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FBI
to join search for missing Waterbury man
BY
GENNADY SHEYNER
Copyright © 2006 Republican-American
Sunday,
October 1, 2006
FOI COMMISSION COMPELS WATERBURY PD TO PRODUCE SMOLINSKI MISSING
PERSON LOVE TRIANGLE FILE;
Upside Down Investigation In Billy Smolinski Case; Waterbury PD FOI
request re- Missing Person Billy Smolinski;
Complaint / Request for hearing re- Denial of public records request by
Waterbury PD;
Does Missing Person / Love Triangle Case Add Up To Homicide?]
WATERBURY
-- It's been more than two years since Billy Smolinski vanished from
city streets.
And now, the case that has long mystified local police is getting some
help from the FBI.
Last month, the FBI assigned an agent to assist with the investigation
into the disappearance of Smolinski, a Waterbury man who disappeared in
August 2004. Smolinski, then 31, asked his neighbor to look after his
German shepherd and said he was leaving for three days to look at a car.
He hasn't been seen since.
Police said they have exhausted all local resources and hope federal
assistance will bring them closer to uncovering the mystery.
"We feel we did all we can do from the local perspective,"
Police Superintendent Neil O'Leary said Saturday. "The case was
investigated as thoroughly as it could be."
On Aug. 4, Deputy Chief of Police James F. Nardozzi sent a letter to
Kimberly Mertz, the agent in charge of the FBI's New Haven Field Office,
requesting FBI's assistance in conducting a joint investigation between
local and federal authorities into Smolinski's disappearance.
"It is our belief there is a likelihood of foul play involved in the
disappearance of Mr. Smolinski," Nardozzi wrote. "However in our
quest to locate Mr. Smolinski we also believe we have exhausted all
avenues of investigation available to us."
While police have never definitively stated that foul play was a factor in
Smolinski's disappearance, Police Superintendent Neil O'Leary said
Saturday that they have never ruled it out as a possibility.
"One of the three things happened," O'Leary said Saturday.
"He may have disappeared on his own accord and, hopefully, he is
alive and well. There may have been foul play; someone may have harmed him
and that's why he is missing. Or he may have disappeared and took his own
life."
"I felt from the beginning that foul play was as likely a possibility
as the other two."
Members of Smolinski's family have long expressed their frustrations with
the police, who the family says ignored their concerns and were negligent
and careless in their investigation. Over the past two years, the family
repeatedly spoke to the FBI, put up countless posters of Billy and
contacted Andy Thibault, a private investigator whose blog,
cooljustice.blogspot.com, focuses on police and courts.
On the same day that Nardozzi sent his letter to the FBI, Thibault filed a
Freedom of Information [complaint] against Waterbury police. Last Tuesday,
the Freedom of Information Commission held a hearing on the complaint and
ruled that the police must deliver the file on the case within a week. The
commission will decide which records in the file can be released to the
public.
During the hearing, police presented the letter to the FBI as evidence
that they are still working on the case.
Janice Smolinski, Billy's mother, said that while she hopes federal
assistance will help the police locate her son, the family remains angry
about how case has been handled.
"Whether the FBI's participation will help remains to be seen,"
she said. "We've heard many promises that never came through."
Thibault said that while it's unclear whether the police were negligent in
their investigation, the family's complaints should be carefully
considered.
"I take their concerns very seriously," Thibault said Saturday.
"I think they're certainly worth looking into."
LINK:
http://cooljustice.blogspot.com/2006/10/wtby-rep-am-notes-foi-action-on.html
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