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Windsor Police Blotter: September 29 - October 6

The following arrest reports as provided by the Windsor Police Department are accurate as of Oct. 8, 2011. Items on this list reflect charges filed, not convictions. It is not the policy of Windsor Patch to omit any arrests from this log.

September 29

Nicholas Barton, 26, of 56 Glennwood Avenue in Bloomfield was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 4:00 p.m.

Michael Erickson, 39, of 16 Seymour Street in East Granby was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle, and violating exhaust or emission standards; 2:09 p.m.

Bobby Forbes, 25, of 891 West Boulevard in Hartford was charged with second-degree failure to appear; 8:32 a.m.

Jacinth Freeman, 37, of 94 Brook Street in Hartford was charged with tinting windows without a sticker, possession of less than one-half ounce of marijuana, operation of a motor vehicle with a suspended or refused license or registration, and second-degree failure to appear; 7:54 p.m.

Marlon Gilling, 31, of 30 Lincoln Terrace in Bloomfield was charged with failure to wear a seat belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:32 p.m.

Jarrell Lawrence, 27, of 91 Spring Street in East Hartford was charged with first-degree forgery, and sixth-degree larceny; 8:26 a.m.

Gregory McCullough, 38, of 395 Cornwall Street in Hartford was charged with failure to wear a seat belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:18 p.m.

Dianne Miller, 56, of 28 Bridge Street in Windsor was charged with failure to wear a seat belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 4:48 p.m.

Nelson Miller, 36, of 97 Poquonock Avenue in Windsor was charged with possession of less than one-half ounce of marijuana; 2:49 p.m.

Arnold Washington, 35, of 658 Windsor Avenue in Winsor was charged with unauthorized manufacture, sale, etc. of drugs; and being in possession of drugs within 1,500 feet of a school; *;38 a.m.

September 30

Gandhy Arias, 28, of 101 Harbison Avenue in Hartford was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 1:53 p.m.

Duval Barrett, 25, of 86 Daniel Boulevard in Bloomfield was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:45 p.m.

Gairy Campbell, 20, of 75 Deerfield Road in Windsor was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia; 2:16 p.m.

Chyanna Clark, 24, of 102 Pliny Street in Hartford was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 1:30 p.m.

Jonathan Heine, 24, of 77 Mather in Manchester was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 1:39 p.m.

Vitaly Katko, 30, of 22 Wachussett Street in Springfield was charged with failure to weara a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 1:35 p.m.

Jevon Moody, 18, of 578 Bloomfield Avenue in Windsor was charged with third-degree assault, and disorderly conduct; 2:00 p.m.

Jason Pedemonti, 33, of 31 Lownds Drive in Windsor Locks was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:40 p.m.

Bryan Plunske, 32, of 18 Taverner Road in Windsor was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:59 p.m.

Charles Smith, 31, of 642 Winsor Avenue in Windsor was charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol; manufacturing, selling or administering restricted substances; and possession of a controlled substance, non-narcotic; 7:04 p.m.

October 1

Kim Lowe, 50, of 107 Portman Street in Windsor was charged with disorderly conduct; 7:33 p.m.

October 3

Barbara Buckbee, 34, of 27 Somerset Drive in Windsor was charged with disorderly conduct, non-threatening; 4:31 p.m.

Denise Currie-Dyson, 44, of 40 Sounders Street in East Hartford was charged with failure to obey a control signal; 3:57 p.m.

Jason Gactani, 33, of 7 West View Drive in Ashford was charged with failure to obey a control signal; 4:07 p.m.

Natasha Goode, 21, of 205 Westland Street in Hartford was charged with operating a motor vehicle with a suspended or refused license or registration, and failure to meet minimum state insurance requirements; 3:52 p.m.

Paul Hannan, 52, of 64 Quality Avenue in Somers was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 4:05 p.m.

Adam Hilliman, 20, of 91 Cambridge Drivein East Hartford was charged with second-degree failure to appear; 8:59 a.m.

Rutina Joseph, 49, of 126 Giddings Avenue in Windsor was charged with breach of peace; 10:30 a.m.

Kyle Juten, 33, of 304 Colt Highway in Farmington was charged with use of a hand-held mobile phone while operating a motor vehicle; 3:38 p.m.

Lennox Miller, 73, of 43 Pebblebrook in Windsor was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 4:25 p.m.

Jayendraprasad Pandya, 60, of 7 Lathrop Lane in Rocky Hill was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 4:29 p.m.

October 4

Christian Adorno, 23, of 127 Hungerford Street in Hartford was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 4:06 p.m.

Glendolyn Bryant, 37, of 29 Mills Road in Windsor was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 1:01 p.m.

Patrice Hall, 27, of 360 Oakland Street in Manchester was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 4:22 p.m.

Christopher Harold, 48, of 38 Redding in West Hartford was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 3:03 p.m.

Sybil Lewis, 44, of 684 Windsor Avenue in Windsor was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle, and failure to meet minimum state insurance requirements; 4:44 p.m.

Antwon Lofty, 30, of 192 Edgewood Street in Hartford was charged with failure to obey a control signal; 1:05 p.m.

Byron Luca, 32, of 253 West Street in Plantsville was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 2:15 p.m.

Lindburgh Miller, 28, of 74 Fanuil Street in Windsor was charged with failure to weara a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 2:46 p.m.

Michael Phelan, 26, of 34 Mack Street in Windsor was charged with improper use of a motor vehicle marker, operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle, and failure to meet minimum state insurance requirements; 10:31 a.m.

Cheryl Schoenmehl, 34, of 206 Clark Street in New Britain was charged with traveling unreasonably fast, and operating a motor vehicle without a license; 4:33 p.m.

Rowan Simms, 40, of 26 Harwich Street in Hartford was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 4 p.m.

Philip Tambling, 46, of 19 Chelsea Lane in Windsor was charged with failure to wear a safety belt in the front seat of a motor vehicle; 4:10 p.m.

October 5

Robert Benn, 47, of 25 Marguerite Avenue in Bloomfield was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle, failure to meet minimum state insurance requirements, and operating a motor vehicle with a suspended or refused license or registration; 9:56 a.m.

Wedis Cowell, 40, of 40 Hillside Street in East Hartford was charged with use of a hand-held mobile hone while operating a motor vehicle; 2:54 p.m.

Perrie Dyer, 29, of 215 Tunxis Avenue in Bloomfield was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 1:53 p.m.

Jerome Hamlett, 42, of 111 Westbourne Parkway in Hartford was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 2:14 p.m.

Corey Mann, 33, of 14 Allen Street in Windsor was charged with operating or towing an unregistered motor vehicle; 3:32 p.m.

John Melo, 40, of 112 Old Ellington in Broad Brook was charged with stop sign violation; 2:22 p.m.

Richard Roulston, 49, fo 542 North Street in Windsor Locks was charged with use of a hand-held mobile phone while operating a motor vehicle; 3:43 p.m.

October 6

Cindy Baker, 26, of 266 Main Street in Windsor Locks was charged with improper passing; 4:28 p.m.

Mardan Bayromov, 19, of 945 Windsor Avenue in Windsor was charged with passing on the right, and failure to drive at a reasonable distance; 4:32 p.m.

Steven Farrell, 41, of 171 Ethan Drive in Windsor was charged with evading responsibility in a motor vehicle accident involving serious physical injury, and failure to drive at a reasonable distance; 4:13 p.m.

Princes Green, 25, of 267 Main Street in East Hartford was charged with improper use of a motor vehicle marker, speeding, and operation of a motor vehicle with a a suspened or refused license or registration; 3:31 p.m.

Matthew Reymond, 36, of 100 Lockhouse Road in Westfield was charged with stop sign violation; 4:38 p.m.

Alexander St. Paul, 23, of 1221 Southwest 74th in North Lauderdale was charged with first-degree larceny, unauthorized computer use, first-degree e-crime, and criminal impersonation; 4:05 p.m.

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George Slate May 22, 2013 at 06:45 pm
Yes, success has many parents. I truly do not want to taint your story, but my question is: DoesRead More WEF have enough money to fund an EER by a legitimate researcher (or are you willing to start up a collection?)? If you do, maybe in five years you can do a similar story about our High School.
CatherineDennis May 21, 2013 at 08:45 pm
Congrats to all students, parents, teachers and administrators at Sage Park. It would seem thatRead More mission statements, transparency, parent involvement all equal excellence. How much would you charge to teach these basics to those that feel the need to hire college students from Chicago to review WHS-those very same people that congratulated you tonight? The students achievements that were honored tonight were very impressive and you make us all proud. Keep up the great work at Sage Park.
George Slate May 21, 2013 at 05:07 pm
Thank you Al and Bill for the follow up comments. For both, as I understand it, the fancy words are,Read More longitudinal studies. Take the same students, or group of students if the individual data is not available, and see how the test results go from third grade to high school. I've only done a quick scan of the test results for Windsor that R. Eleveld gave us a link to earlier. Along with understanding the Town's audited financial statements (which Bill might help me with), this longitudinal information is something that I hope to work through as time permits. As I write this, I should consider a FOI to see if it already exists. If it already exists, I'm surprised that all of us do not already have easy access to it. When I have the information gathered, I will share summaries here. And for the two of you, I will share the detailed spreadsheets. As I recall, even last night the conversation centered on the High School for turn around, and regardless of what we think of the person currently engaged for the EER, the EER is for the High School only.
Bill Generous May 21, 2013 at 04:46 pm
George, keep in mind that after middle school at Sage Park, some students go to other public orRead More private high schools. Studies comparing the middle and high school should concentrate on students that have attended both.
Jeanneen Griffin, First Vice President and Team Leader, Commercial Real Estate Lending for First Niagara's New England and Tri-State Regions
Albert Williams May 20, 2013 at 03:40 pm
Just curious...any relation to Griffin Land, Imperial Nursuries, River Bend Associates?
R Eleveld May 21, 2013 at 03:44 pm
@Slate The BoE originally said they did not believe the Town Ethics Commission had purview over theRead More BoE. Yes in November the voters can choose to continue the behavior with the current party in the majority. See the comment of WR who says a Councilor accepted responsibility here: http://windsor.patch.com/groups/schools/p/council-approves-reduction-in-education-funding
George Slate May 20, 2013 at 02:27 pm
R Eleveld - Just to clarify, The Town Ethics Committee ruled (1) that the BOE is subject to the TownRead More Ethics Code, but (2) they do not have jurisdiction over violations of BOE by laws violations. When someone is brought in front of an Ethics Committee, and comes out vindicated, one of two things happen. They are humbled, or emboldened. The BOE President, and the Superintendent of Schools are emboldened because virtually nothing stands in their way of two person absolute rule, until November 2013. The only obstacle is for one of the Democrat BOE members joining the other four BOE members to reign (the pun works all too well here) them in (this appears unlikely). What is the old saying, Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely? So we have to wait until November to try and fix this situation. In the meantime the voters in Windsor can keep voting NO on the referenda to send the message that we do not want dysfunctional BOE oversight. Or we could get back a functional BOE. Since September 12, 2012, this possibility grow less likely each day.
R Eleveld May 20, 2013 at 10:18 am
@Michele, you are correct. The TC can only provide the BoE an amount of money, it can not in anywayRead More tell the BoE what to do with that money. It could make suggestions, however they carry the same weight as any citizen making any suggestion to the BoE. State law has created the BoE as an island unto itself. They do not even think they are subject to the Town Ethics Code. The voters do have the power to change what they do not like in November. The question is will they again repeat the prior behavior and vote in those that will not make change. Remember Einstein's definition of insanity. It applies here.
R Eleveld May 20, 2013 at 10:22 am
They did a good job of investigation along with Ms. Fissel. in the article: Some investigationRead More yields more questions. I ask some questions about the timing of this whole situation. It is now become an embarrassment to Windsor, Loyola, and Dr. James. The idea of this research/study is important, however this execution is fraught with problems and serious concerns. http://windsor.patch.com/groups/r-elevelds-blog/p/some-investigation-yields-more-questions
R Eleveld May 15, 2013 at 01:12 pm
The results:Read More http://windsor.patch.com/groups/r-elevelds-blog/p/voting-results-by-district-with-analysis
AnneB May 15, 2013 at 09:19 am
What they don't get is that the Dollar Tree and Poquonock development are not isolated issues.Read More They directly relate to the overall frustration of voters. Residents have repeatedly been told that development will produce "benefits" for them and the town and help keep taxes low. Meanwhile, those "benefits" always seem to go to an ever hungry, yet still failing, education beaurocracy while the center of town and other neighborhoods languish with no improvements and taxes still go up.
Malvi Lennon May 15, 2013 at 09:10 am
What Mayor Trinks and Minority Leader Jepson refuse to acknowledge is that people (ALL people) areRead More tired. Most Windsor residents whether they are on the right or the left want cost effective responsible government. We want our elected officials to remember that they ARE accountable to the people. It is OUR money hence OUR priorities should set the agenda. No more horse trails or sidewalks to nowhere. This November let’s send a clear message to the Town Council – step aside boys a new team is taking over.