Connecticut, Waterbury police
Digest more
Top News
Impacts
Police in Connecticut have released photos from inside the home where they say a woman held her stepson against his will for over two decades.
From USA TODAY
The man, whose name has not been disclosed, was emaciated and weighed only 69 pounds (31 kilograms) when he was rescued from the two-story house in Waterbury after starting the fire on Feb. 17.
From Yahoo
Read more on News Digest
A man is in critical condition after being struck by a vehicle in a hit and run in Waterbury Thursday evening.
Sullivan said that her son couldn’t escape the room because there were flames, but that he must have walked through them eventually.
A man was rushed to the hospital after he was hit by a car in Waterbury Thursday night. Police say it happened just before 8:30 on the 500 block of Baldwin Street. The vehicle that struck the man left the scene and police noted that the man is in critical condition.
Police released crime scene photos that showed the inside of the home in Waterbury where a stepmother has been a accused of holding a man captive for about 20 years.
A pedestrian is in critical condition after a hit-and-run Thursday night in Waterbury, according to police. The incident happened on Baldwin Street. Upon arrival, police
Waterbury police released reports from 2005 visits to a Blake Street home where a man was held captive for decades.
A Waterbury police spokesperson said a pedestrian is in critical condition after a hit-and-run crash on the 500 block of Baldwin Street Thursday.
Waterbury police have released new body camera footage and documents pertaining to the case of a man who said he was held captive inside a home for 20 years. The body camera footage shows police officers responding to the Blake Street home on the night of Feb.
It runs, like titanium fiber, through the sinew of the characters in her second novel, which, like her debut, "Brass," is set in Waterbury. Hers is a city that is no longer Brass, no longer muscular, without identity or initiative, a bit like Peter DiMeo, whose directionless life sets the novel in motion.