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Wrongful Death
Wrong way driver head-on crash on highway

Connecticut Jury Awards $15.2 Million in Wrongful Death of Waterbury Crash Passenger

A Waterbury Superior Court jury awarded $15,235,245 to the family of Dominique Dalessio, a 20-year-old Bethlehem, Connecticut woman killed in an April 2020 head-on collision. The civil verdict, returned April 28, 2026 after roughly three hours of deliberation, found defendant Jamall Smith liable for negligence in Dalessio's death. Dalessio had been a passenger in Smith's BMW when he crossed the centerline of East Main Street in Waterbury and struck an oncoming Honda Accord. Plaintiff's counsel was Christopher Houlihan of Hartford-based RisCassi & Davis.Case at a Glance Verdict: $15,235,245 ($15 million noneconomic + $235,245 economic) Case Type: Wrongful Death (Auto Accident, Centerline Crossover) Court: Waterbury Superior Court, Connecticut Verdict Date: April 28, 2026 Jury Deliberation: Approximately 3 hours Crash Date: April 22, 2020 Crash Location: East Main Street near Newington Avenue, Waterbury, CT Plaintiff: Family of Dominique Dalessio (deceased, age 20, of Bethlehem, CT) Defendant: Jamall Smith Plaintiff Attorney: Christopher Houlihan, RisCassi & Davis (Hartford, CT)What Happened on East Main Street? According to the lawsuit and Waterbury Police Department records cited in the case, Smith was driving a BMW westbound on East Main Street near the intersection of Newington Avenue around 10:30 p.m. on April 22, 2020. He crossed into the opposing lane and struck a 2007 Honda Accord traveling in the opposite direction. Dalessio, a passenger in Smith's vehicle, was taken to a hospital with life-threatening injuries and died six days later. Smith and the driver of the Honda were also hospitalized. The Honda driver suffered serious injuries but survived.What Did the Jury Find? After approximately three hours of deliberation, the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff and assessed total damages of $15,235,245. Of that, $235,245 was awarded as economic damages, covering medical and funeral expenses, and $15 million was awarded as noneconomic damages for the loss of Dalessio's life. Court filings show the jury found Smith acted with "reckless disregard for the safety of others" and that his conduct was the cause of the crash and Dalessio's fatal injuries. The plaintiff's complaint had alleged that Smith was driving under the influence and at an unreasonable speed, but the jury did not find either of those allegations proven. The verdict on liability rested on negligence and reckless conduct, not intoxication. "This was a profoundly tragic loss," Houlihan said in a statement following the verdict. "Dominique's life was taken far too soon due to reckless and preventable conduct. While no verdict can ever replace her, we are grateful the jury delivered justice in her name and provided her family with a meaningful measure of accountability and closure."The Criminal Case Came First, and Ended Much Lighter Smith was arrested by Waterbury police in May 2020 on charges that included second-degree manslaughter, second-degree assault, illegal operation of a motor vehicle while under the influence, and failure to drive in the proper lane. The criminal case resolved nearly five years later. In April 2025, Smith was convicted of "misconduct with a motor vehicle," a Connecticut charge meaningfully less severe than the manslaughter and DUI charges originally filed. He was sentenced three months later to five years in jail, fully suspended, and five years of probation. He served no incarceration time on the conviction. The civil verdict, returned roughly one year after the criminal disposition, delivered the larger accountability outcome.Why a Civil Verdict Matters Even After a Criminal Conviction Civil and criminal cases run on different standards of proof. Criminal prosecutors must prove their case "beyond a reasonable doubt." Civil plaintiffs only need to prove their case by a "preponderance of the evidence," meaning more likely than not. That is one reason a defendant can be acquitted of a criminal charge or pleaded down to a lesser one yet still be found liable in civil court for the same underlying conduct. Civil cases also serve a different purpose. Criminal convictions punish the defendant. Civil verdicts compensate the people harmed. For families who lose a loved one, the civil suit is often the only path to financial accountability for the lifetime of harm caused, regardless of what happens in the criminal courtroom. The Dalessio case is a clean illustration of that pattern. The criminal court reduced the case to a misdemeanor-level conviction with no jail time. The civil jury, hearing essentially the same conduct, valued the loss of Dalessio's life at $15 million. The case adds to a growing body of Connecticut verdict news where families have pursued civil accountability after criminal cases ended in lighter outcomes. Results like this one show what civil juries are willing to award when a plaintiff team builds the case patiently across years of criminal and civil proceedings. Verdicts like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements, for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself.Frequently Asked Questions Q: What's the difference between a civil wrongful death verdict and a criminal conviction? Civil and criminal cases run on different standards of proof. Criminal prosecutors must prove guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt." Civil plaintiffs only need to prove their case by a "preponderance of the evidence," which is a lower standard meaning more likely than not. A defendant can be acquitted in criminal court (or pleaded down to a lesser charge, as happened here) yet still be found liable in civil court for the same underlying conduct. Q: Why did the family sue the driver of the vehicle their loved one was riding in? Connecticut law allows passengers and their families to sue a negligent driver, even when the driver was operating the same vehicle. Dalessio was a passenger in Smith's BMW. The legal theory was straightforward: Smith owed a duty of reasonable care to his passenger, breached that duty by crossing the centerline into oncoming traffic, and caused her death. The fact that Dalessio was in his vehicle did not bar the wrongful death claim. Q: How can a jury award $15 million when economic damages were only $235,245? Wrongful death damages in Connecticut include both economic losses (medical bills, funeral expenses, lost future earnings) and noneconomic losses, which value the loss of life itself. The $15 million in noneconomic damages reflects the jury's valuation of Dalessio's life: the years she would have lived, the relationships and experiences taken from her family, and the gravity of the conduct that ended her life at age 20. Noneconomic damages routinely exceed economic damages in fatal injury cases, especially when the deceased was young.

Slip and Fall

$2.58M Verdict in Connecticut Parking Garage Slip-and-Fall Case

A Connecticut jury returned a verdict of $2,582,952.89 in a premises liability case arising from a slip-and-fall incident in a parking garage, finding the defendants 99% at fault after just two hours of deliberation. Attorney Cassandra Hardy of The Flood Law Firm LLC in Middletown, Connecticut, represented the plaintiff and secured the award in April 2026.Case at a Glance Verdict: $2,582,952.89 Case Type: Premises Liability (Slip-and-Fall) Location: Middletown, Connecticut Verdict Date: April 2026 Defendant: Parking garage property owner(s) (not identified in court records) Plaintiff Attorney: Cassandra Hardy, The Flood Law Firm LLC Economic Damages: $309,043.32 Non-Economic Damages: $2,273,909.57What Happened in This Case? The plaintiff suffered a fractured humerus in a slip-and-fall at a parking garage. The injury required surgical intervention and may necessitate a future joint replacement, according to The Flood Law Firm. The defendants' insurer made a final pre-trial settlement offer of $90,000. The Flood Law Firm rejected it and took the case to trial. The jury's $2,582,952.89 verdict represents nearly 29 times the defendant's last offer. How Did the Jury Rule on Fault? The jury assigned 99% of the fault to the defendants, a finding that reflects the strength of the evidence presented at trial. In Connecticut, a plaintiff found partially at fault can still recover damages reduced by their share of responsibility. A 1% allocation to the plaintiff in this case had minimal impact on the final award. The verdict came after only two hours of deliberation, a timeline that signals the jury found the liability case clear-cut.What Did the Jury Award? The total award of $2,582,952.89 broke down into two components: Economic damages: $309,043.32 - covering medical expenses, future medical costs, and other out-of-pocket losses Non-economic damages: $2,273,909.57 - reflecting the pain, suffering, and lasting reduction in quality of life the plaintiff experienced as a result of the injury The non-economic portion of the award accounts for more than 88% of the total verdict, underscoring how significantly the fractured humerus and its consequences affected the plaintiff's daily life. Who Represented the Plaintiff? Attorney Cassandra Hardy led the trial for The Flood Law Firm LLC. Hardy joined the firm in 2025 after spending several years as defense counsel for insurance companies, experience that gives her direct insight into how insurers build and evaluate cases. Hardy earned her law degree from Quinnipiac University School of Law, graduating summa cum laude. She is admitted to practice in Connecticut and the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut, and is a member of the Connecticut Trial Lawyers Association and the American Association for Justice. "This verdict represents not only justice for our client but also accountability for negligent property owners," a firm spokesperson said.Why This Verdict Matters for Property Owners and Injury Victims Parking garages present a specific category of premises liability risk. Property owners and managers have a legal duty to maintain safe conditions for visitors. When they fail, Connecticut juries have shown a willingness to hold them fully accountable. This case also illustrates a pattern seen across high-value premises liability verdicts: insurers routinely make low initial offers, banking on plaintiffs accepting less than their case is worth. Here, the gap between the $90,000 pre-trial offer and the $2,582,952.89 verdict was nearly $2.5 million. For attorneys handling similar cases in Connecticut, the damages breakdown and the jury's swift fault determination make this verdict a useful data point when evaluating comparable claims. To see more plaintiff trial results from Connecticut, visit the Connecticut personal injury public resources on Major Verdict.Find a Plaintiff Attorney With a Trial Record to Match Verdicts like this one show what juries are willing to award when the evidence is strong and the attorney is prepared. If you or someone you love has been seriously injured in a slip-and-fall or other premises liability incident, find a Connecticut plaintiff lawyer on Major Verdict who has the trial record to back it up. Are you a plaintiff attorney with verdicts or settlements worth showcasing? Join Major Verdict and put your results in front of the clients and colleagues who are looking for them.FAQ Q: What is the difference between economic and non-economic damages in a Connecticut premises liability case? A: Economic damages cover measurable financial losses such as medical bills, future treatment costs, and lost wages. Non-economic damages compensate for pain, suffering, and the overall impact the injury has on the plaintiff's life. Connecticut does not cap non-economic damages in most personal injury cases, which allows juries to award amounts that reflect the true severity of the harm. Q: What does a 99% fault finding mean for the plaintiff's recovery? A: Under Connecticut's modified comparative negligence law, a plaintiff's damages are reduced by their percentage of fault. If a plaintiff is found 1% at fault, they recover 99% of the total verdict. A plaintiff assigned 51% or more of the fault cannot recover at all. In this case, the 99% fault finding against the defendants meant the plaintiff's recovery was reduced by only 1%. Q: How are future medical costs handled in a premises liability verdict? A: Future medical expenses are typically included in the economic damages portion of a verdict when the evidence supports anticipated ongoing treatment. In this case, the plaintiff faces a possible future joint replacement, a cost that may have factored into the jury's economic damages calculation of $309,043.32.

Medical Malpractice

Jury Awards $49 Million in Connecticut Cervical Cancer Screening Verdict Against Westmed Medical Group

A Connecticut jury awarded $49 million to a Darien woman after finding that her gynecologist at Westmed Medical Group repeatedly failed to follow standard HPV screening protocols over six years, allowing cervical cancer to progress to a late-stage, metastatic disease. The verdict was returned on April 9, 2026, after just three hours of jury deliberation following a five-week trial in Connecticut Superior Court in Stamford.Case at a Glance Verdict: $49 million ($39 million to plaintiff, $10 million to spouse) Case Type: Medical Malpractice (failure to follow HPV screening protocols) Court: Connecticut Superior Court, Stamford Judge: Yamini Menon Verdict Date: April 9, 2026 Plaintiff: Jennifer Anderson, Darien, Connecticut Defendant: Westmed Medical Group Plaintiff Attorney(s): Peter Dreyer and Sarah Russell, Silver Golub & Teitell LLP Trial Length: 5 weeks Deliberation: 3 hoursWhat Happened to Jennifer Anderson? Jennifer Anderson was a patient of an obstetrician/gynecologist employed by Westmed Medical Group from at least 2013 through 2019. During that time, she attended annual visits and underwent routine testing. Over the course of those visits, Anderson repeatedly tested positive for high-risk strains of HPV, including HPV 16, a genotype known to place patients at significantly elevated risk for cervical cancer, according to her attorneys at Silver Golub & Teitell. Despite those results, the doctor never performed a colposcopy, a standard follow-up procedure required under the applicable standard of care for patients with persistent high-risk HPV.How Was the Cancer Discovered? In September 2019, Anderson visited the doctor with complaints of irregular menstrual cycles and bleeding. A mass was discovered on her cervix, and subsequent testing confirmed invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. The cancer had already spread to her chest, abdomen, and pelvis. Anderson now suffers from late-stage metastatic cervical cancer, which her attorneys say is expected to cause her death.What Did the Jury Award? After a five-week trial before Judge Yamini Menon, the jury deliberated for approximately three hours before finding the defendants negligent. The jury awarded $39 million to Jennifer Anderson and $10 million to her husband in damages. The verdict is one of the largest medical malpractice awards in Connecticut in recent years.What Are the Plaintiff's Attorneys Saying? Peter Dreyer, a partner at Silver Golub & Teitell, said in a statement: "Jennifer Anderson did everything right. She went to her doctor every year, she had her tests done, and she trusted that her results would be acted upon." Sarah Russell, also a partner at the firm, emphasized the preventable nature of the outcome: "What makes this case so troubling is that cervical cancer is one of the most preventable cancers we have."How Has Westmed Responded? A Westmed spokesman said the company disagrees with the verdict but empathizes with the Andersons. The spokesman confirmed that Westmed intends to file post-trial motions and an appeal.A Verdict That Underscores the Cost of Missed Screening This $49 million verdict sends a clear message about the consequences of failing to follow established screening protocols for high-risk patients. For Jennifer Anderson, years of positive HPV tests went without the standard follow-up that could have caught her cancer at a treatable stage. Verdicts like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself. Find a plaintiff personal injury attorney in Connecticut by browsing Major Verdict members.FAQ Q: What is a colposcopy, and why is it important for HPV-positive patients?A: A colposcopy is a procedure that uses a magnifying instrument to closely examine the cervix for abnormal cells. It is the standard follow-up when a patient tests positive for high-risk HPV strains, particularly HPV 16, which carries a significantly elevated risk of cervical cancer. Q: Can cervical cancer be prevented with proper screening?A: Cervical cancer is considered one of the most preventable cancers. Regular Pap tests and HPV screening can detect precancerous changes early, allowing treatment before cancer develops. When high-risk HPV is identified, follow-up procedures like colposcopy are critical to catching abnormalities before they progress. Q: What does it mean that the defendant plans to appeal?A: When a defendant announces intent to appeal, it means they plan to ask a higher court to review the trial court's decision. The verdict amount is not final until appeals are resolved, which can take months or years. The plaintiff may not collect the full award until the appeals process concludes.


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