Connecticut Post

John F. Solomon III

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On April 13, 2024, John F. Solomon III, former Easton, CT, police chief, passed away at the age of 82 and surrounded by his family and friends.

Chief John F. Solomon’s career spanned five decades, beginning as a Connecticu­t State Police trooper and rising to Chief Inspector at the State’s Attorney’s Office before spending his last 17 years of service as the Easton Police Department chief.

Solomon also served as President of the Connecticu­t Police Chiefs Associatio­n during the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. He was also a veteran of the U.S. Army prior to starting his law enforcemen­t career.

Solomon presided over a marked expansion of the Easton Police Department after his hiring in August 1995 to his retirement in December 2012, including a full-time K9 unit, a full-time school resource officer and enhanced programs for youth, including Police Explorers and DARE. His department also played a role in alerting federal authoritie­s to the 9/11 hijackings.

Before joining Easton, Solomon worked for three decades for the state of Connecticu­t as a trooper and detective at Troop G in Westport. He made headlines on his very first day as a State Trooper when returning from graduation with family in tow, he observed another officer being assaulted during a motor vehicle stop. Solomon came to the aid of the officer and apprehende­d multiple suspects that were attacking the officer.

Solomon later transferre­d to the Chief State Attorney’s Office in Bridgeport as an Inspector and eventually rose to the position of Chief Inspector for the State Attorney’s Office in Bridgeport under the late State Attorney Donald A. Browne.

Over that span, Solomon teamed with renowned criminolog­ist, Henry Lee, to help investigat­e or solve more than 150 murders, including some of Connecticu­t’s most famous crimes: a teenager murdered by gangster, Tommy Marra, a 1976 arson fire at a Greenwich night club that claimed 24 lives, the John Hoeplinger murder case that reached the U.S. Supreme Court, the murder of a woman whose body was run through a woodchippe­r, and the Kent Oppel murder case, where Solomon’s suspicions helped locate the victim’s body under a patio hastily built by the suspect.

The New York Times in 1995 chronicled Solomon’s work as a detective and his collaborat­ions with Lee, reporting he had earned the nickname “Super Sleuth.”

Solomon was sworn in as the president of Connecticu­t Police Chiefs Associatio­n just prior to the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks and spent the next year playing a key role, educating the public about the dangers of terrorism and fortifying Connecticu­t against future threats with enhanced cooperatio­n among law enforcemen­t agencies.

Solomon’s Town of Easton was directly struck by loss from the terror attacks as three members of Lee and Eunice Hanson’s family perished on United Flight 175, one of the jetliners that crashed into the World Trade Center towers. Their loss included the youngest victim of the attacks, 2-1/2 year-old Christine Hanson.

Lee Hanson’s call to the Solomon’s police department – relaying what his son was telling him from aboard the hijacked flight – was one of the earliest alerts received that something was amiss that fateful day, according to the official 9/11 Commission report and an account from the dispatcher who took the call.

The Hansons would become some of the most visible advocates for victims of the terror attacks, and their sacrifices and the role of the town in one of America’s darkest days is memorializ­ed in an exhibit inside the Easton Police Department.

Solomon was born on July 11,1941 to the parents of John F. Solomon II and Loretta Solomon in Bridgeport, Conn. He graduated from Notre Dame High School, where he starred as the football team’s quarterbac­k. He later attended the University of Bridgeport before enlisting in the U.S. Army Reserves, where he was activated during the Bay of Pigs crisis.

After his service in the Army, Solomon enrolled in the Connecticu­t State Police academy and was sworn in as a trooper in 1965.

Solomon is survived by his wife of 21 years, Marjorie Olschan Solomon; his brother, Martin Solomon of Hempstead, NH, his sister, June Ray of Danvers, Mass., two sons, John Solomon of Manassas, Va., and retired Greenwich Police Department Detective 1st Grade Mark Solomon of Seymour Conn.; and five stepchildr­en: Jeanine Olschan of Cheshire, Conn., Rachel Olschan-Wilson of Fairfield, Jay Olschan of Easton, Todd Olschan of Shelton, and Sarah Olschan Pinto of Trumbull.

He also is survived by 12 grandchild­ren and proudly claimed all of the men and women of the Easton Police Department to be members of his extended family.

Solomon’s wake is scheduled from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. EDT, Tuesday, at the Cyril F. Mullins Funeral Home, 399 White Plains Rd., Trumbull. His funeral is slated for 11 a.m. EDT on Wednesday at St. Theresa’s Roman Catholic Church, 5301 Main St., Trumbull.

In lieu of flowers, the family is setting up a new Chief John F. Solomon memorial scholarshi­p fund to support Connecticu­t students seeking careers in law enforcemen­t. Details will be announced shortly.

For more informatio­n or to leave an online condolence, please visit www. mullinsfh.com .

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