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Taco Bell set to open at Springfield's Breckwood Center in Sixteen Acres

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A new Taco Bell is slated to open by mid-summer on Breckwood Boulevard as part of renovations and improvements taking place at the Breckwood Center plaza.

SPRINGFIELD -- A new Taco Bell restaurant is slated to open by mid-summer on Breckwood Boulevard as part of renovations and improvements taking place at the Breckwood Center plaza.

The Taco Bell is opening at the vacant Dunkin' Donuts shop, 464 Breckwood Blvd., close to the campus of Western New England University.

Sally Lussier, president of the Sixteen Acres Civic Association, said the new store and other improvements at the plaza are welcomed by the neighborhood.

"I'm sure the college students will like it very much," Lussier said.

Fran Cataldo, president of C&W Realty Enterprises, which owns the commercial plaza, said the Dunkin' Donuts was outdated and small, and has been vacant in recent months after being replaced by a new Dunkin' Donuts on the Wilbraham Road side of Breckwood Center.

The plaza at 1060 Wilbraham Road is near full capacity with tenants that also include Winn Liquors, Dollar Tree, Peppa's Express Pizzeria and Paddy's Irish Pub.

Other Taco Bells in Springfield include restaurants on Liberty Street, Main Street in the North End, Boston Road and Sumner Avenue.


Save-A-Lot supermarket coming to Sixteen Acres plaza in Springfield at former movie house

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A Save-A-Lot supermarket is coming to Sixteen Acres in Springfield, taking plaza space that once housed the Springfield Cinemas movie theaters.

SPRINGFIELD -- A Save-A-Lot supermarket is coming to Sixteen Acres, slated to open in the fall at the Breckwood Center plaza on Wilbraham Road in a space that included the former Springfield Cinemas movie complex.

Fran Cataldo, president of C&W Realty Enterprises, which owns the Breckwood Center property at 1060 Wilbraham Road, confirmed the plans and said the new store is part of significant changes and improvements. The plaza is at the corner of Breckwood Boulevard.

"We have always believed in the location," Cataldo said. "It has great traffic and is a great neighborhood. We are happy it's all coming together this fall. We think it's a good addition to the neighborhood -- Sixteen Acres, Pine Point."

Springfield Cinemas, a 12-screen movie theater, closed at the site in 2004, and the space has been vacant since that time. Previously, the site housed the Entertainment Cinemas and before that time was a Big Y supermarket.

Construction is taking place, and the building facade is being improved. The ownership will also pave an unfinished area of the parking lot, Cataldo said.

Sally Lussier, president of the Sixteen Acres Civic Association and vice-president of the Golden Agers in Sixteen Acres, said reaction from members of both neighborhood groups has been positive.

"I have gotten a lot of positive feedback from members of both organizations regarding the new food market that is going in -- Save-A-Lot," Lussier said. "I, for one, am looking forward to it."

There are also Save-A-Lot stores in Springfield at 459 Main St., Indian Orchard, and 655 Liberty St.

Cataldo said there has been a lot of activity at the Breckwood Center plaza in the past six months.

A new Dunkin' Donuts opened in recent months, opposite from Duggan Middle School on Wilbraham Road. Business there is going very well, Cataldo said.

The new Dunkin' Donuts allowed for the closure of the smaller, outdated Dunkin' Donuts at the other side of the property off Breckwood Boulevard, Cataldo said.

The old Dunkin' Donuts is being converted to a Taco Bell, slated to open there by mid-summer, he said.

In addition, a Dollar Tree store expanded at the Breckwood Center prior to the new Dunkin Donuts being constructed, Cataldo said.

There is "a lot of enthusiasm in Springfield" tied to the MGM Springfield casino and other developments, aiding efforts to attract retail tenants, Cataldo said. In the case of Save-A-Lot, the ownership was waiting for the right opportunity for the long-vacant space, he said.

The ongoing investment in the property is "fairly large," Cataldo said, not disclosing specific costs.

Other tenants in the plaza include Wynn Liquors, Peppa's Express Pizzeria and Paddy's Irish Pub.

The Breckwood Center is at the border of Sixteen Acres and Pine Point and near Western New England University.

Canada to legalize marijuana on Oct. 17

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The move should take market share away from organized crime and protect the country's youth, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.

TORONTO (AP) -- Marijuana will be legal nationwide in Canada starting Oct. 17 in a move that should take market share away from organized crime and protect the country's youth, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday.

The Senate gave final passage to the bill to legalize cannabis on Tuesday, legislation that will make Canada only the second country in the world to make pot legal across the country.

Trudeau said provincial and territorial governments need the time to prepare for retail sales.

"It is our hope as of October 17 there will be a smooth operation of retail cannabis outlets operated by the provinces with an online mail delivery system operated by the provinces that will ensure that this happens in an orderly fashion," Trudeau said.

The prime minister said at a news conference that the goal is to take a significant part of the market share away from organized crime.

"Over the following months and indeed years we will completely replace or almost completely replace the organized crime market on that," he said.

Canada is following the lead of Uruguay in allowing a nationwide, legal marijuana market, although each Canadian province is working up its own rules for pot sales. The federal government and the provinces also still need to publish regulations that will govern the cannabis trade.

"The legislation is transformative," said Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, adding it "marks a wholesale shift in how our country approaches cannabis, leaving behind a failed model of prohibition."

She urged Canadians to follow the existing law until the Cannabis Act comes into force.

"The law still remains the law," Wilson-Raybould said.

Many questions remain unanswered, including how police will test motorists suspected of driving under the influence, what to do about those with prior marijuana convictions and just how the rules governing home cultivation will work.

The Canadian provinces of Quebec and Manitoba have already decided to ban home-grown pot, even though the federal bill specifies that individuals can grow up to four plants per dwelling.

"Provinces can set their own laws. If individuals are challenging that law, they can challenge it," Wilson-Raybould said.

Trudeau said the government won't discuss pardons of past convictions until legalization is in effect.

"There's no point looking at pardons while the old law is in the books," Trudeau said.

Trudeau said they are going to treat it like wine and tobacco, noting that few people will cultivate it at home, but it's necessary to fight organized crime.

Trudeau promised to legalize it during the 2015 election and had set a goal of July 1 for it. The provinces pleaded for more time.

Canadian marijuana stocks have rallied in anticipation of legalization and jumped again on Wednesday.

In the neighboring U.S., nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized marijuana. California, home to one in eight Americans, launched the United States' biggest legal marijuana marketplace on Jan. 1.

The news was greeted with enthusiasm by marijuana advocates in the U.S.

Morgan Fox, a spokesman for the National Cannabis Industry Alliance in the U.S., said Canada's legalization should also serve as a wake-up call south of the border.

"The most important takeaway is that it's time for advocates in the industry to double down, so as to not be surpassed by the Canadian cannabis industry," he said.

Don Hartleben, who manages Dank of America, a retail cannabis store just south of the border in Blaine, Washington, said Canada's legalization was not only politically exciting, but a potential business boon for him.

Many of his customers are Canadian tourists who are terrified of trying to bring pot across the border, he said. If more use marijuana when they're in Canada, more will use when they're on vacation in the states.

"People ask me all the time, 'Isn't legalization in Canada going to hurt your business?'" he said. "I tell them, 'No! The more it's legal, the more people are going to feel safe to buy my product.'"

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Associated Press writer Gene Johnson in Seattle contributed to this report.

Fugitive who fled Massachusetts caught with kilo of fentanyl, 10 grams of heroin

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Rhode Island State Police arrested a man who allegedly fled Massachusetts while awaiting trial.

Rhode Island State Police have arrested a Massachusetts fugitive who was allegedly hiding himself, as well as several pounds of drugs in a Providence basement. 

Jesus Ramos, 52, of Providence, was arrested on Wednesday around 11:30 a.m. when police went to search the apartment where he was staying. Rhode Island State Police say Ramos was allegedly hiding in a basement in an apartment on Ford Street in Providence after fleeing Massachusetts in violation of his terms of release on bail while awaiting trial for multiple weapons and drugs charges.

Police allege that in the Providence basement space where he was living, Ramos was in possession of nearly an entire kilo of fentanyl, as well as 10 grams of heroin. RI State Police said in statement they also found drug presses and other drug paraphernalia during their search.

As a Fugitive from Justice in Massachusetts, Ramos already faced charges of trafficking fentanyl and narcotics and the possession/use of a firearm during a felony. He now faces a slew of new drug charges following the raid by Rhode Island officials, including not only the possession of illegal substances, but intent to deliver and manufacture the drugs as well.

The arrest on Wednesday was the result of collaborative work by multiple agencies, including members of the Rhode Island State Police Violent Fugitive Task Force U.S. Marshals Service, Homeland Security Investigators, Boston Police Department and the Rhode Island State Police's drug trafficking force.

House rejects hard-right immigration bill, baring GOP divide

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The House killed a hard-right immigration bill Thursday, and Republican leaders delayed a planned vote on a compromise GOP package with the party's lawmakers fiercely divided over an issue that has long confounded the party.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House killed a hard-right immigration bill Thursday, and Republican leaders delayed a planned vote on a compromise GOP package with the party's lawmakers fiercely divided over an issue that has long confounded the party.

The conservative measure's 231-193 defeat set the stage for debate on the second bill, this one crafted by Republican leaders in hopes of finding an accord between the party's sparring moderate and conservative wings. That bill was considered too lenient by some conservatives and seemed likely to fall, too, and aides said the final roll call would wait till Friday.

Rejection of both would represent an embarrassment for President Donald Trump, who had embraced them. The battle over immigration has been intensified by heartbreaking images of migrant children separated from families and complicated by opaque statements by Trump.

At the White House, Trump defended his administration's "zero tolerance" policy of prosecuting all migrants caught illegally entering the country, a change that has caused thousands of families to be divided while the parents are detained. He said without it, "you would have a run on this country the likes of which nobody has ever seen."

He said he was inviting Congress' top two Democrats, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, to the White House for immigration bargaining. He called them "extremist open-border Democrats."

In a tweet that seemed to undermine House leaders' efforts to round up votes, he questioned the purpose of their legislation by suggesting it was doomed in the Senate anyway.

Trump issued an executive order Wednesday aimed at reversing his own policy of taking immigrant children from their detained parents, but emotions remained high.

"I was welcomed here," a tearful Rep. Norma Torres, D-Calif., said during House debate, describing her journey to the U.S. as a child from Guatemala. "I was not put in a freezing cell."

In an embarrassing detour, the House used an early procedural vote to correct what Republicans called a drafting error -- language providing $100 billion more than they'd planned to help build Trump's proposed border wall with Mexico. Instead of giving initial approval for $24.8 billion spread over the next five years, the legislation said it would open the door to $24.8 billion "for each" of the next five years.

The rejected compromise bill would have granted no pathway to citizenship for young "Dreamers" who arrived in the country illegally as children, curbed legal immigration and bolstered border security.

The second was a compromise between GOP moderates and the party's conservatives that included an opportunity for citizenship for the young immigrants. It provides $25 billion for Trump's wall, restrictions on legal immigration and language requiring the Homeland Security Department to keep migrant families together while they're being processed for illegal entry to the U.S.

Democrats oppose both measures as harsh.

"It is not a compromise," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters. "It may be a compromise with the devil, but it is not a compromise with the Democrats."

Even before votes began, Trump complicated GOP efforts to round up votes.

"What is the purpose of the House doing good immigration bills when you need 9 votes by Democrats in the Senate, and the Dems are only looking to Obstruct (which they feel is good for them in the Mid-Terms)," Trump wrote. "Republicans must get rid of the stupid Filibuster Rule-it is killing you!"

In the unlikely event that the House approved the GOP compromise, it seemed certain to go nowhere in the GOP-run Senate. Democrats there have enough votes to use procedural delays to kill it. Sixty votes are needed to end filibusters.

On Wednesday, Trump reversed himself and took executive action aimed at curbing the separation of families. His order seemed to stem some of the urgency for Congress to act.

But GOP leaders were eager to hold the votes anyway. The roll calls would let Republicans assert to voters that they tried addressing the immigration problem.

"Our members wanted to express themselves on an issue they care a great deal about," Speaker Paul Ryan said.

Passage of the GOP compromise was always a long shot, but failure may now come at a steeper price. Republicans and Trump have raised expectations that, in control of Congress and the White House, they can fix the nation's long-standing immigration problems.

When the crisis of family separations erupted at the border, GOP leaders revised the compromise bill to bolster a provision requiring parents and children to be held together in custody. It did so by eliminating the 20-day cap on holding minors and allowing indefinite detentions.

Even though Trump has acted unilaterally to stem the family separations, lawmakers still prefer a legislative fix. The administration is not ending its "zero tolerance" approach to border prosecutions. If the new policy is rejected by the courts, which the administration acknowledges is a possibility, the debate could move back to square one.

Senate Republicans, fearing Trump's action will not withstand a legal challenge and eager to go on record opposing the administration's policy, have unveiled their own legislation to keep detained immigrant families together.

In the House, moderate Republicans forced the immigration debate to the fore by threatening to use a rare procedure to demand a vote. Led by Curbelo and Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., many are from states with large populations of young "Dreamer" immigrants who now face deportation threats under Trump's decision to end the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. A federal court challenge has kept the DACA program running for now.

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Associated Press writers Alan Fram and Kevin Freking contributed to this report.

Suspect, a Level 3 Sex Offender wanted on warrants, crashes motorcycle while fleeing West Springfield police

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The suspect, Daryl Whitaker, made the news nearly a year ago, when he crashed his Ford Mustang on Interstate 91 in Northampton, again while fleeing police. Troopers pulled Whitaker from the burning wreckage.

WEST SPRINGFIELD - A 56-year-old Chicopee man, who crashed his motorcycle early Wednesday while fleeing police, resisted arrest even though he wiped out onto the pavement at an estimated 30 to 35 mph.

The suspect, Daryl Whitaker, made the news nearly a year ago when he crashed his Ford Mustang on Interstate 91 in Northampton, again while fleeing police.

Troopers pulled Whitaker from the burning wreckage. Whittaker, seriously injured, was arraigned on numerous charges in his room at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield.

This time around, Whitaker, a Level 3 Sex Offender, caught the eye of West Springfield police Tuesday night when they attempted to stop his red Yamaha motorcycle on Route 5, according to a post on the department's Facebook page.

The suspect, wanted on warrants, fled, however, and a police pursuit was aborted due to traffic.

Whittaker was last seen heading up a ramp onto Interstate 91.

Police were apparently ready for Whitaker's return to West Springfield, however, because they were staged in the area of the Super 8 Motel at 150 Riverdale St. when they saw him riding his motorcycle in the parking lot there, with his lights out, at about 12:45 a.m. Wednesday.

Once again, Whitaker fled and he led police on a "slow speed" pursuit into Holyoke where he crashed at Main and Canal streets. After a struggle, Whitaker was taken to Baystate for treatment of a leg injury.

Whitaker was charged with two counts of failing to stop for police, resisting arrest, reckless operation of a motor vehicle and motor vehicle offenses. He was also arrested on warrants for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, failure to stop for a police officer and reckless operation of a motor vehicle.

DA not likely to name former UMass student who fell from graduate building's 16th floor

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UMass has referred all questions about the death of the 25-year-old Hampton, New Hampshire, man who fell from the top floor of the 16-story building Tuesday night to the DA's office.

AMHERST -- The Northwestern district attorney's office said Thursday it will not release the name of the former University of Massachusetts student who fell to his death Tuesday from Lederle Graduate Research Center because "no foul play is expected."

When the information about the death was released Wednesday, Mary Carey, spokeswoman for District Attorney David E. Sullivan, said that no further details on how he fell would be provided.

UMass has referred all questions about the death of the 25-year-old Hampton, New Hampshire, man who fell from the top floor of the 16-story building Tuesday night to the district attorney's office.

UMass has not sent a broadcast email to the campus about this death, university spokesman Ed Blaguszewski said in an email. 

During the academic year, Student Life staff often send messages to the community about student deaths and to provide campus services for people in need.

Blaguszewski said he cannot comment on why the man was on campus, but explained that there is ongoing activity throughout the summer that includes faculty, staff and students in the Lederle complex.

"The building is open to the public, so a non-student can enter the facility," Blaguszewski said. "Such access for academic and administrative buildings during business hours is a common operating practice at public universities."

The complex, which opened in 1972 and is named after former UMass President John W. Lederle, includes three towers and a low-rise building. 

Math, chemistry, information and computer sciences, biochemistry, molecular biology and information technology are housed in the building, Blaguszewski said.

"During the summer, faculty work with graduate students on research projects as well as with undergraduates who participate in an undergraduate research experience program," he said. "In some buildings, there are spaces such as laboratories and mechanical areas that are locked and not open to the public. Access is limited to approved persons."

First Massachusetts marijuana business license awarded to Sira Naturals

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The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission granted the state's first marijuana business license, allowing Sira Naturals, Inc. to move ahead with cultivation at its existing Milford facility.

The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission granted the state's first marijuana business license, allowing Sira Naturals, Inc. to move ahead with cultivation at its existing Milford facility.

Sira Naturals, which currently uses the facility for medical marijuana, was granted a provisional license through a unanimous vote of the five-member commission on Thursday.

The company was quick to note in a press release that it's the first to receive a marijuana business license on the US eastern seaboard.

Shawn Collins, the commission's executive director, said the company plans to have the Milford facility fully operational - 20,000 square feet -- on the recreational marijuana side within four months.

The facility currently has 10,000 square feet for growing medical marijuana. The company says it has enough inventory to ensure medical marijuana patient demand is always fulfilled and any excess can be shifted to the recreational market.

The facility's hours of operation will be 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, according to Collins.

The company provided the commission, the state agency tasked with overseeing the new marijuana industry, with a security plan, inventory and quality control procedures, as well as record-keeping procedures.

The commission will grant the final license to Sira Naturals after staffers inspect the facility to ensure they're meeting their goals and procedures, Collins said.

"This historic milestone is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our exceptional team and to the countless cannabis industry stakeholders throughout the Commonwealth whose passion to legalize cannabis made this dream a reality," Sira Naturals CEO Michael Dundas said in a statement.

"This is an exciting first step on the path toward making our premium cannabis products available to a wider audience than ever before," he added.

The company, which first started in 2013, has also applied for research and transportation licenses, but Thursday's vote was limited to the granting of the provisional cultivation-only license.

While Sira Naturals has medical marijuana dispensaries in Somerville, Cambridge and Needham, it has not yet applied for a license to sell recreational marijuana at those locations.

The commission has not approved any applications for retail pot shops, meaning that legal sales of recreational marijuana are still a ways off.

Companies seeking to open retail pot shops must not only receive approval from the Cannabis Control Commission, but they also go through the local approval process at the city or town level.

Massachusetts voters in November 2016 approved a ballot question broadly legalizing recreational marijuana for adults 21 years and older.

This post was updated with additional information.


Chicopee police asking for help to ID suspect in break-ins

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The suspect is believed to have broken into several unlocked cars in the neighborhoods off Newbury Street Wednesday night.

CHICOPEE - After a spate of break-ins into cars, police are asking for help to identify a possible suspect.

A man walked through neighborhoods off Newbury Street Wednesday night and tried to open unlocked car doors. He is believed to have rummaged through several cars searching for items to steal, said Michael Wilk, police public information officer.

A suspect was caught on a video camera set up in the area. Police are now asking anyone who can identify him to call the detectives at 413-594-1740 and reference case 18-2815-OF. People can also send a private message through the department's Facebook page.

Wilk is once again reminding people to lock their car doors so they will not be an easy target of thieves.

Did Melania Trump wear 'I really don't care, do U?' jacket to border visit?

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First lady Melania Trump on Thursday traveled to Texas to speak to children and officials at a shelter for migrant children.

By EMILY HEIL
The Washington Post

First lady Melania Trump on Thursday traveled to Texas to speak to children and officials at a shelter for migrant children. "I'm here to learn about your facility," Trump said, informing the people who run the facility that she wants to "ask you how I can help these children be reunited with their families as quickly as possible."

But her message was obliterated by a controversy over what appeared to be words emblazoned on the jacket she wore as she boarded the plane for takeoff at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland: "I REALLY DON'T CARE, DO U?"

After photos emerged of the first lady wearing the jacket, which she took off before touring the shelter and meeting with the children, people online quickly compared it to a $39 Zara jacket bearing that phrase. The outrage was immediate, but her spokeswoman, Stephanie Grisham, dismissed the reaction as a distraction.

"It's a jacket," she said in an email asking what the first lady's choice meant. "There was no hidden message. After today's important visit to Texas, I hope the media isn't going to choose to focus on her wardrobe."

Photos taken of Mrs. Trump did not show the full phrase on her coat, and reporters on the scene did not have full view of it.

Asked whether the first lady's jacket did actually have the words "I don't care" on it, Grisham responded: "I don't know."

 

Mass DOT to close lane on I-91 North closed Friday for fuel-spill cleanup

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Northbound traffic will be reduced to one lane for much of Friday at the scene of the tanker crash.

WHATELY - The Massachusetts Department of Transportation announced that northbound travel on Instate 91 will be reduced to one lane in Whately as part of continued clean up from Wednesday's fuel tanker accident.

A 3/4 mile stretch beginnning at mile marker 33 will be affected. The right travel lane and breakdown lane will be closed from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The left lane will be open but drivers are encouraged to reduce speed while passing by the work scene.

The site was the scene of a fatal crash involving a tractor trailer hauling 9,000 gallons of gasoline. Driver Jody Crosby, 47, of Seymour, Connecticut was killed.

The crash closed the highway in both directions and the adjacent railroad lines for several hours as officials transfered the fuel to another tanker.

Study highlights risks with post-mastectomy reconstruction surgery

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Women electing to have breast reconstruction surgery after a mastectomy need to be better informed about the risks associated with the various techniques.

Women electing to have breast reconstruction surgery following a mastectomy need to be better informed in making their choice of technique used.

This is the conclusion of two studies involving more than 2,000 women from 11 study sites published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

The purpose in evaluating data from the Mastectomy Reconstruction Outcomes Consortium was to compare on a larger scale and over a longer time frame than previously studied the results in terms of complications and satisfaction from common post-mastectomy reconstruction techniques.

More than 60 percent of women who have a mastectomy for breast cancer treatment are said to elect to undergo breast reconstruction.

The prospective study on complications, which was conducted from Feb. 1, 2012 to July 31, 2015, indicated that the overall complication rate for the 2,343 women surveyed was high - close to 33 percent.

Dr. Andrea L. Pusic, plastic surgeon and one of the lead authors of the studies from Brigham and Women's Hospital told the New York Times that the complication rate found may be "higher than what we've been telling people," but that women opt for such surgery for psychological and physical reasons and need to know the "pros and cons" to make "good decisions."

The satisfaction study found that women who opted to have reconstruction using tissues transplanted from other parts of their body, something called autologous reconstruction, showed greater satisfaction with the results on several levels two years out than women who opted to use breast implants.

However, the second study indicated that women making this choice had "significantly higher odds" of developing a complication after surgery than women electing expander-implant techniques.

A greater likelihood of developing any complication, such as the need for repeat surgery, was associated with the transplanted tissue called "flaps" of autologous reconstruction. The women also reported weakened abdominal muscles when tissue was taken from this area of the body.

A greater risk for failure and infection was associated with prosthetic reconstruction.

The study on satisfaction also reported that regardless of whether women elected to have implant or donor reconstruction all patients reporting having higher psychosocial well-being three or four years out than at baseline.

Researchers said this highlighted "the positive association of postmastectomy breast reconstruction with breast-related quality of life."

A JAMA editorial noted that the study measuring patient satisfaction had only 60 percent of patient surveys completed over the time period. It also noted that the rates of repeat surgeries associated with some of the procedures were the same 15 years ago.

These included the overall failure rate of 7.1 percent with implant-based techniques and 1.2 percent for tissue described as deep inferior epigastric artery perforator flaps as well as rates of reoperative complications, ranging from 15.5 percent for expander implant reconstruction to 29.2 percent for the deep inferior epigastric artery perforator flap procedure.

The editorial called for further research.

Rhode Island finance committee delays anticipated vote on PawSox deal

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Rep. Marvin Abney said the bill was still being worked on and would not be considered until later tonight.

Rhode Island's House of Representatives Finance Committee has pushed back a hotly anticipated vote on a stadium deal for the Pawtucket Red Sox, as the state attempts to prevent the team's potential move to Worcester.

The Finance Committee was scheduled to vote on the measure, which has the support of House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, on Thursday afternoon.

But when the committee convened an hour and a half after its planned start time, Rep. Marvin Abney said the bill was still being worked on and would not be considered until later tonight.

"We're still in the process of making sure we've got all the I's dotted and T's crossed on all of the bills that we're working on," said Abney, the committee chair.

If Rhode Island passes the proposal, the team, state and city of Pawtucket would be responsible for $23 million, $15 million and $12 million in debt respectively, with the PawSox also contributing $12 million in construction costs to the project. The proposal also includes a commitment by the team to develop at least 50,000 square feet of ancillary retail and mixed-use real estate by the time the stadium opens.

Pawtucket officials have described the proposed stadium as a potential centerpiece of the city's redevelopment, while voicing concerns about the PawSox' demonstrated interest in Worcester -- and about the revenues that would disappear if the team left Rhode Island.

Following public hearings, an earlier version of the deal sailed through the Rhode Island Senate Finance Committee and was passed by the full Senate in January. But its future in the House remained uncertain, with Mattiello saying it would receive committee hearings but refusing to commit to a floor vote.

The deal's chances appeared to reach a nadir later that month, when Mattiello told radio host Dan Yorke that the proposal was "dead in the state of Rhode Island."

"Two-thirds of Rhode Islanders do not support it and therefore, the House will not support it."

But the deal still had a pulse, and negotiations between the Pawtucket, the legislature and the team continued through the spring. In late May Mattiello announced his support following changes to the bill that removed a requirement that the state set aside money to cover revenue shortfalls.

Mattiello told the Providence Journal on Wednesday that someone within the PawSox organization told him the team was "interested" in his version of the deal, and that he intended to hold a full House vote Thursday night if it passed the Finance Committee.

The anticipated vote comes as Worcester has continued to court the team, with the rumored goal of building a stadium on the vacant Wyman Gordon lot near Kelly Square. Much of the city's business community has vocally supported bringing the PawSox to Worcester, as public officials have led rounds of secretive talks with team executives.

PawSox spokesman Bill Wanless told MassLive the team will not comment on the deal until the process is complete.

What does the Supreme Court's Wayfair decision on online sales taxes mean for Massachusetts?

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Brick-and-mortar retailers have been lobbying Congress for years to overturn a court decision that said online retailers only had to collect the state sales tax in states where they have a physical presence.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that states can collect sales taxes from online retailers. 

Brick-and-mortar retailers cheered the decision. Gov. Charlie Baker hailed the ruling as "a good day for states, and it's a good day for those in the retail space who have been for many years disadvantaged because of the two-tiered system."

But the practical effect in Massachusetts may be more about providing clarity than gaining any substantial new revenue, since Massachusetts already started collecting taxes from online sales last year -- despite a lawsuit challenging those collections. 

"It certainly clears up any confusion, clears up some of the rhetoric," said Rep. Jay Kaufman, D-Lexington, chairman of the Committee on Revenue.

Retailers who own physical stores have been lobbying Congress for years to overturn the 1992 Quill decision by the Supreme Court. That decision established that online retailers only had to collect the state sales tax in states where they had a physical presence. 

Local retailers said this put them at a competitive disadvantage, since someone could avoid the state sales tax by buying online. "It's a drain on our economy and a drain on our main streets and our local sellers," said Jon Hurst, president of the Retailers Association of Massachusetts. 

Hurst said particularly with so many people owning smartphones today, online sales have accelerated.

Although taxpayers are legally obligated to pay the tax on online sales, few actually do.

In Thursday's 5-4 decision, South Dakota v. Wayfair, the court overturned the requirement that an online seller have a physical presence in the state. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote, "Each year the physical presence rule becomes further removed from economic reality and results in significant revenue losses to the States."

Hurst called the court's decision "a huge win for actual brick and mortar stores on our Main Streets and also for the commonwealth and other states for obtaining fair taxation."

Amazon started collecting the sales tax in Massachusetts in 2013, when it opened offices here.

A November 2017 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office estimated that Massachusetts could gain an estimated $169 million to $279 million in additional tax revenue if it could tax all remote sellers.

However, on Oct. 1, 2017, the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, under Baker and working with Attorney General Maura Healey, issued a new regulation reinterpreting existing law. The DOR decided that as long as a company is doing business in Massachusetts using computer software or hardware located in the state, or is using Massachusetts-based delivery services or payment processors, that counts as having a physical presence in the state.

Massachusetts began requiring companies that conducted at least $500,000 in online sales in Massachusetts or had 100 or more transactions to collect and pay sales tax.

Massachusetts law was similar to laws in several other states. Some states claimed that they could tax companies that had an "economic nexus" rather than a "physical nexus" in the state.

The Massachusetts law went into effect, but was challenged in court by a company, Crutchfield Corporation, which said it violated federal law.

Kaufman said he anticipates that the Supreme Court ruling "will eliminate any question about whether we're able to collect it."

Attorneys for Crutchfield Corporation could not immediately be reached.

Theoretically, the Wayfair decision could open up additional retail sellers to Massachusetts taxation.

But a state finance official said the Department of Revenue does not anticipate taking any immediate administrative action or issuing additional guidance in light of the Supreme Court decision.

Kaufman said he does not anticipate any legislative action either.

Noah Berger, president of the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center, a liberal-leaning think tank, said the likely result of the ruling is that Massachusetts' existing rules will take full effect, without the threat of a legal challenge, and more online retailers will begin collecting sales tax in Massachusetts. 

"The decision is good for Massachusetts and good for states across the country both because it could help to level the playing field between in-state retailers and online retailers and because it will provide revenue for important services in the state, like education and local aid," Berger said.

Chris Geehern, a spokesman for Associated Industries of Massachusetts, a business trade group, said the court ruling has the potential to "introduce a high degree of complexity for companies that do sell things over the web." 

He noted that it could apply not only to behemoths like Amazon and eBay but smaller businesses, like a machining company that sells parts online. 

"For the business community, it now means that they may have 50 different sales tax regimens to deal with as they sell to people in the 50 states," Geehern said.

But Gehern noted that the court did put some limits on what states can do, because they are not allowed to put "undue burdens" on interstate commerce. For example, South Dakota, like Massachusetts, creates a minimum threshold so only someone doing a large amount of business in the state has to collect taxes.

Sen. Eric Lesser, D-Longmeadow, Senate chairman of the Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies, said the decision was the correct one. "For a long time, we've been pointing out a real unfairness in the fact that mega online sellers like Wayfair or Amazon or Jet were not paying the sales tax... Whereas mom and pop brick and mortar businesses were," Lesser said. 

Massachusetts AG Maura Healey joins lawsuit suing Trump administration over family separation of migrants

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"This is about our duty as a nation to protect children and keep families together," Healey said in a statement.

Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey is joining a coalition of 11 attorneys general in suing the Trump administration over its policy of separating children and families at the Mexican border.

The attorneys general announced the lawsuit a day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order rescinding his policy of separating families. The lawsuit claims that the executive order does not actually end the policy because it does not establish a way for families who have been separated to be reunited or to make sure families are kept together in the future.

"This is about our duty as a nation to protect children and keep families together," Healey said in a statement. "We've seen this Administration pass executive orders and issue proclamations to muddy the waters when they've done something illegal. We are suing to make sure this cruel policy ends, that families are reunited, and that this never happens again."

The lawsuit will claim that the policy of separating children and parents violates due process, equal protection and federal law, according to Healey's office.

Eva Millona, executive director of the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Coalition, said in a statement of support for the lawsuit that the Trump administration "created a humanitarian crisis that the new executive order does nothing to resolve."

"No provisions seem to have been made to ensure that parents and children can be reunited as soon as their cases are resolved," Millona said. "Instead of rushing to build large-scale family detention facilities, the administration needs to prioritize coordinating between agencies to return children to their parents as fast as possible."

The attorneys general who are filing the lawsuit are from Washington, California, Iowa, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon and Pennsylvania.

Healey, a Democrat, has taken a strong stance against the Trump administration. She frequently files or joins onto lawsuits challenging Trump's policies. 


Massachusetts Senate passes wage theft bill

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According to the labor groups that support the bill, an estimated $700 million in wages is stolen from 350,000 workers each year.

BOSTON -- The Massachusetts Senate passed a bill Thursday that will make it easier to prosecute wage theft cases.

"This legislation takes crucial steps to protect workers from this illicit practice and holds employers accountable for their actions," said Sen. Sal DiDomenico, D-Everett, assistant majority leader and the lead sponsor of the bill.

According to the labor groups that support the bill, an estimated $700 million in wages is stolen from 350,000 workers each year. Wage theft includes practices such as not paying the minimum wage, not paying overtime, forcing workers to work off the clock, misclassifying employees or not paying workers at all.

Al Vega, director of policy and programs at the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health, said sometimes, for example, a general contractor will delay paying a subcontractor, so the subcontractor will not pay its workers. 

"Wage theft is something that is prevalent on a day to day basis," Vega said. "Workers are doing this hard work and then having issues being paid."

The bill, S.2327, would hold contractors -- both the lead contractor and a subcontractor -- liable for wages, as well as penalties or fines.

It would allow the attorney general to bring wage theft cases to court and seek civil damages, including treble damages. It would let the attorney general issue a stop work order, halting work until a wage violation is corrected. The employer could request a hearing or correct the violation to have the work restarted.

A labor group calling itself Community Labor United had launched a TV, radio and digital ad campaign urging lawmakers to pass the bill.

The bill will now go to the House.

An earlier version of the bill passed the Senate but not the House in 2016. Opponents worried that the bill would hold contractors responsible even if the contractor did not know about a wage violation by a subcontractor.

Drugs, gun were 'accessible to the children,' says police report on man indicted after raid

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An Easthampton man has been indicted after police found thousands of bags of heroin and firearms at his residence.

NORTHAMPTON -- An Easthampton man has been indicted on drug, gun, and child endangerment charges after a police raid allegedly found heroin, cocaine and firearms at a residence where he lived with four children.

William Grajalez-Rios, 33, was indicted in Hampshire Superior Court Tuesday on charges of heroin and cocaine trafficking, marijuana possession with intent to distribute, four counts of reckless endangerment of a child, and numerous firearms and ammunition charges. 

A clerk said no court dates have been set in the case. 

Grajalez-Rios was arraigned and pleaded not guilty in Northampton District Court. He was released on $25,000 bail, according to the Daily Hampshire Gazette. 

Grajalez-Rios was arrested in March following an investigation by the Northwestern district attorney's Anti-Crime Task Force.

On March 6, police raided the Dartmouth Street duplex where he lived, discovering around 11,500 bags of heroin, about 65 grams of cocaine and over $6,000 in cash, according to a police report.

Police also found a loaded, unsecured .380-caliber pistol at the house, the report said. The gun had been reported stolen in Springfield.

Four children lived in the unit, the report said, adding that the drugs and the gun were "accessible to the children."

Police said the drugs were stored in a pantry drawer along with food. Officers also found heroin partially hidden behind a wall panel near the children's bedrooms, police said. 

As former US Senate candidate bolts GOP, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker touts his particular brand

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Brian Herr, who four years ago ran as a Republican against US Sen. Ed Markey, left the GOP this week as President Donald Trump's administration carried out and then reversed a policy of separating immigrant children and parents at the US-Mexico border. Watch video

Brian Herr, who four years ago ran as a Republican against US Sen. Ed Markey, left the GOP this week as President Donald Trump's administration carried out and then reversed a policy of separating immigrant children and parents at the US-Mexico border.

Herr said on Twitter that he made the decision after "months of pain, frustration and embarrassment," prompting a reporter to ask Gov. Charlie Baker about the move. Herr and Baker were on the same Republican ticket in 2014.

"Using children to advance political agendas is immoral and sad beyond belief!" Herr said in his Twitter post, adding that he was headed to his town hall to unenroll and "become an Independent." "Where have the positive leaders gone in the USA?"

He later posted a photo of his un-enrollment form from the Hopkinton town clerk's office. "Done," he wrote.

Others who have recently left the party include state Rep. Susannah Whipps, who pulled away from the party in 2017, and Gabriel Gomez, also once a Republican candidate for US Senate who told WCVB earlier this year he is now registered as an independent.

Asked about Herr's departure from the Republican Party, Baker turned to touting his particular GOP brand, based on Bill Weld and Paul Cellucci, who had served as moderate Republican governors in Massachusetts.

Weld ran as a Libertarian Party candidate for vice president in 2016, and Cellucci died in 2013 after five years of fighting Lou Gehrig's disease.

"Brian's a really good guy," Baker told reporters. "And I've said this before, you know, it's a free country. People need to make whatever decisions they need to make."

Baker continued: "But I happen to believe that the brand that I represent is what I call the Bill Weld-Paul Cellucci brand. Which is a collaborative approach to governing, a fiscal discipline approach to dealing with budget issues, and a recognition that at the end of the day we need to work collaboratively with folks at the local level and the people in the private sector to make sure we can move this Commonwealth forward."

Baker blanked the presidential part of the ballot in November 2016, opting against casting a vote for either Trump or Democratic Party nominee Hillary Clinton. The governor this week pulled back on a plan to send a National Guard helicopter to the US-Mexico border after an outpouring of public outrage over the Trump administration's family-separation policy.

Gov. Charlie Baker reverses course on sending National Guard to Mexican border, citing Trump policy of splitting up migrant families

Baker remains popular in Massachusetts as two Democrats, Jay Gonzalez and Bob Massie, jockey for the chance to unseat him in November 2018.

The governor faces a primary challenge from Scott Lively, a pastor who has touted himself as a Donald Trump Republican.

A Suffolk University/Boston Globe poll released last week showed 59 percent of likely Massachusetts voters viewing Baker as an "anti-Trump" Republican. According to the poll, 14 percent said Baker is "pro-Trump," while 11 percent said "neither." Sixteen percent said they were undecided.

The survey included 500 voters and the margin of error was plus or minus 4.4 percent.

Material from State House News Service was used in this report.

Self-driving car tests expand to Worcester, metro Boston area

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Cities and towns around Metro Boston agreed Thursday to designate areas for testing self-driving cars and to work with state officials to develop a universal application for companies seeking to try out the new technology on public streets before the end of the year.

By ANDY METZGER

Cities and towns around Metro Boston and Worcester agreed Thursday to designate areas for testing self-driving cars and to work with state officials to develop a universal application for companies seeking to try out the new technology on public streets before the end of the year.

"This agreement will allow companies to responsibly develop and test autonomous vehicle technology in Massachusetts, while ensuring there are uniform safety guidelines in place," Gov. Charlie Baker said in a statement.

The governor on Thursday took a ride in the back seat of a self-driving car as part of an event in the Seaport where he announced the agreement. Both he and Transportation Secretary Stephanie Pollack arrived at the event in autonomous vehicles, according to MassDOT.

Thursday's agreement covers Arlington, Boston, Braintree, Brookline, Cambridge, Chelsea, Malden, Medford, Melrose, Newton, Revere, Somerville, Weymouth, Winthrop, and Worcester, along with the Department of Conservation and Recreation.

Without any framework from the Legislature, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, municipalities and companies have nosed out toward a future that might eventually include cars that operate without anyone behind the wheel.

Boston on Wednesday announced it had given the go-ahead to nuTonomy, which was acquired by Aptiv, to expand its testing terrain beyond the South Boston Seaport where it has piloted autonomous cars since January 2017.

"Continuing to test autonomous vehicles in a careful and methodical manner represents another step forward in helping us to achieve the vision for improved mobility that was established by residents during the Go Boston 2030 Transportation Plan public process," said Boston Mayor Marty Walsh. "If deployed thoughtfully, shared fleets of autonomous vehicles could offer the City of Boston the potential to improve safety on our streets, provide equitable connections to the MBTA, and offer a new source of mobility to all Boston residents."

The company's autonomous cars must have a professionally trained driver ready to take over operations at all times, must operate within the speed limit and abide by protocols stipulated by the city and MassDOT, according to City Hall, which announced Aptiv also puts a test engineer in the passenger seat.

The agreement with the 14 Metro Boston communities and Worcester calls for cities and towns to within six months "identify approved testing locations for at least one Testing Phase," with the idea that "MassDOT and the Participants shall endeavor to identify diverse driving environments and contiguous cross-border testing routes."

The 15 municipalities will also work with MassDOT on a universal Application to Test Autonomous Vehicles on Public Ways by the end of the year, and the agreement requires MassDOT to work with the communities on updates to the application and testing phase as appropriate.

The Metro Boston city of Everett will be surrounded by communities subject to the agreement but is not a signatory itself. Quincy is bordered to the north and south by participating communities, but likewise is not part of a memorandum of understanding.

Autonomous vehicles represent an alternative to human-piloted vehicles that killed 40,000 people across the country last year, including 14 in Boston, according to City Hall.

The new technology has its skeptics, and Walsh temporarily suspended testing on city streets earlier this year after an autonomous Uber car struck and killed a pedestrian in Arizona.

Karl Iagnemma, president of Aptiv Automated Mobility on Demand, said the company is "excited to have access to some of the most complex roads in North America."

"Each vehicle is equipped with a suite of sensors that provide a 360-degree view of the surroundings. Testing may occur in both day and nighttime hours, and during some inclement weather, such as light precipitation, fog, and low temperatures," Boston announced about its deal with nuTonomy. "As part of the upcoming expansion process, nuTonomy will continue to supply quarterly reports to the City and to update the Boston Transportation Department each time it begins operating in a new neighborhood of Boston."

Charles Krauthammer, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and Fox News pundit, dies at 68

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Charles Krauthammer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post columnist and intellectual provocateur who championed the muscular foreign policy of neoconservatism that helped lay the ideological groundwork for the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, died June 21 at 68.

Charles Krauthammer, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post columnist and intellectual provocateur who championed the muscular foreign policy of neoconservatism that helped lay the ideological groundwork for the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, died June 21 at 68.

The cause was cancer of the small intestine, said his son, Daniel Krauthammer. He declined to provide further information.

"I believe that the pursuit of truth and right ideas through honest debate and rigorous argument is a noble undertaking," he wrote in a June 8 farewell note. "I am grateful to have played a small role in the conversations that have helped guide this extraordinary nation's destiny. I leave this life with no regrets."

A star of page and screen, Dr. Krauthammer (pronounced KRAUT-hammer) was one of the highest-profile commentators of his generation. In addition to his syndicated weekly column in The Washington Post, which garnered him a Pulitzer in 1987, he was a marquee essayist for magazines across the political spectrum, including Time, the New Republic, the Weekly Standard and the National Interest foreign policy journal. He also was a near-ubiquitous presence on cable news, particularly Fox.

By any measure, Krauthammer cut a singular profile in Washington's journalistic and policymaking circles. He graduated in 1975 from Harvard Medical School - on time, despite a diving accident that left him a paraplegic - and practiced psychiatry before a restless curiosity led him to switch paths. Instead of diagnosing patients, he would analyze the body politic.

Jacob Heilbrunn, author of "They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons" and editor of the National Interest, said in an interview that Krauthammer "crystallized conservative thought and exerted influence by setting the terms of public debate at key moments in the nation's political life."

Known for acerbic, unsparing prose and hawkishness on U.S. and Israeli security matters, Krauthammer long directed his moral indignation at the "liberal monopoly" on the news cycle. He was festooned with honors by right-leaning groups and sought after by Republican policymakers. Vice President Dick Cheney once praised him for his "superior intellect."

To the left, Krauthammer was a bogeyman, most notably on the matter of President George W. Bush's "war on terror" and the ultimately catastrophic efforts to democratize the Middle East.

On Israeli-Palestinian relations, he acknowledged suffering on both sides but firmly defended the Jewish state in what he saw as its existential battle for survival. "Israel's crime is not its policies but its insistence on living," he wrote in a 2008 Post column. He declared international law worthless and quipped that Islamist militants are seldom "impressed by U.N. resolutions."

His prolific work extended far beyond politics and foreign affairs to touch on complex social problems that he had first encountered in his medical practice. He wrote poignantly - and at times caustically - about societal treatment of the mentally ill. Many patients, released from psychiatric facilities at the urging of civil libertarians, were set adrift on the "very mean streets" because of a fantasy of "a Rockwellian community ready to welcome its eccentrics," he wrote in Time in 1985.

"In the name of a liberty that illness does not allow them to enjoy," he concluded, "we have condemned the homeless mentally ill to die with their rights on."

After mass shootings, Krauthammer argued, Democratic leaders made "totally sincere, totally knee-jerk and totally pointless" calls for stricter gun-safety laws instead of addressing what he regarded as the more relevant underlying issue: the failure of families and the state to ensure effective psychiatric intervention for those who need it.

"In the liberal remake of 'Casablanca,' " he wrote in The Post in 2013 after the Washington Navy Yard killings, "the police captain comes upon the scene of the shooting and orders his men to 'round up the usual weapons.' "

The essayist and critic John Gross, writing in the New York Times, once called Krauthammer a skilled "controversialist" and "master of the crisp and compact formulation" whose greatest strength was his "ability to seize on the giveaway quotation or the exquisitely revealing chink in his opponent's armor."

Krauthammer said his politics were shaped by growing up in the post-Holocaust years with Jewish parents who had escaped Nazi Europe. He grew up attuned to the "tragic element in history," he once told a C-Span interviewer. "It tempers your optimism and your idealism. And it gives you a vision of the world which I think is more restrained, conservative, if you like. You don't expect that much out of human nature. And you are prepared for the worst."

He initially defined himself as a liberal Cold Warrior, a Democrat who embraced anti-communist as well as New Deal and Great Society programs that aided the most vulnerable. His support for the robust use of American military power gradually left him alienated from the Democratic Party, however, and he found ideological succor in neoconservatism, identifying with writer Irving Kristol's definition of its adherents as onetime liberals who have been "mugged by reality."

In the 1980s, Krauthammer coined the term "Reagan doctrine" to describe "overt and unashamed American support for anti-Communist revolution" in the form of proxy wars from Nicaragua to Angola. After the fall of the Soviet Union, he was credited with popularizing the phrase "unipolar moment" in commentaries that advocated solidifying American hegemony in an era when no other power came close to matching the United States in might.

His arguments found favor with the growing tide of neoconservatives in the GOP and saw their most intense expression during the first term of the Bush administration, when the president sought not only to bring to justice the perpetrators of the Sept 11. 2001, terrorist attacks but also more broadly to foster American-style democracy in the Middle East by toppling Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

In the lead-up to the Iraq invasion, the Bush White House tried to gain international support by accusing Hussein of hiding weapons of mass destruction. Despite shaky evidence for the claim, Krauthammer was foremost among pundits who took up the president's cause, excoriating anyone who opposed it or hesitated, from the Swedish weapons inspector Hans Blix to Secretary of State Colin Powell.

The U.S.-led invasion, which Krauthammer billed at the outset as a "Three Week War," has dragged on ever since, caused more than 4,000 U.S. deaths and more than 100,000 Iraqi casualties amid a grinding insurgency, and left the United States mired in a failed state with hostile neighbors. No nuclear weapons were found.

Harold Meyerson, then a Post columnist writing in the liberal American Prospect magazine in 2005, dubbed Krauthammer "the most insistent and hectoring" of the public intellectuals who sold the war to the public by subordinating "the facts on the ground to their own ideological preferences and those of their allies within the administration."

Krauthammer later downplayed the American abuse and torture of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq as an aberration in "the most humane occupation in history." He favored torture of terrorism suspects, assailing the "moral preening and the phony arguments" of those - including Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who endured torture as a prisoner of war in Vietnam - supporting a 2005 bill that prohibited under all circumstances the inhumane treatment of prisoners.

The noted political scientist and author Francis Fukuyama, a longtime admirer, began to accuse Krauthammer of blind triumphalism. They exchanged long, blistering, sometimes personal critiques in the pages of the National Interest that, in part, led Fukuyama to distance himself from the neocon movement.

Krauthammer at times took a corrosive tone toward Bush's Democratic successor. He called President Barack Obama "a man of first-class intellect and first-class temperament" but took jabs at his "highly suspect" character, citing his friendships with his "race-baiting" pastor Jeremiah Wright and the "unrepentant terrorist" Bill Ayers.

Krauthammer, who sounded the clarion call of an existential struggle with "Arab-Islamic totalitarianism," said Obama's "passion" was for "protecting Islam from any possible association with 'violent extremism' " and painted him as a welfare-state expanding extremist "given to apologies and appeasement" on the world stage.

Yet Krauthammer, who was named by Bush to the President's Council on Bioethics, was never completely a partisan warrior. He differed from many cultural conservatives by favoring legalized abortion and stem-cell research and abhorred the idea of "intelligent design," calling it "a fraud," "today's tarted-up version of creationism."

He scolded the tea party, a loud minority within the GOP that tried to force its way legislatively with government shutdowns, as the "suicide caucus." It was one thing to be a "blocking element" in the minority, he said, but their tactics were no way to govern.

Krauthammer was apoplectic about the rise and election of President Donald Trump, calling him a "moral disgrace" for his initial refusal to fully condemn a white nationalist rally in Charlottesville and a walking "systemic stress test."

"He had great lucidity of thought and was an extremely pungent polemicist," Heilbrunn said of Krauthammer. "Those traits manifested themselves once more in his searing denunciations of Donald Trump as a phony. They showed that Krauthammer wasn't simply a reflexive, unthinking conservative who was peddling the party line. He had real discernment and independence. At bottom, he was an intellectual, not just a journalist, with real literary flair and style and insight."

Irving Charles Krauthammer was born in Manhattan on March 13, 1950, and at 5 settled in Montreal with his father and mother, Jewish refugees from Europe.

In Canada, the elder Krauthammer prospered as a real estate executive. Charles, the younger of two sons, graduated first in his class at Montreal's McGill University in 1970 with a degree in political science and economics. He then spent a year studying political theory at the University of Oxford.

Amid the ferment of student revolution on college campuses, he grew disillusioned with politics and abruptly switched course to pursue medicine. That discipline, he later wrote, "promised not only moral certainty, but intellectual certainty, a hardness to truth, something not to be found in the universe of politics."

Physically robust in his youth, Krauthammer was a gifted sailor, skier and swimmer. The summer after his first year at medical school, he was diving from a springboard into an outdoor swimming pool in Boston when he struck his head on the concrete bottom and his spinal cord snapped. He had been studying neurology that week and said he "knew exactly what happened the second it happened."

He spent 14 months in intensive physical therapy while also being tutored so he could complete medical school with his class. What pained him most, he told The Post, was the fear that people might evaluate him by different standards because he was in a wheelchair, with limited use of his hands.

"If I can just muddle through life, they'll say it was a great achievement," he said. "That would be the greatest defeat in my life - if I allowed that. I decided if I could make people judge me by the old standard, that would be a triumph and that's what I try to do. It seemed to me the only way to live."

The Post reported that he reached a settlement with the pool builders for about $1 million. He became chief resident of the psychiatric consultation service at Massachusetts General Hospital and an official at the federal Health and Human Services Department in Washington.

After a brief stint as a speechwriter for Vice President Walter Mondale, he joined the staff of the New Republic in 1981, received a National Magazine Award in 1984 and joined The Post the next year. His books included two essay collections, "Cutting Edges: Making Sense of the Eighties" (1985) and "Things That Matter: Three Decades of Passions, Pastimes and Politics" (2013). He spent decades as a panelist on the syndicated public affairs talk show "Inside Washington."

Outside of his political thinking, he was chairman of Pro Musica Hebraica, a group that revives largely forgotten Jewish classical music on the concert stage.

In 1974, he married the former Robyn Trethewey, an artist, whom he met at Oxford. In addition to his wife, of Chevy Chase, Maryland, and their son, of San Francisco, survivors include his mother, of Rockville, Maryland.

"History is shaped by its battle of ideas, and I wanted to be in the arena," Krauthammer once said, "not because I want to fight, but because some things need to be said. And some things need to be defended."

(c) 2018, The Washington Post. By Adam Bernstein.

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