Massachusetts
Brookline rules over Needham again to claim state title
A year later and the ending turned out to be the exact same for the Brookline and Needham boys volleyball teams.
The No. 2 Warriors took home the Division 1 state title for the second year in a row over their Bay State Conference rival and top-seeded Rockets with a 3-1 victory (25-20, 25-22, 23-25, 25-17).
It took two days for Brookline to capture the hardware and a change in venue as the match was suspended Friday night midway through the second set due to poor floor conditions caused by moisture.
The restart at Hopkinton High didn’t halt any of Brookline’s momentum after it took the first set Friday night as the Warriors won the second set, 25-22, before Needham rallied to win the third frame, 25-23.
Brookline bounced back, though, and got a final kill from Amir Tomer to send the Warriors into celebration.
Along with taking down Needham, Brookline also defeated Woburn (3-0), Arlington (3-0), Newton South (3-1) and Natick (3-2) en route to its state title.
Massachusetts
Ideal weekend for outdoor plans: Hot and rain-free across Mass.
For only the third time since the start of March, the weekend is rain-free.
If you count the overnight on Sunday, however, we will technically not be, thanks to leftover storms and rain that move in late.
For purely planning purposes, we’re good to go for any outdoor events both days — including if you’re heading to our first local World Cup match at Boston Stadium, or any watch parties, on Saturday.
The dew points have dropped, so the heavy, hanging air has lifted.
We’re still seeing hot temperatures, with highs both today and tomorrow reaching the low 90s.
This is an ideal beach weekend, too. Tides are high early in the day (lots of beach in the afternoon), and winds will mostly be coming from land.
Speaking of wind, the gusts get a little strong on Sunday afternoon ahead of a vigorous weather system pushing through Sunday night.
There’s some hope that we get some decent rain from this system. Guidance shows up to half an inch in spots – although it doesn’t show it being widespread. In any event, we’ll clear for more sun on Monday and continue to see the temps slide into Tuesday.
Our next focus will be a stronger storm system by Thursday. It’s early, but if all the ingredients come together, we could be seeing some severe weather in parts of New England.
Have a great weekend!
Massachusetts
Court rejects bid to derail ballot question to repeal marijuana legalization
The initiative petition that would undo the 2016 legalization of recreational marijuana in Massachusetts can continue advancing toward November’s ballot, the state’s high court said Friday in a ruling that also deemed the attorney general’s summary of the question to be fair.
A handful of participants in the state program that provides funding to boost opportunities for entrepreneurs disproportionately impacted by marijuana prohibition and enforcement filed a lawsuit seeking to remove the question from this year’s ballot. The plaintiffs argued that Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell’s required summary of the initiative left out key details and that the AG should not have certified the multifaceted measure because it contains unrelated policy sections.
The Supreme Judicial Court disagreed in a 20-page opinion written by Justice Bessie Dewar.
“The Attorney General argues that the petition’s various parts all relate to the common purpose of restricting the use of recreational marijuana through a new integrated scheme for marijuana regulation. We agree and are not persuaded by the plaintiffs’ arguments to the contrary,” the jurist appointed by Gov. Maura Healey, an opponent of 2016’s legalization, wrote.
Elsewhere in the ruling, Dewar wrote, “We conclude that the Attorney General did not err in certifying the petition on either of the claimed grounds, and that her summary of the petition is fair.”
Massachusetts voters legalized recreational cannabis through a 2016 ballot measure. The Coalition for a Healthy Massachusetts is advancing this year’s ballot question, which would repeal legalization of non-medical marijuana, allow adults 21 or older to possess and gift up to an ounce of marijuana (possession of up to second ounce would carry a civil penalty), make it a civil infraction for people younger than 21 to possess up to two ounces, and allow retail marijuana stores to either apply to become medical dispensaries or sell their inventory to one. The Cannabis Control Commission would remain, but only to regulate the medical sector.
“Massachusetts is just not as comfortable a place to live in anymore … We walk across the common and smell weed. I drive down [Interstate] 93, the car in front of me is a hotbox. It’s everywhere. It’s pervasive,” Wendy Wakeman, a veteran of Republican Party politics who is working as spokeswoman for the ballot campaign, told lawmakers in March.
The Legislature’s Special Joint Committee on Initiative Petitions recommended that lawmakers take no action on the idea this spring, and most members of the committee signed onto a report that details tax revenue, public health and public safety concerns with the idea.
“The Committee finds that the proposal lacks sufficient detail regarding implementation and enforcement mechanisms, including how existing regulatory authority would be modified, transferred, or eliminated. This absence of clarity creates legal uncertainty with respect to the continued applicability of current statutes and regulations, as well as the roles of state agencies responsible for oversight of the cannabis industry,” the report said. It added, “The majority of the Committee therefore finds that, as drafted, the proposal does not adequately address these operational, fiscal, and public safety considerations.”
Legal cannabis sales grossed more than $1.65 billion in 2025, and generated $289 million in state tax revenue in fiscal year 2025, according to the CCC.
Massachusetts
Authorities recover 35 ‘high-risk missing children’ in Mass. in anti-trafficking initiative amid World Cup – The Boston Globe
The statement did not identify anyone arrested in connection with the operation or provide any additional details on the children, such as how long they had been missing or their ages.
The announcement also did not explicitly state whether any of the recovered children had been forced into commercial sex work.
But the Marshals said Operation Yellow Card, a reference to a violation in a soccer game, involves “proactive measures” to identify and locate vulnerable missing children at an “elevated risk” of trafficking.
“The upcoming FIFA World Cup is a monumental event for Massachusetts, but large-scale international gatherings historically bring a heightened risk of predatory exploitation targeting our communities’ most vulnerable youth,” said Dennis Matulewicz, acting US Marshal for Massachusetts, in the statement.
“Operation Yellow Card represents our unyielding commitment to intercepting these threats and securing endangered children before they can be pulled into networks of trafficking and abuse,” he said. “This operation’s early success in recovering 35 high-risk missing children is a direct result of the extraordinary, seamless cooperation” between state, local, and federal law enforcement.
Working together, Matulewicz said, “we are sending an unambiguous message to those who seek to harm children: we are aware, we are acting, and we will never stop looking for those in danger, nor will we relent in pursuing those who prey on them.”
His words were echoed in the statement by Suffolk District Attorney Kevin R. Hayden.
“The World Cup is bringing enormous benefits to our region, but it also brings the possibility of child exploitation,” Hayden said. “We and our partners will do everything in our power to prevent victimization and punish anyone who violates our laws.”
In recent weeks, officials and victim advocates have announced a series of public safety plans tied to the World Cup games here, with more than 2 million visitors expected to descend on the region.
Gillette Stadium in Foxborough — dubbed “Boston Stadium” during the World Cup — will host seven matches between Saturday and July 9, featuring teams from Haiti, Scotland, Iraq, Norway, England, Ghana, and France.
Ted Docks, FBI special agent in charge of the Boston division, has mentioned human trafficking at multiple recent press events related to World Cup Safety.
At one event that focused on trafficking, Docks was among more than a dozen members of law enforcement, activists for exploited people, and government officials who announced a public-awareness campaign and other efforts aimed at cracking down on trafficking for sex and labor.
They said they’re working especially with people in hotels, restaurants, and other hospitality or transit entities to spot and report trafficking, as well as asking the public to be aware and ready to call 911 or the national human-trafficking hotline, which is 1-888-373-7888.
The awareness campaign includes a billboard currently looming over busy Route 1 just south of Gillette: “Human trafficking” it says in large bold letters over close-ups of several eyes. “If you see something, say something.”
In the Marshals’ statement Thursday, Boston police Commissioner Michael Cox said his department has a unit devoted to fighting trafficking year-round.
“While this work is not new to us, we have increased the scope of our operations to manage the size of this summer’s events,” Cox said. “Our partnerships with the Massachusetts State Police, Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, Federal Bureau of Investigations Boston Division, United State Marshal Service, the Suffolk County Children’s Advocacy Center and the Support to End Exploitation Now Program are all critical. We also want to thank the hotels in Boston for their partnership.”
The Marshals statement also included praise for the operation from the Plymouth and Essex district attorneys as well as State Police Colonel Geoffrey D. Noble.
Gillette Stadium sits within the jurisdiction of the Norfolk County district attorney’s office.
“Every missing and vulnerable young person deserves safety and security and to be given the opportunity to live free from the threat of exploitation,” Noble said in the statement, “Human traffickers prey on our most vulnerable, targeting those who are often isolated or in crisis.”
Noble said the “men and women of the Massachusetts State Police, along with our local and federal partners, have remained laser-focused on the mission of Operation Yellow Card, to locate missing children from around Massachusetts and provide them with the support and protection they deserve.”
Material from prior Globe stories was used in this report.
Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com.
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