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'Making a Murderer': Attorneys for Dassey Ask for Clemency

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NOTE: Attorneys for Dassey are expected to speak live in Madison about the clemency effort. Watch live in the player above. 

Attorneys for "Making a Murderer" subject Brendan Dassey have filed a petition for clemency in his case, asking the governor of Wisconsin to pardon or commute his sentence "on the basis of actual innocence and his extreme sentence." 

(Read the full petition below)

Dassey is currently serving a life sentence after being convicted of first-degree homicide, second-degree sexual assault and mutilation of a corpse following the 2005 murder of photographer Teresa Halbach. His uncle, Steven Avery, is also serving a life sentence for the crime.

Attorneys Laura Nirider and Steven Drizin with the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University argued Dassey was a 16-year-old high school "special education student with no criminal history" at the time of his confession to the crime. He has an IQ of 74, and a speech-language function in the bottom percentile, they said. 

"After undergoing four police interrogations in 48 hours, he found himself charged with involvement in one of the highest-profile homicides in Wisconsin history – and, subsequently, sentenced to life in prison – based on a videotaped confession about which state and federal judges, national police authorities, prosecutorial groups, and psychological experts have since expressed the gravest doubts," they wrote in their petition. "Indeed, his confession is disproven by the physical evidence found at the crime scene, including DNA. The confession is also marked by Brendan’s utter inability to describe accurately the method by which Ms. Halbach had been killed until he was told by police that she had been shot in the head. And it is punctuated by Brendan’s staggeringly guileless requests to go back to school even after agreeing to confess to murder." 

The petition to Gov. Tony Evers is the latest attempt at clearing Dassey in the case, which was profiled on the Netflix docu-series "Making a Murderer." 

The series followed Avery and Dassey as they try to overturn their convictions. Avery had argued that his conviction was based on planted evidence and false testimony.

The series spawned conjecture about the pair's innocence, but those who worked on the cases accused the filmmakers of leaving out key pieces of evidence and presenting a biased view of what happened.

Previously, a federal judge in Milwaukee overturned Dassey's conviction, but several legal proceedings later, an appeals court kept Dassey behind bars and the Supreme Court declined to weigh in on the controversial case. 

"Like no other case in this State, and indeed few around the globe, the case of Brendan Dassey cries out for relief. Seeking clemency from the Governor is now one of the last remaining legal options available to him," the 26-page  petition filed Wednesday reads.

In a press conference Wednesday, attorneys, joined by a large group of experts and advocates, described the many issues they saw in Dassey's confession.

"From the first interrogation through the last these investigators told Brendan they were not cops - they were more like father figures or friends," Drizin said. "They threatened him by telling him that the district attorney’s office was ready to charge him with a crime or a cover-up of a crime."

They argued the confession was coerced. 

"He actually believed that he would be set free if he just told police what they wanted to hear," Drizin said, adding "true confessors don’t need help with their narratives." 

Earlier this year, Avery won a motion to appeal his case and have it re-examined by a Wisconsin court. 

Since then, a reward has been offered for information on the case and a convicted murderer behind bars wrote a handwritten confession (read it here) that attorneys believe was simply an attempt to get money. 

Both Avery and Dassey are still fighting for freedom. 



Photo Credit: Morry Gash/AP
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How to Get to TF Green Airport During Bradley Closure

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Bradley Airport is closed after a vintage World War II era B17 plane crashed and flights that were supposed to land at the airport in Windsor Locks are being diverted to T.F. Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island. The flights will be diverted until at least 1 p.m. 

How to Get to TF Green Airport in Rhode Island: 

If you are picking up a passenger who were supposed to land at Bradley, here is how to get to Green Airport: 

From Southern Rhode Island and Connecticut, take Interstate 95 North to Exit 13. 

From Worcester, take MA-146 South which becomes RI-146 South. Take RI I-295 S to Exit 3A, RI-37 East to I-95 South and take Exit 13 

Approximate Travel Times

From New Haven

Travel time approximately: 109 minutes

Travel distance: 96 miles

From New London:

Travel time approximately: 59 minutes

Travel distance: 50 miles

From Worcester

Travel time approximately: 73 minutes

Travel distance: 51 miles

The Federal Aviation Administration said a vintage B17 aircraft crashed at the end of Runway 6 while attempting to land. Officials said the plane slid off the runway during landing. 

The plane involved is a Collings Foundation World War II aircraft, according to the airport. It's unclear how many people were on board the plane. 

Officials from Hartford Hospital said they are getting at least six patients. One was flown via LifeStar. 



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Pedestrian Stuck on Route 9 South in Berlin

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Route 9 South was closed at exit 23 in Berlin after a car hit a pedestrian Wednesday after a pedestrian was struck on Wednesday morning.

Connecticut State Police said the person was hit around 10:38 a.m. and the C.A.R.S. unit was called to the scene. The person's condition was not immediately clear.

State police urge drivers to seek alternate routes.

No other details were immediately available. 



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Windsor Issues Health Advisory After B-17 Plane Crash at Bradley

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The town of Windsor has issued a health advisory about the possibility of firefighting foam getting into the Farmington River after the plane crash at Bradley Airport.

A health advisory on the town of Windsor website says the state Department of Public Health as well as the town are alerting the public to a potential discharge of firefighting foam and advise people not to come into contact with foam they may encounter on the Farmington River or the river banks. They are also urging people not to take fish from the river.

The town is also warning people not to come into contact with any foam that might come from storm drains, manholes or catch basins.

This advisory is in effect while officials evaluate the potential impact to the watershed. 

Simsbury Firefighters Among Injured After B-17 Plane Crash at Bradley Airport

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Multiple people are dead and at least 14 people, including two Simsbury firefighters, have been taken to hospitals after a vintage B-17 plane crashed Wednesday morning at Bradley International Airport in Connecticut.

Among the 14 people injured are two members of the Simsbury Fire Department, who officials from the fire department said they are being treated.

One of the firefighters has been working with the department for more than 15 years while the other has been with the fire department for a little over five years.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the plane, a vintage B-17 aircraft, crashed at the end of Runway 6 around 10 a.m. while attempting to land around five minutes after take-off.

Windsor Locks First Selectman Chris Kervick said 13 people were on the plane, including 10 passengers and three crew members, according to.

One of the injured people was at the de-icing facility.

Multiple fatalities occurred but the number of deaths has not been confirmed, according to Commissioner James Rovella of the Department of Emergency Service and Public Protection.

The identities of the deceased are not yet known.

"Victims are very difficult to identify, we don't want to make a mistake," Rovella said.

Patients went to three different hospitals and at least six patients taken to Hartford Hospital, including one via Lifestar and five by ambulance, the hospital said.

Three of those patients were critical at the hospital, which is a Level 1 trauma center. Two patients at Hartford Hospital are being taken to a burn unit at Bridgeport Hospital.

Hartford Hospital says family members can call (860) 972-9166 for information on patients injured in the plane crash at Bradley Airport. They can also report to Taylor Conference Room at Hartford Hospital’s cancer center.

Patients from the plane crash were also taken to Saint Francis Hospital.

"We received a mass casualty alert following the plane crash that took place near Bradley International Airport this morning. As a Level 1 Trauma Center, Saint Francis Hospital department has deployed all the necessary preparations in order to be ready to receive any number of patients" said Dr. Steven Wolf, Emergency Department Chair at Saint Francis Hospital.

"Right now, my heart goes out to the families that are waiting," Gov. Ned Lamont said during a news conference Wednesday afternoon. "Remember these are husbands and wives and sisters and brothers, all part of our Connecticut family."

Sen. Richard Blumenthal released a statement: "Our hearts go out to the loved ones of the victims. They and the public deserve to know the facts and causes of this tragic crash. I am calling for an immediate National Transportation Safety Board investigation so we can get to the bottom of what happened and prevent future tragedies. The NTSB should be on the scene as soon as possible, with assistance from other agencies like the FAA."

According to NTSB Aviation Accident Data, the same plane was involved in a crash on Aug. 23, 1987 in Beaver Falls, Penn. In that incident, one serious injury was reported and two minor injuries occurred. The damage to the aircraft at the time was determined to be "substantial."

This plane is one of 18 actively flying in the United States, Blumenthal said.

Connecticut State Police said any immediate family members looking for information on the plane crash can call the CSP Message Center at 860-685-8190.

This plane is one of 18 actively flying in the United States, Blumenthal said.



Photo Credit: D McDonald

New Haven School Board to End Superintendent's Contract: Source

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The New Haven Board of Education has agreed to terminate superintendent Dr. Carol Birks, according to a source with knowledge of Wednesday's planned meeting.

The source said the board reached an agreement with Birks for her exit, effective Wednesday. The source said Birks will not be formally “voted out.”

An interim superintendent has already been selected and will be named Wednesday.

The terms of the separation will be discussed at Wednesday’s board meeting.

Birks started with the district in 2018.

No other details were immediately available.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Witnesses Describe Moments Before Plane Crashed at Bradley Airport

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Seven people are dead and eight others injured a vintage plane crashed Wednesday morning at Bradley International Airport. Witnesses who saw and heard the moments leading up to the crash described the horrifying experience. 

"Minding my own business, waiting to get a load next thing I hear a plane, the engine was kind of rough, next thing I look and see the plane going down wind, turning pace on Runway 15,” Manny Rolon said.

Rolon said he never imagined being so close to a plane crash.

“Being a student pilot myself, I know when an engine sounds rough, so there was something maybe one of the engines and next thing I know unfortunately the plane,” he said.

The pilot-in-training said he watched as the plane began descending near one of the airport runways.

“ I think he was flying about 800 feet,” he said. "There were problems, there were really problems, you know because the engine was sounding rough."

Linda McGrath said she was gearing up for another day at her food stand when she saw the B-17 bomber getting closer to the ground.

"I heard it, I wanted to take a picture of it, I grabbed a picture of it and that's when everything kind of happened,” she said.

"I just saw after it hit and kind of gone done really low and I saw the smoke coming from beyond the building,” she continued. "I didn't know if it had really crashed, I didn't know what had happened….I'm kind of loss of words."

McGrath said her heart is heavy to know that some families are now grieving.

"It's very heartbreaking, especially when it's for a great foundation."

The plane involved is a Collings Foundation World War II aircraft, according to Bradley International Airport. Here is what we know about the plane.

Many witnesses expressed shock that something like this could happen at what they describe as the “quiet” airport, and offered their condolences to the families.



Photo Credit: Linda McGrath

California Man Accused of Spying for China Denied Bail

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A U.S. judge has denied bail and the services of a public defender to a Bay Area man charged with carrying national security documents to officials in China.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Corley on Wednesday said Xuehua Edward Peng was a flight risk.

Corley said she wasn't satisfied that the presence of his wife and two young daughters in the Bay Area was enough to keep him from fleeing to China, where authorities say he has money, an apartment and a mistress.

The judge also told Peng to get a new attorney because he has too many assets to qualify for a free federal public defender. Peng has not entered a plea.

Prosecutors say Peng participated in anonymous drops where he left money in hotel rooms in exchange for documents on a digital card provided by a person secretly working with the FBI.



Photo Credit: United States Department of Justice

'A Direct, Toxic Chemical Injury': What Vaping Does to Lungs

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Toxic chemical burns may be behind the hundreds of vaping-linked illnesses spiking across the country, according to new images of lung tissue taken from people who got sick after vaping, NBC News reports.

The images and resulting analysis from pathologists were published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The findings provide a better understanding of what's actually happening to the lungs in these cases. They're also meant to give other doctors a frame of reference for what the vaping-related lung injuries look like under a microscope, as well as help in diagnosis.

"It looks like the kind of injury that we normally see when a person is exposed to a spilled drum of toxic chemicals at their workplace," said Dr. Brandon Larsen, an author of the study and a surgical pathologist at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona. He and his team are often called upon to examine lung tissue for a second opinion, or in cases that have perplexed other physicians.



Photo Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

DOJ Joins Trump Lawsuit Seeking to Block Release of Taxes

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The Justice Department is joining President Donald Trump in his legal battle to block the release of his tax returns to state prosecutors investigating the Trump Organization, according to court papers filed Wednesday.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance is seeking eight years of Trump's personal and corporate tax returns as part of a criminal investigation into the Trump Organization over hush money payments made to two women who have alleged affairs with Trump before he became president, NBC News reported.

The president’s lawyers filed a lawsuit in federal court late last month seeking to block the subpoena.



Photo Credit: AP

New Life Comes to Old Stanley Black & Decker Building

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Empty for decades, New Britain’s former Stanley Black & Decker manufacturing site will have new life.

As part of a $1 billion project, an energy and data center will soon take residence in buildings that have been dormant for more than 30 years.

The Energy & Innovation Park is being privately funded by EIP, LLC. Phase one construction is scheduled this month and will include 44 Connecticut-made Doosan Fuel cells. It will be the world’s largest indoor fuel cell installation, providing clean, renewable energy.

Once fully built out, in a four stage process, the data center will host computers and servers that will comprise the high-performance computing center.

“Within two or three years they’re gonna be a state of the art data facility providing digital back up for all the tech companies and finance companies throughout Connecticut and this region,” said Gov. Ned Lamont.

Lamont says this is the type of project that could lure new business to the state.

“It’s a reason other tech savvy companies are going to want to come to Connecticut because they have a facility just like this here in New Britain,” he said.

The project, estimated to be completed within five years, is expected to generate $200 million in tax revenues for Connecticut and $45 million in New Britain alone. New Britain Mayor Erin Stewart says this project will make EIP, one of the largest taxpayers in New Britain, practically overnight.

“This data center is a game changer,” said Stewart. “It is going to change the way people view Connecticut in our region. With this data center you will see Silicon Valley shift east and with that technology companies and good paying jobs will follow.”

Officials say this could create up to 3,000 jobs within the next twenty years; something New Britain residents are praising.

“I think it’s great,” said New Britain’s Jessica Sierra. “We need anything that we can get in this city to bring some value. Bring some jobs to the people that are living here.”



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Where 2020 Democrats Stand on Gun Safety

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Nine candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary are in Las Vegas on Wednesday to talk about gun control, two years after the city saw the worst mass shooting in modern American history.

Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat elected after a gunman opened fire on the Route 91 Harvest music festival and killed 58 people, said the state was proud of what it had done after achieving that deadly distinction: It banned bump stocks, passed red flag laws that give courts the power to seize guns in emergencies and took other gun control measures.

The forum was presented by MSNBC; March for Our Lives, the student-led movement for gun control; and Giffords, the organization created by former Rep. Gabby Giffords after she was shot at a community meeting in Arizona and who appeared at the meeting to urge the attendees to fight.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders canceled his appearance after he had an emergency heart procedure for a blocked artery Tuesday night.

PETE BUTTIGIEG

Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, said he sensed a shift in power away from the National Rifle Association, which has blocked major gun control measures for decades. Its influence comes not just from its donations but also its ability to mobilize voters around a single issue. Buttigieg said that voter influence is being challenged by groups like Moms Demand Action and March for Our Lives.

He also said that young people's moral urgency is supported by their parents and their grandparents, who are cheering them on.

“And I don’t think the NRA can match that,” he said.

The country knows which laws are needed, he said: universal background checks, closing loopholes that allow those convicted of hate crimes from buying weapons, red flag laws that permit courts to order guns be confiscated from those posing a danger, a ban on assault rifles. The issue now is to get them passed, he said.

Buttigieg, who served as a lieutenant in U.S. Naval Reserves in Afghanistan, wants a nationwide standard on gun licenses though said he would support it being administered at a state level. He said he thought that mandatory buy-back programs for weapons could distract from other efforts — Americans are split in their support on such programs, according to polls — while voluntary ones had mixed results.

JULIÁN CASTRO

Julián Castro, former secretary of Housing and Urban Development under former President Barack Obama, would focus as much on regulating ammunition as weapons. He would raise $600 million to $700 million from an excise tax on ammunition and guns — money he would invest in programs to prevent gun violence — and he would make ammunition easier to trace through unique markers. He supports a voluntary buy-back program of assault weapons, not a mandatory one.

He said he believed that the idea that more gun ownership makes Americans safer — that a good guy with a gun will confront a bad guy with a gun — is beginning to wane after shootings like those at the El Paso, Texas, Walmart in August that left 22 people dead.

“That shooter knew that he was walking into a place where a lot of people were carrying and that didn’t make a difference,” he said.

After another shooting 14 hours later in Dayton, Ohio, left nine people dead, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine was met with a crowd shouting, “Do something.”

That is the message for the 2020 elections, Castro said.

CORY BOOKER

Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, and a former mayor of Newark, New Jersey, said guns used to kill in states with strong gun control programs are coming in from states with lax laws, he said. Eighty percent of gun deaths in New Jersey are a result of out-of-state weapons, according to statistics compiled by the state.

“You should not be a nominee from our party that can seriously stand in front of urban places and say, ‘I will protect you,’ if you don’t believe in gun licensing,” Booker said.

Booker supports a mandatory buyback program of assault weapons, which he would ban, but said that did not mean federal agents showing up at gun-owners doors. 

“Do not let the fearmongers dictate our policy,” he said.

Booker choked up after hearing from a mother whose 15-year-old was accidentally killed by an unsecured gun belonging to a friend’s father. He said he would support federal accountability on the safe storage of guns.

“I’m so sorry for your loss,” Booker said. “I hear these stories a lot."

ELIZABETH WARREN

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said the lack of gun control, some forms of which most Americans want, exposed the fundamental corruption in Washington, D.C. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, President Donald Trump and other Republicans are impeding Congress’ ability to pass such laws, she said, as she rejected Trump’s contention that the Democrats’ impeachment inquiry was getting in the way of legislation on gun safety.

“There is too much power in the gun industry and the gun lobby," she said. 

Ninety-three percent of Americans support universal background checks, according to a Quinnipiac University poll from August. 

Asked about her proposed cap of one gun purchase a month, she said it would prevent would-be killers from bulking up but also cautioned that the gun violence problem would need more than one piece of legislation.

“This is not going to be a one and done,” she said.

Warren likened gun violence to deaths on the highways in the 1960s. The country focused on bringing those numbers down — first with safety glass and seatbelts, then air bags and other innovations. She said she's committed to bringing the same persistence to gun deaths.

JOE BIDEN

Former Vice President Joe Biden defended his decision to suggest rather than require a licensing system. A federal registry might be possible down the line, he said, but he would not want disagreements over one to hold up other legislation.

Asked why he thought compromise with Republicans was not possible now as it has been in the past, Biden said: “Because we’ve got a president named Trump.”

He said he had beaten the NRA in the past — for example with the 1994 Brady Bill, which banned assault weapons — but acknowledged he and fellow Democrats failed to pass legislation after the murder of 20 six- and seven-year-olds and six staff members at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Democrats had lost control of the House of Representatives, he noted, and regulations that President Barack Obama did put into effect — licenses for gun sellers and increased mental health treatment, among them — were by executive order.

Now, he said, “This has gone from a cause to a movement.”

BETO O’ROURKE

Former U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke of El Paso, Texas, was adamant that a mandatory buyback program of assault weapons was the right policy and called out Buttigieg by name for not supporting one. It is the right thing to do, he said.

“The American people are with us on this issue,” he said. “It is time to lead.”

The Quinnipiac University poll at the end of August showed 46 percent to 49 percent of Americans supporting a mandatory buyback of assault weapons.

As for enforcement, he said he expected Americans to follow the law.

Young people have led progress in the United States, he said, integrating lunch counters in Greensboro, North Carolina, for example. The Parkland, Florida, students who started March for Our Lives after 17 were killed at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School are continuing that tradition. The country would be moved by the moral compass they had shown, he told one of those students, Emma Gonzalez.

AMY KLOBUCHAR

Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota said the country had witnessed a sea change in the attitudes toward gun control, among them universal background checks, that she attributed to young activists such as the March for Our Lives organizers.

“When they stood up, they were icons,” she said.

Lawmakers in Washington, D.C. have lacked the extraordinary courage that ordinary people have shown when the shootings occur, such as the El Paso mother killed while shielding her baby, she said. The 2020 presidential election is about showing that ordinary people are not going to take it anymore, she said.

Unlike some of her competitors, she would begin with a voluntary buyback program. She would focus instead on the bills passed by the House and blocked by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, including requiring background checks on all gun purchases.

ANDREW YANG

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang of New York supports banning assault weapons and high capacity magazines, but unlike the other candidates, he would enact a three-tier licensing requirement that distinguishes weapons by their power.

Yang, who has made a basic income of $1,000 a month for every adult a central part of his campaign, said the money would lessen help to reduce gun violence.

“And there are many reasons why I'm certain we should do this, but it even impacts the causes, the underlying root causes of gun violence, because if you look at the series of events that lead to gun violence, what are we talking about?” he asked. “ We're talking about the composition and stress levels in homes, in the family.”

He also would give all Americans $100 to donate to candidates or a cause, which he argued would weaken the NRA and a gun lobby that has prevented the country from treating gun violence for what it is: a public health crisis.

“When the NRA lobbyists or the gun lobby comes along and says, ‘I’m going to give you $100,000 to bury this legislation,’ you say, ‘I don't care about your $100,000.  I'm getting $1 million from the people.’ That's how we override the stranglehold,” he said. “We break the stranglehold that the NRA and the gun lobbies have over our laws.”

KAMALA HARRIS

Sen. Kamala Harris of California said the conversation about gun violence had to begin not with the criminal justice system but with the health of a community, and the resources being put into schools and mental health resources.

“Healthy communities create safe communities,” she said.

She would invest $100 billion in neighborhoods that had historically been redlined, or denied funds for mortgages typically because of race and ethnicity. Residents of those neighborhoods and of federally subsidized housing would receive grants for down-payments and closing costs so they could buy homes. Research has connected home ownership with lower crime.

Harris was a former district attorney in San Francisco and California’s attorney general.

“Growing up as a black girl in America, nobody had to teach me what was not right about the system,” she said. “And my point was, why do we always want to change the system from the outside? Let's also be on the inside.”



Photo Credit: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Serious Crash Closes State Street in Hamden

Pilot Signaled Engine Trouble Before Connecticut Crash

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The pilot behind the controls of a WWII-era bomber that crashed in Connecticut Wednesday told air traffic controllers he was experiencing a problem with one of the plane’s engines shortly after takeoff.

The issue was evident within moments, according to air traffic control transmissions, obtained from LiveATC.net and reviewed by the NBC10 Boston Investigators, which show the pilot requested permission to return to Bradley International Airport as the plane struggled to climb.

“What's the reason for coming back?” a controller asked.

“The number four engine,” the pilot replied. “We’d like to return and blow it out.”

The plane, a vintage B-17 bomber registered to the Collings Foundation of Stow, Massachusetts, was at Bradley Airport for the "Wings of Freedom Tour" sponsored by the Collings Foundation.

Records of past flights by the aircraft show the B-17 is usually in the air for 20 or 30 minutes while taking passengers on joy rides in the historic craft. But the plane was aloft for only about five minutes Wednesday before touching down again, sliding off a runway and crashing into a deicing facility at the airport, leaving at least seven people dead.

As the plane approached, air traffic controllers rerouted other aircraft and cleared Runway 6.

“You can proceed onto the downwind for Runway 6,” a controller radioed to the bomber pilot. “And you said you need an immediate landing?”

“When you get a chance, yeah,” the pilot replied.

“You can proceed however necessary for Runway 6,” the controller said.

A little more than a minute later, a dispatcher at the tower asked for an update.

“We’re getting there,” the pilot replied, trailing off into an inaudible sound.

It was apparently the last transmission captured from the pilot, who touched down less than two minutes later, sending emergency responders speeding toward the scene.

“Bradley tower to all responding vehicles no matter where you are: Proceed to the craft via the quickest way available,” a controller radioed at about 9:53 a.m.

Philip Greenspun, an aviation expert from MIT, reviewed the transmissions and thought it sounded like the plane had to land without one of its engines operating.

“But if they are flying at B-17, they need specific training before getting their certification,” Greenspun said. “Those pilots have gone through all kinds of simulations for those types of situations.”

Greenspun added that engine trouble is common at the beginning of a flight because takeoff is the most stressful time on the machinery.

Thirteen people were onboard the plane, including 10 passengers and three crew members, according to Windsor Locks First Selectman Chris Kervick.

Officials from the Simsbury Fire Department said two members of their department were on the plane and are being treated for injuries.

The FBI, FAA are on scene investigating the Bradley plane crash. The NTSB will be arriving on scene sometime Wednesday. State Police are assisting the NTSB with crash reconstruction.

Crews Responded to Truck Fire at Truck Stop in Southington

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Firefighters responded to a truck fire at a truck stop in Southington and said the fire is contained.

A tweet from the Southington Fire Department says units were responding to 1875 Meriden-Waterbury Turnpike, the T/A Truck Stop. 

They said a caller reported the truck was carrying hazardous materials.



Photo Credit: Connecticut Department of Transportation

How DJ Pauly D Helped Solve a Massachusetts Mystery

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Police were able to track down a man believed to have dumped a couch and mattress in a state park in Spencer, Massachusetts, all thanks to a ticket for a "Jersey Shore" star Pauly D concert discovered inside the couch.

The ticket was discovered by a Spencer resident so angered and upset by the furniture dumped off the side of the road in Howe State Park that he decided to do something about it. 

"I come down here all the time, it's beautiful down here," said the man, who doesn't want to be identified for fear of retaliation

He said he actually went digging through the couch cushions Monday morning to try to find something that might identify the person who dumped it here.

Amongst remote controls and pocket change, he found the crumpled up concert ticket with the suspect's name on it.

"I started laughing actually and said, 'Uh huh, actually he's going to come back and get this,'" he said.

He turned in the ticket, for a May concert at a Connecticut nightclub, to Spencer police, who were able to track the suspect down.

"He admitted it was his property, there was a question of whether he himself or a friend of his dropped it off, but in the end he went down, cleaned up his property and it was removed from Howe State Park," Spencer Police Sgt. Michael Befford said.

That 23-year-old Spencer man hasn't been charged yet, so NBC10 Boston isn't identifying him, but police say he will be summonsed to court.

"Maybe when he pays the fine he won't do it again because I'm sure the fine is going to be more than what it was if he just would have went to the dump and got rid of it in the first place," said the Spencer resident who helped identify the suspect.

It's a small victory for police and the parks, one that has been met with praise and pride throughout town.

"You can't get away with that, it's just not right," said Charlie McGrath, who saw the dumped items.

"I think that's amazing, You never know what's in your couch, so don't throw out your couch on the side of the road because you're going to get caught," Brenda Berard of Spencer said.

The owner of the couch and mattress will be charged with littering, police said.

Beyond that, they hope this discourages anyone else from dumping trash or furniture in the state park.

As for Pauly D, he's actually been successful in his second career spinning records away from the Jersey Shore. He's tied for No. 15 on the Forbes highest-paid DJs list this year.

Asher Klein contributed to this report.


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Cool and Cloudy With Passing Showers Today

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It will be cloudy, cool and damp today, with some passing showers.

It will not be a washout and any lingering rain will clear before sunrise tomorrow.

The high temperatures will be in the 50s this afternoon, but a few hill towns might stay in the 40s

We will have partly sunny skies Friday and bright sunshine by the weekend. Temperatures will stay unseasonably cool, in the low 60s.

 

 



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut
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Route 6 in Farmington Closed After Rollover Crash

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Route 6 in Farmington is closed between Spring Lane and Fairlawn Street after a rollover crash.

Police said there are no serious injuries, but wires are down.

Detours will be set up, but police urge people to avoid the area until further notice.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Rollover Closes Route 8 North in Winchester

Hartford Yard Goats Recognized by Eastern League

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The Hartford Yard Goats have been recognized by the Eastern League for two major awards and are the finalists for the awards across all of Minor League Baseball.

The Yard Goats have been named the Eastern League's top “Community Service Club” in 2019, and best “Promotional Club” for the second straight year, the team announced Thursday is a press release. The Yard Goats are a finalist for two major awards from Minor League Baseball, the prestigious John Henry Moss and Larry MacPhail Awards, according to the team.

The John Henry Moss Award is given to the club which demonstrates an outstanding, on-going commitment to charitable service, support and leadership, and the Larry MacPhail Award goes to the club that has demonstrated outstanding and creative marketing and promotional effort.

The Yard Goats could be the first ever team from the state of Connecticut to win the awards, and are one of 14 league finalists selected from 160 minor league clubs across America.

The John Henry Moss Award and the Larry MacPhail Award will be presented by Minor League Baseball in December at the 2019 Baseball Winter Meetings in San Diego, California. The John Henry Moss Award is named after the key contributor to the development of Minor League Baseball, by stressing the importance of providing quality, wholesome, family-friendly entertainment at an affordable price. The Larry MacPhail Award is named after the Hall of Fame executive, considered one of baseball's great innovators.

“Since the inception of the Hartford Yard Goats, we have made great efforts to delight our fans with in-game promotions, on-field promotions, and creative marketing and social media, along with making a difference in the community,” Yard Goats President Tim Restall said. “It is a tremendous honor to be recognized by the Eastern League and Minor League Baseball for these efforts.”

In addition to the several fan-friendly promotions, the Yard Goats have also focused on increasing outreach by continuing unique community programs such as the Young Ambassadors Program, Youth Performing Arts Program, Youth Culinary Arts Program, Fitness, Program, and Dance Team. The Yard Goats have the “Aetna Community Center” at Dunkin’ Donuts Park as a home base for these programs, which allow several high school students to receive leadership training, and to be educated on a variety of topics including personal branding, money management, good study habits, college readiness, performing on stage, and cooking. When the program concludes, a dinner is held with a graduation ceremony at the ballpark for the students and their families.

NBC Connecticut and Telemundo Connecticut are the proud media partners of the Hartford Yard Goats.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut
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