Wednesday, September 30, 2009

BANG BANG FIVE TIMES WITH COP'S GUN

Via New Haven Independent


One of the five shootings was a gun battle ... where New Haven cops exchanged gunfire with unnamed suspects ...

Police:
Cop’s Gun Used In 5 Shootings


By MELISSA BAILEY


A Waterbury cop turned himself in Wednesday on charges that he stockpiled explosives in this Westville home — and that two of his guns turned up in criminals’ hands on New Haven streets.

  • Complete Article
  • Tuesday, September 29, 2009

    New Mag, The Prospect


    Via
    Courant Refugees


    A handful of former Courant journalists have finished their first assignments for The Prospect, a new magazine for Greater Hartford engineered by The Warren Group. The Prospect is the reincarnation of the Hartford Club’ newsletter and will be mailed to about 10,000 readers in the region at no charge.

  • Complete Article
  • WATCHDOG To Courant: Bite Me And Pay


    Via
    CtNewsJunkie

    By CHRISTINE STUART

    A veteran consumer columnist, whose departure from the Hartford Courant made national news, filed a First Amendment lawsuit against his former employer Tuesday in Hartford Superior Court.

    George Gombossy, a Hartford Courant employee for 40 years, alleges in the lawsuit that he was fired Aug. 14 because he refused to go easy on the newspaper’s “major” advertisers.

  • Complete Article


  • Bed Bug Mouthpiece Tells Connecticut WATCHDOG: I Will Guide You


  • George To Whistleblowers: Write To Me


  • WATCHDOG Post On Lawsuit
  • Sunday, September 27, 2009

    Looking For Light In Litchfield Synagogue Lawsuit

    As to the legal rights of the Jewish congregation in Litchfield, federal legislative intent is clearly on its side ... Litchfield will need to show a “compelling” need to torture the congregation — and then some miserable jury or really bored judge is going to decide whether the Historic District is justified in staving off the Jewish expansion ...


    By LARRY COHEN


    Everyone knows that planning and zoning commissions and historic district commissions are tools of the Devil.


    Consider the ongoing Litchfield land-use street theater, directed by Satan himself, in which a Jewish congregation is attempting to plop a synagogue and house expansion in the borough’s Historic District.


    -- Cohen Photo By Chion Wolf

    The Chabad Lubavitch of Litchfield has now filed a federal suit, based on a hilariously complex and controversial Religious Land Use And Institutionalized Persons Act, which kind of, sort of, maybe limits the powers of government to inhibit the practice of religion, in a land-regulating kind of way.

    Much more entertaining than the legal record that this case creates is the subtext. The lurking suspicion is that the official resistance is a nuanced form of anti-Semitism — aimed not only at Jews in general, but, in this case, an Orthodox branch of the religion that in dress and other, more subtle, ways, won’t be mistaken for Presbyterians on the way to chapel.

    For Litchfield County, which has a concentration of Jews more on the order of South Dakota than West Hartford, the current Litchfield case may sound vaguely familiar. It was in the 1970s that a non-traditional Jewish congregation with “sleeping quarters” dragged the town of Norfolk up to the state Supreme Court in a zoning dispute — a dispute that prompted a majority opinion suggesting that houses of worship had a “cloak of immunity” against onerous zoning rules. Ah, if only it were that simple.

    Arguing against the implication of anti-Semitism is the instinct of Litchfield to view the construction of anything new and different in the historic district as if it were to be a slaughterhouse or nuclear power plant.

    Quite aside from the current Litchfield case, towns and neighborhoods have often had a resistance to growth in the name of the Lord. Houses of worship can be noisy. Evangelical and Pentecostal churches often face resistance from neighbors, fearing that evangelical fervor will prompt joyous (and loud) noise unto the Lord. Churches don’t generate tax revenue, but often generate traffic. New Milford spent years in court battling with a family that wanted to hold “prayer meetings” in its residential neighborhood.

    As to the legal rights of the Jewish congregation in Litchfield, federal legislative intent is clearly on its side. The first version of the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act was laughed out of court by the U.S. Supreme Court, but Congress came right back with a new version that seems to pass muster. In truth, the lower courts and their appellate cousins are littered with zoning cases involving churches — and the record is sufficiently murky as to suggest the presence of a mischievous God.

    Litchfield will need to show a “compelling” need to torture the congregation — and then some miserable jury or really bored judge is going to decide whether the Historic District is justified in staving off the Jewish expansion.

    The proper strategy would be for the judge to threaten both sides with the Mighty Hand of God, and insist that the lawyers withdraw to a conference room and not come out until a settlement is reached.

    In a letter to Congregation Kahal Kadosh Yeshuat Israel, in Newport, R.I., President George Washington asked that “the father of all mercies scatter light and not darkness in our paths, and make us all…in his own due time and way, everlastingly happy.”

    The Litchfield case might not generate everlasting happiness, but all involved might pray for a little scattered light.

    Laurence D. Cohen, a former reporter, editor and member of the Hartford Courant's editorial board, has worked as an executive speechwriter at the Hartford Insurance Group and United Technologies Corp. He is a former president of the Connecticut Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, and the Connecticut Valley Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America. He is the former executive director of the Yankee Institute for Public Policy, in Hartford, and served as special assistant to former Connecticut Gov. John Rowland. He has taught at the University of Connecticut, Central Connecticut State University, Albertus Magnus College and the University of Hartford.


  • Let's Get Hysterical


  • Highlights Of Synagogue's Federal Lawsuit Against Litchfield, CT Hysterical District Commission
  • Saturday, September 26, 2009

    GABY AND THE ICEMAN, A Literary / Sports / Music Event


    -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    GABY TUNES UP FOR JOHN ICEMAN SCULLY, 9-24-09, WITH 7-TIME FORMER NATIONAL AMATEUR CHAMPION SAMMY VEGA (left) AND MIKE MACHINE GUN OLIVER, A REIGNING PROFESSIONAL FEATHERWEIGHT CHAMPION, AT THE HARTFORD CLUB. Gaby, aka Gabrielle Calvocoressi, the poet / ring enthusiast, and Iceman, the former light heavyweight contender / trainer, also got together Thursday night. They will headline a literary event including live jazz and boxing, to be scheduled on or about Jan. 15, 2010. Entry forms for the 2010 Connecticut Young Writers Competition will be distributed at the event.


    -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    GABY LETS ICEMAN KNOW WHO'S THE BOSS



    -- Photo By Bob Thiesfield
    For The Connecticut Young Writers Trust,
    Courtesy Of The Hartford Club


    SHE LETS UP, GIVING ICEMAN
    A FALSE SENSE OF SECURITY


    GABY AND THE ICEMAN IN THE RING
    site to be announced;
    lineup subject to change...



    poet gaby calvocoressi and iceman john scully
    reading from their works


    ... to be scheduled on or about Jan. 15, 2010.
    Entry forms for the 2010
    Connecticut Young Writers Competition
    will be distributed at the event ...

    -as part of the day / evening
    ceu credits for teachers
    via workshop
    hosted by sports writer george kimball


    -more poets and writers including

    kate rushin
    franz douskey
    chandra prasad
    richard esposito
    shouhua qi
    david cappella
    binnie klein
    amy ma*
    bob leuci**

    Amy Ma,
    the 2001 State Poetry Champion,
    has served as a keynote speaker
    for two annual celebrations.
    A Wesleyan graduate, she earned
    as Masters degree at Central Connecticut State University
    and now teaches for the Hartford Public Schools.


    Treat Williams played him in Prince Of The City. Bob Leuci wrote the real story in All The Centurions. Bob is now an accomplished novelist, teaching at the University of Rhode Island.


    JEN ALLEN BIG BAND with vocalists


    -boxing exhibition
    coordinated by
    iceman,
    sammy vega,
    mike mike oliver
    to conclude the evening.


    co-masters of ceremonies, Rand Cooper, Ravi Shankar

  • Drunken Boat / Ravi Shankar


  • Rand Cooper's Dad On A Lark Blog



  • poster to be designed and developed
    by Rob Denley of Raj Patel's
  • Business Center


  • Connecticut Young Writers Trust

  • * Fax- 860-567-9119
    * tntcomm82@cs.com

    ANDY THIBAULT
    Chairman
    Cell: 860-690-0211
  • YOUNG WRITERS WEB PAGE



  • New Poetry From Gaby


  • Iceman John Scully


  • Mike Mike Oliver Blast From The Past


  • George Kimball


  • Young Writers Bash May 09 @ Twain House


  • [Part Two] - More Young Writers Twain House Photos By Chion Wolf - - plus, Video Links


  • As Seen In Connecticut Magazine, August 09, page 15: Emma Lowneberg, State Prose Champion


  • Jen Allen Big Band Video 09


  • Jen Allen Big Band Video 08


  • Kate Rushin's Black Back-Ups


  • Rich Esposito's Bomb Squad


  • Bomb Squad Website


  • Chandra Prasad


  • Franz Douskey


  • ShouhuaQi


  • David Cappella


  • Binnie Klein


  • WPKN


  • Binnie Klein Radio Show On Facebook


  • Hartford Club Magazine


  • GABY AND THE ICEMAN

    Gabrielle Calvocoressi was born in Central Connecticut.

    She has been the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including a Stegner fellowship in Poetry, a Jones Lectureship in Poetry at Stanford University and a Rona Jaffe Woman Writers' Award.

    Her poem "Circus Fire, 1944" received The Paris Reviews' Bernard F. Conners Prize. Her first collection, The Last Time I Saw Amelia Earhart was published by Persea Books in 2005 and won the Connecticut Book Award. It was shortlisted for the Northern California Book Award .

    Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous journals and online publications including; The Paris Review, The New England Review, Gulf Coast, The Cool Justice Report and Guernica. A new multi-media piece is forthcoming online on The Owls.

    She lives in Los Angeles and teaches in the MFA program at California College of Arts in San Francisco and in the MFA Program in Creative Writing at Warren Wilson College. She is visiting professor at Bennington College this fall [2009]. Her second collection, Apocalyptic Swing is out now from Persea Books.

    "Iceman" John Scully's BIOFILE
    By Scoop Malinowski


    Status: Boxing trainer, ESPN Classic TV commentator, author and former three-time world title challenger.

    Ht: 5-11 Wt: 185

    DOB: July 28, 1967 In: Hartford, CT

    Childhood Heroes: Lynn Swann, Fred Lynn, Muhammad Ali.

    Nicknames: Iceman, Jon-Jon, Superman.

    Hobbies/Interests: Writing, reading, working with amateur boxers, traveling. Playing with my daughter, Sarita

    Favorite Movies: Shawshank Redemption, Remember The Titans, Mississippi Burning, Top Gun, the original Rocky, Seven, Stripes. Meatballs. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, the original Miami Vice movie (back in the early 80's, the one when Crockett and Tubbs first met). "Notebook" (that's right, the girly movie).

    Childhood Dreams: To play center field for the Boston Red Sox like my favorite player, Fred Lynn.

    Musical Tastes: R&B, some classic rock, little bit of rap. Elvis Presley, Sinatra, Bob Seger, Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, Lionel Richie, Chubby Checker, Jackie Wilson, Brian McKnight, Michael Jackson (You do, too. Stop lying!), Phil Collins, Teddy Pendergrass. All kinds. R.E.M. ("Everybody Hurts" and "Man On The Moon").

    Favorite TV shows: TAXI, Cheers, Hill St. Blues, Miami Vice, MASH, In Living Color, MAD-TV, Saturday Night Live (in the early 80's).

    Early Boxing Memory: Boxing other kids in town in Jr. High School in a little boxing league we set up. We called it the WBC (Windsor Boxing Council).

    First Job: Working at a well known hot dog stand in Windsor called The Ranch House. Rick Mahorn used to come in sometimes when he was still in the NBA.

    First Car: 1976 Red Chevy Nova that I bought from my aunt in 1985 for $500. Made the money cutting lawns in the summer and selling decorative holiday candles door to door at Christmas.

    Favorite Meal: Steak, garlic mashed potatoes and cheesecake for dessert. At one time it used to be a whole cheese pizza from the Pizza Palace in Windsor.

    Favorite Breakfast Cereal: Lucky Charms and Honey Nut Cheerios. Special K when I am training.

    Pre-fight Feeling: Depends on how training camp went. If it went great and I am ready... I feel like I can fight anybody in the world. If there were problems and there is doubt... THAT is a tough spot to be in, like walking into a dark room and you don't know what's in there and your not so sure you want to find out, either.

    Greatest Career Moments: Defeating World Amateur Champion Darin Allen to qualify for the 1988 Olympic Trials. Losing a close and controversial 12-rounder to Michael Nunn (for WBO Super Middleweight title in '95). That fight proved to me that I could hang with the guys at that level.

    Most Painful Moment: At the moment when I tore the rotator cuff against Sam Ahmad. My whole shoulder, at the core, felt like it came out of its socket.

    Worst Injury: In my 1999 fight against Ahmad, in the first round, I tore the rotator cuff in my left arm. I fought the whole fight with one arm and still only lost by majority decision. It was bad to me because I know I would have defeated him soundly with two good arms.

    Funny Boxing Memories: I was fighting a guy one time later in my career and he got me on the ropes at one point and threw a huge flurry of punches at me, maybe twenty punches, and I blocked them with my gloves and arms. I was real good at blocking shots like that and it was often a thing where an opponent wouldn't even realize he wasn't landing all those shots on me until it was too late. When he was done throwing I got real close to him and whispered in his ear "You're gonna' be tired NOW" and right away he said "I know!"

    The other funny thing that stands out at me was the day after Tito and Hopkins fought. I trained at a gym called the San Juan Center so you know there was a whole lot of die-hard Tito fans there every day. One of the kids I trained at the time, Greg Cuyler, used to argue with certain guys in that gym every day about who was going to win that fight. Our gym at that time, let's just say that all the Puerto Rican guys were very dedicated to Tito and supported him fiercely and some of the arguments got ugly. You couldn't say anything about Tito without somebody getting irate over it. I went at it verbally with this one kid in particular one day when he not only told me that Tito could beat John Ruiz but he also said he would bet me his car that Tito could even beat Roy Jones, Stuff like that. After Hopkins threw down the flag that time in Puerto Rico all these guys came in the gym and they were convinced more than ever that Tito was going to demolish Hops after that.

    The day after the fight it was a subdued scene in the gym to say the least. Greg and I got these miniature American flags and met in the parking lot before walking into the gym together. We walked in and everybody knew something was coming from us. We came in without speaking a word, walked the forty yards all the way back to where the ring was. Everybody stopped what they were doing to watch as we climbed the steps to the ring apron. We ended up looking down at all these guys, like we were about to make a speech or something. Then we both put our arms up high over our heads, with the American flags in our hands, in the "X" pose that Hopkins loved to do.

    Lucky for us that all these humbled guys could take a joke

    Favorite Boxers To Watch: Muhammad Ali, Tommy Hearns, Nino LaRocca, Aaron Pryor. LaRocca was called "The Italian Ali." He was a welterweight back in the 80's that boxed a lot like Cassius Clay did against Sonny Liston. I also liked watching Tommy Hearns because not only did he put sharp, strong punches together extremely well but he was also a guy who, in his prime, could change a fight with one shot, just like that, in the blink of an eye. I admire him because he always, always came to fight as hard as he could but it did it with great skill.

    Weird Fan Encounter: I guess the one that stands out is when I was in Berlin, Germany in 1997 for the Roccigianni fight there was this German woman that showed up at the hotel who didn't speak English. She wanted me to kiss her baby or take a picture with it or something like that. She had pictures of me from the newspaper that she wanted signed. Every day she would be there at the hotel, it was like she knew where I would be and when. She showed up at the fight. She was in the dressing room hallway after the fight. She got into the post fight press conference and while I am talking to the media she is sitting right there in the crowd among them. She somehow got into our van after the fight and made it into the club/restaurant with us for the post fight party. The whole time we were there she just hung out, didn't really say too much or show any emotion and it was like she just wanted to be there around me. She even managed to get in our van afterwards to get a ride home and she even made it back to my hotel early in the morning to see me off when we were leaving for the airport! She was waving goodbye and all that and, the thing is, she spent all that time there with me, wherever I was, and I probably didn't speak more than ten words to her the whole time.

    Favorite Fights: Ali-Frazier 3, in Manila. Arguello-Pryor in Miami. The first Leonard-Hearns fight back in 1981 out in Las Vegas. I also actually loved my fight with Alphonso Bailey on USA Tuesday Night Fights, it's the only one of my fights that I have watched more than a few times because there was some very good back and forth action in it.

    Toughest Man Faced: I faced many, many equally tough guys. Tony Thornton comes to mind. Henry Maske and Graciano Roccigianni are on that list, too.

    Current Car: I drive a Honda Accord.

    Last Book Read: "The City Game" by Pete Axthelm.

    Favorite Vacation Spot: Pensacola, Florida and Las Vegas, Nevada (I LOVE that Vegas atmosphere). Disneyworld, too. I always like Disney (and the ride where you end up going down a drop and getting wet. I look forward to bringing my daughter Sarita there one day). Miami, too. Anywhere in Florida, really. I would definitely go back to Lake Tahoe, as well, if the chance came up.

    People Qualities Most Admired: Strong character and the ability to NOT follow the crowd. Honesty and people (kids especially) that can resist peer pressure, like kids that don't do drugs, smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol for example.

    "The wait in the dressing room before a boxing match - that last hour - could be enough to strip a man that never boxed before of whatever pride, desire and heart he thought he had."

    - John Scully, April 2002


  • Iceman Wikipedia
  • Thursday, September 24, 2009

    Mike Mike Oliver Blast From The Past


    2006 Photo Via
  • The Sweet Science


  • GOLDEN GLOVE
    Connecticut Magazine
    July 1998, Page 12


    Eighteen-year-old Mike Oliver of Hartford trained hard since he could walk for the moment in February when he was named best amateur boxer in New England.

    His opponent in the parochial and political arena of Golden Gloves boxing in Lowell, Mass., Bobby Jaynes, had been New England champion for six years. From the opening bell, Oliver used his speed and power to score with blistering right jabs and strong left uppercuts. Jaynes, the local favorite at the 112-pound limit, couldn’t withstand the onslaught. Oliver went home with the huge silver trophy naming him outstanding boxer of the tournament.

    “To take that trophy out of Lowell you’ve practically got to have a machine gun for protection,” says Oliver’s trainer and manager, Johnny Duke, a fixture of Hartford’s boxing scene for 55 years. According to Duke, the trophy, now displayed in Hartford’s San Juan Center, has left Lowell perhaps six times in 40 years.

    The boxing ring might be the most civilized, and certainly the most fair environment Mike Oliver has ever known. Boxing since age two – when his feet dangled off the little stool inside the ring – he has worked his way into a life of self-discipline and respect for others. With little adult supervision, he spent his kindergarten days alone, and was often on the streets till 9 or 10 at night. “He could handle himself, he would cuss people out – he was not afraid of nobody,” Duke says.

    Later, Oliver lived in an apartment with 30 people in Hartford’s tough Bellevue Square neighborhood, where he was ambushed once with a hammer to the back of the head. He had to zealously guard the cereal Duke bought for him.

    “When Mike was growing up,” recalls light heavyweight pro John “Iceman” Scully of Hartford, “I used to say to myself, ‘That kid, when he’s 15, 16, he’ll be in jail for sure.’ I really thought that was the way he was heading. He was rough with girls, he used to steal – he was just a rough kid beyond his years.

    “Boxing save his life,” Scully says. “I have no doubt whatsoever about that.”

    In August, Oliver, who now lives with his grandmother, will travel with Scully to the prestigious Ohio State Fair tournament, a stepping –stone for fighters like Sugar Ray Leonard, Mike Tyson and Thomas “Hit Man” Hearns. His dream is to be a contender at the 2000 Olympics in Australia.

    Oliver admits responsibility for his early troubles but says he has taken charge of his life. His world is the gym – three hours a day, seven days a week. “I’m into this game,” he says, in short staccato bursts while pounding the bag at the San Juan Center. “I used to fight with people if they started pushing me around, but now I just walk away like nothing happened. I’m different now – I used to be stupid and crazy. I would do anything. Now I know what’s right and wrong. This gives me the strength to walk away from anything.”

    -- Andy Thibault

    Cool Justice Editor’s Note: Mike Mike Oliver did not make it to Australia, but he is a successful professional boxer, trained by Iceman Scully and Sammy Vega, a seven-time amateur national champion now working as a paralegal.

  • Mike Mike Wins Featherweight Titles


  • Iceman John Scully


  • Connecticut Magazine
  • Local Web Site: Irwin leaves legacy for young writers


    2008 photo of Britta Bell of Litchfield, statewide poetry winner; with from left, Franz Douskey of the Young Writers Trust; Ben Cooper of Barkhamsted, statewide prose winner, and Jack Miller, president of Central Connecticut State University.

    Story By SUSAN PEARSALL

    “Jim Irwin’s dedication to the talents of young writers will be a legacy that lives on in all students who benefited from his generosity,” said Deborah Dove, the English department coordinator at Litchfield High School in an email. “Both Dr. James McGoldrick and I had students from Litchfield High School who became award winners in his prestigious and well known IMPAC contest.”

  • Complete Article


  • Litchfield County Times: A Notable Loss ...


  • Jim Irwin, 1936-2009, Friend Of Young Writers
  • Tuesday, September 22, 2009

    Jim Irwin, 1936-2009, Friend Of Young Writers

    NEW:
    Friends, Colleagues React;
    [following photos]




    -- Photos Courtesy of Connecticut Young Writers Trust
    Jim Irwin, right, at the Litchfield Inn several years ago with friend and colleague Franz Douskey, the poet and writer.


    Irwin founded the Young Writers Trust in 1998. Douskey, an original board member of The Trust, has also served as President of IMPAC University in Punta Gorda, FL.

    Today, the Connecticut Young Writers competition continues to affirm the work of young poets and writers while celebrating their accomplishments. The Young Writers Trust has given more than $182,000 to Connecticut’s best young writers since 1998.

    IMPAC Chairman Jim Irwin and retired Connecticut State University System Chancellor William Cibes expanded the Young Writers Program from Litchfield County to cover the entire state in 2000.

    IMPAC, a leading global productivity firm, sponsors the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, which, at 100,000 euros, is the largest in the world for a single work of fiction.

    Jim Irwin was a great friend to young writers all over the world. He was a fierce and relentless advocate for free expression.

    Within the persona of a vigilant planner and a cool strategist was a warm heart. In addition to his legacy as a literary philanthropist and advocate, there are many good deeds that will remain known only to those he helped.

    -- A.T.


    Jim Irwin at Writers Workshop with Luanne Rice, the novelist.


    Jim Irwin in 2001 photo with retired Eastern Connecticut State University Professor Bruce Clements, retired CSU System Chancellor Bill Cibes, State Poetry Champion Amy Ma and State Prose Champion Candi Deschamps.


    Jim Irwin with 2002 Hartford County Prose Champion Daniel Golden.


    Jim Irwin With 2002 State Poetry Champion Emily Madsen and Bill Cibes.


    Jim Irwin With 2001 New Haven County Poetry Champion Martha Kwasnik
    --

    Pattis, Douskey Talk About Jim Irwin

    Via
    Register Citizen


    9-23-09

    "[He] was a brilliant businessman, but more than that, he was passionate about the mind’s ability to transform the world," attorney Norman Pattis said. "His work sponsoring competitions for young writers together with his sponsorship of a major literary award were proof positive that he stood by his commitments. His loss is devastating to me. I already miss the time we spent talking about books, the world and the quirkiness of the human soul."

    "He was a staunch supporter of free speech and free expression," Franz Douskey said. Douskey, a poet and writer, serves on the board of the Young Writers Trust, which Irwin established to celebrate the works of young writers throughout the state.

    "He was an incredibly well-rounded, generous individual," Douskey said. "He cared a lot about people."
    --

    From A Parent Of A Young Writer:

    So sorry, he accomplished greatness and goodness!

    -- Evan Cooper


    “He was a powerful intellect and a very passionate man ... It was hard not to love him if you got to know him.”

    Monday, September 21, 2009

    Poetry Blog Notes Profiling Arrests

    Would what happened to Dr. Henry Louis Gates and the two professor/poets have happened had they been white in those areas?

  • Palmer Hall's Pecan Grove Press And Me



  • Pecan Grove Press


  • NY Post Story On Poet-Prof's $10M Lawsuit For NYPD False Arrest / Incarceration
  • Criticism of Obama 'Not About Race,' Says New Poll of White People

    Foreign Birth,
    Resemblance to Hitler Cited

    "It indicates that race is no longer an issue in America ... "


    By ANDY BOROWITZ
    www.borowitzreport.com
    September 21, 2009

    People who criticize President Obama do so for reasons that have "nothing to do with his race," a new poll of white people indicates.

    According to the poll, which was conducted by the University of Minnesota's Opinion Research Institute, those who take issue with the President do so because of his "questionable birth certificate," his "love of socialism," and his "Hitler-like health plan," but "not because of race."

    A significant number of Mr. Obama's critics "strongly agree" with the statement, "I don't have any problems with Obama being black, but I do have a problem with him being a socialist from Kenya who is trying to kill my grandmother."

    Professor Davis Logsdon, who conducted the survey, says that the poll is "full of good news" for Mr. Obama: "It indicates that race is no longer an issue in America, but a foreign-born president trying to institute a Nazi-slash-socialist euthanasia plan is."

    Elsewhere, Fox News host Glenn Beck called for stricter limits on the nation's IQ.

    Andy Borowitz's Books at Amazon.com

    Saturday, September 19, 2009

    NY Post Story On Poet-Prof's $10M Lawsuit For NYPD False Arrest / Incarceration

    Prof: I'll sue cops

    "There's nothing more humiliating than being falsely arrested and falsely accused on an improper warrant," said Bruce Baron, the lawyer for Shankar ...


    By Denise Buffa

    Last Updated: 9:02 AM, September 17, 2009
    Posted: 4:13 AM, September 17, 2009

    An English professor and poet-in-residence at a Connecticut college yesterday notified the city and NYPD that he intended to file a $10 million lawsuit charging he was falsely arrested in an exasperating case of mistaken identity.



    "Always a good day when you can bag a sand n- - - - -," Ravi Shankar alleged one cop said during the July 10 bust at West 34th Street and Sixth Avenue, according to a Hartford Courant op-ed piece he wrote last month.

    It was later determined that a different Ravi Shankar had an outstanding arrest warrant in Brooklyn, according to the professor's notice of claim.


    "There's nothing more humiliating than being falsely arrested and falsely accused on an improper warrant," said Bruce Baron, the lawyer for Shankar, who teaches at Central Connecticut State.

    A spokesman for the city's Law Department said the matter would be reviewed "thoroughly." The NYPD had no immediate comment.



  • NY Post


  • WAY BEYOND WRONGFUL ARREST & INCARCERATION


  • Bruce Baron Law Firm


  • Interview With Ravi


  • Driving While ... Brown: Link To NPR Segment On Shankar Case


  • Profiled Poet, Falsely Arrested & Incarcerated, Files Against NYPD
  • WAY BEYOND WRONGFUL ARREST & INCARCERATION



    a rose is a rose has left a new comment on your post "Profiled Poet, Falsely Arrested & Incarcerated, Fi...":

    you know i think a LOT of suits are frivolous, NOT this one. he was beyond wronged. i have never spent one second behind bars. i cannot even imagine how it must feel. being behind bars AND being 100% innocent AND having officers of the law and court NOT listen to one word of sanity....holy cow

    Posted by a rose is a rose to The Cool Justice Report at 1:30 AM

    AND
    another comment:

    "i hope the judge he gets for his suit does indeed 'listen'"

  • Profiled Poet, Falsely Arrested & Incarcerated, Files Against NYPD
  • Friday, September 18, 2009

    Manchester, Ct Paper Runs Free Speech Op-ed

    HEADLINE

    Avery Doninger:
    Standing up for all of us

    Editor's Note: This commentary originally appeared in The Litchfield County Times and was also published in The Torrington Register Citizen, Bristol Press, New Britain Herald and Danbury News Times.

    [click
    on
    image
    below
    ]




  • Journal Inquirer


  • Boost For Landmark Free Speech Case


  • Profiled Poet, Falsely Arrested & Incarcerated, Files Against NYPD
  • Thursday, September 17, 2009

    Let's Get Hysterical:

    Meter Primed
    For Taxpayer-Funded
    Legal $$$,$$$,$$$
    In Synagogue Lawsuit



    NEWS ITEM,
    Litchfield County Times:


    [Litchfield] First Selectman Leo Paul declined to comment. Because the town is named as a defendant, James K. Robertson of Carmody & Torrance LLP, based in Waterbury, has been retained as special counsel for the case.


    Whoa, not so fast.

    Robertson said today he had not been retained yet.

    When he actually is retained, documents detailing the retainer and fees will be public records available promptly for viewing by any person during business hours.

    Senior partners at firms like Robertson's can earn about $500 an hour. It is not unusual for them to charge $10,000 or more to say hello.

    Robertson, in a phone conversation today, would neither dispute nor affirm those numbers.


    Update 9-18-09:

    Sometimes such firms offer "discounted" rates for the municipalities of $375 an hour from a standard rate of $450 an hour or thereabouts.... Also, in lawyer talk, not retained means, "I haven't been paid yet ..." Note: the checks and invoices and other billing data are also public records.


  • Robertson


  • Cases & Background: The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act


  • UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

    CHABAD LUBAVITCH OF
    LITCHFIELD COUNTY, INC. and
    RABBI JOSEPH EISENBACH,

    Plaintiffs,

    vs.

    TOWN OF LITCHFIELD, CONNECTICUT;
    LITCHFIELD HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION;
    AND DEFENDANTS DOE ONE THROUGH TEN

    Defendants.

    SEPTEMBER 9, 2009



  • Highlights Of Synagogue's Federal Lawsuit Against Litchfield, CT Hysterical District Commission


  • Olivia Neutron Bomb Version / Theme For This Story: Let's Get Hysterical ... Let Me Hear Your Money Talk ...
  • Annie Le Suspect Followed @ Hebron Fair Last Week

    By PAUL BASS
    New Haven Independent


    A day after playing softball in New Haven and attending the Hebron Fair, the suspect in the murder of a Yale graduate student noticed the seven cops following him around. They wanted him to.

  • Complete Article


  • De Facto Arrest In Annie Le Case?
  • Wednesday, September 16, 2009

    Profiled Poet, Falsely Arrested & Incarcerated, Files Against NYPD

    ATTY BRUCE BARON FILES NOTICE TO SUE NYPD
    ON BEHALF OF PROFILING VICTIM AND CENTRAL CT STATE UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR RAVI SHANKAR


    City On Hook
    For $10 Million
    In Damages

    CLICK ON
    Documents Filed Today








  • BACKGROUND -- Blockhead Judge To Profiling Victim: `I'm Not Listening ...'





  • Arrest Warrant




  • Bruce Baron Law Firm


  • Interview With Ravi


  • Driving While ... Brown: Link To NPR Segment On Shankar Case
  • De Facto Arrest In Annie Le Case?

    Once it is determined that there is a custodial situation, a suspect's Sixth Amendment rights to counsel attach and the Miranda warnings are a necessity.

    What Is Nontestimonial Evidence?


    By RICHARD MEEHAN

    The Cool Justice Report
    www.cooljustice.blogspot.com
    Sept. 16, 2009

    EDITOR'S NOTE: Clark was released about 3 a.m. today. This column is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com


    Recent news video from the Annie Le investigation revealed police escorting Raymond Clark, described as a "person of interest," to an awaiting police vehicle Tuesday night. Despite showing all signs of being in police custody, New Haven's police chief clearly stated, later, that Clark was not under arrest. He was being removed to police headquarters to obtain relevant samples of hair and bodily fluids for testing. If cooperative he was to be released on the completion of the process.

    Clark looked every bit the part of someone being arrested-handcuffed and accompanied by a large cadre of police-but he was not. Investigators had applied for a search warrant to seize what is known as nontestimonial evidence from Clark. The term "nontestimonial" simply means that it is physical evidence, as distinguished from a statement from the subject. Since the evidence is not derived from the subject's spoken words it does not implicate his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. Even if the physical evidence obtained is incriminating the Fifth Amendment only protects against compelling someone to give a statement.

    Prior to an arrest, the police must obtain either the consent of the subject or seek judicial authority. The Fourth Amendment protects citizens from warrantless and unreasonable searches and seizures. Obtaining blood or bodily fluids and hair samples are a "search" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Taking the person into custody to obtain the samples is as well a "seizure" under that Amendment. Since most people would refuse to volunteer such samples, a search warrant is needed for the police to "seize" the person and detain him for a reasonable time to collect the items sought. A judicial finding of "probable cause" must support that warrant. Prosecutors also have the right to ask the judge to seal the supporting affidavits and warrant application up to two weeks if revealing those could jeopardize an ongoing investigation.

    If a prosecution has already commenced the prosecutor can employ a provision in the Criminal Rules of Practice to make an application to a judge to obtain nontestimonial evidence. In that instance, as well, the application must demonstrate probable cause that the evidence may be of material aid in determining whether the accused committed the crime and cannot practicably be obtained from other sources. In either instance the seizure can involve invasive means such as drawing blood.

    The warrant that permitted the "seizure" of Clark provided police an opportunity to seek to interview him while in their custody. There are prescribed rules that govern how police may conduct a custodial interrogation. The warrant in this case would only permit the police to detain Clark for as long as it takes to obtain the samples. An artful criminal lawyer may later argue that there was no reason to detain him and transport him to headquarters as the swabs and samples could as easily have been collected at his home.

    If police do question a subject under similar conditions as here, they must give that person the opportunity to leave. If he is not permitted to leave then he is in "custody" irrespective of whether it has been articulated that he is under arrest. The courts have determined that there are no talismanic words that define whether an arrest has occurred; rather, it is the surrounding circumstances that establish that. Once it is determined that there is a custodial situation a suspect's Sixth Amendment rights to counsel attach and the Miranda warnings are a necessity.

    The Constitution protects all citizens from investigative detention. That principle has been at the cornerstone of the issues surrounding the detention of suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay.

    Bridgeport attorney Richard Meehan Jr. was the lead defense counsel for former Bridgeport Mayor Joseph Ganim's corruption trial. Meehan is certified as a criminal trial specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy since 1994 and serves on the organizations Board of Examiners. He is a Charter Fellow, Litigation Counsel of America -- Trial Lawyer Honorary Society. Meehan has also obtained multi-million dollar verdicts and settlements in complex medical and dental malpractice and personal injury litigation. He is a past president of the Greater Bridgeport Bar Association and appears regularly on Court TV. His column also appears in the Sunday Norwich, CT Bulletin. Website, www.meehanlaw.com

  • Meehan law firm


  • NH Independent: Suspect In Annie Le Murder Had Fiancee


  • Ray & The Cops, 2003
  • NH Independent: Suspect In Annie Le Murder Had Fiancee

    By MELISSA BAILEY

    The target in the slaying of Yale graduate student Annie Le had something in common with the victim — he, too, was engaged.

  • Complete Article


  • News analysis: Lessons learned from Jovin’s ’99 unsolved murder


  • Cops Take DNA From Annie Le Target


  • ABC: Couple Left Apt. In A Hurry


  • It's A Homicide


  • Hartford Site Searched For Missing Yale Student
  • Tuesday, September 15, 2009

    Bed Bug Mouthpiece Tells Connecticut WATCHDOG: I Will Guide You


    Be advised that any statement we consider to be false will be followed by a suit against you personally for libel.

    Be guided accordingly.


    Marialana M. Morvillo, Esq.
    Associate General Counsel | Legal Department


  • Complete Article




  • A Stake In The Heart Of a Crippled Newspaper


  • Sponsors Supporting Connecticut WATCHDOG
  • Sunday, September 13, 2009

    Annie Le Case: It’s A Homicide

    By Paul Bass
    New Haven Independent


    Police found what they believe is the body of missing Yale med student Annie Le, ending a five-day manhunt that transfixed the nation.

  • Complete Article


  • Hartford Site Searched For Missing Yale Student
  • Hartford Site Searched For Missing Yale Student


    -- Christine Stuart Photo

    SEE NH INDY UPDATE BELOW


    EDITOR'S NOTE: This story is available for reprint courtesy of The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com

    ON THE SCENE UPDATE, 11 A.M.
    -- it's not the landfill, but rather is the waste processing facility in the south end where authorities are searching right now.


    Teams of Connecticut State Police cadaver dogs began searching a Hartford waste facility Saturday night for missing Yale grad student Annie Le.

    More than half a dozen state police vehicles were observed at the site Sunday morning.

    The Waterbury Republican-American reported about 8:30 a.m. today that federal authorities and state police canine teams were searching a landfill in Hartford for Le, who hasn't been seen since Tuesday.

    Yale distributed this
  • community message [presser expected]
  • last night.

    Although it is unclear why the FBI is involved in the case, there are several possibilities:

    * The case is very high profile;

    * It might have crossed state lines:

    * Various law enforcement agencies serve with the FBI on task forces in the New Haven office;

    * There might be connections to other cases.

  • ABC New Haven, Channel 8 Report


  • NH Indy Update


  • ABC Network News
  • Saturday, September 12, 2009

    They Could Have Fought In A Phone Booth

    Mike Mike Prevails,
    Earns New England And Eastern Boxing Association
    Junior Featherweight Titles


    PLYMOUTH, Mass. (September 11, 2009) – “Machine Gun” Mike Oliver won a hard-fought decision to capture the vacant New England and Eastern Boxing Association junior featherweight titles tonight on the “A Night To Remember” pro boxing cared, presented by Jimmy Burchfield’s Classic Entertainment and Sports, Inc., at historic Plymouth Memorial Hall.

  • Complete Article


  • Iceman John Scully Previews Upcoming Mike Mike Oliver Bout
  • Friday, September 11, 2009

    Highlights Of Synagogue's Federal Lawsuit Against Litchfield, CT Hysterical District Commission

    Editor's Note:
    Some are more equal than others ....



    HISTORY

    45. The Oliver Wolcott Library is an addition to a residential structure which is one of the most historically significant residential structures within the Historic District of the Town. It consists of a historically significant home to which is attached a substantially sized addition. The square footage of the rear addition to Wolcott's historic home is larger than the house itself, the addition extends way beyond the existing building at the south side of the structure. It is not half the size of the historic home - it is larger than the Wolcott's historic home. The Defendants approved these changes to the Wolcott's historic home.

    46. The Rose Haven home is located on North Street within the Historic District of the Town. Like Plaintiffs' Property, the Rose Haven home is an historic Deming house which also has an extensive rear addition that is much larger than the residential home structure. The Defendants approved these changes to the Rose Haven's historic home.

    47. Another originally historic home within the Historic District of the Town houses the Cramer & Anderson law firm. The Defendants approved an addition nearly doubling the size of the original historic home's structure.

    48. The Town's Hall is within the Historic District of the Town. In 2007, the Town's Hall was nearly 7,884 square feet. The Defendants approved a planned addition to the Town Hall making it nearly 20,000 square feet.

    49. Christian religious facilities within the Historic District of the Town exceed the building area to a lot size proposed by Plaintiffs' Certificate of Appropriateness.

    50. Christian religious facilities within the Historic District of the Town modified their structures in manners exceeding the modifications proposed by Plaintiffs' Certificate of Appropriateness.

    51. A Christian religious facility within the Historic District of the Town exceeds the height proposed by Plaintiffs' Certificate of Appropriateness.

    52. Plaintiffs' proposed Certificate of Appropriateness is consistent with other houses of worship within the Historic District of the Town.

    53. Plaintiffs' proposed Certificate of Appropriateness is consistent with the historical and current patterns of development within the Historic District of the Town.


    RELIEF SOUGHT

    WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray for Judgment as follows:

    On the First through Fifth Causes of Action:

    A. Declaratory judgment holding the decisions and actions of the Defendants to be unconstitutional and illegal under the United States Constitution;

    B. Annulment of those decisions and actions pursuant to the Town's Policies that violate the Plaintiffs' civil rights and permanent injunctive relief enjoining all Defendants from unconstitutionally and illegally applying the Town's Policies and laws;

    C. Declaratory judgment declaring that the Plaintiffs' use of their Property as a Temple and place of worship is permitted, subject to legitimate health and safety review;

    D. Appointment of a federal monitor to ensure that the Defendants comply with all orders of this Court by overseeing the actions of the Defendants so as to entitle the Plaintiffs to the relief awarded by the Court and to report to the Court as needed;

    E. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for Plaintiffs' monetary expenses;

    F. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for the loss of Plaintiffs' constitutional rights;

    G. Costs and expenses of this action, including a reasonable attorneys' fee award, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and other applicable law, and other taxable costs under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1920;

    H. Such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable, just, and proper;

    I. That the Court adjudge, decree, and declare the rights and other legal relations of the parties to the subject matter here in controversy, in order that such declarations shall have the force and effect of final judgment; and;

    J. That the Court retain jurisdiction of this matter for the purpose of enforcing the Court's orders.

    On the Sixth through Eighth Causes of Action:

    A. Declaratory judgment declaring that the Defendants have violated Plaintiffs' rights under RLUIPA;

    B. Annulment of those decisions and actions pursuant to the Town's Policies that violate the Plaintiffs' statutory rights under RLUIPA and permanent injunctive relief enjoining all Defendants from illegally applying the Town's Policies and laws;

    C. Declaratory judgment declaring that the Plaintiffs' use of their Property as a Temple and place of worship is permitted, subject to legitimate health and safety review;

    D. Appointment of a federal monitor to ensure that the Defendants comply with all orders of this Court by overseeing the actions of the Defendants so as to entitle the Plaintiffs to the relief awarded by the Court and to report to the Court as needed;

    E. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for Plaintiffs' monetary expenses and other losses;

    F. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for the loss of Plaintiffs' statutory rights;

    G. Costs and expenses of this action, including a reasonable attorneys' fee award, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and other applicable law, and other taxable costs under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1920;

    H. Such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable, just, and proper;

    I. That the Court adjudge, decree, and declare the rights and other legal relations of the parties to the subject matter here in controversy, in order that such declarations shall have the force and effect of final judgment; and;

    J. That the Court retain jurisdiction of this matter for the purpose of enforcing the Court's orders.

    On the Ninth and Tenth Causes of Action:

    A. Declaratory judgment declaring that the Defendants have conspired to violate, and failed to prevent a conspiracy to violate, Plaintiffs' rights protected under the United States and Connecticut Constitutions and Plaintiffs' rights protected under federal and Connecticut statutes;

    B. Appointment of a federal monitor to ensure that the Defendants comply with all orders of this Court by overseeing the actions of the Defendants so as to entitle the Plaintiffs to the relief awarded by the Court and to report to the Court as needed;

    C. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for Plaintiffs' monetary expenses and other losses;
    D. Compensatory and/or nominal damages against Defendants as the Court deems just for the loss of Plaintiffs' statutory rights;

    E. Costs and expenses of this action, including a reasonable attorneys' fee award, in accordance with 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and other applicable law, and other taxable costs under Title 28 U.S.C. § 1920;

    F. Such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable, just, and proper;

    G. That the Court adjudge, decree, and declare the rights and other legal relations of the parties to the subject matter here in controversy, in order that such declarations shall have the force and effect of final judgment; and;

    H. That the Court retain jurisdiction of this matter for the purpose of enforcing the Court's orders.

    On the Eleventh and Twelfth Causes of Action:

    A. Declaratory judgment holding the laws and actions of the Defendants to be unconstitutional and illegal under the Connecticut Constitution, and Connecticut's Religious Freedom Act;

    B. Annulment of those decisions and actions pursuant to the Town's Policies that violate the Plaintiffs' civil rights and permanent injunctive relief enjoining all Defendants from unconstitutionally and illegally applying the Town's Policies and laws;

    C. Declaratory judgment declaring that the Plaintiffs' use of their Property as a Temple and place of worship is permitted, subject to legitimate health and safety review;

    D. Appointment of a federal monitor to ensure that the Defendants comply with all orders of this Court by overseeing the actions of the Defendants so as to entitle the Plaintiffs to the relief awarded by the Court and to report to the Court as needed;

    E. An award of Plaintiffs' costs and disbursements; and

    F. Such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable, just, and proper;

    G. That the Court adjudge, decree, and declare the rights and other legal relations of the parties to the subject matter here in controversy, in order that such declarations shall have the force and effect of final judgment; and;

    H. That the Court retain jurisdiction of this matter for the purpose of enforcing the Court's orders.

    DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL

    Plaintiffs respectfully request a trial by jury of all issues so triable.


  • Quotes Of The Day


  • The Synagogue That Will Not, And Should Not, Go Away
  • Wilson Does It Again!


    Via

  • BorowitzReport


  • Wilson Shouts 'You Lie'

    After Wife Fakes Orgasm



    THIS JUST IN
    Updated With Background



    Breach of Congressional Decorum, Experts Say

    But the South Carolina congressman got a vote of support from a fellow Republican lawmaker, Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) ...


    By ANDY BOROWITZ
    www.borowitzreport.com

    Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) courted controversy again today as he reportedly shouted "You lie" during a sexual encounter in which his wife pretended to have an orgasm.

    While details of Rep. Wilson's latest outburst are sketchy at best, congressional experts say that it is totally against the decorum of the House of Representatives to speak out during a spouse's faked orgasm.

    But the South Carolina congressman got a vote of support from a fellow Republican lawmaker, Sen. John Ensign (R-NV), who told reporters, "It's so rare for a Republican politician to have sex with his own wife, we should applaud it when it happens."

    In a related story, President Obama said that Rep. Wilson's outburst during his speech Wednesday night was "productive," adding, "Joe Wilson highlighted the need for mental health care."

    Elsewhere, see Andy Borowitz live this Tuesday night in Cleveland.
  • Tickets


  • Andy Borowitz's Books at Amazon.com

    Quotes Of The Day


    "It's a very big shame — I would personally even say a disgrace — that Litchfield denied these permits for Chabad," said the Rev. Thomas Drobena, the pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Torrington.

    "Jewish-Christian relations are actually quite good out here in Litchfield County, and many of us regularly attend worship with Rabbi Eisenbach and at other synagogues.

    "Jewish symbols are absolutely not a threat to a historic district," Drobena told The Hartford Courant, "and anyone who says they are just doesn't know their history. Christians and Jews share a common heritage that's really essential to the fabric of New England."
    --

    "The defendants [the Litchfield Historic Commission] have engaged in a targeted and deliberate effort to prevent the Plaintiffs from developing the property and [using] it as a place of worship, while permitting other development within the town that is substantially similar to the modifications proposed for Plaintiff's property," Chabad Lubavitch's Hartford attorney, Kenneth R. Slater, wrote in the federal complaint. "This targeting has been based in large part on anti-Hasidic animus."


  • The Synagogue That Will Not, And Should Not, Go Away
  • Thursday, September 10, 2009

    Hans Felsendinger Public Radio Debut


    -- One Of Hans' Many Disguises ...

  • Hans' Segment Begins About 6-7 Minutes Before Conclusion



  • -- Hans In CT Last Summer


    -- Near Hans' Bat Cave, Bavarian Alps

  • Hans Covers Obama In Berlin
  • The Synagogue That Will Not, And Should Not, Go Away

    Sadly we were forced to reach out
    to the Federal government as a last resort ...

    ...The Litchfield community - Jew and Gentile - and its clergy, have been most welcoming and supportive in all our programs, and it is a shame that some elected officials have made it their mission to try to block the Synagogue, with statements from a historic commission member claiming "there is no place for a Star of David on the Litchfield Green" and a Litchfield selectman hiring her own lawyer to fight the Synagogue, and having him announce at the town meeting "the Synagogue is like a Strip Joint"


  • Statement From The Congregation





  • Discriminatory Treatment Claim In Huge Federal Lawsuit


    "The Star of David may not comply with the District."
    -- Litchfield Hysterical District
    Commission Chairman Wendy Kuhne


    Taxpayers On The Hook,
    Big Time,
    For Legal Costs, Multiple Damages
    Resulting From Official Actions


    Litchfield County Times /
    Torrington Register Citizen
    Break Story:
    Jewish Group Sues Litchfield Over A Denial


    By DOUGLAS CLEMENT

    LITCHFIELD - In a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court Wednesday, Chabad Lubavitch of Litchfield County and Rabbi Joseph Eisenbach are suing the town of Litchfield, the Historic District Commission and 10 unnamed individual defendants in connection with Chabad's rejected attempt to expand and transform property at 85 West Street into a new headquarters that would include a temple.

    The plaintiffs claim in the suit, prepared by attorney Kenneth R. Slater of Halloran & Sage LLP in Hartford, that the actions of the defendants in blocking Chabad's plans represent violations of the Jewish group's civil rights, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 (RLUIPA) and Connecticut statutes.

    In fact, Chabad and Rabbi Eisenbach allege on the part of the defendants "a pattern of religious discrimination directed at the Jewish people ... based in large part on anti-Hasidic animus ... ."

    ... One section of the lawsuit discusses the use of other nearby properties in the historic district, citing among examples the Oliver Wolcott Library, which consists of a historic home embellished by an addition done by a master of Modern architecture. "The square footage of the rear addition to Wolcott's historic home is larger than the house itself, the addition extends way beyond the existing building at the south side of the structure," the lawsuit says. "It is not half the size of the historic home - it is larger than the Wolcott's historic home. The Defendants approved these changes to the Wolcott's historic home ...

  • Litchfield County Times



  • Editor's Note: Please see the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000, aka RLUIPA.

    Note Attorneys Fees section in this federal law:


    RLUIPA is a federal statute that was passed in 2000 to provide stronger protection for religious freedom in the land-use and prison contexts.

    RLUIPA has since been asserted in dozens of lawsuits, prompting widespread media coverage and scholarly attention.


  • Full Text Of RLUIPA


  • RLUIPA Web Site




  • Torrington Paper Notes Meeting On Litchfield Synagogue, Congregation


  • You Don't Have To Be An Einstein To Figure Out What Was Going On Here


  • Halloran & Sage


  • Courthouse News Service Story


  • Litchfield Hysterical District Sets Up Court Battle