Brian McDonald

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up in smoke?

July 31, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, Cheshire home invasion trial, Dr. Petit, thomas ullman, michael dearington

:
according to members of her church, Jennifer Hawke-Petit signed A Declaration of Life, but there has been no sign and little talk of the document. A Declaration of Life is a contract of sorts that states a person's objection to the death penalty and requests, should that person be a victim of homicide, that the death penalty not be imposed.

along with her two daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11, Hawke-Petit was murdered during the Cheshire, Ct. home-invasion in July of 2007. The alleged murderers, Steven Hayes, 47, and Joshua Komisarjevsky, 29, both face the death penalty in upcoming trials.

the mystery of the missing document raises several possibilities, among them are:

1. defense attorneys have the document and are waiting for the trial. Presenting such a document to the jury would provide an incredibly dramatic moment and perhaps a sentencing game-changer.

2. Hawke-Petit's church, the United Methodist Church of Cheshire, has the document and is conflicted over whether or not to release it. The United Methodist has a long anti-death penalty history, but the vicious cruelty of the Petit murders in its own backyard has tested the church's resolve.

3. Dr. Petit, Hawke-Petit's husband and lone survivor of the home invasion, has the document, and doesn't plan on showing it to anyone. Dr. Petit has become increasingly vocal over the past few months in his desire to see hayes and komisarjevsky executed.

4. lastly, and undoubtedly the most ironic of the possibilities, is that the document was destroyed in the fire that consumed the Petit home and killed Hayley and Michaela. presumably, the fire was set by komisarjevsky and hayes in an attempt to silence witnesses and cover their tracks. Hawke-Petit was raped and strangled before the fire was set.

steven hayes' triple murder trial begins on sept. 13th, komisarjevsky's in the beginning of next year.

ullmann crying the Blues

July 29, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, Cheshire home invasion trial, Judge Jon Blue, thomas ullman, michael dearington

Judge Jon Blue stayed back on Thomas Ullman's curveball and hit it right out of New Haven yesterday. Ullman, as you might remember, tried to float an off-speed bender past the prosecution by arguing that the death penalty in Connecticut violates his client's rights. his client, of course, is accused triple-murderer, steven hayes.

part of ullman's argument centered around the words of Connecticut governor, Jodi Rell. In the wake of the Cheshire murders, Rell vetoed legislation that would have abolished the death penalty in Ct. in a press release and other documents explaining the reason behind her veto, Rell cited Dr. Petit, the lone survivor of the Cheshire home-invasion, who in turn cited Lord Denning, the Brit jurist who believed that some crimes just deserve the death penalty.

but only a handful of the thousands of prospective jurors interviewed for hayes' trial knew the wording of Rell's veto, Blue said (let alone who Lord Denning was).

the other part of ullman's argument was that the legislature that passed the bill abolishing the death penalty was representative of the will of the people of Connecticut. Not true, though. sixty percent of Ct. supports the needle, and that number has been constant for a lot of years.

so ullman falls behind one-ziltch in the opening inning and steven hayes' life is still at stake when his trial starts on sept. 13th

A declaration of life...

July 27, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, Cheshire home invasion trial, Dr. Petit, thomas ullman, michael dearington

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according to members of her church who were interviewed by The New York Times, Jennifer Hawke-Petit believed fervently that the death penalty was wrong and probably signed A Declaration of Life agreement. Along with her two daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11, Hawke-Petit was murdered during the Cheshire home-invasion.

today her husband, Dr. William Petit, the lone survivor of that home-invasion, asked the people of Connecticut to support pro-death penalty candidates in the upcoming elections.

Petit's remarks came after a pretrial hearing where a judge heard arguments by the defense that Gov. Jodi Rell violated their client's rights when she vetoed legislation that would have abolished the death penalty in Connecticut. Rell cites Dr. Petit in the press release explaining her veto.

the trial of steven hayes, one of the two men accused of murdering Petit's family, begins sept. 13th. hayes is being tried for capital crimes and could face the death penalty.

in the middle of the night

July 25, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

CHAPTER ONE

3 A.M. Loose gravel on the street crunched beneath the heavyset Hayes' feet. He could make noise in a blizzard, Joshua thought, but now Joshua wore a small smile as he shook his head and, palms facing down, motioned to his partner to walk softly. Joshua was either getting use to Steven Hayes or, more likely, charged by the thrill of the crime he was about to commit. Leading the way, Joshua, looking younger than his 26 years (even considering four-and-a-half of them spent in jail) his frame slim with muscles like rope knots, moved silently up the driveway into the backyard and passed the sunroom. It was then he first saw Dr. Petit asleep on the couch in the enclosed porch. Joshua stood there motionless at the edge of complete darkness in the yard. A soft light was coming from inside the room. Hayes stood behind Joshua, anxiously shifting his weight from one foot to the other. "What are we waiting for?" Hayes said as softly as he could, but his words were nearly frantic. Joshua didn't so much as twitch. It was as if he was listening to something that only he could hear. Finally, after what must have seemed like forever to his partner, Joshua pulled a knit ski hat, with slits cut out for eyeholes, over his head. Then he turned to Hayes, "I'll let you in," he whispered.

three years ago today (cont'd)

July 23, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

by midnight, everyone was asleep, except maybe Dr. Petit, who had brought some paperwork down to the sunroom. his youngest, Michaela, took his place in the master bedroom next to her mom. Hayley had read herself to sleep with the newest Harry Potter, the poster on the wall of the WNBA star, Swin Cash, keeping watch.

soon the lids of Dr. Petit's eyes too began to fall. the sounds outside the sunroom: the gentle rustle of the leaves on the trees in the backyard, the click of the crickets, folded into the rhythm of his breath.

if Dr. Petit heard the van slowly roll by the house at 3 a.m., it was part of the soundtrack of his dreams.

driving the van was the young man with the auburn hair and the raven tattoos. besides him sat a man almost twenty years his senior, bald and heavyset. they both wore dark, hooded sweatshirts.

New York Times

July 22, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

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today's new york times story might be a bit confusing to some. in the hope of clearing up my role in it, below is the reprint of my June 9th post about the book steven hayes was reading in jail. for further clarification, please go to "june" archives below left for more posts on this topic.

steven hayes's reading list.
June 9, 2010
contrary to many news stories about In the Middle of the Night, joshua komisarjevsky rarely looked to shift the blame to hayes for what happened that morning in Cheshire. out of all the information joshua gave to me in his letters and during my interviews with him, only once or twice did i get the feeling that he was giving up hayes. one of those times was when he told me about the book hayes was reading in the months leading up to the Cheshire murders.

that book was a topic of discussion in New Haven Superior Court yesterday and could be introduced as evidence by the prosecution during the Sept. trial. it is explosive material and supports what i've always believed--as motives go, monetary gain was second to the primary reason hayes and joshua broke into the Petit home early that July morning: the Cheshire home-invasion was rape; planned, executed and murderous.

three years ago today...

July 22, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

...was a beautiful, late july sunday in new england. Dr. Petit left the house early to meet his dad for a round of golf at the country club. his wife, Jennifer, and daughter Michaela, 11, were heading to the club later in the day to lounge around the pool. daughter, Hayley, 18, was coming home from the Cape, where she'd spent the weekend with some friends.

the family planned to gather for sunday dinner back at he house on sorghum mill drive. Michaela, a devotee of Rachael Ray, had selected the menu: pasta and a salad made with local tomatoes.

as happens often to chefs in the kitchen, Michaela realized at the last minute that she was missing a key ingredient: balsamic vinegar for the salad. not to worry, mom said, we'll take a ride to Stop & Shop. nothing was out of the ordinary. as the mother of an 11- and 18-year-old, the job as chauffeur was automatic, done with a love so deep it needed no outward displays. but this would be the last time Jennifer would drive Michaela anywhere.

mom pulled into the supermarket parking lot and next to a red van with a young man with auburn hair seated behind the wheel. he wore jeans and work boots. he smoked camel cigarettes. although Michaela and mom didn't notice him, and surely wouldn't have been able to see these even if they did, he also had two ravens tattooed across his back in homage to his favorite poem by edgar allan poe: "and his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming..."

like poe's bird, the young man watched intently as mother and daughter walked together into the store.
(to be continued)

was the gas the threat?

July 21, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

question:

did Jennifer Hawke-Petit know that her captors had plastic gallon jugs filled with gasoline?

it goes without question that Mrs. Petit feared for the lives of her daughters when steven hayes drove her to the bank that monday morning in july three years ago. why else would she withdraw the 15 thousand dollars and get back in the car with hayes instead of staying in the safety of the bank.

the threat could very well have been the gasoline. should hayes sense that Mrs. Petit was raising the alarm, or not coming out of the bank with the money, he would phone komisarjevsky who would spread the gasoline and set the house on fire, leaving Hayley, 18, and Michaela, 11, and Dr. Petit, tied and bound behind him as he fled.

if Mrs. Petit knew about the gasoline, and it seems likely that she did, then she must have realized that there was a real possibility that hayes and komsiarjevsky were not planning on leaving any witnesses. but she must have also believed that her only chance of saving her family was going back to the house. no matter what horrible scenarios played in her mind, it is highly unlikely that she gave even a moment's thought of surviving without her children.

if the gas was the threat, then it was one that hayes and komisarjevsky would ultimately follow through on. Mrs. Petit, however, wouldn't be alive to see the horror of it. she had already been raped and strangled when the house was set on fire. Hayley and Michaela would die in the inferno. Dr. Petit managed to escape.

steven hayes's trial begins sept. 13th, komisarjevsky's next year

"things got out of control..."

July 19, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

in a pretrial hearing last week, a cheshire detective testified that, just after apprehending steven hayes, the home-invasion murder suspect told him that "things got out of control." so let's see if the home-invaders ever lost control:

1. joshua komisarjevsky cased-out the Petit house in the early evening after following Mrs. Petit and her daughter, Michaela, home from Stop & Shop

2. jk and/or steven hayes bought a pellet gun (that looked like a real gun) and zip ties

3. around 3 a.m., jk broke into Petit home through bulkhead doors, beat Dr. Petit (asleep on a couch in a florida room) with a baseball bat, then tied him up. let hayes into the house

4. in just a few minutes jk and hayes were able to subdue and tie-up Mrs. Petit and the two Petit girls, Hayley, 18, and Michaela, 11

5. held dominion over the house and their captives for six hours, coming and going as they pleased (at one point both jk and hayes were out of the house for at least twenty minutes while jk moved his van to a condominium complex parking lot a couple of miles away and hayes followed in the Petit's van)

6. coordinated a run to the all-night gas station (where hayes filled plastic gallon containers)

7. Made Mrs. Petit call her husband's office to say he was sick and wouldn't be in; jk called in to his own job saying his daughter was sick

8. coordinated a run to the bank (where Mrs. Petit withdrew 15 grand and raised the alarm)

9. sexually assaulted Michaela, raped and strangled Mrs. Petit, then spread the gasoline

10. lit the fire and ran out of house, leaving Hayley and Michaela to die tied to their beds

steven hayes' triple murder trial starts sept. 13th, jk's in the beginning of next year

moment of truth

July 18, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

in the pre-dawn hours of july 23rd, 2007, steven hayes drove through the back roads of cheshire. next to him in the van sat empty plastic gallon containers that he and joshua komisarjevsky found filled with windshield washer fluid in the Petit garage.

hayes found the all-night gas station with little trouble. but on the way back, in the misty darkness, he lost his way. at least twice, maybe three times, he had to phone joshua, a cheshire native, for directions.

in the petit house, joshua kept watch over the three Petit women, mother Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her two daughters, Hayley, 18, and Michaela, 11. The father of the home, Dr. William Petit, was bound and nearly unconscious.

finally, after what must have seemed forever to his partner, hayes pulled the pacifica into the Petit driveway, then carried the gasoline into the house.

that gasoline would be used to start the fire that killed Hayley and Michaela, who were left to die tied to their beds, and consume the body of Jennifer Hawke-, who had already been raped and strangled. Dr. Petit escaped the inferno.

if a jury ends up sentencing steven hayes and joshua komisarjevsky to death, it will be that gasoline that fueled their decision.

hayes' trial starts sept. 13th, komisarjevsky's in the beginning of next year.

political baseball

July 16, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, Cheshire home invasion trial, Thomas Ullman, michael dearington

if thomas ullman, steven hayes' attorney, has lost a couple of miles-an-hour on his fastball, he can still throw junk with the best of them. today, during a pre-trial hearing, he floated a bugs bunny curveball by the prosecution by challenging the legality of the death penalty in Connecticut. swing and a miss.

just because steven hayes' triple homicide trial coincides with the nutmeg state's gubernatorial and u.s. senate races this fall doesn't mean he would try to capitalize on the timing. ullman is into his windup and here's the pitch...

steven hayes' trial begins sept. 13th, joshua komisarjevsky follows soon after

Miss Porter's hat

July 14, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, home invasion trial, Cheshire murder trial, thomas ullman, joshua komisarjevsky

maybe the most depraved detail in a morning filled with depraved details was steven hayes wearing Hayley Petit's school hat when he ran from the Petit house after setting it on fire. both the 18-year-old Hayley and her sister, Michaela, 11, died in the inferno. both had been tied to their bedposts. the detail of the Miss Porter's school hat was entered into court record today by testimony of a cheshire police detective who was outside the house on sorghum mill drive the morning of the murders.

the detective, and two other witnesses, testified as part of pre-trial hearing on motions made by the defense to suppress statements hayes made to police right after he was apprehended.

instead of his client's statements, hayes' attorney. thomas ullman, should have tried to have the hat removed from the record. ullman's trying to save hayes' life, not get him acquitted. in my opinion, the visual of hayes wearing the Miss Porter's hat makes a jury a lot more likely to give him the needle. then again, they may have already read about the hat in In the Middle of the Night.

hayes' trial begins on sept. 13th, joshua komisarjevsky's follows soon after.

exit caroline

July 13, 2010

Tags: steven hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire murders

three years ago this week:

joshua komisarjevsky, then 26, was telling friends that he was depressed because his 16-year-old girlfriend, caroline, had moved away. the pair first met at a christian summer camp when caroline was just 8. joshua was dating caroline's older sister at the time. caroline wrote to joshua in jail and the pen pal relationship evolved into a surreptitious conjugal visit and then furlough flings. but by the time joshua was paroled, caroline's family was already planning a move to rogers, arkansas. at a barbecue a few days before the Cheshire murders, joshua told friends that he needed to get his hands on some money so he could join caroline in arkansas. the night before the Petit murders, just before joshua went to meet steven hayes, caroline and joshua engaged in a cyber sex session in which caroline emailed joshua x-rated photos of herself.

steven hayes' triple murder trial begins sept. 13th, joshua's follows soon there after

enter uncle fester

July 12, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

three years ago this week:

not only did joshua komisarjevsky give steven hayes work on the construction jobs he was doing, he invited his old halfway house buddy into his small circle of friends: among this group was joshua's girlfriend caroline, who was 16 at the time, and some of his friends from growing up in cheshire. the group pinned the nickname "Uncle Fester" on hayes because of his bald head and pudgy frame. hayes could care less about the unflattering moniker. in the space of just a couple of weeks, the 44-year-old had gone from prison to hanging out with a bunch of teens and twentysomethings. he had hit the ex-con lottery.

hayes' triple murder trial starts sept. 13th, joshua's will follow soon after

bible stories

July 10, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

three years ago this week:

though it was short-lived, joshua komisarjevsky played the daddy role well. the night before the Petit murders, Sunday, July 22nd, 2007, joshua gave his 5-year-old daughter a bath, tucked her in and read Bible stories to her until she fell asleep. but there was a duality in joshua that had a side so contrary, so evil, that it was capable of murdering children.

just six or so hours after he had tucked his own daughter in, he was tying 11-year-old Michaela Petit to her bed posts. He and steven hayes broke into the Petit house in the middle of the night and decided to turn a dream of a suburban home into an incomprehensible nightmare. Michaela, her sister, Hayley and their mother, Jennifer Hawke-Petit, would all die before joshua and hayes were through. and now judgment day draws near.

steven hayes triple murder trial begins sept.13th. joshua's will follow sometime next year.

from the rooftops of cheshire

July 8, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

three years ago this week:

perched on the roofs of the houses they worked on, the sun beating down on their backs, hayes and joshua wiped the sweat from their eyes and looked out on manicured lawns, backyard decks and swimming pools of central Connecticut. every now and then they would get a glimpse of a teenage girl or young mother in summer shorts or a bathing suit top and entitlement would stir in their loins, a feeling that began to boil under the sun's unrelenting heat.

it would take just a little over two weeks before the legitimate jobs on the roofs of Cheshire and environs would cave to the mismatched pair's baser nature and lead them to the Petit's basement bulkhead door.

steven hayes' triple murder trial starts on sept. 13th. joshua's trial will begin sometime early next year.

nightmares

July 5, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, joshua komisarjevsky, Cheshire home invasion trial, cheshire muders

it's supposed to climb to a 100 degrees here on the east coast and stay that way for almost a week. no time to be in jail, especially a maxi prison in Connecticut awaiting your triple murder trial and possible death sentence. but that's where steven hayes and joshua komisarjevsky find themselves. i wonder what thoughts come to them just before they close their eyes to sleep. i wonder who visits them in their dreams.

the end of this month will mark the third anniversary of the Cheshire home-invasion murders. steven hayes' trial begins sept. 13th.

yesterday's events

July 1, 2010

Tags: Steven Hayes, home invasion trial, Cheshire murder trial, thomas ullman, joshua komisarjevsky

Judge Blue denied the request to close the courtroom to press and the public made by Thomas Ullman, steven hayes' attorney--this is good news for all who put any credence into a little thing called the First Amendment. also, prosecution has decided not to enter the library book hayes was reading in jail in the months before the Petit murders into evidence--which is also good news. as evidence, the book no doubt would have caused a backlash against the prison library system in Ct. Connecticut's jails have taken a beating over their shoddy stewardship of hayes and komisarjevsky, and rightfully so. but this is an area where they don't deserve to take a hit. what hayes was reading didn't make him kill Jennifer Hawke-Petit any more than "Blackbird" instructed Charles Manson.

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