
Man gets stuck in chimney while trying to get his dog out of a locked building
Firefighters had to rescue a man who got stuck in the chimney of a Connecticut parks building while trying to retrieve his dog from a bathroom when the doors automatically locked for the night.
Police were called Sunday morning to Rockwell Park in Bristol for a burglary complaint and were told by parks employees that someone was in the chimney. Firefighters responded to the scene and got the man out after having to remove parts of the chimney and building, causing $5,000 to $10,000 worth of damage, police said.
The Bristol man, who was not injured, was arrested and charged with burglary, trespassing and criminal mischief. He was released on bond and ordered to appear in court on July 7.
A message seeking comment was sent to an email address listed in public records for the man. Phone numbers listed for him were not in service. Online court records did not list a lawyer for him.
The man got stuck near the flue of the chimney of Mrs. Rockwell's Pavilion, a building named after a beneficiary of the park. Locks on the doors to the bathrooms are on new timers and automatically lock at 10 p.m. every night, said Erica Benoit, community engagement coordinator for Bristol Parks, Recreation, Youth and Community Services.
It's not clear how the dog got stuck in the bathroom or how long the man was in the chimney. The doors can be opened from the inside after they are locked for the night. The dog was unharmed, police said.
'It is a bit of a crazy scenario,' Benoit said. 'Our parks staff is working with the police department and the fire department to make sure that doesn't happen again. If he had just contacted police in the first place, we might have been able to avoid the situation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
14 minutes ago
- BBC News
Hartcliffe: Bridge Learning Campus pupil brings knife to school
A school has contacted police over allegations that a primary school pupil threatened other children with a is claimed the Year Six pupil at Bridge Learning Campus in Hartcliffe, Bristol, confronted other children after lessons on one was injured in the incident, with a spokesperson for the school telling the BBC "immediate action" was taken "in line with our established safeguarding procedures". They added that cases like this were "incredibly rare" and would be treated with the "utmost seriousness", with parents encouraged to contact the school directly with any concerns.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Woman, 35, missing for a year mysteriously reappears at gas station - and she's arrested just minutes later
A woman who had been missing more than a year resurfaced at a gas station, only to be arrested minutes later due to an outstanding warrant. Tori Milsak, 35, vanished from Hot Springs, Arkansas on June 6, 2024, sparking a frantic search from her family. Police reports at the time indicated she may have been struggling with 'mental health concerns.' Milsak walked into a gas station in Little Rock, about 55 miles away from where she disappeared, on Thursday - just over a year after she was last seen. She told one of the gas station attendants that she was a missing person, and the employee called police, according to a police report seen by Newsweek. When police arrived, they spoke with Milsak and confirmed her identity. She said she had run away from her home a year ago, but saw herself on the news when she was reported missing. Milsak was then taken into custody in relation to an outstanding warrant. Her family are overjoyed that she is safe but are still trying to piece together where she was and how she vanished. Speaking to WBRC News, her brother Jason Hamel said he was initially 'shocked' when he learned she had been found. 'I'd been told that she might have been murdered multiple times,' he said. 'Hope was lost. I mean, like everybody said, you hold onto that 1 percent that she'd be found alive, and she's that 1 percent.' Hamel had previously revealed his sister was dealing with post traumatic stress disorder at the time she vanished following a traumatic incident in the year prior. He said she'd mostly stopped communicating with loved ones in 2023 as she battled her mental health. 'Makes me very angry, not at Tori, but at some people. Now, it's time to try to start the healing process and rebuild Tori's life,' he said. He has yet to speak with her while she remains in custody. 'I'm nervous, and I want to find out what happened. Was she held against her will? It's been a year. I want to see her, make sure she's OK,' Hamel said. Their last conversation came during a family crisis, in which Hamel and his father were weighing whether to take another sibling off live support following a tragic motorcycle accident. Milsak had called and sounded distressed about something on the phone, but Hamel dismissed her. She vowed to call in a week and hung up, only to fall off the radar entirely and lose contact. 'That's haunted me for the last year, thinking that maybe if I took an extra five minutes, things could have been different,' he said. Milsak will apear in Garland County court in July on charges linked to her outstanding warrant.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Padres' Fernando Tatis Jr. sues to void future earnings deal
June 24 - San Diego Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. filed a lawsuit on Monday against Big League Advance (BLA), attempting to void a contract he signed as a teenage minor-leaguer that states he owes the company a share of his future earnings. According to the suit, filed in San Diego County Superior Court, the 26-year-old Tatis signed a deal with BLA in 2017 as a 17-year-old player that paid him $2 million in exchange for 10 percent of his future earnings. Per the contract with BLA, Tatis would owe the company $34 million after signing a 14-year, $340 million deal in February 2021. Per a press release from Tatis' legal team, the two-time All-Star is looking to hold BLA accountable for "exploitative, predatory business practices, which shamelessly push illegal loans on young, vulnerable athletes -- most from economically disadvantaged Latin American countries." The year after he signed the deal with BLA, Tatis was a top 10 prospect in baseball and debuted with San Diego in 2019. In a 2018 interview with The Athletic, Tatis said, "I'm not afraid. I'm not going to spend that money stupidly. You've got to be smart with your decisions, with what you're going to do." Now Tatis is aiming to protect younger players from "predatory lenders." "I'm fighting this battle not just for myself but for everyone still chasing their dream and hoping to provide a better life for their family," Tatis said in a press release. "I want to help protect those young players who don't yet know how to protect themselves from these predatory lenders and illegal financial schemes -- kids' focus should be on their passion for baseball, not dodging shady business deals." Tatis entered Monday's game against the visiting Washington Nationals hitting .268 with 14 home runs and 34 RBIs in 75 games. In six seasons with the Padres spanning 591 games, Tatis is a .278 hitter with 141 home runs and 365 RBIs, along with 107 stolen bases. --Field Level Media