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Police had little information other than a dark car had hit a pedestrian on Feb. 10. They were given access to business and residential security cameras to track its movements and identify a suspect.

Pittsfield Police Used Surveillance Footage to Trace Path of Fatal Hit & Run

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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William Gross, charged in the hit-and-run, was identified by chasing down leads on his car. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Police used a combination of on-scene investigation and community surveillance footage to find a suspect in the hit-and-run that killed 69-year-old William Colbert last week. 

William Gross, 65, was arraigned in Central Berkshire District Court on Wednesday for negligent motor vehicle homicide and leaving the scene on Feb. 10. He was arrested Monday after police investigators narrowed down the type of car seen on video at the accident scene. 

District Attorney Timothy Shugrue said it was "pretty incredible" that the case was solved in less than a week. Residents and businesses provided surveillance footage along the nearly four-mile stretch between where Colbert was struck and where his body was found, including McDonald's, Crawford's Service, J Smegal, and Thing or Two Variety.

"They wanted to solve this. It was personal to everybody, and so they put their time and energy and effort into it, and I'm so proud that they did it," Shugrue said after Gross's arraignment on Wednesday. 

"Because we always get worried. We're so close to New York. What if he got over that border? What if he lived in New York? But we were looking for vehicles in New York as well." 

Police say Colbert had fallen in the road at the Francis Avenue and Linden Street intersection on Feb. 10 before he was struck and dragged nearly four miles. His body was found on West Housatonic Street.
 
Gross is being held on $250,000 cash bail in the Berkshire County House of Corrections. Shugrue said the case will go to a grand jury and foresees additional charges being placed. 

The DA reported that he used to play high school football with Colbert's brother, and that his office has been in "constant" communication with the family. 

"They're devastated," he said. "It's their brother. It's their older brother, and he's deceased, and in such an awful way." 

Officer Anthony Dayton provided a six-page report of the tragic incident. He and six other officers' narratives are included in court documents; Officer Mason Papirio was the first on the scene around 11:55 p.m. 

According to police reports: 

The investigation began by tracing evidence of the hit-and-run from 1350 West Housatonic St., where a Berkshire Medical Center employee discovered Colbert's body in the road, to the intersection of Betnr Industrial Drive.



Police then drove the most likely path to the intersection of Francis Avenue and Linden Street, where Colbert was struck, following South Merriam and Merriam Street to West Street, to Onota Street, and down Linden Street. 

The next day, on Feb. 11, police spent hours going to residences and businesses in the car's suspected route to search for evidence. Members of the Traffic Unit, the Detective Bureau, Crime Scene Services Unit, and patrol officers reviewed and collected video footage over the following days. 

While Dayton was reviewing a video from the Linden Street Laundromat, he saw a blue coupe that resembled a Honda Civic. It was entering the Linden Street and Francis Avenue intersection around 11:36 p.m. 

The good Samaritan's 911 call for Colbert's assistance after he had fallen in the road, before he was hit, came in at 11:33 p.m. 

Footage from St. Mark's Church on West Street shows the car taking a right turn from Onota Street onto West Street and taking a left onto Merriam Street at 11:37, pushing a "human-sized object" at the base of its front bumper. Dayton observed that the passenger side taillight was dimmer than the driver's side taillight. 

Surveillance footage showed the vehicle in the same conditions then traveling down South Merriam Street, and around 11:40 p.m., the front of the vehicle was clear in footage from McDonald's on West Housatonic Street. Police say it was likely that the victim was underneath the vehicle at that point. 

Around 11:43 p.m., footage from a West Housatonic Street residence showed the same coupe traveling westbound, slowing down and stopping in front of the Best Western, reversing with the front driver's corner lifting in the air, and driving around what was later identified as Colbert's body. 

Police searched through registered Honda Civics in Pittsfield, Hancock, and Richmond, and on Monday, Feb. 16, located a car matching that description with Massachusetts plates on Lebanon Mountain Road in Hancock. It was parked and unoccupied in the driveway of a home, which police approached around 2 p.m. 

Minor damage was observed on the vehicle's front bumper. A search warrant was granted on that day, and the next morning, the car was in the Police Department garage, where investigators found traces of blood on the vehicle.

In the police interview room, Gross informed officers that he had taken 20 milligrams of prescribed Xanax, and he was transported to Berkshire Medical Center. His arraignment, scheduled for Tuesday, was pushed to Wednesday. 

According to the police report, Gross told police he didn't know what was in front of his car, and that he stopped and backed up just before the Best Western. He said he did not see Colbert in the road and "was freaking out at the time" and "didn't know what to do," and drove home. 

"This is very, very difficult work, and these people, men and women, put their lives online and put their lives on hold and worked 24/7 to resolve this," the DA said on Wednesday. 


Tags: fatal,   police investigation,   

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BRPC Exec Search Panel Picks Brennan

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Executive Director Search Committee voted Wednesday to move both finalists to the full Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, with a recommendation that Laura Brennan was the preferred candidate. 

Brennan, BRPC's assistant director, and Jason Zogg were interviewed by the committee on Saturday.

Brennan is also the economic development program manager for the BRPC. She has been in the role since July 2023 but has been with BRPC since 2017, first serving as the senior planner of economic development. 

She earned her bachelor's degree from Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania and earned a graduate-level certificate in local government leadership and management from Suffolk University.

Zogg is vice president of place and transportation for Tysons Community Alliance, a nonprofit that is committed to transforming Tysons, Va., into a more attractive urban center. 

He previously was the director of planning, design, and construction at Georgetown Heritage in Virginia, where he directed the reimagining of Georgetown's C&O Canal National Historic Park.

They each had 45 minutes to answer a series of questions on Saturday, and the search committee said they were both great candidates. Meeting virtually on Wednesday, the members discussed which they preferred.

"In my own personal opinion, I think both candidates could do the job and actually had different skills. But I do favor Laura, because she can hit the ground running and with the time we have now, I think she is very familiar with the organization and its strengths and weaknesses and where we go from here," said Malcolm Fick.

"I would concur with Malcolm, especially because she was the only candidate who could speak directly to what's currently going on in the Berkshires, and really had a handle on every aspect of what BRPC does, could use examples, and showed that she actually understood the demographic information when that information was clearly available on the BRPC website, and through other means, and she was the only candidate who was able to integrate our regional data, our regional demographics, into her answers, and so I find her more highly qualified," said Marybeth Mitts.

Brennan was able to discus the comprehensive regional strategy the BRPC has worked on for Berkshire County and said she made sure they included voices from all over the region instead of what she referred to as the "usual suspects."

"That was an enormous priority of ours to make sure that the outreach that we did and the input that we gathered was not from only the usual suspects, but community groups that were emerging in a lot of different corners of the region and with a lot of different missions of their own, and try to encompass and embrace as many voices as we could in that," Brennan said in her interview.

Member Sheila Irvin said she liked Brennan’s knowledge of Berkshires Tomorrow Inc.

"I think that her knowledge of the BTI, for example, was important, because that's going to play a role in the questioning that we did on funding. And she had some interesting insights, I think on how to use that," said Irvin. "And in addition, I just thought her style was important. 

"She didn't need to rush into an answer. She was willing to take a minute to think about how she wanted to move on and she did."

In her interview, Brennan was asked her plans to help expand funding opportunities since the financial structure is mainly grants and the government has recently been withdrawing some interest.

"With Berkshires Tomorrow already established, I would like to see us take a closer look at that and find ways to refine its statement of purpose, to develop a mission statement, to look at ways that that mechanism can help to diversify revenue," she said. "I think, that we have over the last several years, particularly with pandemic response efforts, had our movement to the potential of Berkshire's Tomorrow as a tool that we should be using more, and so I would like to see that be a big part of how we handle the volatility of government funding."

Member John Duval said she has excelled in her role over the years.

"Laura just rose above every other candidate through her preliminary interview and her final interview, she's been the assistant executive director for maybe a couple of years and definitely had that experience, and also being part of this BRPC, over several years, have seen what she's capable of doing, what she's accomplished, and embedded in meetings and settings where I've seen how she's responded to questions, presented information, and also had to deal with some tough customers sometimes when she came up to Adams," said Duval.

"She's done an excellent job, and then in the interviews she's just calm and thought through her answers and just rose above everyone else."

Buck Donovan said he respected all those who applied and said Zogg is a strong candidate.

"I think both and all candidates were very strong, two we ended up were extremely strong," he said.  "Jason, I liked his charisma and his way. I really could tell that there was some goals and targets and that's kind of my life."

The full commission will meet on Thursday, March 19, to vote on the replacement of retiring Executive Director Thomas Matuszko.

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