CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 CALEDONIANRECORD.COM ESTABLISHED 1837 SPORTS Cobb, Berlack Athletes Of Week BARNET TransCanada Valuation Likely Court Bound PAGE B2 75 CENTS LOCAL NEK A Safe Place To Hunt in 2014 PAGE A3 PAGE A3 IRASBURG ST. JOHNSBURY VOTERS TO DECIDE CONSTABLE POWER PARTY HEADS CANCEL 2015 CAUCUS By Jennifer Hersey Cleveland Staff Writer IRASBURG – Voters at Town Meeting will be asked for the second year if they wish to prohibit the constable from exercising law enforcement authority. Last year, voters re-elected constable Brien Lemois Jr. and declined to strip him of law enforcement authority. On Monday evening, the select board spoke with Lemois, who has completed his part-time officer training and field service requirement at his own expense, about what his service to the town would encompass if he were to actively police the town. Lt. Walt Smith, Vermont State Police Derby barracks commander, had hoped to attend as well, but was unable. Lemois said he’s in no position to offer full-time policing services to the town and sees his role as assisting the two law enforcement agencies that patrol Irasburg, the state police and the Orleans County Sheriff’s Department. “It was because of a party that wasn’t inter- Johnsbury. “It’s not a big deal,” he said. “It’s okay. It’s ested in doing it, so I decided we didn’t need it going to work out fine.” anyway,” Bostic said. Caucus attendance was down recently, he said. When asked if Democrats represent the uninThis year may spell the end of a decades old Last year, for example, it drew fewer than the 30 terested party Bostic said, “I didn’t say that.” political tradition in St. Johnsbury. people needed to pen the 30 required signatures The annual town caucus to nominate candiwas because of a party that “It on candidacy petitions, he said. dates for elected office, an event sponsored South, the Democratic committee chairman, wasn’t interested in doing it, so I jointly by local Democrats and Republicans, was canceled this year. Office seekers now must col- decided we didn’t need it anyway.” was not available Tuesday or Wednesday but Conrad Doyon, a decades long Democratic comlect a blank petition from the town clerk and mittee member and a former chairman, addressed – Don Bostic gather signatures from 30 registered voters by the cancellation. Doyon was not involved in cauJanuary 26 in order to gain ballot placement in Bostic though later said he aimed to devise cus decision making this year but said the comMarch at annual town meeting. caucus plans with Bob South, chairman of the mittee determined the event was unnecessary. Caucus typically occurs in early January. “They didn’t think there would be any need of Caledonia County Democratic Committee, but Don Bostic, chairman of the Caledonia County Republican Party, was tight-lipped about the can- South did not answer or respond to repeated tele- it,” he said. Doyon is dispassionate about caucus. He said phone calls. cellation. Bostic is unconcerned about a caucus-less St. See Caucus, Page A6 By taylor reed Staff Writer LYNDONVILLE See Constable, Page A6 LSC JOURNALISM PROGRAM TOP-RANKED NATIONALLY By JaMes Jardine Staff Writer VERMONT CAREGIVERS WHO FAIL TO REPORT CHILD ABUSE COULD FACE FELONY By dave GraM Associated Press MONTPELIER, Vt. — Any caregiver who knows a child is in danger of abuse but doesn’t report it could face a felony charge carrying a 10-year penalty under pending state legislation. House and Senate judiciary and human services committees were given details of the bill by legislative staff on Wednesday. The legislation comes in response to the 2014 deaths of two toddlers who had been under state supervision. Vermont currently has a mandatory reporter law, which makes it a misdemeanor for certain professional groups like teachers and nurses to fail to report suspected child abuse. The bill would broaden the reporting requirement to include anyone having custody, charge or care of a child and would toughen the penalty. Mandatory reporters currently can face up to a $500 fine or a year in jail for failure to report signs of abuse. See abuse, Page A6 Lyndon State College has once again been recognized nationally for its outstanding journalism program. This year, NewsPro annual survey of college electronic journalism programs earned Lyndon State College a tie for sixth place in the nation. Last year, the program was ranked 10th in the same survey. All of the other Top Ten schools in the NewsPro Survey ranking are at least 10 times the size of Lyndon State College. NewsPro article stated, “The Electronic Journalism Arts Department at 1,400 student Lyndon State College in Lyndonville, Vt. had a strong showing for the second straight year - and, like the Missouri School (university of Missouri), was favored for its in-the-trenches approach to teaching.” According to a release from Lyndon State College, “The program has won more than 80 regional and national awards in the last 10 years.” Meaghan Meachem, an Assistant Professor at Lyndon State and a graduate of the LSC program, says the news room at LSC “is as real world as you can get.” The LSC news program covers the news in 14 towns. Students learn how to find stories and build relationships with sources. Meachem said the students “definitely cover CourteSy Photo LSC students Ronald Kauffman and Taylor Young report from Vermont Democratic Party headquarters, election day 2014. the accidents and fires,” adding “they learn how to practice safety and how to listen to the police scanner.” Meacham says students “learn how to be a little bit picky” and pick out the more serious incidents to cover. Meacham said the LSC program has a very high retention level of students and the journalism “numbers are strong,” at approximately 60 students. She says the program brings together 20 students who all work together to put together a nightly newscast. Meacham estimates 90 to 95 percent of the graduates gets jobs in their program. Sean Siciliano is a 2013 LSC grad who works at WPRI television station in East Providence, See lsC, Page A6 LITTLETON MAINE FIRM WEIGHS MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARY ON MAIN STREET TODAY: Mix of clouds and sunshine INSIDE VOL. 177, NO. 135 © T HE C ALEDONIAN -R ECORD Classifieds. . . . . . . . . . B8 Entertainment. . . . . . . B4 For the Record . . . . . . A2 Opinion. . . . . . . . . . . . A4 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . B1 Television . . . . . . . . . . B5 HIGH: 26 LOW: 14 Details on Page A2 NATIONAL DEBT CLOCK $ 18,094,697,164,240 Population: 319,806,499 Your share: $56,580.14 “The budget should be balanced; the treasury should be refilled; public debt should be reduced; and the arrogance of public officials should be controlled.” –Cicero, 106-43 B.C. before occupation. Eldridge wrote that he also needs to meet with the town’s fire and police chiefs. Calls placed to Eldridge Tuesday and Wednesday were not immediately returned and it is undetermined how large an alternative treatment center in Littleton would be and how many patients would be served. It was also undetermined if the company is looking at other potential locations in the North Country. On Dec. 19, the N.H. Department of Health and Human Services began soliciting requests for applications (RFAs) from nonprofit corpoSee Main, Page A6 New Issue Of Charlie Hebdo Sells Out Quickly ––––– France Cracks Down On ‘Defending Terror,’ Sends Aircraft Carrier To Help US Fight IS Militants ––––– Oil Has Fallen By More Than Half Despite Record Consumption. Where Did It All Come From? Page A5, A7 Black Cyan Magenta Yellow REGION LITTLETON, N.H. — Main Street is being looked at by a Maine medicinal marijuana firm as a possible site for an alternative treatment center. Wellness Connection of Maine, which opened in 2011 and operates four licensed dispensaries in Maine, is responding to New Hampshire’s requests for applications for medicinal marijuana treatment centers and is looking at repurposing the building at 42 Main St., owned by Darius Gray and the former location of the Mill River Furniture outlet. In an email to the town, Bill Eldridge, a consultant for Wellness Connection, a charitable trust that would be the operator of the alternative treatment center, said one of the state’s requirements is that the facilities chosen by the state meet the zoning requirements of municipalities. Eldridge, in his email, wants to confirm if the building is a suitable location in terms of zoning and is scheduling a meeting Friday with the zoning officer for a walk-through to determine if there is anything that needs to be addressed NATION By roBert BleCHl Staff Writer Questioning Of Prospective Jurors Begins Today In Tsarnaev Trial ––––– Vermont, USDA Announce $16M To Clean Lake Champlain Page A9, A10 Scan For Mobile Web Access www.caledonianrecord.com/m CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow A2 the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 FOR THE RECORD OBITUARIES RONALD GROVER BERLACK 1994-2015 Ronald Grover Berlack was born on April 21, 1994 in Winchester, Mass., and died in a skiing accident in Soelden, Austria, on Jan. 5, 2015. He was a warm, kind, and caring young man, in addition to being an accomplished ski racer and a member of the U.S. Ski Team. Ronnie was adopted at birth by his parents, Cindy Wright Berlack and Steve Berlack of Franconia, N.H. At the age of two (in 1996), Ronnie and his family embarked on an 18-month sailing trip from America to the British Islands, Norway, and Sweden. Having already been exposed to skiing on Cannon Mountain, N.H., Ronnie skied often that winter in the French Alps, as his family lived near Chamonix. By the time Ronnie was three, he had sailed in the North Atlantic, the North Sea, Norwegian Sea and Barents Sea, and the majority of the Norwegian coast. This long trip taught him two important lessons: to make friends fast when you meet kids your age; and to be able to sleep anywhere. Both of these skills served him well in the ski racing world. At the age of five, Ronnie moved with his family from Sudbury, Mass., to Franconia. He attended Lafayette Regional Elementary School and ski raced with the Franconia Ski Club. As a 10-year-old, his ski race training was moved to Burke Mountain Academy, where his father, Steve, was (and still is) an alpine ski coach. In addition to his skiing accomplishments, Ronnie was an exceptional soccer goalie, good tennis player, a ferocious road and mountain biker, and a solid offshore sailor. He graduated from Burke Mountain Academy with the class of 2012 and was a post-graduate student-athlete the next year, also at Burke. He was named to the U.S. Ski Team development squad in the spring of 2013, and was renamed again in the spring of 2014. Ronnie knew he was fortunate to have many excellent coaches, teachers, and other adult role models who fondly remember the wattage he brought to everything he did. These people helped him shape his life and reach his goals. The avalanche that took Ronnie’s life also took the life of his close friend and teammate, Bryce Astle, 19, of Sandy, Utah. The two skiers died together doing what they loved. Ronnie was a determined, funny, and kind young man. He will always be remembered for his ability to see how he could move his life in a positive direction, in spite of his weaknesses. Surviving Ronnie are his parents, his sister Carolyn, numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and his dog…all who loved him dearly. A celebration of his life will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 3:15 p.m. at the Lyndon Institute Auditorium, Lyndon Center, Vt. Memorial donations may be made in his name to the Friends of Mt. Eustis Fund, PO Box 29, Littleton, NH 03561. www.mteustis.org. Mount Eustis is a ski hill being reopened to offer “donation only” skiing and riding to local youth and their families in the greater Littleton, N.H. area. Memorial donations may also be made to the Ronnie Berlack USSA Development Team Scholarship C/O Trisha Worthington , One Victory Lane, Park City, UT 84098 www.ussa.org. The USSA Development team is a fee based athletic program. This will help fund named athletes in need of financial support. To send a private note of condolence to the family go to www.RossFuneral.com. The Numbers MEGA MILLIONS (Tuesday) 12-20-25-50-51; Mega Ball: 7; Megaplier: 5 MEGABUCKS PLUS (Wednesday) 5-15-24-29-33; Mega Ball: 3 GIMME 5 (Wednesday) 14-15-16-17-29 DAILY PICKS (Wednesday) Day Draw — Pick 3: 4-0-9; Pick 4: 7-7-1-4 evening Draw — Pick 3: 5-0-1; Pick 4: 7-5-1-6 ROY A. CHASE 1942-2015 Roy A. Chase, 72, of Danville, passed away at his home after battling a lengthy illness on Jan. 12, 2015 surrounded by his family. He was born in St. Johnsbury, Vt. on Aug. 9, 1942, the son of Carroll and Katherine (Sanville) Chase. He married Edith Ann Willson on Feb. 3, 1968 in Walden, Vt. In 1971, Roy and his wife Edith built their first home on the Willson property in Danville where they still reside. Roy had a passion for motorcycles, going to antique car shows, snowmobiling, go-kart racing, bowling, card playing and spending time with his two dogs, Pebbles and Daisy, while watching Nascar. He is survived by his wife Edith, three sons, Donald Chase and his wife Nancy of Milton, Richard Chase and his wife Becky of Newport, N.H., and Terry Chase of Danville, one daughter Trudy Harran and her husband Steve of Danville, one sister, Dorothy Starin and her husband Martin of Austin, Texas, two brothers, Wayne Chase and his wife Jean of Passumpsic, and Raymond Chase and his wife Ellen of Lyndonville, five grandchildren, Laura, Kyle, Maranda, Cory, Alicia, one great grandchild, Zoey, and several nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his parents, an infant brother, Jimmy, and by a niece Karen Thresher. A graveside service with full military honors will be announced at a later date in the spring. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be marked in Roy’s memory to the: Norris Cotton Cancer Center North, 1080 Hospital Drive, St. Johnsbury, VT 05819, OR, to the Danville Congregational Church, 87 Hill St., Danville, VT 05828. Pearson’s Funeral Home Located at 70 Church St. in Lyndonville is in care of the arrangements. JANICE A. LAROSE 1954-2015 Janice A. Larose, 60, of Barton, Vt., passed away on Jan. 12, 2015 at her home. She was born on Aug. 28, 1954 in Sacramento, Calif. to Raymond Daigle and the late Jeanne (Deamer) Daigle. In 1981 she married Clarence “Buzzy” Larose. Janice was currently secretary for Carl’s Equipment in Barton where she worked for over 20 years. She enjoyed going to the family camp on Crystal Lake and traveling to Maine for summer vacations. She enjoyed making crafts-stained glass, Christmas wreaths, Christmas gifts, and attending ceramic classes. Janice was very friendly, always willing to lend a hand, and was very kind-hearted. She loved her family and always put them first. She is survived by her husband Clarence “Buzzy” Larose of Barton, Vt., by her children: Christopher Larose of Newport Center, Vt., and Monica Larose of Burlington, Vt., by her grandchildren: Dylan Poginy, Kayana Larose, Kaylene Larose, and Kaydriene Larose, by her father, Raymond Daigle of Connecticut, and by her siblings: Michael Daigle and his wife Meghan of Connecticut, Robert Daigle and his wife Debbie of Connecticut, John Daigle and his wife Pam of Connecticut, Brian Daigle of Florida, Susan Brousseau and her husband Richard of Connecticut, Kathy Blake of Connecticut, and Linda Petricola and her husband Dennis of Connecticut, and by several nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015 at the Curtis-Britch-Converse-Rushford Funeral Home, 12 Elm St., Barton. Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015 from 1 p.m. until the hour of the funeral. On-line condolences at curtis-britch.com. Arrangements are entrusted to the care of Curtis-Britch-Converse-Rushford Funeral Home, locally family owned and operated. Local Forecast YOUR CONTRIBUTION HELPS TOWARD KEEPING NEWSPAPERS IN EDUCATION FREE TO TEACHERS AND STUDENTS Newspapers In Education (NIE) sponsorships/partnerships make good sense to businesses, professionals, organizations, families and schools. Newspaper use has documented benefits for education... and a good education benefits all of us. But without your support, many students will not be able to take advantage of this “living textbook.” To find out more about the NIE program at The Caledonian-Record, to sponsor a classroom, or helping with support efforts, contact: Rosie Smith, NIE Director The Caledonian-Record 190 Federal St., P.O. Box 8St. Johnsbury, VT 05819 802-748-8121 • 800-523-6397 [email protected] Periodicals postage paid at St. Johnsbury, VT, Post Office, 05819. Published daily except Sunday, New Years, Thanksgiving and Christmas by The Caledonian-Record Pub. Co., Inc., P.O. Box 8, 190 Federal St., St. Johnsbury, VT 05819, Tel. 802-748-8121. Publication (USPS-083020). Postmaster send address changes to: The Caledonian-Record Pub. Co., Inc., 190 Federal St., P.O. Box 8, St. Johnsbury, VT 05819 Newstands and Stores: Daily...........$0.75 Home Deliver y (by carrier): 4 Weeks $19.00 Mail Subscription Rates in our deliver y area where no HD ser vice is available (Postal regulations require payment in advance) 4 wks. $19.00, 13 wks. $57.00, 26 wks. $110.00, 52 wks. $212.00 All Other: 4 wks. $22.00, 13 wks. $65.00, 26 wks. $120.00, 52 wks. $235.00 Back Issues: $1.00 each, Mailed $5.00 RIGHTS TO ADVERTISING COPY Rights to layouts of advertising placed with The CaledonianRecord which are the creative effort of its staff and printing material supplied by The Caledonian-Record rest with The Caledonian-Record and may not be reproduced by photographic or similar methods without specific authorization of The CaledonianRecord. The Caledonian-Record assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertising but will reprint that part of any advertisement in which the typographical error occurs. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any error which may occur. Today: Clear except for a few patches of high clouds. High temperatures in the low to mid 20s. Light south winds. Tonight: Increasing clouds, with a chance of snow showers after midnight. Lows in the low to mid teens. Winds continuing light from the south. Tomorrow: Cloudy early with snow showers likely, giving way to scattered clouds by afternoon. Early highs from the mid teens to around 20. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph, occasionally gusting to 25 mph. Extended Forecast: Friday Night: Scattered clouds. Lows around 10 below. Saturday: Mostly cloudy. Highs in the low to mid teens. Saturday Night: Partly to mostly cloudy. Temperatures steady or rising from the low to mid teens. Sunday: Mostly cloudy. Chance of light snow or rain. Highs in the mid 30s. Sunday Night: Cloudy. Chance of snow or rain. Lows around 30. Daily Weather Highlights Weak high pressure remains overhead today, so apart from a few periods of high clouds, skies will remain clear, with temperatures reaching into the low to mid 20s, thanks to the combination of sunshine and light south winds. Clouds will be on the increase tomorrow night, ahead of a cold front, with a rising chance of snow showers. The front will sweep through from the northwest on tomorrow, bringing snow showers and possibly squall, mainly in the morning, and then steady or falling temperatures in the afternoon, along with gusty northwest winds. That will lead to another unseasonably cold day on Saturday, although it should be more calm. After that, an abrupt warm-up appears likely for Sunday, so much so that any light snow could segue into a wintry mix, which, itself, will be part of coastal storm that’s likely to at least graze us on Sunday night and into Monday., says Chris Bouchard of the Fairbanks Museum weather station. CONDITIONS AT 4 P.M. YESTERDAY Mostly clear TEMPERATURE Temp. at 4 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Maximum past 24 hours . . . . . . . . .16 Minimum past 24 hours . . . . . . . . .-20 Yesterday’s average . . . . . . . . . . . .-2 Normal average . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 Maximum this month . . . . . . . . . . . .42 Minimum this month . . . . . . . . . . .-22 Maximum this date (1995) . . . . . . .61 Minimum this date (1957) . . . . . . .-32 HUMIDITY 61% DEWPOINT 2 WINDS 1 mph, 3 max . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W BAROMETER 30.24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Falling PRECIPITATION New . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.00 in. Total for Month . . . . . . . . . . . .1.11 in. Normal Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1.13 in. SNOWFALL Past 24 Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0.0 in. Monthly Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12.5 in. Season Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45.6 in. Season Norm To Date . . . . . . .38.1 in. Snowpack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7.3 in. ALMANAC Sunrise today . . . . . . . . . . . .7:20 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . . . . . . .4:34 p.m. Length of day . . . . . . . .9 hrs. 13 min. DEGREE DAYS Average temp. difference below 65° Yesterday* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67 To date since July 1 . . . . . . . . . .3594 To date last year . . . . . . . . . . . . .3853 * calculated for the day before yesterday Black Cyan Magenta Yellow RUSSELL A. WILSON 1920-2015 Russell A. Wilson, 94, died Thursday, Jan 8, at Woodridge Nursing Home in Berlin. He was born Nov. 2, 1920, in St. Johnsbury, the son of Augustus and Janet Wilson. He lived most of his life in Lyndonville, and was graduated from Lyndon Institute in 1939. He was a World War II veteran, serving as a cryptographer in the U.S. Army Air Force from October 1942, to February 1946. He was employed for 10 years by Vermont Tap and Die, and for 3 years in the Lyndonville Savings Bank. From 1957 to 1985, he worked for the Vermont American Corp. For many years, he was a member of the Lyndonville Military Band and the St. Johnsbury Town Band. He was a past president of the Lyndonville Rotary Club and a member of the Lyndonville Congregational Church, where he served as chair of the Deacons Committee. Survivors include his wife, Patricia C. Wilson, his daughter, Elizabeth Slayton; son-in-law, Thomas K. Slayton, and grandson, Ethan Augustus Slayton and his wife, Shawna S. Slayton. He was predeceased by his parents and by his brothers, Edward and Leslie T. Wilson. A memorial service will be held at the Lyndonville Congregational Church at 2 p.m. on Jan, 31, 2015 with interment to follow in the Lyndon Center Cemetery with full military honors at a later date. Pearsons Funeral Home Located at 70 Church Street in Lyndonville, Vt. is in care of the arrangements. NEWS BRIEFS Vermont deer hunters bagged higher than average count MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Vermont Fish and Wildlife officials say the successful deer season underscores the health and stability of the animal’s population in the state. Deer biologist Adam Murkowski says hunters took a total of 13,590 deer — an increase over the last three years’ averages. The count includes deer harvested during archery, rifle and muzzleloader seasons and the 1,652 bagged during youth weekend. Murkowski says deer biologists are still assessing information gathered on age, sex, antler characteristics and overall health of more than 1,000 deer taken during the two-day youth hunt and rifle season. Officials say a final report on the hunt 2014 hunt will be available early next month. Author threatened over ‘Satanic Verses’ to speak in Vermont BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — The author Salman Rushdie who lived for years under a death threat after his 1988 book “The Satanic Verses” drew the wrath of Iranian religious leaders is going to be speaking at the University of Vermont. The Wednesday talk by Rushdie was planned long before last week’s attack by Islamic extremists killed 12 at the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. The attack has since been claimed by the Yemen-based group Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula. Rushdie is scheduled to speak about his 1990 children’s book, “Haroun and the Sea of Stories.” He is expected to address the attacks on Charlie Hebdo. UVM officials wouldn’t discuss security arrangements. But people planning to attend are being told that as with some campus events, bags and coats will be checked. Leahy: No more tax write-offs for corporate wrongdoing MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Vermont U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy has introduced legislation to end a practice in which companies found to have engaged in wrongdoing can write off the punitive damages they must pay as a business expense. Leahy says companies now enjoy a tax break when they are forced to pay punitive damages after being found to have engaged in wrongdoing. It’s not the first time Leahy has tried to pass a No Tax Write-Offs for Corporate Wrongdoers Act. He did so as well in 2011, after a mine accident in West Virginia and the Deepwater Horizon oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Leahy says ending the tax deduction for punitive damages could result in about $335 million in additional government revenues over the next 10 years. Former firefighter sentenced to probation on embezzlement BARRE, Vt. (AP) — The former president of the local firefighters union in Barre, Vermont, has been sentenced to probation and community service after pleading guilty to embezzling several thousand dollars from the organization. Jeffrey Cochran, a lieutenant with the Barre City Fire Department, was accused of converting money for his own use between Oct. 1, 2012, and Jan. 9, 2014. The 35-year-old Cochran had been president of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 881 in Barre. The Times-Argus reports Cochran, who was sentenced Tuesday, pleaded guilty on Dec. 30. He’s been ordered to pay the money back. Police began investigating Cochran in January 2013 after being told that union money may have been misused. Trial starts for man accused of crash that killed teen WHITE RIVER JUNCTION, Vt. (AP) — The trial has started for a Vermont man accused of causing a crash that killed a 17-year-old girl in Rutland in 2012. Alex Spanos pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the death of Carly Ferro. Police say the 26-year-old Spanos of Rutland was inhaling chemicals before his car went into a parked car, pushing it into Ferro, a pedestrian who had just walked out of the store where she worked. Two other vehicles were hit and two passengers in Spanos’ car were injured. Police found aerosol cans and alcohol at the scene. The Rutland Herald reports Spanos’ lawyer said in opening statements the prosecution’s proof that Spanos knew the risks of passing out while huffing rested on the credibility of a passenger who changed his story multiple times. CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 A3 LOCAL NO HUNTING ACCIDENTS REPORTED IN 2014 ST. JOHNSBURY By JaMes Jardine Staff Writer Photo By toDD Wellington St. Johnsbury firefighter Troy Darby sweeps up debris following a two-car crash at the intersection of Hospital Drive and Breezy Hill Road in St. Johnsbury Wednesday evening. State Police said Ashley Whitcomb, 24, of St. Johnsbury was northbound on Breezy Hill when her 2007 Subaru Impreza collided head-on with and oncoming 2002 Toyota Camry driven by Robert Hartwell, 62, of Lyndon at 6:55 p.m. No injuries were reported. Police said the crash occurred as Whitcomb was attempting to turn left onto Hospital Drive. Whitcomb was issued a civil ticket for failure to yield. BARNET TRANSCANADA VALUATION LIKELY COURT BOUND By taylor reed Staff Writer TransCanada Hydro Northeast’s lawsuit against the town of Barnet over assessed property values may be courtroom bound. The parties convened Monday in St. Johnsbury at Vermont Superior Court, Caledonia Division, for a brief status conference. The energy giant is suing Barnet over the assessed values of Comerford Dam and McIndoe Falls dam in a case that has already included mediation. “We’re now waiting for an answer from TransCanada on our latest offer,” said Barnet Selectman Dylan Ford. “If they say no we will probably go to court.” Ford is not overly optimistic about reaching a settlement. She said Barnet and TransCanada are “quite far apart” in negotiations and an agreement would require much compromise. TransCanada is suing Barnet over the $41.5 million assessment assigned to Comerford Dam and the $5.09 million assessment assigned to McIndoe Falls dam. The properties were valued at $33.7 million combined before a state-sponsored 2010 reappraisal conducted by George Sansoucy of Lancaster, N.H. In addition to Barnet, TransCanada appealed the $29 million assessment on Moore Dam in Waterford, which was formerly valued at $21 million. In related business, TransCanada in December settled a long-standing lawsuit with the town of Vernon. The Vernon dam was assessed at nearly $40 million but TransCanada said it was worth just $21 million. The parties each compromised about $10 million and agreed to a $30.5 million assessment. The value is fixed for 5 years, and Vernon need not reimburse excess taxes paid by TransCanada based on the dam’s $40 million assessment from 2010 versus the adjusted value, according to the settlement. A TransCanada spokeswoman in December when asked about the settlement’s implications for Barnet and Waterford said, “TransCanada is pleased that an agreement was reached after amicable and productive discussions with the town of Vernon and the state…The Barnet and Waterford appeals are similar cases to the town of Vernon’s given each of the towns rely on the same appraisal report prepared for the state of Vermont. TransCanada intends to keep the line of communications open with those towns under appeal with the overall goal of working with them until there is an equitable resolution.” Despite the fact that thousands of men, women and children roamed the Vermont woods with loaded guns in 2014, there were no reported hunting accidents last year. Chris Saunders, head of hunter safety for the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, said there were no injuries reported in the state involving the misuse of a firearm. This is not the first year Vermont has had with no hunting accidents; the last was in 2012. A hunting accident as defined by the Vermont Fish and Game department refers specifically to a firearm accident. Saunders cites two major factors which he believes contribute to the good track records; increased hunter safety and increased use of blaze orange clothing for hunting. “Just about every hunter has attended a hunter safety education course,” said Saunders. He said since hunter safety classes were mandated by Vermont state law in 1997, hunting accidents have declined. He also said there are fewer hunters in the woods. Years ago, there might have been 100,000 hunters; currently there are about 65,000 Vermont resident hunters and about another 5,000 out of state hunters, said Saunders. Hunting safety has improved dramatically, according to Saunders, with 30 to 40 shooting accidents a year in the 1950s and 1960s. The accident-free hunting season CourteSy Photo Jessica Booth fires a .44 magnum revolver as hunting safefty instructor Jeff Houde, of Lyndon, looks on. Women now make up half of hunter safety courses. is welcome news for sportsmen and women. “I think it’s great,” said Tom Moore, president of Caledonia Forest and Stream Club in St. Johnsbury. He credits the safety results with better training and more frequent shooting practice. The forest and stream club has multiple shooting ranges. The club has grown a great deal with over 600 members in 2013 compared to a total membership of 350 a few years ago. One of the reasons for the growth is a substantial increase in the number of women members. Moore added that the national 4H program for young men and women offers a number of hunting safety courses and hunting camps. He said those hunting programs sometimes include overnight camping activities and attract more young people to the sport. Local Vermont Fish and Game Warden Dennis Amsden called the state’s latest safety record “outstanding.” He credited hunter edu- cation classes and the instructors who teach them as the reason. Jeff Houde is a local instructor Amsden mentioned by name. He has spent nine years volunteering to teach others how to safely use firearms. Operating out of hunter safety ranges on the property of Linwood Smith in St. Johnsbury, Houde was involved in teaching 997 students hunter education classes in 2014. The students came from all over Vermont and from New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and even Florida. Houde said five students from Massachusetts came up for a day course and all five were from China. The students were e-mailing photos back home to China of themselves shooting. Houde said everyone can benefit from knowing how to use a firearm. He points out there were 31 rabies incidents in Vermont last year and a hiker or hunter or anyone else enjoying the outdoors may want to have a firearm for self-defense, to shoot a rabid animal. What Is Your Resolution? Start your new year off right! White Mountains Community College offers a variety of ways to kickstart your college career. With over 50 degree and certificate programs, online courses, and classes in Berlin, Littleton, Conway and Colebrook, there is never a better time to invent yourself than right now! Apply Now! Spring semester begins January 20, 2015 wmcc.edu 1-800-445-4525 [email protected] Farming … it’s not just cows anymore! Christmas trees, alpacas, sheep, pumpkins, game birds, or veggie stands … modern farming has many new faces. But today’s farmers still depend on us, the Co-operative Insurance Companies, as their farm insurance experts. With the Berwick Agency you get first-rate insurance protection at a competitive price, great local service, and convenient payment plans. Call the Berwick Agency today for a quote on your farm insurance: 185 Church Street, Peacham, VT [email protected] 802.592.3234 Black Cyan Magenta Yellow CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow A4 the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 Todd M. Smith, Publisher OPINION Dana Gray, Executive Editor Editorial Comment … No Such Privilege In an attempt to reconcile her big-government vision with economic reality, New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan asked state agencies to make proposals for ways they might operate more efficiently. State departments submitted their ideas on Dec. 1. Since then our friends at the Concord Monitor have filed three separate public record requests under New Hampshire’s Right to Know law. Hassan, who claims to be all-transparent-all-the-time, has rejected each request as they’ve come. She’s claiming “executive privilege,” which is not a power lawfully or Constitutionally granted to the Governor in the “live free or die” state. For whatever reason, Hassan thinks the very public business of running government is none of the public’s business. As the Monitor argued in its latest request for the records, “We contend that honesty and transparency are exactly what the public deserves… Given the importance of the state budget and its importance on the people of New Hampshire, we feel the argument for disclosure couldn’t be stronger… With all due respect, these records are the people’s records, not private documents that should be shrouded in government secrecy.” Agreed on all counts. Whatever Hassan is hiding, we hope it’s worth her new reputation for hypocrisy and opacity. Michael Reagan Quarterbacking Congress I’m not a huge fan of John Boehner. But now that he has both houses of Congress to work with, let’s give him a chance to move the Republican offense down the field to the end zone. After fighting off a challenge to his speakership this week, Boehner has held on to his job as the starting QB of the GOP’s legislative team in Washington. Boehner and his Boys of Winter have a lot of hard work to do for the next two years, on and off the field. But thanks to six years of fumbles by Obama at home and away, and Republican victories in the midterm elections last fall, the GOP is looking like the team to beat in 2016. The Republican position in Congress is stronger than it’s been in decades. Boehner has the largest majority — 246 to 188 — in the House since Truman was president. And the Senate is solidly in Republican hands with a 54seat majority. It’s now or pretty much never if Republicans hope to retake the Oval Office and reverse the damage done to America by Team Obama. But before QB Boehner even thinks about which legislative play to call first — “Keystone — 686 Pump F-Stop, on two”? — he and his party need to do some cheerleading for their own team. Boehner has been badly roughed up by everyone since 2011. The liberal media mock him. The conservative media have booed him unmercifully and he was almost sacked by some of his own teammates for being a wimpy conservative or a stooge of Obama. But Boehner and the Republican House he has presided over deserve credit for a miraculous accomplishment that few people, even Republicans, know about. Thanks mostly to the House, Congress has actually reduced federal spending for the last two years. The cuts are nowhere near what they should be — $3.60 trillion in 2011 to $3.54 trillion in 2012 to $3.45 trillion in 2013. But it’s an important turnaround. It’s the first two consecutive years of federal spending cuts since 1953. Republicans should be tooting their own horn about that spending drop from coast to coast, because the liberal media sure aren’t going to do it. Meanwhile, Boehner’s game plan for the next two years is nothing new or complicated. The people of America want the Congress to work — and get to work. They want it to pass legislation that will create jobs and opportunity for Americans. It’s up to Congress — and QB Boehner — to make that happen by pushing through laws to kill ObamaCare, cut taxes, cut spending budgets, slash regulations and repeal legislation (like ObamaCare) that harms the economy. If President Obama wants to veto everything a Republican Congress passes, fine. Let him become known as the obstructer in chief. Let Americans see that he’s the one whose policies need to be rejected in 2016. Boehner and his conservative Congress have to be careful, however. They need to approach the Washington political “game” the way Ronald Reagan did. My father looked at the legislative process in Washington like it was a football field. He knew that if you move the ball 10 yards at a time, you’ll eventually get to the end zone and you’ll accomplish something. He knew politics is always a work in progress. It’s the art of negotiation. Boehner and the Republican Congress don’t need to do everything this week or all at once. The worst thing QB Boehner could do is to start throwing a bunch of Hail Mary passes into the end zone. He should move the ball 10 yards at a time. If he plays it right, Republicans will score their TD and win the Super Bowl — the presidency of the United States in 2016. ©2014 MiChAel reAgAn Letters to the Editor… Scam alert To the Editor: Over the past 18 years and 3 months (since October, 1996) global warming as measured most accurately by satellite remote sensing systems is 0. Flat line. It’s dead. Our children have grown up without knowing a single day of global warming! In the meantime atmospheric CO2 has increased from 360 ppm to 400 ppm - a 10% increase in atmospheric CO2 over the same time that there was no global warming. There is no disagreement about these numbers. But the doomsayers and the UN cannot afford to admit that their weapon, CO2, was not any agent for temperature change. This is a decades old premeditated swindle. Huh? We were supposed to trip a catastrophe at 350 ppm where temperatures would skyrocket out of control, the ice caps would melt, the oceans would rise, the polar bears would die and we’d have total life extinction. We had to hurry out to bulldoze the ridges and erect those fab “renewable” energy machines to protect our planet. So what if they drove people out of their homes, poisoned the land in Mongolia, stripmined the mountains of Alaska and sterilized all marine life in Bristol Bay. Ah yes, now we have the Warm War. That catastrophe bit was just a very bad computer simulation. Catastrophic Man-Made Climate Change is a complete fiction meant to scare the crap out of us. And justification to spend an estimated 1 trillion dollars/decade over the past three decades on the simulations and, of course, the spin. parently not, due to the recent articles in the local papers. It is online learning for grades 6-12. Seems like even the local school boards have never heard about it. Many benefits are had by online learning for students: 1. One on One teaching for each students. Helping them to understand subjects thoroughly. 2. Can choose from 100 courses to study. All approved by the Dept of Ed in NH. 3. Students can learn at their own pace. No interference from other students. 4. Can graduate at an earlier age with the required credits approved from the Dept of Ed in NH. Student can even get College credits while studying thru VLACS. 5. Can learn anytime, anywhere from any computer or device. As easy as logging onto an email account. 6. Student earns credit for each course taken. Approved by the Dept of Ed in NH. 7. FREE FOR ALL NH STUDENTS IN GRADES 6-12. Given the technology of the present day, young people already know about IPads, Kindles, etc. With the direction of technology moving forward, our students life have to move forward also. Give our students grades 6-12 the opportunity to advance with this program to learn online from the privacy of their home. So again, I ask, Why haven’t the school boards in this area even considered online learning for students grades 6-12? And hence, close the mortar and brick schools of yesteryear. It is time to move forward with education, instead of staying stagnant with the way it is now. To the Editor: Another question i would like to VLACS established in 2007 and put forward. With the high unemapproved by the Dept of Ed in N.H. ployment rate and high poverty rate Has anyone ever heard of this? Ap- in Coos County, how long will it be We have not heard the end of it. Just ask our politicians and watch how heated they get exclaiming we’re doomed if we don’t get on with renewables and carbon taxes. “This is urgent; everybody knows this, and its past time to go over it. We have to be clean”. Why do they get so mad? Because with no global warming and climate devastation, their tax money and subsidies should equal zero. Do not believe “climate scientists” who have degrees in social studies, political studies, English or economics. At a time when we have clean, abundant and cheap baseload energy sources, do not let your governor and legislature and our elected federal officials commit us to unnecessary, destructive renewables and their energy poverty where we must pay the costs for both those unreliable and intermittent systems and their full-time backup that is the only source we need. CO2 gloom and global warming doom are dead. It was propaganda. We are not poisoning the planet. They are preparing to steal your money. The UK and Germany have been railroaded into this dual energy charade. Economists estimate that 30% of homes in the UK can only afford to heat a single room and many of these are the elderly. Families of 2.3 million children right now must choose between heating and eating. Jim Sawhill Kirby, Vt. Virtual Learning Academy that all schools close due to nonfunding from the public? Look up the information for yourself. Go to vlacs.org. Kathy Videtto Stewartstown, N.H. Freedom of the press in France and the U.S. To the Editor: We join the rest of the world in mourning the brave staff of the magazine Charlie Hebdo, gunned down by religious fanatics for defending freedom of the press. Meat industry fanatics in the U.S. have devised a more subtle means of stifling freedom of the press. The states of Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, and Utah have enacted “ag-gag” laws that impose criminal penalties on investigators seeking to expose animal abuses and safety violations in factory farms. According to an Associated Press report in yesterday’s papers, four members of an animal protection organization were charged with violating Utah’s ag-gag law. They sought to document the daily transport of thousands of pigs from the infamous Circle Four factory farm in Cedar City (UT) to the Farmer John slaughterhouse in Los Angeles. Ag-gag laws are clearly unconstitutional and are being challenged in federal courts. Assaults on press freedom need to be confronted wherever they rear their ugly heads, even when they assume the legitimacy of a state law. Clyde Raftsburger St. Johnsbury, Vt. Jason Stanford Jihad and right-wing extremism not so different Since 9/11, 34 people have been killed in America by Islamic jihadist terrorists. Wait, did I say Muslim terrorists? I meant right-wing extremists. For some reason, we’re better at recognizing threats from outside the castle walls than from within. I’m not saying that radical Islamic terrorists are not a threat to American lives and western civilization. After 9/11, only a fool would not recognize Al Qaeda as a clear and present danger to our national security. Since then, the Southern Poverty Law Center says right-wing extremists have killed more people in this country than have Islamic terrorists. Why then do we habitually consider those terrorists as aberrations? Why do we not see that our country is being attacked from within by right-wing extremists? Case in point: Paris. With all the attention focused for good reason on the terrorist attack in Paris, we forgot to worry about attack in our own backyard when a presumably homegrown terrorist bombed an NAACP office in Colorado. What happened to those folks at Charlie Hebdo was an atrocity, but paying heed to that terrorist attack is not a reason to ignore the terrorist attack within our own borders. It’s not just the NAACP bombing. It’s also three militia members who were arrested in January for plotting to bomb the Atlanta police station, the murder at a Kansas City mosque in December, and the right-wing extremist who shot more than 100 rounds at government buildings the same month in Austin, which is where the software engineer flew his Piper Dakota into an IRS building in Austin not too long ago. It’s the couple from the Bundy Ranch who killed three people, including two police officers, before shooting each other in Las Vegas last June. It’s the neo-Nazi who shot and killed three people at a Kansas Cityarea Jewish community center last April. It’s the white power musician who murdered six people in a Sikh temple in Wisconsin in 2012. It’s Dr. George Tiller being murdered while sitting in a church pew in Wichita in 2009. It’s more attacks than anyone Black Cyan Magenta Yellow could be expected to remember unless they were no longer described as isolated incidents committed by lone gunmen, deranged individuals, and loners. It’s terrorism. Like Islamic terrorism, rightwing domestic terrorists use violence to stop people from doing things they find morally objectionable. They want people to be too scared to perform legal medical procedures, to observe a religion they don’t like, or to perform basic government functions such as collecting taxes. A major impediment to Americans understanding that they are under attack from Americans is that a wing of the political party controlling our legislative branch agrees with some of the views of these right-wing extremists. Until we wrap our minds around the fact that the Republican Party is home to radical views, we can’t see that this extremism has metastasized in some cases as violence. There is nothing inherently unAmerican about holding these views. Our country started as a tax protest, after all. But just as the Muslim community condemns violence by Islamic radicals, we—all of us— must recognize and condemn violence done in the name of politics. Instead, some conservative pundits criticized the Department of Homeland Security in 2009 when it warned of the dangers posed by domestic terrorists motivated by rightwing extremism. And when the FBI issued a threat assessment for 2013 saying domestic terrorists posed a greater danger to the country than Islamic terrorists did, some criticized it as political correctness run amok. We won’t stop bombings by confiscating guns. And we won’t stop them by outlawing right-wing extremism as Germany banned the Nazi party. This is America. We have the freedom to think whatever foolishness comes into our heads. A little less hyperbole about the tyrannical federal government might be nice on the part of our elected officials, but expecting politicians to speak responsibly is another foolish thought. The first step is admitting we have a problem. It would be idiotic to say that Islamic terrorists pose Americans no threat. Maybe it’s time to not act like idiots by ignoring a similar if not greater threat from domestic terrorists. ©2015 JASon StAnforD CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 A5 NATION & WORLD France cracks down on ‘defending terror,’ sends aircraft carrier to help US fight IS militants PARIS (AP) — France ordered prosecutors around the country to crack down on hate speech, anti-Semitism and those glorifying terrorism and announced Wednesday it was sending an aircraft carrier to the Middle East to work more closely with the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State militants. Authorities said 54 people had been arrested for hate speech and defending terrorism since terror attacks killed 20 people in Paris last week, including three gunmen. The crackdown came as Charlie Hebdo’s defiant new issue sold out before dawn around Paris, with scuffles at kiosks over dwindling copies of the satirical weekly that fronted the Prophet Muhammad anew on its cover. President Francois Hollande, speaking aboard the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier to members of the military, said the situation “justifies the presence of our aircraft carrier.” One of the Paris gunmen had claimed allegiance to the Islamic State group, while two others said they were backed by Yemen’s al-Qaida branch. France is already carrying out airstrikes against the Islamic State group in Iraq. A top leader of Yemen’s al-Qaida branch claimed responsibility Wednesday for the Charlie Hebdo massacre that left 12 dead at the paper, saying in a video the massacre came in “vengeance for the prophet.” The newspaper had received repeated threats previously for posting caricatures of Muhammad. Ohio man arrested in FBI operation on charges of plotting to attack US Capitol WORLD BRIEFS to suffer over the longer term if these problems are not quickly and decisively addressed,” said a report Wednesday by agency watchdog Nina E. Olson. IRS Commissioner John Koskinen says budget cuts are forcing the agency to reduce taxpayer services and other functions. The number of audits will decline, technology upgrades will be delayed and the agency might be forced to shut down and furlough workers for two days later this year, Koskinen said. Pummeled by US-led airstrikes, Islamic State group loses ground in symbolic battle for Kobani BEIRUT (AP) — With more than a thousand militants killed and territory slipping away, the Islamic State group is losing its grip on the Syrian border town of Kobani under intense U.S.-led airstrikes and astonishingly stiff resistance by Kurdish fighters. It is a stunning reversal for the Islamic State group, which just months ago stood poised to conquer the entire town — and could pierce a carefully crafted image of military strength that helped attract foreign fighters and spread horror across the Middle East. “An IS defeat in Kobani would quite visibly undermine the perception of unstoppable momentum and inevitable victory that IS managed to project, particularly after it captured Mosul,” said Faysal Itani, a fellow at the Atlantic Council, referring to the militants’ seizure of Iraq’s second-largest city during its blitz into Iraq from Syria last summer. It would also rob the group of a “psychological edge that both facilitated recruitment and intimidated actual and potential rivals, as well as the populations IS controlled,” Itani said. In September, Islamic State fighters began capturing some 300 Kurdish villages near Kobani and thrust into the town itself, occupying nearly half of it. Tens of thousands of refugees spilled across the border into Turkey. WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal prosecutors say an Ohio man has been arrested in a plot to attack the U.S. Capitol and kill government officials inside the building. A criminal complaint charges 20-year-old Christopher Lee Cornell, of Green Township, with attempting to kill officers and employees of the United States. Cornell, also known as Raheel Mahrus Ubaydah, was arrested Wednesday as he took control of a firearm during an undercover FBI operation. Oklahoma plans first lethal injection It wasn’t immediately clear if he had a lawyer. The FBI says the public since botched execution was never in danger and he never made it to Washington. The complaint alleges that an FBI informant began supplying agents with OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma plans to resume executions information about Cornell last year. Thursday after botching its last one and will use the same three-drug method as a Florida lethal injection scheduled for the same day. The drug mixture begins with the sedative midazolam and includes the GOP House votes to overturn Obama’s same drugs used in Oklahoma’s botched execution of Clayton Lockett, who immigration actions, expose many writhed on the gurney and moaned after he’d been declared unconscious. His execution in April was the first time Oklahoma had used midazolam as immigrants to deportation the first in a three-drug combination, but attorneys for the state say a failed WASHINGTON (AP) — Shunning a White House veto threat and oppointravenous line and a lack of training led to the problems with Lockett’s sition within their own party, House Republicans approved legislation lethal injection, not the drugs. Wednesday to overturn President Barack Obama’s key immigration policies Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt said the state Department of Corand expose hundreds of thousands of younger immigrants to expulsion from rections “has responded with new protocols that I believe, prayerfully, will the U.S. provide them more latitude in dealing with exigent circumstances as they The 236-191 vote came on a broad bill that would provide $39.7 billion arise.” His office has successfully defended Oklahoma’s new protocol in fedto finance the Homeland Security Department through the rest of the budget eral court. year, legislation that lawmakers of both parties said was sorely needed to pay Oklahoma also has increased by five times the amount of midazolam it for counterterrorism, cybersecurity and other priorities at a moment when plans to use to mirror the exact recipe that Florida has used in 11 successful the Paris terror attacks have underscored dire threats. executions. Democrats accused Republicans of putting that money at risk by attaching But midazolam also was used in problematic executions last year in Ariveto-bait amendments on immigration, and some Republicans voiced the zona and Ohio, where inmates snorted and gasped during lethal injections same concern. But House GOP leaders and most of their rank and file accused that took longer than expected. Four Oklahoma death row inmates asked the Obama in turn of reckless and unconstitutional actions on immigration that U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to halt their executions. They argue that had to be answered. the midazolam won’t properly anesthetize them before the second and third “This executive overreach is an affront to the rule of law and to the Condrugs are administered, creating a risk of unconstitutional pain and sufferstitution itself,” said House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio. “The people ing. made clear that they wanted more accountability from this president, and by our votes here today we will heed their will and we will keep our oath to protect and defend the Constitution.” 8 inmates, 2 officers killed when prison bus But Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., who chairs the Congressional Hispanic skids off icy West Texas road, hits train Caucus, said the Republicans were simply pandering to the far right. ODESSA, Texas (AP) — Eight inmates and two corrections officers died Wednesday when a prison bus skidded off an icy West Texas highway, slid IRS cutting taxpayer services just as health law makes filing federal returns more complicated WASHINGTON (AP) — Filing a federal tax return is about to get more complicated for millions of families because of President Barack Obama’s health law. But they shouldn’t expect much help from the Internal Revenue Service. Got a question for the IRS? Good luck reaching someone by phone. The tax agency says only half of the 100 million people expected to call this year will be able to reach a person. Callers who do get through may have to wait on hold for 30 minutes or more to talk to someone who will answer only the simplest questions. “Taxpayers who need help are not getting it, and tax compliance is likely MEADOW LEASING Littleton, N.H. Ground Level Containers 20’ - 40’ Office Trailers Storage Trailers 28’ - 48’ 1-800-762-7026 • 603-444-7026 Let Us Help You With All Your Storage Needs. ALL SIZES PROPANE CYLINDERS FILLED LP GAS Dyed Off Road Diesel Interstate Batteries Alkaline & Auto 802-748-4208 DADS 4 BY TOOL & SUPPLY 22 Memorial Drive, St. Johnsbury, VT • 802-748-4208 10 Railroad Street, Wells River, VT • 802-757-2000 www.dads4bytool.com Black Cyan Magenta Yellow down an embankment and collided with a passing freight train, authorities said. The overpass on Interstate 20 was slick with ice Wednesday morning when the Texas Department of Criminal Justice bus left the roadway in Penwell, just west of Odessa, according to Ector County Sheriff Mark Donaldson. An earlier accident on the I-20 overpass may have contributed to the prison bus losing control, Donaldson said. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice confirmed the 10 deaths in a statement, adding that four prisoners and one corrections officer were injured. “It’s as bad as you can imagine,” Odessa Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Kavin Tinney told the Odessa American newspaper. “In 32 years it’s as bad as anything I’ve seen.” Ranch owned by Ted Turner seeks New Mexico permit to import endangered black-footed ferrets ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A more than half-million-acre ranch that straddles the New Mexico-Colorado border and is owned by media mogul Ted Turner has asked for permission to import black-footed ferrets. The highly endangered carnivores have struggled across the Great Plains, and the Vermejo Park Ranch wants to bolster their numbers as part of a recovery program spanning 12 Western states. It will be up to the New Mexico Game Commission to clear the way for a permit for the ranch during a meeting Thursday. Biologists at the ranch have been working for years to recover the species. This marks the first time they have to jump through an extra hoop of review because of a regulatory change involving the importation and release of carnivores on private land in New Mexico. Oil has fallen by more than half despite record consumption. Where did it all come from? NEW YORK (AP) — The world burns enough oil-derived fuels to drain an Olympic-sized swimming pool four times every minute. Global consumption has never been higher — and is rising. Yet the price of a barrel of oil has fallen by more than half over the past six months because the globe, experts say, is awash in oil. So, where did all this oil come from? The Earth has been accumulating oil and natural gas for about a billion years or so. Humans have been drilling and burning crude and gas in significant amounts for only the last 156 years, since the 1859 birth of the oil industry in Pennsylvania. So, even when oil prices spiked earlier this decade amid worries that oil supplies would soon run low, scientists and oil companies knew there was plenty available. It wasn’t so much a question of how much oil and gas was left in the earth’s crust, but whether we could figure out how to squeeze it out and make money doing so. Model who claims Bill Cosby drugged, sexually abused her meets with police to pursue charges LOS ANGELES (AP) — A model who claims Bill Cosby drugged and sexually abused her at the Playboy Mansion met with Los Angeles police on Wednesday to pursue criminal charges against the comedian over the 2008 incident. An attorney for Chloe Goins said after the meeting that his client is the first woman accusing Cosby of sexual misconduct whose case may fall within the statute of limitations. More than 15 women have accused Cosby of sexual misconduct, including several who say the comedian drugged and raped them in incidents dating back at least four decades. Goins did not speak during a press conference Wednesday. Her attorney, Spencer Kuvin, said she came forward after hearing about other women describing abuse by Cosby and realizing she might have a valid criminal case. An email to Cosby’s attorney, Marty Singer, was not immediately returned. Kuvin declined to discuss what Goins told detectives but restated her allegations that Cosby drugged her at a 2008 event at the Playboy Mansion. Goins does not know what happened while she was blacked out but Kuvin says she awoke to find herself naked and Cosby over her. CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow THE CALEDONIAN-RECORD A6 ICONIC GUN STORE HOPES TO RELOAD UNDER NEW OWNER Caucus Continued from Page A1 By roBert BleCHl Staff Writer WHITEFIELD, N.H. — The iconic Village Gun Store, a downtown landmark for four decades and campaign stop for generations of presidential candidates, is inching toward new ownership to take it into the next generation of gun enthusiasts. “It’s not a done deal until the closing, but it’s in the process of happening and we’re 99.9 percent sure it’s going to happen,” Sandy Holz, who owns the store with her husband, Stan, said Tuesday. “It’s just taking a little slower than expected, but everything looks good.” The announcement of a prospective new owner comes after uncertainty last year that the store could close for good if no one wanted to take it over after Stan’s and Sandy’s retirement. In June, the Holz family, including daughter, Leah, held a recordsetting 40th anniversary sale, billed as the “last anniversary sale” because of their plans to sell the business or close it if they could not find a buyer. As the transaction is being finalized, Village Gun Store is temporar- ily closed and will remain closed for the rest of January, with an expected reopening in February. It will reopen under the Village Gun Store name, said Sandy Holz. Holz declined to name the new owner, but said he is a young military veteran from central New Hampshire whose family has been in the gun business. “We couldn’t have picked a better person,” she said. “He has been trying for almost a year to make this happen.” And for at least the first month after it reopens, Holz said her husband will work with the new owner. “Stan will have a large hand in it because he wants it to succeed after putting his life into it,” she said. “We expect [the new owner] to continue in the same kind of business plan, with Stan mentoring.” The new owner’s plan is to take the gun store into the future and make the business a way of life, said Sandy. The closing is expected by the end of January, she said. “We are really excited and hopeful it will continue,” she said. Stan and Sandy opened the Village Gun Store in June of 1974 in the bagel shop space next door to its current location at 4 King Square. The year prior, looking for a change of pace, they had moved from New York to the North Country, where they had vacationed. Through the decades, they saw changes in the gun business. In the 1970s, Village Gun Store customers were mostly men buying rifles and shotguns for hunting. But through the years, the store began selling more handguns along with rifles and a larger share of its customers are women. Word of mouth and regular discounts have helped drive sales. Owning a small business, however, often means much paperwork and long hours and Stan and Sandy found plenty of both. With retirement, Sandy said she and Stan, who live in Whitefield, will have a luxury they haven’t experienced for many years - free time. The new owner will inherit a store inventory that currently runs about 700 firearms that include new, used and collectibles as well as accessories and ammunition. Business since the 1970s has only gotten better, she said. “It’s gone up every year for 40 years,” said Sandy. “It’s a very solid business and it draws people from a three-hour circle.” time will tell if its absence impacts local politics. Caucus was a St. Johnsbury tradition reaching back “forever,” Doyon said. Its sole purpose was to ensure a candidate for each elected position, he said. “There was a time when it was hard to get anybody to run for office and positions were left blank,” Doyon said. “The caucus system has worked very well because it did ensure the positions were filled.” Caucus attendees would nomi- THuRSDAY, JANuARY 15, 2015 nate a candidate and then sign a candidacy petition. Office seekers who did not attend gathered signatures themselves. School Director Bruce Corrette went to his first caucus more than 45 years ago and is upset by its cancellation this year. “In my memory, they’ve been going on a long time,” Corrette said. “I can remember going to vote at caucus in ‘68, and it had been going on then for a while.” The event typically drew a crowd of at least 50 Democrats and Republicans, he said. Caucus created a one-stop-shop for candidacy by providing a nomination and a signed petition, he said. LSC Continued from Page A1 R.I. The station is a CBS and Fox news station. He says, “I had a great experience at LSC.” He adds that he works with staff who graduated from other college journalism programs and finds many of them “have no knowledge of the business.” Siciliano is the technical director of multiple news programs. He summarizes the LSC program by saying, “LSC is set apart from any program in the country. The LSC journalism program covers real life issues.” Another LSC graduate, Suzanne Proulx, who works for WMUR television station, located near Binghamton, N.Y., is a producer for weekend and evening news. She says the LSC program, “helped me immensely,” adding, “I most defithey’d paid him to complete the nitely would recommend LSC.” She said since graduating from work. Kearse was ordered to pay the LSC, she’s had an opportunity to Murphys $7,347.66 in restitution. compare her training to other news According to Field’s affidavit, Kearse didn’t finish work on one home and failed to notify homeowners that he is required to post either a $50,000 bond or an irrevocable letter of credit with the Attorney General’s Office, as required Continued from Page A1 by the registry. Field, aware of Kearse’s convic- rations that seek approval to apply tions, started seeing “Kearse Con- for a registration certificate to opstruction” signs on lawns in May. erate an alternative treatment cenShe stopped by homes and busi- ter. nesses in Newport, Charleston and Deadline for the RFAs is Jan. Barton to inquire whether Kearse 28. had been up front about his convicNew Hampshire’s medicinal tions and to find out whether he marijuana law, which passed in was properly bonded for the work. 2013, is aimed at easing the pain When Field asked Kearse, he of those with debilitating diseases said he was permitted to do con- and helping those with terminal illtracting work as long as he notifies ness find a measure of comfort that the attorney general’s office about traditional medicines can’t prowhat he was doing. vide. Janet Murnane, director of the For obtaining the marijuana, the Consumer Assistance Program at law allows for controlled alternathe attorney general’s office, told tive treatment, or distribution, cenField that Kearse was not in com- ters. pliance with the rules. A maximum of four alternative Homeowner Gregory Abbott Sr. treatment centers are allowed in of Lake Road in Newport said he the state, one for each geographic hired Kearse to power wash his area, Michael Holt, administrator building and stain his decks. Ab- of DHHS’s Therapeutic Use of bott said they had shaken hands on Cannabis Program, told the White the $400 deal and had no contract. Mountain Record in December. Jean Morris of Center School Road in Charleston said Kearse first started work on her home in the summer of 2013 replacing clapboards and painting her house. She said Kearse still had not repaired clapboards that were damaged Continued from Page A1 when he put them on the house. He said he could respond to calls Morris said Kearse owed her eiand investigate, and then turn what ther three gallons of paint or a rehe finds over to the investigating fund for $150 as well, but that he hadn’t made good on that promise agency. “We won’t get involved in cases since early July. he’s initiated,” Smith said during a Morris said she’d paid Kearse phone interview Wednesday. $3,000 by check for the current Sheriff Kirk Martin agreed. “If work being done on the other side they choose to have him respond to of her house. Field was unable to contact other complaints, he’s responsible for his building owners, including James own investigations.” Smith said that if the townspeoBullard of Water Street in Barton ple do not prohibit Lemois from exand the owners of Wok N Roll, a ercising law enforcement authority, Chinese restaurant under constructhey should still call 911 if they tion in Newport. want the assistance of the state police or sheriff’s department. The state police will not dispatch for the Irasburg constable, Smith said, and will treat policing as busiforce trauma to the head and neck, ness as usual no matter what occurs skull fractures and broken vertebrae. at Town Meeting. Second-degree murder charges have Smith said in the event that a vibeen filed against Dezirae’s stepfa- olent or otherwise serious crime is ther and Peighton’s mother in the first called in to Lemois, they won’t two cases. Both have pleaded not leave people hanging. “We won’t guilty. involve ourselves in town politics,” Too much emphasis on reuniting he said, a sentiment that Martin children with their families, heavy echoed. social worker caseloads and absent On Monday, Lemois said he communications among agencies wanted it made known at Town were contributing factors in the Meeting that if people want him to deaths, according to the November respond, they will need to call him findings of a special state panel. directly. Lawmakers launched a separate He said he will be able to decide inquiry, with a special legislative on a case by case basis what to recommittee hearing from more than 600 people in hearing testimony and spond to and what to pass along to a different agency. For instance, he written comments. can respond to people riding fourwheelers on town roads, but people CONTRACTOR GUILTY OF SECOND FRAUD Plea Deal Includes Jail Time, Restitution For Homeowners By Jen Hersey Cleveland Staff Writer NEWPORT — A contractor who got a deferred sentence on a felony count of home improvement fraud a year ago lost that deal when he pleaded guilty to another felony count of the same Tuesday in Orleans Superior Court-Criminal Division. Defendant Paul Kearse Jr., 34, of Newport also pleaded guilty to a count of violating the terms of the home improvement fraud registry and two counts of driving after suspension – all misdemeanors. If he’d gone without legal trouble for the two years of sentence deferment, Kearse would have seen the first felony wiped from his record. Instead, he admitted that the new conviction violated the terms of his probation and was sentenced in that docket as well. His total sentence is two to three years, suspended except 30 days to serve in jail on weekends. He starts his sentence Feb. 13. He must comply with the home improvement fraud registry and make full restitution across all dockets. This type of behavior is damaging to the community, Judge Timothy Tomasi said, “and it’s happened before.” “So let’s turn a page, let’s comply with the registry, let’s not make promises you can’t keep, and let’s not see you back here again,” Tomasi said. Kearse had already paid former victims John and Roni Murphy more than $7,000 in restitution last January for failing to complete work on their roof. While restitution has not been determined in the new case, victim Thad Beebe told Deputy State’s Attorney Jim Lillicrap that he got a $13,250 estimate to finish the replacement of his roof. Kearse quoted Beebe $9,950 for a standing seam metal roof in August 2013, and accepted $6,350 from him as a down payment and then another $3,000 for building supplies, according to court records. Beebe reported the fraud two days after Kearse’s first home Abuse Continued from Page A1 A violation under the new language could bring a 10-year prison term and/or a fine of up to $20,000. The new provision would expand those required to report to include a baby sitter or a grandparent who watches a child for the weekend, said Sen. Richard Sears, D-Bennington and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. “If a baby sitter allows her boyfriend to rape the child and does nothing about it, then she could be charged,” he said in an interview. He added that lawmakers are in the very early stages of considering the 43-page bill and that changes are improvement fraud conviction on Jan. 22, 2014. Kearse said he had only two payments left for another victim. He will remain on probation until all restitution is paid. Kearse, who has operated under business names Maple Leaf Framing and Construction, and more recently Kearse Construction and Peak Roofing, was arrested on a warrant Nov. 17, 2014, after failing to return calls from both a Newport City Police officer and a state trooper over several months. According to the affidavit filed with the case, Kearse is suspected of defrauding customers of more than $54,000 in just the cases investigated by the state police. New Charge In mid-September, Kearse stripped Beebe’s roof and applied an underlayment, and then failed to show for the next several weeks. Eventually, Kearse returned Beebe’s calls and agreed to complete the roof by the end of October 2013. He prepped the roof, but did not return until November, when the roofing supplies were delivered. Kearse didn’t have money to reimburse the people who made the delivery and persuaded Beebe to pay the $3,000 fee for delivery and materials, Lefebvre wrote. Lefebvre contacted Kearse, who promised to finish the roof by the end of March. Kearse sent an email to Beebe thanking him for his patience and explaining that he’d had “tons” of professional and personal setbacks. He asked him for 30 more days to complete the roof. On March 9, Beebe told Kearse he was clearly uninterested in finishing the job and asked for his money back. Kearse did more work, but did not complete the project. Attempts to reach Kearse were unsuccessful, and in the interim, Lefebvre learned that Field was searching for Kearse as well to arrest him for several new offenses. Registry Violation In the original case, Kearse was convicted of leaving Derby couple John and Roni Murphy without a roof during winter months after likely as it winds its way through the legislative process. Luke Martland, chief of the Legislative Council, the Legislature’s research and bill-drafting staff, told lawmakers the legislative language was designed to hold accountable those who know of but fail to report child abuse. He also said there are cases in which one family member is reticent to provide information against another. The possibility of a 10-year felony charge “may provide an inducement for them to cooperate in the investigation,” Martland said. Two-year-old Dezirae Sheldon, of Poultney, died in February from blunt force trauma to the head, and 15-month-old Peighton Geraw, of Winooski, died in April of blunt Its disappearance will impact local politics, Corrette said. Resident Dave Timson is even more passionate about the caucus cancellation. “This is bull crap,” he said. “We need some transparency. There needs to be more input from taxpayers and the caucus is a good forum for that.” Timson on Wednesday was attempting to contact South, the Democratic committee chairman, and had already spoken to Bostic, the Republican committee chairman. Timson said it would be upsetting to discover caucus was canceled because Democrats were unavailable, as Bostic said. CourteSy Photo Electronic Journalism Arts major Alex Farnsworth reporting on Vermont’s 2014 election day results. people and finds she was better “My hats off to all the hard prepared. She said when she first working students, faculty and staff stated a job for a news station, “I for making this happen,” LSC knew what to do.” President Joe Bertolino said. Main The North Country is one geographic area, and in terms of the law, is defined as Coos, Carroll and upper Grafton counties, he said. “By doing that, it makes the populations areas roughly the same,” said Holt. The treatment center licensing fee for each of the three non-North Country regions is $80,000. “The geographic area in the north was reduced in half, to $40,000, with the thinking the North Country needs to be incentivized,” he said. Once the applications are received, DHHS will consider the geographic locations and eventually select applicants, said Holt. Within 10 days of selection, the applicant would need to pay a portion of the $80,000 or $40,000 and within 90 days of selection the applicant is required to submit a registration application. There is nothing in the rules that mandates a specific size for a treatment center, he said. A qualifying medical condition under the law includes cancer, glaucoma, AIDS, muscular dystrophy, Crohn’s disease, agitation of Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury or disease, traumatic brain injury, or other injuries that significantly interfere with daily activities as documented by the patient’s provider. Severely debilitating or terminal medical conditions include chemotherapy-induced anorexia, constant or severe nausea, persistent muscle spasms, seizures, wasting syndrome, and severe pain that has not responded to previously prescribed medication or surgeries. Advocates of medicinal marijuana say it will also help stimulate the appetites of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and reduce the unpleasant side effects. Qualifying patients, who are prohibited from using cannabis in public or while operating a vehicle, are allowed to possess up to two ounces of marijuana. Constable should call the state police when there is an active break-in taking place. “I want to keep this in the realm of having the tools to do this correctly,” Lemois said. Selectmen Brian Sanville and Brian Fecher questioned Lemois about his level of training and experience. Lemois said he’s just as qualified as any other part-time certified officer, but Fecher said he doesn’t have the training piece that those on the job would have. “You didn’t take the physical part,” Sanville said, adding that he’s sure that part would be required if Lemois were to, for instance, apply for a deputy sheriff position. Lemois said he did his on the job training, a requirement for certification, with the Fair Haven Police Department and said he’s willing to “give” them more hours to get more experience. “I did have to draw my weapon once. It was pretty hairy,” Lemois said. Lemois said the chief in Fair Haven would hire him if he lived nearer to the area. But he said the experience has taught him to know when to ask, “Do I pull this trigger?” Lemois said there were “no takers” locally for that portion of the training. The local police still have a certain idea of what a constable is and their response to him is part of the “backlash from Vezina and Teddy Miller. It’s kind of given that a bad name,” Lemois said, referring to Barton Constable Romeo Vezina, who recently died, and the former constable of Island Pond, who was known for writing lots of tickets to bring revenue to town. So far, no local police will allow him to ride along on patrol to get hours because they are worried about liability, Lemois said. “With you acting like a law enforcement officer around here, you are a liability to the town,” Sanville said. If Lemois shot someone, who is going to get sued, Sanville asked. “The town and me,” Lemois said. He said he would be covered under the town’s policy with the Vermont League of Cities and Towns (VLCT). Lemois said he would suggest adopting policing policies from the VLCT, and would want a camera system, or “silent witness,” to avoid a situation like “Ferguson.” Lemois said he’s already made two DUI stops. One, he stopped and the state police responded. The other was a guy coming back from the emergency room with an eye problem. He said he made him park his vehicle and get a ride. Lemois paid for his own training, which required 50 hours at the police academy, 150 hours of elective courses, and 80 hours of on the job training, although Lemois said he’s completed far more hours than necessary. When first elected in 2013, Lemois told the selectmen he had been a law enforcement officer in New York, a claim the Orleans County Record found to be untrue. The constable’s office is not funded in Irasburg. Black Cyan Magenta Yellow CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow NATION & WORLD THuRSDAY, JANuARY 15, 2015 A7 New Issue Of Charlie Hebdo Sells Out Quickly By elaine Ganley and JaMey Keaten Associated Press PARIS — Parisians lined up Wednesday to empty the newsstands of the first issue of Charlie Hebdo, a week after Islamic extremists attacked the satirical newspaper’s office, and French justice officials began cracking down by arresting dozens of people who glorified terrorism or made racist or anti-Semitic remarks. The editors of the publication again put a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad on the cover, and it quickly sold out by early morning around the capital and elsewhere, with long lines and scuffles at kiosks. Disappointed buyers were told to come back Thursday when more of the increased print run of 5 million copies will be available. A leader of Yemen’s al-Qaida branch officially claimed responsibility for the attacks by two gunmen that left 12 dead at the weekly publication, saying in a video posted online that the slayings came in “vengeance for the prophet.” The newspaper had received repeated threats for lampooning Muhammad. A third attacker killed five other people, bringing the total number of dead in the Jan. 7-9 spasm of violence to 17 before all the gunmen died in police raids. On alert for new attacks, France deployed thousands of police and soldiers around the country, and they moved to quash any racist remarks or praise for terrorists. The scale of security measures is raising questions in some quarters about whether some freedoms will be impinged upon. At least 54 people were arrested for hate speech or other acts insulting religious faiths, or for cheering the men who carried out the attacks. The new issue of Charlie Hebdo features the prophet, a tear rolling down his cheek, holding a placard that says “Je Suis Charlie.” The saying has swept France and the world, with the irreverent newspaper being embraced as a symbol of freedom of speech. Prime Minister Manuel Valls held up his copy after the weekly Cabinet meeting — but strategically placed his hand over the prophet’s face. Muslims believe their faith forbids depictions of the prophet, and some reacted with dismay — and occasional anger — to the new cover. Some who had supported Charlie Hebdo after the attacks felt betrayed and others feared the cartoon would trigger yet more violence. Defending his caricature of the prophet on the latest cover, cartoonist Renald Luzier argued that there should be no exceptions to freedom of expression. He said when the weekly was threatened before, the reaction was often: “Yes, but you shouldn’t do that (publish cartoons of Muhammad). Yes, but you deserved that.” “There should be no more ‘Yes, but,” he insisted. In Turkey, a court in a southeastern city ordered a ban on access to websites showing the cover of Charlie Hebdo’s new edition after a lawyer filed a petition saying it would endanger public order, the state-run Anadolu News Agency reported. The issue was banned in Senegal, in west Africa, and the spokesman for the Brussels prosecutor’s office, Laurens Dumont, said four shops in one neighborhood were threatened in one Brussels neighborhood if they sold it. Egypt and Iran condemned the “provocative” publication. Egypt’s top Islamic authority, Dar al_Ifta, had warned against publishing the cover after its content became known Monday. President Francois Hollande, speaking aboard the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle to members of the military, said he was sending the warship to the Middle East as part of the ramped-up effort to fight terrorism. The situation “justifies the presence of our aircraft carrier,” Hollande said. France is already carrying out airstrikes over Iraq as part of an international coalition fighting the Islamic State group. Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, one of al-Qaida central’s most active affiliates, posted an 11minute video on the group’s Twitter account. A top commander, Nasr al-Ansi, warned of more “tragedies and terror” in the future. Al-Ansi said AQAP “chose the target, laid out the plan and financed the operation.” He said the radical Yemeni-American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who was killed in a U.S. drone strike in Yemen in September 2011, had arranged the attack. But a high-ranking French intelligence official told The Associated Press that French authorities see the claim as “opportunistic,” and that AQAP appears to have served as an inspiration — not an orchestrator — of the attacks. That account coincided with U.S. intelligence officials who said they have no evidence AQAP coordinated the attack or knew of it in advance. All three officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss classified matters publicly. The brothers Cherif and Said Kouachi, behind the Charlie Hebdo massacre, had told survivors they were sent by al-Qaida in Yemen. Amedy Coulibaly, the third gunman who killed a policewoman and four people at a Paris kosher supermarket, had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, normally a bitter rival of al-Qaida. French police say as many as six members of the terror cell may still be at large, including a man seen driving a car registered to the widow of one of the gunmen. Officials say the widow is now in Syria. There has been no word on the whereabouts of the driver or the car. Since the attacks, France has deployed 10,000 troops and 120,000 AP Photo People browse a newsstand advertising "We don't have any more Charlie Hebdo" in Paris, France, Wednesday. Charlie Hebdo's defiant new issue sold out before dawn around Paris on Wednesday, with scuffles at kiosks over dwindling copies of the paper fronting the Prophet Muhammad. security forces around France, an area the size of Texas, to protect sensitive sites, including Jewish schools and synagogues, mosques and travel hubs. Police were detaining anyone who shows even verbal support for terrorism or racism and anti-Semitism. Scores of mosques have been attacked in the past week. The 54 people arrested included four minors, and several already had been convicted under special measures for immediate sentencing. Inciting terrorism can bring a five-year prison term — or up to seven years for inciting terrorism online. Dieudonne M’Bala M’Bala, a popular and controversial comic, was briefly detained and ordered to trial in February on charges of justifying terrorism. He has repeated convictions for racism and antiSemitism, and most recently called himself “Charlie Coulibaly” in a Facebook post, mixing the names of the newspaper and the market at- Black Cyan Magenta Yellow tacker. France already has laws on the books against hate speech, especially anti-Semitism in the wake of the Holocaust. However, the Justice Ministry laid out new rules to prosecutors and judges for rounding up those who defend the Paris terror attacks or speak against religions. Education Minister Najat Vallaud Belkacem expressed deep concern about the failure of students in some schools to honor the minute of silence held this week. “Schools are on the front line. They will be firm in sanctioning,” she said. The failure of some students to join in the national effort to tackle terrorism underscores the malaise in poor suburbs, usually with populations with roots in Arab countries and on the margins of mainstream society and living with a sense that their own religion has been stigmatized. The surviving employees of Charlie Hebdo produced the new issue while working out of borrowed offices. The French Culture Minister Fleur Pellerin has promised 1 million euros in “emergency” financing to the weekly, although it was not clear when the funds would be released. It was also unclear whether, even with financing, the Charlie Hebdo staff would publish on a weekly basis as in the past. The weekly cost 3 euros ($3.55). The publication’s comeback also is being backed by the Digital Innovation Press Fund, which was created by Google and a French publishing trade group in 2013. The fund is contributing 250,000 euros (about $295,000) to the publication, according to its managing director, Ludovic Blecher. “It is an exceptional answer to an exceptional situation,” Blecher said Wednesday. “Our fund is dedicated to help the press.” Google holds one of seven seats on the fund’s board. CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow A8 the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 Black Cyan Magenta Yellow CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow the reCorD • thurSDAy, JAnuAry 15, 2015 A9 NEW ENGLAND Questioning Of Prospective Jurors Begins Today In Tsarnaev Trial By denise lavoie AP legal Affairs Writer BOSTON — Prospective jurors who made it through the first round of cuts in Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s federal death penalty trial face individual questioning as the second phase of jury selection begins Thursday. More than 1,350 people were called to court last week to fill out lengthy juror questionnaires. Tsarnaev’s lawyers and prosecutors were due to submit a list of jurors both sides agree should be excused, but that number was not immediately released publicly Wednesday. When individual questioning begins Thursday, Judge George O’Toole Jr. will do most of the inquiry, but the judge has said Tsarnaev’s lawyers and prosecutors will NOTICE TO THE VOTERS OF BETHLEHEM SCHOOL DISTRICT be allowed to ask some follow-up questions. Tsarnaev, 21, is accused of carrying out twin bombings near the finish line of the 2013 marathon. The blasts killed three people and injured more than 260. On Wednesday, O’Toole rejected a bid by Tsarnaev’s lawyers to suspend jury selection because of the potential impact of last week’s terror attacks in Paris. Tsarnaev’s lawyers argued that the French terror attacks had placed the marathon bombings “at the center of a grim global drama.” They said delaying jury selection for at least a month would allow some time “for the extraordinary prejudice flowing from these events — and the comparison of those events to those at issue in this The Lafayette Regional School District operates under the non partisan ballot system for the election of school officials: a Moderator for a term of one year; and one School Board Member from the preexisting district of Sugar Hill for a term of three years. The School District Clerk will prepare the ballots and all candidates for office shall file their declarations of candidacy or petitions of nomination with the School District Clerk between the dates of January 21 to January 31, 2015. Blanks for candidates will be furnished by the School District Clerk, or White Mountains School Administrative Unit #35, 260 Cottage Street, Suite C, Littleton, New Hampshire. Amy Venizia, Clerk Lafayette Regional School District NOTICE TO THE VOTERS OF LANDAFF SCHOOL DISTRICT The Town of Hardwick received $350,000 from the State of Vermont for a grant under the Vermont Community Development Program. A public hearing will be held at Memorial Building, 20 Church Street on 2/5/2015 at 5:30 to obtain the views of citizens on community development, to furnish information concerning the range of community development activities that have been undertaken under this program, and to give affected citizens the opportunity to examine a statement of the use of these funds. The VCDP Funds received have been used to accomplish the following activities: The Lamoille Housing Partnership and Housing Vermont requested VDCP funds in the amount of $350,000 to help fund the rehabilitation of the Maple Street Apartments in Hardwick. The project commenced in September of 2013 and was completed in November of 2014. The project consisted of Life Safety and Code upgrades; new sprinkler system and fire alarms; insulation and windows; new kitchens and bathrooms; new siding, roofing and exterior painting. New water and sewer lines were also installed. Information on this project may be obtained from and viewed during the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at Town Manager’s Office, 20 Church Street, on 2/5/2015. Should you require any special accommodations please contact Brittany Cote at 802-472-6120 to ensure appropriate accommodations are made. For the hearing impaired please call (TTY) #1-800-253-0191. Legislative Body for the Town of Hardwick The Landaff School District operates under the non partisan ballot system for the election of school officials: A Moderator, Clerk, Treasurer, for a term of one year; one School Board Member for a term of three years. The School District Clerk will prepare the ballots and all candidates for office shall file their declarations of candidacy or petitions of nomination with the School District Clerk between the dates of January 21, and January 31, 2015. Please be aware the election of School District Officials for 2016 will take place at the Landaff Town Meeting, Tuesday, March 10, 2015. Blanks for candidates will be furnished by the School District Clerk, J. Denise Cartwright, Landaff; or White Mountains School Administrative Unit #35, 260 Cottage Street, Suite C, Littleton, New Hampshire. J. Denise Cartwright, Clerk Landaff School District See trial, Page A10 Buying Used Guns. OOver 700 Guns. NOTICE TO THE VOTERS OF LAFAYETTE REGIONAL SCHOOL DISTRICT The Bethlehem School District operates under the non partisan ballot system for the election of school officials: a Moderator, Clerk, Treasurer, for terms of one year; Two School Board Members for terms of three years. The School District Clerk will prepare the ballots and all candidates for office shall file their declarations of candidacy or petitions of nomination with the School District Clerk between the dates of January 28, 2015 and February 7, 2015. Blanks for candidates will be furnished by White Mountains School Administrative Unit #35, 260 Cottage Street, Suite C, Littleton, NH 03561 Lisa Pelotte, Clerk Bethlehem School District public. Legal analysts said that both prosecutors and Tsarnaev’s lawyers will be looking to get a snapshot of the life experiences and attitudes of prospective jurors when they are questioned individually. “It’s hard to pigeonhole particular types of jurors. It’s going to case — to diminish.” In a brief written ruling, O’Toole said his review of jury questionnaires “has so far confirmed, rather than undermined, my judgment that a fair and impartial jury can and will be chosen to determine the issues in this case.” The questions asked on the 28page jury forms has not been made 6-MONTH LAYAWAY AND GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE Rte. 15, Hardwick, VT • 802-472-5916 HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-2. FINAL PUBLIC HEARING PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE HERBICIDE USE NOTIFICATION Vermont utilities maintain electric line rights-of-way with several methods, including the selective use of herbicides on trees and brush. They also encourage low-growing shrubs and trees which will crowd tall-growing species and, thus, minimize the use of herbicides. The application of herbicides may start as early as April 1. Requests to utilities for notice by mail, however, must be made by February 15. The Public Service Board requires Vermont utilities to carry out vegetation management techniques which allow maintenance of electrical systems in a cost-efficient manner. The types of herbicide treatment used to maintain vegetation on utility rights-of-way include the following applications: stump, injection, basal, soil, and foliar. These are the commonly used methods; your local utility may use other methods. Landowners have the right to request that a utility apply herbicide treatment on cut stumps only or that a utility refrain from applying herbicide. In the latter case, the landowner has to pay the utility an administrative fee. Only electric utility rightsof-way that have tall-growing tree species with the potential of threatening the electric utility system are treated. Utilities advertise by radio and newspaper prior to herbicide applications on all lines. Utilities typically treat rights of way once every four-to-six years, depending on the utility’s specific vegetation management cycle. Please check with your utility regarding the vegetation management cycle of a particular line. Some utilities identify their poles with metal letters and numbers, e.g., V.E.C. (Vermont Electric Co-operative), or V.E.L.C.O. (Vermont Electric Power Company). These markings are not found on every utility pole. However, by checking of several poles on a line, you should be able to find a marked pole and determine which utility owns it. Persons owning or occupying land within 1,000 feet of a utility right-of-way may request in writing that the utility notify them individually by mail anytime but at least 30 days prior to treatment of the line with herbicides. The landowner or resident is responsible for contacting the utility, in writing, to request placement on the mailing list. The utility should be provided with sufficient information as to the exact location of the residence and land. It is the duty of each landowner or resident to make the utility aware of the location of any potentially affected water supply, and any environmentally sensitive areas where herbicide application ought to be avoided. ANTIQUESAUCTION AnƟques,Furniture,Glass,Jewelry,WhiteMtns. Saturday,January17·10AM The Barn · 3247 Route 302, Lisbon, NH We are pleased to oīer a nice selecƟon of items from N. Country homes. FEATURING: Larkin #9 bow front china cab; White Mountain ice chest; post oĸce mail sorter; oak sͲroll top desk, dropͲleaf tables, dressers, gentleͲ man’s chest w/mirror; & buƩer print bed; commode w/ towel bar; Vict. walnut marbleͲtop table; pine cedarͲ lined chest; old wood box; tall wooden painted shelf; maple child’s school chair; sm. dropͲfront desk; sm. Old Man framed photo; Sawyer mini interior; set/farm scene lithos; Parrish print; Ɵn type siblings; Rose Medallion; yellow ware; NaƟve American vase; 2Ͳgal. salt glazed jug w/blue dec, NH; ink boƩle; commode set; cobalt boƩles; White Mtn. plates; Sandwich compote; Wedgewood JasͲ perware pitcher; goat yoke; wooden planes, scribe & levels; 2Ͳman saw; apple picker; buck saw; VW & other car parts; solid brass NaƟonal cash register c1897; manͲ tel clock; Western Electric wall phone c1900; New EngͲ land railroad paper; garlic press; wooden mortar & pesͲ tle; model train engines, cars, track, accessories; Meade ETX telescope set; WWI & WWII lead & composite solͲ diers; Civil War camp lamp; Oriental carpets; carved SamͲ bo dolls; Model T car horn; Ɵn dough maker; linens & crochet work; cast iron keƩles; asst’d copper; Speedway metal runner sled; ladies skates c1920; catcher’s mask & ball, c1930; calf grain bag; washer/dryer set; gold, silver & costume jewelry; more! PREVIEW: Fri 1/16: 3Ͳ6PM & Sat1/17:8Ͳ10AM.TERMSOFSALE:10%BUYERSPREͲ MIUM, cash or check,w/ proper ID; all items sold AS IS; all sales final. Refreshments available. ESTATEAUCTION AnƟques,Furniture,Silver,Glass,Art Saturday,January31·10AM·TheBarn Save the date! This sale will feature items from the estate of Mary Brockhardt of Topsham, VT, with some addiƟons. AmmonoosucRiverAucƟonCompany AucƟon&AppraisalServices Michael J. Carver, AucƟoneer NHLic.#3081/VTLic.#2371 3247 Route 302, Lisbon, NH 03585 Ph: 603Ͳ444Ͳ1136 Details&[email protected]Ɵon.com Foreclosure: 37± Acres DƚŶsŝĞǁƐ͊ Friday, January 16 @ 2PM ϰϴϲ,ĂƌƌŝŵĂŶZŽĂĚ͕ĂůƚŽŶ͕E, CONTACT YOUR ELECTRIC UTILITY WITH QUESTIONS OR SUBMIT THE COUPON PROVIDED If you have further questions or concerns contact: Agency of Agriculture James Leland 116 State St., Montpelier, VT 05602 1-802-828-2431 Consumer Affairs & Public Information Dept. of Public Service 112 State St., Montpelier, VT 05620 1-800-622-4496 or 1-802-828- 2332 LANDOWNER REQUEST TO BE ADDED TO HERBICIDE TREATMENT NOTIFICATION MAILING LIST Name Town/City of Affected Property Street Address Town State Telephone Number (Home) Zip Code Electric Account Number Property of Concern: (Work) O.K. to use Work Number: Year Round Residence Water Supply Line and Pole Identification: Utility Initials Land Best Time to Call Summer Residence Other &ŽƌĞĐůŽƐƵƌĞ͗ϯZ,ŽŵĞŽŶϮϮ± Acres Yes No Wednesday, January 28 @ 11AM ϮϮϮtĞƐƚDŝůĂŶZŽĂĚ͕ĞƌůŝŶ͕E, Commercial Property Numbers We need all of this information in order to determine if you qualify for personal notification. If information is unobtainable, please state why. Use an extra sheet of paper if you need more space. VELCO15 3BR (2 up & 1 down) Log home with mountain views! Tongue *URRYH SLQH FHLOLQJ *UHDW 5RRP ZLWK VWRQH ¿UHSODFH ZRRG )XOOEDWKGLQLQJIXOOEDVHPHQW0DVWHU6XLWHZLWK-DFX]]L:DONLQ FORVHWVODUJHNLWFKHQZLWKVODWHÀRRUJUDQLWHFRXQWHUWRSV %5 %$ UDQFK VW\OH KRPH RQ DFUHV 6) ZLWK FDU EDVHPHQWJDUDJH¿UHSODFHEDUQVKHG*UHDWPLQLIDUP RETURN TO YOUR LOCAL UTILITY Thomas Hirchak Co. d,ƵĐƟŽŶ͘ĐŽŵ 800-634-7653 (NH#2661) Black Cyan Magenta Yellow CALEDONIAN Black Cyan Magenta Yellow NEW ENGLAND A10 Trial starts for man accused of war crimes in Bosnia THuRSDAY, JANuARY 15, 2015 The break-ins included a pawn shop, an auto consignment store, an eye store, pet store, and pizzeria. Some items were taken. Police said they found a utility truck parked near a restaurant containing a cash register taken from the break-in at the pizzeria. An investigation also BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — A Bosnian war crimes suspect living in Verto clear disabled vehicles from the road as quickly as possible so that small showed the vehicle had been stolen and used in a commercial burglary in mont is on trial in federal court. Bedford. Police said security cameras were able to capture images of possible If convicted, 55-year-old Edin Sakoc could be deported. Prosecutors allege problems don’t cause major tie-ups. suspects. Detectives are still trying to determine if all of the incidents are reSakoc lied about being involved in war crimes against a Bosnian Serb family Vermont National Guard to send lated. in 1992 when he came to the United States. helicopter and 4 to southwest The Burlington Free Press reports (http://bfpne.ws/17H82WQ) attorneys Man in pickup crash with children played videotaped testimony of a man who said two men kidnapped his niece COLCHESTER, Vt. (AP) — The Vermont National Guard is planning to accused of driving drunk and killed two other female relatives. Prosecutors allege Sakoc was one of send a helicopter and four soldiers to help perform border security operations the men. along the U.S. border with Mexico. GILMANTON, N.H. (AP) — Police have accused a man of crashing his Sakoc’s lawyer said the alleged accomplice is the person who is guilty. The guard says the Lakota helicopter will be used near Tucson, Arizona. pickup truck in Gilmanton, New Hampshire, while driving drunk and with Sakoc is charged with lying to immigration officials when he entered the Soldiers from separate detachments will split the 90-day mission. The sol- two children in the vehicle. United States in 2001 and lying again when he applied to become a natural- diers will be providing aerial support to Department of Homeland Security Police found the truck rolled over onto its roof and blocking a road Friday ized citizen in 2007. ground units during security operations. night, with no one inside. WMUR-TV reports (http://bit.ly/1wZwrN4) police later identified the Vermont, USDA announce $16M Frozen pipe bursts, closes medical driver, 40-year-old Michael Delloiacono and found him at a home down the to clean Lake Champlain road. They said the children, ages 11 and 7, were in the truck with him at the office building MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin and officials PLYMOUTH, N.H. (AP) — Speare Memorial Hospital’s medical office time of the crash. from the U.S. Department of Agriculture have announced $16 million in fed- building has been closed after a frozen pipe burst and caused water damage There were no serious injuries. eral funds to help clean up Lake Champlain. Delloiacono was charged with aggravated driving while intoxicated, conto the floors and furniture. The funding is part of more than $370 million in federal spending on about duct after an accident and two counts of endangering the welfare of a child. Speare Memorial at Boulder Point is in Plymouth and is home to the hos110 projects nationwide as part of a new USDA Regional Conservation Part- pital’s affiliated practices, including an orthopedics and sports medicine It wasn’t immediately known if he had a lawyer. nership Program. clinic, primary care, eye care and physical therapy. Elderly Maine man saved from fire by his dog Shumlin made cleaning up Lake Champlain a priority in his inaugural adThe Citizen reports White Mountain Eye Care & Optical is expected to dress last week. PLEASANT RIDGE PLANTATION, Maine (AP) — A 73-year-old rereopen as early as Friday, but the rest of the building will remain closed for Vermont and New York will share the $16 million to improve water quality cleanup and repair for up to three weeks. tired builder in Maine is crediting his Brittany Spaniel with saving his life. and land sustainability. Herbert Hingley says "Babe" woke him up by jumping on him and pawing The orthopedics, primary care and physical therapy practices have reloRunoff from farms, wastewater treatment plants and developed properties cated to the hospital for now. at his face to get him out of bed. He says he awoke early Wednesday to disare among the primary sources of phosphorus, which is blamed for toxic cover his house as on fire in Pleasant Ridge Plantation. algae blooms in the lake. Fire Chief David Robinson tells the Morning Sentinel that Hingley has 132 marijuana plants seized from home Among other things, the project announced Wednesday will use modeling trouble hearing, and couldn't hear the smoke detectors going off. ROCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — Police say they’ve seized 132 marijuana to target conservation practices and an extensive monitoring network to as- plants from a home in Rochester, New Hampshire, and they’ve made an arBingham Fire Chief Scott Lawyerson says firefighters struggled to get sess if the practices are effective. enough water to the scene to bring the fire under control as the temperature rest. dipped to minus-20. Police said 52-year-old David Bock of Rochester has been charged with State expands roadside assistance The blaze destroyed the house but Hingley survived along with Babe and manufacturing a controlled drug. He was being held on $25,000 cash bail; it to Spaulding Turnpike nine other hunting dogs he keeps in a kennel outside. wasn’t immediately known if he had a lawyer. PORTSMOUTH, N.H. (AP) — New Hampshire is expanding its roadside Police said they visited the home Monday night. The plants were found in assistance program to include the Spaulding Turnpike from Portsmouth to various stages of maturity, from small seedlings to fully grown plants. Police Rochester. also seized growing equipment, including lights and fertilizer. sense of whether this juror is the Beginning Wednesday, the state’s Department of Transportation will add right juror to hear this case,” said Business break-ins reported in Manchester a service patrol truck for the turnpike during the morning and afternoon comformer U.S. Attorney Donald MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — Police in Manchester, New Hampshire, Continued from Page A9 mutes. The service already exists on Interstate 95. Stern. “The stereotypes that Drivers who experience relatively simple problems such as a flat tire, dead say there’s been a rash of burglaries at businesses overnight and they’re come down to specific answers to lawyers and some jury consultants battery or running out of gas will get assistance from the truck. The goal is searching for suspects. specific questions and getting a use I don’t think really apply in this case.” Frank Libby, a former federal prosecutor who is now a Boston defense attorney, said individual Auctioneers & Appraisers Since 1972 questioning helps lawyers on both explore the backgrounds of MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE sides prospective jurors and the deciAT PUBLIC AUCTION sions they’ve made in their lives. FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2015 – 1:30 P.M. “As a prosecutor, you want to have somebody who is adult, 6 Mitchell Road – Thornton, NH grown-up, had some experience in On the above date we will sell at Public Auction for the Mortgagee the following property situated at 6 Mitchell Road, Thornton, NH. life, perhaps has some ups and Located in the White Mountains of New Hampshire and within easy driving time to downs, someone who understands Cannon or Loon Mountain ski areas this log home property may be just what you’re that actions have consequences, looking for. and they’ve had exposure to makDirections: Take Interstate 93 to exit 27 (Thornton), take route 3 North for approx. 2.2 miles to Mitchell Road and the auction site. ing tough decisions,” Libby said. Terms of the Sale: Fifteen minutes prior to the auction prospective bidders must “From the defense side, you cerpresent to the mortgagee or its agent a deposit in the amount $10,000. (Tentainly want to find the maverick, Thousand Dollars) in cash, certified check or other form of tender acceptable to the the mustang, somebody who’s not mortgagee. The balance of the successful bid must be paid within 45 (forty-five days). averse to going his or her own way Please Note: The mortgagee reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids. and standing their ground,” he said. Sale per order of: Union Bank, 263 Dells Road, Littleton, NH 03561 where the The judge has said he expects to original mortgage instrument may be examined. question about 40 prospective juInspection: One hour prior to the auction if permitted. rors each day until enough people For additional information contact: Thomas Pancoast, Esq., 603-444-7764, Counsel have been qualified to move to the For the Mortgagee, Littleton, NH, 603-444-7764 or Auctioneer, Archie Steenburgh, final phase of jury selection, when 603-989-5361. both sides will be allowed to elimPRIOR TO THE AUCTION PROSPECTIVE BIDDERS SHOULD MAKE ANY AND ALL SUCH INVESTIGATION AS THEY DEEM APPROPRIATE. inate a certain number of jurors All information furnished is believed to be correct but no warranties are without stating a reason. Each side expressed or implied. has 20 such peremptory challenges. Archie H. Steenburgh & Joshua W. Steenburgh A panel of 12 jurors and six alAuctioneers and Appraisers – NH Lic. 2194 & 2754 ternates will be chosen. 779 Jeffers Hill Road, Pike, NH 03780-9403 Testimony is expected to begin Tel.: 603-989-5361 Jan. 26. E-mail: [email protected] – Website: www.steenburgh.com REGION BRIEFS Trial STEENBURGH ABSOLUTE AUCTION – NO RESERVES For Townline Equipment, other area equipment dealers and construction companies at the Connecticut Valley Auto Auction facility located at 1567 RT 14 in White River Jct., VT 05001 SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 2015 @ 10:00 AM SELLING CONSTRUCTION EQUIP, FARM TRACTORS, COMPACT TRACTORS, EQUIPMENT, TOOLS AND ATTACHMENTS CONSTRUCTION TRACTORS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT Cat 303.5 excavator w/cab, hyd thumb, 2700 hrs Kobelco 25SR2 excavator w/cab, 2120 hrs JD 210C 4WD loader landscape w/cab 2008 McCormick CT47 4WD shuttle trans, loader, 380 hrs 2006 Kubota BX24 4WD TLB, perfect condition 100 hrs 2005 NH TZ25DA 4WD TLB w/belly mower, 400 hrs 2007 Kubota BX2350 4WD w/loader Kubota M5400DT 4WD w/loader, after market cab, 3465 hrs Case IH 5140 4WD w/cab, power shift, power shuttle Kubota L3710B 4WD glide shift shuttle trans, loader, 1800 hrs Kubota L2550DT 4WD shuttle trans, 1530 hrs JD 2555 4WD w/245 loader, canopy JD 4020 2WD power shift w/loader 5414 hrs JD 670 4WD w/loader, mower deck, 574 hrs JD 755 4WD w/loader, front snow blower, mower deck Cub Cadet 7305 4WD w/loader, cab, 1014 hrs Int Cb Cadet 185 w/loader, mower deck, 3pth roto tiller Int Cub Cadet 154 low boy w/blade Ford 8N New Eagle 30 gal truck mount air compressor Honda powered Smartquip compactors Power Trail 4” water pump New Q/A forks New Q/A 66” brush grapple New Q/A 66”, 72”, 78”, 90” high volume buckets New Q/A mounting plates New Gentec hyd thumb 50,000# New X36 manual thumb FARM EQUIPMENT & ATTACHMENTS JD 916 8’ disc mower w/finger conditioner NH 163H 17’ hyd fold tedder Woods SB60 3pth 60” snow blower Woods RM660 72” finish mower JD 690 brush hog Eurospand VAS203 fert spreader Kubota BX2750 snow blower attachment 3pth 5’ box blade SKIDSTEERS 2006 Bobcat T140 track loader, 1250 hrs Gehl 3410 TRAILERS 2001 Challenger 6x12 enclosed Come Taste our Treats! at the Grindstone Cafe, Lyndonville January 17th from 10am to 3 pm MISC. Patu 355 grapple loader forwarder w/winch 2008 Magnum light plant 18.4 x 30 ice chains Delta DC-380 planer Craftsman radial arm saw Reliant dust collection system 2 – Delta air cleaners New 12V winches 4500# & 10000# TERMS: CASH, GOOD CHECK OR CREDIT CARD W/3% FEE • 6% SALES TAX • NO BUYERS FEE LUNCH BY WRIGHTS CATERING There will be many more items included in this sale. AUCTIONEERS: C W GRAY & SON’S INC. East Thetford, VT EAST THETFORD, VT • VT LIC # 128 • 802-785-2161 • 802-296-5806 SALE SITE Jan 23, 24 & 25 WEB: www.cwgray.com • EMAIL: [email protected] • ALSO: www.auctionzip.com Black Cyan Magenta Yellow
© Copyright 2024