2023-04-06@9:45am–The MGM Family Dental at 2690 East Main Street was raided by the FBI this morning. By noon agents were seen leaving with a number of boxes and computers.
Month: April 2023
Bridgeport News: Domestic Violence Turns Deadly
2023-04-06@11:30pm–#Bridgeport CT— Police are investigating a homicide at Candlelight Square at 333 Vincellette Street. I’m told it was a result of domestic violence. Police are looking for a silver sedan with New York plates that fled the scene. Detectives have arrived to begin their investigation.
Neighbors told me the only problems at this complex were parking issues, otherwise a very peaceful neighborhood.
Driver Faces Charges After Striking Vehicles In Westport Construction Zone
#Westport CT—On Tuesday, 04/04/23, at approximately 11:39 p.m., Troop G dispatch received a report of an evading motor vehicle accident in a construction zone on Interstate 95 Northbound in the area of Exit 17 in Westport. The caller reported that his vehicle had been struck and so had a truck working in a construction zone. He reported that he was now traveling northbound behind the black Honda which had allegedly evaded the scene.
A responding trooper located the Honda traveling northbound in the left lane in the area of Exit 20 and observed that it was drifting from the median into the center lane, failing to properly maintain a travel lane. The trooper initiated a motor vehicle stop prior to Exit 23 and the Honda came to a stop in the right shoulder. The trooper observed damage to the front of the Honda.
While speaking with the operator of the Honda, positively identified as Jose Ernesto Velazquez-Pastrana, DOB 02/20/1989, of Bridgeport, the trooper detected the odor of an alcoholic beverage emanating from Velazquez-Pastrana’s person. When asked, Velazquez-Pastrana verbally admitted to consuming alcohol earlier in the evening and agreed to participate in Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, which were not performed to standard.
Based upon information obtained during the on-scene investigation, Velazquez-Pastrana was taken into custody and transported to Troop G in Bridgeport, where he was processed and charged with the following:
C.G.S. 14-236Z, Failure to Maintain Lane in a Construction Zone
C.G.S. 14-227aZ, Operating a Motor Vehicle Under the Influence of Alcohol, Drugs or Both in a Construction Zone
C.G.S 14-224(b)(3)Z, Evading Responsibility in a Construction Zone
C.G.S. 14-283(e)Z, Failure to Move Over for a Non-Emergency Vehicle in a Construction Zone
Velazquez-Pastrana was later released on a $1000.00 non-surety bond and is scheduled for arraignment on 04/25/2023, at Bridgeport Superior Court.
I-95 Crash
2023-04-05@5:38pm–#Bridgeport CT–#cttraffic– A crash on I-95 southbound near exit 27. No word on injuries.
Bridgeport News: Man Shot at Trumbull Gardens
Police UPDATE: On April 4, 2023, at around 11:30 p.m., the Bridgeport Police were called to 640 Trumbull Avenue due to a gunshot detection system alert. Some people also called to report that someone had been shot at the location’s parking lot.
When the officers arrived, they found a person who was unconscious and had been shot several times. The victim was a 21-year-old man from Bridgeport, who was quickly taken to Saint Vincent’s Hospital but died shortly after midnight on April 5, 2023.
The investigation of this case is being handled by the B.P.D. Detective Bureau Homicide Squad, who are conducting interviews and pursuing leads. The B.P.D. Identification Unit is processing the crime scene.
The victim has been identified as Deron Dacosta from Bridgeport, Connecticut, and his family has been informed of his passing. The Bridgeport Police Department expresses their condolences to Deron Dacosta’s family and friends.
If anyone has any information regarding this crime, they can contact Detective Brian Coyne at 203-581-5223 or the Bridgeport Police Tips Line at 203-576-TIPS.
2023-04-05@11:41pm–#Bridgeport CT– A man was shot in the 600 block of Trumbull Avenue. The crime scene appeared to be in the parking lot area near or in a car. Two cars with open doors were not in a parking spot. Not a lot of details as this is still breaking news and detectives have just arrived to investigate.
Bridgeport News: Shots Fired Vehicle Hit
Bridgeport Police confirmed:
Today at 6:01 pm, the Bridgeport Emergency Communications Center received a notification about a car crash that took place at the intersection of Park Ave and State St. The car involved was a white pickup truck that drove away after hitting a person riding a motorcycle. A group of other motorcyclists chased the pickup truck as it fled the scene. One of the motorcyclists shot at the pickup truck when it was first noticed, and this triggered a ShotSpotter alert at Washington Ave and Lafayette Sq.
The driver of the white pickup truck later went to the police station and reported that he had been shot at. The officers confirmed that there were bullet holes in his vehicle. They are still investigating the incident at the scene. The driver of the pickup truck was not hurt, but the extent of the injuries sustained by the motorcyclist who was hit by the pickup truck is currently unknown.
This is an ongoing investigation, and more information will be provided as it becomes available.
2023-04-04@6:00pm–#Bridgeport CT– Witnesses said there were about 4 shots fired on Washington Avenue at vehicles by kids on dirtbikes. The witnesses said the white pickup was struck twice in the back windshield and had the driver not ducked he would have been hit. You can see two bullet holes in the back window. This truck drove to police headquarters on Congress Street. Another car stopped on the Lafayette Square bridge but don’t know if it was struck.
Today’s Vehicle Fie
2023-04-04@4:44pm–#Bridgeport CT– Today’s vehicle fire is a brake fire on a box truck on Lafayette Boulevard.
This news report is made possible by:
INVESTING IN AMERICA AGENDA
Connecticut State Agencies and Academics Pledge to Partner to Further the Agenda
(NEW HAVEN, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont today announced that senior members of his administration – including Chief of Staff Jonathan Dach, Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Commissioner Katie Dykes, and Office of Early Childhood Commissioner Beth Bye – and Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro met yesterday with U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen at Yale University’s Tobin Center for Economic Policy in New Haven to discuss how President Joe Biden’s “Investing in America” agenda is expanding economic opportunity and boosting productive capacity in Connecticut.
Secretary Yellen’s visit is part of the Biden administration’s “Investing in America” tour that is putting a spotlight on the historic investments from the Inflation Reduction Act, the CHIPS and Science Act, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and the American Rescue Plan Act, and how those investments are building a clean energy economy, rebuilding crumbling infrastructure, strengthening supply chains, spurring manufacturing, and creating good-paying jobs across the United States. According to the U.S. Treasury Department, states play a critical role in implementing these new investments and research universities are integral to deploying skills and talent in support of essential public policy goals.
To further these efforts, the Lamont administration and the Tobin Center announced a series of new steps that respond to Secretary Yellen’s call for states to implement inclusive and green policies and for academic economists to deploy their skills in support of state efforts.
“Here in Connecticut, we are fortunate to have leading academic researchers like those at Yale’s Tobin Center who we can partner with to ensure that the policies we are implementing are efficient, methodical, and produce the best results for the residents of our state,” Governor Lamont said. “I appreciate their willingness to partner with us, and academics at the state’s other great universities, on these efforts.”
“Secretary Yellen’s visit marks a time when Yale is making historic investments in multidisciplinary social science research,” Yale President Peter Salovey said. “I am grateful to Secretary Yellen for providing thoughtful perspectives regarding the federal administration’s economic priorities in the context of the Yale Tobin Center’s research and policy work. By convening leaders such as Secretary Yellen and working collaboratively with faculty members across the university, the Tobin Center is helping to set the national agenda and informing domestic public policy through evidence-based research.”
“Providing residents with access to high-quality childcare and early childhood education opportunities is critical to unlocking the potential of today’s workforce, as it allows parents to enter the workplace and have the peace of mind that their kids are being well cared for – and it’s also critical to the development of tomorrow’s workforce as it sets our kids up for success in school, work and life,” New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker said. “This first-of-its-kind study will help inform and empower both policymakers and parents with evidenced-based findings that help advance the priorities of childcare access, workforce participation, and workforce development in New Haven and beyond.”
The partnerships the Lamont administration and the Tobin Center announced include:
- The State of Connecticut, New Haven Public Schools, and the Tobin Center will produce a first-of-kind study on the connection between childcare access and parental workforce participation. This will be part of a broader, multi-generational, multi-jurisdictional study to provide causal evidence on how access to free public pre-K affects near-term and long-term outcomes for kids and their parents. The research will link the results of 20 years of school choice assignment lotteries data with state data on educational and labor market outcomes for parents and kids. It will also include a survey tracking how parents’ careers have evolved since their child’s participation in the choice lottery. Often called for in policy and research circles, but hard to accomplish given complexities of long-term research, the results will provide comprehensive evidence on the costs and benefits of public pre-K programming. In addition, New Haven Public Schools, with the support of Tobin Center faculty, has launched NHPS Explorer, a platform that parents can use to learn more about schools.
- Connecticut’s Medicaid program and the Tobin center are forming a new public-private partnership to identify long-run sources of cost-growth, evaluate best-practices, and optimize solutions for Connecticut residents. Together, they will create a rapid-cycle learning unit within the Medicaid program, using cutting-edge techniques and approaches to continually improve recipient outcomes and the administration of Medicaid. Faculty will engage and support state Medicaid programs and leaders’ current efforts including using administrative data and resources to accomplish key program priorities like streamlined enrollment and renewal; investigating how Medicaid interacts with other state programs (e.g., education, nutrition assistance, and workforce programs); and more efficiently deploying resources in ways that improve service and save the state money.
- Tobin Center and Yale economists announce a new initiative to further Connecticut’s ambitious efforts to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions. Although the federal government has recently made a generational investment to reduce emissions, the effectiveness of that investment now depends on successful implementation by states. Connecticut, like all states, faces complex analytical challenges around accomplishing these tasks and the preparation of our electric grid for new demands the federal government is catalyzing. The Tobin Center’s technical experts will help the state optimize its eclectic grid effectively, equitably, and affordably.
- Connecticut’s Chief Data Officer will collaborate with the Tobin Center to advance and support its nationally recognized data strategy to develop effective partnerships with researchers and higher education. The Tobin Center will help the state assess practices from peer states for practical lessons and identify actionable projects where data efforts can deliver near-term value. Tobin Center will also support the state’s efforts to engage with Connecticut’s higher education institutions to identify ways that state agencies can leverage universities’ substantial research and analytic capacities.
Distracted Driving Enforcement
The Stratford Police Department will be conducting additional enforcement patrols during the month of April as part of the national distracted driving awareness campaign. April is National Distracted Driving Awareness Month; the Connecticut Department of Transportation (CTDOT) is launching the U Drive. U Text. U Pay., high-visibility enforcement campaign to crack down on distracted driving.
The national U Drive. U Text. U Pay. campaign is a partnership with State and local law enforcement, the U.S. Department of Transportation, and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). In Connecticut in 2022, there were nearly 5,200 crashes attributed to distracted driving.
Over the past decade, distracted driving has become one of the leading causes of vehicle crashes on our nation’s roads. At any given moment across America, approximately 660,000 drivers are using or manipulating electronic devices while driving – a number that has held steady for over a decade. According to NHTSA, in 2020, the last year of available national data, more than 3,100 lives were lost in crashes involving distracted drivers. Approximately 8 percent of all fatal crashes in 2020 involved a distracted driver.
The U Drive. U Text. U Pay. campaign will increase efforts to enforce distracted-driving laws across Connecticut from April 1 to April 30, 2023, to reduce crashes and keep people safe. Connecticut Department of Transportation Commissioner Garrett Eucalitto said, “If your attention is anywhere other than the road, you are driving distracted and putting yourself and others at risk of a crash, injury, or death. Distracted drivers often do not see the risk of their behavior until it’s too late. We are
counting on every single driver on our roadways to be a part of the solution by paying attention to avoid putting everyone on the road in danger.”
Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection Commissioner James Rovella said, “Every state trooper has seen the horrible consequences of drivers not paying attention to the road. The results can be heartbreaking. A distracted driver is a menace to other drivers on the road. The sad part is that all distracted driving accidents can be avoided by simply ditching the distractions. If you must answer a text or a call,
please pull over to a safe location, such as a commuter lot or rest area.”
Connecticut law prohibits the use of any hand-held mobile electronic device while operating a motor vehicle. Drivers who are 16 or 17 years of age are prohibited from using a cell phone or mobile device at any time, even with a hands-free accessory. Violating Connecticut’s distracted-driving laws can be costly. Drivers who are ticketed are fined $200 for the first offense, $375 for the second offense, and $625 for the third and subsequent offenses.
The public is reminded of the following safety tips:
When you get behind the wheel, be an example to your family and friends by putting your phone
away. Texting and driving is not safe behavior.
If you struggle to ignore your phone notifications, activate the “Do Not Disturb” feature or put your silenced device in your vehicle’s trunk, glove box, or back seat until you arrive safely at your destination.
If you are expecting a text message or need to send one, pull over and park your car in a safe location. Once you are safely off the road and parked, it is safe to text.
Give control of your phone to your passenger. Let them respond to calls or messages.
Never engage in social media scrolling or messaging while driving.
Even when hands-free, do not stream or watch movies or videos.
If you see someone texting while driving, speak up. Tell them to stop what they are doing because it is dangerous. If someone catches you texting while driving and tells you to put your phone away, put it down.
Remember, when you get behind the wheel, U Drive. U Text. U Pay.
Bridgeport News: Police Involved Accident
#Bridgeport CT– On Saturday April 1, 2023, at approximately 9:33pm, the Bridgeport Emergency Operations Center received a radio call from Bridgeport Police Officer Bettini (Car Green 32) reporting he was struck head-on by a vehicle while traveling eastbound on Barnum Ave. The striking vehicle was a 2012 Toyota Camry traveling westbound on Barnum Ave. operated by a 42-year-old male from Stratford. Officer Bettini also reported an entrapment within the Toyota Camry and the Fire Department and AMR were dispatched and responded.
The Fire Department extracted the operator of the Toyota Camry out of the vehicle. Officer Bettini and the operator of the Toyota Camry were both transported to Bridgeport Hospital where they were treated for non-life-threatening injuries.
The Bridgeport Police Serious Crash Team arrived on scene and are in the process of investigating the crash. Anyone with any information about this accident should contact Officer Eroildo Quiles at (203) 576-7721 or utilize the Bridgeport Police Tip Line at (203) 576-TIPS.
