Subject: DCF Drunks were VERY Drunk (Over 0.16% blood alcohol for the
Chief)
Date: Mar 21, 2009 11:07 PM
That's pretty damned drunk, over 0.16.
How drunk were the other DCF drunks who left the same party and who
were they?
Is this what all DCF meetings are like and the main reason for DCF's
over-the-top stupidity and incompetence?
Don't forget, the other one was a drunken whore, too:
http://www.actionlyme.org/RAGAGLIA_GRANDJURY_DETAILS.htm
That's how much what DCF is in the best interests of the children:
http://www.actionlyme.org/THE_REAL_DON_DICKSON.htm
They place them with bona fide, psychiatrist-diagnosed "sociopaths,"
with long histories of domestic violence.
My middle kid has *never* gone back to school. She's 16 now.
She's too afraid of being kidnapped from the school again by DCF.
http://www.actionlyme.org/DIANE)EHRLICHIOSIS.htm
That's the one with both Congenital Lyme and Congenital Ehrlichiosis:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Schoen.htm
DCF protects child murderers:
http://www.actionlyme.org/UCONNS_ABUSE_CZECH_CHILDREN.htm
and pediatric penis-biters and penis-pinchers:
http://www.actionlyme.org/andersonpenisbiters.htm
Be sure to read all the scanned-in medical records
because you can't make this shit up.
2 little boys with inflammed penises requiring medical
attention.
Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
======================================
http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-hamilton-dcf-dui-0321.artmar21,0,289879.story
DRUNKEN DRIVING
DCF Head Accepted Into Alcohol Education Program
By CHRISTINE DEMPSEY | The Hartford Courant
March 21, 2009
MERIDEN — - In a proceeding that lasted about a minute, the head of
the state's child protection agency on Friday was accepted into a
program that likely will lead to the erasure of her drunken-driving
charges.
Superior Court Judge Arthur C. Hadden granted the application of Susan
Hamilton, commissioner of the state Department of Children and
Families, for the alcohol education program. Hamilton opted to attend
a 22-hour, weekend alcohol education program in New Hampshire run by
the Amethyst Foundation, a private, nonprofit organization that offers
substance abuse education. If she completes the program, her charges
will be erased. Her next court date is March 19, 2010.
Her lawyer, Michael Tansley, would not disclose what Hamilton's blood
alcohol content was on the night of her arrest. As in other cases when
defendants apply for the program for first-time offenders, the court
sealed her arrest file.
Hamilton's license was suspended for 120 days, from Feb. 21 to June
21, said William Seymour, spokesman for the state Department of Motor
Vehicles. Under state law, the state motor vehicles department will
suspend the driver's license of a first-time offender for 120 days if
the person has a blood alcohol content of 0.16 — twice the legal limit
— or greater, said Russell Palmer, an attorney who specializes in
drunken driving cases. If the BAC is lower, a first-time offender's
license is usually suspended for 90 days.
Related links
*
Susan I. Hamilton
Hamilton did not ask for a hearing to restore her license, Seymour
said. But she does have a permit allowing her to drive for work-
related business, said Ernie Bertothy, another agency spokesman.
At about 6:45 p.m. on Jan. 22, a state trooper saw Hamilton driving
her white GMC Acadia erratically on I-91 in North Haven, according to
the state police. She failed a field sobriety test and was taken to
the Troop I barracks in Bethany, where she was processed on charges of
operating under the influence of alcohol and failure to drive in the
proper lane.
Hamilton, 42, of West Hartford, began her DCF career as a child-abuse
investigator. She was confirmed as commissioner by state lawmakers on
June 28, 2007. Her husband, Paul Hamilton, was with her in court
Friday.
In a statement on her behalf, Tansley said his client continues to
express remorse about the incident last month.
"She appreciates the opportunity to participate in the alcohol
education program and looks forward to a successful completion."
"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci