Shay Taylor-Allen's inspiring journey from working as a janitor for ten years to becoming an anesthesiology resident at Yale New Haven Hospital highlights her determination and resilience.
Karl Jacobson, city’s police chief for three years, is accused of pilfering money from fund meant to pay informants
An official who recently resigned as police chief of one of Connecticut’s largest cities was arrested on Friday on larceny charges after allegations that he stole more than $85,000 from two department accounts – money that was meant to pay for certain informants as well as a youth extracurricular program.
Karl Jacobson, who abruptly retired from the New Haven police department in January, turned himself in on an arrest warrant. He was later released on a court-set bond of $150,000, a state prosecutor said in a news release. Jacobson faces two counts of larceny related to defrauding a public community.
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Dr. Henry C. Lee, a celebrated forensic scientist who helped bring modern crime scene investigation into the public spotlight through high-profile cases like the O.J. Simpson murder trial, has died peacefully at 87.
Shay Taylor-Allen, who worked as a janitor at Yale New Haven Hospital for a decade, has now secured a residency as a doctor at the same institution where she was born.