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3 CT cases to watch this week: Courthouse shooting, developer's sex assault case, prosecutor hearing

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3 CT cases to watch this week: Courthouse shooting, developer's sex assault case, prosecutor hearing.Three Connecticut court cases to watch this week include a Fairfield developer accused of sex assault, a New London prosecutor accused of harassment and the Waterbury courthouse shooting.Daniel Suozzi A Fairfield developer accused of sexually assaulting an acquaintance at his home after a day of partying last Memorial Day weekend wants a judge to order police to extract cellphone data from the alleged victim and five other witnesses named in an arrest warrant affidavit.Advertisement Article continues below this ad The hearing on the defense motion to preserve evidence is slated for Monday in the case of Daniel Suozzi, who faces a single charge of first-degree sexual assault in connection with the May 25, 2025, incident at his home near Penfield Beach in Fairfield.He was released after posting $50,000 bond following his arrest in the case last November.In the 14-page motion filed in February, Suozzi’s lawyer, Mark Sherman, wrote that the cellphone data — in addition to data from Uber related to two of the witnesses — would contradict the version of events presented in an arrest warrant affidavit, which only cited text messages between the victim and Suozzi’s wife.“Those text messages between complainant and defendant’s wife were not just cited, they were republished in over seven continuous pages of the 20-page arrest warrant application,” the motion said.“Astonishingly, no text messages between complainant and the five other disclosure witnesses are referenced in the police reports or arrest warrant application.” Advertisement Article continues below this ad Want more New Haven Register?According to a 20-page arrest warrant application, the victim reported the assault in mid-September, telling police that she initially tried to “bury” what happened, but decided to come forward after she learned Suozzi, who went to a New Canaan drug rehab facility in the ensuing weeks, “wasn’t taking the incident seriously.” The defense motion, which was disclaimed as being a “fishing expedition,” said orders for the preservation and subpoena of the information sought are the only way of ensuring Suozzi has a fair trial.“In this case, under any standard, basic notions of fairness and justice compel the preservation orders sought to ensure the defendant’s ability to effectively exercise his Constitutional rights,” the motion said.Advertisement Article continues below this ad Christa O’Connell The New London senior assistant state’s attorney accused of harassing a woman her husband was dating has a hearing scheduled Monday in state Superior Court in Middletown on her application for a diversionary program.Christa O’Connell faces charges of harassment and computer crimes, stemming from complaints of alleged harassment and unwanted contact the victim filed last year.In addition to sending the woman harassing text and social media messages, O'Connell is accused of accessing prosecutorial databases to access information on her, according to warrants.O’Connell, who has been on administrative leave from her New London prosecutor job since August, applied for accelerated rehabilitation — a court program that, if granted and successfully completed, could result in the erasure of her charges.Advertisement Article continues below this ad The victim told state police Baker texted her husband, who was known to the victim, specific information about the victim's past arrest.The warrant for that arrest was signed by Baker and was four years before the victim and Baker's husband had become known to one another, the warrant stated.Waterbury courthouse shooting A judge will hear arguments Monday on a motion to hold the murder trials of three men charged in connection with a deadly 2024 shooting outside state Superior Court in another courthouse since the Waterbury courthouse was the scene of the crime.Attorneys for Dante Howell, 31, Tory Keith, 36, both of Meriden, and Nicholas Chiapponi, 28, of Glastonbury, filed motions with the court seeking the change before the trials for their clients are scheduled.The three are charged in the killing of Jarron Chapman, 26, on March 21, 2024, as Chapman and his family were walking out of the Grand Street courthouse.Advertisement Article continues below this ad Chapman was in court that day on gun- and drug-related charges, according to his attorney, Ioannis Kaloidis.Keith and Chiapponi have rejected plea offers and their cases were added to the trial list, according to court records.Howell received a plea offer from prosecutors for a 35-year sentence but his lawyer said his client was likely to reject any offer.Supervisory Assistant State's Attorney Don Therkildsen said the state plans to object to the motions.Advertisement Article continues below this ad The three defense attorneys argue in court documents there would be an "undue prejudice" to their clients "that cannot be cured by an instruction from the Court."