Task Force Arrests 3 for Drug Trafficking

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A raid on Brown Street on Tuesday resulted in the arrests and arraignments of three men described by authorities as large-scale drug traffickers.
 
Kareem Archibald, 25, and Maurice Simmons, 33, both of the Bronx, N.Y., and Jah'Rell J. Mayes, 22, of Pittsfield, were arraigned Wednesday in Pittsfield District Court on numerous charges including trafficking in heroin and cocaine.
 
Archibald and Simmons are both being held on $100,000 bail and Mayes on $50,000 bail.
 
Law enforcement said they identified the suspects and the suspected trap house, an apartment unit on Brown Street, based on an extensive investigation leading up to their arrests.
 
Police said the three men were arrested Monday at about 12:52 p.m. after walking out of 30 Brown. Simmons was wearing a satchel and Archibald and Mayes both carried backpacks. 
 
Archibald and Simmons were handcuffed without issue. Mayes fled and was later apprehended on Oak Street. All the bags recovered by law enforcement contained drugs and other evidence of drug dealing, according to police.
 
The Berkshire County Special Response Team executed a knock and announce search warrant at the house at 1:35 on Tuesday. No one was found inside when the warrant was executed but law enforcement recovered guns, ammunition, drugs, cash, and other items that they say indicated the house was used as a central location for drug dealing. 
 
Combined, law enforcement recovered approximately $20,729 in cash; approximately 146 grams of cocaine (worth between $7,300 to $14,600); multiple digital scales (digital scales are used to weigh drugs); numerous cell phones (drug dealers often possess multiple cell phones to communicate with other dealers and customers); an illegal firearm; and an illegal ammunition.
 
"I do not tolerate large-scale drug trafficking in the Berkshires," said Berkshire District Attorney Timothy Shugrue. "Once again, the Task Force conducted a comprehensive investigation and taken action to apprehend individuals brining drugs and violence. We will ensure that these individuals are held accountable for their actions.

Tags: drug charges,   drug trafficking,   

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Big Lots to Close Pittsfield Store

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Two major chains are closing storefronts in the Berkshires in the coming year.
 
Big Lots announced on Thursday it would liquidate its assets after a purchase agreement with a competitor fell through. 
 
"We all have worked extremely hard and have taken every step to complete a going concern sale," Bruce Thorn, Big Lots' president and CEO, said in the announcement. "While we remain hopeful that we can close an alternative going concern transaction, in order to protect the value of the Big Lots estate, we have made the difficult decision to begin the GOB process."
 
The closeout retailer moved into the former Price Rite Marketplace on Dalton Avenue in 2021. The grocery had been in what was originally the Big N for 14 years before closing eight months after a million-dollar remodel. Big Lots had previously been in the Allendale Shopping Center.
 
Big Lots filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September. It operated nearly 1,400 stores nationwide but began closing more than 300 by August with plans for another 250 by January. The Pittsfield location had not been amount the early closures. 
 
Its website puts the current list of stores at 960 with 17 in Massachusetts. Most are in the eastern part of the state with the closest in Pittsfield and Springfield. 
 
Advanced Auto Parts, with three locations in the Berkshires, is closing 500 stores and 200 independently owned locations by about June. 
 
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