

The Connecticut State PoliceĀ are attempting to keep under wraps items it gathered at the residence of Nancy and Adam Lanza during its initial investigation of the incident. On June 26 it appealed a unanimous decision by the Connecticut FOI Commission to release the evidence following a request by The Hartford Courant.
CTNow reports:
State police have appealed a Freedom of Information Commission ruling that the department must make available personal documents seized from Adam Lanzaās home during the course of the investigation into the 2012 killings of 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
The appeal was filed on June 26. In addition to the FOIC, it names the Hartford Courant and David Altimari, a reporter at the Courant, as defendants.
take our poll - story continues belowCompleting this poll grants you access to DC Clothesline updates free of charge. You may opt out at anytime. You also agree to this site's Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.The appeal asks the court to reverse a May 13 unanimous decision by the commission that state police must make documents seized from Lanzaās home available to the public. The commission made the ruling, in part, because of the stateās expense investigating the Sandy Hook shooting and the worldwide media attention the shooting garnered.
The ruling āfailed to conclude that seized property is under the control of the judicial branch and thus is not a public record,ā the appeal contends.
The Courant attempted to obtain copies of documents noted in the state policeās investigation into the massacre beginning in January of 2014, but the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, which oversees the stateās police force, has been blocking those efforts.
Previous moves by Newtown and Connecticut authorities closely involved in the Sandy Hook shooting event and aftermath strongly suggest efforts to destroy and withhold evidence that would have enabled journalists and third party investigators to better understand what exactly took place on December 14, 2012.
The Lanza residenceāthe initial crime scene of the massacreāwas demolished in March 2015Ā following a decision by the Newtown Legislative Council.Ā The secondary crime scene,Ā Sandy Hook Elementary, was leveled in October 2013 after Governor Dannel Malloy provided $50 million grant to destroy and rebuild the facility.
Courtesy of Dr. James Tracy @ Memory Hole.
