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Officers peruse the ground at the intersection of Main and Marshal looking for evidence of a reported shooting.
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Firefighters responded to a fire at 149 Pleasant St. on Friday afternoon.

North Adams Police Chase Shooting Incident; Firefighters Tackle Blaze

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
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Police Chief Mark Bailey, left, confers with detectives investigating a reported drive-by shooting near City Hall on Friday. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — As firefighters brought a structure fire on Pleasant Street under control, police were trying to pin down reports of a drive-by shooting near City Hall. 
 
Police are looking for a tan or gold sedan which had reportedly been at the intersection of State Street and Main when the passenger or driver fired out the window at another vehicle. 
 
The intersection was shut down for a short period while officers and detectives looked for evidence. 
 
One witness reported seeing a Black man with dreadlocks brandish a firearm out the window and there were reports of witnesses hearing something. 
 
Interim Police Chief Mark Bailey said he could not confirm whether there had been a shooting because police were sifting through a lot of information, some of which had come in during the fire.
 
Police had stopped a couple vehicles and had responded to a report of an individual who matched the witness's description but did not find anyone. Bailey said early in the investigation they had not found a vehicle that showed evidence of a shooting but it was later reported by The Berkshire Eagle that a car was found with damage and a pellet gun was seized. The Eagle reported that another incident occurred earlier in the day in Dalton possibly involving a pellet gun. iBerkshires had contacted Dalton Police but were told no shooting had occurred there. 
 
The fire at 149 Pleasant St. was reported at about 1 p.m. and C Company was called in to cover the station. One person who had been in the house was reportedly being treated for smoke inhalation. 
 
The blaze was very smoky and firefighters made their way into the first floor of the single-family home and then checked the second to clear it. The Fire Department began clearing the scene at about 2:30 p.m.
 
Fire Chief Brent Lefebvre said the fire is still under investigation but appeared to have started in the living room. 
 
"It's a room and content fire, and nothing got into the structure," he said. "It was a really good stop by the guys."
 
The one person home at the time was asleep when the fire started but was able to exit the building, the chief said. "We have a fire watch there for the next probably at this point, 3 1/2 hours just to make sure."
 
The resident was injured and taken to North Adams Regional, as was a firefighter who cut his hand. 
 
Berkshire Gas and National Grid responded to cut off power and gas and Lefebvre said the building is condemned at this point. 

 


Tags: shooting,   structure fire,   

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Memorial Day a Time for 'Acknowledging Cost of Peace'

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Abby Beer, Ciera Crockwell and Dakota Hurlbut read The Gettysburg Address. See more photos here. 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — As the county remembers its fallen over the past 250 years, Kurtis Durocher reminded the gathering at Town Hall that Memorial Day isn't about glorifying war. 
 
"It is about acknowledging the cost of peace," said town's veterans agent. "The sacrifice of life for liberty is profound, and it depends or it demands more from us than parades or ceremonies. It asks for our vigilance in protecting the freedoms they died for. It asks us to care for their fellow veterans, to support their families and to build a country worthy of their sacrifice."
 
Durocher is a retired, decorated Army master sergeant with multiple deployments including Iraq and Afghanistan. He was named as the regional veterans service officer earlier this year in North Adams and serves nearly a dozen North County towns. 
 
He said the stories of those who were lost "are etched into the very soil of our community here in Northern Berkshire ... They are not statistics. They are our family."
 
"Let us also remember the Gold Star families, those who bear the weight of personal loss every single day we see you, we honor you, and we thank you for the unimaginable price your loved ones paid," Durocher continued. "So let us lower our heads, not in despair, but in gratitude. Let us speak their names, tell their stories and preserve their memory, because a hero remembered never truly dies."
 
The ceremony at Clarksburg included selections from the Drury High School band, an honor guard made up of the Clarksburg Volunteer Fire Departments and remarks from master of ceremonies Joseph Bushika of Peter A. Cook Post 9144 Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Town Administrator Ronald Boucher. Laurie Boudreau sang "God Bless America" and "American the Beautiful."
 
Boucher called for veterans in the crowd to raise the hands and thanked them for their service. 
 
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