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

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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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Jennifer Dulos may have been alive when taken by estranged husband, former prosecutor says​

Jennifer Dulos may have been restrained with 3-foot-long zip ties and alive when she was taken from her New Canaan home by Fotis Dulos in May 2019, former prosecutor Richard Colangelo told college students studying journalism earlier this year.

"We don't know if she was dead when he took her out of New Canaan or not," Colangelo said. "My theory was she wasn't."

Colangelo made the revelation and others — such as his belief that Jennifer Dulos may be buried in the expansive property in Farmington near where she previously lived — during a talk in late March with University of New Haven students studying journalism with columnist and adjunct professor Andre Thibault.


Attorney Jon Schoenhorn, who represented Michelle Troconis, convicted on charges she conspired with Fotis Dulos, her former boyfriend, to kill Jennifer Dulos, also spoke to the students in April about the eight-week trial that ended with Troconis' conviction on several charges, including conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Jennifer Dulos, her discussions with police and the possibility of her filing an appeal.

Her prior attorney Andrew Bowman was "sitting there more or less like a potted plant while the police grill Ms. Troconis for hour, upon hour, upon hour," said Schoenhorn, who later indicated that ineffective assistance of counsel might be an avenue for getting the conviction overturned.

Journalism students Gabby Pinto and Mikaela Motz peppered Colangelo, a former chief state's attorney who now is a professor at UNH, and Schoenhorn with questions about the case and the trial during the discussion. The journalism class had reviewed videos and print stories about the disappearance and death of Jennifer Dulos prior to the talk as part of a learning experience on gathering news, Thibault said.
 

Jennifer Dulos may have been alive when taken by estranged husband, former prosecutor says​

Jennifer Dulos may have been restrained with 3-foot-long zip ties and alive when she was taken from her New Canaan home by Fotis Dulos in May 2019, former prosecutor Richard Colangelo told college students studying journalism earlier this year.

"We don't know if she was dead when he took her out of New Canaan or not," Colangelo said. "My theory was she wasn't."

Colangelo made the revelation and others — such as his belief that Jennifer Dulos may be buried in the expansive property in Farmington near where she previously lived — during a talk in late March with University of New Haven students studying journalism with columnist and adjunct professor Andre Thibault.


Attorney Jon Schoenhorn, who represented Michelle Troconis, convicted on charges she conspired with Fotis Dulos, her former boyfriend, to kill Jennifer Dulos, also spoke to the students in April about the eight-week trial that ended with Troconis' conviction on several charges, including conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Jennifer Dulos, her discussions with police and the possibility of her filing an appeal.

Her prior attorney Andrew Bowman was "sitting there more or less like a potted plant while the police grill Ms. Troconis for hour, upon hour, upon hour," said Schoenhorn, who later indicated that ineffective assistance of counsel might be an avenue for getting the conviction overturned.

Journalism students Gabby Pinto and Mikaela Motz peppered Colangelo, a former chief state's attorney who now is a professor at UNH, and Schoenhorn with questions about the case and the trial during the discussion. The journalism class had reviewed videos and print stories about the disappearance and death of Jennifer Dulos prior to the talk as part of a learning experience on gathering news, Thibault said.
That would be a way to not have any blood evidence in the home.
 

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