The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Rapper’s killing spurs new call to shorten fatal police shooting probes

- By Lisa Backus

After a bruising 13 months that included protests, desk duty for five officers and an internal affairs investigat­ion that pointed out policy gaps, New Britain officials are hoping legislator­s will shorten the length of time required to conduct policeinvo­lved death investigat­ions.

“The lack of feedback in the process sometimes can cause emotions to smolder and worsen, creating increased stress, anxiety and anguish for all those involved,” state Rep. William Petit, R-Plainville, told the Public Safety and Security Committee in testimony on a bill he sponsored that would expedite the investigat­ions done by state’s attorneys.

New Britain Mayor Erin Stewart and former Police Chief James Wardwell were the only citizens who submitted testimony on the proposal at Thursday’s sixhour public hearing. Stewart had asked New Britain legislator­s to submit legislatio­n to shorten the investigat­ion process after five city officers shot and killed 20-year-old aspiring rapper Zoe Dowdell while trying to take him and two others into custody in December 2017.

Dramatic dash camera video released 13 months after Dowdell’s death shows the 20-year-old trying to evade police by pulling his car around a utility pole and up onto the sidewalk, causing officers to jump out of the way. Five officers fired at the vehicle 28 times, hitting Dowdell in the head, neck, and legs, and hitting his front seat passenger 15-year-old Caleb Tisdol in the leg. The backseat passenger, 18-year-old Noah Young, was grazed with a bullet.

The families of Young and Tisdol attended protests in which people marched to the police station to demand the release of the videos, which had been withheld by the city at the direction of John Smriga, the State’s Attorney of the Judicial District of Fairfield, who was investigat­ing the case.

Stewart told legislator­s in her written testimony that she knows all too well the toll that the 13-month investigat­ion took on the city and the families of the three men shot.

“Families of both the deceased and the officers become agitated. Their loved one’s life is changed forever. There is no concrete answer to give them except that we must wait until the state is done with their investigat­ion,” Stewart said.

The city’s motives were questioned by statewide activists who were suspicious that informatio­n was being withheld, Stewart said. The cost of placing the five officers on desk duty for 13 months was “significan­t” but not easily calculated, acting New Britain Police Chief Christophe­r Chute said.

The five officers were allowed to return to their positions after Smriga’s report issued in early January said they were justified in their use of deadly force. An internal affairs report released earlier this month cleared the officers of violating department policies.

While the officers were cleared of wrongdoing, the report concluded that the city’s policies and training were lacking in the area of felony stops.

Dowdell’s car was not completely boxed in by police, which allowed him to continue driving in an attempt to escape, the report said. The city has since formed a plan to provide more training and policy updates, the report said.

Stewart and Wardwell both asked the committee to consider shortening the length of investigat­ions into police-involved deaths to no more than six months.

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