Hartford Courant

Former cop charged in burglaries

Linked to Wethersfie­ld and Old Saybrook incidents, police say he’s a suspect in 30 or more similar cases

- By Justin Muszynski

A former Glastonbur­y police officer accused of misusing a law enforcemen­t database has been charged with burglaries in Wethersfie­ld and Old Saybrook.

Patrick Hemingway, 37, was served with warrants by police department­s in both towns while he was being held in lockup following an appearance Wednesday in Hartford Superior Court, according to the Wethersfie­ld and Old Saybrook Police Department­s.

Hemingway faces a burglary charge in connection with a break-in at the Pizza Palace in Old Saybrook on May 8 and charges of third-degree burglary, sixth-degree larceny and third-degree criminal mischief tied to a burglary at the Old Wethersfie­ld Country Store on Feb. 10, police said. The former cop is believed to have fled before taking anything at the shoreline restaurant, while police in Wethersfie­ld said a cash register drawer with $200 inside was reported missing.

Hemingway was expected to appear in Middletown Superior Court Thursday to answer to the Old Saybrook burglary charge and on Friday in New Britain Superior Court in connection with the Wethersfie­ld break-in. He has been held on a $1 million bond since he was arrested as a fugitive in New Jersey and extradited to Connecticu­t on Sept. 28.

Upon being extradited back to the state, he was charged by Connecticu­t State Police with first-degree computer crimes and making a false statement.

The arrest warrant affidavit authored by state police investigat­ors indicates Hemingway is a suspect in 30 or more burglaries at businesses in Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and Massachuse­tts in which the suspect targeted safes and cash registers, stealing cash using a similar M.O.

State police believe Hemingway used his access to COLLECT — a database used by police officers and others in criminal justice that provides access to state and federal law enforcemen­t resources — to determine if any agencies had identified him as a suspect while he was an officer with the Glastonbur­y Police Department.

Hemingway worked as a police officer in New Britain from 2009 until January 2019, at which point he joined the department in Glastonbur­y until he submitted a resignatio­n letter in July 2023. The letter, which requested his resignatio­n take effect Sept. 1, cited his desire to pursue a career in commercial aviation, which he wrote

would better suit his skills and allow him more time to spend with his family.

According to the affidavit, Wethersfie­ld police were the first agency to suspect Hemingway in a burglary. While investigat­ing the break-in at the Old Wethersfie­ld Country Store, police found that cellphone tower data from the crime matched tower data from a burglary in Shelton. The “common identifier” in the cellphone data had ties to a 2019 Jeep Cherokee registered to Hemingway’s wife, the affidavit said.

State police said Hemingway was later found to have run numerous queries through COLLECT between January 2021 and August of this year checking on vehicles registered to him and his wife as well as his name.

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