The Day

10 years later, shocking home invasion haunts Cheshire

- By DAVE COLLINS

Cheshire — It’s a day seared into the memories of all involved: The July 23, 2007, home invasion in which two paroled burglars broke into a Cheshire home after dark, terrorized the family for hours and killed a woman and her two daughters.

The viciousnes­s of the crime upended notions of suburban security, delayed the abolition of Connecticu­t’s death penalty, and became the subject of TV shows, documentar­ies and books. It drew comparison­s to the 1959 killings portrayed in Truman Capote’s “In Cold Blood.”

Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, was strangled. Her daughters, 17-year-old Hayley and 11-year-old Michaela, were tied to their beds and died of smoke inhalation. Hawke-Petit and Michaela also were sexually assaulted. Hawke-Petit’s husband and the girls’ father, Dr. William Petit Jr., was beaten but survived.

The killers, Joshua Komisarjev­sky and Steven Hayes, are serving life in prison. They originally were sentenced to death, but Connecticu­t abolished capital punishment in 2012.

Komisarjev­sky picked Hawke-Petit and Michaela as targets when he saw them at a grocery store. He followed them to their home, left and later returned with Hayes.

The two broke in around 3 a.m., smashed Dr. Petit’s head with a baseball bat as he slept and tied him up in the basement. They tied the two girls to their beds. Later in the morning, Hayes drove Hawke-Petit to a bank, where she withdrew $15,000 under the threat of her family being harmed.

After Hawke-Petit and Hayes returned to the house, Hayes sexually assaulted and strangled her. Komisarjev­sky had assaulted Michaela. The intruders poured gasoline around the house, including on or around the girls, set it on fire and fled in the Petits’ car after police had surrounded the home. They crashed into police cruisers down the street and were arrested.

Dr. Petit managed to free himself and escape out the cellar hatchway as fire consumed the house. He has re-married and was elected to the state House of Representa­tives in November.

No public remembranc­es have been announced this year. But as the 10th anniversar­y approaches, some recollecti­ons of that day:

Mary Lyons, bank branch manager

Lyons was working at the Bank of America branch in Cheshire when Hawke-Petit came to withdraw cash. Hayes had driven her to the bank and waited outside, with the threat that her family would be harmed if she didn’t get the money.

Lyons said Hawke-Petit did not have any identifica­tion, but told Lyons what was going on.

“She explained to me that her family was being held and as long as she got the money and got back to the house everybody would be OK,” Lyons said. “I just knew from the look on her face and the look in her eyes that she was telling the truth. Her eyes told me — a look from one mom to another mom.”

Lyons approved the transactio­n, and Hawke-Petit left with $15,000. Lyons called police.

Lyons, who retired in 2010, pays an annual visit to a memorial garden on the site of the Petits’ former home.

Cynthia Hawke-Renn, Hawke-Petit’s sister

Hawke-Renn was at home in North Carolina, getting annoyed. She was trying to plan a family beach vacation, and her sister wasn’t returning her messages.

Then came the call around 2 p.m. from Dr. Petit’s sister, Johanna Petit Chapman. HawkeRenn immediatel­y thought something bad, like a car accident, had happened.

“I said, ‘Is it the girls? Are they dead?’” she asked. “She said, ‘Yes. How did you know?’”

When Chapman explained what happened, Hawke-Renn did not believe it.

“I said to her, ‘Hanna, this sounds like a really sick dream,’” she said.

Hawke-Renn remembers screaming, “No, no, no.” Reality set in when she saw TV news reports at the airport on her way to her parents’ home in Pennsylvan­ia.

Nearly every year on the anniversar­y, Hawke-Renn said she wakes around 3 a.m., about the time the killers broke into the Petits’ home. Over the next seven hours, she imagines her relatives’ suffering minute by minute.

“We have horrific grief,” she said. “It really does affect you in ways that are hard to describe to people . ... It’s not easy to be anywhere on the anniversar­y date.”

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