.”

“Any sentence for Mark would only serve to extend an unnecessary situation that already seems as if it has been never-ending,” she said.

“We ask that you please ... send him home with us today so that he can rejoin our family,” she said, breaking down in tears.

Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Keeley asked the judge to sentence Kerrigan to the maximum 2 ½ years, citing his lengthy criminal record and alcohol problem.

Defense attorney Janice Bassil asked for a 6-month suspended sentence followed by a year of probation.

The judge called a recess before pronouncing the sentence, after listening to the emotional statements from Nancy Kerrigan and her aunt, Joanne Tarason, who spoke on behalf of Nancy and Mark’s mother, Brenda Kerrigan.

Brenda Kerrigan’s statement said, “Mark and I have suffered enough.” She said Mark has helped her “in every way possible” since his father’s death. Brenda Kerrigan is legally blind.

What they said: Massachusetts Senate rejects several tax rollback measures; budget debate continues Thursday

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See what Senators Gale Candaras, Michael Knapik and Stephen Brewer had to say.

candaras-knapik-brewer.jpgSenators Gale D. Candaras, D-Wilbraham, Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield and Stephen M. Brewer, D-Barre.

Click to hear discussion of tax credit proposal

The Massachusetts Senate rejected a number of Republican-sponsored tax measures during its first day of budget deliberations Wednesday, including one that would roll the state's income tax back to 5 percent over three years, and another that would provide tax credits for businesses based on the number of new jobs they created.

Here are some highlights from what local legislators had to say about the proposals.

Gale D. Candaras, D-Wilbraham

Sen. Gale Candaras, D-Wilbraham, co-chair of the Senate's revenue committee, opposed both the income tax rollback, which Republicans argued was meant to honor a 2000 referendum calling for a 5 percent income tax, and the the tax credit proposal.

Candaras argued that Massachusetts tax breaks and deductions in the Commonwealth nearly equal state spending. During discussion of the proposed tax credit for jobs created, sponsored by Sen. Bruce Tarr, R-Gloucester, Candaras said:

We are presently giving a billion dollars in deductions, deferrals, credits, exclusions and exemptions to corporations here in the Commonwealth. One billion dollars. And I'm not sure that all of our colleagues feel we get our biggest bang for the buck on this one billion dollars that we are deferring, excluding, exempting, etcetera, for the corporations of the Commonwealth.

Candaras cited an estimate from the state's Department of Revenue that such a measure could cost as much as $116 million in tax revenue for the Commonwealth.

Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield

Knapik, the ranking Republican on the Senate Ways and Means committee, saw things differently than Candaras. He argued on the Senate floor that the lost revenue would come from jobs that wouldn't exist otherwise. He said:

The amount of revenue lost — we don't have the revenue, Madame President, that's the point of this incentive. And know that we're already doing this in the medical device industry. We thought it was an important tool there. For every job added, a 50 percent rebate, up to 50 percent, on the income tax paid. We don't have these jobs.

Sen. Stephen Brewer, the Senate Ways and Means Committee chair, said the state could not afford new tax credits given the projected loss of revenue. The amendment failed by a voice vote.

The amendment to roll the state's income tax back failed by a 5-33 margin. Brewer said that an automatic income tax rollback to 5.25 percent is possible if state revenues continue to come in faster than projected, according to The Associated Press.

Other rejected tax-related measures include the establishment of a permanent sales tax holiday and a measure to bring the state sales tax back to pre-2009 levels, from 6.25 percent to 5 percent.

The Senate also voted to restore $3 million for summer jobs for at-risk youth. More coverage from the AP is available here.

Senate budget deliberations continue Thursday. You can watch a live stream here.

Materials provided by the State House News Service and the Associated Press were used in this post.


MSNBC's Ed Schultz off air due to Laura Ingraham remark

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Schultz was apparently upset over Ingraham's criticism of President Barack Obama's overseas trip.

ed schultz laura ingrahamIn a Jan. 1 2005 file photo provided by Democracy Radio, Ed Schultz laughs at a caller's joke during his nationally-syndicated progressive program.

NEW YORK — MSNBC's Ed Schultz is off the air for more than a week after calling a fellow talk-show host a vulgar term.

On his radio show, the liberal commentator referred to conservative host Laura Ingraham as a "right-wing slut." He was apparently upset over her criticism of President Barack Obama's overseas trip.

Schultz apologized on MSNBC on Wednesday to Ingraham, his family, MSNBC and viewers for the remark. He said it was wrong and uncalled for, and he recognized the severity of what he said.

MSNBC said the network and Schultz mutually agreed on a suspension that will take him off the air until June 6.

2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs Round 2: South Region

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32 Valley pizza shops go head-to-head as the competition heats up.

2011-valley-food-championship-b2.jpg

On Wednesday, we revealed the 32 Valley pizza shops that advanced from Round 1 voting in the 2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs.

We mentioned how close the Pizza Playoffs voting was. Indeed, any one vote – your vote – could make the difference between a pizza shop's advancing or going home.

And with Round 2, your votes become even more critical – from here until the Elite 8, it's head-to-head, NCAA basketball-style tournament play. Pizza shop vs. pizza shop. One pizza shop wins, one pizza shop doesn't.

In Round 2, your votes will narrow the field of contenders from 32 down to 16. In each region, you can vote in each of the four matchups. The four winners in each region will advance to Round 3, the Spicy 16. The 4 unsuccessful pizza shops in each region will be eliminated.

Round 2 voting is open until Wednesday, June 1 at noon. It's time to cast your ballot!

Links to Round 2 polls: North | South | East of the River | West of the River









South Region Bracket:

2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs Round 2: North Region

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32 Valley pizza shops go head-to-head as the competition heats up.

2011-valley-food-championship-b2.jpg

On Wednesday, we revealed the 32 Valley pizza shops that advanced from Round 1 voting in the 2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs.

We mentioned how close the Pizza Playoffs voting was. Indeed, any one vote – your vote – could make the difference between a pizza shop's advancing or going home.

And with Round 2, your votes become even more critical – from here until the Elite 8, it's head-to-head, NCAA basketball-style tournament play. Pizza shop vs. pizza shop. One pizza shop wins, one pizza shop doesn't.

In Round 2, your votes will narrow the field of contenders from 32 down to 16. In each region, you can vote in each of the four matchups. The four winners in each region will advance to Round 3, the Spicy 16. The 4 unsuccessful pizza shops in each region will be eliminated.

Round 2 voting is open until Wednesday, June 1 at noon. It's time to cast your ballot!

Links to Round 2 polls: North | South | East of the River | West of the River









North Region Bracket:

2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs Round 2: East Region

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32 Valley pizza shops go head-to-head as the competition heats up.

2011-valley-food-championship-b2.jpg

On Wednesday, we revealed the 32 Valley pizza shops that advanced from Round 1 voting in the 2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs.

We mentioned how close the Pizza Playoffs voting was. Indeed, any one vote – your vote – could make the difference between a pizza shop's advancing or going home.

And with Round 2, your votes become even more critical – from here until the Elite 8, it's head-to-head, NCAA basketball-style tournament play. Pizza shop vs. pizza shop. One pizza shop wins, one pizza shop doesn't.

In Round 2, your votes will narrow the field of contenders from 32 down to 16. In each region, you can vote in each of the four matchups. The four winners in each region will advance to Round 3, the Spicy 16. The 4 unsuccessful pizza shops in each region will be eliminated.

Round 2 voting is open until Wednesday, June 1 at noon. It's time to cast your ballot!

Links to Round 2 polls: North | South | East of the River | West of the River









East Region Bracket:

2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs Round 2: West Region

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32 Valley pizza shops go head-to-head as the competition heats up.

2011-valley-food-championship-b2.jpg

On Wednesday, we revealed the 32 Valley pizza shops that advanced from Round 1 voting in the 2011 Valley Food Championship Pizza Playoffs.

We mentioned how close the Pizza Playoffs voting was. Indeed, any one vote – your vote – could make the difference between a pizza shop's advancing or going home.

And with Round 2, your votes become even more critical – from here until the Elite 8, it's head-to-head, NCAA basketball-style tournament play. Pizza shop vs. pizza shop. One pizza shop wins, one pizza shop doesn't.

In Round 2, your votes will narrow the field of contenders from 32 down to 16. In each region, you can vote in each of the four matchups. The four winners in each region will advance to Round 3, the Spicy 16. The 4 unsuccessful pizza shops in each region will be eliminated.

Round 2 voting is open until Wednesday, June 1 at noon. It's time to cast your ballot!

Links to Round 2 polls: North | South | East of the River | West of the River










West Region Bracket:

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