2022-10-28@10:57pm–#Bridgeport CT– Report of a pedestrian struck at Frank and Main Street.
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2022-10-28@10:57pm–#Bridgeport CT– Report of a pedestrian struck at Frank and Main Street.
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2022-10-28@8:49pm–#Bridgeport CT– Report of an assault in the 200 block of Peqonnick Street. The victim was bleeding from the head according to EMS reports. It’s been 6 days since any crimes in Ganimville according to the Bridgeport Police Twitter account.
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2022-10-28@5:05pm–#Fairfield CT — Report of a pedestrian struck on Stillson Road near Fairfield Woods Road. Fortunately the pedestrian only has a minor knee injury according to radio reports.
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Fairfield Warde High School Marketing students gave the school “pumpkin” to talk about this week! The students came together to create the Annual Warde Product Pumpkin Patch.
Students were asked to prepare and organize a marketing campaign for an existing product.
They investigated and evaluated a product’s SWOT & PEST Analysis, Marketing Mix, Marketing Segmentation, and Competitive Position using a variety of research tools and methodologies.
Using their creativity, they were challenged to transform existing ideas and knowledge into new ideas using a pumpkin and making it resemble the existing product or service.
2022-10-28@1:34pm–#Bridgeport Ct– Report of a pedestrian being struck at Vanguard and Main Street. No further details.
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2022-10-28@12:32pm–#Bridgeport CT– Report of a person assaulted at Bond and Boston Avenue. There are no further details.
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#Milford On October 28, 2022, at approximately 2:30 AM Milford Police Officers initiated a motor vehicle stop for motor vehicle violations. It was determined that the suspect vehicle was used in 2 armed carjackings in the surrounding area. The vehicle fled onto I-95 southbound, exited the highway at Exit 35, and immediately entered I-95 northbound. The suspect vehicle exited I-95 and went eastbound on Boston Post Rd until it became disabled utilizing tire deflation devices near Peck Ln. Two of the suspects, later identified as Levante Player, 20, of 285 Quinnipiac Ave in New Haven and Tyshawn Stanley, 21, of 121 Dewitt St in New Haven, attempted to flee the vehicle on foot but were apprehended. Stanley was apprehended by the police K9. A handgun was seized from the scene and was found to have one round in the chamber. Officers checked the area for any additional suspects. A Connecticut State Police Trooper located the third suspect, later identified as Kevin Wilfong-Dixon, 21, of 51 Salem St in New Haven, hiding near a dumpster near Pilgrim Furniture Store,
1755 Boston Post Rd. It was determined that Wilfong-Dixon was a parole absconder.
All parties were arrested and will appear in Milford Court on October 28, 2022.
Player and Stanley were held on a $75,000 bond and charged with:
Larceny 2nd Degree
Conspiracy to Commit Larceny 2nd Degree
Interfering with a Police Officer
Weapons in Vehicle
Conspiracy to Commit Weapons in a Motor Vehicle
Carrying Pistol Without a Permit
Conspiracy to Commit Carrying a Pistol Without a Permit
Wilfong-Dixon was held on a $100,000 bond and charged with:
Larceny 2nd Degree
Conspiracy to Commit Larceny 2nd Degree
Interfering with a Police Officer
Weapons in Vehicle
Conspiracy to Commit Weapons in a Motor Vehicle
Carrying Pistol Without a Permit
Conspiracy to Commit Carrying a Pistol Without a Permit
Engaging Police in Pursuit
2022-10-28@10:42am–#Fairfield CT– A elderly woman was injured when a closet door allegedly fell on her at Sullivan McKinney Elder Housing located at 224 Meadowbrook Road.
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(Hartford, CT) – Attorney General William Tong this week joined a coalition of 22 attorneys general in filing a friend of the court brief in Moore v. Harper, a case in which the U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether to adopt the radical “independent state legislature theory” (ISLT) and give state legislators the sole, unchecked authority to make election rules at the expense of voters and other state institutions. The coalition is supporting North Carolina, its voters, and voting-rights organizations in their challenge.
In the brief, the attorneys general argue that ISLT lacks any historical or constitutional foundation and that its adoption would invalidate a large swath of state election law that does not come from the state legislature, such as state constitutions, court decisions, and regulations. Elections would thus become unworkable and impossible to administer.
“State constitutions, state courts, and state regulators have a critically important role in defining, interpreting, and protecting voting rights. The ‘independent state legislature theory’ is a radical, unworkable ploy to inject unchecked partisanship into our elections. It cannot be allowed,” said Attorney General Tong.
The U.S. Constitution provides that a state’s legislature may set rules governing federal elections. Historically, the Supreme Court has interpreted “legislature” flexibly to include any state actor or entity who exercises lawmaking power. The Court has never questioned that a state court has the power to rule on election statutes and state constitutional provisions.
Consistent with this precedent, North Carolina’s Supreme Court interpreted its state constitution to prohibit partisan gerrymandering and struck down North Carolina’s badly gerrymandered congressional maps as violating the state constitution. At the request of the North Carolina state legislators, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to consider whether the ISLT is correct, and whether the North Carolina Supreme Court was thus without power to prohibit partisan gerrymandering. At the U.S. Supreme Court, the North Carolina state legislators are arguing that only state legislators—not other actors like the state supreme court, executives, or voters—can make election rules. ISLT is gaining traction among conservative academics and jurists, but it lacks any support in American history or precedent of the U.S. Supreme Court. The theory would unravel states’ election processes and impede election officials’ ability to administer free and orderly elections.
The attorneys general raise two main points:
• State constitutions, courts, and officials historically played an integral role in regulating federal elections: At and after the nation’s founding, states employed various institutions of state government, including their constitutions, courts, and executive officials, to set and implement the rules governing federal elections. Under the guise of originalism, ISLT calls into question what the nation’s founders themselves practiced.
• ISLT threatens states’ ability to administer free and fair federal elections: The states’ historical practice continues today. Justifying their reputation as laboratories of democracy, contemporary state governments still use different branches of their government to conduct elections. ISL threatens to wreak havoc and disrupt the states’ established elections practices.
2022-10-27@11:01pm–#Stratford CT– An employee at Walmart was hit in the face with a phone during a shoplifting incident.
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