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"I did well but I didn't want to end my life" in the corporate world

I wrote a profile for The Stamford Advocate of Courtney Nelthropp, who left a successful career at IBM to start his own business as the owner of a printing services franchise. Most importantly, Nelthropp has changed the landscape of Stamford, Connecticut's public housing by chairing Charter Oak Communities' board for the last dozen years and leading the authority in taking down its old high-rise housing in favor of state-of-the-art town homes.

A story excerpt: 

Courtney Nelthropp spent 20 years in the corporate world. He says had very little opportunity to do anything to give back to the community as an IBM company man.

But that changed when Nelthropp went into business for himself as the owner of a Sir Speedy printing and marketing services franchise in downtown Stamford.

An old IBM colleague and Stamford resident, Bob Harris, suggested that Nelthropp seek a mayoral appointment to join the board of commissioners for Stamford's public housing authority. GovernorDannel P. Malloy, then mayor of Stamford, appointed Nelthropp to the board. Nelthropp now has been the chair of Charter Oak Communities' board for the last dozen years and has led the authority in taking down its old high-rise housing in favor of state-of-the-art town homes.

Nelthropp's contributions to Stamford have inspired recognition this fall. He was the first person honored by the Truglia Thumbelina Fund for his volunteer work. And he was one of the honorees at the Stamford NAACP's annual Freedom Fund Dinner.

One of Nelthropp's biggest accomplishments, Charter Oak Communities' chief executive officer Vincent J. Tufo said, was his leadership in getting the housing authority to take on the role of developing and revitalizing all its new housing stock itself. The first project the housing authority undertook after Nelthropp joined the board was done with an outside developer. But every project since then Charter Oak has developed itself.

Nelthropp chose this strategy because he was convinced that it was impossible to rely only on financing from the federal and state government and still provide very high-quality housing.

"Very early on we started thinking about how we could be more entrepreneurial and produce more revenue and still do it within the charter of a quasi-public organization," Nelthropp said.

The result was new developments with residents who pay full market price living along side residents in affordable-rate units, Tufo said.

Only five to 10 percent of housing authorities handle all the development of new housing or revitalized housing internally, Tufo said.

Changing Charter Oak from a traditional housing authority managing affordable housing to developing its own housing stock required "a long-range vision and a steady hand" from Nelthropp, Tufo said.

Other housing authorities would have wavered, Tufo said.

The end of `projects'

Christel Truglia, a former state representative and founder of the Truglia Thumbelina Fund that helps Stamford's impoverished children, said that whenever she visited the old Southfield Village housing project -- one of the city's dilapidated public housing projects -- she "just felt sad that anyone's children would have to live in that kind of atmosphere."

That housing project was torn down in 1997 after the shooting of a little girl attending a birthday party there, prompting the city and the residents association to agree on what would replace it.

Now Truglia is so proud of Charter Oak's developments that she takes out-of-town guests to see them.

"You really need true leadership and vision and a passion and that's exactly what Courtney has had," Truglia said.

"Things haven't gotten that good in the middle and the top to really lift up the bottom level"

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Thu, 11/28/2013 - 12:51

While the American economy has been officially out of recession for four years, social service providers told me for a piece I did for the Stamford Advocate that the need for assistance for the least well-off has not slackened. On this day of Thanksgiving, the need for social services is a reminder to give if you have the means to do so and to be grateful for the means that you do have.

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An excerpt of the story:

Robert M. Arnold, president and CEO of Greenwich-based Family Centers, which provides education, health and human services to children, adults and families in Fairfield County, said the economic recovery has been uneven, and people at the lowest rung of the economic ladder have had the lowest level of recovery.

"Things have to get really better up in the middle and the top to lift up the bottom level," Arnold said. "Things haven't gotten that good in the middle and the top to really lift up the bottom level."

Many people are working jobs on which they can barely subsist, Arnold said.

Jason T. Shaplen, chief executive officer of Stamford-based Inspirica, Inc., one of the largest providers of services to the homeless in Connecticut, said that the demand for his organization's services is at a record level. The number of people living in the street in Connecticut has increased 82 percent in the past three years and the number of homeless people in Greenwich and Stamford increased 45 percent in the past year, according to Shaplen.

Nationally, 100 million Americans live in poverty or live within 50 percent of the poverty line, Shaplen added.

Historically, homelessness was connected to people having mental health problems, substance abuse problems or lack of education, Shaplen said. While all those things still cause people to become homeless, the new driver for homelessness is people being unable to find work or make enough money from their work to meet all of their needs, especially in a housing market as expensive as lower Fairfield County's, Shaplen said.

The winter is an especially hard time for people in poverty in Fairfield County because they have the additional seasonal expenses of heating, warm winter clothing and maintaining vehicles that are not in great repair to survive winter weather, Arnold said.

 

Special Events Reach 'Super-Saturation' Point On Connecticut's Gold Coast

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 11/18/2013 - 16:38

I wrote a piece for The Stamford Advocate on how the gala season has exploded on the "Gold Coast" of Lower Fairfield County, Connecticut. One source told that me that 50 years ago there would only be one or two galas in the autumn and only one or two galas in the spring. Now there are two or three galas per week:

Fairfield County charities turn to galas to raise funds

Flowers flown from abroad. Live animals. Goody bags with luxurious gifts. Back in the financial world's heyday in the 1980s and 1990s, fundraising galas in Fairfield County were "hugely extravagant," says Elaine Ubiña, a photographic chronicler of the philanthropic scene with the website Fairfield County Look.

"Hedge funds ... the whole world of finance, everybody was just doing incredibly well and had less regard for the kind of money they were spending on the events," Ubiña said. "They knew there was always somebody who would underwrite" the lavishness of parties.

While the embellishments arranged for galas have been stripped down from years past, that has not meant any slackening in the number of special events put on by charities in Fairfield County and the rest of the greater New York City area.

"The competition is really fierce," said Christopher J. Riendeau, senior vice president of the Stamford Hospital Foundation.

Riendeau said that there are only five ways for nonprofits to raise funds: special events like galas, runs and golf outings; annual giving campaigns; large gifts of $25,000 or more from donors; planned giving in which nonprofits are named in donors' estate plans; and grants given by corporations and foundations.

As major gift-giving has decreased, more regional charities are undertaking special events, Riendeau said.

"The special event dollar, particularly on the corporate sponsorship side, is not infinite," Riendeau said. "It's definitely finite. I worry that we're going to get to this super-saturation point."

According to 2012 data from the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Fairfield County's $1.3 billion in giving ranks it 10th in the nation.

Read the full piece here.

Philadelphia Police Department Plans to Record Interrogations. One Case Shows It Can’t Come Soon Enough

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 11/18/2013 - 14:17

The Crime Report, a news service about criminal justice published by the Center on Media, Crime and Justice at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, ran my piece about the case of a false confession in a double murder in West Philadelphia:

When Nafis Pinkey was taken into a Philadelphia Police Department homicide interrogation room in the 24 hours after his childhood friend was murdered, he had no idea that he would become a murder suspect.

In August 2009, the bodies of Jonathan Pitts, Pinkey’s friend since the days they went to the same daycare, and Pitts’ girlfriend, Nakeisha Finks, were found with their wrists and feet bound and their eyes and mouths covered with duct tape, in their West Philadelphia house.

They had both been shot in the back of their heads.

Pinkey joined the crowd of other concerned friends and relatives, who had gone to the house when Finks did not show up for a client’s hairdresser appointment. He had been in the house the night before.

He went voluntarily to the homicide unit after uniformed officers asked him if he would go. They assumed that he was one of the last people to see the couple alive.

But during the estimated 24 hours he spent in a locked interrogation room, under periodic questioning, things got “worse,” Pinkey recalled.

“What I mean by worse: it got more physical, more confrontational.”

Pinkey confessed to involvement with the crime. According to his statement to the police, which was later presented in court, he had arranged for Pitts’ home to be burglarized by suggesting a compatriot climb through a window with an air conditioner loosely set into its frame.

Then two burglars (Pinkey was not one of them) allegedly killed the couple.

Four Years in Detention

Held without bail because he originally was charged with capital murder, Pinkey spent the next four years in detention in the Philadelphia Prison System awaiting trial.

The case took so long, in part, because Pinkey changed defense lawyers midway. His defense counsel also asked for a delay in starting the trial to wait for a ruling from Pennsylvania Supreme Court on the admissibility of expert testimony about why false confessions happen.

In early October, Pinkey was acquitted.

The two men Pinkey fingered as the murderers were never charged. No one else besides Pinkey has ever been charged with the murders.

One factor in his acquittal was Pinkey’s testimony that his original confession had been coerced—and was false. One of the detectives who interrogated Pinkey testified during the trial. That left the jury with two stories to compare on who was more credible.

“I was very emotional. I was confused. I was just saying anything that would get me out of the door,” he told The Crime Report.

The jury took Pinkey’s claim into account, along with inconsistencies in the prosecution’s case, when it freed him. But according to his lawyer, Gregory Pagano, his long pre-trial imprisonment might have been avoided if Pinkey’s “confession” had been videotaped—providing authorities with an impartial means of weighing the evidence against him.

600 PDs Videotape

While videotaped interrogations are common in law enforcement—at least 600 U.S. law enforcement agencies now conduct them—Pagano told The Crime Report he couldn’t remember a single case in the Philadelphia Police Department where an interrogation was videotaped.

This was confirmed by others familiar with the Philadelphia system.

Paul G. Conway, chief of the Defender Association of Philadelphia’s homicide unit, said that his office has never defended a homicide case in which the interrogations were taped.

There have been videotapes of defendants reading their confessions or answering questions on whether their confessions were voluntarily, Conway said. But not in all cases, he said.

Both Conway and Pagano cited several other homicide cases that have involved coerced confessions.

The Philadelphia police’s practice of not videotaping interrogations may soon change.

The Philadelphia Police Department plans to ask for funding to buy the required equipment, with a goal of making such equipment available in all four interview rooms in the homicide unit at some point in the future.

Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey testified in a budget hearing in April that the department was behind other jurisdictions in videotaping interrogations.

“I think that we have to do all we can to make sure that the right people are arrested and charged with crimes and that everything is above-board, and I think that the videotaping of interrogations certainly does that,” the commissioner testified.

During the hearing, Ramsey said the office still needed to put together an estimate on how much it would cost to install video-recording equipment.

The plan was to make a request for a capital expenditure, Ramsey said. He added he favored recording in all violent felony cases.

A spokeswoman for the police department declined to provide an estimate of the cost or a time frame for when recording would start.

“The standard operating procedures are in the process of being completed,” Police Officer Jillian Russell said in an email.

Advocates Hopeful

Yet advocates for recording interrogations are hopeful.

“They are moving very quickly,” reports Marissa Boyers Bluestine, legal director of the Pennsylvania Innocence Project. “They’ve gotten all the directives in place.”

But the municipal budget is strained, Bluestine added.

“Part of the problem in Philadelphia is frankly a resource one,” she said, noting that Philadelphia’s homicide unit is located in an old building that is badly in need of retrofitting.

Ramsey testified that there were expenses associated with wiring and rehabilitating outmoded facilities to handle video recording.

According to Bluestine, the best practices to prevent false confessions include: taping entire interrogations from the moment a suspect sits down, stopping interrogations from extending beyond three hours and continuing investigations even after confessions have been signed.

The International Association of Chiefs of Police has made wrongful convictions a priority. A recent article from Police Chief Magazine reported that the best practices to avoid false confession include recording the entirety of interrogations, and keeping secret some crime details to ensure innocent suspects do not just parrot back inside information gleaned from their interrogators.

Richard Leo, an academic who has been doing empirical research on police interrogation practices for 20 years and is a frequent expert witness in cases involving false confessions, said he is seeing a growing movement nationally to record confessions.

Leo said the movement has developed because of greater understanding of what causes false confessions.

He listed, for example: 

* lying to suspects about the evidence against them;
* the length of interrogations;
* the propensity of people to comply with authority;
* mental illness or low intelligence;
* and implications from police interrogators that if a suspect makes an admission, he is “not admitting to a crime or admitting to something that has very serious consequences.”

Philadelphia’s suburban neighbor, Montgomery County, is one jurisdiction that has joined the movement to record confessions.

Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman, the top prosecutor in the third largest county in Pennsylvania, said her office started a pilot program of recording homicide interrogations about 18 months ago.

The office has since expanded the pilot to include videotaping confessions in cases of violent felonies at one county police department.

Nine suspects agreed to speak to county detectives, but only three also agreed to be taped, Ferman said.

She was surprised that the vast majority of suspects refused to be videotaped but consented to have their conversations memorialized by detectives’ note-taking.

But the pilot also has benefited prosecutors in the courtroom.

In one case that went to trial with a videotaped confession, Ferman was “a little startled” at the power of seeing the defendant talking about the murder he committed with “no possible suggestion that the words were coming from someone else.”

Edward McCann, the first assistant district attorney in Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams’ office, said right now only one of the city’s homicide’s interrogation rooms is capable of videotaping and it is used only in a very limited fashion.

‘Proper’ Training Needed

“I think that police officers and prosecutors, properly trained, could do this and do it well,” said McCann. “It would just enhance the cases and take away a lot of the arguments about coercion and force and things of that nature.”

“I definitely see it as a positive.”

He notes that video recording is available in one Philadelphia interrogation room, but it has never been used to record entire interviews. Instead, it has been used occasionally to record defendants answering if they gave their confessions voluntarily and if they were treated well during their interrogations.

(That was not done in Pinkney’s case, according to Pagano.).

A videotape also is more powerful evidence to present to a jury because they can see the defendant’s demeanor at the time of the interrogation, McCann said.

McCann, however disagrees with advocates who call for setting a time limit for interrogations.

“That said, if you’re going to hold someone for 24 hours you better have a lot of reasons for that to happen for a judge to say that’s OK,” McCann said.

One example: the need for investigators to corroborate other information in order to confront a suspect.

The irony, Bluestine said, is “that innocent people in some ways are more likely to give a false confession just because they’re more willing to talk to police.”

Lawsuit Challenges Connecticut Alimony Laws As Unconstitutional

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 11/11/2013 - 12:16

I wrote a story for ALM's Connecticut Law Tribune about a lawsuit challenging Connecticut's alimony laws as unconstitutional:

"Four plaintiffs have filed a complaint challenging the constitutionality of Connecticut's alimony laws on the grounds that they affect a "fundamental liberty interest in ending a marriage and in remarrying."

The plaintiffs, who filed their complaint anonymously and who were ordered to pay alimony as a result of their respective divorces in Middlesex, Hartford, Fairfield and Middletown counties, argue there are no standards to guide judges when granting alimony. The lawsuit claims alimony is an anachronism dating from when women's legal identities merged into their husbands' identities upon marriage.

Within that framework, no statue guides judges on the point of granting spousal support, according to the complaint. "In no other area of law is the judiciary cast adrift and empowered to force the transfer of a private citizen's assets with no stated goal against which to measure the appropriateness of the award," the plaintiffs' papers said.

In contract cases, courts are only allowed to award enough money to return plaintiffs to the positions they would have been if their contracts had not been breached, the plaintiffs said. In personal injury cases, courts are only allowed to award plaintiffs enough to compensate them for their pain and suffering as well as their lost earning power, the plaintiffs also said.

The plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that Connecticut's alimony laws violate the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution as well as a permanent injunction enjoining the alimony laws."

Read the full story here: http://www.ctlawtribune.com/PubArticleFriendlyCT.jsp?id=1202627142771

Celebrating Italian-American Heritage Without Celebrating All Things Christopher Columbus

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Mon, 10/14/2013 - 12:06

This weekend, I covered a Columbus Day celebration for Hearst's Stamford Advocate. I very much had the history of colonization and the destruction of the indigenous peoples' cultures that followed Christopher Columbus' voyages to North and South America on my mind before I went to the event. But even before I had to ask one question on this point, the folks I interviewed at the event brought it up that they'd like to separate the celebration of Italian-American culture from the celebration of Columbus. Here's a passage from my story:

"Celebrating Italian-American heritage is not the same thing as celebrating all things about Christopher Columbus, more than one person said. At the same time as Christopher Columbus is celebrated as the preeminent Italian in history for leading voyages that led to Europeans learning of the Americas, that history is very controversial now, Mickela Mallozzi said.

'You have the whole history of Columbus enslaving the people of the islands and forcing Catholicism on them and raping their women,' Mallozzi said. 'It comes to this whole point of, where is the balance of celebrating our Italian culture when people aren't wanting to revere this person?'

The Rev. Martin deMayo, who read up on the history of Columbus in preparation for the festivities Sunday, said that in one instance, Columbus brought back American Indians in chains to the royal court of Spain.

Spanish Queen Isabella, a 'very strong-willed, upright woman, said to Columbus, `Who gave my admiral permission to treat my subjects this way?' deMayo recounted.

While that was not a shining moment for Columbus and he had strong desire for wealth, Columbus also was a man of faith, deMayo said."

The full piece is here: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/local/article/Italian-Americans-celebrat...

Diana Nyad Might Swim for 48 Hours But True Heroes Are 'People Who Pick Up and Start Over'

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 10/08/2013 - 15:05

Marathon swimmer Diana Nyad made her record-breaking swim from Cuba to Florida just recently. This morning, she started a 48-hour charitable swim to raise funds for Hurricane Sandy survivors. But, as her coach said, “I can’t imagine what it would be like to lose everything — everything you’ve worked for and strived for in your life, gone. It’s not easy. These are the people who become heroes. These are the people who pick up and start over.”

My piece for Hearst's Connecticut News Group starts: "When Lindsay O’Brien’s 15 minutes are up, she’s not going to linger one second longer than she has to in a 120-foot, two-lane pool that is going to be installed in New York City’s Herald Square.
'The minute that clock hits the 15 minutes I am jumping out of there,' said O’Brien, the project manager for Hurricane Sandy relief at Stamford-based AmeriCares, a nonprofit global health and disaster-relief organization.
When she and others from AmeriCares undertake 15 minutes of nonstop swimming as part of a fundraiser for Hurricane Sandy relief, it will challenge their endurance. But the true endurance test will be undertaken by marathon swimmer Diana Nyad, who plans to swim for 48 hours straight — from 8:30 a.m. Tuesday to 8:30 a.m. Thursday — in an effort to raise money to help Sandy survivors.
Nyad, who is fresh off her record-breaking, 53-hour ocean swim from Cuba to Florida, said in an email that she wanted to help her hometown of New York City raise storm-relief money after Sandy hit. After a conversation with Carol A. Robles-Roman, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s deputy mayor for legal affairs and counsel, Nyad came up with the idea of constructing a pool in 'in the heart of Manhattan, where I would swim for 48 continuous hours, in solidarity with those who had suffered great loss, and invite guest swimmers to shadow swim with me in the next lane' she wrote."

The rest of the story: http://blog.ctnews.com/stamford411/2013/10/08/stamfords-americares-swims...
 

Stamford's Dinosaur BBQ offers pork and preaching

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Sat, 09/21/2013 - 15:40

Here is the piece I wrote for the Stamford Advocate about a local church starting an unconventional Sunday service at a local BBQ joint: 

"Great barbecue can seem like a religious pastime in America.

But a local church is taking it to the next level by holding a Sunday service in the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que joint in Stamford.

This Sunday at 10 a.m., nondenominational Black Rock Congregational Church's Long Ridge branch will hold its first 'Church at Dinosaur Bar-B-Que' with the trifecta of blues music, a discussion of the Bible and barbecue to follow.

Rick Allen, the pastor of Black Rock-Long Ridge, said a lot of people have a lot of baggage about going to church these days, either because they have left the faith they grew up with, or didn't have a strong faith in the first place. For all those people who wouldn't walk into a conventional church, Allen said he wants to welcome them with an unconventional experience of faith.

As the flier for the service says, 'This Ain't Your Momma's Church.'"

To read the full story: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/default/article/Stamford-s-Dinosaur-BBQ-...

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