Connecticut
Kevin Rennie: When CT’s state government is riven by fear of retribution and vengeance
“I’m right here to lastly give voice to what’s happening and I’m not afraid of retribution,” vowed public defender Corrie Mainville. She saved her phrase, making a riveting second hardly ever seen in Connecticut public boards: braveness at an unknown value.
Mainville spoke through the public remark interval of the primary assembly of the reconstituted Public Defender Providers Fee. 5 of the fee’s six members resigned final month shortly after receiving a menacing letter from Chief Public Defender TaShun Bowden-Lewis’ private lawyer. The letter accused fee members of making a pretext for discrimination by disagreeing with Bowden-Lewis on hiring choices.
The current assembly included no point out of the unprecedented mass resignations of committee members. Public defender division officers spent a few hours introducing themselves to the fee and explaining in typically dizzying displays what they do. There was a contact of the eraser utilized to the final a number of tumultuous months, which fooled not one of the 30 folks within the viewers.
It fell to Mainville and a few her courageous colleagues to talk fact to energy through the public participation section of the assembly. Even the logistics of that new function of the fee’s conferences pulled again the curtain on life among the many state’s public defenders. Bowden-Lewis wished to offer every speaker a parsimonious two minutes every. The brand new chair, retired Supreme Court docket Justice Richard Palmer, doubled that to 4 minutes with the implication nobody with related feedback was more likely to be cutoff. Bowden-Lewis made it clear she was the timekeeper.
What adopted was a unprecedented occasion in Connecticut authorities. Three veteran frontline public defenders informed the fee particulars of the disaster. State authorities is riven by worry of retribution and vengeance, particularly in businesses charged with upholding the legislation. It’s the silent disaster and disgrace of our time.
As fee reached the general public remark merchandise on its agenda, I didn’t anticipate a lot. The custom of residents showing at conferences to inform leaders what they’d not in any other case know has been smothered by worry. And so Mainville’s stark account life as a public defender through the 9 months Bowden-Lewis has been on the head of the greater than 400-employee company.
Mainville, the lead public defender within the Litchfield judicial district, informed the fee that when one lawyer working briefly in her workplace died, she requested Bowden-Lewis for assist. Her request was denied. Bowden-Lewis, Mainville mentioned, informed her “‘Your numbers don’t justify that. Rally the troops, deal with it.’”
“That’s not appropriate,” Bowden-Lewis interrupted.
“I’ve it in writing, TaShun,” Mainville replied. “That is the kind of factor I’m speaking about. She’s sitting right here, watching me as if I’m right here to personally insult her.” After which Mainville issued her declaration of being unafraid of retribution. Bowden-Lewis strengthened Mainville’s level by making an attempt to argue together with her once more.
Russell Morin, a brand new fee member and a former state consultant, intervened and admonished Bowden-Lewis that the general public participation is for the general public. Mainville continued, proving her abilities as a proficient advocate.
Till public participation, there had been little discuss of the company’s mission: offering efficient defenses to its shoppers. Bowden-Lewis had spent her portion of the assembly sharing her targets of rebranding the company with a brand new brand, establishing a public relations unit and offering post-incarceration providers equivalent to housing.
As of Tuesday, caseloads of particular person public defenders, Bowden-Lewis informed the fee, don’t exceed 375 instances — under the bounds established by a class-action lawsuit within the Nineties. However the caseload numbers, Hartford public defender David Warner identified, are measured by what number of a public defender handles in a yr, not at any given second.
Joseph Lopez, the top of complicated litigation, informed the fee, “Morale is low … persons are afraid to come back ahead.” Concern might have to discover a place on that new brand if that is allowed to proceed.
“Braveness is resistance to worry, mastery of worry,” Mark Twain wrote, “not absence of worry.” Lopez, Mainville and Warner know what’s at stake for his or her shoppers and themselves. Additionally they perceive the limitless methods a chief public defender could make their job tougher by denying assets or transferring legal professionals out and in of their workplaces. The trio have resisted the worry of punishment to so what few others have dared.
The members of the fee want to grasp what they have been informed. It seems they could not: Canceling their Might and July conferences, scheduling just one assembly between now and Aug. 1 means that some members of the fee don’t perceive the fierce urgency for a whole bunch of public defenders and hundreds of their shoppers.
Kevin F. Rennie of South Windsor is a lawyer and a former Republican state senator and consultant.
Connecticut
Public Middle School In Fairfield Among Top 5 In CT: New Report
Roger Ludlowe Middle School in Fairfield is the fifth-best in the state, and is credited with having a 10:1 student/teacher ratio; 72 percent proficiency in math; and 80 percent proficiency in reading.
U.S. News ranks schools based on “their performance on state-required tests, graduation, and how well they prepare their students for high school.” Click here to read the publication’s methodology.
Roger Ludlowe joins five public elementary schools in Fairfield to be ranked by U.S. News among the state’s best.
The best public middle school in Connecticut is House of Arts Letters and Science Academy in New Britain. Rounding out the top five are Eastern Middle School in Riverside (#2); Saxe Middle School in New Canaan (#3); and Middlebrook School in Wilton (#4).
U.S. News studied publicly available data from the U.S. Department of Education for its ranking, and analyzed 59,128 middle schools throughout the country for the report.
For more information on U.S. News & World Report’s ranking of top public middle schools, click here.
Connecticut
Connecticut couple arrested for $1 million Lululemon theft spree across multiple states | The Express Tribune
A Connecticut couple allegedly stole nearly $1 million worth of Lululemon merchandise during a two-month, multi-state theft spree, according to authorities.
Jadion Richards, 44, and Akwele Lawes-Richards, 45, were arrested on November 14 for stealing high-end fitness apparel from stores in Minnesota, Utah, Colorado, New York, and Connecticut since September, as detailed in a criminal complaint reported by multiple outlets.
The theft spree was uncovered after Lululemon investigators noticed significant losses, which escalated when the pair triggered a security alarm while leaving a store in Woodbury, Minnesota.
Richards reportedly accused store employees of racially profiling him, the complaint stated. However, a company investigator alleged the couple had stolen at least 45 items worth $5,000 from various stores the previous day.
Police apprehended the pair and discovered multiple credit and debit cards, along with a key to a Marriott hotel room. Inside the room, officers found 12 suitcases, three of which contained approximately $50,000 worth of Lululemon merchandise, as per the complaint.
The company investigator estimated the total stolen merchandise could be worth up to $1 million, though the complaint did not detail how this estimate was calculated.
Lululemon merchandise is known for its high price points, with clothing starting at over $50 and sweatshirts often costing more than $130.
“This outcome continues to underscore our ongoing collaboration with law enforcement and our investments in advanced technology, team training and investigative capabilities to combat retail crime and hold offenders accountable,” Lululemon’s vice president of asset protection told NBC News.
“We remain dedicated to continuing these efforts to address and prevent this industry-wide issue.”
The couple allegedly used various tactics to commit the thefts, including one distracting store staff while the other hid the fitness apparel under their clothes and jackets, according to the complaint.
Connecticut
Connecticut man arrested in Puerto Rico for allegedly killing 4-month-old and Massachusetts mother
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
-
Business1 week ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Science5 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Politics7 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Technology6 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle7 days ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs
-
World7 days ago
Protesters in Slovakia rally against Robert Fico’s populist government
-
News6 days ago
They disagree about a lot, but these singers figure out how to stay in harmony
-
News7 days ago
Gaetz-gate: Navigating the President-elect's most baffling Cabinet pick