Mantello Found Guilty in Prisoner Assault

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A former North Adams police officer has been sentenced to six months behind bars after being found guilty in Berkshire Superior Court on Monday afternoon of several charges relating to the assault of a prisoner.

Joshua N. Mantello, 30, was ordered to serve six months of a two-year sentence at the Berkshire County House of Correction by Judge John A. Agostini for misleading a police officer in the assault of Matthew D. Trombley last year.

He also was found guilty of two counts of assault and battery and one count of filing a false report. However, the judge found him not guilty of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (stun gun).

Trombley, then 28, was reportedly intoxicated and combative on Nov. 28, 2008, when North Adams police officers picked him up at a North Church Street apartment house, where he had been banging on doors. Mantello was accused of using excessive force at the police lockup in trying to control Trombley, including choking and Tasering him, and filing a false report to cover it up.

Mantello was fired in March and charges filed against Trombley were dropped.

He waived his right to a jury trial, instead leaving it to Agostini to determine his fate. The trial began Nov. 18; those testifying included Police Director Michael Cozzaglio, Trombley and Mantello.

Agostini also sentenced him to two years' probation on the assault and battery charge and a year's suspended jail sentence for filing a false report.

Mantello was ordered begin his jail sentence on Friday, Dec. 4.
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Greylock School Project Garnering Interest From Bidders

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A recent walkthrough of the Greylock School site turned out more interest than expected, which school officials and project managers hope will translate into multiple bids. 
 
The project includes the demolition of the 60-year-old elementary school and the construction of a new two-story school directly to its north. 
 
"We don't always expect a lot of them to show when a building is going to be demolished. There's not a lot for them to see," said Tim Alix of Collier's International, the owner's project manager, told the School Building Committee on Tuesday. "But just putting eyes on the site, seeing where the utilities are coming in so they can they've seen them all that information on the documents, but to see it in 3-D and they can start making their plans.
 
"We're hopeful that that means that we are going to be receiving a number of bids in each category. So that's encouraging."
 
The subcontracting bids are due Tuesday and the general contractors' on Jan. 14. Alix said there will be plenty of time to review the subcontractor documents before releasing that information so the general contractors can compile their bids. All bidders went through a prequalification process this past fall to be accepted by the Massachusetts School Building Authority, which is covering more than two-thirds of the cost of the project.
 
Jesse Saylor of TSKP Studio, the school's designer, said there have also been a lot of questions from potential bidders. 
 
"We have received a number of bidders' questions, which are called bid RFIs, and that's normal," he said. "I think it shows participation, you know, bidders who are working on the job, are looking at the documents, and they're finding things that they want to make sure they understand."
 
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