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Serious Bus Crash Reported on King Street in Greenwich

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Part of King Street in Greenwich is closed due to a serious accident involving two buses.

Police tweeted that the road is closed at 1252 King St. and will be for some time.

Sacred Heart Greenwich confirmed that the crash involved two buses and one of their school buses was involved. Multiple injuries have been reported, though the school has not confirmed that any of its students are involved. The school bus was on the way to pick up two students at the time of the crash.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



Photo Credit: Greenwich Police Department
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Navy Sailor Accused of Sexual Relationship With Teenage Boy

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A 28-year-old sailor based out of Groton is accused of having sexual relations with a teenage boy he met through the Grindr app and has been arrested.

State police have charged 28-year-old Chazzman Chung with risk of injury to a child and enticing a minor by computer.

The middle school student was home sick in December and Chung picked the teen up at his house, brought him to the sub-base and had sexual relations with the teen in the Navy barracks.

According to the arrest warrant, the two met on the app Grindr. The victim told police he listed his age at 18, but that he told the suspect he was actually 14.

During an interview with police, Chung admitted to having sex with the victim in his barracks room on the submarine base, despite knowing the victim was underage, the warrant states.

Bond was set at $100,000.



Photo Credit: Connecticut State Police

Report: Trump Admin Wants to Make Asylum Harder

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The White House is working on plans to make it harder for immigrants at the border to receive asylum by forcing them to do more to prove they have a credible fear of returning home and putting border agents in charge of the interview process, multiple senior administration officials told NBC News.

The potential changes are part of President Donald Trump's overhaul of the Department of Homeland Security. Currently, asylum-seekers are interviewed by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services asylum officers and only need to express a fear of persecution in their home country in order to pass the first step in the process.

A DHS spokesman declined to comment. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

About 90 percent of asylum-seekers pass the credible fear interview, according to data from DHS, but only about 10 percent go on to be granted asylum by a judge. Due to a backlog in immigration courts, those who pass the initial interview live in the U.S., either in detention or at large, for months or years while waiting for their cases to be adjudicated.



Photo Credit: Lenny Ignelzi/AP

Lamont: Feds OK With Connecticut Tolls

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If Connecticut installs highway tolls, then it will not risk losing any of its federal funds meant for infrastructure upgrades, Gov. Ned Lamont said Tuesday.

The federal government has typically provided to states reimbursement for investments in transportation or infrastructure related projects. If the state-funded a project at 20 percent of the overall price, the federal government would provide the remaining 80 percent.

When asked whether Connecticut could install tolls without risk of losing any of that money, Lamont said the answer is yes.

“It sounds like something we can do and we can do it on a fairly timely basis,” he said.

Lamont met recently with Elaine Chao, secretary of transportation, who he said provided that reassurance that Connecticut could collect revenue, and not jeopardize the ability to rely on the federal government to help the state complete projects like rail improvements, highway widening, and bridge replacement.

Connecticut, according to the Department of Transportation in Washington, currently holds one of the spots available through the agency’s Value Pricing Pilot Program. That program would allow Connecticut to install tolls on existing roadways, so long as the prices are based on congestion levels and time of day.

Republicans in the General Assembly are unified against tolls, but they also do not want to see the state lose any federal cash for tolls.

Sen. Len Fasano, (R – North Haven), the Senate minority leader, said he’s under the impression that congestion pricing is the only way Connecticut could collect revenue without building a new structure like an extra lane or a bridge.

“As long as it’s congestion pricing tolls, it’s fine,” he said. “We’ll get the federal money. It’s you can’t put up tolls unless you have this value pricing high end use and lower tolls at low-end use.”

Fasano said any toll program cannot be flat rate. He added, “I think if we put in tolls as a one rate, unless they get a waiver from the federal government in writing that says it’s not going to hurt our federal money.”

Lamont has changed his position on tolls from the campaign. He had run on the issue, arguing to toll only trucks, not passenger cars. He later changed his tune, calling for tolls on all cars as the best way to raise revenue and improve transportation infrastructure.

Lamont says his conversations with Chao have been productive.

“They’re pretty entrepreneurial down there at transportation. They like public-private partnerships. They said there’s going to be a new infrastructure bill soon which could be as much as two trillion dollars, and she said, ‘Connecticut, make sure you have the revenues in place so you can make your 80-20 match,’ so the state could put up its share of the dough.”

‘Heroes 4 Hire’ Career Fair Benefits Those Who Served

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More than 100 employers and 30 service providers were looking to hire our heroes in East Hartford Tuesday.

The annual Heroes 4 Hire veterans career fair brought more than 1,000 people into Rentschler Field, according to a spokesperson for the Connecticut Department of Labor, that managed the event.

“This is awesome,” said Army veteran Kevin Briley. “I didn’t know all of these jobs were out there like this.”

The former Army specialist is in search of a new job.

“Working in the military, it advances your level of thinking and everything,” Briley said.

Which he, veterans, reservists, even military family members hope gave them a leg up.

“Veterans definitely get hired due to this event,” said Tim Rockefeller, a local veteran’s employment representative for the Connecticut Department of Labor.

A veterans team from the state Department of Labor was on hand to help veterans create strong resumes so employers could see the valuable experience and skills they have to offer, according to Rockefeller, who served the Marine Corps from 2002 to 2006.

This is the largest veteran’s career fair in New England, he said.

Upstairs was Save-A-Suit. The non-profit provided veterans with professional, donated suits and other business attire for free, to help them dress for their interviews and to professionally network.

“It makes you feel a little more confident. You got to dress for the role,” said Sean Byrne, a Marine Corps veteran who was fitted with a suit before going to the career fair.

It’s the first year Save-A-Suit partnered with the state Department of Labor for this event.

“It’s a little too good to be true. So it’s pretty amazing,” Byrne, a former sergeant, said.

A photographer also took professional photos for attendees LinkedIn profiles.

Those in attendance appreciated the opportunities to meet potential employers face-to-face, especially since the majority of job applications are electronic.

Companies including Walgreens, Mohegan Sun, UPS, Vista Home Improvement, and state and local police were on hand.

“All the companies are here. You can choose and meet everybody. It’s like a network to be able to get your foot in the door,” said Specialist Ely Peña of the Connecticut Army National Guard who was looking for a civilian job.

The Heroes 4 Hire event has been going on for 15 years.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

State Police Using License Plate Scanners on Highways

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Connecticut State Police are using technology to spot potential problems on the road.

License plate reader technology alerts police when a car driving by may be unregistered, stolen, linked to a missing persons case, or more.

One Connecticut State trooper was honored Tuesday for putting the technology to good use.

“We do get our share of stolen cars but we don’t get our share of stolen cars involved in a homicide,” explained Trooper Jason Cassavecchia.

Cassavecchia was conducting a traffic stop on Interstate 84 in Danbury last July when a car drove by that came back as stolen.

He alerted nearby troopers, and when they stopped the car, they discovered that the driver was wanted for murder in New York.

It wouldn’t have been possible with the license-reading technology hooked to his car, powered by cameras that are increasingly fast and accurate.

“It’s an extra set of eyes I mean obviously we’re still doing our job but this is just doing an additional service to us,” he said.

The company that created and sells the technology honored Cassavecchia for his work.

“The Connecticut State Police are doing a wonderful job with the license plate recognition program they’re out there every day,” said Pat Fox, the national sales director for Secure Watch 24.

Drivers who spoke with NBC Connecticut said the technology makes them feel safer on the roads.

“I think it’s a good thing because you don’t know who’s on the road next to you and its time saving probably for police they can capture more people at one time you know if they’ve committed a crime it’s a good way to catch people,” Raeann Paparello of Middletown said.

Cassavecchia agrees, especially after what the system alerted him to in that lucky stop last summer.

“For this technology to be able to pick that up is important for the safety of the public, I am a strong believer in this technology,” he said.

The technology isn’t only used by State Police. It’s expanding across local police departments, now in Wallingford, Cheshire and soon Guilford, among others.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Ridgefield Baseball Coaches on Leave After Field Set On Fire

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Three Ridgefield high school varsity baseball coaches are on administrative leave while police investigate who poured gasoline on the team’s field at Governor Park and set it on fire.

Superintendent Dr. William Collins notified the school community in a letter Tuesday, saying that there were no students involved. Collins also said that while they do not think the coaching staff was directly involved, they have been placed on leave as a precaution pending the outcome of the investigation.

The town of Ridgefield said that on Saturday, someone doused the field with gasoline and set it on fire in an attempt to “dry the field quicker.”

No one was hurt, but there was damage to the site. The town plans to excavate the infield, place dirt in a safe container and add fresh, clean soil to the field. Town officials said it could cost as much as $50,000 for all the repairs.

Anyone who witnessed the incident is encouraged to call the Ridgefield Police Department.



Photo Credit: @AmityNorton
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NY Couple Missing in Caribbean Likely Died on Way to Airport

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Police in the Dominican Republic say the missing couple from New York who mysteriously vanished while vacationing in the Caribbean country are believed to be dead. 

Orlando Moore, 40, and his 52-year-old girlfriend Portia Ravenelle, left Newark Liberty International Airport for a romantic getaway on March 23. They were supposed to fly back four days later. They never came home to Mount Vernon.

At a news briefing late Tuesday, police in the Dominican Republic said a woman thought to be Ravenelle was found unconscious, with traumatic injuries to her body, on the side of a highway March 27, the day the couple had been expected to fly home. She died several days later from her injuries. 

Four days after the woman was found, a body resembling the characteristics of Moore was discovered in a car in the the Caribbean Sea, about 12 to 18 miles where authorities believe the couple got into a car accident on their way to the airport. They had rented a vehicle to make their way home; authorities haven't been able to recover the car from the water because of current conditions, but they expect it is the same vehicle the couple rented to drive to the airport.

Authorities are awaiting fingerprint and other testing to confirm the identities.


Five Displaced After Fire in New Haven

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Five people are displaced after a fire on Stevens Street in New Haven Tuesday night. 

Officials received a 911 call just after 11:30 p.m. reporting fire at 41 Stevens St. 

They said they fire started in a first-floor bedroom and firefighters battled it quickly. 

No injuries are reported, but five residents are displaced. The fire was under control at midnight.



Photo Credit: Strngr.com

'Campus Clash' Event Sparks Political Debate, Protests at UConn

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There was a clash of political opinion at the University of Connecticut Tuesday as representatives from conservative organization Turning Point USA came to speak on campus Tuesday.

There was a spirited debate between students and the political speakers, as well as some fireworks in the theater and protests outside.

“It definitely attracts a crowd. There are a lot of haters. But I think the best thing both sides can do is listen,” said James Petersen, a UConn freshman.

There was a brief, heated moment between protesters and those looking to attend the so-called Campus Clash Tour’s stop, prompting one group to chant “Build the Wall! Stop the deportations.”

The rest of the event ran smoothly.

Fans and opponents lined up to hear speakers including Charlie Kirk, founder of the conservative organization Turning Point USA.

“I just agree with him politically. We’re both conservatives,” said Eli Majek, a senior.

Also on stage were commentators Candace Owens and Dave Rubin. The group engaged the audience in a sometimes feisty back and forth on topics such as culture and big government.

“Connecticut was once a beautiful state and now it’s a sinking ship because of Democrat, socialist policies,” argued Candace Owens, Turning Point USA communications director.

UConn beefed up security for these types of events after two arrests at a talk in 2017. Tuesday’s appearance was hosted by the UConn chapter of Turning Point USA, which also sees this as a free speech issue. 

“I believe all students should have the ability to exchange ideas and participate in the marketplace of ideas,” said Joseph Gatti, a member of the Turning Point USA UConn chapter.

At the same time, a counter-event was taking place nearby. A broad group of student associations coming together to stand up against what they feel is the spread of hateful beliefs.

“As a Muslim woman I wanted to be sure to be present and showing support for people who are here in solidarity,” said Elaf Al-Wohaibi, a UConn Law Student

Turning Point USA describes itself as a student movement for free markets and limited government. It has chapters on more than 1,000 high school and college campuses.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

1 Killed in Crash Involving Maryland School Bus, Students Among 6 Hurt

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A woman was killed and more people, including two students, were injured in a crash involving a truck and a Prince George's County school bus, police say.

Six people, including two teenagers and the bus driver, were taken to the hospital with injuries that are not considered life-threatening, Prince George's Fire Department spokesperson Mark Brady said.

Two people refused transportation to the hospital.

Extended operations are necessary to extract the woman who was killed from the wreckage, police say. She was driving one of the vehicles involved.

The school bus was headed toward Charles H. Flowers High School, Prince George's County Public Schools says. The collision occurred on the southbound lanes of Branch Avenue near Surratts Road in Clinton, Maryland, about 6:18 a.m., police say.

A hazardous materials team was called to clean up fluids leaking from the vehicles, Brady said.

All southbound lanes are closed during the investigation and clean up; Only one northbound lane was open for a time.

Chopper4 video shows a car with extreme damage between the bus and the truck near the grassy median. The truck turned over, and video from the scene shows debris on the road. The bus suffered damage to the front end and the driver side.

Maryland State Police initially said there were no students on board the bus.

The cause of the crash is under investigation.

Stay with News4 for more on this developing story.



Photo Credit: Chopper4

Scientists Unveil First-Ever Photo of a Black Hole

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Scientists have unveiled humanity's first-ever photo of a black hole.

The image from the Event Horizon Telescope, a network of eight radio observatories spanning the globe, captured a massive black hole "53.5 million light-years away in galaxy M87," researchers with the National Science Foundation announced Wednesday.

"We have seen what we thought was unseeable," said Sheperd Doeleman, Harvard University senior research fellow and assistant director for observation of the Black Hole Initiative.

The image of the black hole's event horizon, which is the outer edge of the collapsed star, shows a bright ring that is formed as light bends in the intense gravity around a black hole. Doeleman said the black hole is 6.5 billion times bigger than the Sun.


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Man Suffers Serious, Possible Life-Threatening Injuries in Bristol Crash

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A man has serious, possible life-threatening injuries after a crash in Bristol on Tuesday night.

Police were called to Mountain Road shortly before 11:00 p.m. after a vehicle rolled over and trapped the driver.

When first responders arrived to the scene, they said they found the male driver unresponsive.

The driver was extradited from the vehicle and was taken to an area hospital to be evaluated. Emergency personnel at the scene determined that the driver may have sustained serious, possible life-threatening injuries, police said.

The Bristol Police Department's Serious Traffic Accident Reconstruction Team responded to the scene.

The accident remains under investigation.

Anyone who may have witnessed the crash is asked to call Officer O'Connor at (860) 584-3031.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Groups Lobby to Raise Minimum Age to Buy Tobacco Products to 21

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Two groups are lobbying at the Capitol on Wednesday to draw attention to a bill that would raise the minimum age to buy any tobacco products to 21.

The American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association are trying to keep pressure up on lawmakers to raise the age, which would apply to purchases on cigarettes and e-cigarettes.

States like Massachusetts and New Jersey have already upped the age to 21.

In Connecticut, Hartford and Bridgeport have already increased the age. Other towns like Milford and South Windsor have considered it.

The bill would also prohibit the sale of flavored products. Those flavors are often viewed as enticing to young teens.

The vaping industry said that will harm people trying to quit smoking cigarettes.

The Public Health Committee has already passed this bill, but it hasn't been voted on yet by the full legislature.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Meet the 1st Male Patriots Cheerleaders in Decades

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For the first time in decades, the New England Patriots will have male cheerleaders on the sidelines this season.

Two men were selected to be on the squad for the upcoming season.

"Walking (into tryouts), I knew people were going to look at me — one, because I am over 6 feet tall, and two, because I am a male," said 23-year-old Driss Dallahi of Londonderry, New Hampshire.

Months before his audition in March, Dallahi went to the squad's optional workshop and realized he wasn't alone.

He met Steven Sonntag.

"I attended that workshop and walked in and heard there was another boy, and so I was immediately looking around trying to find him," said Sonntag, 22, of Colchester, Vermont.

They didn't know each other until they realized they had the same dream.

"We didn't really know the criteria for male cheerleaders auditioning for the New England Patriots, so we kind of created that together in texting back and forth," said Sonntag.

They coordinated colors and styles of clothes to wear so they wouldn't look off or out of place.

The two were the only men that auditioned, and both made the roster, becoming the Patriots' first male cheerleaders since the early 1980s.

"I was excited," said Tracy Sormanti, the Patriots' director of cheerleading, when asked about first seeing the two at tryouts. "Change is good."

For decades, Sormanti, who was once a cheerleader herself, has led the squad.

"They were not selected because they were the first men to try out," said said. "They were selected because they actually had the talent."

Sonntag started cheering in high school and created the team at Dean College.

Dallahi just spent the last year and a half in New York City auditioning for jobs, but his biggest break would come back home in New England.

Dallahi's specialties include aerials, which Sormanti said she's brainstorming ways to incorporate into their acts.

Both men pointed to the LA Rams' cheerleading team as their inspiration to tryout.

"At least in my lifetime, it was the first time I had seen two men do something like that," said Dallahi.

Last season, Quinton Peron and Napoleon Jinnies gained national attention for becoming the first male cheerleaders to perform at a Super Bowl.

Both Dallahi and Sonntag reached out to them on social media for advice and were warned about what they might hear in the stands or read online.

"If there are people that aren't 100 percent on board today, then maybe somewhere down the line, they are, once we actually get out there," said Dallahi.

Sonntag calls this the new generation of cheerleading in the NFL.

"Two genders on the squad is a big step for any team in the NFL, because that's not what people are used to seeing sidelines, so I encourage it to progress even more across the NFL board," said Sonntag.

Now that they're on the team, they will make public appearances in the community serving as ambassadors for the Patriots.

Their first performance will be during the Patriots' preseason.



Photo Credit: NBC10 Boston

Loverboy to Perform Free Show at Big E

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Fans of the 1980s Canadian band “Loverboy” will be “Lovin’ Every Minute of it” if they head to the Big E in September.

Loverboy is performing on Saturday, Sept. 14 at The Big E in West Springfield, Mass.

The show is free with Big E admission and a limited number of premium reserved seats for $29 will go on sale Thursday, April 11 at 10 a.m. at TheBigE.com and The Big E Box Office.

Some of the band’s hit have included “Working for the Weekend,” “This Could Be the Night,” “Turn Me Loose” and “Heaven In Your Eyes.”

The Big E takes place Sept. 13 to 29 in West Springfield, Mass.



Photo Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for iHeartMedia

$20M Sharon Estate With Art Gallery Was Once Frank Oz's Home

NorCal Residents Demand Change After Fatal Police Shootings

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Three months ago, in this working-class port city 13 miles south of Napa Valley's rolling vineyards, cellphone video showed a white police officer conducting a traffic stop in which he drew his weapon and then tackled and handcuffed a black Marine veteran who was legally filming from his front porch.

In 2017, four Vallejo officers seen on police bodycam descended on an unarmed white man outside of his woodwork shop, throwing him to the ground and pummeling him with fists, knees and batons as he screamed, "I didn't do anything!"

That same year, an officer responding to a fight at a house party fatally shot a Latino man believing he was wielding a knife.

Last year, an elderly black driver mistakenly turned down a closed street — and said she was met by a young white officer who berated her and left her "extremely shaken."

These handful of police encounters and other cases made available in city records, court documents and police reports and through interviews with residents, attorneys and activists represent what they say is a wider pattern of excessive force and overly aggressive policing in their Bay Area community of 122,000 people, feeding into a belief that there is a lack of transparency and accountability for officers' conduct.

Now, a plea for an outside agency or civil rights group to review the Vallejo Police Department has been renewed by residents and activists after the fatal shooting in February of a young black rapper, Willie McCoy, by six officers — the 16th death involving Vallejo officers since 2011, police records show. In San Francisco, with a population more than seven times Vallejo's, the police department has been involved in 22 fatal shootings since 2011.

The majority of those killed by the police in Vallejo have been black and Latino men, police records show. The city remains evenly divided among white, black, Latino and Asian residents.

As in Vallejo, similar concerns have been raised in cities across the country over police interactions that can cost millions of dollars in civil lawsuits, sow distrust, and produce questions about whether independent oversight or outside monitoring is warranted.

"Can we not use the O.K. Corral tactics?" asked Askari Sowonde, a longtime black resident of Vallejo who last fall organized a community meeting around de-escalation tactics of the police department. "We've become the wild, Wild West. That has to change. We're losing too many lives."

Attorneys for McCoy's family say he was shot around 25 times. Employees at a Taco Bell called police after they found him slumped over and unresponsive in his car in the drive-thru with a gun on his lap. After officers arrived at the scene, they discovered the car was locked and in drive. The officers were in the process of blocking in the car when McCoy woke up, and police said in a press release that he failed to listen to verbal and visual commands and was shot when six officers surrounding the car believed he was reaching for the gun. His family says the weapon was for protection, and police say it was stolen.

Police Chief Andrew Bidou called the situation a "tragedy."

While the incident remains under investigation by the Solano County District Attorney's Office and the officers were returned to duty three weeks after the shooting, Vallejo police on March 29 released bodycam footage after pressure from the family, saying they did so to "facilitate a community dialogue about the facts of this incident."

Michael Gennaco, a former federal prosecutor and a founder of the California-based OIR Group, which provides independent oversight of law enforcement departments, said the internal review processes for many police agencies just aren't "robust" enough to effectively evaluate officers who have used force to determine if they are still fit to wear a badge.

The Vallejo Police Department does have an Internal Affairs Division, and Bidou can order it to investigate whether officers in use-of-force cases acted appropriately before making a final determination about disciplinary action. It wasn't immediately clear how many officers they have investigated or filed disciplinary actions against.

"When it comes down to it," Gennaco said, "a police agency is only as good as its worst officer."

SHINING A LIGHT

In 2011, Alicia Saddler's mother moved her family to Vallejo to escape the gun violence and crime afflicting their neighborhood in Oakland, about 20 miles to the south. Saddler and her younger brother, Angel Ramos, then 15, settled comfortably into their new community, made up of charming Victorian homes and a shuttered naval shipyard that lured a diverse population.

"Everything was great for a while," Saddler, now 29, said recently, "until the police came in and turned our family upside down."

In January 2017, her family was hosting a house party. People had been drinking for hours, and by early morning, a fight broke out.

Vallejo police were called, and Officer Zachary Jacobsen told investigators that he witnessed a brawl occurring above him on a second-story balcony. He said he saw a man — later identified as Ramos — holding a kitchen knife and making a stabbing motion toward another person.

Jacobsen said that he already had his firearm out because of the nature of the call and that he had explicitly "seen the guy who had the knife inside the house," according to Solano County District Attorney's Office documents recently released by the city. Once Ramos appeared and Jacobsen believed he was stabbing the other person, documents indicate the officer fired his gun four times, killing Ramos.

Family members said to investigators the fight involving Ramos began after he was roused from sleep and rushed over to defend his sister amid a larger melee.

Witnesses told police that Ramos, 21, had been holding a knife inside the house and began swinging it at two others. Police said the two others suffered lacerations and one also had an open wound. The knife was taken away from Ramos, and then he reached for a second one. But when the alcohol-fueled fight moved to the balcony, Ramos was no longer armed, his family told investigators.

Attorneys for the family would later say Ramos was making a punching motion, and not a stabbing one. One officer told investigators that Ramos appeared to be making a striking motion with the bottom of his fist, while another officer said that he did not see a knife, but based on Ramos' movements would have also used lethal force if Jacobsen had not shot him, according to the district attorney's findings.

Amid the chaos, police said, no one listened to commands to break away. Saddler was arrested for resisting and obstruction as her brother lay dying beside her. She was never charged with a crime.

A Solano County District Attorney's Office investigation ended last year with officials concluding that Jacobsen, who had been on the force since 2013, "acted lawfully" and he was "in reasonable fear that Angel Ramos was going to murder another person," according to their findings. The office also concluded that "it can be clearly stated that Angel Ramos was armed with a knife," although it was unclear where — either in the house or on the deck — he stabbed someone, according to the report.

The family said they still had questions: Did Jacobsen really see Ramos holding a knife? Why did he fire toward a dimly lit balcony with an obstructed view and with small children and other witnesses close by? And why didn't he deploy a Taser, as another officer had done, or allow another officer with a clearer vantage point to intervene?

Police insisted Ramos was armed, which the family disputed in the months after his death as they held rallies and vigils maintaining that he didn't have to die.

Then, Saddler told NBC News, the harassment began.

She said that officers shined spotlights into the windows of the family's home, flashed emergency lights and blared sirens as an intimidation tactic, and that her request to Bidou, the police chief, to make it stop went ignored.

Bidou did not respond to requests for comment through the department about the family's allegations as well as overall concerns about policing in the city.

Saddler's family filed a federal lawsuit against the department, which alleges wrongful death and the violation of the family's civil rights. The suit, filed in August 2017, says that five months after the shooting, a man claiming to be a Vallejo police officer "accosted" Saddler in a nightclub parking lot and said that her family "needed to quit pursuing legal actions."

The city denied the various allegations in its answer to the lawsuit. A jury trial is set for October.

At a rally in front of Vallejo City Hall in February, Saddler and other families gathered amid a sea of posters with pictures and messages about loved ones who died in police shootings.

"There is no justice for the daily hell that we're living," said Paula McGowan, whose son, Ronell Foster, 32, was fatally shot in 2018 during what police said was a "violent physical struggle" with an officer — who would be one of the six involved in this year's shooting of McCoy. (A lawsuit is pending against the city by Foster's family, and the city in its response has denied all allegations of unreasonable and excessive force. A district attorney's investigation remains ongoing.)

"Something is rotten within the Vallejo Police Department," added John Burris, an Oakland civil rights attorney who grew up in Vallejo and represents several of the families suing the city of Vallejo.

When it was Saddler's turn to speak, she clasped her cellphone in her hands and trembled.

"I never imagined it would be the police that would come and kill my brother," she said. "Why are so many people dying at the hands of these officers? My family has lost all faith and has nothing but fear in our hearts when it comes to cops."

Police did not respond to Saddler's comments. Seven months after Ramos' death, Jacobsen would be involved in another shooting. He and four other officers fired at a man who led them on a high-speed freeway chase and got out of the car holding up a machete and screaming, "Kill me." The officers — believing he was a threat to the public — shot him 41 times, according to the coroner's inquest report. A jury at an inquest hearing last year ruled his death a suicide by police, and found there was no wrongdoing by officers.

Among the officers involved in that case was David McLaughlin, who joined Vallejo's force in 2014 after two years in Oakland. Earlier this year, McLaughlin was in the spotlight again for confronting Adrian Burrell, the black Marine veteran who was filming a traffic stop from his front porch involving his cousin about 30 feet away.

Cellphone video shared by Burrell shows McLaughlin ordering him to "get back" and accusing him of interfering with the stop. He then approaches Burrell and tells him to "stop resisting," at which point Burrell told NBC News he was slammed into a wall and swung into a pole, where he knocked his head and sustained a concussion. He was then handcuffed. Only after McLaughlin learned that he was a veteran with no police record, Burrell added, was he released from the back of a police car.

Bidou called for an "expeditious" internal affairs investigation after Burrell's video began circulating on social media. McLaughlin remains on leave following the incident.

Burrell said he feels fortunate it didn't turn out worse — with him getting swept up in the criminal justice system or losing his life — but he wants to shine a light on the police department after filing a legal claim alleging false arrest and negligence.

The city has yet to respond to that claim.

A 'PROBLEMATIC CULTURE'

The prevalence of cellphone recordings and officer body cameras has opened up Vallejo to increased scrutiny in other cases — and exposed what some say is a web of connections between them.

For instance, an officer in the McCoy shooting, Mark Thompson, was also involved in an alleged use-of-force incident in July 2017 involving a white man named Carl Edwards.

Edwards, 49, said he was tinkering with his fence outside of his woodwork shop when a group of officers "worked in concert" to "viciously beat him," according to a lawsuit filed last September against the city, the police department, the police chief and the four officers.

Bodycam footage purportedly taken from one of those officers, Spencer Muniz-Bottomley, appears to show him pulling up to the scene, walking up to Edwards at his fence and commanding him to "put your hands on your head, bro." NBC News does not know what, if anything, occurred before the footage was shot.

As Edwards begins to question the officer, using an expletive, Muniz-Bottomley immediately pulls Edwards down, and in a matter of seconds, other officers are on top of him. His face and hands are bloodied on the pavement. He shouts repeatedly, "I didn't do anything!" and "Why are you laughing?"

Edwards obtained the video as part of his case, and later found it had surfaced on social media, his attorney, Michael Haddad, told NBC News. According to the lawsuit, Edwards suffered multiple injuries, including head trauma, a broken nose, and cuts and bruises across his face and body.

Haddad said that police were investigating a call about a man using a slingshot on children, and that Edwards was misidentified as a suspect. In addition, he said in the lawsuit, the officers falsified reports claiming Edwards had been identified as having thrown the rocks. Charges of assault with a deadly weapon and resisting an officer against Edwards were dismissed last summer.

Muniz-Bottomley, who was hired in Vallejo in 2015, was no longer with the department last fall, although police officials have not said what led to his departure.

"There's a clear, very problematic culture in the Vallejo Police Department," Haddad said, adding that "I suspect that a lot of community members feel powerless."

"This kind of rampant brutality and lawlessness in the police department can't go on without enablers in the city government," he said.

The city has denied the allegations of wrongful or negligent conduct in Edwards' lawsuit. Efforts to reach Muniz-Bottomley for comment were unsuccessful.

Vallejo Mayor Bob Sampayan referred questions about policing practices and the city's financial costs to the city manager's office and the police department, which did not immediately respond to follow-up calls and emails.

The toll that questionable police conduct takes can be counted in a less apparent way: a city's bottom line.

"One of the most astonishing things to me is when you look at the big cities, they pay out tens of millions of dollars a year, every year," said Samuel Walker, a professor emeritus at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and a police oversight scholar.

For instance, in Oakland, whose police department has been under federal court monitoring since 2003, roughly $3 million was spent annually from 1990 to 2014 to settle police lawsuits, according to an analysis by the independent reporting project Oakland Police Beat.

In Vallejo, civil rights lawsuits and claims in connection with the police department have cost the city more than $7 million in settlements since 2011, according to city settlement records examined by NBC News. (Still pending are about a dozen other cases and claims indicating potential lawsuits.)

The settlements don't imply wrongdoing by the city, but they can be an easier and cheaper alternative than going through the courts.

Last year, City Attorney Claudia Quintana told the City Council that "escalating costs of defending claims and paying claims" were leading Vallejo to drop out from its municipal insurance pool, which it had belonged to since 1987 and helped shoulder the costs of litigation.

Previously, the city's risk fund was responsible for paying up to $500,000 of a settlement, and the insurance pool would cover the rest. But the pool's board voted to raise the city's deductible amount to $2.5 million because its losses were "large and disproportionate" compared to other cities. Vallejo, instead, joined a new insurance pool in July.

The financial hardships resonate deeply in Vallejo, which was mired in bankruptcy from 2008 to 2011 as it struggled with a reputation for crime and remained relegated to the fringes of the region's tech boom. Residents lament that the money set aside for lawsuits could have instead gone to pot-holed streets, social services, schools or even additional officers.

The city was paying its officers and firefighters six-figure salaries before last decade's deep recession, after which the police force fell from a high of 158 officers in 2005 to fewer than 95 in 2012. There are now about 100 officers in Vallejo, although local leaders have acknowledged in recent years that the department was "woefully understaffed."

WHAT ABOUT OVERSIGHT?

Critics of the Vallejo police say the department's strained past shouldn't thwart its ability to make substantive changes.

"We have police policing police," Burrell, the ex-Marine confronted filming the traffic stop, said. "It gets swept under the rug. The police department becomes complicit in creating a culture of violence."

The idea that some officers might rack up excessive-force allegations against them or be involved in multiple shootings, including fatal ones, while remaining on duty is exemplified in the case of former Vallejo Officer Sean Kenney. He was involved in three fatal shootings over six months in 2012 — in two he was the lone officer — and was promoted to detective before he was formally cleared in all of the deaths.

Police records show he was involved in a 2017 shooting in which he was hospitalized with minor injuries, and a lawsuit against the city is pending in that case. In the three fatal shootings in 2012, three separate lawsuits filed by the respective families were settled with the city totaling nearly $2.5 million, and the city did not admit liability or responsibility.

Kenney retired from the department in December, and started his own consulting company for law enforcement agencies called Line Driven Strategies LLC. He has since tried to solicit work with the Vallejo Police Department, according to The Vallejo Times-Herald.

He told the newspaper last month that "I wish the shootings and other traumatic events never happened" but also that "we would be foolish not to learn from the good and bad experiences we all experience." Kenney declined to comment to NBC News.

Walker said officers in general are thrown into dangerous and demanding situations as part of the job, and they have legitimate concerns when they feel demoralized by budget cuts, shrinking staff and public criticism.

Following the McCoy shooting, the Vallejo Police Officers Association reiterated the challenges faced in making split-second decisions, particularly when a person appears to be armed and fails to follow commands.

"Officers receive countless hours of training to resolve emergency and dangerous situations without having to resort to taking someone's life. That is a massive responsibility that weighs heavily on each officer — in Vallejo and across the Nation," the union said in a statement in February, adding, "It is unreasonable to believe police officers have the skills to shoot someone in the arm or shoot the gun out of their hand. This is real life, not television. Maybe more importantly, we cannot be asked to wait to see if the subject is going to shoot first and hope they miss, potentially injuring or killing an innocent citizen."

Walker said that even if an officer's actions are determined by a department or prosecutors to be justified in case after case, that shouldn't dissuade a reexamination of training and policies for how to best preserve life. From 2010 to 2018, 13 officers in Vallejo were involved in at least two shootings each, according to police records.

"There's clearly something wrong here," Walker said.

The city in 2013 worked with federal mediators from the Justice Department's Community Relations Service to ease tension between residents and the police department after officers fatally shot a man who had a pellet gun inside of his car. That partnership led to a community relations section being formed within the department.

But Gennaco, the former federal prosecutor, said it remains incumbent on a city's leaders and community members to be vocal if they want accountability, an active citizen advisory board or an outside monitor for police.

Such an undertaking can be challenging under the Trump administration.

In 2017, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions rolled back Obama-era efforts to investigate police departments accused of a "pattern or practice of civil rights violations. At the time, 14 police departments across the country were under Justice Department consent decrees — agreements that would enforce the overhaul of the local police. But now, new agreements are much more difficult to obtain, so states, if they are so inclined, are being forced to fill the void.

"It's a terrible step backwards," Walker said.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a Democrat, agreed last year to oversee changes within the San Francisco Police Department that were started by the Justice Department after the deadly shooting of a black man in 2015 that drew protests.

Becerra's office told NBC News that while local district attorneys handle individual incidents involving police, the state will "occasionally undertake a broader review of these agencies where our office's involvement in these matters is merited and necessary when weighing a variety of factors." The office declined to comment about Vallejo.

The city has not seen the same unrest that has unfolded in other Bay Area communities or Sacramento after questionable police shootings. There have been calls from some residents for Police Chief Bidou's resignation, and he said in March that he would be stepping down after more than four years on the job. City officials, however, said his retirement was already in the works and voted unanimously Tuesday night to allow him to remain as interim chief until a successor is found.

Mayor Sampayan, who told the City Council he has been fielding visits from "people coming into my office to talk to me about what they see is a police department that's running amok," said before the vote that the city will conduct a national search for a new chief with the help of the community.

But while residents have given Bidou credit for increasing training programs for officers and community outreach initiatives, including "Coffee with the Cops" and basketball for children, there remain setbacks for some.

Brenda Crawford, 72, who works as an advocate for elderly residents in the city, said she was driving last year when she accidentally turned down a public street that had been closed for a film set. The young officer who stopped her was "red-faced" and irate, and threatened to give her a $500 ticket, she said.

Such interactions undercut the goodwill of other officers, Crawford said.

"I love Vallejo, and I don't want to indict all police officers," she said. "But people have a feeling that these rogue ones — who can be so absolutely brutal — are the best Vallejo can get."

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com.



Photo Credit: Brock Stoneham / NBC News
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Man Stole $200 Worth of Candy, Tried to Punch, Bite Clerk: Hamden Police

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Police have arrested a man who is accused of trying to punch and bite the manager of the Save-A-Lot Food Store in Hamden while stealing $200 worth of candy. 

Police said they responded to the Save-A-Lot Food Store at 1125 Dixwell Ave. around 6 p.m. on Sunday, April 7 to investigate reports of a shoplifting. 

Police identified the suspect as 48-year-old Angel Vega, of New Haven. They said the store manager confronted him when he tried to leave the store with $200 worth of candy and Vega tried to punch and bite the store manager. 

Vega and the store manager fell to the ground during the struggle, police said. 

Vega walked away from the store and police arrested him Vega in the vicinity of Dixwell Avenue. 

Vega was charged with robbery in the third degree and larceny in the sixth degree. 

He was held at police headquarters on a $10,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in Meriden Superior Court on April 18. 



Photo Credit: Hamden Police

Route 9 North in Chester Closed: State Police

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Route 9 North is closed in Chester and is expected to be closed for hours, according to state police.

A Tweet from state police says the road is closed at exit 6 and is estimated to remain closed. They are asking driver to avoid the area.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com
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