Lt. Manmeet Colon greets Capt. Duff at Dec. 11 “Signal 4” Van Dome fundraising party.
New Haven will always be grateful that Anthony Duff followed his own advice in 2019. Otherwise he might not have made it to 2020, on the cusp of reporting back to work at the police department.
Osvaldo Garcia, at right, with rookies Marlena Ofiara and Jake Wright.
Jake Wright watched Officer Osvaldo Garcia finish questioning a witness about a stolen gun. He recognized the last question — because Garcia had asked it already.
Officers Brandon Way and Donald White had to make an instant decision — to shoot or not to shoot — in a dark parking lot.
Two bits of advance work helped them keep everyone safe without pulling a trigger: Way knew his way around the parking lot. And Officer David Santiago and his partner knew a man across town who watches his block — and likes to talk football.
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Maya McFadden |
Jun 27, 2019 4:48 pm
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Shayna Kendall with SCSU officer Kim Clare at the training.
When 16 female cops and soldiers assembled to brush up on their firearms training, they learned about alternative techniques and safe gun-carrying from the state’s first-ever black woman to be certified for the task.
Officer Joseph Perrotti and another officer were at the District 4 substation on Edgewood Avenue wrapping up their work on a domestic violence incident when Perrotti heard gunshots.
Determined special victims cops Lt. Renee Dominguez, Detective Leonardo Soto, Sgt. Mary Helland.
A serial rapist was preying on prostitutes on New Haven’s west end. The cops couldn’t get any leads on him. Until one of his alleged victims turned on her new phone — and saw her attacker’s face pop up in her Google Cloud photos.
Officer Vanessa Thompson and Detective Omaida Nieves at tourniquet training Wednesday.
Officer Gregory Dash saw bright red blood flowing from the leg of a shot man on a Newhallville porch. So he reached to the left side of his duty belt to retrieve the police department’s latest weapon of choice.
Officer Doug Pearse thought he and his partner still had a “50 – 50” chance to rescue a suicidal woman at East Rock’s summit. Then she stood up at the precipice of a rock and bent her knees above a deadly drop.
Officers Matt Stevens and Jocelyn Lavandier: Restrain & detain.
The man ran from the cops, through traffic, to the edge of the bridge. He was out of control. He turned, grabbed a dark object from his waist, pointed it directly at an officer.
Smoke was filling the apartment. The man inside seemed confused about what to do — until Sgt. Yessennia Agosto appeared at his door and declared: “Viste el fuego! Tenemos que salir ahora!”
Officer Natalie Crosby was sitting in her parked cruiser at 3:45 a.m. writing a report on an arrest when a call came over the radio: Thieves had just stolen a black 2001 Mercedes Benz ML 430 and a 2016 Nissan Altima from a home on Russell Street.
Gabe Canestri Jr. at Hole in the Wall with the family Harley …
Instagram
… and in action.
An already legendary 22-year-old stunt rider involved in controversial mass rides promised to keep doing wheelies and drifts and tire melts with his buddies on asphalt — but no longer on city streets.
In the post-midnight darkness, five cops walked side by side down Osborn Avenue hunting for a clue, any clue, that could help them find the driver who had killed a motorcyclist and then fled.
The time had come for Shayna Kendall to approach the Body Master, grab the handles, pull the cables, work her triceps. She left behind the other thoughts that had occupied her mind: Her investigation of a grandfather’s sexual assault of his 11-year-old granddaughter. Or her brother’s murder. Or her cousin’s murder.
Officer Michael Haines knew gang members planned to hold a party in Newhallville. He knew rival gang members might show up. But he didn’t know exactly where.