Crime & Safety

4 Stamford Natives Graduate From CT State Police Training Academy

Among the 100 new State Troopers that graduated on Thursday are four Stamford natives.

STAMFORD, CT —The Connecticut State Police announced on Thursday that 100 new State Troopers have graduated from the training academy as part of the 130th Training Troop.

Among the 100 new troopers is Jannina Bonilla, Carmine DeRubeis, Rahiem Farrow and Luis Morales, all Stamford natives. The group will be be assigned to Troop G in Bridgeport.

According to a news release, a ceremony for the graduating class was held on Thursday at Dunkin Donuts Park in Hartford, with an address from Gov. Ned Lamont.

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The 130th Training Troop entered the Connecticut State Police Training Academy on Jan. 15, with classes starting remotely due to COVID-19. In early April through mid-May, the class commuted for day classes at the academy. In mid-May, members of the 130th TT transitioned to residential living to complete their final 13 weeks of training.

In total, a news release from the State Police said, the class completed 32 weeks and approximately 1,500 hours of training both online and in person. In addition to classwork, the recruits spent many hours on physical conditioning, water rescue, firearms training, driving and other specialized areas of police work.

Find out what's happening in Stamfordfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The 100 members of this class includes 76 men and 24 women who began the process of becoming State Troopers more than a year ago. At that time, they applied for the positions, took the written test and the physical fitness assessment, along with observational and polygraph tests.

Among the 100 graduates, 20 have military experience; 8 have prior law enforcement experience; 51 are taking college classes, have completed some college, or earned an associate's degree; 44 hold bachelor's degrees; seven have advanced degrees; 27 are minorities.

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