Subject: CT State Troopers complain of having duh DCF sic'd on em.
Date: Mar 5, 2008 11:18 AM
HARTFORD COURANT ARTICLE BELOW
Day sic duh DCF hoes on each other, since they all know duh DCF is off
duh charts
insane. The DCF lies to everyone about everything, since it ain't
about duh
kids, but torturing parents.
My kids have congenital Lyme and day falsely accuzed me a bein a
tearrist. den day
gave duh kids to duh well-documented psychopath and wife and child
abuser, Donald
G. Dickson who works at Sikorsky in Huntsville, Alabama, in the
Redstone Arsenal-
a really safe place for kids if we piss off Russia too much:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Schoen.htm
http://www.actionlyme.org/DIANE_EHRLICHIOSIS.htm
http://www.actionlyme.org/THE_REAL_DON_DICKSON.htm
Does the following say I reported Gauvin to the Department of Justice,
or does it
say I made a death threat?
http://www.actionlyme.org/GAUVIN_DEATH_PENALTY.htm
James Phillips did not want to be sued for malpractice:
http://www.actionlyme.org/JAMES_PHILLIPS_HOMEPAGE.htm
when it was a perfectly winnable case.
The entire FDA lecture hall saw me:
http://www.actionlyme.org/KFORSCHNER_ON_FDA_EXHIBIT_A.htm
DCF is not allowed to interfere with malpractice lawsuits. They bug
your phones
in order to turn your witnesses against you by illegally calling them
and lying
about you. The "judges" all know DCF wiretaps their victims and
believes
duh DCF is telling duh truth about what day know from duh wiretapping.
The worst criminals know how to abuse the evil bitches uh duh DCF, and
especially,
how *remarkably* *stupid* duh DCF is:
http://www.actionlyme.org/MUNCHAUSENS.htm
http://www.actionlyme.org/MCSWEEGAN_AND_MUNCHAUSENS.htm
I was in correspondence with UK Parliament's Lord Earl Howe about this
type
of abuse by duh DCF hoes, since he thinks they're stupid, too:
http://www.actionlyme.org/HOWE_BBC_SCIENCE_EVIDENCE.htm
In that report to Lord Howe is contained the evidence that the MMR
vaccine antigens
themselves cause the brain damage we call autism. And that, kids with
HIV are given
fully heat-killed vaccines rather than attenuated vaccines. If that
is the case,
then surely these vaccines are not for kids who are immune
compromised, but no one
ever checks for this predisposition.
CDC says it is a "calculated risk," admitting they know about the
damage
from vaccine antigens- and the risk, which the CDC *themselves* take
for all you
parents by hiding these facts, when I think all us parents would like
to make that
judgment for ourselves, thanks.
'Knowing that the CDC are abundantly lying profiteers:
http://www.actionlyme.org/index.htm
Verify independently.
Kathleen M. Dickson
courant.com/news/local/hc-csphearing0305.artmar05,0,7496598.story
Courant.com
Troopers Tell Of Retaliation
Legislators Urged To Revamp State Police
By TRACY GORDON FOX
Courant Staff Writer
March 5, 2008
Their voices cracking at times, trooper after trooper stepped forward
at a legislative
hearing Tuesday to testify that they had been victims of blatant
retaliation by
state police managers against whom they had filed complaints alleging
severe misconduct.
The troopers, many of them whistle-blowers in some of the most
egregious cases of
wrongdoing outlined in a 2006 internal affairs report, asked
legislators to help
stop the harassment and revamp the state police department.
As a show of support, about 200 troopers -- dressed in suits and ties --
attended
the hearing before the public safety committee in the Legislative
Office Building
in Hartford. It lasted five hours.
Union President Steven Rief harshly criticized the agency for severely
punishing
road troopers for misdeeds while being lenient with managers.
The committee may decide as early as today whether to create a task
force that would
address problems within the department.
Even legislators who have attended hearings in recent weeks on racism
and harassment
within the state police were stunned at some of Tuesday's testimony.
Rep. Andrea
Stillman, D- Waterford, said she was "flabbergasted," and apologized
to
some of the troopers who testified.
Among them was Det. Karen Nixon, one of the whistle-blowers who
expressed concern
about Eugene Baron, a trooper who had been stopped on suspicion of
drunken driving
four times and let go each time by state police. Baron left the
department last
year after he was arrested on a drunken-driving charge by Manchester
police.
She told legislators that in October 2006, after she filed a complaint
with the
attorney general's office about the department's failure to deal with
Baron's
problems, two of her supervisors in Southbury called the state
Department of Children
and Families to her home after she had a bad reaction to a medication
and asked
to leave work.
DCF workers later went to her home and asked her 7-year-old son "if
mommy ever
touched him," Nixon, a 14-year veteran, told legislators. The DCF
later determined
the case to be unfounded, and Nixon's young children remain with her,
according
to records.
"When you or your loved ones dial 911, you get us. We are what is
public safety.
We understand the inherent risk every day," Nixon said. "But at no
point
should I have to suffer ridicule or public humiliation to me as a
mother."
Trooper William Cario testified that he was a whistle-blower in a case
of alleged
misconduct, after which he was disciplined for failure to properly
supervise an
accident. He was stripped of his rank as sergeant and was given a 60-
day suspension,
meaning he would be out of work for 96 calendar days, the longest
suspension anyone
can remember.
"Health benefits for my family were canceled" because of the lengthy
suspension,
he said. He fought the case and his suspension has since been
overturned; he is
awaiting a July 2008 date for arbitration to clear his name.
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said Tuesday that he was aware of
claims of
state police retaliation against whistle-blowers, and that their cases
are the reason
he proposed stronger legislation to protect those who report
misconduct within their
agencies.
He said he was outraged "at the harassment and retaliation directed at
the
courageous men and women who cooperated in my investigation." The 2006
internal
affairs investigation was conducted by Blumenthal and the New York
State Police.
Missing from most of Tuesday's hearing was Public Safety Commissioner
John A.
Danaher III, who instead went to a press conference with Gov. M. Jodi
Rell about
traffic safety initiatives on I-95 in the Fairfield area.
Danaher, who became commissioner a year ago, arrived later in the day
and spoke
to Rief privately.
The union president had asked legislators earlier, "Where is the
commissioner
of the Department of Public Safety?"
Rief focused his testimony on the discipline of troopers since a new
internal affairs
policy began more than a year ago, saying that in some cases
investigations go on
for a year or more.
"There are core issues yet to be resolved that are ripping this
department
apart," Rief said.
He added that the 200 troopers attended Tuesday "because morale has
never been
so low."
Reached later by telephone, Danaher said he plans ongoing discussions
with the union
and legislature about the issues.
Col. Thomas Davoren, commander of the state police, said that managers
are being
held accountable, and that in 2007 there were nine internal affairs
cases involving
managers, three times the normal amount.
Danaher said he discussed the Nixon case with Lt. Col. Robert Duffy,
who heads the
internal affairs unit.
"I confirmed they [the two supervisors involved] are under
investigation,"
he said.
"We have a retaliation policy. If they bring it to our attention, then
an investigation
will be done," Danaher said.
Danaher said the new internal affairs process has required a long
learning curve.
He said that investigations must be done more quickly, and that the
department needs
to look at the level of discipline imposed.
"We are willing to talk to the committee about any proposals they have
in mind,"
Danaher said.
But Rep. Christopher Caruso, D-Bridgeport, said the time for talking
may be past.
"We've got to look at this entire agency," he said. "This entire
General Assembly and the governor have been unwilling to acknowledge
and change
a structural defect within the Connecticut state police. We have done
basically
nothing to change how it operates."
Contact Tracy Gordon Fox at tf...@courant.com.
Copyright (c) 2008, The Hartford Courant