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Friday, February 18, 2000

02/18/00 GET INVOLVED - BE HEARD (Updated)

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Send your own words or adapt an op ed from the Prepare Tomorrow's Parents website
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CT Newspaper
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Title
email
phone
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address



Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Letters to the Editor
edit@ctpost.com
203-333-0161

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

William Sarno
Bristol Press
Bristol
Editor
editor@bristolpress.com


99 Main Street, Bristol


Danbury News-Times
Danbury
News and Editorial
editor@newstimes.com
203-744-5100

333 Main Street, Dnbury, CT 06810


Greenwich Time
Greenwich
Letters to the editor
letters.greenwichtime@scni.com

203-964-2345
20 East Elm, Greenwich, CT 06830


Hartford Courant
Hartford
Letters to the editor
letters@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115


Journal Inquirer
Manchester
Letters to the editor
letters@journalinquirer.com
860-646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860-646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045


The Record-Journal
Meriden
Letters to the editor
letters@record-journal.com
203-235-1661

11 Crown Street, Meriden CT 06450
300 word maximum. Include address & day phone

Middletown Press
Middletown
Letters to the editor
cday@middletownpress.com
860-347-3331
860-347-3380
2 Main St., Middletown, CT 06457

Charles Kochakian
New Haven Register
New Haven
Editorial Page Editor - op ed
ckochakian@Nhregister.com
203-789-5678

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511

Elizabeth Utke
The Day.com
New London
Letters to the Editor
letters@theday.com
860/701=4252




Norwich Bulletin
Norwich
letters to the editor
letters@norwichbulletin.com

887-9666
66 Franklin Street, Norwich CT 06360
Plain Text/ no attachments. Up to 200 words and signed. Include writer's address & daytime phone for verification.

The Advocate
Stamford
letter to the editor
letters.advocate@scni.com
203-964-2200
203/964-2345
75 Tresser Blvd. P.. Box 9307 Stamford, CT 06904

Mary Dempsey
Register Citizen
Torrington
editor - Letters to editor/op ed
editor@registercitizen.com
860-489-3121 x333



Johnathan Kellog
Repubican-American
Waterbury
Executive Editor
smacey@rep-am.com
203-574-3636 x 1492
203-596-9277
389 Meadow St., P.O. Box 2090, Waterbury CT 06733-2090

Will Rowlands
The Westport News
Westport
Editor
erowlands@bcnnew.com
203 226-6311

15 Myrtle Avenue, Office 1A Westport, CT 06880


The Chronicle
Willimantic
Letters to the editor
letters@thechrnicle.com
860-423-8466





OP-EDS:
Name
CT Newspaper
Town
Title
email
phone
fax
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Steve Winters
Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Editorial Page Editor
swinters@ctpost.com
203/330-6203

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604
Joy Haenlein
Greenwich Time
Greenwich
Editorials & Opinions
joy.haenlein@scni.com
203-964-2293

20 East Elm, Greenwich, CT 06830

Hartford Courant
Hartford
Op Ed
oped@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115
Keith Burris
Journal Inquirer
Manchester
Editorial Page Editor
kburris@journalinquirer.com
860) 646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860) 646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045
Allan Church
The Record-Journal
Meriden
Op Ed
achurch@record-journal.com
203-317-2250

11 Crown Street, Meriden CT 06450

Middletown Press
Middletown
Editor
editor@middletownpress.com
860-347-3331
860-347-3380
2 Main St., Middletown, CT 06457
Charles Kochakian
New Haven Register
New Haven
Editorial Page Editor - op ed
ckochakian@Nhregister.com
203-789-5678

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511
Mary Dempsey
Register Citizen
Torrington
editor - Letter to the editor/op ed
editor@registercitizen.com
860-489-3121x333


Johnathan Kellog
Repubican-American
Waterbury
Executive Editor
smacey@rep-am.com
203-574-3636 x 1492
203-596-9277
389 Meadow St., P.O. Box 2090, Waterbury CT 06733=2090
Will Rowlands
The Westport News
Westport
Editor
erowlands@bcnnew.com
203 226-6311

15 Myrtle Avenue, Office 1A Westport, CT 06880
Reporters and Editors 1 Send press releases and story ideas to them.
Name
CT Newspaper
Town
Title
email
phone
fax
address


Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Letters to the Editor
edit@ctpost.com
203-333-0161

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

Sev Rinaldi
Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Features Editor
srinaldi@ctpost.com
203-330-6309

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

Eileen Fischer
Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
WomanWise Editor
efischer@ctpost.com
203-330-6481

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

James Smith
Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Editor - Letters to the Editor
jsmith@ctpost.com
203-330-6394

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

Steve Winters
Connecticut Post
Bridgeport
Editorial Page Editor
swinters@ctpost.com
203/330-6203

410 State Street, Bridgeport, CT 06604

William Sarno
Bristol Press
Bristol
Editor
editor@bristolpress.com


99 Main Street, Bristol


Danbury News-Times
Danbury
News and Editorial
editor@newstimes.com
203-744-5100

333 Main Street, Dnbury, CT 06810

Joy Haenlein
Greenwich Time
Greenwich
Editorials & Opinions
joy.haenlein@scni.com
203-964-2293

20 East Elm, Greenwich, CT 06830


Greenwich Time
Greenwich
Letters to the editor
letters.greenwichtime@scni.com

203-964-2345
20 East Elm, Greenwich, CT 06830

Jim Wolfe
Greenwich Time
Greenwich
Features
jim.wolfe@scni.com
203-625-4440

20 East Elm, Greenwich, CT 06830

Michael Regan
Hartford Courant
Hartford
Editor/Bureau Chief - Politics/State Govt.
Regan@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115

Nancy Schoeffler
Hartford Courant
Hartford
Editor/Bureau Chief- Statewide Education
Schoeffler@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115

Naedine Hazell
Hartford Courant
Hartford
Editor/Bureau Chief - Lifestyle
Hazell@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115


Hartford Courant
Hartford
Letters to the editor
letters@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115


Hartford Courant
Hartford
Op Ed
oped@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115

Reporters and Editors. Send press releases and story ideas to them.
Name
CT Newspaper
Town
Title
email
phone
fax
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Robert k. Schrepf
Hartford Courant
Hartford
Editorial Page Editor
schrepf@courant.com
860-241-6200

285 Broad St., Hartford, CT 06115


Journal Inquirer
Manchester
Letters to the editor
letters@journalinquirer.com
860) 646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860-646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045

Julie Sprengelmeyer
Journal Inquirer
Manchester
State Editor
Jsprengelmeyer@journalinquirer.com
860) 646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860-646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045

Rich Tambling
Journal Inquirer
Manchester
Living Section Editor
rtambling@journalinquirer.com
860) 646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860-646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045

Keith Burris
Journal Inquirer
Manchester
Editorial Page Editor
kburris@journalinquirer.com
860) 646-0500 or 1-800-237-3606
860-646-9867
306 Progress Drive, P.O. Box 510, Manchester, CT 06045


The Record-Journal
Meriden
Letters to the editor
letters@record-journal.com
203-235-1661

11 Crown Street, Meriden CT 06450
300 word maximum. Include address and day phone
Allan Church
The Record-Journal
Meriden
Op Ed
achurch@record-journal.com
203) 317-2250

11 Crown Street, Meriden CT 06450

Amanda Falcone
The Record-Journal
Meriden
Meriden-Wallingford Educaton
afalcone@record-journal.com
203/317-2232

11 Crown Street, Meriden CT 06450


Middletown Press
Middletown
Editor
editor@middletownpress.com
860-347-3331
860-347-3380
2 Main St., Middletown, CT 06457


Middletown Press
Middletown
Letters to the editor
cday@middletownpress.com
860-347-3331
860-347-3380
2 Main St., Middletown, CT 06457

Jack Kramer
New Haven Register
New Haven
Editor
jkram@nhregister.com
203/789-5601

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511

Helen Bennett Harvey
New Haven Register
New Haven
State Editor
Hbennettharvey@nhregister.com
203/789-5707

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511

Rick Sandella
New Haven Register
New Haven
Features Editor
features@Nhregister.com
203-789-5708

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511

Charles Kochakian
New Haven Register
New Haven
Editorial Page Editor - op ed
ckochakian@Nhregister.com
203-789-5678

40 Sargent Drive, New Haven, CT 06511

Judy Benson
The Day.com
New London
Health/
Science/
Environment Reporter
https://campus.theday.com//frm_contactus.aspx?cfg=50
860-701-4337



Elissa Bass
The Day.com
New London
Feature Editor
https://campus.theday.com//frm_contactus.aspx?cfg=50
860) 701-4377



Elizabeth Utke
The Day.com
New London
Letters to the Editor
https://campus.theday.com//frm_contactus.aspx?cfg=50
860/701=4252




Norwich Bulletin
Norwich
letters to the editor
letters@norwichbulletin.com

887-9666
66 Franklin Street, Norwich CT 06360
Plain Text no attachments. UP to 200 words and signed. Include writer's address and daytime phone for verification.

The Advocate
Stamford
letter to the editor
letters.advocate@scni.com
203-964-2200
203/964-2345
75 Tresser Blvd. P.. Box 9307 Stamford, CT 06904

Mary Dempsey
Register Citizen
Torrington
editor - Letter to the editor/op ed
editor@registercitizen.com
860-489-3121 x333



Debra Aleksinas
Repubican-American
Waterbury
Feature Editor
daleksinas@rep-am.com
203-574-3636
x 1481
203-596-9277
389 Meadow St., P.O. Box 2090, Waterbury CT 06733=2090

Johnathan Kellog
Repubican-American
Waterbury
Executive Editor
jkellog@rep-am.com
203-574-3636
x 1492
203-596-9277
389 Meadow St., P.O. Box 2090, Waterbury CT 06733=2090

Will Rowlands
The Westport News
Westport
Editor
erowlands@bcnnew.com
203 226-6311

15 Myrtle Avenue, Office 1A Westport, CT 06880

Carol King
The Westport News
Westport
Living Editor
cking@bcnnew.com
203-222-6787

15 Myrtle Avenue, Office 1A Westport, CT 06880


The Chronicle
Willimantic
Letters to the editor
letters@thechrnicle.com
860-423-8466

================================================================
Or you can send your letter or story to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

Friday, February 11, 2000

02/11/00 Matthew Margolies: Mother Recounts Son's Life

By Peter Moore -- Greenwich Post

Since a site dedicated to Matthew Margolies went up on the Internet, the response has been a blessing for his mother Maryann. But by adding her own personal touch, she says she was able to let web surfers know that Matthew was something far more than a 13-year-old victim of a senseless crime. He was a person.

Maryann recently arranged for a story she wrote, "A Legacy of Love," accompanied by photographs of Matthew, to be posted at www.matthewmargolies.com. Five web pages long, the story tells of a life short in length, but full of spirit.

Maryann's story is one of the latest additions to a website created and maintained by Tom Alessi, a Stamford 911 facilities manager, who maintains two sites dedicated to unsolved murders that have taken place in Greenwich. Alessi's other site profiles the case of his childhood friend Martha Moxley, a Greenwich teen who was bludgeoned to death with a golf club in 1975.

"I asked Tom Alessi to post [the story] on the Internet because I wanted my son to have an identity," Maryann said Monday. "I think that except for the people who have known him, [Matthew] probably had been looked upon as a victim without an identity. And there's been such a response on the Internet that I wanted people to get a feeling of who he really was as a human being, as a person."

The person Maryann described lived from Jan. 24, 1971 until Aug. 31, 1984. And though Matthew's murder by an unknown assailant in the Pemberwick section of Greenwich has generated far more media attention than the happenings of his life, "A Legacy of Love," does not discuss the time surrounding his death at length.

Instead, Maryann Margolies talks of her son's love of nature and uses his example to touch the net surfer's heart and remind him or her of ways to achieve inner happiness.

"Given a choice, he would always prefer to be outdoors," she writes of Matthew. "The warmth of the sun, the wetness of the rain and the coldness of the snow would all nourish his spirit. He found joy in all of it. How long has it been since you last listened to the soft music made by fresh falling snow or perhaps the deeper sounds of rain?"

She describes Matthew as a decent student, specifically mentioning books he wrote at school with titles such as "Tombstone Ghost," "Fishing" and "Merry Christmas." These books still lie on the shelves of Maryann Margolies' house where she resides with her husband Jim.

At the time of his death, Matthew was due to begin eighth grade at Western Middle School. He disappeared on Aug. 31, 1984 and his body was found five days later in a wooded hilly area near Hawthorne and Greenway Street. He had been stabbed with a boning knife and asphyxiated and his body had been left in a shallow grave. There has never been an arrest in the killing.

"I've always had hope in that at some point, whoever was responsible for my son's death would be identified and that justice would be served," Maryann Margolies said Monday.

When Martha Moxley's neighbor Michael Skakel was arrested on Jan. 19 for Martha's murder, Maryann said the arrest did not influence her hope of an eventual arrest in her son's case. But she did say that the arrest proved that there is no way of time completely standing in the way of justice.

"I think that what has happened within Martha's case supports the fact that it's never too late," she says.

In her story, Maryann also writes of the joy Matthew received at the times of holidays, particularly Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter and Halloween. A picture of Matthew in a Halloween costume accompanies the story.

She also mentions Matthew's fondness for hats on a page which includes a photo of Matthew atop a fire engine, wearing the traditional red firefighter's hat. Matthew's love of sports, especially fishing is also brought to light.

"He was quite the sportsman and many a man learned from him," she says.

She also mentions remembering Matthew with a positive outlook.

"Not a day passes, that I do not think of Matthew," she writes. "It seems clear that his life ended as it began, with a struggle. However, it is his life that I have had to focus upon. I can see his smile and hear his laughter. I know his love, warmth and caring ways. God has shown his love and bestowed his blessing in choosing me to be Matthew's mother."

Matthew's mother concludes "A Legacy of Love," by urging busy grownups to take time for their little ones. She explained the passage Monday.

"I think that it would be part of a living memorial to Matthew in order for people to take the time to tell their child that they love them," she said. "With both parents working and all the changes, people are always rushing around. It's important for parents to take the time, tell their children how they feel and above all, take the time to listen to them."

The story's final paragraph reads, in part: "If you have read this, please take the time to tell a child how much you love him/her. Chase rainbows, and if you can't find one, then make it! (Ingredients: a little sun, a garden hose and some running water) The reward: FUN, LAUGHTER AND LOADS OF LOVE IN BEING TOGETHER!"

Thursday, February 10, 2000

02/10/00 EDITORIAL: ANOTHER OLD MURDER WAITS TO BE SOLVED

Greenwich Time

THE ISSUE: Developments in the Moxley case serve to underline the lack of an arrest in the killing of another teen.

The well-publicized arrest of a suspect in the 1975 murder of 15-year-old Martha Moxley is a painful reminder to some townspeople that another slaying involving a Greenwich teen remains unsolved. For townspeople who rememberthe 1984 case involving 13-year-old Matthew Margolies, the lack of resolution is especially troubling in a community that has a reputation as a safe place to raise children.

A police investigation into the Margolies killing was reopened in 1998, but the mystery continues. For more than 15 years, questions have gone unanswered about what happened to the boy after he left his Glenville home to go fishing on August 31, 1984. His partially clad, stabbed and strangled body was discovered in a shallow grave near the Byram River five days later. Nearby was a boning knife that police believe was the murder weapon.

The single biggest similarity for the two cases is obvious: Both murders involved teens who were brutally murdered in places that residents considered to be safe.

But the differences are substatial, and some observers may find them telling. Martha Moxley's body was found on the grounds of her well-to-do family's Belle Haven mansion; Matthew Margolies remains were unearthed in a wooded area some distance from the working-class home where his mother still livesin Glenville. Dorthy Moxley, Martha's mother, spent years as an activist seeking justice, talking with receptive media representatives to press law enforcement officials to identify and charge her daughter's killer; Maryann Margolies, while cooperative and interested in the same kind of resolution, has not been able to elicit the same kind of interest.

The biggest fifference may involve the slaying suspects, which in turn may explain the amount of attention these bereaved mothers and the murder cases have received. Suspects in the Moxley case were members of the Skakel family, neighbors of the slain girl, who are related to the Kennedy family by marrage. The man who has been charged in her murder is Michael Skakel, 39, the nephew of the widow of Robert Kennedy. Police have not identified a suspect in the Margolies case.

After Mr. Skakel's arrest last month, Mrs. Margolies told staff writer Ryan Jockers, "I don't think it's done intentionally ...but the stark riality is that fame and fortune are factors to be considered." For her part, Mrs. Moxley told Mr. Jockers that Matthew Margolies should "get her story out".

The arrest in the Moxley slaying indicates that resolution of old murder cases needn't be considered forever stymied. Importantly, there are other factors involved in the Margolies case. Greenwich Police Chief Peter Robbins was the lieutenant who supervised the department's initial investigation, and he has said he wants to do all that is possible to identify the boy's killer and bring that individual to trial. Many townspeople who lived in Greenwich in 1984 recall the slaying and continue to be quietly outraged that it could occur within their community.

Beyond that, Mrs. Margolies has remained optimistic that an arrest ultimately will be made in the death of her son. That quiet confidence in the face of an unimaginable tragety is complling. We can only hope that in time authorities will solve the mystery of the awful killing of Matthew Margolies and bring his murderer to justice.

Tuesday, January 25, 2000

01/25/00 A mother seeks justice in town's ‘other murder’

By Ryan Jockers - Greenwich Time

With the recent arrest in a long-unsolved murder of a Greenwich teenager, a similar case remains unsolved. This case, however, is far removed from an exclusive waterfront community, Kennedy relatives and a popular young girl from California.

And while the case of Matthew Margolies, who was 13 in 1984 when he was found in a shallow grave on a secluded hillside outside his Glenville neighborhood, does not have the made-for-television elements of the 1975 murder of 15-year-old Martha Moxley, his case is equally as compelling. Thus far, no one has been arrested for killing the boy.

Michael Skakel, now 39, a former neighbor of Moxley, was arrested last week after the state, in a last-ditch attempt to solve the crime, invoked a seldom-used grand jury statute that found probable cause to arrest him after an 18-month investigation. Skakel surrendered to the murder charge but maintains his innocence through his attorney, Michael Sherman of Stamford.

Maryann Margolies, Matthew's mother, who lives in the same home in which she last saw her son, said yesterday that the idea of a grand jury investigating her son's murder was appealing, though she has not taken steps to initiate such action.

Until State's Attorney Jonathan Benedict applied for and received approval from a three-judge panel in New Haven to appoint a one-man grand jury in 1998 to investigate Moxley's death, Margolies said she was unaware the option existed.

"It's appealing because obviously it led to an arrest in the Moxley case, and very well could lead to an arrest in my son's case," Margolies said in the living room of her home, decorated with photographs of Matthew. "But I'm not rushing into anything. I guess I'm rather cautious. I like to have details. I like to think things through."

The Greenwich Police Department began to reinvestigate the murder of Matthew Margolies in June 1998, the same month the Moxley grand jury convened.

In an interview with Greenwich Time in September, Greenwich Police Chief Peter Robbins said the reinvestigation of the 1984 murder was moving slowly but he expected it to build momentum after the department settled down after a major reorganization of personnel. Calling the work environment at the time stable, Robbins said of the Margolies case, "We're really going to have to pick things up and get going."

Robbins could not be reached yesterday for comment for this article.

Robbins, who supervised the Margolies investigation as a lieutenant, has shown optimism toward solving the case in various interviews with Greenwich Time. Yesterday, Maryann Margolies said she, too, is optimistic that an arrest will ultimately be made in her son's murder.

"I think there is light at the end of the tunnel," she said.

According to police, Matthew Margolies set out on the afternoon of Aug. 31, 1984, from his Pilgrim Drive home to go fishing in the Byram River, which had become a pastime for the boy. Police said they believe the boy was killed the same afternoon by someone who repeatedly stabbed and strangled him. The boy's partially nude body was discovered five days later in a wooded area near the river. A boning knife believed to be the murder weapon was found a short distance from the body.

Shortly after the murder, the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Behavioral Science Unit profiled Margolies' killer as a white male familiar with Glenville, who knew Margolies as well as the victim's passion for fishing.

In 1986 the town paid an independent consultant to review the Police Department's investigation. That analysis further characterized the murderer as a sadist who lured the victim to a secluded area where he would be able to act out his gory fantasies.

Before reinvestigating the Margolies case, police tracked down occasional leads but the murder of a working-class family's only son did not attract as much attention as the Moxley case. Moxley was bludgeoned to death outside her family's mansion in the affluent Belle Haven section of town with a golf club belonging to a set owned by the prominent Skakel family.

The Moxley case maintained a high profile as Michael Skakel and his older brother Thomas, the prime suspect in the case for many years, are nephews of Ethel Kennedy, widow of Robert F. Kennedy. Michael and Thomas Skakel, then 15 and 17, respectively, were with Moxley the night she was killed. Thomas Skakel has also denied any wrongdoing.

The Moxley case was the subject of two nonfiction books, the inspiration for a novel and subsequent television miniseries, and provided fodder for numerous talk shows and other television programs. In books and at a Web site devoted to the Moxley murder, the Margolies case has been referred to as "Greenwich's other unsolved murder."

"I don't think it's done intentionally," Margolies said. "I'd like to live in a naive bubble but the stark reality is that fame and fortune are factors to be considered."

Margolies, who works in a nursing capacity for the city of Stamford, said more media attention in her son's murder case "would only be helpful." Dorthy Moxley, mother of Martha Moxley, said her advice to the Margolies would be to "get her story out" to people.

Investigators and journalists who have covered the Moxley case have said that if not for Dorthy Moxley's persistence in keeping the story of her murdered daughter's death in the news, it would have faded into obscurity.

"I don't see how someone could commit a horrible crime and not tell somebody, and that somebody might be willing to tell," Moxley said yesterday from her home in Chatham Township, N.J. "Talk to the media; do television if you can. I know it's hard, but do it, and maybe someday you'll reap some success."

Saturday, December 11, 1999

12/11/99 Death Notice HOLCOMBE, BROWNING JR.

HOLCOMBE-Browning Jr. Of Greenwich, Connecticut.

Beloved husband of Carolyn and father of Elizabeth B. Sengle of Hinesburg, Vermont; Karen H. Pet of Barrington, Rhode Islane; Jane H. Tranfo of Greenwich, Connecticut and Browning Holcombe, III of Jamison, Pennsylvania. Devoted brother of Sally J. Dideriksen of East Brunswick, New Jersey.

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on June 11, 1940 to Browning Holcombe, Sr. and the former Jane Hilliard Jackson, Mr. Holcombe attended Pennsylvania State University and the University of Pennsylvania.

After service in the United States Marine Corps, Mr. Holcombe embarked on a career in the television and broadcast industry which would ultimately span four decades. During that time,

Mr. Holcombe held senior positions with Kaiser Broadcasting in Pennsylvania, Metromedia in New York, Petry Television in Chicago and New York and Univision in New York. For the last 10 years, Mr. Holcombe was the President and Chief Executive Officer of Broadcast Sales, Inc., the company which he founded.

Mr. Holcombe was a long-time and active member of the Belle Haven Club in Greenwich. He served on the Board of Directors of that organization from 1992 to 1996, and as Treasurer from 1994 to 1996 and chaired the Tennis Committee.

A memorial service will be held on Sunday, December 12, 1999 at 2:30 PM at The Belle Haven Club. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Mr. Holcombe's memory to the Greenwich Firefighters Association, P.O. Box 4064, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830 or to the Greenwich Police Silver Shield Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box 1123 Greenwich, Connecticut 06830.

Friday, December 10, 1999

12/10/99 Mrs. Margolies hasn't given up; Mother of slain Glenville boy says 'when' NOT 'if'

By Peter Moore
Greenwich Post


When Maryann Margolies speaks of an eventual arrest for the 1984 murder of her son Matthew, she speaks in terms of "when" and not "if"

Strangely enough, she also says that she's never experienced any anger towards Matthew's unknown killer. "Not yet," she adds.

In reference to the crime, she continues, "No one had the right to do it. What I would like to know is when the person is found and arrested can I forgive? I honestly don't know. I can't tell what my feelings will be at this time."

For more than 15 years, Maryann Margolies has led her family in a quest to keep living and to not languish in grief or bitterness.

"I have to think about moving forward," she says, while keeping her composure in the living room of her Pilgrim Drive house where she resides with her husband Jim. "I have to think about living life. However I respond would have an effect [on the family]." She adds that if she wallowed in misery, "it would be more difficult for anybody to have any semblance of happiness."

The whole process dates back to the day of Aug. 31, 1984 when 13-year-old Matthew Margolies left his grandmother's house in Glenville to go fishing. Accounts vary as to where Margolies was last seen alive, but he never came home. Five days later, his body was found in a wooded area near Hawthorne and Greenway Street. He had been stabbed several times and asphyxiated, before his unknown assailant had disposed of his body in a shallow grave.

Maryann recalls Matthew as an active boy who didn't like to confine himself to the house. Shd describes her son as a big baseball fan whose favorite player was Reggie Jackson. Matthew was also fascinated with the outdoors, she adds. "He had a fishing pole in his hand as a rattle," she recalls with a smile.

A silver-franied photograph in Maryann and Jim's living room shows a young Matthew canoeing while another photo shows him peering intently at a single blade of grass. "I would say that [photo] epitomizes his interest in nature and living things," Maryann adds. "He always had that curiosity."

Police have never named a suspect in the killing. In an outside investigation by consultant Vernon Geberth, a former New York City Police Department lieutenant commander, the murder was detemiined to be a crime of lust - Matthew's athletic shorts were stripped off, yet there were no signs that he had been molested.

Geberth also faulted the Greenwich Police Department's investigation, particularly in the early stages before Matthew's body was discovered. The department had not handled a homicide since 15-year-old Martha Moxley was found bludgeoned near her Belle Haven home in 1975. Geberth revealed that no detective had been assigned to Matthew's original missing person report. By the time the body was found, Geberth said, "the investigative arm of the Greenwich Police Department had, in effect, lost six days of crucial informational interviews and neighborhood canvasses, which would later prove to be significant to the homicide investigation." But Maryann Margolies said that she does not completely fault the police department. "I think they "the investigative arm of the Greenwich Police Department had, in effect, lost six days of crucial informational interviews and neighborhood canvasses, which would later prove to be significant to the homicide investigation."

But Maryann Margolies said that she does not completely fault the police department. "I think they tried," she said. "I think they made a concerted effort. They were very compassionate. They were supportive, I was supportive."

However she acknowledges, "They did make some mistakes. They're were some things they should have done differently." But she then adds, "They haven't had to have much involvement in having to find murderers."

The names of the three central suspects in the Margolies case tried," she said. "I think they made a concerted effort. They were very compassionate. They were supportive, I was supportive."

However she acknowledges, "They did make some mistakes. They're were some things they should have done differently." But she then adds, "They haven't had to have much involvement in having to find murderers." The names of the three central suspects in the Margolies case have not been released. Margolies said she has stronger suspicions of two, whom she also declined to identify. It has been revealed that one of the suspects was an acknowledged neighborhood bully who.has since even been accused by a former area father of earlier threatening his own son with a knife similar to the one used to kill Matthew Margolies.

Another suspect was a teenage troublemaker from over the state have not been released. Margolies said she has, stronger suspicions of two, whom she also declined to identify. It has been revealed that one of the suspects was an acknowledged neighborhood bully who has since even been accused by a former area father of earlier threatening his own son with a knife similar to the one used to kill Matthew Margolies.

Another suspect was a teenage troublemaker from over the state line in Port Chester, N.Y. who, like Matthew, frequently fished from the Byram River. This suspect and his father, a Port Chester police officer, agreed to meet a Greenwich detective for a polygraph examination after Matthew's body was found. But on the appointed day, neither showed up. The suspect was recently reported by a retired Port Chester police detective to be serving time in prison for another crime.

In May 1998, Police Chief Peter Robbins announced that the Greenwich Police Department was launching an all-out investigation to solve the Matthew Margolies case. An August 1998 published report quoted Robbins as saying, "I believe the killer is still living here in " town and I think we have the potential to locate this individual and build a good case against him."

Earlier this year, the department asked the state to evaluate forensic evidence connected to the case for DNA samples. In April, Elaine Pagliaro, acting director of the Connecticut Forensic Science Laboratory, said the state would answer the department's request by the end of the month. Information on the laboratory's answer is not available. Pagliaro was saiid Tuesday to be out of her office due to illness.

Chief Robbins refused to comment Tuesday on any aspect of the investigation, including the status of DNA testing. "It's an open case," he said. But Maryann Margolies says that she is convinced that her son's murder will be solved.

"I feel very strongly that whoever did this will be arrested at some point. I'm not giving up on that.

I find it very difficult to believe that given the time of day that this happened, that there [isn't] someone out there who has a piece of information we don't know," she continued. "They may not know how important the information is. They may have their own reasons for not saying anything."

Matthew's mother also remains determined to honor her son's memory.

"There are two things I can do for Matthew. One is to see that justice is carried out. Two, to see that anything connected with his death will be handled with dignity.

"And of course love goes without saying. He's my son and I'll always love him."

Friday, December 3, 1999

12/03/99 Moxley and Margolies web site manager keeps hope alive

By Peter Moore - Greenwich Post

Tom Alessi recalls his old Western Junior High and Greenwich High School classmate Martha Moxley as a "very nice person."

"Never had a,.bad thing to say about anybody," Alessi said. "Everybody liked her. She was very bright and intelligent." For some time now, Alessi,a resident of Stamford, has maintained and updated www.MarthaMoxley.com an informational website on the 24-year-old unsolved murder case. The site serves as a resource center for anybody wishing to learn about the case and its latest happenings as well as a forum for those wishing to air their views or even to E-mail tips about the killing.

As the Moxley site gained fans, Alessi, a facilities manager at the Stamford 911 center, began to receive correspondence from acquaintances about a different matter which had gained far less media attention.

"Several people that I knew from Greenwich, when they found out I was doing the Martha Moxley case website said, 'There's another [murder] that could use some attention too."'

On Aug. 31, 1984, 13-year-old Matthew Margolies, a resident of the Pemberwick section of Greenwich, left his grandmother's house to go fishing. He was last seen walking along the Byram River that afternoon. When he did not return home in the evening, his mother Maryann called police, but it was not until five days later before his body was finally discovered in a wooded hilly area near Hawthorne and Greenway Street.

Matthew had been stabbed several times and an autopsy revealed that his torso had been compressed to the point where breathing was impossible. The knife reportedly used to kill Matthew was found nearby several days later, but was never traced to a suspect. The Greenwich Police Department had not dealt with a homicide since the 1975 Moxley killing and as in the Moxley case, they never arrested a suspect.

Recently, Alessi became acquainted with Kevin McMurray, a reporter who had interviewed Maryann Margolies. McMurray and Alessi then struck a deal for a new site,

www.MatthewMargolies.com.

"I told [McMurray] that if he wrote the first page of the site that I would go over it and publish it," Alessi said.

The "first page" of the website actually prints out to more than seven pages on paper. McMurray's account and interviews detail how, as in the Moxley the early stages of the investigation.

In an excerpt from his book, "Murder in Greenwich; Who Killed Martha Moxley?" former Los Angeles Police detective Mark Fuhrman writes that several mistakes were noted in the Margolies report, including no detective being delegated to check the initial missing person report, only one detective viewing the crime scene, a lack of clear explanations to various officers of their assignments on the case, and the department's release of "sensitive information" to the media.

Links are also provided on the site to recent news updates on the case and excerpts on the Margolies killing from both Fuhrman's Moxley account and Tim Dumas's "A Wealth of Evil" (formerly "Greentown"), another book on the Moxley murder.

For Alessi, whose says his website programming skills are self taught, maintaining the Margolies site represents another opportunity to shed light on a case sadly still unsolved.

"The most positive thing that I've found is that people have been interested in keeping the cage going and by letting it slip by the wayside," he said. As of noon on Tuesday, the two-month old Margolies site was approaching 1900 hits.

Alessi first became involved with the Moxley site two years ago after meeting Robert Steiner ' an Austrian college student, on CyberSleuths.com, an independent news service which maintains chronicled accounts of crimes. Steiner had created several small web pages containing synopsis of different murders. One eventually became what is today his complete Moxley site.

"I expressed a desire to [Steiner] to take it over and create www.MarthaMoxley.com, since I was closer to the news and was able to devote more time to it," Alessi said.

Alessi said that his maintenance of the two websites is not driven by a need to be noticed, but by a desire to help keep the Moxley and Margolies cases alive in hopes that one day their killers will be found.

"I don't really care for publicity," he said Monday. "The story is not me, the story is the murders."

Maryann Margolies, Matthew's mother is said to be pleased with the website dedicated to solving her son's case.

"She's contacted Kevin, told him she's impressed and mentioned that she wanted to get in touch with me," Alessi said. Attempts to contact Maryann Margolies were unsuccessful.

Alessi and his wife of twelve years Moira are also parents themselves; of a seven-year old boy, also named Matthew. For Alessi, the sites serve as a reminder of how precious the life of his own child really is.

"There's not a day that goes by that you don't think it can happen to your own kid," he said. "That's the scary part. If it happens, you don't want people to forget. [Martha and Matthew] are gone, but hopefully not forgotten."

Sunday, November 28, 1999

11/28/99 New Web site revisits unsolved '84 murder

By Thomas Mellana - Greenwich Time

"The Greenwich curse has manifested itself again. But unlike Martha Moxley, nobody talks about Matthew Margolies from Glenville anymore."

- From "Greentown" by Tim Dumas


Books have not been written about Matthew Margolies. For each newspaper story written about him, 10 appear about that other unsolved Greenwich murder.

But Matthew has found a place on the Web.

A Stamford Web site creator has established a new site about the unsolved 1984 killing of 13-year-old Margolies, whose body was discovered Sept. 5 of that year in the woods near his house, five days after he was reported missing.

"Some of the people from Greenwich who visited Martha's site brought up the fact there was this other unsolved murder in Greenwich," said Tom Alessi, who created the site about two months ago. "I did a little research, and decided this is something people needed to know."

Alessi, 39, a facilities manager at the Stamford 911 center, created a site about the unsolved 1975 murder of Martha Moxley two years ago. A Greenwich native, he was a childhood friend of Moxley, who lived in Belle Haven.

"I was originally from Chickahominy," he said. "I was a classmate of Martha's, and a good friend."

Alessi's strong interest in computers has led him to create Web sites for non-profit organizations in the community as a hobby. Creating one about Moxley seemed a natural.

His Margolies site, which can be reached by a link from the Moxley site, has caught on quickly with cybersleuths and the merely curious.

"In just two months, 1,600 people have looked at it - from all over the country," Alessi said.

Comments they leave on the site's bulletin board are not always flattering to the town or its police department.

"There is a lot of outrage, that two murders in the same town can go unsolved," Alessi said.

"Everyone is entitled to their opinion as to why these cases haven't been solved," Deputy Police Chief James Walters said. "But it doesn't result in anything positive to get into an argument about it. We're just continuing to try to move the investigation forward."

Margolies was an avid fisherman who frequently went fishing with his grandfather, who died shortly before Matthew disappeared. On Aug. 31, 1984, he left his grandmother's house, fishing pole in hand. nearly a week later, his body was discovered on a secluded hillside near his Glenville neighborhood. The murder weapon, a boning knife, was found near his body.

The Web site offers a lengthy synopsis of the murder and the investigation that followed, including photographs of Matthew and his family; a bulletin board on which visitors can record comments; excerpts mentioning the murder from books by Mark Fuhrman and Tim Dumas; and news updates.

"The purpose of this Web site (as well as the Martha Moxley Web site) is to keep the public informed of any developments in the case," Alessi wrote. "But most of all, it is meant to keep Matthew's memory alive for his family and friends."

The site creator's hope, of course, is that it also helps to solve the case.

"Tips would be appreciated," Alessi said. "I would certainly take them and forward them."

As of yet, that has not happened.

"We have not gained any additional information from the Martha Moxley site as of yet, or the Matthew Margolies site," Walters said. "However, as long as they're out there being talked about, we view it as a positive thing."

In May 1998, Police Chief Peter Robbins revealed plans to reinvestigate the Margolies case. Twenty suspects originally identified in the murder have been pared to five, some of whom still live in town.

Walters last week said he could not provide an update on the investigation. Greenwich Time has filed a claim with the state Freedom of Information Commission to see the Margolies investigation case file. The case is pending.

"We can't give out any additional information on that," Walters said.

The Margolies site can be found at matthewmargolies.com. The Moxley site is at marthamoxley.com.

Matthew's mother, Maryann Margolies, could not be reached for comment last week.

Sunday, September 5, 1999

09/05/99 Mother still hopes for arrest

Site where body Found stirs vivid memories

By J.A. Johnson Jr.

Inching down the steep incline, parting low-hanging branches along the way,Maryann Margolies stopped and pointed at bicycle handlebars on the ground.

"They're still there," she said. "I can't believe after all these years they're still there."

For Margolies, the badly rusted metal bars jutting from the earth are a landmark, a headstone of sorts. They mark the spot that had been the shallow grave in which her son, Matthew, had been unceremoniously interred a decade and a half ago.

On Friday morning, Maryann returned to this secluded place on the wooded outskirts of the Glenville neighborhood where Matthew lived his 13 years - that is at the same time unholy and hallowed. She was overwhelmed with the grief she has carried since the youngest of her two children was savagely murdered on August 31, 1984.

"All I want to understand is why. Why did this happen to him? Matthew deserved much better than this," the 59-year-old woman said, her eyes welling with tears. "He was a human being, and he had so much potential to be a contributing person to society. He already was contributing because he made people happy, and if that was all he ever did the rest of his life - making people happy - that would have been outstanding."

It was exactly 15 years ago today (September 5th) that Matthew's body was found by a local volunteer fighter on this wooded hillside below Greenway Drive and overlooking Pemberwick Road.

He had disappeared five days earlier, on August 31, 1984, after having left his grandmother's house less than a mile away to go fishing. Police said they believed the boy was killed that same day by someone who strangled and repeatedly stabbed him.

The 13-year-old's partially clothed body was found in the hastily prepared grave, covered with leaves and stones. The murder weapon, a boning knife, was found beneath the body.

In between the time Matthew was murdered and his body found, the crime scene had been all but destroyed by the elements. Five days of intense heat and steady rain had combined to wash away any trace evidence the killer had left and speed up decomposition of the body.

Detectives started out by identifying some 20 potential suspects, then whittled the number to five, some of whom remain suspects and continue to either live in town, or nearby.

A profiler from the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit told police the killer likely was a white male familiar with Glenville as well as the victim, and who knew of the boy's love of fishing. In a 1986 consultants critique of the investigation, the murderer was further characterized as a sadist who lured Matthew to the secluded hillside where the body was found.

If Matthew had been lured to this death, the hillside overlooking Pemberwick Road would have certainly been a place to tempt an, adventurous boy his age. In the area of the makeshift grave, the rugged terrain flattens a bit at the foot of rock outcroppings that scream to be climbed on. Investigating the nooks and crannies could easily delight a young boy fancying himself an explorer. The area is littered with rusted beer cans and similar debris that make it seem it had been a place to hang out in the days before aluminum containers, the absence of which could indicate that at some point visitors abruptly stopped coming. One could almost envision teens passing long summer days seated amid the rocks, perhaps drinking and smoking, spying on traffic that rolled past below. Charred stones seemed to speak of fires around which young males swapped tales and cemented bonds.

"When we would drive past, Matthew would ask me, 'What's up there?' and I'd tell him that I didn't want him going there," Maryann recalled. "He was very curious about this place for some reason."

One of the suspects, none of whom have been publicly named by police, is said to have been a young troublemaker who got kicks rolling logs from atop the ravine onto the roadway below. Another is rumored to have harbored a grudge against Matthew because he believed the boy somehow responsible for his getting caught growing marijuana in the woods nearby. Yet another suspect, tagged by other children as a neighborhood bully lived up the hill from where Matthew's body was found.

On her somber return to the site, Maryann wore a gold "love knot" on a chain around her neck, explaining, "It's the last thing Matthew gave me!" She reminisced about how 15 years ago, as a recently divorced mother of two, she often worked double shifts to make ends meet. One of those long work days was on August 30, 1984, and Matthew, as usual, was spending the night at his grandmother's house Morgan Avenue, a few blocks from his own house on Pilgrim Drive. "When I was working doubles, I would always call Matthew before bedtime to say good night," Maryann said."When I called him that night, my last words to him were 'I love you,' and that one thing has helped to sustain me. "At least he left this world knowing that his mother loved him."

Matthew was last seen the following day at about 5 p.m., leaving his grandmother's, and was believed headed for a favored angling spot along nearby Byram River. As the boy walked toward his destiny, he carried his prized possession, a fly rod given to him by his grandfather, George Miazga, who died two weeks before. One year later, the tightly knit Glenville community paid tribute to Matthew, dedicating a plaque on the Glenville Road bridge spanning the Byram River.

Below a depiction of a fly rod on the plaque, an inscription reads: "An excellent angler!; and now with God. Matthew Margolies, 1971-1984."

Sunday, May 2, 1999

May 2, 1999 - Events In Greenwich

Emil and Elizabeth Benvenuto are to be honored yesterday at the Hyatt Regency Greenwich for their support of the Connecticut Center for Child Development.

Monday, January 18, 1999

1/18/99 HELP WANTED

SLP for Greenwich and Norwalk, CT

Full-time, CFY, Part-time, and Per Diem positionsWe are a center based private practice (we are not an agency and we do not provide any contract work or home care services) that has been growing steadily in the past few years. Now we are interviewing for positions that will provide flexibility to fit your career needs. We offer great opportunities for career growth and skill development. We will help you achieve your long-term career goals. Our practice is an exciting and rewarding place to work. You can have career growth within our company.Our Organization: We are experienced and dynamic professionals who enjoy working and learning in a pleasant office setting. We provide weekly in-service and staff development programs.Client Population: 90% are children from age 18 months to 15 years. 10% are adults.Type of Disorders: Children: Play, speech and language skill development, feeding and oral motor dysfunction, phonological and articulation disorders, motor planning, language delay, language based learning disabilities, word retrieval and auditory language processing, voice, fluency and tongue thrust/reversed swallow. Adults: voice, fluency disorders, head injury and stroke, and accent reduction.Locations: Our main office is in Greenwich Connecticut, and our second office is in Norwalk Connecticut. We have openings at our Greenwich and Norwalk locations. Our Norwalk office is an easy commute from anywhere in Fairfield County, Connecticut. Our Greenwich office is only 5 minutes by car from Westchester County, New York.Salary & Benefits: For full time employees, we offer excellent compensation packages including individual health insurance, company matched 401-K retirement plan and 6 weeks of paid time off per year. For per diem clinicians, we offer a competitive rate. To Apply: You must have a master’s degree in Speech and Language Pathology, ASHA certified, licensed or eligible for licensing in Connecticut. Two years of pediatric experience and some adult experience are preferred. Special interests and experience in stuttering, voice disorder, and feeding with both children and adults are a plus. Send letter of interest and your resume to Josephine Chen by e-mail to jchen@speechtherapyct.com, mail to 100 Melrose Avenue, Suite 201, Greenwich, CT 06830 or fax to 203-869-8289. If you have any questions, please call us at 203-869-8272. We look forward to hearing from you.Please visit our website at: www.speechtherapyct.comOur offices:100 Melrose Avenue, Suite 201, Greenwich, CT 068305 Mott Avenue, Norwalk, CT 06850
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Sunday, July 5, 1998

07/05/98 New probe of 14-year-old Margolies murder begins

By J.A. Johnson Jr. - Greenwich Time

The renewed investigation into the unsolved 1984 murder of 13-year-old Glenville resident Matthew Margolies is under way.

After a recent review of the extensive but dormant Margolies case file, a Greenwich detective began conducting interviews two weeks ago to officially launch the renewed murder probe.

"We've started some interviews, Detective Division Captain James Walters said Thursday. He would not disclose whether those questioned included suspects. According to police, more than 60 people were initially identified as possible suspects, a number that was whittled down to about a dozen, some of whom remain under suspicion.

The reinvestigation of the Margolies case was announced in May, when Police Chief Peter Robbins revealed his department was planning to launch an all-out effort to find out who nearly 14 years ago sadistically murdered Margolies and buried him in a shallow grave beside the Byram River.

Though police followed up on occasional leads in the case, the murder of the only son of a working-class family has not been as actively investigated as has the case of Martha Moxley, a 15-year-old who was bludgeoned to death outside her family's mansion in the affluent Belle Haven section of town in 1975.

The Moxley case has maintained a high profile because two nephews of the late U.S. Sen. Robert Kennedy are among the murder suspects. The case has been the subject of two recently published books, the inspiration for a novel and subsequent television miniseries, as well as fodder for numerous talk shows and other television programs. A reinvestigation of the Moxley case was launched in 1991, and last month a grand jury was appointed to probe the matter.

Robbins was promoted captain and placed in charge of the Detective Division three months after Margolies was killed. For reasons he would not explain, Robbins said he had been unable to pursue the case as vigorously as he had wanted. But in a May interview, Robbins said that as a result of his appointment as chief eight months earlier, he found himself in a position to do things with the investigation he previously could not.

On Thursday, the police chief said he remained optimistic the case would be solved.

I just think that it's a solvable case, but I don't want to go into why I believe that at this time," Robbins said.

The victim's mother, Maryann Margolies, who still lives in Glenville, has declined comment on the reopening of her son's case.

According to Walters, there have been no new developments that warranted the renewed investigation, but he said it was hoped that advances in forensic science since the 1984 slaying would play a pivotal role in identifying the youth's killer.

"We're going to re-evaluate all the evidence to see if they should be submitted for further forensic analysis," he said. "There is a substantial body of evidence in this case."

In addition to a knife found near Margolies' body, believed to be the murder weapon, Walters said the initial investigation recovered trace evidence. Although he would not disclose what was recovered, trace evidence can include hair, clothing fibers, semen, or any other physical evidence a killer leaves at the crime scene.

No fingerprints were found on the alleged murder weapon, as the knife was exposed to rain during the five days Margolies' body went undiscovered.

According to police, Margolies set out the afternoon of August 31, 1984 from his Pilgrim Drive home to go fishing in the Byram River. Police said they believed the boy was killed the same afternoon by someone who repeatedly stabbed and strangled him. The boy's partially nude body was discovered five days later in a wooded area near the river. The boning knife believed to be the murder weapon was found a short distance. from the body.

Shortly after the murder, the FBIis Behavioral Science unit profiled Margolies' killer as a white male familiar with Glenville, who knew Margolies as well as the victim's passion for fishing. In a town funded 1986 paid consultant's critique of the Police Department's investigation, the murderer was further characterized as a sadist who lured his victim to a secluded area where he would be able to act out his gory fantasies.

Walters said no time limit has been set on the renewed investigation, "The investigation isn't going to be limited by time constraints," he said. "We will spend whatever time is necessary to follow all leads and review all the evidence to further the investigation as far as we can."

Wednesday, February 8, 1995

02/08/95 RTM MEMBER RICHARD HOLLERAN WAS RIGHT

FREEDOM OF INFORMATION COMMISSION
OF THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT

In the Matter of a Complaint by FINAL DECISION

Richard Holleran,

Complainant

against Docket #FIC 94-80

Greenwich First Selectman and Greenwich
Department of Public Works,

Respondents February 8, 1995

The above-captioned matter was heard as a contested case on July 21, 1994, at which time the complainant and the respondents appeared, stipulated to certain facts and presented testimony, exhibits and argument on the complaint.

After consideration of the entire record, the following facts are found and conclusions of law are reached:

1. The respondents are public agencies within the meaning of 1-18a(a), G.S.

2. By letter of complaint filed March 18, 1994, the complainant appealed to the Commission, alleging that he was denied access to a meeting on February 18, 1994 at which town business was discussed.

3. It is found that the town of Greenwich is in the process of redevelopment plans for a certain parcel land known as the Cos Cob Power Plant.

4. It is found that the commissioner of the respondent department of public works solicited requests for proposals for a site plan for the power plant.

5. It is found that, after numerous proposals were received, the commissioner delegated the responsibility for developing a "short list" of applicants to a committee of three individuals, consisting of a selectman and two other town residents.

6. It is found that the committee developed such a list, was enlarged to five members, and set a date to interview the five finalist applicants.

7. It is found that the committee met on February 18, 1994 to interview the five finalists separately but sequentially.

Docket #FIC 94-80 Page 2

8. It is found that each interview consisted of the same questions put to the applicants, concerning their proposals, and that their answers were scored on a scale of one to ten.

9. It is found that the highest scoring applicant was then communicated to the commissioner of public works, who met with and ultimately executed a contract with that applicant.

10. It is found that the February 18, 1994 interviews were not open to the public generally or to the complainant, who also sought to attend in his capacity as a member of the subcommittee of the planning and zoning committee of the representative town meeting ("RTM") that is charged with collecting information about the Cos Cob power plant site.

11. The complainant maintains that he was improperly denied access to the meeting, and that without access he is unable to discharge his responsibilities as a citizen and member of the RTM.

12. The respondents maintain that the meeting was a staff or administrative meeting within the meaning of 1-18a(b), G.S., and that conducting the interviews in public would result in the disclosure of documents exempt under 1-19(b)(7), G.S.

13. The respondents further maintain that conducting the interviews in public would have been unfairly prejudicial to the applicant then being interviewed, and unfairly advantageous to other applicants who could have attended, because all the questions that were asked of the applicants were the same, and because applicants would have had to reveal whatever plans they necessarily believed gave them a competitive advantage.

14. Section 1-18a(b), G.S. provides that an administrative or staff meeting of a single-member public agency is not a "meeting" within the meaning of 1-18a(b) and therefore is not subject to the requirements of the FOI Act.

15. The respondents maintain that the February 18, 1994 meeting was an administrative or staff meeting within the meaning of 1-18a(b), G.S., because the commissioner of public works himself would ordinarily conduct such interviews with the assistance of a staff member.

16. It is found that the commissioner of public works delegated the responsibility for interviewing and scoring the applicant engineering/architectural firms to the committee.

17. It is also found that the first member of the committee (a selectman) was selected for his architectural knowledge and background, not for his administrative abilities.

Docket #FIC 94-80 Page 3

18. It is found that the respondents failed to prove either that the selection of an architectural/engineering proposal is an administrative function, or that the members of the interview committee were staff members of the respondents.

19. It is therefore found that the respondents failed to prove either that meeting with applicants to evaluate their proposals is an administrative task within the meaning of 1-18a(b), G.S., or that the previous participation of a staff member at such an interview would convert it into a staff meeting within the meaning of 1-18a(b), G.S.

20. Section 1-18a(a) provides in relevant part that the term "public agency" means:

any executive, administrative or legislative office of the state or any political subdivision of the state and any state or town agency, any department, institution, bureau, board, commission, authority or official of the state or of any city, town, borough, municipal corporation, school district, regional district or other district or other political subdivision of the state, including any committee of, or created by, any such office, subdivision, agency, department, institution, bureau, board, commission, authority or official .... [Emphasis added].

21. It is therefore concluded that the respondents' interview committee is a public agency within the meaning of 1-18a(a), G.S.

22. The respondents also maintain that the proposals submitted were feasibility studies within the meaning of 1-19(b)(7), G.S., which are permissibly exempt from disclosure, and that 1-19(b), G.S., generally provides that nothing in the Freedom of Information Act--such as requiring a meeting to be open to the public--shall be construed as requiring the disclosure of documents exempt by 1-19(b)(7), G.S.

23. Section 1-19(b)(7), G.S., provides that disclosure is not required of:

the contents of real estate appraisals, engineering or feasibility estimates and evaluations made for or by an agency relative to the acquisition of property or to prospective public supply and construction contracts, until such time as all of the property has been acquired or all proceedings or transactions have been terminated or abandoned, provided the law of eminent domain shall not be affected by this provision ....

Docket #FIC 94-80 Page 4

24. Section 1-18a(e)(5), G.S., provides in relevant part:

"Executive sessions" means a meeting of a public agency at which the public is excluded for one or more of the following purposes: (5) discussion of any matter which would result in the disclosure of public records or the information contained therein described in subsection (b) of section 1-19.

25. It is found that proposals were sought from engineers and architects.

26. It is found that the proposals generally concerned the design of affordable housing and park space at the site of the former Cos Cob Power Plant.

27. It is found that the proposals addressed road design and construction; a plan for marina facilities; 23 units of affordable housing, including plans to show sidewalks, driveway and parking, as well as the location of the units themselves; plans to grade, topsoil, seed and landscape open space; and a method for screening off nearby railroad and electrical facilities.

28. It is concluded that the proposals submitted were engineering or feasibility estimates and evaluations made for the respondent relative to a prospective public construction contracts

29. It is therefore concluded that the proposals were exempt from disclosure pursuant to 1-19(b)(7), G.S.

30. It is therefore concluded that the respondents' committee could have permissibly convened in executive session to discuss the contents of the proposals.

31. It is also found, however, that the respondents' committee did not file a notice of the meeting to conduct interviews, and did not vote to convene in executive session in accordance with the procedures described in 1-21(a), G.S.

32. It is therefore concluded that the respondents' committee violated 1-21(a) by failing to file a notice of the committee meeting to conduct interviews, and by failing to vote to convene in executive session and to state a reason for so convening.

The following order by the Commission is hereby recommended on the basis of the record concerning the above-captioned complaint:

Docket #FIC 94-80 Page 5

1. Henceforth the respondents shall strictly comply with the requirements of 1-18a(e) and 1-21(a), G.S.

Approved by Order of the Freedom of Information Commission at its regular meeting of February 8, 1995.


Debra L. Rembowski
Clerk of the Commission

PURSUANT TO SECTION 4-180(c), G.S. THE FOLLOWING ARE THE NAMES OF EACH PARTY AND THE MOST RECENT MAILING ADDRESS, PROVIDED TO THE FREEDOM OF INFORMATION COMMISSION, OF THE PARTIES OR THEIR AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE.

THE PARTIES TO THIS CONTESTED CASE ARE:
RICHARD HOLLERAN
66 Milbank Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830

GREENWICH FIRST SELECTMAN AND GREENWICH DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
c/o John K. Wetmore, Esq.
Assistant Town Attorney
101 Field Point Road
P.O. Box 2540
Greenwich, CT 06836-2540


Debra L. Rembowski
Clerk of the Commission

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