Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
Crime
A 51-year-old Hanson man was sentenced in the first federal dogfighting conviction in Massachusetts on Wednesday, officials said.
John Murphy was sentenced to one year and one day in prison with the last three months to be served in community confinement, followed by three years of supervised release, according to a statement from U.S. Attorney Leah B. Foley.
“Dogfighting is a blood sport rooted in cruelty and greed,” Foley said. “This sentencing marks a historic moment in the first federal dogfighting conviction in Massachusetts and serves as a stark warning: those who engage in this barbaric practice will be exposed, prosecuted and punished.”
Authorities said they first identified Murphy discussing dogfighting on recorded calls with a New York-based dogfighting target.
A subsequent investigation revealed Murphy’s “years-long” involvement in dogfighting, officials said.
Investigators searching Murphy’s Facebook found that he communicated with other dogfighters about the results of dogfights, breeding dogs, and fighting dogs’ injuries, the statement said.
Photos and videos on Murphy’s Facebook showed a pit bull-type dog with “scarring and discolorations” on its head and leg consistent with that of dogfighting, the statement said.
The dogs were seen on video “physically tethered to different treadmill-like devices,” authorities said. Officials also found evidence of Murphy’s involvement on his cell phone, including WhatsApp messages discussing elements of dogfighting.
In June 2023, authorities found nine pit bull-type dogs — several of which suffered scarring — as well as animal fighting paraphernalia, at Murphy’s residence in Hanson.
In March 2024, the U.S. filed a civil forfeiture complaint against 13 dogs seized in June 2023 from Murphy’s residence and another residence in Townsend, that were being used for dogfighting, the statement said. In September and October, the court ordered the dogs to be forfeited to authorities.
In November, Murphy pleaded guilty to nine counts of possessing animals for use in an animal fighting venture and was indicted by a federal grand jury in March 2024.
In addition to his prison sentence, Murphy was ordered to pay a fine of $10,000 and prohibited from possessing pit-bull type dogs, authorities said.
“Mr. Murphy brutalized defenseless animals for profit and sport – training them to fight, suffer and die for his own financial gain,” Foley said. “His actions were not only illegal but deeply disturbing.”
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
A Massachusetts man accused of making threats on Facebook to kill United States President Donald Trump was arrested on Wednesday after a stand-off with law enforcement in which the man began brandishing a sword.
Andrew Emerald, 45, was charged in an eight-count indictment filed in federal court in Springfield, Massachusetts, over a string of threatening posts he allegedly made last year, including one in which he vowed to travel to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida if the president was not dead by 2026.
“Either Trump is dead and in the ground by 2026, or I am hunting him down and putting him there,” Emerald wrote in another social media post in May 2025, according to the indictment.
A lawyer for Emerald did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
His Facebook posts came to the FBI’s attention as a result of a tip from a citizen who had warned Emerald that it was a crime to threaten the life of the president, according to documents prosecutors filed seeking to have him detained.
Emerald replied that he had been threatening Trump online for a decade and that, if law enforcement came after him, “I’ll kill them until they kill me,” according to an affidavit from an FBI agent.
When the FBI on Wednesday went to his residence in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, to execute an arrest warrant, Emerald refused to come out before eventually stepping into view brandishing a long, metallic sword, the affidavit said.
The FBI agent said Emerald had previously referenced his sword in Facebook posts threatening Trump, including in July 2025, when he said he would stick it through the president’s throat.
Emerald told agents they would need to shoot him before locking his door, the FBI agent recounted.
Local police and an FBI crisis negotiation team were called in. He finally agreed to be arrested after a police officer reached him on his phone, the FBI agent’s affidavit said.
CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) – Jewish families in western Massachusetts and across the world are preparing to observe the eight-day festival of Passover starting at sundown Wednesday. The holiday commemorates the biblical story of Exodus and the Israelites’ liberation from slavery in Egypt.
The festival is also known as Pesach and the Festival of Unleavened Bread, according to the National Day Calendar. Its date changes annually because it is set according to the first full moon in the Hebrew calendar month of Nissan.
The roots of the holiday are found in the Old Testament. While traditionally a Jewish observance, many Christians have also begun participating in Passover celebrations.
The holiday starts with the Passover Seder, which is a ritual feast. The event includes reading, singing, washing hands, drinking wine, and eating specific foods.
A traditional Seder meal includes roasted lamb, flatbread called matzah, bitter herbs like horseradish, and vegetables dipped in saltwater. These items are arranged on a Seder plate.
The food and wine are ingested in a specific order during the meal. The procedure is written in a book called the Haggadah, which also includes the consumption of four cups of wine.
All facts in this report were gathered by journalists employed by WWLP. Artificial intelligence tools were used to reformat information into a news article for our website. This report was edited and fact-checked by WWLP staff before being published.
WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Download the 22News Plus app on your TV to watch live-streaming newscasts and video on demand.
The countdown is on for Artemis II and its crew’s historic liftoff Wednesday evening. The mission will mark NASA’s first piloted flight to the moon in 53 years.
Attached to the Orion spacecraft the four astronauts will take around the moon, is a key piece of technology developed over decades in Lexington, Massachusetts.
Researchers and developers at MIT Lincoln Laboratory designed and built optical communication systems, which use lasers instead of traditional radio frequencies to transmit information.
“With laser communications, we’re able to deliver a lot more data with a lot less power and with much smaller terminals,” explained Jade Wang, Assistant Group Leader of Optical and Quantum Communications at MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
The technology marks a major leap from the RF systems used during the Apollo missions decades ago. Researchers say those older systems created limits on how much and how reliably data could be sent back to Earth during flight.
“The in-flight instrumentation is a huge bottleneck [on newer spacecrafts], and without laser communications, all of that data that’s critical to the safety and the health of the astronauts wouldn’t be as readily available,” said Steve Gillmer, Assistant Group Leader of Structural and Thermo-Fluids Engineering at MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
The new system is expected to provide a faster, more seamless flow of critical data, including 4K video upload and download as well as other capabilities. In a sense those grainy videos of the moon from the 60s and 70s will truly be a thing of the past.
“The way I eventually described it to my friends was I was working to make communications in space more like, bring the internet so astronauts could view cat videos for instance, and to have the experience in space that they currently enjoy at home,” said Wang.
Beyond Artemis II, researchers say technology will play a vital role in the future of deep space exploration. NASA plans to have a moon-landing flight in 2028.
“Artemis is just the first step. Ultimately, we are hoping to send people to Mars for exploration there, and this same of technology is required to kind of provide the amount of data and services that we need for that kind of exploration,” Wang added.
MIT Lincoln Laboratory is owned and operated by Massachusetts Institute of Technology but serves as the largest federally funded R&D tasked with developing advanced technology for the DoW, U.S. government agencies and non-DoW organizations such as NASA, the FAA, and NOAA.
South Carolina vs TCU predictions for Elite Eight game in March Madness
Do You Know the Comics That Inspired These TV Adventures?
Jannik Sinner’s Girlfriend Laila Hasanovic Stuns in Ab-Revealing Post Amid Miami Open
Video: Trader Joe’s Dip Head-to-Head Taste Test
Wil Wheaton Discusses ‘Stand By Me’ and Narrating ‘The Body’ Audiobook
Boy who shielded classmate during school shooting receives Medal of Honor
Tennessee Police Investigating Alleged Assault Involving ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson
Skier dies after fall at Sugarbush Resort