dudalb
Penultimate Amazing
You know TV/Streaming movie about this in almost certainly already in the works as we speak.
Sullivan’s attorney Ioannis Kaloidis said not much happened. “The case was continued. Today was kind of a lot of administrative, some housekeeping stuff. Nothing has been ruled upon or decided at this time,” Kaloidis said. WTNH ABC affiliate in New Haven Conn. article link. Also includes 10 minute video of interviews immediately after hearing


The court appearance for Kimberly Sullivan, the Waterbury stepmother accused of imprisoning and starving her stepson for over two decades, has been postponed to October 3, 2025. Sullivan’s legal team has filed two motions seeking to modify restrictions placed on her during the ongoing case.
One motion requests permission for Sullivan to return to her home on Blake Street home to retrieve her personal belongings, arguing the the current protective order is too broad. The other motion asks to end her GPS bracelet monitoring, citing no violations or flight risk and claiming the condition stigmatizing. WFSB (CBS affiliate in Hartford Conn,) article link
If there's no violations, that tells me the bracelet is working.
Last week Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury scheduled a pretrial hearing for Kimberly Sullivan but it was postponed until early October..
If there's no violations, that tells me the bracelet is working.
I think it's actually a better argument than you give it credit for.Awesome work, Captain Hindsight
I think it's actually a better argument than you give it credit for.
Because they are arguing "to end her GPS bracelet monitoring, citing no violations or flight risk and claiming the condition stigmatizing" but you don't know the counterfactual. That's like arguing to be let out of jail early because you didn't try to escape. A risk assessment was made at the start of the process and I don't see how anything has changed.Ok, what's the argument and why is it better than I give it credit for? I'm open to learning for sure.
Because they are arguing "to end her GPS bracelet monitoring, citing no violations or flight risk and claiming the condition stigmatizing" but you don't know the counterfactual. That's like arguing to be let out of jail early because you didn't try to escape. A risk assessment was made at the start of the process and I don't see how anything has changed.
Oooh, sorry, I misunderstood. I actually thought you were arguing for the exact opposite.My entire premise has been that she doesn't deserve the freedom at all. It's something she robbed from someone else and has shown 20+ years of depraved indifference to the life of someone else. ◊◊◊◊ the stigmatization. A ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ ankle bracelet giving her a bad appearance. She's an absolute piece of dog ◊◊◊◊, so my statement about hindsight is that yeah, it's worked so far. That doesn't mean she deserves anything less and, in my opinion, deserves significant more.
Again, "After stealing 20+ years of someone else's life away she's managed not to do it to someone else" isn't really a convincing argument to me, and I absolutely believe her to be a threat to the community. That she hasn't been so far means nothing.
Oooh, sorry, I misunderstood. I actually thought you were arguing for the exact opposite.
In my defense, the thread had been inactive for months. I was just reacting to "Awesome work, Captain Hindsight"
Sullivan’s stepson, who has been known publicly as “S,” has a new name and the state filed a motion requesting that his new name, address, and medical records be concealed. The defense argued that the state's position violates Sullivan's right to confront her accuser and the accuser's rights do not trump Sullivan’s constitutional rights. They also said that Sullivan has complied with a no-contact and protective order and there's no factual basis to treat her differently. The judge ruled in favor of the defense in releasing S's new name and address to Sullivan and her defense attorney, but only for court purposes. The new name cannot be leaked to the public. If Sullivan were to make the name public, she would be held in contempt, according to the judge.
Sullivan has been wearing a GPS monitor since her arrest in March. Her attorney filed a motion to have it removed, but the judge denied that request. NBC News article link

Does a person's right to face their accuser normally include being told where they live?
I think this interpretation violates the spirit of the right to face your accuser.Surely, this is a criminal matter? It's not a civil thing, the man is a witness for the prosecution and not 'her accuser'. It should be The People vs Sullivan.
I'm not sure. I did say "in general", in response to a general-rule interpretation that I disagreed with.How does society benefit by giving the accusers identity to the person who held him captive for most of his life? Genuinely curious.
I'm not sure. I did say "in general", in response to a general-rule interpretation that I disagreed with.
In general, I think society benefits from recognizing a right to know who's making criminal accusations against you.
Anonymous allegations aren't generally a good thing.
Do you think society benefits by prohibiting anonymous criminal allegations in general? Genuinely curious.