Homicides prompt special session: following a brutal crime, the Connecticut General Assembly looked at how to improve supervision of parolees in the community.

AuthorLawrence, Alison

There are times when a single horrific crime can galvanize lawmakers into plunging ahead with significant changes to the criminal code. A robbery turned triple-homicide in Cheshire, Conn., last July was one of those times.

The deaths of Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, and her daughters Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11, at the hands of two parolees led to a state task force inquiry, and by January, to a special session of the General Assembly to grapple with policy changes.

"The incident precipitated a discussion on the whole criminal justice system," says Representative Michael Lawlor, co-chair of the Joint Judiciary Committee. Lawmakers have remained focused on making system-wide changes into the 2008 regular session.

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In the early morning hours of July 23, 2007, two men on parole broke into the home of Dr. William Petit Jr., a doctor in the upper-middle-class neighborhood of Cheshire. His wife and two daughters were killed, one daughter was raped and the mother strangled. The doctor crawled out of the burning home after being brutally beaten.

The two men arrested for the crime met at a halfway house after being released from prison in 2007. Both served time for robbery convictions, had no records of violence, and had been compliant with the terms of their release. The parole board, however, did not have sentencing transcripts in which the judge referred to one of the parolees as a "calculated, cold-blooded predator."

Within days of the crime, Governor Jodi Rell commissioned the Sentencing and Parole Review Task Force to examine the arrest, charge, sentencing and release process for convicted offenders. The governor told the parole board to start treating all burglary offenders as if they were violent offenders. The judicial system and the Board of Pardons and Paroles agreed to improve the sharing of information between their departments.

There was an immediate desire to make speedy and simplistic changes that addressed the robbery-homicide case, says Representative Lawlor. Proposals included stiffening penalties under Connecticut's three-strikes sentencing law. But work by the task force and research by legislative leaders determined that the General Assembly should take a broader look at policy changes.

In January, after the governor's task force released policy recommendations, the General Assembly went into special session. The collection of laws passed were a compromise between the Democratic-controlled General Assembly...

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