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Great Barrington's Andy Bachetti celebrates his win in the 2013 Mr. Dirt Track USA event at Lebanon Valley Speedaway.
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Lebanon Valley Speedway regular Brett Hearn celebrates his 2012 win in the Mr. Dirt Track USA event.

Mr. Dirt Series Returns to Lebanon Valley

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WEST LEBANON, N.Y. — Three Berkshire County drivers figure to be in the mix on Thursday, Aug. 14, when the Mr. Dirt Track USA tour makes its annual stop at Lebanon Valley Speedway.

The event is part of the Super Dirtcar Series that kicks off each February in Florida and ends up back below the Mason-Dixon Line at the Dirt Track of Charlotte in North Carolina in November.
 
The Lebanon Valley stop is always one of the highlights of the track's season and certainly one of the richest nights.
 
"It pays $17,500 for the winner ... and pays all the way back to, I guess, $300 or $500 for the last spot," Lebanon Valley owner/promoter Howard Commander said this week. "It's a big purse. It usually makes a guy's year."
 
Last year, it made the year of Great Barrington driver Andy Bachetti, one of a dozen or so Lebanon Valley regulars who will be competing in Thursday's 100-lap feature.
 
The series draws drivers from throughout the Northeast, including current points leader Matt Sheppard of Waterloo, N.Y.
 
With seven dates left before the tour heads south, Sheppard holds a five-point lead over Unadilla, N.Y.'s, Billy Decker. In third place is Brett Hearn, who calls Sussex, N.J., home but makes the weekly trip north to compete in both the Mr. Dirt series and the Saturday night features at Lebanon Valley, where he currently is second in the Modified Division, a season-long competition he has won seven times, including four straight wins from 2002-05.
 
The current Modified leader at Lebanon Valley (by 18 points) is Pittsfield's J.R. Heffner, who has won the Mr. Dirt feature at the track twice in the past.
 
"We've had a lot of winners of this race from Berkshire County," Commander said. "Two of the last three are from out of town."
 
But that does not mean all the faces will be familiar on Thursday night. Commander said generally about 75 percent of the four dozen cars expected for the feature will be visiting Lebanon Valley just for the Mr. Dirt tour.
 
That makes sense, given the high purse. Commander said Mr. Dirt tour stops regularly pay significantly less to the winner -- including last week's feature in Weedsport, N.Y., ($10,000 to Decker) and the July 30 race at Albany-Saratoga Speedway ($10,000 to Danny Johnson).
 
The Upstate GM Dealers and Hoosier Tire are the principal sponsors for Thursday night's race, which promises some interesting twists for track regulars.
 
"Kenny Tremont, the winning-est driver at Lebanon Valley, will have a brand new engine to go with his brand new car," Commander said. "Andy Bachetti, who won Saturday night after a horrible start to the year, has got a new engine for Thursday night. Brett Hearn will be bringing out his tour car, and he's got a rebuilt engine in that.
 
"There will be a lot of new engines."
 
Commander said Lebanon Valley is enjoying a successful season despite some struggles with the weather and an economy that cuts into how much its patrons can afford to spend at the track.
 
"The weather has been funny," he said. "When the weather is good, everything has been good. But we had one race where 10 miles south of us all the way to Long Island it was pouring, and when you look out your window and see that ... 
 
"We've had some beautiful days, but we had a lot of clouds and rains at the beginning of the season."
 
Lebanon Valley opens in early April and runs every Saturday night through early September with a few special events like Thursday's feature thrown in.
 
"It's usually one or two thousand more then a regular night," Commander said of the Mr. Dirt events. "It's a larger crowd.
 
The gate opens at 5 p.m. on Thursday, and the warm-ups on the half-mile dirt oval get under way at 6 with a 7 p.m. green flag. General admission is $20 for adults, $7 for children 11 and under, and reserved seating is available in advance by calling 518-794-9965.

Tags: automobiles,   lebanon valley ,   racing,   

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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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