Thursday, October 21, 2010

Southeast NY limo Serevice 845-279-2500

SHERMAN — Rumor has it that in 1802, the same year the town was incorporated, an 18-year-old built a colonial house in the middle of town.

Doctors successfully removed a benign tumor from Mayor Mark Boughton’s brain during a complex procedure Tuesday at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Mayor Mark Boughton delivers remarks from the City of Danbury during Immaculate High Schools Graduation Excercises at Western Connecticut State Universities O'Neill Center on Wednesday May, 31, 2017.

For more than three decades, Lt. Albert Mion has driven to work at the Danbury Fire Department, aware that he could be tasked with saving someone’s life.

Danbury native Oscar Bordoy scored a win in his second career boxing match, defeating Felip Nazario at Uptown Live in Charlotte, North Carolina on Saturday. Bordoy is now 2-0 as a lightweight fighter.

July 19 is National Hot Dog Day! If you're in the mood for a good dog tonight, seems you should head to Fairfield. Three of the top 10 most Yelp-reviewed hot dog spots in southwestern Connecticut are found in Fairfield.

The spirit of “buy local” is as strong as ever. It’s the practice that often falls short.

DANBURY — Hidden gems produced by local companies and grown on local farms lurk 
among the shelves of even the largest supermarkets in the area.

Millennials aren’t the only ones who want to live in downtowns, where restaurants, shops and other amenities are only a walking distance away. So do Baby Boomers.

New Milford football played its spring game, the Green and White game, Thursday, June 15, 2017. 

Site names Newtown's Ferris Acres the best ice cream in Connecticut


DANBURY - The $50 million expansion of the state’s largest high school is in high gear, with only 70 more days of summer for workers to complete key upgrades before classes resume in September.

Homelessness in Danbury has dropped 12 percent since 2016

Kyle Lyra receives his diploma during Danbury High Schools Commencement Exercises that were held on Tuesday June 20, 2017.

DANBURY — Andrea Gartner has a lot of passions, and many of them are embodied in her new restaurant, Pour Me Coffee and Wine Café, which opened this month at 274 Main St.

Bob's Stores is closing at 114 Federal Rd. in Danbury, Conn., one of three locations in southwestern Connecticut getting the ax by bankrupt parent company Eastern Outfitters of Meriden.






"Batman" TV star Adam West had
died



Four Seasons Limousine serving the Southeast, Brewster area since 1989 with freindly and reliable service  845-279-2500

New Customers receive $20 off on round trip to any airport


                                               

Southeast NY Limousine Service

Four Seasons Limousine Can provide professional, friendly and reliable limousine service whenever you need it 845-279-2500


At our worst we are still the best
This blog is about the town Of Southeast and it's people. It is sponsored by the folks at Four Seasons Limousine

 Brewster Man Causes Fatal Crash in Danbury  An elderly Bethel woman was killed after a head-on crash on Shelter Rock Road Thursday afternoon, according to Danbury Police. Hannelore Hillebrand, 85, died from her injuries at Danbury Hospital after she was struck by another driver who crossed over the center line.

Police say that according to their preliminary investigation, Frankie Macnear, 44, of Brewster, NY, was traveling at "a high rate of speed" when he crossed the center line and crashed into Hillebrand's 2016 Subaru Impreza.
Both were transported to Danbury Hospital for injuries. Police are asking anyone who witnessed the crash to contact Sgt. Rory DeRocco or Officer Keith Leggiadro at (203)797-2157.


Colin with Four Seasons Limousine in Brewster NY


Man Drowning In Southeast Pond Rescued After Contractor Flags Down Police

New York State Police saved a man from a pond near the intersection of Route 22 and Doansburg Road in Southeast.

Members of the New York State Police came to the rescue of a citizen in need on Wednesday, saving a 40-year-old mentally handicapped man from drowning in Putnam County.
At approximately 11:21 a.m. on Wednesday, troopers were flagged down by a contractor working in the area who reported to police that there was a man swimming in a pond at the intersection of Route 22 and Doansburg Road in Southeast.
Police said that as they approached the pond, they saw a ripple across the top of the water, prompting the troopers to leap into action. Police Sgt. John Hennigan, a 23-year-veteran of the state police, and trooper Jason Kim, who has been on the force for two years, immediately entered the “frigid” water and saw a man, submerged in the water, face down.
According to police, Hennigan and Kim entered several feet of water and brought the 40-year-old man to the shoreline. First aid was administered to the victim, who was reportedly conscious and semi-alert. Paramedics then transported him to Danbury Hospital for further medical evaluation and treatment.
The man, who was a consumer from the Hudson Valley Cerebral Palsy Association had been reported missing moments before he was located and saved, police said, praising the contractor who flagged the troopers.
“Thanks to the alertness of the area surveyor, the disabled man was saved," state police said.

Former Putnam Man Accused in New Fairfield Suspicious Death

Former Putnam Man Accused in New Fairfield Suspicious Death

Connecticut state police detectives arrested a "person of interest" on a larceny charge in connection with an investigation into a suspicious death of a woman on Candlewood Lake Road in New Fairfield. Steven Flood, 32, (no address known) was arrested while camping in the woods in Union, CT, at noon Thursday by a patrol trooper and his K9 partner, police said.
Flood is a former Carmel resident, a veterinarian's assistant and security guard who worked in Putnam and Connecticut, according to the Putnam County Courier.
Police said Flood was developed as a person of interest after they processed the scene at 26 Candlewood Road, where the unidentified woman was found dead, and once her death was ruled suspicious. Police later secured a warrant for Flood, and checked several addresses looking for him before he was found.

Flood was held on a court set bond of $100,000. Police said the investigation remains active, and neither the woman's identity nor the cause of her death has been released.

Selling a Gun for Gas Money

A woman's trip from Texas to Maine is interrupted by an arrest.

 A woman who told police she was on a trip from Texas to Maine and wanted to sell one of the unregistered guns she was carrying to get money for gas will have to come back to New York sometime in the future for a court date.
Putnam County Sheriff Donald B. Smith reports that on Feb. 16 the Sheriff’s Office received a call from the Precision Armory gun store at 423 Route 52. The caller said a woman was there offering to sell a handgun but lacked the required documentation to legally possess it.
Sergeant William Quick responded to the call and located the woman as she was leaving the gun store in her vehicle.
Police said the woman, identified as Theresa A. Sager, 50, of Alfred, Maine, was found in possession of two unregistered handguns—a .32 caliber revolver and a .380 caliber semiautomatic pistol—for which she did not have the required licenses.
Police said Sager told them she had acquired the firearms in Texas while living there and was moving back to Maine. She said she was trying to sell a firearm to the gun store for gas money to continue her trip.
Quick arrested Seger and charged her with two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Fourth Degree, a class A misdemeanor. She was processed at the Sheriff’s Office and arraigned before Town of Southeast Justice Gregory Folchetti, sitting on behalf of the Town of Kent Justice Court, and was released on her own recognizance pending a future appearance in the Kent Court.
If found guilty, she could face up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $1,000 on each count.
Police did not say if she told them how many guns she had started the trip with.












Cops: Wilton Man Ate Joint After Traffic Stop in Brewster



Cops: Wilton Man Ate Joint After Traffic Stop in Brewster
New York State Police alleged the CT resident was trying to hide the marijuana from them and hit him with a felony evidence-tampering charge
A Connecticut man who New York State Police said ate a joint to hide it from them now faces a felony charge of evidence tampering. He is also charged with operating a motor vehicle while impaired by drugs, a misdemeanor, and unlawful possession of marijuana, a violation.
On April 10, 2017, in Brewster, state police said they stopped a car driven by 25-year-old Alexander E. Orsher, of Wilton.
Troopers allege that while interviewing the driver they smelled a strong odor of marijuana emanating from the vehicle, and saw marijuana on his shirt and stuck in his teeth. When they asked Orsher about their observations, he said he had eaten the marijuana cigarette to conceal it from law enforcement.
    

Putnam Sheriff Encourages Institute Support

The Sheriff's Institute was established to advance criminal justice education, prevent juvenile delinquency, and support victims of crime.

Putnam Sheriff Encourages Institute Support

 Putnam County Sheriff Donald B. Smith is encouraging community residents to support the New York State Sheriffs’ Institute, which began its annual Honorary Membership drive in Putnam County this week.
The Sheriffs’ Institute was established in 1979 to advance criminal justice education, prevent juvenile delinquency, and support victims of crime and their families. Institute programs include the following:
Sheriffs’ Summer Camp: Almost 900 children from across New York State attend the sheriffs’ camp for economically challenged children, which is located on Keuka Lake. The Sheriffs’ Institute pays all costs for the campers, including transportation, a week of camp, meals, and traditional camp activities like sailing, archery and crafts. The camp is in its 41st year of operation.
Criminal Justice Scholarship Program: The scholarship program provides one scholarship to the Criminal Justice Program at each of New York State’s Community Colleges. This program aims at attracting the best and the brightest students to a criminal justice vocation.
      Victim Notification Programs: The Sheriffs’ Victim Hotline provides automated notification to registered victims when an inmate is released. The Sheriffs’ Order of Protection Notification Program allows individuals who have been granted Family Court orders of protection to receive alerts when those orders are served.
“The Sheriff’s Institute is our partner in providing programs that help the people in our communities,” Sheriff Smith said. “But we really rely on the support of our Honorary Members for the Sheriffs’ Summer Camp. Their support allows us to send economically disadvantaged children to camp. These kids wouldn’t have a chance to go away to camp otherwise,” he said.
Persons interested in learning more about the Sheriffs’ Summer Camp and other Sheriffs’ Institute Programs may visit www.sheriffsinstitute.org or they may call Ms. Pat Hughes at (518) 434-9091 or email her at phughes@nysheriffs.org. The Sheriffs’ Institute is a not-for-profit, tax-exempt organization.
Photo courtesy of Putnam County Sheriff's Department (The Sheriffs’ Summer Camp gives boys and girls from economically challenged circumstances an opportunity to experience all the traditional activities of summer camp while interacting with deputies from around New York State. Here a deputy conducts a character education workshop with a group of truly happy campers.)

    

        



Four Seasons Limousine in southeast NY


The Brewster Fire Department battled a fire at a farmhouse on West Wind Lane early Tuesday. Officials are investigating the blaze as suspicious.


An early morning fire in an unoccupied West Wind Lane home is being investigated as possible arson, according to lohud.com.
Seventy-five firefighters from the Brewster Fire Department were joined by firefighters from eight other departments to battle the 2 a.m. blaze at the Pleasant View Farms house this past week, according to lohud.com, which reported that it took about one hour for officials to get control of the flames.
The first firefighters to arrive found the home engulfed in flames, according to lohud.com, which reported that a lack of a water supply also hindered the response, leading to a partial collapse of the building.
Officials said the house was unoccupied when the fire broke out, but they could not yet provide a specific cause, according to lohud.com, which reported that the blaze was the third on the property since 2015.

Danbury man charged with drug trafficking





WHY GO TO THE BIG GUYS WHEN WE HAVE BETTER PRICES.

5 comments:

  1. Limo Services in Toronto is here to make it all very simple, exclusively for the residents of Toronto

    ReplyDelete
  2. The homes that is available for sale in Harrison NY :-
    The indications white plains homes for sale amount of items close the traineeships has been yonkers homes for sale a well-thought-of unplanned in the Mahopac real estate. The sitting room has number moment of truth the achievement as well as unfortunate the exertion broken down the customs that are subsequent in period. By the side of this period is the residence you can narrate the places that are in Hudson harbor.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow, absolutely fantastic blog. I am very glad to have such useful information. Thanks. For more information visit extreme incense

    ReplyDelete
  4. Really very interesting information and introduction about limo Service.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Enjoyed reading the article above, really explains everything in detail, the article is very interesting and effective.Thank you!! Cheap transportation in Ottawa Ontario Airport shuttle van Ottawa Ontario

    ReplyDelete