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More than 130 emergency responders and guests attended the annual award banquet in Pittsfield on Friday night.

County EMS Workers Recognized At Awards Dinner

By Patrick RonaniBerkshires Staff
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Ann Marie Larson, left, and Warren Larson, right, were very grateful for the actions taken by Deputy Sheriff Lucas Alibozek, center.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Television and film portray "super heroes" as people who possess uncanny abilities when responding to a crisis.

In real life, the superheroes aren't wearing masks or capes. On Friday night, however, they were adorned in suits, ties and dresses for the 20th Emergency Medical Services Corp. of Berkshire County Dinner and Awards Recognition. The banquet, which was held at the Elks Lodge, welcomed representatives from every EMS agency in the county.

"Everybody deserves credit for what they do because it's a job where you don't get a lot of thanks on the street," EMSCO President Brian K. Andrews, who is also president of CountyAmbulance in Pittsfield, said. "This our way of trying to recognize our team, and it kicks off EMS Week."

EMS Week, which is nationally recognized, starts Sunday and runs through May 22. EMSCO continued its "kick-off" festivities Saturday with its first EMS Expo at the Berkshire Mall.

Thirty-seven awards were presented Friday night in two categories: Save Awards for 2009 and six Western Massachusetts EMS Recognition Awards. The county logged 17 saves in 2009, including when EMS personnel played a role in bringing a patient back to life. Dr. Ronald Hayden, director of Berkshire Medical Center's emergency department, said under specific parameters — taking into account the population served and emergency-call volume — the county's life-saving statistics are "tops in the state" and they are "getting a lot of recognition at the state and national levels."

The recognition awards, which were presented by Shawn Godfrey, operations manager at Village Ambulance in Williamstown, were divided into six categories, including two new awards added this year. The winners were: Lester Trufant (Educator of Excellence); Kevin Hamel, EMT-paramedic at North Adams Ambulance (Advanced Life Support Provider of the Year); Gerald Cahalan, Dalton firefighter/EMT (Firefighter of the Year); Craig DeSantis, Lee Police Department (Law Enforcement Officer of the Year); and Susan Chipman, County Ambulance (EMS Communication Specialist of the Year). Village Ambulance took home the EMS Agency of the Year award.


Kevin Hamel
Hamel, who turns 70 on Tuesday, began his EMT career in 1977 and has worked for several ambulance services in the county. He has also served on the National Ski Patrol at Brodie Mountain and Jiminy Peak for the last 40 years. He has received save awards at past banquets, but this was his first regional honor.

  "I've attended just about every one of [the award dinners] they've had, and every year it gets a lot better," said Hamel, who was one of more than 130 people who attended the event. Hamel was profiled by iBerkshires three years ago.

DeSantis, the law enforcement award recipient, was involved in one of the more dramatic rescues from last year. On March 10, 2009, he was working a traffic detail in Lee when a helicopter crashed into a hillside. DeSantis rushed to the scene and discovered three people inside the wreckage — one of whom, the line mechanic, was unconscious. With fuel pouring our of the aircraft and the engine still running, DeSantis pulled the mechanic out of the helicopter while the other two were able to exit on their own.

All three are alive today.

"If you see something tragic, you respond," DeSantis said. "That's the job."

When asked about his efforts, DeSantis deflected credit to the other providers for their quick response times.

"It was a team effort. It wasn't anything I did as an individual," he said. "I had brother officers who responded from multiple police agencies, the fire department, the ambulance, the EMS. ... That's the kind of community that we live in."

On Sept. 12, 2009, Lanesborough native Ann Marie Larson was working out at Retro Fitness in Pittsfield, just three days before her 72nd birthday.  Deputy Sheriff Lucas Alibozek was running on a treadmill near her. That was unusual; Alibozek said he never goes to the gym on Saturdays unless he misses a workout during the week.

Because Alibozek missed a day, Larson is still alive.

"I heard a noise behind me, and I looked back to see Mrs. Larson on the ground [after she had gone into cardiac arrest]," Alibozek said. "I cleared a path around her and asked some bystanders to help get her on her back so I could check her vitals. She was unresponsive, and that's when I started CPR."  

Alibozek said, when looking back, the experience is "kind of a blur," but because of his efforts, which included calling for an automated external defibrillator and requesting that a bystander call 911, Larson was able to turn 72 and celebrate the holidays with her family.

Larson, who was accompanied by her husband, Warren, met Alibozek (while conscious) for the first time Friday night. She was thankful, to say the least:

"I'm happy to be here, happy to be alive."
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Adams Man Convicted in Murder of Stephanie Olivieri

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams man was found guilty in the 2019 murder of 32-year-old Stephanie Olivieri, a Pittsfield native and mother of two.
 
A jury found Tyler Sumner, 30, guilty on Friday of murder in the first degree and possession of ammunition without a Firearm Identification Card.
 
The trial was held in Berkshire Superior Court. Judge Francis Flannery will schedule sentencing.
 
"Today justice was served in the tragic death of an innocent bystander, Stephanie Olivieri; however, this guilty verdict will do nothing to bring her back," said Berkshire District Attorney Timothy Shugrue. "Tyler Sumner murdered Ms. Olivieri while she sat in a car filled with gifts and decorations for her child's birthday. She was preparing to celebrate a wonderful event when her life was ruthlessly cut short."
 
Olivieri, who had been living in Yonkers, N.Y., was found sitting in her running car on Columbus Avenue when police responded to reports of masked men near South John Street and heard gunshots on the way.
 
The officers found Olivieri gasping for breath and blood running down the right side of her head. She was treated by emergency medical services and then transported to Berkshire Medical Center, where she was later pronounced dead. The Chief Medical Examiner found the cause of her death to be a homicide caused by wounds sustained from a bullet to her head.
 
Multiple individuals testified that they believed Sumner was targeting an individual living in the area of the shooting and that Olivieri was not the intended target.
 
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