© 2024 WSHU
NPR News & Classical Music
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Action after audit

Brian Scott-Smith
/
WSHU

The ACLU of Connecticut calls for action after an audit found thousands of misreported traffic stops in the state. State police commanders vote no-confidence in the commissioner. Suffolk’s DA will be the lead prosecutor in the case against the suspected Gilgo Beach serial killer. And taking a trip to Christina’s World.


Hear more from Davis Dunavin on this week's trip to New England as part of the WSHU podcast Off The Path — available online and wherever you get your podcasts.

Sabrina is host and producer of WSHU’s daily podcast After All Things. She also produces the climate podcast Higher Ground and other long-form news and music programs at the station. Sabrina spent two years as a WSHU fellow, working as a reporter and assisting with production of The Full Story.
Related Content
  • Connecticut could end the sale of gas-powered passenger cars by 2035. There are about 130 Connecticut state troopers who could be involved in the recent ticketing scandal. Ticks are now a year-round problem in the Northeast. And a Shinnecock art exhibition opens this weekend.
  • Recent floods have cost Connecticut farms more than $20 million in lost revenue. No human remains were found in a search of the suspected Gilgo Beach serial killer’s home. An audit finds thousands of traffic stops in Connecticut were incorrectly reported. And how New York could respond to future extreme weather events.
  • A study estimates 1 in 8 Long Island seniors have Alzheimer's. The University of Connecticut will work with local manufacturers on clean energy strategies. Experts say New Haven needs over 8,000 affordable housing units by 2030. And a Connecticut gunmaker is being sued by the Mexican government.