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  • Prosecutors ask judge to keep protesters, ‘Free Karen Read' clothing away from courthouse
    by Kirsten Glavin on March 28, 2024 at 12:15 am

    With the high-profile murder trial against Karen Read just weeks away, Massachusetts prosecutors are asking the judge to keep protesters away from the courthouse and prohibit certain articles of clothing. Read is accused of killing John O’Keefe, her Boston police officer boyfriend, in Canton, Massachusetts, in 2022. Her lawyers have alleged that she is being framed amid a massive coverup, which the prosecution has denied. The trial is set to begin April 16. The Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office filed a motion this week asking that demonstrations be moved back 500 feet, creating a “buffer zone” around Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham. The motion also asks for shirts and other objects displaying “Free Karen Read” and other messages to be banned in the vicinity of jurors. “There is a substantial risk to both the defendant and Commonwealth’s rights to a fair trial that would be jeopardized if prospectives [sic] jurors are exposed to the messages contained in the demonstrations, especially before this Court has had the opportunity to instruct trial jurors about their obligations to remain fair and unbiased,” prosecutors wrote in the motion. “Further picketing and demonstrating at the courthouse during the pendency of the case would expose jurors to extraneous matter that could prejudice both parties.” “The Commonwealth also moves for an order prohibiting anywhere where prospective jurors gather or walk to the courtroom, the wearing or carrying of papers, water bottles, tote bags, signs, buttons, pins, t-shirts, sweatshirts, hats, or any other attire or item that contains any images or writing that suggests a favorable or unfavorable opinion of either party,” prosecutors went on to say. Paul Cristoforo, who helps organize rallies in support of Read, believes the move would be an abuse of power in defiance of his First Amendment rights. “My first reaction was literally, ‘What?'” Cristoforo said. “The commonwealth is calling it a ‘buffer zone,’ but they might as well call it a restraining order against the citizens of Massachusetts, because that’s exactly what it is.” “I’ve never seen anything like this, and it kind of goes against everything that the First Amendment stands for,” said Benjamin Urbelis, a criminal defense attorney who is not involved in this case. Urbelis says he’s seen regulations inside of courtrooms, but nothing like this outside — particularly when it comes to attire. “If you’re getting a coffee or you’re walking down the street, not actually doing anything other than wearing a pin, this motion kind of suggests that you’re committing a crime,” he said. The judge is now left to decide whether to approve or deny the motion. “We’ll see how this turns out, because I think it is ripe for a challenge,” Urbelis said. A protest is scheduled at 3 p.m. Monday outside the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office in opposition to the motion. More on the Karen Read case Karen Read Mar 26 Karen Read murder case: Judge denies defense's motion to dismiss Karen Read Mar 14 Lead detective in Karen Read murder case under investigation Karen Read Feb 26 Karen Read's murder trial delayed as new evidence from feds comes in This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

  • Police seek man who robbed Dorchester convenience store at gunpoint
    by Michael Rosenfield on March 27, 2024 at 11:34 pm

    Boston police are investigating the armed robbery of a Dorchester convenience store Wednesday. A man wielding a gun entered RJ Smokes & Convenience on Blue Hill Avenue just before 7 p.m. and robbed the store. MD Islam, who owns the store, says the man told the clerk he’d shoot him if he called police. “My message to my employees is whenever they show a gun, give them what they want,” said Islam. “Save yourself.” The suspect stole about $400 from two different registers. He also took tobacco products. The store has been robbed three times in the last six months which is very discouraging for a small business. “We are demotivated everyday to continue,” said Islam. “It’s happening again and again. Maybe we have to close.”

  • Tourist from Mass. swept away by current on Puerto Rico beach
    by Telemundo Puerto Rico on March 27, 2024 at 9:37 pm

    Authorities are searching for a tourist from Massachusetts after he was swept away by the current on a Puerto Rico beach. Telemundo Puerto Rico reported that a 26-year-old man, whose name has not been released, is being sought after disappearing from La Pared Beach in Luquillo. The Coast Guard and other agencies are involved in the search. No further information was immediately available.

  • Baltimore bridge collapse could have ‘profound effect' on supply chain
    by Eli Rosenberg on March 27, 2024 at 7:28 pm

    The economic impact of Tuesday’s deadly bridge collapse in Baltimore could be widespread and far-reaching. Six people died after a container ship hit the Francis Scott Key bridge, sending it crumbling into the Patapsco River. The bodies of two victims were recovered Wednesday. The tragedy could have major consequences for the supply chain. At Subaru of New England’s parts distribution center in Norwood, Massachusetts, the hum of activity is a good thing. The worry though, is how long the facility will have enough inventory. “If this goes on for weeks or even months, there is going to be a major parts problem,” Ernie Boch Jr. said Wednesday. “I’ve never seen anything like it, and the backup, and the problems, I think, are just beginning.” According to Boch, Subaru of New England gets 50% of its cars and car parts from Japan. They arrive by ship, passing through Baltimore. In fact, hours before the container ship hit the bridge, a ship containing cars bound for Subaru of New England passed through. The Port of Baltimore has now shut down indefinitely, forcing those who rely on it for inventory to scramble. “We think there could be some longer-term disruption to the industry, because that is a major port that was affected,” said Jeffrey Ruble, chief operating officer of Subaru of New England. More on the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge Boston 22 hours ago After Baltimore bridge collapse, officials reassure bridges in Mass. are safe Baltimore Key Bridge Collapse 11 hours ago Two bodies recovered as Baltimore bridge collapse investigation continues Baltimore Key Bridge Collapse 19 hours ago Baltimore bridge collapse: What we know, who are the victims and will it affect US supply chain? MIT’s Center for Transportation and Logistics was busy Wednesday. FEMA works with the center on studies about logistics and reached out for help looking at what is going on in Baltimore. “It is usually invoked during hurricanes, and other natural disasters, but it has just been invoked, they asked us to go and collect data and give them an estimate of the logistics impact,” said MIT professor Yossi Sheffi. “It is a major problem for the region, it’s an economic problem.” Experts in the field of logistics say lessons learned during the 2021 Suez Canal backup and during the pandemic, have created a more resilient network. “We did learn our lessons, I think, and I think we are more resilient — at least that’s what we are trying to do over the last couple of years,” said Boston University Professor Canan Gunes Corlu. “There is a lot of emphasis on the supply chain resiliency.” “The question is how fast will they be able to do it,” she said. “These ports will be definitely busy, and it will be a challenge for people working in these ports to figure out the traffic coming in the new traffic.” Subaru of New England is hoping a solution is found soon. The spring and summer are traditionally the busiest times for people buying cars. “We just finally got back to full strength coming off of COVID,” Ruble said. “One tragic event can have a profound effect.”

  • Mass. lawmakers say planned sale of Steward's physician network demands scrutiny
    by Chris Lisinski on March 27, 2024 at 6:48 pm

    Elected officials are voicing skepticism about a planned deal to sell Steward Health Care’s physician network to for-profit insurer Optum, questioning whether it might do more harm than good as Massachusetts grapples with fallout from Steward’s financial upheaval. A day after regulators announced they would review a potential sale of Stewardship Health to Optum Care, House Speaker Ron Mariano said the transaction could “cause further disruption” and requires intense scrutiny. “The proposed sale of Steward’s physician group to Optum has the potential to significantly impact the competitiveness of the health care market in Massachusetts, and cause further disruption during a period of acute instability in the health care system,” Mariano said Wednesday. Steward, a for-profit, private equity-backed system that operates several hospitals in Massachusetts, has become one of the biggest boogeymen for policymakers since its financial woes burst into public view in January. The company filed paperwork with the Health Policy Commission on Tuesday signaling plans to sell its physician network to Optum Care, a subsidiary of the national giant UnitedHealth Group. Parties did not disclose financial details, but the sale could provide relief for Steward amid financial precarity, or serve as a precursor to offloading hospitals down the road. Steward, whose leaders have faced calls to leave the state from Gov. Maura Healey and others, noted in one of its filings that it expects to disclose transactions concerning “certain of its acute care hospitals and other provider operations in the next 12 months.” The sale of Steward’s physician network will not proceed until the HPC and other regulators complete a review of the proposal, according to HPC Executive Director David Seltz. “As described in the notice, this is a significant proposed change involving two large medical providers, both in Massachusetts and nationally, with important implications for the delivery and cost of health care across Massachusetts,” Seltz said on Tuesday. “Details of the proposal will be reviewed by the HPC to examine potential impacts on health care costs, quality, access, and equity.” Mariano, who has voiced his disdain for Steward and its decision to shutter a hospital in his hometown of Quincy, called on the HPC to consider the “vulnerability” of Steward’s remaining hospitals and a federal antitrust probe as it examines the deal. The Wall Street Journal reported last month that the U.S. Department of Justice is conducting an antitrust investigation into UnitedHealth Group. “The HPC’s statutory authority to review the health care impacts of this transaction should not delay state and federal antitrust authorities from doing their own rigorous review as we all seek to protect patient access and affordability, communities, employees, and the overall health care system,” Mariano said. U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren said that Optum already covers more than 10% of doctors in the country, making it the nation’s largest employer of physicians. The deal, she said, “raises significant antitrust concerns.” “After years of gross profiteering and mismanagement, Steward’s latest plan raises more serious questions about the future of the Massachusetts health care system,” Warren said in a statement. “My top priority is ensuring Steward’s Massachusetts hospitals remain open. But Steward executives have no credibility, and I am concerned that this sale will not benefit patients or health care workers, or guarantee the survival of these facilities. It would be a terrible mistake for Steward to be allowed to walk away while looting Massachusetts hospitals one more time.” A U.S. Senate subcommittee plans to meet in Boston next week to explore the impact of for-profit companies in the health care industry, and the delegation has set their sights squarely on Steward. More on the Steward Health Care crisis Steward Health Care Mar 26 Steward's physician group purchased by Optum, Sen. Markey says Steward Health Care Mar 25 Mass. lawmakers exploring Steward Health Care crisis Mar 14 Markey invites Steward CEO to testify before Senate subcommittee Warren and U.S. Sen. Ed Markey have repeatedly called on Steward Health Care CEO Ralph de la Torre to face questions at the hearing, seemingly without success. “On March 7, we sent you a letter about these troubling transactions and Steward’s role in this growing crisis, but nearly three weeks later, you have failed to provide us with any response,” they wrote in a letter to de la Torre published Tuesday. “Investing in and operating a health care system includes a responsibility to the public, and you must answer for Steward’s current financial insecurity and its impact on access to health care.” If regulators on the HPC determine the sale of Stewardship Health to Optum will inflict a significant impact on health care costs and the market, they can pursue a more expansive “cost and market impact review.” But it’s not clear how forcefully they could reshape the proposal. “After Steward recklessly took on massive debt that is continuing to … put hospitals in Massachusetts and across the country into financial crisis, the Massachusetts health care system must move away from Steward’s financial insecurity,” Markey said in a statement Tuesday. “With this announcement, Optum must demonstrate that it can meet the even greater responsibility to preserve and protect health care access in the Commonwealth, and I hope they will live up to that responsibility by controlling costs and putting patients and providers first.” Leaders of the agency for years have urged the Legislature to award them with greater muscle to little avail. At a state legislative hearing earlier this week about private equity in health care, Seltz said other states empower regulators to deny or impose conditions upon health care transactions. “That is not something the HPC currently has authority to do,” he said Monday. “Our process is really a public report at the end of the day.” Steve Walsh, president of the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association, said any sale of Steward’s physician network “should center around the needs of patients and help stabilize — not further harm — the commonwealth’s already fragile healthcare system.” “We believe a transaction of this magnitude must be subject to a stringent and transparent approval process that invokes Massachusetts’ best oversight tools — the very same oversight that local hospitals are held to,” Walsh said.

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  • ‘We must have unity’
    by M.E. Jones on March 28, 2024 at 8:13 am

    SHIRLEY — Select Board Chairman Andree Lourdes Jean Jacques is one of many Haitian-Americans watching with growing concern as the dire situation in Haiti goes from bad to worse. In recent weeks, a renewed wave of violence and lawlessness rocked the capital city of Port-Au-Prince as heavily-armed gangs broke into a prison complex and attacked

  • Lunenburg Water District partners with engineering firm
    by Submitted Article on March 28, 2024 at 7:12 am

    LUNENBURG — In an ongoing commitment to providing high-quality drinking water to the community, the Lunenburg Water District recently announced the decision to partner with Tighe & Bond, a leader in water engineering services. This collaboration aims to develop a comprehensive Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Water Master Plan to address and mitigate PFAS contamination,

  • Delegation: FEMA excluded costs in disaster review
    by Colin A. Young on March 28, 2024 at 7:08 am

    LEOMINSTER — Members of the state’s Congressional delegation added their voices Wednesday to Gov. Maura Healey’s appeal of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s denial of a major disaster declaration for strong storms that flooded the city and many others throughout the state. “Recognizing that the flooding has strained finances, time, and resources for some of

  • Police say road rage to blame for altercation on I-495
    by Submitted Article on March 28, 2024 at 5:17 am

    BOLTON — On Monday afternoon, State Troopers responded to a report of an altercation with a weapon involved in the breakdown lane of Route 495 south. A preliminary investigation by State Police from the Leominster Barracks indicated the incident, which resulted in a tractor-trailer driver suffering serious injuries, stemmed from alleged road rage. Evidence suggested

  • Editorial: ‘Smishing’ latest con by cybercrooks to get personal info 
    by Editorial on March 28, 2024 at 4:48 am

    Scam artists are always looking for other ways to elicit personal and financial information from unsuspecting individuals. In the digital age, unscrupulous actors have turned to the Internet to pursue their cybercrimes. By now, we’ve all heard of phishing, one of the most common strategies used in online identity theft. It’s a fraudulent attempt to

Northeast MA News

  • ‘We must have unity’
    by M.E. Jones on March 28, 2024 at 8:13 am

    SHIRLEY — Select Board Chairman Andree Lourdes Jean Jacques is one of many Haitian-Americans watching with growing concern as the dire situation in Haiti goes from bad to worse. In recent weeks, a renewed wave of violence and lawlessness rocked the capital city of Port-Au-Prince as heavily-armed gangs broke into a prison complex and attacked

  • Cybersecurity back before Lowell City Council
    by Melanie Gilbert on March 28, 2024 at 8:11 am

    Lowell City Manager Tom Golden told the City Council, "We’re out of disaster recovery right now,” in describing the restoration work of the municipal network that was hacked last April. Other meeting updates included repairs to the Pollard Memorial Library elevator and a recognition of Councilors Rita Mercier and Kim Scott for Women's History Month.

  • Eye On Art: ‘5 Connect’ celebrates friendship, art at Loading Dock Gallery
    by Nancye Tuttle on March 28, 2024 at 7:36 am

    It’s the end of March – finally. And while we hate to see time speeding by, we’re happy to see April’s arrival next week. And with the new month’s appearance on the calendar, a new show opens next week at the Loading Dock Gallery at Western Avenue Studios in Lowell. “5 Connect,” featuring the work

  • Police say road rage to blame for altercation on I-495
    by Submitted article on March 28, 2024 at 5:17 am

    BOLTON — On Monday afternoon, State Troopers responded to a report of an altercation with a weapon involved in the breakdown lane of Route 495 south. A preliminary investigation by State Police from the Leominster Barracks indicated the incident, which resulted in a tractor-trailer driver suffering serious injuries, stemmed from alleged road rage. Evidence suggested

  • Editorial: ‘Smishing’ latest con by cybercrooks to get personal info 
    by Editorial on March 28, 2024 at 4:48 am

    Scam artists are always looking for other ways to elicit personal and financial information from unsuspecting individuals. In the digital age, unscrupulous actors have turned to the Internet to pursue their cybercrimes. By now, we’ve all heard of phishing, one of the most common strategies used in online identity theft. It’s a fraudulent attempt to

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