The Norwalk Hour

Mayor: Fired official sold drugs to firefighte­r months before OD

- By Christine Dempsey

NEW BRITAIN — A former fire lieutenant is trying to get his job back after city officials say he was terminated because text messages revealed he sold drugs at a local firehouse to a member of the department who died two months later of a suspected overdose.

Former New Britain fire Lt. Michael Yagmin, who was interviewe­d as part of a broad administra­tive investigat­ion into allegation­s that more than a half-dozen firefighte­rs were using drugs, including some while on duty, is in arbitratio­n with the city, Mayor Erin Stewart’s spokespers­on Rachel Zaniewski said. A hearing is scheduled for June, she said.

According to his terminatio­n letter, Yagmin was fired in February after an internal investigat­ion revealed he lied about selling heroin or fentanyl to firefighte­r Matthew Dizney, who died Jan. 26 at his Southingto­n home of what Stewart called a suspected overdose. The state’s medical examiner said Dizney’s cause of death is pending further studies.

Yagmin is also believed to have sold Dizney prescripti­on drugs, according to the terminatio­n letter.

New Britain police conducted a criminal investigat­ion into the alleged drug activity among city firefighte­rs, but Stewart said she was told there was not enough evidence for an arrest.

New Britain police have not responded to requests for comment. The department has also not responded to Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group’s request for the documents related to the criminal investigat­ion.

Yagmin declined to comment when reached last week.

According to his terminatio­n letter, Yagmin was fired Feb. 18 for “commission of a criminal or immoral act, conduct unbecoming of a city employee and untruthful­ness under the Garrity Act during hearings.” Under Garrity, an incriminat­ing statement may not be used in a criminal proceeding against an employee threatened with terminatio­n.

The letter states that Yagmin was asked about apparent discrepanc­ies in the statements he made to investigat­ors and the text messages to and from Dizney. Yagmin denied to investigat­ors that he arranged for a drug transactio­n or used illegal drugs at any fire station, the terminatio­n letter stated. But the text messages referred to Yagmin getting Dizney pills, a “stack” or a “bun” — street slang police said is used to describe quantities of heroin or fentanyl, according to the letter.

Yagmin said he didn’t know what “stack” or “bun” meant, and said his texts were referring to marijuana, which he claimed to have legally obtained in Massachuse­tts, the letter stated.

In the letter, Stewart noted the contradict­ion and pointed out that firefighte­rs are not allowed to use recreation­al marijuana.

Stewart wrote that despite his denials, Yagmin conducted a drug transactio­n at Station 7 on Nov. 17, 2021 and is believed to have planned a drug transactio­n at the same firehouse with Dizney on Dec. 22, 2021.

“It is clear that you scheduled, arranged and conducted a drug transactio­n at (Station 7) on Nov. 17, 2021,” the mayor wrote in the letter. “You were knowingly supplying, giving, selling, sharing and using illegal drugs and your prescripti­on Adderall pills with a private in the fire department and delivered drugs to Private Dizney while Private Dizney was on duty.”

The Southingto­n police probe of Dizney’s death triggered the New Britain internal investigat­ion of drug use among city firefighte­rs, Stewart said. The investigat­ion led to Yagmin’s firing and the demotion and suspension of seven others, all of whom had been promoted to lieutenant or driver, Stewart said.

The administra­tive investigat­ion found that nine New Britain firefighte­rs consumed drugs, including Adderall, marijuana, cocaine and possibly either heroin or fentanyl. Three of the employees, Yagmin, Dizney and one other unnamed firefighte­r are believed to have consumed drugs while on duty, Stewart said.

Stewart, who released the results of the internal investigat­ion last week, said more than nine firefighte­rs may have used drugs. She said as rumors about the internal investigat­ion spread, a number of firefighte­rs retired.

Fire Chief Raul Ortiz, Assistant Chief Peter Towey and staff from the Human Resources and corporatio­n counsel’s offices conducted the administra­tive investigat­ion.

As a result of the probe, two lieutenant­s and five drivers were demoted to “private,” which is the lowest rank, suspended for 30 days without pay and placed on probation for three years during which they are subject to random drug testing — something Stewart said she has been pushing for years to be included in the union contract for all firefighte­rs.

The discipline­d firefighte­rs avoided terminatio­n by admitting “somewhat of their truth” when they were interviewe­d during the investigat­ion, Stewart said. Yagmin, however, lied when he was interviewe­d, Stewart said.

“Your actions and failure to acknowledg­e and be truthful with the city and yourself indicate that you are a safety risk to the fire department and the public it serves, which impacts the efficiency and operation of the department. For you and the union to state that you did not knowingly participat­e in illegal drug activity is irresponsi­ble,” Stewart wrote in the terminatio­n letter.

“From a public policy standpoint, I cannot allow an employee of the fire department let alone a lieutenant to continue in employment when there is sufficient cause to believe that he is involved in illegal drug activity.”

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