Whitey Ford
01-26-2022, 02:17 AM
Connecticut police open probe after autopsy released of woman last seen alive on date
https://i.imgur.com/JMxHch1.jpg
wahhhhhhhhhh fentanyl beez rayciss! Weez wanz justuss an' sheeit.
The Bridgeport Police Department has opened a criminal investigation into the death of Lauren Smith-Fields after the Connecticut chief medical examiner's office ruled her death an accident involving drugs and alcohol.
The 23-year-old Connecticut woman was last seen alive while on a date with a man she met on a dating app.
The ME's office said Monday that Smith-Fields died on Dec. 12 of intoxication from fentanyl combined with prescription drugs and alcohol and that her death was accidental. The Bridgeport Police Department opened a criminal investigation into her death after the autopsy report was released.
Crosland has notified the city of his intent to file a lawsuit accusing police of failing to properly investigate.
In his notice of intent to sue, Crosland said evidence, including a blood-stained bedsheet, was left in the apartment and was not recovered by police until two weeks later at the family’s insistence. He said that as of Friday the evidence had still not been submitted to the state forensics lab.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/lauren-smith-fields-connecticut-autopsy-criminal-investigation
Police in Connecticut have opened an investigation into the death of a Black woman who was found dead last month in her Bridgeport apartment after a date with a man she had met on a dating app.
The woman, Lauren Smith-Fields, 23, was found after a man she had met on Bumble called 911 on Dec. 12 to report that he had woken up to find her unresponsive with a nosebleed.
An attorney for Smith-Fields' family, Darnell Crosland, filed a notice of claim Friday notifying the city of his intent to sue over what he described as the police department's "racially insensitive" handling of the case.
The family also said that police told them the man she met online, who is 37 and white, was not a person of interest but did not explain why, and that the initial detective assigned to the case told them to stop calling to inquire about the status of the investigation. Her family said police never notified them of her death and that they learned about it from her landlord.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/connecticut-police-open-criminal-investigation-death-black-woman-rcna13505
https://i.imgur.com/JMxHch1.jpg
wahhhhhhhhhh fentanyl beez rayciss! Weez wanz justuss an' sheeit.
The Bridgeport Police Department has opened a criminal investigation into the death of Lauren Smith-Fields after the Connecticut chief medical examiner's office ruled her death an accident involving drugs and alcohol.
The 23-year-old Connecticut woman was last seen alive while on a date with a man she met on a dating app.
The ME's office said Monday that Smith-Fields died on Dec. 12 of intoxication from fentanyl combined with prescription drugs and alcohol and that her death was accidental. The Bridgeport Police Department opened a criminal investigation into her death after the autopsy report was released.
Crosland has notified the city of his intent to file a lawsuit accusing police of failing to properly investigate.
In his notice of intent to sue, Crosland said evidence, including a blood-stained bedsheet, was left in the apartment and was not recovered by police until two weeks later at the family’s insistence. He said that as of Friday the evidence had still not been submitted to the state forensics lab.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/lauren-smith-fields-connecticut-autopsy-criminal-investigation
Police in Connecticut have opened an investigation into the death of a Black woman who was found dead last month in her Bridgeport apartment after a date with a man she had met on a dating app.
The woman, Lauren Smith-Fields, 23, was found after a man she had met on Bumble called 911 on Dec. 12 to report that he had woken up to find her unresponsive with a nosebleed.
An attorney for Smith-Fields' family, Darnell Crosland, filed a notice of claim Friday notifying the city of his intent to sue over what he described as the police department's "racially insensitive" handling of the case.
The family also said that police told them the man she met online, who is 37 and white, was not a person of interest but did not explain why, and that the initial detective assigned to the case told them to stop calling to inquire about the status of the investigation. Her family said police never notified them of her death and that they learned about it from her landlord.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/connecticut-police-open-criminal-investigation-death-black-woman-rcna13505