Lanesborough Firefighters Take 4 Trailers of Donations to New York

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Volunteers have been donating both goods and supplies to help a destroyed town that nearly 'mirrored' their own.
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The small town of Breezy Point, N.Y., bore the brunt of Hurricane Sandy last month.

Volunteer fire companies found themselves battling sea water and a whipped-up inferno as the superstorm pummeled the Rockaway Peninsula.

Breezy Point flooded during the storm and a six-alarm fire broke out destroying a large swath of the town. High flood levels trapped the volunteer firefighters and the New York City Fire Department couldn't help.

The blaze destroyed 111 homes and damaged 20 others along with the fire station.

After learning about the devastation in the oceanside town, Lanesborough volunteer firefighter Glen Storie and his wife, Beth, saw similarities between that tight-knit community and their own and immediately wanted to help.

Storie posted to Facebook that he wanted to use his trailer to take supplies down to Breezy Point and his fellow firefighters jumped at the opportunity to help. The word spread throughout the region and every night last week, donations came in from across the Berkshires and from as far as Stephentown, N.Y., and Hamden and Franklin counties.
 
On Friday night, firefighters were finishing loading four trailers full of supplies — an estimated 12,000 pounds — to be shipped to Breezy Point on Saturday morning. Ten firefighters are escorting the supplies to the Breezy Point Fire Department and will lend their manpower to help clean and repair the fire station, firefighters' homes or anything else Breezy Point fire officials need.

"A lot of people wanted to donate but they didn't know how," Storie said Friday in between loading trailers. "It's expanded five-fold."

According to Fire Chief Charlie Durfee, the supplies range the entire spectrum. Berkshire fire departments from Savoy, Adams, West Stockbridge, Tyringham and Lanesborough all donated used fire equipment to help replace what Breezy Point lost.

"Their fire department got destroyed and this is to help out firefighters and fire departments," Durfee said. "We're just doing our part to help them out."


The largest of four trailers was filled to the brim on Friday.
Durfee added that there are a lot of firefighters and police officers from New York City, both active and retired, who live in Breezy Point.

"This directly affects firemen," Durfee said. "They're down there with only the clothes on their back."

The donations came from residents and from businesses. The trailers are loaded with boxes of batteries, pallets of food, brand-new chainsaws and tools, clothing for all ages, baby supplies, four 55-gallon tanks of gasoline or, as Durfee said, "everything you could imagine."

"We've been here every night. Everybody has been here loading, loading, loading," Durfee said. "It's been overwhelming."

So many items came in that Storie's trailer filled quickly. But a family member of another Lanesborough firefighter loaned another and when that one filled up, DCM Racing Products showed up with a 24-foot trailer. On Friday, the 24-footer was so stuffed that the Fire Department loaded up its own 10-foot trailer for the final items.

Of the 10 volunteers going, four are returning Saturday and the rest are staying all weekend and will return Monday. Another six firefighters have already volunteered to return next weekend.

While the Red Cross and the Federal Emergency Management Agency have their hands full with the rest of New York and New Jersey, one small town and volunteer fire department is helping out where it can.

Tags: fire department,   hurricane,   Sandy,   superstorm,   volunteers,   

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Dalton Man Accused of Kidnapping, Shooting Pittsfield Man

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A Dalton man was arrested on Thursday evening after allegedly kidnapping and shooting another man.

Nicholas Lighten, 35, was arraigned in Central Berkshire District Court on Friday on multiple charges including kidnapping with a firearm and armed assault with intent to murder. He was booked in Dalton around 11:45 p.m. the previous night.

There was heavy police presence Thursday night in the area of Lighten's East Housatonic Street home before his arrest.

Shortly before 7 p.m., Dalton dispatch received a call from the Pittsfield Police Department requesting that an officer respond to Berkshire Medical Center. Adrian Mclaughlin of Pittsfield claimed that he was shot in the leg by Lighten after an altercation at the defendants home. Mclaughlin drove himself to the hospital and was treated and released with non-life-threatening injuries. 

"We were told that Lighten told Adrian to go down to his basement, where he told Adrian to get down on his knees and pulled out a chain," the police report reads.

"We were told that throughout the struggle with Lighten, Adrian recalls three gunshots."

Dalton PD was advised that Pittsfield had swabbed Mclaughlin for DNA because he reported biting Lighten. A bite mark was later found on Lighten's shoulder. 

Later that night, the victim reportedly was "certain, very certain" that Lighten was his assailant when shown a photo array at the hospital.

According to Dalton Police, an officer was stationed near Lighten's house in an unmarked vehicle and instructed to call over the radio if he left the residence. The Berkshire County Special Response Team was also contacted.

Lighten was under surveillance at his home from about 7:50 p.m. to about 8:40 p.m. when he left the property in a vehicle with Massachusetts plates. Another officer initiated a high-risk motor vehicle stop with the sergeant and response team just past Mill Street on West Housatonic Street, police said, and traffic was stopped on both sides of the road.

Lighten and a passenger were removed from the vehicle and detained. Police reported finding items including a brass knuckle knife, three shell casings wrapped in a rubber glove, and a pair of rubber gloves on him.

The response team entered Lighten's home at 43 East Housatonic before 9:30 p.m. for a protective sweep and cleared the residence before 9:50 p.m., police said. The residence was secured for crime scene investigators.

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