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  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    3:59pm, EDT

    Cops: Man searched for hooker with kid in tow

    By NBCConnecticut.com

    Police arrested 25 people in a prostitution sweep in New Britain Thursday, including a man who brought his child along during his alleged search for a prostitute.

    Gonzalo Paredes, 32, of New Britian was charged with patronizing a prostitute and risk of injury to or impairing the morals of children. He was picked up while trying to solicit a prostitute Wednesday evening, police said.  Paredes' child was in the car when he was arrested.  Police did not release the child's age.

    Read the original story on NBCConnecticut.com

    An undercover female officer posed as a prostitute during the sweep, police said. In all, 23 people were charged with patronizing a prostitute and two were charged with prostitution.

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    16 comments

    In other news, 25 consenting adults were placed in cages for participating in an exchange of cash for services rendered. Any victims of this heinous crime are encouraged to come forward, for appropriate persecution.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: arrest, crime, prostitute, hooker, conn
  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    6:51pm, EST

    Cops: 4-year-old brings nine bags of pot to school

    By msnbc.com staff

    A 4-year-old boy brought nine bags of pot to his elementary school and pulled them out during snack time, police said.

    A teacher at Hanover Elementary School in Meriden, Conn., alerted officials to the drug early Tuesday afternoon, according to a report in the Record-Journal.  Detective Lt. Mark Walerysiak, a police spokesman, told the newspaper that the child turned over the bags to his teacher.


    Walerysiak could not be reached for comment by msnbc.com on Friday.

    "The case remains under investigation," Walerysiak told the Record-Journal. The Department of Children and Families "was called in to also conduct an investigation."

    School Superintendent Mark D. Benigni called the event “isolated incident,” the newspaper said.

    “Our concern is for the 4-year-old student who had no knowledge of what he was bringing to school," Benigni said. "The student is safe and we will continue to ensure a safe learning environment to all of our students."

    He said the teacher was close to the child when he pulled the bags out of his coat pocket. No other student was involved, the Record-Journal reported.

    Benigni told the newspaper that the child was not at fault. "This is clearly an adult issue," he said.

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    259 comments

    Well, not the most tasty thing he could have had for lunch, but I'm sure he could have found someone in the school to trade him an apple for a small bag of what he was carring. No big deal really.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: student, marijuana, crime, elementary, conn, meriden
  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    12:27pm, EST

    Second Conn. home invasion killer is sentenced to death

    By NBC News and news services

    AP file

    Joshua Komisarjevsky,

    NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- A Connecticut man was sentenced Friday to die for killing a woman and her two daughters during a night of terror in their suburban home, a gruesome crime that unsettled the suburbs and halted momentum to abolish the death penalty in the state.

    Joshua Komisarjevsky will be joining Steven Hayes on death row for killing Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. He is scheduled to be executed in July.

    The girls were tied to their beds and doused in gasoline before the house was set ablaze; they died of smoke inhalation. Komisarjevsky was convicted of the killings and of sexually assaulting Michaela.

    The only survivor, Dr. William Petit, was beaten with a baseball bat and tied up but escaped.

    "I will never find peace within. My life will be a continuation of the hurt I caused," Komisarjevsky said in court. "The clock is now ticking and I owe a debt I cannot repay."

    Komisarjevsky said he walked out of court condemned to die by 12 members of the community. 

    "It's a surreal experience, being condemned to die," Komisarjevsky said.


    Forgiveness is not his to have, he said, and he needs to forgive his worst enemy -- himself.

    Read story at NBCConnecticut.com

    Before the sentencing, Judge Jon Blue said sentencing another human being to death is the most somber task a judge can have.

    The court then heard some emotional victim impact statements from the Hawke and Petit families.

    Petit read his statement as a slide show of his family played on the screen.

    Petit called the crime a "personal holocaust" as he testified during the sentencing hearing. He said his wife was his friend and confidante, and a wonderful mother. He also noted that Hayley would have been in medical school by now and that Michaela loved to cook and sing.

    "I lost my family and my home," he said. "They were three special people. Your children are your jewels."

    Michaela came into the world smiling, Petit said. He recently received a card from one of Michaela's friends. It said it was sad to know that she wouldn't be in 10th grade this year.

    "I miss her running to the door and yelling 'Dada's home,'” Petit said.

    'Was it worth the price?'
    The Rev. Richard Hawke spoke directly to the convicted killer and said he’s presided over many funerals, but never dreamed he would bury his daughter and grandchildren. It was the worst thing he’s had to go through.  

    "Was it worth the price?" he asked at one point.

    If Jennifer, Hayley and Michaela could endure the pain that Komisarjevsky put them through, their families can endure the pain of the trials, Hawke said.

    “You have not only destroyed your family, you have destroyed your own and destroyed a noble family name,” Hawke told the man who killed his family members.

    The statement from Jennifer’s mother, Marybelle Hawke, was also played in court and she said the love of family will carry them through.

    The Petit and Hawke families left court before the sentence was handed down.

    Lawyers fought for jurors to hear videotaped testimony from Komisarjevsky’s 9-year-old daughter, but the defendant made a plea against it. 

    Last month, a jury delivered the death verdict for Komisarjevsky after finding him guilty of the crimes. On Friday, the judge handed down that sentence.

    The Associated Press and NBCConnecticut.com contributed to this report.

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    458 comments

    Justice is served.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: home, killing, invasion, hayes, petit, conn, komisarjevsky
  • 25
    Jan
    2012
    3:29pm, EST

    Cops: Man hacked victim with ax, ate brain

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    A Florida man has been arrested on charges that he hacked to death a Connecticut man and ate the victim's eye and part of his brain.

    Police in Lynn Haven, Fla., said Wednesday that 35-year-old Tyree Lincoln Smith was arrested Tuesday night on a Connecticut warrant for murder.

    According to police in Bridgeport, Conn., Smith was covered in blood when he told a relative on Dec. 16 that he had killed a man with a hatchet and eaten pieces of his brain and his eye.

    The relative contacted authorities after the body of Angel "Tun Tun" Gonzalez, 43, was discovered Jan. 20 at his Bridgeport, Conn., apartment. Police say Smith left Connecticut that day on a Florida-bound bus.

    Lynn Haven police say federal, state and local law enforcement officers took Smith into custody at a residence without incident.

    According to ctpost.com, an affidavit in the case says Gonzales had seen Smith sleeping outside on a porch and invited him to come in from the cold and share the apartment he was living in.

    Once in the apartment, the affidavit states, Smith began beating Gonzalez about the head and face with the ax, ctpost.com reported.

    He later told his relative the blows to Gonzalez's head were so severe he was able to remove an eye from the victim's head along with a piece of the victim's brain, which he then carried in a plastic bag to a nearby cemetery where he ate the parts at his brother's grave site, ctpost.com reported..

    Odalys Vaszuez told ctpost.com that she wants justice for her stepfather's slaying.

    "Here it is that my dad was trying to help this guy, telling him to come inside from the cold," she told the website. "If my father was helping him stay warm, what kind of person is it who does this, who repays him by swinging an axe at him and hitting him so hard it blows his brains out?"

    Police said the woman Smith was staying with in Florida was unaware of the allegations and is cooperating with investigators, according to NBCConnecticut.com.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    364 comments

    Obviously, this guy needs to be executed today. We do not need to pay for his meals, shelter and healthcare.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, cannibalism, featured, conn
  • 5
    Jan
    2012
    1:27pm, EST

    Hundreds gather for funeral for 3 girls killed in fire

    Getty Images

    Matthew and Madonna Badger embrace as the casket of one of their three daughters arrives for funeral services on Thursday in New York City.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    The mother of three young daughters who perished in a devastating Christmas morning blaze urged hundreds of mourners Thursday to commit "pure acts of kindness" in tribute to her children.

    "I want to remember my girls out loud," Madonna Badger said, adding that the way to keep their memory alive was through love.

    "My girls are in my heart," Madonna Badger told more than 500 mourners at St. Thomas Church in Manhattan. "They're right here. And that's where they live now."

    Badger broke down several times as she described each girl in turn — Lily, 9, and 7-year-old twins Sarah and Grace — then wailed as she followed their coffins out of the cavernous Gothic church. She was accompanied by her estranged husband, Matthew Badger, and a friend, Michael Borcina.

    Borcina was with Madonna Badger and her family when the lethal fire tore through her Connecticut home. He walked behind the grieving parents as the coffins were brought out of the church.

    Badger's parents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson, also died in the fire.

    More than 800 people crowded inside St. Thomas Episcopal Church for the service "in thanksgiving for the lives." Among those at the service were fashion designers Calvin Klein and Vera Wang, rocker Lou Reed, and actor Philip Seymour Hoffman. Madonna Badger is a fashion advertising executive who worked on Calvin Klein campaigns.

    Authorities shut down three lanes of Fifth Avenue on the church's block in honor of the girls.

    Badger said that she always used to wonder what a parent would do if her children died first. She said she couldn't imagine going on to live. "But here I am," she told the crowd.

    She also said that her daughter Lily wondered how she would die, and that she'd told her daughter she didn't know because, "life is a mystery." And she said daughter Grace worried "a thousand times" that she would die before her mom.

    Her mother reassured her that would never happen.

    Singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright performed a haunting a cappella version of "Over the Rainbow" during the service, which also featured hymns sung by St. Thomas' all-male choir.

    Read complete coverage at NBCConnecticut.com

    Santa Claus
    St. Thomas Episcopal Church was less than a five-minute walk from the department store Saks Fifth Avenue, where the children's grandfather, Lomer Johnson, played Santa Claus in the days before the fire.

    A private service was held later at Woodlawn Cemetery for the girls and their grandparents.

    Badger and Borcina were the only survivors of the fire, which was attributed to a bag of smoldering ash and embers left in a first-floor mudroom.

    Borcina is believed to have moved the ashes out of the fireplace because the girls wanted to make sure that Santa Claus could come through the chimney. 

    All died of smoke inhalation. Lomer Johnson also suffered blunt head and neck trauma, which resulted from a fall or being hit by an object.      

    One of the girls, found dead just inside a window, had been placed on a pile of books, apparently so Johnson could reach in and grab her after he jumped out. Instead, authorities say, he fell through the roof.      

    Stamford police were helping fire officials investigate the blaze. Police said Monday officials want to know if there were smoke alarms, the status of renovation work in the house and whether the contractor had permits.      

    The issue of permits could figure in the investigation because the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection has said that neither Borcina nor his company, Tiberias Construction Inc., was registered to perform home improvement work in Connecticut.

    A foundation has been developed in the girls' honor, called The Other 364 Foundation, "whose mission is to champion compassion every day of the year," according to a statement on badgerandwinters.com.

    Checks may be made out to:

    The Other 364 Foundation
    c/o Badger & Winters Group
    135 Fifth Avenue 3rd Floor
    New York, NY 10010

    Notes may be sent to love@badgerfamilysupport.com.

    WNBC's Andrew Siff, NBCConnecticut.com and msnbc.com's Sevil Omer contributed to this report, as did The Associated Press.

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    85 comments

    This story doesn't add up....Boyfriend and Badger escapes....everyone else perishes...mmmmm. How can a contractor not know to deposit ashes in a metal can?! This is basic. The whole thing is a real tragedy. I find the whole funeral thing odd also after going through a major tragedy myself.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fire, funeral, girls, badger, stamford, conn, fatal-fire
  • 4
    Dec
    2011
    12:55pm, EST

    Storms spark debate over Conn. trees

    By The Associated Press

     HARTFORD, Conn. -- Once again, Connecticut's trees are at the center of a storm.

    Countless trees and limbs were brought down by the remnants of Hurricane Irene in late August. Two months later, trees with their leaves still fully on branches were overwhelmed by a rare October snowstorm and were felled by heavy snow.

    Both times, overhead electric lines were tangled in downed branches, which blocked roads and slowed repair trucks.

    Politicians, utilities and tree-lovers are now battling over the future of trees in one of the most heavily forested states.

    Investigations are focusing on how to avoid future widespread outages such as those that affected more than 800,000 utility customers for a week or longer in October and early November. One solution that's emerging is to trim or remove trees to provide greater clearance for overhead wires.

    Opponents of broader tree clearance have skewed priorities, said state Sen. Steve Cassano, D-Manchester.

    "Those same people were not pleased to not have power for eight days or 10, let alone two blackouts in six, eight weeks," he said.

    The cause of the outages was obvious, Cassano said.

    "The reason the power was down was because of trees," he said. "We have been complaining about being over-treed, and a lot of people would probably disagree."

    The Greenwich Tree Conservancy would disagree. It's urging state officials to require Connecticut Light & Power to bury power lines to avoid tree removal.

    "The cutting down of hundreds of thousands of trees is not going to solve the problem," said Peter Malkin, president of the group. "It would be an environmental disaster."

    He said trimming also is unacceptable because it "takes the heart out of the trees and they die."

    But United Illuminating, which serves 325,000 customers, says burying power lines is prohibitively expensive.

    "It isn't prudent and customers don't appear to be in the mood to pay those costs," said spokesman Michael West.

    In addition, trimming alone does not solve the problem, he said. United Illuminating trimmed trees in its easements and outages still occurred, he said.

    Malkin said not burying power lines leads to costly cleanup and restoration operations after destructive storms. Connecticut Light & Power and its parent company, Northeast Utilities, have said it expects the tab to be $200 million or more for cleanup and restoration related to the two storms.

    Utilities are required to provide uninterrupted service, but fail to do so when the weather turns nasty, Malkin said.

    "The system we have in Connecticut is 19th-century. It must be updated," Malkin said.

    Mitch Gross, a spokesman for Connecticut Light & Power, said the utility has 17,000 miles of electric lines and interest by towns in burying lines evaporates when CL&P officials mention the cost. In addition, lines belonging to cable and telephone companies also would have to be buried in construction projects that are extremely disruptive, Gross said.

    In the conflict between aesthetics and trimming or removing trees to ensure reliable electricity, the balance has shifted to cutting trees because of the outages, said Dave Goodson, manager of vegetation management at CL&P.

    The state's largest utility is asking Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and legislators to change state law that limits tree cutting and trimming, he said. For example, making it easier to cut trees on private property and streamlining an array of state laws and local ordinances governing tree maintenance in scores of towns are among changes that are needed, Goodson said.

    "There is no short-term fix here," he said.

    The battle over trees covers a lot of ground. As much as 58 percent of Connecticut is forested, making it 12th among the states in forest cover, said Jeffrey Ward, chief scientist at the Department of Forestry and Horticulture at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station.

    "That's one of our connections to nature," he said. "When you think of New England, you think of stone walls and trees."

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    101 comments

    Burying the lines is the least expensive in the long term, for multiple reasons. People used to care more about generations to come; now they just seem to care about their own generation. It's sad.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: power, storms, tree, conn

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