Sunday, January 30, 2011

SHORT BIOS: Police Chief, Commission Staffer At RCNewsroom Cafe FOI Classes 2-2-11



  • Registration Link For FOI Class @ The Register Citizen Newsroom Cafe, Torrington, CT


  • EDITOR'S NOTE:
    If you can't make it in person, just tune in to RegisterCitizen.Com (we'll have a link up prominently), and there you'll find a video feed of the class and a "live chat" session that will enable you to answer questions or add comments posted during the class.


  • Prior Class Info


  • UPCOMING GUESTS:

    Feb. 2, 11 a.m., South Windsor Police Chief Matthew Reed

    Feb. 2, 8 p.m., Tom Hennick of the Connecticut FOI Commission


    Matthew Reed was appointed as South Windsor's police chief on May 16, 2010.

    Chief Reed, a native of Springfield, Massachusetts, served in the United States Army as a military police traffic accident investigator at Ft. Hood, Texas from 1983 until 1986.

    He was hired as a South Windsor police officer in 1987 and served in the patrol section as a patrol officer and supervisor. Chief Reed served as the department’s youth service officer from 1989-1991 and was responsible for the implementation of the DARE program at the Timothy Edwards Middle School. After his assignment as youth service officer, Chief Reed returned to the patrol section.

    In 1993 he was assigned to the department’s administrative services section where he was designated as the department’s public information officer. While assigned to administrative services, Reed worked as aide to the Chief of Police researching and writing department policies, conducting community outreach activities and managing the department’s information technology structure. Chief Reed served as the manager of the public information and technology section until his promotion to the rank of Commander in June, 2005.

    From June 2005 until his promotion to chief, Reed was assigned as commander of the Operations Division. As division commander he was responsible for the officers on patrol, the criminal investigations unit, the school resource officer program, the police canine program, the traffic safety enforcement and investigation unit, the community service officers and the special enforcement unit.

    Chief Reed holds an Associate’s Degree in Criminal Justice from Tunxis Community College in Farmington, CT; a Bachelor’s Degree in Criminology from Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, CT and a Juris Doctor from Western New England College School of Law in Springfield, MA. Chief Reed is a Connecticut attorney, an adjunct faculty member at Manchester Community College and a certified police instructor.

    Chief Reed lives in South Windsor with his wife and five children.
    --
    Thomas Hennick is the Public Education Officer at the Freedom of Information Commission. In that role, Tom travels around the state, conducting FOI seminars and workshops, educating members of the public as well as public officials about their rights and duties under the Act. In addition, Tom is one of the principal architects of the Commission’s education initiative, which includes the Municipal Advisory Board and FOI Liaison programs. From 2001-2006 when the Legislature was in session, Tom served as the commission’s legislative liaison, testifying on proposed legislation and working with legislators on various bills. He still assists the commission’s legislative liaison during the session. Tom also spends a great deal of time on the telephone answering questions about the Act raised by the general public.

    His background is in journalism. He was a newspaper reporter and editor from 1976-2001. He worked at the Middletown Press from 1976-1982 and again from 1988-1994 where he was a reporter, news editor and sports editor. He also worked at the Naugatuck Daily News from 1982-1988 where he was Executive Editor and Assistant Publisher and at the Waterbury Republican American from 1994 to 2001 where he was the Regional Editor.

    Tom was born and raised in Naugatuck, Ct. and currently lives in Durham with his wife and three daughters. He is the chairman of the Regional School District 13 Board of Education and a member of the Nutmeg Financial MHC Board of Corporators. He is a 1972 graduate of the Taft School in Watertown, Ct. and a 1976 graduate of Brown University in Providence, R.I.

  • Sample CT FOI Letter


  • FOI Reveals Censorship Scheme, Gag Order


  • twitter@cooljustice
  • ;

    Tweet;

    Saturday, January 29, 2011

    Sample CT FOI Letter



    Joe or Mary or Whoever Citizen
    Address

    Public Servant
    Address
    Phone
    Fax
    Email

    Dear Public Servant,


    This is a formal request for prompt production of documents in accordance with the state Freedom of Information Act.

    I request copies of any and all correspondence - on paper or electronic - to and / or from town officials regarding the TOWN / CITY ISSUE.

    These documents are not exempt from disclosure. As you probably know, improper withholding of public records is punishable by a fine of up to $1,000. A denial of prompt production would result in a hearing in which subpoenas would be sought to compel appearances and the department / office holder would have to justify those actions and demonstrate what has done to comply with the law up to this point.

    By prompt, I mean immediately, unless you can demonstrate to the FOI Commission that this would interfere with the normal course of business. This information is vital to the public interest. Accordingly, I request a waiver of any and all fees.

    These records include but are not limited to: meeting minutes, memorandums, texts, phone logs and e-mails, etc.

    To amplify, this request covers any and all public records about this matter in your possession or control, regardless of where they are stored, whether in your office and office computer, home and home computer, etc.

    It is a Class A Misdemeanor CGS Sec. 1-240 to destroy a public record. Destruction of a public record is punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

    Thank you for your service.

    Sincerely,

    Joe or Mary or Whoever Citizen


  • Registration Link For FOI Class @ The Register Citizen Newsroom Cafe, Torrington, CT


  • EDITOR'S NOTE:
    If you can't make it in person, just tune in to RegisterCitizen.Com (we'll have a link up prominently), and there you'll find a video feed of the class and a "live chat" session that will enable you to answer questions or add comments posted during the class.


  • Prior Class Info


  • UPCOMING GUESTS:

    Feb. 2, 11 a.m., South Windsor Police Chief Matthew Reed

    Feb. 2, 8 p.m., Tom Hennick of the Connecticut FOI Commission


  • STORY: Register Citizen offers free class on Freedom of Information Act in Connecticut


  • FOI Reveals Censorship Scheme, Gag Order


  • CT FOI Commission Website


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • JI Scoops: Enfield, CT Censorship Conspiracy, Gag Order Documented Via FOI; also see links to CT Post, Courant columns

  • Journal Inquirer




  • Censorship Commissar Kaupin
    Conspired To Block Film Screening;
    Handcuffed Library Announces New Schedule


    Enfield mayor
    made inquiry
    about ‘Sicko’
    before issue
    raised at meeting


    By Marcus Hatfield
  • Journal Inquirer

  • Published: Friday, January 28, 2011 1:06 PM EST

    ENFIELD — Mayor Scott R. Kaupin asked why the Enfield Public Library was “getting in the middle of the debate” over the controversial film “Sicko” a day before a resident publicly asked the Town Council to cancel the library’s screening of the film, e-mails obtained by the Journal Inquirer show.

    The e-mails, which were sent between Jan. 17 and Jan. 20, were obtained from Town Manager Matthew W. Coppler through a freedom-of-information request. They show the sequence of events that led to the library’s cancellation of its planned Jan. 21 screening of “Sicko,” filmmaker Michael Moore’s 2007 Academy Award-nominated documentary about the American health care system.

    At its Jan. 18 meeting, the council asked Coppler to look into canceling the screening after several residents — all members of the Republican Town Committee — complained about the screening at the meeting. Kaupin threatened at the meeting to cut the library’s funding if it showed the film.

    The screening was part of a non-fiction film series that Library Director Henry Dutcher said focused on topics such as health care, education, and the environment.

    The first e-mail was sent by Kaupin to Dutcher and Coppler on Jan. 17, the day before the council meeting. In it Kaupin asks why the ibrary decided to show “Sicko.” Kaupin wrote that a resident contacted him to say “he is very upset that his tax dollars is being spent to support such a film and is looking for answers.

    “Why spend taxpayer dollars on such an initiative when other less controversial films could be shown?” Kaupin wrote. “What is the cost? Although I believe in freedom of speech, why do we even bother doing things like this?”

    In an e-mail to Coppler on the morning of Jan. 18, the same day as the council meeting, Dutcher noted that the library had previously shown two other Moore films “Bowling for Columbine” and “Fahrenheit 9/11.”

    Coppler wrote to the full council shortly after noon on Jan. 19, the day after the council meeting, to announce that the screening had been canceled.

    “Unfortunately, this news was not well received and a call to the State Library Commission was made that called some free speech group that called the ACLU. I don’t have a lot of details but that is what I was told,” Coppler wrote. “But the movie will not be shown as scheduled.”

    Later that afternoon, Coppler sent Dutcher an e-mail asking several questions about the film series. First, he asked why Dutcher had objected during a previous conversation to showing two movies back-to-back.

    In his response, Dutcher said that asking patrons to sit through even one film “can be a real test of fortitude.”

    “There is no way you can sit in our library seating for two in a row,” Dutcher said. “It has nothing to do with topic or counterpoint or anything else. It is pure and simply that.”

    Dutcher also told Coppler in his response that the library had been showing films for many years and noted some previous programs the library hosted.

    “Last winter, in conjunction with other town departments, we showed a series of films on bullying, including the film ‘Milk’ with a homosexual theme and no counterpoint,” Dutcher wrote. “We have had a speaker debunking global warming without counterpoint. Author Malachy McCourt was here bashing President George Bush.”

    Dutcher also said that he was “hurt” by the implication that he was showing a bias, saying he has lectured other librarians about the importance of not taking sides.

    “How can your patrons believe in your objectivity when you so obviously show your bias?” Dutcher wrote. “Of all the issues here, including the possibility of losing my job, that is the one that hurts the most. I have spent 40 years in libraries priding myself on serving all sides. Showing any film with no immediate counterpoint in no way changes that.”

    When Dutcher e-mailed Coppler just after 4 p.m. on the afternoon of Jan. 20 to ask how he should handle “the numerous media requests I am receiving,” Coppler wrote back about a half hour later.

    “Don’t speak to them,” he wrote.

    In another e-mail, from the afternoon of Jan. 21, Dutcher said Republican Town Chairwoman Mary Ann Turner had requested answers to a series of questions. Dutcher said Thursday that because he didn’t speak to Turner personally, he didn’t remember what she asked.

    When asked Thursday what she had asked, Turner said “nothing important.” She said she posed questions simply because she is a resident.

    Dutcher said this week that he and Coppler have been working on a revamped film series that will provide balanced counterpoints to the films originally picked for screening. He said the details of that plan will be announced early next week.
    --

    Enfield library
    slates ‘balanced’film series


    By Harlan Levy
  • Journal Inquirer

  • Published: Saturday, January 29, 2011 12:06 AM EST

    ENFIELD — In a revamped film series aimed at quelling the uproar over the library’s canceled showing of the controversial film “Sicko,” Library Director Henry Dutcher on Friday announced a “balanced” movie schedule for the next four months.

    The brouhaha hit a crescendo after the Town Council’s Jan. 18 meeting, when the council asked Town Manager Matthew Coppler to look into canceling the Jan. 21 screening of “Sicko” — filmmaker Michael Moore’s 2007 Academy Award-nominated documentary castigating the American health care system.

    The day after the meeting Coppler announced that the screening was canceled.

    The controversy received national publicity after the Journal Inquirer reported on it.

    The showing of “Sicko” was part of a non-fiction film series that focused on topics such as healthcare, education, and the environment.

    Dutcher and Coppler developed the new Friday film series this week.

    The new series reinstates “Sicko” but adds a film with an opposing viewpoint. Other similar pairings of films with different viewpoints will follow.

    This is the new lineup, with all films starting at 1 p.m.:

    • Feb. 11. “Sicko.” Michael Moore critiques the American health care system, focusing on the health maintenance organizations, drug companies, and members of Congress who profit from the status quo.

    • Feb. 18. “Sick and Sicker: Obamacare Canadian Style.” In interviews with doctors, patients, and journalists, filmmaker Logan Darrow Clements shows what happens when “the government becomes your doctor.”

    • March 4. “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed.” Ben Stein examines the issue of academic freedom and decides there is none in the debate over intelligent design as an alternative to Darwinism.

    • March 18. “Waiting for Superman.” Director Davis Guggenheim provides a revealing look at America’s ailing educational system.

    • April 1. “An Inconvenient Truth.” Former Vice President Al Gore argues that global warming dangers have reached crisis level and reveals efforts of interest groups trying to discredit the existence of global warming.

    • April 15. “Great Global Warming Swindle.” Director Martin Durkin argues that information supporting the global warming thesis is probably untrue, including the idea that humans cause it.

    • May 6. “Religulous.” Skeptical comedian Bill Maher interviews representatives of Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Mormonism.

    • May 20. “IMPACT: The Passion of the Christ.” The library flier bills it as a "critically acclaimed Christian documentary that uncovers all the stories that made "The Passion of the Christ" intothe most explosive movie of our time."

  • Missed Opportunity For Book Burning By Enfield, CT Town Council & Mayor Scott Kaupin …


  • Thought Police Still Logging Hours In Enfield


  • Mayor Directed Assault On Free Speech


  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!


  • The Road To A Police State Spins Through Enfield, CT


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Friday, January 28, 2011

    Workshop With Poet Ravi Shankar Feb. 10, 2011, Oliver Wolcott Library, Litchfield



    From Flarf to Cento: Using Multiple
    Sources to Find Your Voice
    A Workshop with Poet Ravi Shankar


    RESCHEDULED
    for Thursday,
    February 10th

    7:00 - 8:00 p.m.


    In this workshop, we’ll catch up to what is current in the field of contemporary poetry, taking on things like the collage-form of the cento, the ancient Japanese form of the zuihitsu and the nonsense permutations of Flarf. We’ll read some poems beforehand and work on creating our own masterpieces of literary absurdity, finding the deeper stream of meaning that runs even in chance operations.

    Ravi Shankar is Co-Director of the Creative Writing Program at Central Connecticut State University and the founding editor and Executive Director of the international online journal of the arts, Drunken Boat (www.drunkenboat.com). He has published four books and chapbooks of poems, including Seamless Matter, Voluptuous Bristle, Wanton Textiles and Instrumentality, a finalist for the 2005 Connecticut Book Awards. Along with Tina Chang and Nathalie Handal, he edited Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from Asia, the Middle East &Beyond, called, “a beautiful achievement for world literature” by Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer. He has won the Pushcart Prize and received numerous fellowships and awards, been featured in The New York Times, The Financial Times and the Chronicle of Higher Education. He is currently on the faculty of the first international MFA Program at City University of Hong Kong, and at Central Connecticut State University. Norah Jones is not among his daughters.

    Space is Limited -
    REGISTRATION
    IS
    REQUIRED


  • Registration Link


  • Oliver Wolcott Libary


  • P. 1 Poet Ravi Shankar Featured by Register Citizen


  • Drunken Boat


  • BREAKING NEWS: Poet / CCSU Prof Ravi Shankar Wins Settlement From NYC In Racial Profiling Case


  • VIDEO: Ravi Live @ Szechuan Tokyo October 2010


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Wednesday, January 26, 2011

    Missed Opportunity For Book Burning By Enfield, CT Town Council & Mayor Scott Kaupin …



    Comment @
  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!


  • The Enfield Library has a monthly non-fiction book group. One month in 2010 they read "Letter to a Christian Nation," by Sam Harris. Sam Harris is a neuro-scientist who is also an atheist. In this book, Mr. Harris refutes beliefs that form the core of fundamentalist Christianity. He has written extensively about his belief that God does not exist.

    Without getting into any debate over believers vs. nonbelievers or religion in general, my point is that this is a highly controversial subject, that was not followed up with an opposing viewpoint. In fact, I would argue this subject matter is more inflammable than Michael Moore.

    Why was there no opposition to the library offering this book for the public to read at its monthly book discussion meeting? No one went to a Town Council meeting to oppose the library offering it in its book series.

  • The Road To A Police State Spins Through Enfield, CT


  • About Films @ Public Libraries ...


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Tuesday, January 25, 2011

    About Films @ Public Libraries ...



    THIS JUST IN ...

    Here's how things work in a free society, subheading: showing a movie at a public library. Those who want to see the movie, go see the movie; those who don't want to see the movie, don't go. A nonfiction movie is a threat only to fictional characters trying to do impressions of civic leaders. But now their masks are off and we recog...nize them from another time and another place where books were burned and certain music couldn't be played, by decree of the political leaders of that time and that place.

    Just shut up and show it, so we can all move on.


  • The Road To A Police State Spins Through Enfield, CT


  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • FOI Class Notes For Wed., 1-26-11

    Announcement
    Via Register Citizen

    FREEDOM OF INFORMATION CLASS:
    morning class being held as planned, evening class postponed
    Tuesday, January 25, 2011

    TORRINGTON -- The 11 a.m. section of the Freedom of Information Act class with Andy Thibault will be held as planned tomorrow morning, and will be available either in-person at the 59 Field St. newsroom cafe, or online at RegisterCitizen.com

    The 8 p.m. section of the class has been postponed due to the impending snowstorm. The second part of the evening class will be held at 8 p.m. on Feb. 2, and the third part will be rescheduled for a later date.

  • Registration Link


  • EDITOR'S NOTE:
    If you can't make it in person, just tune in to RegisterCitizen.Com (we'll have a link up prominently), and there you'll find a video feed of the class and a "live chat" session that will enable you to answer questions or add comments posted during the class.


    What to do when lawyers lie about public records:

    File grievances. In practice, the state and federal disciplinary committees probably will not hold lying lawyers accountable -- even though this behavior is hardly consistent with the rules of professional conduct. If the disciplinary committees did hold lawyers accountable in such matters, their case loads initially would increase wildly.

    But, the filing of the complaints wake them all up a little bit.

    Also, demonstrate how the lying lawyers and the truth are complete strangers. In the following audio, then-Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission Chairman Andrew O'Keefe characterizes as "offensive" the diversion and delay by attorney Christine Chinni and former Region 10 School Superintendent Paula Schwartz when they were asked on Aug. 1, 2007 to produce write-in ballots from a stolen election.

    "With regard to this copy of a copy of an original," O'Keefe told Chinni, "That is offensive. I would never want to see a request denied on that basis."

    DOCKET

    Docket #FIC 2007-418, 421 & 458: Andy Thibault v. Paula Schwartz, Superintendent of Schools, Regional School District #10

  • Audio of this hearing, posted @ the Register Citizen


  • THE STUDENT WHO
    ACTUALLY WON THE ELECTION,
    AVERY DONINGER

    HGTV Honors ECSU Student /
    Free Speech Freedom Fighter For Community Service




    Avery Doninger was selected as the HGTV Community Crusader for the month of September. In addition to a $5,000 award and $5,000 donated to charity in her name, HGTV made this one-minute video.

  • HGTV Video


  • Avery Doninger is making a difference. After serving in AmeriCorps NCCC, Avery, who is 19, started college and immediately found a way to be of service in the community as a regular volunteer at the soup kitchen and a wintertime shelter.


  • HGTV Complete Announcement


  • Avery Doninger Clearing Rubble And Reporting From Haiti


  • Still Waiting To Hear From U.S. 2nd Circuit On Free Speech Case


  • Avery Doninger: Standing Up For All Of Us

  • --


    -- photo by Matt Derienzo, Reigster Citizen

    Jan Smolinski Returns To Class Wed., Jan. 26, 2011,
    11 a.m.,
    Following Evening Appearance Last Week


  • Chat, Documents, Audio From FOI Class Jan. 19, 2011 ...


  • One A Citizen Obtains Public Records, What's Next?

    Jan Smolinski learned via FOI how Waterbury Police did virtually nothing following a tip that her son was strangled and buried.

    The revelations led the FBI to dig several sites in recent years.

    Government and private investigators have identified a number of witnesses who could help solve the case. There is also a trail of dead bodies in this case which has not been explored sufficiently.

    Mrs. Smolinski recently followed up with the Connecticut Chief State's Attorney and the U.S. Attorney, formally requesting the empaneling of grand juries to compel witness testimony. She is still waiting to hear from Chief State's Attorney Kevin Kane and U.S. Attorney David Fine.

    The FBI investigation appears to be dormant at this time.

  • FBI launches new form to accept FOIA requests electronically


  • A private investigator, Todd Lovejoy, continues to work on the case while Mrs. Smolinski presses law enforcement and elected representatives to deliver justice.

    In class Wednesday, we'll talk about the status of the Smolinski case and strategies to obtain public records in other cases via state and federal FOI laws.



  • The Search


  • "There has been a lot that happened and we need to get the truth out ..."


  • Smolinski Missing Person / Homicide Case: FOI Decision, 4-11-07


  • UPCOMING GUESTS:

    Feb. 2, 11 a.m., South Windsor Police Chief Matthew Reed

    Feb. 2, 8 p.m., Tom Hennick of the Connecticut FOI Commission


  • STORY: Register Citizen offers free class on Freedom of Information Act in Connecticut


  • CT FOI Commission Website


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • The Road To A Police State Spins Through Enfield, CT



    Enfield, CT drew interest from around the world last week after the Manchester Journal Inquirer reported last week that the council, at its Jan. 18 meeting, pressured the library to cancel its Jan. 21 screening of "Sicko" — the second installment of the library’s nonfiction film series. Mayor Scott R. Kaupin also threatened to cut the library’s funding if the film was shown ...
    --

    Donna Smith column
    Via

  • MichaelMoore.com


  • After SiCKO, Is Your Story Next for Censorship?

    By Donna Smith
    January 25th, 2011 3:49 PM


    EDITOR'S NOTE: Donna Smith, American SiCKO, is a national single-payer healthcare advocate and community organizer with the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee

    The Enfield, CT, public library is in the midst of a controversy about whether the town managers can or should halt the public showing of Michael Moore's 2007 documentary film SiCKO about the U.S. healthcare system. Some folks are nearly up in virtual arms about the implications of this sort of censorship while still others are praising the effort as a way to make sure varied sides of controversial issues are offered up.


    The town's librarian faced the threat of losing funding for the library in the future if the film was screened. So far, final resolution to the debate on local government's authority to dictate what the library does with film or other collection materials is unresolved. Librarians across Connecticut and the nation are rightly sensitive about any attempts to censor what is available for patrons for reading, listening or viewing. But in other instances - on shared computers and web browsers in libraries, for instance - some oversight and some limitations must apply to protect those who do not wish to partake of offensive content and to protect libraries from liability related to such exposure.

    But does SICKO rise to the level in need of restriction? Is it really the film and its content or the filmmaker and his propensity for controversy that is stirring the tensions? And is dislike for the political leanings or issue positions of a filmmaker enough to warrant banning a public showing in a public building on public property if public officials don't embrace Moore's editorial positions framed in his films?

    I know most people are not neutral in their views about Michael Moore. I ask nearly every audience I speak to about that subject, and I share with them that I too had reservations about what it would mean for me to allow our story to be one of the ones shared in SiCKO. But I worried for the wrong reasons, as I was not immune to the criticism of Moore's lack of impartiality. As a small town newspaper editor, I valued trying to be as impartial as possible - and the best way to do that was to report the fact, clearly and cleanly, and allow our readers to develop their own positions.

  • Complete Article


  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!


  • In guarded responses, semi-ungagged library director sounds like a POW still being held in captivity ...

    Story In Today's

  • Journal Inquirer




  • Library head won’t discuss censorship but says ‘Sicko’ will be screened

    By Marcus Hatfield
    Journal Inquirer


    ENFIELD — Library Director Henry Dutcher on Monday said that Michael Moore’s controversial documentary "Sicko" will eventually be screened at the Enfield Public Library but postponing it for now — as some town officials wanted — was in the best interest of the library.

    Dutcher, in his first interview since Town Manager Matthew W. Coppler lifted a gag order on him, would not, however, address questions about whether the Town Council’s pressure to cancel the library’s Jan. 21 screening of "Sicko," Moore’s 2007 Academy Award-nominated documentary criticizing the American health care system, was censorship.

    Also Monday, Democratic Town Chairman Anthony DiPace said he plans to show the film in the Town Hall Council Chambers at the Democratic Town Committee meeting on Feb. 9. The screening will be open to the public, he said.

    Enfield drew interest from around the world last week after the Journal Inquirer reported Thursday that the council, at its Jan. 18 meeting, pressured the library to cancel its Jan. 21 screening of "Sicko" — the second installment of the library’s nonfiction film series. Mayor Scott R. Kaupin also threatened to cut the library’s funding if the film was shown, raising questions of whether the council had censored the library.

    The mayor asked Coppler to talk to Dutcher about canceling the film after four residents —all members of the Republican Town Committee— used the public comment portion of the council meeting to object to the screening.

    Dutcher, in an interview at the library on Monday, said he chose to "take a step back" to retool the film series at Coppler’s request because it was in the best long-term interests of the library.

    "Wednesday morning, we had a situation," Dutcher said, referring to the morning after the council meeting when he and Coppler decided to cancel the screening. "It’s how you resolve the situation, the end result."

    He said that although the episode wasn’t pretty, it provided an "amazing lesson" in how democracy works.

    "I personally think what we’ve been through has been very positive in the outcome," he said. "A lot of people say, if you see sausage made, you wouldn’t want to eat it, but then you might be deprived of something you really like. Going through this might not be something you really, really like, but the end process is something that makes us stronger. That’s a real positive thing.

    Dutcher said that because he worked exclusively with Coppler throughout this process, he did not want to answer any questions about whether he thought the council had censored him or the library, saying that he didn’t know that it was a "yes or no question."

    "I am focusing on the end result. I know someone would want me to say, ‘No, answer that question,’" he said, adding that some of the feedback he has received has been criticism that he didn’t take a stronger stand. "That’s not my province. My province is to make sure this library moves forward in the way we’ve always done. That’s my role.

    "What would I have gained simply by showing a movie on one particular date?" he asked.

    Although he wouldn’t say specifically what he would have risked by refusing to cancel the movie, he said "there was certainly a chance that the manner in which we would progress would be much more confrontational."

    Dutcher said he recognizes now that there were flaws in the film series, which was renamed "Friday Flicks." It had previously been known as "Fun Flicks."

    Dutcher said the titles for the non-fiction film series that included "Sicko" were chosen months ago and, therefore, he had no idea that Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives would push through a vote on their initiative to repeal President Barack Obama’s health care plan last week, the same week the film was to be shown.

    Dutcher said that in the past the library showed two other Moore documentaries, "Bowling for Columbine" and "Fahrenheit 9/11" without any controversy.

    He said he and his staff focused on finding award-winning or nominated films with high profiles that dealt with "hot topics" such as health care, education, and the environment. In doing so, he said, he didn’t create a balanced series.

    "We didn’t get the balance," he said. "That’s what we’re working on."

    He said he expects to have his plan ready in the next week or so, well in advance of the next council meeting on Feb. 7, which is what council member wanted.

    Finding balance is not always easy, he said. Sometimes, there are no obvious counterpoints to offer. For example, he said the library once hosted a presentation about deep-sea fishing, and he said he didn’t know what would constitute balance in that case.

    He said he has considered several films to provide balance to "Sicko." One of the titles is called "Sick and Sicker" and is a documentary critical of the health care reform law promoted last year by Obama. Although both films focus on health care, Dutcher said it isn’t clear whether they represent a balanced look at the same issue.

    He also gave the example of films about Islam, asking whether the library would have to show films about multiple religions to achieve the balance demanded by the council.

    Kaupin said Monday that balance could be achieved by showing multiple movies or by supplementing the films with speakers.

    "Sometimes maybe you can’t find balance —maybe there’s not another film that’s credible, but you can find a speaker. You can find a presentation," Kaupin said. "Invite someone in from Johnson Memorial Hospital or Hartford Hospital or St. Francis and get their impression on health care."

    Resident Kevin Fealy, in his comments at the Jan. 18 council meeting when he objected to the library’s screening of "Sicko," said that although he felt cancellation was the right approach, if the screening was to go forward, there should be an opposing viewpoint offered.

    "If we do want to see differing points of view, I would suggest films like ‘The Passion of the Christ’ and other controversial movies would also be filmed or shown and advertised for viewing in a public venue like that on the tax dollar," Fealy said.

    Dutcher said that because the film series uses materials owned by the library or on loan from other libraries there is virtually no additional cost involved.

    DiPace said he’s looking for someone to provide him with a copy of "Sicko" that he can screen for the public after the Democrats’ meeting on Feb. 9 at Town Hall.

    Republican Town Chairwoman Mary Ann Turner said Monday that she has no objection to DiPace’s plan.

    "Good for Tony. If he wants to invite me, I’ll bring the popcorn," she said.

  • Gag Tightens On Enfield, CT Library Director


  • MORE FREE SPEECH VIOLATIONS IN ENFIELD, CT ... USA??? - Not!


  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Bad Chad Dawson Stiffed In Rematch Bid?



    The 'Iceman' is baffled
    by the sanctioning bodies'
    rules following Dawson-Pascal match
    ...


    By ICEMAN JOHN SCULLY
    Via

  • BoxingNewsOnline.net


  • EDITOR'S NOTE: Iceman John Scully, the former light heavyweight contender, is a well-known and respected boxing trainer in Connecticut.

    AS a trainer it may not always be wise to be critical of the sanctioning bodies.

    I have fighters who are hopeful of getting the chance (or another chance) to compete for world championships and having their trainer be negative about these groups may be seen as naive. But I feel it is not out of line to speak up about questionable decisions.

    When WBC light-heavyweight champion Jean Pascal and challenger Bernard Hopkins fought to a hotly-contested draw it was so close that many in the sport inquired about a rematch. That was understandable – it was a highly competitive fight that saw Hopkins put on a performance worthy of a man half his age. Many thought he deserved to win or earn another crack at becoming the oldest professional champion in boxing history.

    Two words, however, seem to be more than enough to put that fight on hold: rematch clause. Because Dawson has one. He lost a decision to Jean a few months earlier in a fight that saw a return guaranteed by the terms of the contract. Case closed, right?

  • Complete Article


  • Odes To Chad The Champ


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  • Monday, January 24, 2011

    Gag Tightens On Enfield, CT Library Director

    -- Illustration by DAVE CURD

    Field Report From Feacebook Group,
    Stop the Enfield Leadership
    From Censoring our Library!


    "I stopped by the library to talk with the library director and was told that he cannot talk about this issue with anyone, not just the press .... "


  • MORE FREE SPEECH VIOLATIONS IN ENFIELD, CT ... USA??? - Not!


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Saturday, January 22, 2011

    MORE FREE SPEECH VIOLATIONS IN ENFIELD, CT ... USA??? - Not!

  • Censorship News Roundup by CT Library Association


  • FACEBOOK Page: Stop the Enfield Leadership From Censoring our Library!




  • NEW CHAPTERS
    IN THE BOOK OF STUPID
    By Enfield Mayor Scott Kaupin


    Today's
  • Journal Inquirer


  • Enfield town manager postpones future screenings of non-fiction films at library until balanced viewpoint ensured, orders library director not to speak to the media

    By Marcus Hatfield
    Journal Inquirer
    Published: Saturday, January 22, 2011 8:53 AM EST

    ENFIELD — Future installments of the Enfield Public Library’s series
    of non-fiction films about controversial issues are postponed until
    the library director creates a plan to ensure that each screening
    offers multiple sides of each issue, the town manager announced
    Friday.

    Town Manager Matthew W. Coppler has also ordered Library Director Henry Dutcher not to speak to the media.

    The library on Wednesday canceled a Friday screening of filmmaker Michael Moore’s controversial documentary “Sicko” under pressure from most Town Council members and the mayor, who threatened to cut the library’s funding if the film was shown.

    Mayor Scott R. Kaupin asked Coppler to talk to Dutcher about canceling the film after several residents complained at a council meeting Tuesday about the scheduled screening.

    Coppler said the film series had been advertised as a “balanced approach to hot topics,” and said that he and the library staff failed to do “everything we could do to meet the expectations that council had of us, and we’re correcting that.”

    The film series would be postponed, Coppler said, until Dutcher could meet those expectations.

    Coppler said he told Dutcher that until a plan was in place “that lived up to that,” the screenings would not go forward with the topics he selected.

    “He’s working on that now,” Coppler added.

    Also on hold are Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” and “Trouble the Waters,” a documentary on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which were both to be screened next month.

    One screening of the PBS Frontline special “Sick Around the World” already occurred on Jan. 7.

    When asked Friday if Dutcher would have lost his job if he failed to cancel the screening, Coppler said he never discussed that.

    “It was never ever said, never ever indicated, never ever even contemplated,” Coppler said. “Henry has been a very good employee for the town of Enfield and the library does a tremendous job for this community.”

    Coppler said he had directed Dutcher not to speak to the press, and Dutcher did not return several calls for comment.

    The cancellation of the film, which criticizes the shortcomings of the American health care system, drew attention from civil liberties and library groups as news of the controversy spread well beyond the town’s borders and generated conversations about censorship and freedom of speech.

    On Thursday night, Moore linked to the Journal Inquirer’s first story about the cancellation on his Twitter feed. Moore, who is attending the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, could not be reached for comment.

    Will Wilkins, director of Real Art Ways in Hartford, said that he attended an event Thursday at the Sundance Film Festival where Moore mentioned the Enfield controversy in his speech.

    Connecticut Library Association President Debbie Herman, whose organization on Thursday called the cancellation “deplorable,” said she has received a lot of feedback on the issue, which she said was “incredibly supportive.”

    “Overall they’re very pro-library and anti-censorship,” she said.

    Herman said the association is looking into hosting a screening of “Sicko” at a library in a neighboring town and, while there has been interest, no events have been confirmed.

    Wilkins said that Real Art Ways might also work with the library association to host a public event that could include a screening and discussion on censorship.

    He said the Enfield Town Council should stay out of the library’s business.

    “If there’s some form of speech that the council disagrees with, the proper response to that is more speech, more conversation, more dialogue,” Wilkins said.

    Library staff members working at the library Friday declined to speak to the Journal Inquirer or to a television reporter from WFSB-TV3. The library’s community room, where the 1 p.m. screening would have taken place, remained dark as the scheduled start time came and went.

    The library’s copy of “Sicko” wasn’t on the shelf — it had been checked out, as had another Moore film, “Capitalism: A Love Story.”

    But there was still one copy sitting on a library shelf of filmmaker Michael Wilson’s “Michael Moore Hates America.”
    --


    Reader Comment:
    Town Manager Matthew Coppler has also ordered Library Director Henry Dutcher not to speak to the media.

    This unfortunate saga gets more and more alarming. The Town Manager remained silent when he should have explained his earlier actions. He didn't return calls to the JI. He's the Town Manager, the top-dog in Enfield, pulling down a tidy salary for managing the town.

    For him to now "silence" the town librarian is yet another form of censorship. The mayor was on the tube last night presenting his side of the drama, so why not the librarian?

  • Censorship News Roundup by CT Library Association


  • WNPR: Direct Threat / Promise To Punish Free Expression


  • MORE STORIES, COMMENTS @ Journal Inquirer


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Tuesday, January 18, 2011

    Rescheduled This Thursday, 1-20-11: Poet Ravi 'I Don't Play The Sitar' Shankar Luncheon Speaker For Litchfield-Morris Rotary

    Editor's Note:
    December 2010 Appearance
    Was Postponed
    Because Of Family Illness




    Poet and professor Ravi 'I Don't Play The Sitar' Shankar will be the guest speaker for the Litchfield-Morris Rotary Thursday at noon at The Forman School.

    Rotary members and guests are welcome.

    Shankar grew up in Virginia; he received a BA from the University of Virginia and a MFA from Columbia University. He is founding editor of the online journal of the arts Drunken Boat. Shankar teaches at Central Connecticut State University where he is poet-in-residence. He is also a faculty member at the Stonecoast Writers Conference and the MFA program at City University of Hong Kong.

    His first book, Instrumentality, was published by Cherry Grove in May 2004,and was a finalist for the 2005 Connecticut Book Awards. He co-wrote Wanton Textiles (No Tell Books, 2006) with Reb Livingston, selections of which were published in Fringe Magazine and Beltway Poetry Quarterly. His chapbook Voluptuous Bristle, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2010.

    His critical work has appeared in The Iowa Review, among other publications. He co-edited an anthology of contemporary Arab and Asian poetry, along with poets Tina Chang and Nathalie Handal, published by Norton in Spring 2008.

    To RSVP, write to tntcomm82@cs.com or call 860-690-0211.

  • Litchfield-Morris Rotary website


  • Drunken Boat


  • BREAKING NEWS: Poet / CCSU Prof Ravi Shankar Wins Settlement From NYC In Racial Profiling Case


  • VIDEO: Ravi Live @ Szechuan Tokyo October 2010


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Monday, January 17, 2011

    * Manchester, CT's Matt “Sharp Shooter” Remillard Signs With Bob Arum's Top Rank


    MATT REMILLARD LANDS LEFT
    AGAINST RAFAEL LORA
    -- photo by Bob Thiesfield


    Cool Justice Editor's Note, Re; reports of HBO Fight 3-26-11: As of today papers have not been signed ... They're still putting it together ...

    ANNOUNCEMENT

    MANCHESTER, Conn. (January 17, 2011) – Undefeated, 24-year-old NABF and NABO champion Matt “Sharp Shooter” Remillard (23-0, 13 KOs), arguably America’s leading featherweight, has signed an exclusive promotional contract with Top Rank.

    "Matt is a tremendous, exciting fighter, “Hall of Fame promoter and Top Rank CEO Bob Arum said. “We are very pleased he has joined our organization. Matt will get a lot of national exposure while fighting for Top Rank."

    The Manchester, Connecticut fighter is rated No. 4 by the World Boxing Association and World Boxing Organization, as well as No. 5 by the World Boxing Council.

    “Top Rank has some of the best fighters in the world,” an ecstatic Remillard commented “It’s the best promotional company in terms of moving fighters and getting them big fights. I’m really excited about signing with Top Rank. I remember when I first started fighting that Top Rank was the best promoter and now I’m finally there with them. Bob Arum and his team will get me to the next level where I should be.”

    Remillard has shown some signs being like a young Micky Ward, another New Englander known for his vicious, devastating body attacks. Lately, “Sharp Shooter” has been zeroing in on his opponents’ livers with breath-taking shots and, consequently, sudden stoppages.

    “Dealing with Top Rank was very professional,” Remillard’s manager Bret Hallenbeck noted about contract negotiations. “We’re looking forward to working with a quality promotional company like Top Rank.”

    CONTACT:
    Bob Trieger,
    Full Court Press,
    978.664.4482,
    bobtfcp@hotmail.com

    Sunday, January 16, 2011

    Smolinski Missing Person / Homicide Case: FOI Decision, 4-11-07

  • Register Citizen offers free class on Freedom of Information Act in Connecticut


  • CT FOI Commission Website




  • FREEDOM OF INFORMATION COMMISSION
    OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT

    FINAL DECISION
    Docket #FIC 2006-389


    In the Matter of a Complaint by

    Andy Thibault,
    Complainant

    against

    Chief, Police Department,
    City of Waterbury,
    Respondent

    April 11, 2007

    The above-captioned matter was heard as a contested case on September 26, 2006, at which time the complainant and the respondent appeared, stipulated to certain facts and presented testimony, exhibits and argument on the complaint.

    After consideration of the entire record, the following facts are found and conclusions of law are reached:

    1. The respondent is a public agency within the meaning of §1-200(1), G.S.

    2. It is found that, by letter dated July 28, 2006, the complainant requested that the respondent provide him with a copy of any and all reports “including #04-26782, mentioning Madeleine Gleason and/or Christian Sorensen (the “requested records”).

    3. It is found that, by letter dated August 4, 2006 (the “August 4, 2006 letter”), the respondent, through his attorney, stated that no report exists for incident #04-26782, which is the initial missing person report regarding William Smolinski, but provided the complainant with a “computer printout regarding incident report #04-26782.” The August 4, 2006 letter further stated that any other documents relating to the investigation of William Smolinski’s disappearance are exempt from disclosure pursuant to §§1-210(b)(3)(A), 1-210(b)(3)(B), and 1-210(b)(3)(C), G.S.

    4. By letter dated August 4, 2006, the complainant appealed to the Commission, alleging that the respondent violated the Freedom of Information (“FOI”) Act by denying him copies of the records described in paragraph 2, above.

    5. Section 1-210(a), G.S., provides, in relevant part:

    [e]xcept as otherwise provided by any federal law or state statute, all records maintained or kept on file by any public agency, whether or not such records are required by any law or by any rule or regulation, shall be public records and every person shall have the right to … receive a copy of such records in accordance with section 1-212.

    6. Section 1-212(a), G.S., provides, in relevant part that “[a]ny person applying in writing shall receive, promptly upon request, a plain or certified copy of any public record.”

    7. It is found that the requested records are public records within the meaning of §1-210(a), G.S.

    8. It is found that, on August 27, 2004, the respondent opened an investigation into the disappearance of William Smolinski, Jr. It is further found that, by letter dated August 4, 2006, the respondent requested the assistance of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) in conducting a joint investigation into the disappearance of Mr. Smolinski.

    9. At the hearing in this matter, the respondent objected to release of all requested records, generally citing §1-210(b)(3), G.S.

    10. Section 1-210(b)(3), G.S., provides, in relevant part, that nothing in the FOI Act shall be construed to require disclosure of:

    “[r]ecords of law enforcement agencies not otherwise available to the public which records were compiled in connection with the detection or investigation of crime, if the disclosure of said records would not be in the public interest because it would result in the disclosure of … (B) signed statements of witnesses, (C) information to be used in a prospective law enforcement action if prejudicial to such action …”

    11. After the hearing in this matter, the respondent submitted the requested records for in-camera inspection, which documents shall be identified herein as IC-2006-389-1 through IC-2006-389-17. Such documents consist of police reports, witness statements, and handwritten notes.

    12. It is found that the police department of the city of Waterbury is a law enforcement agency within the meaning of §1-210(b)(3), G.S., and that the respondent compiled the requested records in connection with the investigation into the disappearance of Mr. Smolinski. It is also found that the requested records are not otherwise available to the public.

    13. Upon careful examination of IC-2006-389-1 through IC-2006-389-17, it is found that IC-2006-389-2 and IC-2006-389-10 are signed statements of witnesses within the meaning of §1-210(b)(3)(B), G.S.

    14. It is therefore concluded that the records described in paragraph 13, above, are exempt from mandatory disclosure and, further, that the respondent did not violate the disclosure provisions of §§1-210(a) and 1-212(a), G.S. by denying the complainant’s request for a copy of such records.

    15. In Department of Public Safety v. FOIC, 51 Conn. App. 100, 105 (1998), the court stated that §1-210(b)(3)(C), G.S., required an evidentiary showing that (1) the records are to be used in a prospective law enforcement action and (2) the disclosure of such records would be prejudicial to such action. The court further stated that “the statute is not satisfied by the mere good faith assertion that the matter to which the information pertains is potentially criminal ... there must be an evidentiary showing that the actual information sought is going to be used in a law enforcement action and that the disclosure of that information would be prejudicial to that action.”

    16. It is found that, other than a broad assertion of prejudice, the respondent has failed to prove how any of the requested records, specifically IC-2006-389-1, IC-2006-389-3 through IC-2006-389-9, and IC-2006-389-11 through IC-2006-389-17, would prejudice a prospective law enforcement action if released.

    17. Accordingly, it is concluded that the requested records described in paragraph 16, above, are not exempt from mandatory disclosure by virtue of §1-210(b)(3)(C), G.S., and that the respondent violated the FOI Act by denying the complainant copies thereof.

    The following order by the Commission is hereby recommended on the basis of the record concerning the above-captioned complaint:

    1. Forthwith, the respondent shall provide the complainant with a copy of the requested records described in paragraph 16 of the findings, above, at no cost.

    Approved by Order of the Freedom of Information Commission at its regular meeting of April 11, 2007.

    Petrea A. Jones
    Acting Clerk of the Commission

    FIC/2006-389FD/paj/4/17/2007

  • Ct Post MariAn Gail Brown Column On Billy Smolinski Legacy


  • Register Citizen offers free class on Freedom of Information Act in Connecticut


  • CT FOI Commission Website


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • AUTHOR RAND COOPER'S LETTER TO TEACHERS, WRITING COACHES & ADMINISTRATORS ON BEHALF OF YOUNG POETS & WRITERS



    plz forward
    2
    Youth Groups,
    Teachers & Teacher Associations,
    Administrators, etc.


    Dear English Teacher, Writing Coach
    or Secondary School Administrator
    :


    Having come through a funding crisis, the CT Young Writers literary awards competition has risen again, and is addressing itself with renewed force to its mission of honoring high school writers of prose and poetry in Connecticut.

    The awards competition, for writers age 13 to 18, is a project of the Connecticut State University System and the Connecticut Young Writers Trust, and over the past 13 years has given hundreds of student writers public recognition -- and prizes totaling nearly $200,000. This year a distinguished panel of judges will select the state’s top poet and writer, to be announced at a special awards ceremony later this spring. The two winners will each earn an opportunity to be published in Connecticut Review, the literary journal of the Connecticut State University System.

    A year ago, a record-setting 795 entries were received from students from throughout the state. This year we would like to double that. The best way to do this is by word of mouth. So please send this notice along to any colleague who might be interested in nominating students. Entries must be nominated by a teacher in a Connecticut public or private school; home school entries are also accepted. The 2011entry deadline is March 15; entry forms are available at www.ct.edu/ctyoungwriters,
    aka

  • Young Writers Trust Website



  • Year after year, those of us involved in this program continue to hear back from former honorees -- young people, in college and beyond, who look back to this experience with the grateful sense that it truly changed things for them. “I used to dream about writing,” one former winner recalled, “but I never really believed that anyone else out there would care about what I wrote, much less think it was really good. Getting a Young Writers award was the biggest confidence boost of my life.”

    Please help us spread the word and help strengthen the literary arts among the ranks of those Connecticut students.

    For more information, including entry forms, visit www.ct.edu/ctyoungwriters or contact Young Writers Trust Executive Director Ron Winter at hjrwinter@comcast.net or 860-228-6803.

    Rand Richards Cooper is the travel correspondent for Bon Appétit, and is author of a novel, The Last to Go, and a collection of stories, Big as Life. Cooper is also a board member and judge for the Connecticut Young Writers Trust.

  • Chancellor Carter Announces 14th Annual Young Writers Competition


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Saturday, January 15, 2011

    Register Citizen offers free class on Freedom of Information Act in Connecticut



    The class will also be live-streamed on RegisterCitizen.Com, and participants watching on the website will have the opportunity to interact and ask questions via a live chat.

    News

    Saturday, January 15, 2011 [on line]
    Sunday, January 16, 2011 [print]
    By
  • Register Citizen

  • Staff

    TORRINGTON - A free three-week class on the Freedom of Information Act will be offered at The Register Citizen's new Community Journalism School next week, and it's not too late to sign up.

    Former Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission member Andy Thibault is teaching the class, which will also feature guest speakers including South Windsor Police Chief Matthew Reed, Freedom of Information Commission staff members and Jan Smolinski, who used the Freedom of Information Act to bring public attention to the infamous missing person-turned-homicide case of her son, Billy.

  • Jan Smolinski's Shocking Testimony Before Congress 1-21-10


  • Two sessions of the class will be offered - at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. - on three consecutive Wednesdays, January 19, 26 and Feb. 2. It is open to anyone, from journalists, to bloggers, to public officials and citizens who serve on local boards and commissions, to interested members of the public.

  • CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP


  • Topics will include "Who Owns Public Records?," "Cops and Courts," "School Systems," "Local and State Governments" and "Freedom of Information and Federal Government Records."

    The class will also be live-streamed on RegisterCitizen.Com, and participants watching on the website will have the opportunity to interact and ask questions via a live chat.

    Thibault, a former editor of The Register Citizen, is author of "Law and Justice in Everyday Life," wrote the award-winning "Cool Justice" column in the Connecticut Law Tribune from 2000 to 2006, and currently blogs on cops, courts, general news and the arts at http://cooljustice.blogspot.com.

    Thibault served as a hearing officer and commissioner for the Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission from 1995 to 1996. He was a member of the Litchfield Board of Education from 2000 to 2004.

    He chairs a nonprofit foundation, the Connecticut Young Writers Trust, that has given nearly $200,000 to teenage poets and writers since 1998, and his successful battle with colon cancer was the subject of a 2010 Connecticut Public Television special, http://ww.stayinthegamect.com.

    Famed defense attorney F. Lee Bailey once described Thibault as "a gunslinger form the Old West, ready to fire at anything that moves - especially if he doesn't take kindly to the movement ... He is in a way a corollary of Robin Hood; he takes from the powerful and gives to the weak."

    BIO, FOI CLASS GUEST
    ATTY MATTHEW REED,
    S. WINDSOR POLICE CHIEF


    Matthew Reed was appointed AS South Windsor's police chief on May 16, 2010.

    Chief Reed, a native of Springfield, Massachusetts, served in the United States Army as a military police traffic accident investigator at Ft. Hood, Texas from 1983 until 1986.

    He was hired as a South Windsor police officer in 1987 and served in the patrol section as a patrol officer and supervisor. Chief Reed served as the department’s youth service officer from 1989-1991 and was responsible for the implementation of the DARE program at the Timothy Edwards Middle School. After his assignment as youth service officer, Chief Reed returned to the patrol section.

    In 1993 he was assigned to the department’s administrative services section where he was designated as the department’s public information officer. While assigned to administrative services, Reed worked as aide to the Chief of Police researching and writing department policies, conducting community outreach activities and managing the department’s information technology structure. Chief Reed served as the manager of the public information and technology section until his promotion to the rank of Commander in June, 2005.

    From June 2005 until his promotion to chief, Reed was assigned as commander of the Operations Division. As division commander he was responsible for the officers on patrol, the criminal investigations unit, the school resource officer program, the police canine program, the traffic safety enforcement and investigation unit, the community service officers and the special enforcement unit.

    Chief Reed holds an Associate’s Degree in Criminal Justice from Tunxis Community College in Farmington, CT; a Bachelor’s Degree in Criminology from Central Connecticut State University in New Britain, CT and a Juris Doctor from Western New England College School of Law in Springfield, MA. Chief Reed is a Connecticut attorney, an adjunct faculty member at Manchester Community College and a certified police instructor.

    Chief Reed lives in South Windsor with his wife and five children.

  • Contender For Double Award: Stupid & Most F-~!@#$%^&*ed-Up CT Legislative Bill 2011


  • twitter@cooljustice