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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Dave Altimari, Edmund H. Mahony, Emily Brindley and Amanda Blanco

Conn. man charged in estranged wife's death revived after apparent suicide attempt, sources say

HARTFORD, Conn. _ Sources say Fotis Dulos, initially believed to have died Tuesday at his Farmington home in an apparent suicide, is apparently still alive after efforts by emergency responders to revive him.

Dulos, accused of killing estranged wife Jennifer Farber Dulos, was transported to UConn Health in Farmington Tuesday afternoon from his Jefferson Crossing home. While multiple sources have said he died, others said medical personnel engaged in efforts to save his life.

One key source said a faint pulse was detected en route to the hospital, information that conflicts with widespread reports of his death just moments earlier _ including notification to the family.

Dulos' attorney, Norm Pattis, confirmed that Dulos was taken to the hospital.

"I am told Mr. Dulos is en route to the hospital with a pulse," Pattis said. "Our thoughts and prayers are with him."

A source said Dulos was believed to have died but a faint pulse was detected after 30 minutes of CPR by first responders. At that point, he was rushed to UConn Health, where the source said that by early afternoon, Dulos remained unconscious, was unable to breath on his own and was on life support.

A Superior Court judge was expected to hold an emergency bond hearing for Dulos at noon Tuesday in Stamford to discuss the security on the $6 million bond he posted following his Jan. 7 arrest on the murder charges. Sources said Dulos' bond was likely going to be revoked and he would be sent to jail.

Dulos, 52, had previously been arrested and charged with tampering with evidence and hindering prosecution in connection with Farber Dulos' disappearance on May 24. Dulos' former girlfriend Michelle Troconis, 44, and his friend Kent Mawhinney, 54, both face charges of conspiracy to commit murder.

It appears that Dulos' attempt to take his life took place just moments after he learned authorities were initiating steps to revoke his bond because it had been secured by wildly overvalued real estate.

State insurance regulators determined there were problems with the real estate valuations and transmitted the information to Palmetto Surety, the South Carolina insurer that underwrote the bond. Specifically, the bond was secured by six pieces of real estate _ two of which it had been determined were subject to foreclosure and a third was found to have been substantially overvalued.

Early Tuesday, Palmetto instructed its local lawyer, A. Ryan McGuigan, to move in court to revoke the bond. McGuigan said he notified State's Attorney Richard Colangelo at about 8:30 a.m. of the impending revocation and that Colangelo notified Pattis at about 9 a.m.

McGuigan said he and a private bondsman arrived at the Dulos home in Farmington at about 11:30 a.m. to serve notice that they would be formally moving in court later in the morning to pull the bond. McGuigan said he encountered a state of confusion.

Two Farmington patrol cars had already arrived and they were quickly joined by dozens of police officers and emergency medical personnel.

The first responders located Dulos in the garage of his home. McGuigan said Dulos, who appeared unresponsive, was moved to the back yard from the garage, which appears to have been filled with smoke or exhaust. Emergency medical personnel immediately began efforts at resuscitation, which continued for an extended period of time, two sources said.

It was believed initially by the first responders that Dulos had died. But after at least a half-hour of efforts at resuscitation, medical personnel detective a faint pulse, one of the sources said.

In a 35-page arrest warrant affidavit supporting Dulos' murder charge, state police detectives said they found Dulos' DNA on an inside doorknob to the mudroom of Farber Dulos' New Canaan home, along with his DNA and her blood mixed on a faucet in the home.

After tracking Dulos' phone to the North End of Hartford, investigators said they found surveillance footage showing a man they say is Dulos throwing out garbage bags in the area of Albany Avenue, the affidavit said. In the trash, investigators reported finding a number of items, including zip ties, a bloodstained poncho, a sponge and a bloodstained paper towel with Farber Dulos' DNA on it.

Last week, Superior Court Judge Gary White ordered strict home confinement for Dulos after questions surfaced that he meddled with a memorial for Farber Dulos set up near the Farmington home they once shared. At the time of her disappearance, Dulos and Farber Dulos were embroiled in a contentious divorce and custody battle. White told Dulos that if he violated the conditions of his release again, White would double the bond to $12 million.

Last week's hearing followed the filing of a motion by Colangelo asking a judge to review Dulos' bond after Dulos was seen stopping at the end of a private road leading to his home on Jan. 17 to "get out of his vehicle and remove items from a memorial that was set up," court records show.

"Mr. Dulos is on the edge of what he has the right to do. I would ask that you remove his permission to leave for work and do it in black and white so that he knows what he can do. It shouldn't be that hard but apparently it is," Colangelo said to White.

Pattis acknowledged it was not smart for Dulos to remove items from the memorial. But, he said, the memorial was set up near his home to taunt him.

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