Swim Coach Daniel Barillaro Jr Charged With Voyeurism

Daniel Barillaro Jr

Daniel Barillaro Jr was an assistant swim coach at Platt High School in Meriden Connecticut who was just arrested for attempting to film a student changing. According to police reports the student noticed that Daniel Barillaro Jr was attempting to film them and would notify authorities. Police would investigate and Daniel Barillaro Jr would be charged with voyeurism. A search of Daniel Barillaro Jr electronics did not reveal any more videos. Needless to say Daniel Barillaro was placed on leave by the school board

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 Police say a 23-year-old O.H. Platt High School coach has been accused of recording a student while they were changing in the bathroom.

Daniel Barillaro Jr. turned himself in on Tuesday after a warrant had been issued for his arrest, Meriden police said. Barillaro was charged with voyeurism after police said a student said he recorded them with his cellphone inside a school bathroom.

He was released on $5,000 bond and is due to appear in state Superior Court in Meriden on Feb. 22.

Police said Barillaro was placed on leave from the Meriden school district after the student reported the incident. The school district’s website lists Barillaro as an assistant swim coach.

“The Meriden Police Department would like to acknowledge the bravery of this student to come forward and report this incident,” Lt. Darrin McKay said in a news release Wednesday.

Police did not say what team Barillaro coaches or whether he is also a teacher at the school. Police also did not release the age or gender of the victim.

McKay said the department’s Special Crimes Unit began investigating the voyeurism allegation last month after the student reported the incident to school officials.

The student said they “observed a cellular phone recording in a bathroom while they were getting prepared to change after practice,” McKay said in Wednesday’s news release.

Police said they identified Barillaro as a suspect and seized his phone. Police said a review of his phone revealed “no additional acts of voyeurism” or other victims, the news release said. 

https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/meriden-high-school-coach-charged-voyeurism-17771745.php

Ewen DeWitt Murders Julie Minogue With An Ax

ewen dewitt Julie Minogue

Ewen Dewitt is a man from Connecticut who allegedly murdered his ex girlfriend Julie Minogue with an ax in front of her children. According to police reports Julie Minogue had obtained a restraining order against Ewen DeWitt just days before she was murdered with an ax in front of her three year old and seventeen year old children. Now Ewen DeWitt has been charged with murder. It amazes me the number of murders that I cover on My Crime Library where a restraining order was issued yet failed to protect the victim

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40-year-old Milford mother Julie Minogue was found dead in her home on Salem Walk Tuesday night. The Connecticut Office of the Chief Medical Examiner said her cause of death was ‘Chop Wounds and Blunt Impact Injuries of Head, Torso, and Extremities (homicide).’

According to a GoFundMe created by her sister, Minogue was a mother to three boys.

Her ex-boyfriend 42-year-old Ewen DeWitt, Roxbury, is accused of killing her with an axe. In court documents obtained by FOX61, it details what happened that day and the relationship between the two.

Police said Minogue’s 17-year-old son called 9-1-1 around 9 p.m. after being woken up by screams. He told police he didn’t wake up to the first noise but continued to hear a man screaming. He then heard his mother scream. The teen went downstairs and thought he heard DeWitt yelling, “You didn’t believe me.” The child said DeWitt was holding an axe and his mother was on the floor, covered in blood. 

The teen then ran upstairs and locked the door. He opened his window and punched a hole in the screen. He called 9-1-1 to report his mother was being assaulted with an axe and put a chair behind the locked door. Officers responded within minutes, but the teen jumped out the window out of fear the “Milford PD” screams he heard were Ewen DeWitt imitating police. Police eventually picked up the teen.

Police found Minogue in a large pool of blood on the kitchen floor with “multiple critical lacerations to her face and skull.” A large axe was found on the stove near the victim with evidence on it. 

Minogue’s 3-year-old son was on the living room couch in shock, police said, not crying nor responding to police presence. Police stayed with the child until additional officers arrived on the scene.

A ring camera provided by a neighbor shows a man walking with an axe in his hand, matching the description police detailed in the video in the probable cause statement.

The mother of Ewen DeWitt called the police to report a phone call she received from her son. According to the probable cause statement, the mother said, “My son just called us and he said he killed his girlfriend.” She continues to say her son was looking to kill himself. Police made contact with DeWitt over the phone, but he did not want to talk and hung up.

The statement said police started canvassing and went to Dive Bar on Ocean Avenue in West Haven, about a mile away from the Milford home, to inform people to notify police if they spotted DeWitt. Two men later flagged down police after seeing a person matching the description. FOX61 made contact with one of those men who did not want to be interviewed. He said he saw a person matching the suspect’s description wandering around the parking lot for a couple of minutes. The suspect later went into a food truck in the parking lot. The witness told police he went in there. That’s where Ewen DeWitt was taken into custody without incident.

Minogue had protective orders again Ewen DeWitt for previous domestic violence incidents. One was entered in November 2019 and issued in January 2021. It also protected children present at the time of the incident. The victim’s teen told police, in 2019, DeWitt was drunk and got into a fight with his mother. According to the probable cause statement, the child told police Ewen DeWitt threw a playpen at her head and she began bleeding. His mom filed a restraining order while he was in rehab, the teen said. He continued to say DeWitt got visitation for a sibling, who was redacted in the statement. 

In November of this year, Minogue provided an affidavit regarding Ewen DeWitt contacting her, regardless of her restraining order. The mother wrote she brought her phone to the police for “harassing” texts. Police counted 220 texts, she wrote.

“I don’t feel I should be subjected to this abuse any longer. I am scared for the safety of my children and I. Ewen has got himself into a lot of trouble with drugs and alcohol, and I’m scared he’s going to kill me,” she wrote.

Another full no-contact protective order was entered on Dec. 1.

The two children home at the time of the murder are under the care of family members.

DeWitt is being held on a $5 million bond. He’s charged with murder, reckless endangerment, risk of injury to a child, violation of a restraining order, and violation of a protective order. Attorneys on both sides in court Wednesday cited mental health concerns with DeWitt. He’s been placed on suicide watch. His next hearing date is Dec. 14

https://www.fox61.com/article/news/local/new-haven-county/milford/scared-hes-going-kill-me-details-revealed-inmurder-milford-mother/520-a80a75ea-37ea-430c-93ea-ee3d662a2988

Wanted Christopher Francisquini For Murder Of Baby

Christopher Francisquini

Police are searching for Christopher Francisquini for the murder of an eleven month old baby. According to police reports an eleven month old girl was killed at a home in Naugatuck Connecticut however they are not saying how the baby died and have said that Christopher Francisquini lived at the home. Christopher Francisquini who is a convicted felon is described as 6 feet tall weighing 230 pounds. Along with the murder child Christopher Francisquini is also facing other charges.

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Police say the man wanted in the killing of a 1-year-old child remains at large Saturday and is believed to be in the New Haven area.

Naugatuck police released images of a man they believe is Christopher Francisquini, who was seen around 4 p.m. Friday afternoon on security footage on Quinnipiac Avenue in New Haven. Police said the person seen in the footage “matches the clothing description and is believed by investigators to be Francisquini.”

Naugatuck police said they are working with state and federal authorities to find Francisquini, 31, who fled the Millville Avenue home where the child was killed Friday morning.

Naugatuck police said Francisquini lived at the home and was related to the girl, but they have not specified their relationship.

Neighbors who live on Millville Avenue described the area as quiet and void of activity.

Francisquini was convicted in 2013 of first-degree assault and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He has also been found guilty of possession with intent to sell or dispense, and two counts of interfering with or resisting an officer, according to court records. 

In November 2021, state police and West Haven police charged Francisquini with two counts of second-degree assault, third-degree assault, robbery by carjacking, first-degree larceny, third-degree robbery, four counts of assaulting public safety, emergency medical, public transit or health care personnel, attempting to commit an escape from custody, interfering with or resisting an officer, second-degree breach of peace and two counts of failure to comply with fingerprint requirements, court records show. 

He was additionally charged out of Derby in March on counts stemming from November 2021. He was charged with two counts of second-degree breach of peace, third-degree burglary, four counts of attempting to commit third-degree larceny and attempting to commit first-degree larceny, according to court records. 

His bonds for these cases totaled more than $400,000. He was released from custody in July, court records show. 

Anyone with information about Francisquini’s whereabouts can contact Naugatuck Police at 203-729-5221 or the department’s confidential tip line at 203-720-1010.

https://www.ctinsider.com/news/article/Naugatuck-Francisquini-girl-killed-New-Haven-17597449.php

Karin Ziolkowski Murders 8 Year Old Son

Karin Ziolkowski

Karin Ziolkowski is a woman from Connecticut who was just convicted of the murder of her eight year old son. According to court documents Karin Ziolkowski would give her eight year old son a fatal dose of a antihistamine before she set the house on fire. Karin Ziolkowski lawyers attempted to blame the murder on her mental health however the jury thought differently. Karin Ziolkowski will be sentenced later this year

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 A jury in New Haven found a local woman guilty of both murder and second-degree arson this week. 

Karin Ziolkowski, 44, of Meriden, was found guilty of murder in New Haven Superior Court on Tuesday in the death of her eight-year-old son in 2016. She was also convicted of second-degree arson in connection with fires set at their Davis Street home following the homicide. 

According to statements from the state attorney’s office, evidence at the trial showed Ziolkowski asphyxiated her son and set two fires at 13 Davis St. on Nov. 14, 2016.

Ziolkowski’s son was found unresponsive at the scene of the fire, and first responders were unable to resuscitate him. Karen Ziolkowski suffered severe smoke inhalation in the blaze and was taken to Hartford Hospital. 

The cause of death was ruled homicidal asphyxia and acute intoxication from an antihistamine, which was also found in Karen Ziolkowski’s blood.

The medical examiner determined the boy was dead prior to the fire. 

On Nov. 23, 2016, police learned of a Twitter account belonging to Ziolkowski. On Nov. 10, 2016, four days prior to the fire, she tweeted “fire extinguisher” and “devil’s playground,” following by “#takethatasyouwill,” according to the warrant.

The next day she tweeted “empty promises,” again followed by “#takethatasyouwill,” the warrant continues.

Two days before the fire, the warrant states, she tweeted “why did I have a child.”

The case was investigated by Meriden police and fire departments along with state police. 

Ziolkowski’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Jan. 10, 2023 in New Haven Superior Court. 

https://www.myrecordjournal.com/News/Meriden/Meriden-News/Ziolkowski-found-guilty-of-murder-arson.html

Hadley Palmer Guilty Of Sex Charges

Hadley Palmer mugshot photos

Hadley Palmer is a rich woman from Connecticut who was just found guilty of filming people including a minor without permission however the State would drop the more serious charges that including child pornography. The odd part of this case is most of it is sealed so we do not know all that took place behind closed doors and legal experts are predicting her sentence could be as little as ninety days. Chances are a whole lot of money changed hands somewhere along the way or the judge was in a very forgiving mood. As mentioned before Hadley Palmer was facing felony charges of employing a minor in an obscene performance, conspiracy to employ a minor in an obscene performance, and second-degree child pornography.

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In a Greenwich enclave whose multimillion-dollar estates are favored by hedge fund moguls and come with their own private security force, the secret videos went undetected for nearly a year.

The recordings showed several minors in intimate situations without their knowledge, according to the authorities, who classified one of them as an “obscene performance.”

Now the source of growing chatter in town, the videos were the work of one of the neighborhood’s own.

The woman who recorded them, Hadley Palmer, 53, pleaded guilty in January to several felony charges in the voyeurism case. Last week, the judge sealed the court records, over the objections of a reporter for The Associated Press, highlighting the tension between open access to court records and calls for victims’ privacy

A Greenwich psychologist has also been arrested on a charge that he had failed to report the matter, as required by Connecticut’s child welfare laws.

The authorities say that Hadley Palmer committed the crimes in 2017 and 2018 in Belle Haven, where public records show that she had been living in a $10 million 19th-century Victorian home overlooking Long Island Sound. The enclave is known for the 1975 slaying of Martha Moxley and the now-overturned conviction of Michael Skakel, a Kennedy cousin, in her murder.

In Belle Haven, privacy is paramount — so much so that the bylaws strictly prohibit outsiders from toting cameras.

Hadley Palmer was arrested last October on several charges that included employing a minor in an obscene performance, three counts of voyeurism, second-degree possession of child sexual abuse imagery and risk of injury to a child.

All three victims were minors at the time of the crimes, Captain Mark E. Zuccerella, a Greenwich Police Department spokesman, said on Monday. At least one of the victims was 15 or younger, prompting the child endangerment charge, the police said.

As part of a plea deal, prosecutors agreed to drop all but the voyeurism and child endangerment charges.

According to the agreement — one of the few unsealed documents in the case — Ms. Palmer will be required to register as a sex offender. Prosecutors have recommended that she serve 90 days to five years in prison, along with 20 years of probation.

Her sentencing is scheduled for August, but Hadley Palmer was already admitted on Feb. 4 to the York Correctional Institution, a women’s prison in Niantic, Conn., where she is inmate No. 439165, according to the Connecticut Department of Correction. It was not immediately clear whether Ms. Palmer was trying to get a head start on her sentence.

For several months, Ms. Palmer’s arrest remained largely obscured from the glare of the public and the media. Her lawyer moved in January to seal the case file and close all court proceedings, citing privacy concerns related to the victims, whose own lawyers supported that measure.

Hadley Palmer, whose father founded a hedge fund and who has been frequently photographed at charity benefits in Greenwich and New York City, was released on $750,000 bond.

Last week, a judge in Connecticut Superior Court in Stamford granted a motion to seal the case, a move that had been opposed by The Associated Press. During a Feb. 1 hearing, Dave Collins, a veteran reporter for the wire service based in Connecticut, said that the handling of the case after Ms. Palmer’s arrest had set a disturbing precedent, according to an audio recording of the proceeding obtained by The New York Times through a public records request.

“The appearance is almost as if this is a second-tier of justice, where some people keep things secret,” Mr. Collins said.

Mr. Collins said during the hearing that it was commonplace for the names of defendants and court dates to appear on a public website maintained by the Connecticut Judicial Branch, especially for those accused of crimes in which the victims were children. One of the few items that appeared online, he said, was a one-page notice about the hearing on her request to seal the case.

“The public needs to know how these cases are handled and adjudicated,” Mr. Collins said. “Everybody else’s case is online. Why isn’t Mrs. Palmer’s case?”

Michael T. Meehan, a lawyer for Ms. Palmer, responded during the hearing that his client had not sought special treatment and that her name had appeared on a printout of the docket in the courthouse lobby on at least four occasions. The defendant never asked to keep her information private before the motion to the seal the file, he said.

Mr. Meehan did not immediately respond to several requests for additional comment.

During the hearing, Judge John F. Blawie of the Connecticut Superior Court said that he had no control of the online records in the case.

“There is no two-tiered justice,” Judge Blawie said.

In his ruling on Wednesday, Judge Blawie wrote that protecting the victims in the case outweighed keeping the case file open.

“If the defendant may be considered as having thrust herself into the public spotlight by virtue of her wrongful behavior and subsequent prosecution, the same may not be said of those parties already adversely impacted by this case,” Judge Blawie wrote.

Through a judicial branch spokeswoman, Judge Blawie declined to comment further.

Eugene J. Riccio, a lawyer for one of the victims, said in an email on Friday that his client appreciated the court’s move to protect privacy. And Audrey A. Felsen, who represents another victim, said that the sealing order had nothing to do with the defendant — it was a victims’ rights issue. Lawyers for the other victims either declined to comment or did not respond to messages.

Just over a month after her initial arrest, Hadley Palmer was arrested a second time for violating certain terms and conditions of her pretrial release, according to court records, which did not specify what those violations were. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutors agreed to drop the charge associated with her second arrest.

In December, Dr. Jerome F. Brodlie, 83, a psychologist who specializes in treating children and adolescents and is affiliated with Greenwich Hospital, was arrested in connection with the case, the authorities said. He was charged with failing to report abuse, neglect or injury of a child or imminent risk of serious harm to a child, a misdemeanor.

Dr. Brodlie did not respond to an email seeking comment on Thursday, and his lawyer, Andrew B. Bowman, did not respond to requests for comment on Thursday and Friday. Pleading information for Dr. Brodlie was not available because his case was sealed, and his status with Greenwich Hospital was not immediately clear. A request for comment was also left for the hospital.

Court records show that Hadley Palmer applied in October to a pretrial accelerated rehabilitation program, a pathway typically reserved for first-time offenders in lower-level criminal cases to avoid jail time. She later withdrew her application and agreed to the plea agreement in January.

Hadley Palmer, who has four children, is the daughter of Jerrold Fine, who in 1976 started Charter Oak Partners Management in Westport, Conn., one of the first hedge funds, according to a profile of him on the website of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

Online searches for Hadley Palmer yielded an array of photos of her at charity benefits and society events on Connecticut’s Gold Coast and in Manhattan. There was a gala at Sotheby’s in New York benefiting pharmaceutical advances for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and a Wall Street tennis challenge at a private club in Greenwich to support ovarian cancer research, both in 2016.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/14/nyregion/hadley-palmer-connecticut-access-court-records.html