Troopers: Shotgun-wielding man charged with misdemeanors

WESTERLO — After being told to leave a gathering at a Westerlo home on Saturday, Thomas F. Conover, 35, returned with a shotgun, which he aimed at the large group, including several children under the age of 15, according to New York State Police.

Conover fled the scene before police arrived; they found him at his Westerlo home where he barricaded himself and refused to leave.

He “refused all law enforcement orders to exit the home leading to the establishment of a safety perimeter and the involvement of a crisis negotiator,” Trooper Stepahnie O’Neil told The Enterprise this week. 

O’Neil said the gathering was of family and friends, and that it is unclear if Conover was related to any of them. She also said it’s not known whether drugs or alcohol were a factor. 

According to a press release, Conover ultimately volunteered himself to officers, who recovered the shotgun used in the incident along with other illegally possessed firearms. 

Conover was charged with second-degree menacing, second-degree reckless endangerment, fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon, and nine counts of endangering the welfare of a child — all misdemeanors.

 Conover was processed in New Scotland and arraigned at Westerlo Town Court before being released on his own recognizance. 

More Hilltowns News

  • The Rensselaerville Water and Sewer Advisory Committee is holding a community meeting on Thursday, May 15, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Hilltown Commons Guggenheim Theater to get input on preferred well sites for a new public water system. 

  • Although an old agreement is still in place and would remain so indefinitely, the town of Berne is considering signing a new contract with the cable company, Spectrum, that would keep the franchise fee the town receives from the company the same but would remove an obligation for Spectrum to build new infrastructure in areas that meet a household-density threshold. 

  • The Berne-Knox-Westerlo Board of Education unanimously adopted Superintendent Bonnie Kane’s $24.7 million budget for the 2025-26 school year, which will go to a public vote on May 20. 

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