North Adams Man Sentenced to Probation in Jan. 6 Insurrection

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A local man charged in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol has been sentenced to three years of probation for trespassing. 
 
Brian McCreary, 33, was captured on film several times inside the Capitol next to the so-called "QAnon Shaman" Jacob Chansley, who was sentenced last year to 41 months in prison. 
 
McCreary was arrested a year ago by agents from the FBI's Boston bureau. He was charged with obstruction of an official proceeding, trespassing, disorderly conduct on the grounds and in the building, and demonstrating within the building. 
 
Last October, he pleaded guilty to "entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds" in a plea deal. 
 
According to court documents, McCreary had attended the "Stop the Steal" rally in Washington, D.C., and walked to the Capitol with a crowd intent on stopping the counting of elector ballots for the 2021 presidential election. He entered a door that had been kicked open and walked up to the second floor of the Senate side. He was twice told to exit the building by law enforcement before leaving but then re-entered through a separate door that also been kicked open. He finally exited after hearing a gunshot and drove home. 
 
The next day, he contacted the FBI through its tip line and provided footage he had taken inside and outside the Capitol and later cooperated agents. According to the court filing he signed, McCreary told the FBI that he had attended the rally because he was frustrated with the results of the presidential election and that an audit had not been performed to "address allegations of mass voter fraud." 
 
There has been no evidence of any mass voter fraud.
 
On April 1, he was sentenced to 36 months of probation, including 42 days of intermittent incarceration and two months of home detention. He also received a fine of $2,500 and is required to pay $500 in restitution toward the $1.5 million in damage done the Capitol. 
 
The cases of two Pittsfield men, Troy Sargent and David Lester Ross, who also attended the rally, have not yet been resolved. 
 
Sargent has a number of trespassing and disorderly charges, as well as assaulting federal officers and engaging in physical violence on the Capitol grounds. Ross was charged in D.C. Superior Court for trespassing and has a status hearing on May 20.  

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Louison House Celebrates Growth, Programs at Annual Meeting

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Shirley Manuel tells how Louison House helped her find and furnish an apartment after unexpectedly finding herself homeless.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Shirley Manuel was looking to move to the Berkshires with her ailing husband to be closer to her grown children. 
 
She'd visited last fall and then drove here from Mississippi in March to scout out a place to live. It was during her drive north that she received the tragic news that her 82-year-old husband had died of a heart attack.
 
She moved into her daughter's apartment but there wasn't really any space for her. So she called Louison House for help. 
 
"It was nothing like what I expected. I'm 67 years old. I didn't know anything about being homeless, living in a shelter, who to turn to, where to go, anything," she told the attendees at Louison House's annual meeting. "But I had help from everybody."
 
She immediately made herself useful — cooking for the 17 people staying there — and, she admitted, annoying because she kept trying to do everyone's job. 
 
"Miss Kathy would get on me because she would tell me, you know, stop trying to take over everybody's job. Stop telling everybody to go by your rules. They have to go by Louison House rules," she laughed. "I can't help that this my personality!"
 
Louison House helped her find a permanent place to live and the items she needed to furnish it. She's now giving back as a member of the shelter's advisory committee. 
 
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