I think they meant the house was paid for by GF.Sorry if I'm reading this incorrectly why do you think GF paid for the moving van
I think they meant the house was paid for by GF.Sorry if I'm reading this incorrectly why do you think GF paid for the moving van
YES! Where is the WFSB drone when you need it!?!?!Oh, how I wish there was footage! Maybe we'll get lucky and one of the moving people will talk to the press!
Yea they are moving the white boxes back into the house that is what was saidHuh??
However, at the scene it appeared crews were taking items off the truck and bringing them into the house.
Police seen back at Farmington home of Fotis Dulos
I am glad that it looks like someone was keeping an eye on thing.Here is the 911 call to alert FPD that nothing was to be removed from the house and that someone is en route to the scene.
Police called to Dulos home in Farmington
Just like Fotis. The depravity seems to run deep in this family. JMOIt's like this family doesn't think the rules apply to them.
YES! Where is the WFSB drone when you need it!?!?!Oh, how I wish there was footage! Maybe we'll get lucky and one of the moving people will talk to the press!
YIKES![
As long as Pattis is railing about how entitled they are to whatever they were planning on taking, their eyes are averted from the declining balance of the retainer FD gave him - which, by the way, became part of the estate when FD died. So, he can keep on talking, but he is not using up the retainer of a former client; he is merely yammering while the account payable to that former client's estate remains the sum it was when that former client died.
I relish the day a court tells him to write GF a check for that balance, subject to audit by a reasonable third party. Let him collect it from the people currently standing in the driveway having a smoke. They and he deserve each other.
Oh no, where did he work as a journalist? Another Pattis scenario?STAMFORD — Attorney Jon Schoenhorn is expected to challenge the contradictory statements made by Michelle Troconis to police because there could have been a language barrier due to her South American upbringing.
A Spanish-speaking interpreter will be in the Stamford courtroom Friday when his client makes her next appearance on conspiracy to commit murder, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution charges.
Each time Troconis was “interrogated” it was likely a “strenuous exercise” trying to comprehend the questions police were asking and formulate responses, Schoenhorn said.
“English is not her first language,” Schoenhorn said of Troconis, who is a U.S. Citizen by birth, but grew up in South America. “We’re going to look at whether there might be some language comprehension issues.”
Schoenhorn is known for his passionate representation in civil rights and criminal cases. As an experienced litigator with his 30-year-old Hartford law firm, Jon Schoenhorn & Associates LLC, the 65-year-old attorney has won cases that shaped state law on the definition of hostile work environment and secured the right to probable cause hearings for eight defendants charged with murder and other crimes punishable by life imprisonment in the early 1980s...
A graduate of Fairfield schools and Antioche College in Ohio, Schoenhorn worked as a journalist as he sought his law degree from the University of Connecticut. He is among a handful of attorneys nationwide who is certified by the National Board of Trial Advocacy as a criminal trial specialist and a civil trial specialist.
His work changed the definition of hostile work environment in Connecticut by representing a man subject to years of degrading remarks about his sexual orientation in the workplace. Schoenhorn won the case, which set precedent by requiring the definition of harassing behaviors that constitute a hostile work environment to include comments on sexual orientation.
He was also instrumental in allowing eight men charged with murder or offenses punishable by life in prison to receive probable cause hearings in the early 1980s. The men had fallen into a gray area of state law, which was changed to require probable cause hearings for some offenses as of May 1983.
The men had all been indicted by a state Grand Jury before the date, but after a state constitutional amendment had passed on the probable cause hearing requirement.
Schoenhorn said he was one of more than a dozen attorneys who Troconis was considering to hire after Fotis Dulos died from an apparent suicide on Jan. 30. Troconis had previously been represented by attorney Andrew Bowman who publicly said little about the charges and was with his client when she was questioned by police...
Troconis' new 'aggressive' lawyer challenges evidence in Jennifer Dulos case
I think they meant the house was paid for bySorry if I'm reading this incorrectly why do you think GF paid for the moving van
I absolutely knew MT and family would pull this? What about her being asked prior if she needed an interpreter? !STAMFORD — Attorney Jon Schoenhorn is expected to challenge the contradictory statements made by Michelle Troconis to police because there could have been a language barrier due to her South American upbringing.
A Spanish-speaking interpreter will be in the Stamford courtroom Friday when his client makes her next appearance on conspiracy to commit murder, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution charges.
Each time Troconis was “interrogated” it was likely a “strenuous exercise” trying to comprehend the questions police were asking and formulate responses, Schoenhorn said.
“English is not her first language,” Schoenhorn said of Troconis, who is a U.S. Citizen by birth, but grew up in South America. “We’re going to look at whether there might be some language comprehension issues.”
Schoenhorn is known for his passionate representation in civil rights and criminal cases. As an experienced litigator with his 30-year-old Hartford law firm, Jon Schoenhorn & Associates LLC, the 65-year-old attorney has won cases that shaped state law on the definition of hostile work environment and secured the right to probable cause hearings for eight defendants charged with murder and other crimes punishable by life imprisonment in the early 1980s...
A graduate of Fairfield schools and Antioche College in Ohio, Schoenhorn worked as a journalist as he sought his law degree from the University of Connecticut. He is among a handful of attorneys nationwide who is certified by the National Board of Trial Advocacy as a criminal trial specialist and a civil trial specialist.
His work changed the definition of hostile work environment in Connecticut by representing a man subject to years of degrading remarks about his sexual orientation in the workplace. Schoenhorn won the case, which set precedent by requiring the definition of harassing behaviors that constitute a hostile work environment to include comments on sexual orientation.
He was also instrumental in allowing eight men charged with murder or offenses punishable by life in prison to receive probable cause hearings in the early 1980s. The men had fallen into a gray area of state law, which was changed to require probable cause hearings for some offenses as of May 1983.
The men had all been indicted by a state Grand Jury before the date, but after a state constitutional amendment had passed on the probable cause hearing requirement.
Schoenhorn said he was one of more than a dozen attorneys who Troconis was considering to hire after Fotis Dulos died from an apparent suicide on Jan. 30. Troconis had previously been represented by attorney Andrew Bowman who publicly said little about the charges and was with his client when she was questioned by police...
Troconis' new 'aggressive' lawyer challenges evidence in Jennifer Dulos case
Must run in the family.It's like this family doesn't think the rules apply to them.
I wonder if Atty Weinstein is going to have to have a special 'check out procedure' to check bags as the Greek Family leave on Friday?Emptying contents of house, unbelievable.
STAMFORD — Attorney Jon Schoenhorn is expected to challenge the contradictory statements made by Michelle Troconis to police because there could have been a language barrier due to her South American upbringing.
A Spanish-speaking interpreter will be in the Stamford courtroom Friday when his client makes her next appearance on conspiracy to commit murder, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution charges.
Each time Troconis was “interrogated” it was likely a “strenuous exercise” trying to comprehend the questions police were asking and formulate responses, Schoenhorn said.
“English is not her first language,” Schoenhorn said of Troconis, who is a U.S. Citizen by birth, but grew up in South America. “We’re going to look at whether there might be some language comprehension issues.”
Schoenhorn is known for his passionate representation in civil rights and criminal cases. As an experienced litigator with his 30-year-old Hartford law firm, Jon Schoenhorn & Associates LLC, the 65-year-old attorney has won cases that shaped state law on the definition of hostile work environment and secured the right to probable cause hearings for eight defendants charged with murder and other crimes punishable by life imprisonment in the early 1980s...
A graduate of Fairfield schools and Antioche College in Ohio, Schoenhorn worked as a journalist as he sought his law degree from the University of Connecticut. He is among a handful of attorneys nationwide who is certified by the National Board of Trial Advocacy as a criminal trial specialist and a civil trial specialist.
His work changed the definition of hostile work environment in Connecticut by representing a man subject to years of degrading remarks about his sexual orientation in the workplace. Schoenhorn won the case, which set precedent by requiring the definition of harassing behaviors that constitute a hostile work environment to include comments on sexual orientation.
He was also instrumental in allowing eight men charged with murder or offenses punishable by life in prison to receive probable cause hearings in the early 1980s. The men had fallen into a gray area of state law, which was changed to require probable cause hearings for some offenses as of May 1983.
The men had all been indicted by a state Grand Jury before the date, but after a state constitutional amendment had passed on the probable cause hearing requirement.
Schoenhorn said he was one of more than a dozen attorneys who Troconis was considering to hire after Fotis Dulos died from an apparent suicide on Jan. 30. Troconis had previously been represented by attorney Andrew Bowman who publicly said little about the charges and was with his client when she was questioned by police...
Troconis' new 'aggressive' lawyer challenges evidence in Jennifer Dulos case
It was asked as I am sure LE was as baffled as we were by the MT answers but MT and Atty Bowman declined. At AW1 for her arraignment the Judge clearly asked about translation and she said NO.I think they meant the house was paid for by
I absolutely knew MT and family would pull this? What about her being asked prior if she needed an interpreter? !
Is it relevant, that the things in that house don’t belong to you?
put money on it- neighbors watching the fiasco.I am glad that it looks like someone was keeping an eye on thing.
That’s hilarious. I really am laughing now. So glad they got caught red-handed.Yea they are moving the white boxes back into the house that is what was said