Home | About | Archives | RSS Feed |
Superior Court Briefs: Dec. 11 - Dec. 18
UPS Worker in Pedestrian Accident Treated & Released
Update and rewrite: 3:42 p.m., Dec. 18, 2014
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A section of Beaver Street was closed to traffic for nearly two hours on Wednesday morning after a United Parcel Service courier was struck while crossing the road.
The courier, Timothy Rooney of Preston Hollow, N.Y., was taken by ambulance to Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, where he was treated and released.
The accident occurred just after 11 a.m. near the intersection with McCauley Road. According to police, the UPS truck was parked pointing south when Rooney, a seasonal worker assisting a UPS driver, had taken out a package and stepped into the path of a southbound green 2000 Ford pickup truck driven by Justin Henderson of Stamford, Vt.
Henderson was found not at fault and the truck incurred minor damage. The roadway, however, was closed until the state police accident reconstruction team could complete its investigation.
Four Injured, Pets Lost in Pittsfield Duplex Fire
The home on Lincoln Street burned in the early hours. |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An early morning fire on Lincoln Street heavily damaged a duplex and injured four, including three firefighters.
One occupant of the home was taken by ambulance to Berkshire Medical Center for treatment of burns and smoke-related injuries. Two pets are also missing and another, a cat, died in the blaze.
Two firefighters suffered minor lacerations and another smoke inhalation; all three were treated at the scene.
The cause is under investigation by the Fire Investigation Unit, state fire marshal's office and the Police Detective Bureay.
City firefighters responded to the 2-alarm blaze with five engines and the ladder truck to the structure fire at about 4:13 a.m. According Deputy Chief Michael Polidoro, there was heavy fire extending to the second floor when fire units arrived on the scene.
It took 90 minutes to bring the fire under control. There is heavy fire damage in the front on both the first and second floors and smoke and heat damage to the rest of the building. The owner of the building lived on the first floor; a tenant on the second.
All of the occupants were displaced and the Red Cross was contacted to assist them.
Western Massachusetts Electric Co., Berkshire Gas and city inspectors assisted at the scene; Dalton Fire Department covered the city.
No Injuries in Route 7 Collision at Mount Greylock School
Pittsfield Domestic Disturbance Prompts Special Response Team
Police closed streets around a home where a domestic disturbance was reported. |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city man was taken into custody Saturday morning after the Berkshire County Special Response Team had to be called out.
Police received two calls shortly before 10 a.m., one from a postal carrier who heard noises and screaming from a home at the corner of Myrtle Street and Stoddard Avenue and another from a family member.
"We're still trying to sort out what exactly occurred inside, but essentially an emotionally disturbed person, a mental health patient, with some medical history who was having a bad way and managed to get his hands on a black powder rifle," Police Chief Michael Wynn said.
"We're pretty sure it wasn't loaded, from the family, but we didn't know for certain so that necessitates a protocol."
The SRT team consists of representatives from local police departments — including Lanesborough, Lenox, Great Barrington, Adams, and Dalton — and the Berkshire County Sheriff's office.
They closed the streets and were able to make contact with the man, enter the house and defuse the situation.
"He was taken into custody without incident and is on his way to the hospital," Wynn said.
Wynn declined to name the man because the suspect was being treated as a medical patient, but said charges will likely be brought related to the domestic disturbance following an investigation.
The streets were to be reopened once the police equipment was removed. Police began leaving the area about an hour after arriving.
"Everything went as smoothly as could be expected given the circumstances," Wynn said. "When operations go this way, we're very happy. These are the way they're supposed to go."