Connecticut
Connecticut agrees to $3.75 million settlement for homicide of man in New Haven prison
Courtesy of Colleen Lord
Connecticut lawmakers agreed to pay a $3.75 million settlement to the estate of Carl “Robby” Talbot, a West Haven man whose death within New Haven’s Correctional Center on March 21, 2019, was ruled a homicide by the state’s Deputy Chief Medical Examiner.
The tentative agreement was made during a Judiciary Committee hearing last month.
“I didn’t have the opportunity to talk. But I brought a picture of my son, so that people could just see [it] and humanize him,” Colleen Lord, Robby Talbot’s mother, told the News.
The case’s original complaint was filed by Lord and Robert Francis Talbot Jr. — Talbot’s parents and the co-administrators of his estate — on Feb. 28, 2022. It alleges that Talbot, who was both physically and mentally ill, was subjected to “excessive,” “unreasonable” and “significant force,” and denied “necessary, appropriate and required medical care” by correctional officers, leading to his death.
The complaint also alleges that internal reports detailing the circumstances that led to Talbot’s death were falsified. Documents submitted in 2019 affirmed that legally-mandated routine checks of an inmate under restraint took place for Talbot. Yet, an initial internal investigation executed by the Department of Corrections in February 2021 discovered that these checklists were forged after the fact.
According to Commissioner of Corrections Angel Quiros, the individuals involved in the fabrication are still unknown.
“You have my full commitment for my remaining term as Commissioner that I [will] try to do everything possible to ensure this does not happen again,” Quiros said during the hearing. A new internal investigation will be launched into the falsification of the reports this year.
“The details in the Lord v. Padro case are deeply disturbing,” wrote Sen. John Kissel, who was present at the Judiciary Committee hearing, in a press release. “A man lost his life while in state custody, and to this day, there are still unanswered questions about what happened, why it happened and how we can be certain that it will not happen again.”
Talbot died 36 hours after his return to prison
Robby Talbot had been remanded to New Haven’s Correctional Center the evening of March 19, 2019 for a parole violation. The morning of his death, he was being temporarily housed in the prison’s medical center, allegedly awaiting an assessment by a physician for mental health and detoxification concerns.
Talbot, who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder as an adolescent, struggled with substance abuse issues and schizoaffective symptoms caused by his condition. He also suffered from obstructive sleep apnea and asthma, and consequently relied upon inhalers, Ventolin and a BiPAP, or CPAP, machine to aid with his breathing difficulties.
According to Lord and Talbot Jr.’s complaint, Talbot had also been prescribed methadone to treat his addiction issues. However, this medication was allegedly not provided to Talbot at the center.
“He did not get any treatment. He did not get his methadone, he did not get any of his psychiatric medication,” said Lord. “They did not give him his BiPAP machine, and they put him in a solitary cell. One of the guards saw that he needed to be seen by a psychiatric doctor because he was going into withdrawal, which triggered his mania and [started a] psychotic break.”
Around 6:30 a.m., Talbot began to experience a severe mental health episode. Officers entered Talbot’s unit to intervene and remove him to shower, a directive with which Talbot complied.
But when he refused to exit the shower, Lieutenant Carlos Padro doused Talbot twice with pepper spray and kicked him. By 7:23 a.m., footage of the incident showed Talbot had been pepper-sprayed two more times and restrained by a “pig pile” — when multiple correctional officers place their full or partial body weight on an inmate to install their “in-cell restraints.”
By 8:45 a.m., the new sergeant on duty noticed Talbot was quiet and still in his cell. A Code White was activated and resuscitation efforts undertaken. Talbot was transported to Yale New Haven Hospital, where he was pronounced dead by 9:40 a.m., approximately 36 hours after he had returned to the New Haven Correctional Center.
Ending the “culture of violence”
Barbara Fair, who heads the New Haven criminal justice organization Stop Solitary CT, first met Lord in 2019 after organizing a vigil in Talbot’s memory outside of the New Haven Correctional Center. Since then, Lord has participated in rallies, press conferences and other prison reform advocacy events organized by Stop Solitary.
Lord has specifically striven to reverse the stigma regarding mental illness, and to provide crisis intervention training to correctional officers. The recent settlement stipulates that Lord provide a video and deliver in-person training that incorporates the footage of Talbot’s death, to showcase the tangible human cost of excessive force.
“I want to remind officers that they have a duty to intervene, and they need to maintain their humanity in their jobs,” Lord said. “I can’t imagine the kind of pressure they [have to go through], but that’s where the training comes in, so they can recognize people going through mental health issues, like my son.”
Fair pointed to the emotional toll the lengthy legal process took on Lord. She also voiced frustration that Padro was the only correctional officer prosecuted for his involvement in Talbot’s death, despite other officers not intervening when Padro kicked and pepper-sprayed him.
“What kind of a message does that send to people that are incarcerated?” Fair said. “And also for the correctional officers — [they] think that they can continue this culture of violence against incarcerated people and not have to suffer consequences.”
Fair compared Talbot’s case to the 2018 death of J’Allen Jones, who was incarcerated at Garner Correctional Institution. After Jones refused to comply with a strip search, multiple correctional officers pepper-sprayed him in the face, punched him and forced onto a bed over a nearly half-hour period. The correctional officers and a nearby nurse did not administer CPR or call 9-1-1 for seven minutes after Jones fell unconscious.
Shortly after Jones’ death, his family filed a lawsuit against correctional officers and a nurse who were in Jones’ vicinity when he became unresponsive. The lawsuit — which has faced delays over the past six-and-a-half years, including recent legal battles over whether the video of Jones’s death can be released to the public — is scheduled to go to trial on May 6.
Jones’ death preceded Talbot’s by a year, and both men’s deaths were filmed, Fair noted. She compared the two legal battles, emphasizing that Talbot and Lord are white while Jones and his family are Black.
“I feel people can hear the tears of a white woman. They don’t hear those tears when a Black woman cries,” Fair said. “It was an uphill battle for [Lord] to get any kind of justice, and it just makes me concerned about, will J’Allen’s mom get any justice in the end?”
Talbot leaves a legacy
Lord hopes to use the settlement sum to establish a family foundation, which would distribute local and national grants related to mental health treatment.
For Lord, a key concern is Connecticut’s dearth of mental health beds and treatment avenues. She contends that Talbot, who allegedly visited emergency rooms seeking support thirty-nine times and was refused admission and treatment, is indicative of this endemic issue.
“Robby never hurt anybody in his life. [And] he fell through everything. He fell through all the safety nets,” Lord said. “He started to self-medicate because he would tell me it made him feel normal. It was very dangerous and I didn’t approve of it, but I always took care of him.”
She hopes for several of these mental health treatment grants to go to New Haven.
“Robby loved New Haven. He couldn’t really work — he was on psychiatric disability — but he would sometimes sell flowers on the street,” Lord said. “He would cut roses until late at night before Valentine’s Day.”
The Judiciary Committee met on Valentine’s Day nearly six years after his death.
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Connecticut
Remaining GOP candidates for Connecticut governor vie for Erin Stewart supporters
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) — With Republican Erin Stewart suspending her campaign for Connecticut governor on the eve of the party convention, state Sen. Ryan Fazio is now the favorite to win the Republican endorsement.
Up until Thursday morning, Fazio was locked in a head-to-head match-up with Stewart, who had long been considered the favorite to win the Republican endorsement at Saturday’s convention.
With Stewart’s exit, the 36-year-old now stands as one of two remaining Republican candidates. Stewart has thrown her support behind Fazio, perhaps best known for his crusades against Connecticut’s high energy costs, a move that could help consolidate support among party delegates.
Fazio first spoke with News 8’s Chief Political Correspondent Mike Cerulli on Thursday.
“Listen, I expect to fight on this campaign all the way through,” Fazio said. “I don’t expect anything; I’m entitled to nothing. I need to earn everything as a candidate, and our campaign has that exact attitude. So, we’re gonna work extraordinarily hard every single day to win the support, to earn the support of every single Republican delegate, every single Republican primary voter, and every single voter irrespective of their background or their party affiliation in November. This is too important not to.”
The other remaining Republican candidate is 77-year-old Betsy McCaughey, the cable TV host and former New York lieutenant governor. Can she secure 15% of the delegates this Saturday and automatically trigger a primary?
“I’ve been calling Erin Stewart’s delegates all day, and in fact, I want to call Erin Stewart, expressing my concern and saying I wish her and her family well,” McCaughey told News 8’s Chief Political Anchor Dennis House. “This is a difficult time. And then I’ve called many of Erin Stewart’s delegates, and I’m sure I’ll reach all of them and meet with them tomorrow. And I’m asking, please join me in launching the Connecticut comeback.”
Stay with News 8 on air and online all day Saturday as we bring the vote count and let you know if we are heading for a primary showdown in August.
The Collapse of a Campaign
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Connecticut
BUILDing Connecticut’s Capital City: Unique UConn Course Celebrates Five Years of Partnership, Collaboration, and Hartford Stories – UConn Today
On a Wednesday afternoon in late April – tucked inside a quiet brick building in Hartford’s Frog Hollow neighborhood, just a few blocks from the shining gold dome of Connecticut’s State Capitol building – a celebration took place.
On the third floor of The Lyceum – an historic site that at different times in its past housed a box manufacturing company, a punk rock dance club, and a roller-skating business – there were balloons, and there was music. Drinks and hors d’oeuvres. Smiles and handshakes and hugs passed around.
But the celebration wasn’t really about those things.
The celebration was about Hartford, and about a unique partnership with UConn that has been working for five years to uplift, support, and promote all that Hartford has to offer through creators with a new perspective on the capital city: UConn students.
Since 2021, the three-credit course BUILD Hartford, offered by the Connecticut Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, or CCEI, has engaged cohorts of both undergraduate and graduate students working on a real-world opportunity to hone their business storytelling skills by partnering with Hartford’s business, civic, culinary and hospitality, and entrepreneurial ecosystems.
In the last five years, about 100 UConn students have collaborated with more than 30 diverse businesses and entities in Hartford on innovative and creative social and multimedia projects aimed at supporting and promoting development in the city.
“BUILD Hartford is a hands-on UConn course that turns digital storytelling into real support for Hartford’s businesses,” says Rory McGloin, CCEI’s associate director of entrepreneurial communication and research and the course’s instructor. “Students produce videos, social campaigns, and strategic content while working side-by-side with restaurants, shops, and entertainment venues right here in the downtown area.”
Fresh Perspectives
Just below the surface, there’s more to Hartford than its moniker – the Insurance Capital of the World – would suggest.
The city’s metro region is home to six major industries, and the city itself is home to more than 122,000 people – and its population is growing, increasing more than 2% since the 2020 U.S. Census.
Beyond the Hartford metro’s powerhouse industries, like the insurance, aerospace, and health sectors, is a thriving business climate bolstered by a diverse and educated workforce, an innate appreciation for arts and culture, and an ecosystem of innovation and support for start-up and second-stage companies.
But without storytelling, says McGloin, how will people know about it?
“It’s pretty simple – you’ve got to tell a story,” he says. “Because you can read all the advertisements and billboards all over the state. But if you have a good friend and they told you that they got a good cup of coffee across the street, you can get a great slice of pizza down the road, there’s a cool new retail shop on Pratt Street, then you go check it out.”
And that’s where UConn’s student come in, offering fresh perspectives from both traditional and nontraditional students, all with their own diverse backgrounds and life experiences, some from Connecticut – but many not.
Participating students range from fine arts and digital media majors, to communication and business students, to MBA and MFA candidates, but they all work toward the goal of gaining valuable life and career skills and building their own portfolios while contributing research, branding, storytelling, and exposure for Hartford businesses and civic organizations.
“And that’s what this course is about. We set a mission, we talk about our tactics, we learn what a story is, and then the students are in charge of figuring out how to get the job done,” McGloin says. “And they show up, and they present, and they reap the benefits, along with the community and business partners we get a chance to work with.”
A Little Bit of Everything
Karlas Felix ’26 MA didn’t grow up in Connecticut, and she didn’t know a lot about Hartford before coming to the state for college, first her undergraduate studies at Wesleyan and now UConn, where she’s a first-year communication master’s student.
But what drew the New York native to BUILD Hartford was the opportunity it offered to learn while stepping outside of a classroom setting.
“When I heard about the course, I thought it was the perfect opportunity for me to explore making digital content, and to learn about companies, but also to learn what I like to do and develop my voice in the workplace,” she says. “Because I want to make the most of my degree. Not just get in classes, but also get experiences.”
This year, she was part of a BUILD team partnered with Real Art Ways, a multidisciplinary nonprofit arts organization in Hartford that supports contemporary artists, and she got to collaborate not only with her fellow students but also with the marketing professionals within the organization.
“We came up with a storyboard,” Felix says. “We came up with a noun – the noun was art. We wanted to talk about art in Hartford, and we developed a story around how we could do that. How can we show that?”
They built their story through on-site interviews at Real Art Ways, and created a composed six-minute final video that brings the audience inside where art lives – here, in Hartford.
Felix has signed on to take the BUILD course again next year, and she says she’s taking the course multiple times because even though she’s based in Storrs, it’s worth the trip to Hartford to take part in a real-world experience that “gets you out of your seat.”
“Do you want a course that’s hands-on, or do you want to sit in a lecture?” she asks. “Do you want something that you can actually use and apply? Do you want to learn more about yourself, and even develop the language for networking? If you want an opportunity to get real experience, this is where to get it – this is where you’re supposed to be. You get a little bit of everything.”
Start Yesterday
In its first five years, BUILD Hartford was supported by Shari Cantor ’81 (BUS) and Michael Cantor ’80 (ENG) ’83 JD, but the program has since expanded to also include a BUILD Hartford Fellowship, supported by the state of Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development’s Office of Statewide Marketing and Tourism.
The fellowship offers an immersive experience where undergraduate and graduate UConn students can engage directly with Hartford’s hospitality, entertainment, and food service sectors.

Abigail Robinson ’25 (CLAS/SFA) ’26 MA participated in the BUILD program before becoming a BUILD Fellow this past academic year. The communication master’s student, a New Hampshire native who majored in digital media and design as well as communication as an undergraduate, says that she was a passionate storyteller even as a child.
“In high school, I did my senior project on telling stories through photography,” Robinson says. “I was focused on telling emotion through portraiture. So, I knew when I was coming to school, applying to schools, I really wanted to be somewhere that would support me in my storytelling journey.”
One of two fellows, Robinson says her role was to essentially become an influencer on behalf of Hartford, starting with the Hartford Taste festival last June.
“It was a huge event, very hot summer day, and I really just got thrown into it,” she says. “I had to learn how to do one-on-one interviews with people, which I had maybe a little bit of experience with, but when you’re at such a big event, you really have to just start going up and being like, ‘Hi, I’m Abbie, can I have an interview?’”
She used that experience to help her jump head-first into projects involving Hartford’s historic Butler-McCook House; collaborations with Hartford Athletic and the local coffee shop, Story and Soil; and a Hartford for the Holidays campaign, launched in coordination with the Hartford Chamber of Commerce.
“Every single connection I have made has been extremely meaningful and impacted me in so many ways,” Robinson says.
But the value of BUILD isn’t only limited to what the students get out of it – the partners benefit as well, according to Ben Dubow, the executive director of Forge City Works.
One of the first local partners to agree to work with BUILD students, Forge City Works is a nonprofit organization that operates The Lyceum as well as several other social enterprises in Frog Hollow, including The Grocery on Broad Street and the Fire by Forge restaurant.
“We said ‘yes,’ because entrepreneurs often say ‘yes,’ and you led with ‘free,’” says Dubow. “But the value we got, the questions that you asked, caused us to think differently about our own businesses.
“In the real world, unlike most of the fictional world, great storytelling isn’t about creating or making up stories. It’s about finding them, and making them come alive. And these folks helped us tell our story.”
In addition to recruiting students for its next cohort, BUILD Hartford is currently searching for additional supporters and partners to be part of the ongoing collaborations between its students and the city – collaborations that current partners ringingly endorsed during the celebration at The Lyceum.
“Start tomorrow,” says Rashad Hyacenth, executive vice president of business development for Hartford Athletic, “because these students are the future, and we have some of the brightest students in the country in this program, right here. Simple as that.”
“Start tomorrow,” agrees Jennifer Accuosti, senior marketing manager for the MetroHartford Alliance. “Send that email. It’s been wonderful, and we’ll work with [BUILD Hartford] again in a heartbeat, whether that’s under the chamber, under the MetroHartford Alliance, under any of our initiatives, to tell Hartford’s story.”
“Start yesterday,” says Rachel Lenda, the state of Connecticut’s director of tourism. “We’ve invested a lot into this program on purpose, with intention. We believe in the product. We’ve seen it. And I have felt it here from these incredible young professionals who are going to be working for you in this room.
“And you’re going to be so excited to have them on your team when they do.”
All digital storytelling projects produced by BUILD Hartford students are available to view on YouTube, courtesy of the Connecticut Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
For more information about BUILD Hartford and the entrepreneurial and business accelerator opportunities available through CCEI, visit ccei.uconn.edu.
Connecticut
Canadian aerospace company Bombardier launching new ‘fast track’ training program in Connecticut
WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. (WTNH) — Bombardier, a Canadian company, is launching a new “fast track” training program in Connecticut.
The new program will expand Connecticut’s aerospace industry by creating an accelerated pathway for experienced aircraft maintenance technicians to receive new certifications and enter high-demand careers quickly.
“We know the demand for aviation technicians far exceeds the number of students we can currently prepare throughout our traditional programing alone,” Dr. Alice Pritchard, executive director of Connecticut technical education and career system, said. “Our goal is to create a sustainable workforce solution that can continue producing skilled aviation technicians for years to come.”
The program is set to start soon at the company’s service center at Bradley International Airport.
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