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CT JENNIFER DULOS: Missing from New Canaan, CT - 24 May 2019 - Age 50 *Troconis GUILTY of Conspiracy* (8 Viewers)

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New Canaan mom Jennifer Dulos is missing: Here’s what we know​

Fotis Dulos, 51, is the estranged husband of Jennifer Dulos, 50. She has been missing since May 24, 2019. Fotis Dulos operates a building company, The Fore Group. He has built custom homes in Fairfield and Litchfield counties and the Farmington Valley. In her initial divorce filing, Jennifer Dulos described her husband’s affinity for water skiing, which she characterized as an “obsession.” She said he insisted on their children training to be world-class water skiers, and had them on a strict training regimen that she believed was dangerous and excessive, and sometimes would go on from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.

 
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Andrew Bowman could have done more during his roughly eight-month representation of Michelle Troconis, he conceded from the witness stand Monday during a trial in which his former client is challenging her conviction and more than 14-year prison sentence in connection with the death of Jennifer Dulos.

For example, he could have asked a prosecutor threatening to charge her with murder in the days after Dulos’ disappearance to give Troconis immunity before she voluntarily spoke to police about the case.


The exchange exemplified much of the questioning Monday morning of Bowman, Troconis’ first witness in the case, a so-called habeas trial in which Troconis has sued the commissioner of the state’s Department of Correction challenging the legality of her conviction asserting Bowman gave her ineffective counsel.

Again and again, Brown questioned Bowman about certain steps he didn’t take in his representation of Troconis in the days after Jennifer Dulos’ disappearance, which police were working feverishly to investigate as press coverage snowballed.

The central issues during Monday's questioning of Bowman by Brown: Was Troconis prepared enough to talk to the police following her arrest on charges of tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution? And should she have kept talking to them after it became clear they didn't believe her?


For Monday’s trial, which is taking place at state Superior Court in the Rockville section of Vernon, Troconis claims Bowman was ineffective because he allowed her to be questioned by police on three separate days for hours without sealing a deal for immunity from prosecution or informing her the discussions could work against her in court, according to court documents.

Troconis is seeking to overturn her 2024 conviction on several counts, including conspiracy to commit murder, and be released from prison. As she was brought into the courtroom for Monday's proceedings, she smiled to family members in the public gallery before taking a seat next to her lawyers, Brown and Adele Patterson. Throughout Bowman's testimony she leaned forward to listen to his answers, occasionally resting her chin on her hand, reviewing documents, taking notes, and conferring with attorneys.

Taking place over three days — Monday, Jan. 9 and Jan. 16 — Judge Carl Schuman will have 120 days to issue a ruling on whether her counsel was ineffective. If the ruling is that her counsel was ineffective, the judge also must decide what the remedy would be, which possibly includes vacating her conviction. That may result in a second trial.

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Michelle Troconis tries again for prison release while appealing conviction in Jennifer Dulos case​

Michelle Troconis, convicted in the death of Jennifer Dulos, again is seeking to be released from prison while her appeal is pending.

But state prosecutors said she already has been turned down twice in her requests to be released on bond after her 2024 conviction, so her third attempt to be released while her appeal is pending also should be denied, court papers said.
 

Judge denies Michelle Troconis’ habeas petition after conviction in death of Jennifer Farber Dulos​

A judge has denied Michelle Troconis’ first bid to overturn her conviction in the disappearance and death of Jennifer Farber Dulos.

In a written decision filed late Monday, Judge Carl Schuman made a finding that Troconis’ first attorney, Andrew Bowman, did not provide ineffective counsel when he allowed her to sit in on three different interviews with police — which were presented extensively at her trial in 2024 in connection with Farber Dulos’ presumed death. Prosecutors pointed to inconsistencies and her untruthful statements as evidence that she was helping cover for Fotis Dulos, who authorities believe attacked and killed his estranged wife at her New Canaan home in May 2019 as the two were in the midst of contention divorce proceedings and a custody battle.

In a 46-page decision denying the habeas petition, Schuman described Bowman’s strategy to mold Troconis into a witness who could cooperate against Dulos as “reasonable, if not sound.” He noted that this strategy only unraveled after Dulos died following a suicide attempt in January 2020, leaving no one who Troconis could cooperate against — something Schuman said Bowman could not have possibly foreseen.

Schuman also noted that Bowman continually told Troconis that she did not have to speak to police and that, if she did, he stressed that she had to tell the truth, he wrote. Her decision to not be truthful or forthcoming during the interviews, Schuman wrote, falls on her and not Bowman’s advice.

“For those falsehoods and omissions, the court cannot hold Bowman responsible,” Schuman wrote. “Bowman repeatedly told (Troconis) that she had to tell the truth if she decided to interview with the police.”

Troconis’ “reluctance to do so was her own decision, not that of Bowman,” Schuman concluded. “No one can say for certain what would have happened had (Troconis) been completely forthright in the interviews from the beginning. …”

Following Schuman’s decision, Troconis’ family issued a statement expressing their disappointment.

“We are deeply disappointed by the denial of Michelle’s habeas petition, but our commitment to her innocence and to the truth remains unchanged,” the family wrote. “This habeas case centered on the failures in her legal representation, but this ruling does not alter the fundamental truth: Michelle Troconis had no involvement in the disappearance of Jennifer Dulos.

“Nearly seven years after the events that forever altered so many lives, Michelle and our family continue to endure the emotional, personal and public consequences of a case we believe failed to fully recognize the truth,” the family wrote. “We remain determined to ensure that the evidence is fully and fairly presented, and our family, along with friends and supporters throughout Connecticut, stands firmly by her side, committed to ensuring that all issues raised in her case receive full and fair review.”

The law firm that filed Troconis’ habeas petition did not immediately answer an email seeking comment.
 
This is starting to sound like "I know that you knew that I didn't know that you didn't know!" Huh? "appeals the denial of the overturning of the conviction" ......

Michelle Troconis appeals denial of petition to overturn conviction in Jennifer Dulos case​

Michelle Troconis is appealing a judge's denial of her bid to overturn her conviction and 14½-year prison sentence in the disappearance and death of Jennifer Dulos based on claims of ineffective counsel.

Attorneys for Troconis claim in the appeal filed Thursday that state Superior Court Judge Carl Schuman erred when he denied a habeas petition that argued attorney Andrew Bowman provided “ineffective assistance of counsel” by advising Troconis to sit for three police interviews before her arrest.

“Because Bowman’s advice to the petitioner fell within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance and because he was competently acting as her advocate at all times, the petition has not proven ineffective assistance of counsel,” Schuman wrote in his decision issued last month.

Troconis is appealing the ruling on several counts, including that Schuman based his ruling on facts not supported by evidence and that witnesses testified to facts that "could not be true."

Troconis originally filed the habeas petition in 2024 after she was found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder and other charges in the death of Dulos, a New Canaan mother of five whose body has never been found. She is currently serving the 14½-year sentence.

In a three-day trial earlier this year, attorney Michael Fitzpatrick, an expert witness for Troconis, criticized Bowman's decision to allow Troconis to repeatedly speak to investigators even though her first interview went poorly.

Bowman testified in his defense that he allowed the interviews to go forward because he believed police were close to making an arrest in the case and hoped that Troconis could avoid facing charges.

In the petition, Troconis claimed that Bowman failed to secure immunity for his client before she spoke with police and failed to inform her of the consequences of the conversations, during which she appeared to contradict herself.

During the trial, state’s attorney Richard Colangelo Jr. agreed Bowman had not discussed a potential deal for immunity prior to Troconis speaking with investigators. But Colangelo said he wouldn’t have agreed to anything without knowing what she was going to say.

Ultimately, Schuman determined that Bowman’s defense strategy was reasonable. In an order denying the petition, the judge noted that Bowman instructed his client to tell the truth when speaking with police and participated in each interview.

“The evidence reveals that Bowman spent long hours talking with his client, other attorneys and an investigator and spent a significant amount of time conducting discovery and doing legal research,” Schuman wrote.

Dulos last was seen on May 24, 2019. Prosecutors previously have claimed that her estranged husband, Fotis Dulos, killed her after she dropped off her children at school and returned home.

Dulos was reported missing later that night, and around that time, surveillance cameras in Hartford recorded two people resembling Fotis Dulos and Troconis, his then-girlfriend, making a series of stops along Albany Avenue, police have said.

Dulos is believed to be dead by her family and police, and a judge declared her legally dead. Fotis Dulos died in a hospital from injuries suffered during a suicide attempt in January 2020.

At her 2024 trial, Troconis was found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution. She later was sentenced to 14½ years in prison.
 
This is starting to sound like "I know that you knew that I didn't know that you didn't know!" Huh? "appeals the denial of the overturning of the conviction" ......

Michelle Troconis appeals denial of petition to overturn conviction in Jennifer Dulos case​

Michelle Troconis is appealing a judge's denial of her bid to overturn her conviction and 14½-year prison sentence in the disappearance and death of Jennifer Dulos based on claims of ineffective counsel.

Attorneys for Troconis claim in the appeal filed Thursday that state Superior Court Judge Carl Schuman erred when he denied a habeas petition that argued attorney Andrew Bowman provided “ineffective assistance of counsel” by advising Troconis to sit for three police interviews before her arrest.

“Because Bowman’s advice to the petitioner fell within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance and because he was competently acting as her advocate at all times, the petition has not proven ineffective assistance of counsel,” Schuman wrote in his decision issued last month.

Troconis is appealing the ruling on several counts, including that Schuman based his ruling on facts not supported by evidence and that witnesses testified to facts that "could not be true."

Troconis originally filed the habeas petition in 2024 after she was found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder and other charges in the death of Dulos, a New Canaan mother of five whose body has never been found. She is currently serving the 14½-year sentence.

In a three-day trial earlier this year, attorney Michael Fitzpatrick, an expert witness for Troconis, criticized Bowman's decision to allow Troconis to repeatedly speak to investigators even though her first interview went poorly.

Bowman testified in his defense that he allowed the interviews to go forward because he believed police were close to making an arrest in the case and hoped that Troconis could avoid facing charges.

In the petition, Troconis claimed that Bowman failed to secure immunity for his client before she spoke with police and failed to inform her of the consequences of the conversations, during which she appeared to contradict herself.

During the trial, state’s attorney Richard Colangelo Jr. agreed Bowman had not discussed a potential deal for immunity prior to Troconis speaking with investigators. But Colangelo said he wouldn’t have agreed to anything without knowing what she was going to say.

Ultimately, Schuman determined that Bowman’s defense strategy was reasonable. In an order denying the petition, the judge noted that Bowman instructed his client to tell the truth when speaking with police and participated in each interview.

“The evidence reveals that Bowman spent long hours talking with his client, other attorneys and an investigator and spent a significant amount of time conducting discovery and doing legal research,” Schuman wrote.

Dulos last was seen on May 24, 2019. Prosecutors previously have claimed that her estranged husband, Fotis Dulos, killed her after she dropped off her children at school and returned home.

Dulos was reported missing later that night, and around that time, surveillance cameras in Hartford recorded two people resembling Fotis Dulos and Troconis, his then-girlfriend, making a series of stops along Albany Avenue, police have said.

Dulos is believed to be dead by her family and police, and a judge declared her legally dead. Fotis Dulos died in a hospital from injuries suffered during a suicide attempt in January 2020.

At her 2024 trial, Troconis was found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution. She later was sentenced to 14½ years in prison.
One of my favorite parts...

In the petition, Troconis claimed that Bowman failed to secure immunity for his client before she spoke with police and failed to inform her of the consequences of the conversations, during which she appeared to contradict herself.
 

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