Ansonia News: Man Arrested On Numerous Charges

#Ansonia CT– On September 14, 2019 at about 9:15 A.M., the Ansonia Police Department responded to the Stop & Shop Plaza on Division Street on a report of a dispute involving weapons. Officers located and identified Kamrin Crawford, age 43, of Ansonia and Woodrow Ogman, age 33, also of Ansonia as the people involved in a dispute over a parking spot. During the argument, both Crawford and Ogman damaged each other’s cars, and there was a 14-year-old juvenile in Ogman’s car while Crawford damaged it. Ogman reported Crawford was armed with a hammer and metal pole, which he used to damage Ogman’s car and assault Ogman. Ogman suffered a possible broken hand, a laceration to his arm and an injury to his torso.

Kamrin Crawford was charged with Assault Second Degree, Risk of Injury, Criminal Mischief First Degree and Breach of Peace Second Degree. Crawford was released on a $5,000 bond with a court date of September 30, 2019 at Derby Superior Court.

Woodrow Ogman was charged with Criminal Mischief First Degree, Breach of Peace Second Degree, and Operating Without a License. Ogman was released on a $2,500 bond with a court date of September 30, 2019 at Derby Superior Court.

 

Governor Wants Food Tax Review

HARTFORD, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont announced that he received a revised policy statement from the Department of Revenue Services (DRS) updating its guidance of the recently adopted law on prepared foods sold in grocery stores in order to better reflect the intention of the legislature when it was adopted as part of the state budget earlier this year.

 

As a matter of routine practice, DRS creates policy statements like these whenever new laws the agency is responsible for enforcing are adopted so that residents and businesses can have a better understanding of how it recommends the statute be applied. Earlier this week, the governor directed DRS to review its guidance on the prepared foods law, expressing his concern that the agency’s initial interpretation of the statute exceeded the scope of the legislature’s action.

 

“The original guidance created by DRS was too broadly interpreted and not reflective of what was intended when the budget was passed. Businesses and residents depend on the guidance from these policy statements to better understand the real-world impact of legislation, and the update provided today gives a more accurate indication of how the statute on prepared foods should be applied,” Governor Lamont said. “I felt it important to act swiftly, but thoughtfully and thoroughly to ensure that what was enacted was implemented.”

 

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