Two Mental Health Professionals Join BMC Psychiatry Medical Staff

Print Story | Email Story
Rocco Iannucci, MD and Sharon Mozian, MD
Berkshire Health Systems announces the appointment of two new mental health physicians to the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences medical staff at Berkshire Medical Center. Rocco Iannucci, MD and Sharon Mozian, MD join a highly skilled team of psychiatry professionals providing mental health services throughout the Berkshires as part of a collaboration between BMC’s Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the Brien Center for Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. Dr. Iannucci serves as the Medical Director of the McGee Recovery Center at Berkshire Medical Center and as a staff psychiatrist at the Brien Center. Board certified in Psychiatry, he completed a fellowship in Alcohol and Drug Abuse treatment at Massachusetts General and McLean Hospitals. He received his Medical Degree from Yale University School of Medicine and completed residency training at Harvard Medical School through the Adult Psychiatry training program at Massachusetts General and McLean. He served as Chief Resident in the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment program at McLean and later as the Assistant Residency Training Director. Dr. Iannucci received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University, graduating magna cum laude. Dr. Mozian is serving as the Medical Director of the Urgent Care and Crisis Services Division at the Brien Center. She is Board Certified in Psychiatry and completed two fellowships – one in consultation-liaison psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine, and the second in psychiatric education. For her second fellowship she received the Junior Faculty Development Award, an honor given to a junior faculty member by the Association of Academic Psychiatry for outstanding promise as a psychiatric educator. Dr. Mozian received her Medical Degree from the University of Colorado School of Medicine and completed her residency training at Columbia University Medical School’s psychiatry residency program at New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City. She received her undergraduate degree from Duke University, graduating summa cum laude. For more information on Dr. Iannucci, Dr. Mozian or the services provided by the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, call Berkshire Medical Center at 413-447-2000.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Adams Couple Sentenced to Staggered Prison Terms in Death of Foster Infant

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams couple will serve staggered three-to-five year prison sentences for the 2020 death of their foster infant. 
 
Matthew Tucker and Cassandra Barlow-Tucker on March 16 were found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and reckless child endangerment in the death of Kristoff Zenopolous on Feb. 18, 2020.  
 
Their sentencing was delayed by Judge Tracy Duncan until Thursday to determine how their four children, two of whom have high needs, would be cared for. 
 
Kristoff was just 10 months old when he died from complications with respiratory illness, strep throat, and pneumonia. A Superior Court jury determined that his death was a result of neglect. The commonwealth requested five years in prison and three years of probation for both defendants.
 
On Thursday, the rescheduled hearing for sentence imposition was held, and Tucker and Barlow-Tucker were sentenced to state prison for manslaughter involving neglect of legal duty, and three years of probation for reckless child endangerment. 
 
Court documents state that Barlow-Tucker was committed to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Framingham. She will serve three to five years there first; her husband, will serve his sentence once hers is completed but will be on probation.
 
"The sentences imposed will be a state prison sentence of not less than 3 years and not more than 5 years to MCI as to each Defendant as to count #1. The sentences will be staggered. Ms. Barlow-Tucker will serve her incarceration sentence first," court dockets read.  
 
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories