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Record-Journal
07-30-2007, 07:22 PM
Cheshire Police defend response time
By Susan L. Haigh, Associated Press

HARTFORD -- Cheshire police say reports that it took 30 minutes to reach the burning home where a mother and her two daughters were found dead are "absolutely false."

The state's attorney who is prosecuting the case has asked that the exact time when officers were dispatched to the scene not be immediately released, police say.

But Lt. Jay Markella, a spokesman for the Cheshire Police Department, denied that it took police a half-hour to get to the home where Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her two daughters died after being held hostage.

"Any reporting of a 30-minute response time is absolutely false," he told The Associated Press on Monday. "I don't know where they're getting their information from."

"I am proud of the way this department responded," Markella said. "It seems some aspects of the media are just looking for a scapegoat as to why this happened."

William Petit Sr., the father of the lone survivor of the July 23 fire, said his family does not have a problem with how long it took police to arrive at the home.

"As far as we know, the response time was immediate," he said. "We're very satisfied with the police response."

The killings have attracted national media attention. In addition to a few media reports, some Cheshire residents have publicly questioned whether there was too long a lag time between the initial 911 call and police arriving at the home.

State police, which is the lead investigator in the case, have said Jennifer Hawke-Petit was taken by one of the suspects to a local Bank of America branch and withdrew money shortly after 9:30 a.m. Bank officials then notified Cheshire police about the suspicious withdrawal.

The time of that call has not been released.

The local bank branch declined comment, and a call was left seeking comment with the Bank of America headquarters.

Citing the state's Freedom of Information Act, the AP has requested information on what time police were called.

Lt. Paul Vance, spokesman for the state police, said last week that Cheshire officers were "immediately dispatched" to the bank and the Petit home.

When the first officer arrived, he saw the suspects, 26-year-old Joshua Komisarjevsky of Cheshire and 44-year-old Steven Hayes of Winsted, leaving the burning home and get into one of the Pe****' vehicles. Police said they rammed the officer's cruiser to get out of the driveway and tried to ram two more police cars down the road that were blocking the street, but were captured at gunpoint.

Court documents indicate the men were arrested at 10:01 a.m.

After firefighters put out the fire, they discovered inside the home the bodies of Hawke-Petit, 48, and her two daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. Dr. William Petit, 50, badly beaten, escaped from the burning house.

Hawke-Petit was strangled and her daughters died of smoke inhalation, according to autopsy results and police.

Komisarjevsky and Hayes, convicted burglars with lengthy nonviolent criminal records, were out on parole when the attack occurred. They've been charged with capital felony, assault, arson, sexual assault and numerous other crimes in the homicides.

Markella said he is asking the public and media to be patient about getting information about the police response times and any tapes of phone calls. He said the department does not want to compromise the New Haven State's Attorney Michael Dearington's death penalty case against Komisarjevsky and Hayes.

"He says don't release them. I say good for him," Markella said. "We would hate to see any release of information from preventing the individuals from receiving what they deserve, and that would be death."

mysharona
07-31-2007, 02:02 AM
this is totally a bogus time frame, from start to finish. i know where the bank is, i know where the police department is, and i know where the street is that dr petit lives on!!!!

dr petit's family never should have died, and i am quite sure jennifer petit must have been thanking God that her family would be saved!! now, why would she have thought that?? BECAUSE SHE THOUGHT HELP WAS ON THE WAY!!!! BUT IT WASN'T!!!!!!!!!

can you imagine how horrified she must have been when she pulled up to her home expecting the cheshire police to be there, or be there with-in seconds of her arrival?????????

collie
07-31-2007, 09:39 AM
I wondered from the beginning how fast they got there. The day before the murders, I was driving to the canal in Cheshire for a walk and got caught in a shut down of River Road in Cheshire. Cheshire Police closed that highly traveled road down for five hours with no detour signs. I got lost both ways in some beautiful neighborhoods for about fifteen minutes. The second time, I came back out to the part of the road where a Cheshire police officer was. He was so short-tempered, bossy and rude I thought about complaining but let it go and thought what goes around, comes around. So I wasn't surprised to hear Geraldo Rivera reporting the Cheshire Police response time wasn't all that fast. And CT media was reporting everything but! I mean, really, a movement for the death penalty, a three strikes law, etc. but nobody's covering the response time? Took two or three days and I guess the CT media, including the Record Journal, had to cover it. Glad to hear the media has an FOI request in. The sooner the facts are out there, the better. Already I'm suspicious they'll alter records. What is the problem with releasing response time? How could that release possibly interfer with the criminal cases?

mysharona
07-31-2007, 12:32 PM
when did jennifer petit stop for gas??? before the bank, or after the bank?? when she stopped for gas is very important in the time frame!!!! if she stopped after the bank, then that gave the cheshire cops even more time to arrive at her home and save the family!!!!!!!!!!!

and to "COLLIE" i will stake my life on who that rude, arrogant cheshire cop was!!!!!

mysharona
07-31-2007, 12:40 PM
I wondered from the beginning how fast they got there. The day before the murders, I was driving to the canal in Cheshire for a walk and got caught in a shut down of River Road in Cheshire. Cheshire Police closed that highly traveled road down for five hours with no detour signs. I got lost both ways in some beautiful neighborhoods for about fifteen minutes. The second time, I came back out to the part of the road where a Cheshire police officer was. He was so short-tempered, bossy and rude I thought about complaining but let it go and thought what goes around, comes around. So I wasn't surprised to hear Geraldo Rivera reporting the Cheshire Police response time wasn't all that fast. And CT media was reporting everything but! I mean, really, a movement for the death penalty, a three strikes law, etc. but nobody's covering the response time? Took two or three days and I guess the CT media, including the Record Journal, had to cover it. Glad to hear the media has an FOI request in. The sooner the facts are out there, the better. Already I'm suspicious they'll alter records. What is the problem with releasing response time? How could that release possibly interfer with the criminal cases?

thank-you!!! i am so glad to see that i am not alone in my thoughts!!! yes, i also, had the same thought that records will be altered!!! i read in the hartford courant that the cheshire chief of police issued a GAG ORDER!!! mmmmmmmmmm now why would he do that????

jma
07-31-2007, 09:45 PM
NO ONE is to blame for their deaths but the two cretins who were arrested. All this Monday-morning quarterbacking is uncalled for. Police officers have a tough enough job without every know-it-all trying to lay blame on them. Let the friggin investigation play out, and keep the blame where it belongs. I guarantee EVERY cop around would have wanted to be there to blast these two away and save those lives. Do you really think they're not haunted by what happened?? Give me a break!

mysharona
08-01-2007, 01:48 AM
NO ONE is to blame for their deaths but the two cretins who were arrested. All this Monday-morning quarterbacking is uncalled for. Police officers have a tough enough job without every know-it-all trying to lay blame on them. Let the friggin investigation play out, and keep the blame where it belongs. I guarantee EVERY cop around would have wanted to be there to blast these two away and save those lives. Do you really think they're not haunted by what happened?? Give me a break!

if you had comprehended my post you would have gotten my drift!!!!! i did not blame the cheshire police, the spin i put on it was it could have, and should have been prevented by them!!!!! i know who the killers were, and i sure did not imply it was the cheshire police!!!! so, you give me a break and get a grip on what could be the reality of this!!! IT'S CALLED TIME FRAME, AND RESPONSE TIME!!!!!?????

jma
08-01-2007, 07:01 AM
So you know where the police station is, bank, etc. Do you happen to have a crystal ball, too? Before I take any shots at the Cheshire PD, I want to hear the call made to the police. The information reported to the police determines their response. That is standard across the nation. Until they start to hire psychics for dispatchers, that will continue. As far as I know, every call to a police station is taped. Do you really think the PD will erase that tape?? Do you have so little faith in the Cheshire Police? As far as that "obnoxious cop" is concerned--have you made an official complaint, or is it easier to sit back and take pot shots. I've made official complaints against bad officers, and have also acknowledged the good ones. I still believe there are more good ones than bad, and most strive to do the right thing.

collie
08-03-2007, 12:12 PM
The Hartford Courant reported yesterday first responding officers could have been outside the house for at least 20 minutes before the fire was set; also that the approximate time the bank teller called 911 was 9:20 and that it takes 7 to 12 minutes to drive from the bank to the home and 8 to 12 minutes to drive from the police dept. to the home. It seems to me detailed accounts of everything else have been revealed in this case but it took media pressure for police to reveal they had not indeed arrived on the scene as the fire was set, as originally reported over and over. Certainly police have procedures they follow in such situations and I'm not going to second guess them. It is, however, a rotten shame they didn't have someone out on patrol who could have gotten to the house first. There's too much of a time lag between events. And I still think they should have set up road detour signs the day before when they closed off River Road for five hours. Impressed I was not. Maybe they have a manpower problem.

tjohnl
08-03-2007, 06:00 PM
wouldn't the bank have a reocord of when the transaction took place? simple math from there

David
08-07-2007, 11:38 AM
We're always looking for stellar service from police and fire departments, and rightly so. Still, what words of praise might we have for those who risk their lives for us -- no matter how slow or fast some may think the response time to be?