Firefighter resigns after pot stash is found in home
By Kathy McCabe, Globe Staff
A Boston firefighter resigned today, one day after federal drug agents seized 131 marijuana plants from his Maine home, officials said.
Sean Berte, an eight-year veteran of the department, turned in his badge, gear, and identification card today. "He turned in his things and he was gone," Steve MacDonald, the fire department spokesman, said this afternoon.
MacDonald would not comment further on Berte's resignation. "It's a law enforcement issue now," MacDonald said. "He doesn't work for us anymore."
Berte joined the department in August 2001. He was assigned to Tower Ladder 17 in Park Square, MacDonald said.
Agents from the US Drug Enforcement Administration on Friday seized $700,000 worth of marijuana and cultivating equipment from Berte's home in Bridgton. Berte, 31, was called a "person of interest" by police.
Berte's father-in-law, Michael Domenici, 60, of Rehoboth, Mass. was at the home at 2 p.m. Friday, when Bridgton Police and DEA officials arrived with a seaach warrant, according to Bridgton police.
"He was a little shocked that we were there," Officer Donald McCormack said Saturday afternoon.
Domenici was charged with cultivation of marijuana, a felony, and was held overnight at the Cumberland County jail. He posted $2,540 bail Saturday afternoon and was released, a jail spokesman said.
Neither Berte nor Domenici immediately returned calls seeking comment.
On The Beat

Columnist
Yvonne Abraham profiles Bobcat Smith, who gives back to the community by delivering meals to poor, gravely ill people. Read more
|
|

Recent stories from the MetroDesk


Features

Editor's Choice

On this rock, a myth was built

From trash to treasure
- Northeastern scraps its football team
- Data on assaults in prisons fuel debate
- In crisis, state senator soldiers on
- With Baker's choice, a nod to moderate GOP wing

From Today's Globe
- Patrick appointee takes opposing stance on Cape Wind project
- Ruling puts gun verdicts at risk
- At 83, still on a mission to help poor Haitian town
- In Brockton, they’re hoping for a miracle on Main Street
- Vitale loses bid to bar use of e-mail

MORE BLOGS

LOCAL BLOGS
Universal Hub
The Chinatown Blog
CommonWealth Magazine
Red Mass Group
Blue Mass Group
Boston 1775
The Berkeley Beacon
The Daily Collegian
The Daily Free Press
The Harvard Crimson
The Heights
The Huntington News
The Suffolk Voice
The Tech
The Tufts Daily






