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Farmer who lived lavishly in Ja, Argentina off scamming gets 6 years

Loop News File stock photo A Jamaican man who reportedly used intake from a lottery scam he operated to purchase a new home in Jamaica and a vineyard in Argentina, was jailed for almost six years in relation to scamming an elderly American man of almost US$1.2 million. Stieve Fernandez, a 35-year-old resident of Lucea, Hanover, was sentenced to 71 months in prison by US District Judge Kari A Dooley in Bridgeport, Connecticut on Friday. Fernandez had pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud in February. The charges emanated from a scam in which he and two others targeted an elderly man from Mystic in Connecticut, United States, defrauding a total of US$1,196,207 from him.

After a year of pandemic planning, innovating and a false start, Connecticut s federal courts try to attack a trial backlog

After a year of pandemic planning, innovating and a false start, Connecticut’s federal courts try to attack a trial backlog Edmund H. Mahony, Hartford Courant © David Owens/Hartford Courant The Bridgeport federal courthouse. More than a year after the coronavirus pandemic slowed movement in Connecticut courts to a crawl, the state’s federal District Court on Tuesday began trying to seat a jury for a criminal trial in a giant step toward a return to judicial normalcy. But it won’t be normal right away. Two Bridgeport courtrooms were in use Tuesday to space out participants while selecting a jury to try an alleged gangster accused of attempting to arrange the murder of a witness against him. Trials over the coming weeks, depending on the number of participants, could require three courtrooms. And federal judges have collaborated for months with virologists, air circulation experts, information technology consultants and others to configure safe courtroom

Lawsuit over solitary confinement in limbo as state pushes for mediation

Lawsuit over solitary confinement in limbo as state pushes for mediation Attorneys for prisoners want the lawsuit to go on. A federal judge heard arguments Thursday. Northern Correctional Institution, in Somers, will close by July 1. State attorneys and lawyers representing incarcerated people with mental health conditions argued Thursday over how to proceed in a lawsuit filed in February seeking to prohibit the use of in-cell shackling and solitary confinement of individuals with mental illnesses. The state wants the case to be suspended while they try to mediate the lawsuit outside the bounds of litigation and await a court ruling on their motion to get the case dismissed, while attorneys for the incarcerated want the negotiations and lawsuit to proceed in tandem.

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