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The Berkshire Law Enforcement Task Force vehicle parked in front of 175 Middle Road on Wednesday. Law enforcement was at the home until late Wednesday evening.

State Police Arrest Suspect In Clarksburg Homicide

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CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The victim of the incident on Wednesday has been identified as Dennis Bernardi and a 36-year-old Clarksburg man has been arrested in his murder. 
 
William Gingerich was arrested by Lewiston, N.Y., Police on a warrant secured by the State Police Detective Unit assigned to the Berkshire District Attorney's Office. 
 
Clarksburg and North Adams Police responded to 175 Middle Road on Wednesday for a wellness check and discovered the body of the house's owner, 71-year-old Dennis Bernardi. 
 
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner took custody of the body and made a preliminary determination that the manner of death is homicide.
 
The State Police and the District Attorney's Office are now seeking to transport Gingerich back to Massachusetts for an arraignment in Northern Berkshire District Court on single counts of murder and kidnapping.
 
The District Attorney's Office provided no further information. State Police and the Berkshire County Sheriff's Department had officers at the house, a single-family home apparent undergoing renovations, well into the evening on Wednesday. 
 
Bernardi purchased the house in 2019.
 
"I send my heartfelt condolences to the Bernardi family and wish them the best in this difficult time, and I thank State Police, Clarksburg Police, and North Adams Police for their investigation into this tragedy," District Attorney Andrea Harrington said.

Update at 7:50 p.m.: The district attorney's office could not give a timeline on when information would be released so we cannot confirm some details we have. This article will be updated as soon more information is made available. 

Original post 3:27, Feb. 23, 2022:
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — Local and state police were investigating an incident at a Middle Road home on Wednesday.
 
The Berkshire Law Enforcement Task Force vehicle was parked in front of 175 Middle Road; the medical examiner's vehicle was reportedly at the scene earlier. 
 
Officers at the scene referred questions to the district attorney's office. iBerkshires has reached out and is waiting for a reply. 
 
The house is a single-family home owned by Dennis Bernardi, according to documents on file with the Registry of Deeds. 
 
Story developing ...

Tags: murder,   

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North Adams Residents Seek Answers on Forest Management Plan

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Andre Strongbearheart speaks at Thursday's meeting about conservation and land stewardship. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Officials say the forest management plan for the Notch Reservoir watershed will improve the forest's resiliency.
 
But residents continue to be concerned about erosion, water quality and logging, and the effects on wildlife and the popular Bellows Pipe Trail. 
 
The plan includes selective and salvage harvests because of infestations of the emerald ash borer, patch cuts on the red pine plantations, and enrichment plantings of resilient species. The project aims to reinvest income into the forest and watershed, with a focus on best management practices in collaboration with Mass Audubon and the state and federal forestry services.
 
The initiative is part of Mass Audubon's Forest Climate Resilience Program in conjunction with the Woodlands Partnership of Northwest Massachusetts, of which the city is a member. Two demonstration forests in the partnership are eligible for three-year U.S. Forestry Service grants. 
 
It will focus on 70 acres of the more than 1,000-acre woodland to the west and north of the reservoir off Pattison Road. The management plan has been approved by the state Department of Conservation and Recreation but further permitting will be required from the Conservation Commission, for the cutting operation and for endangered species clearance. 
 
"It's an opportunity to harvest trees, open up the understory and replace them with resilient species, part of the climate change initiative here," said Gary Gouldrup, vice president of New England Forestry Consultants.
 
"So the whole purpose is to go above and beyond the typical forest management practices that have been done in the past."
 
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