What to Know
- Jennifer Dulos, a suburban mother of five from Connecticut, vanished May 24 after dropping her children off at school
- Her estranged husband has been charged with murder and other crimes; his ex-girlfriend has been charged with conspiracy to commit murder
- Authorities had received thousands of tips in their quest to find Jennifer Dulos, but they've turned up no sign of her in more than seven months
Fotis Dulos, the estranged husband of a missing mother of five whom he is now charged with murdering, will not be out on bail Wednesday because of a paperwork issue, his attorney said.
If Dulos does post his $6 million bond Thursday, which he's expected to do, he will be placed under house arrest with GPS monitoring and cannot have any contact his children, a Connecticut judge ruled Wednesday.
Dulos is charged with capital murder, murder and kidnapping in the apparent death of Jennifer Dulos of New Canaan, who has not been seen since she dropped her children off at school on May 24. The two were in the midst of a contentious divorce and custody battle at the time.
Also arraigned in Stamford Superior Court Wednesday: Fotis Dulos' former girlfriend, Michelle Troconis, and his friend and former attorney Kent Mawhinney. Both are each charged with conspiracy to commit murder.
Bond for Troconis was reduced to $1.5 million Wednesday; she is also expected to post that on Thursday and will also be placed under house arrest with GPS monitoring. Her mother and sister were in the courtroom for Wednesday's hearing; she blew a kiss their way. Troconis' attorney spoke only to ask for a bail reduction, which he did get, saying, "She had no benefit from the disappearance of Jennifer Dulos."
Mawhinney faces the same bail arrangement, though his bond remained at $2 million, the same it was a day earlier when he was taken into custody. Messages seeking comment were left with the office of Mawhinney. He and Troconis are accused of helping Fotis Dulos cover up the murder of his wife.
The state prosecutor asked for house arrest for Mawhinney, saying the suspect evaded police when he knew an arrest warrant was out and asked for the $2 million bond to stand.
The judge said that Mawhinney has a pending violation of a court order, kept the bond at $2 million, ordered GPS monitoring and for Mawhinney to hand over his passport.
All three are due back in court for respective appearances next month.
It had been known for months that Fotis Dulos was the prime suspect in his wife's disappearance. Another arrest warrant, for evidence tampering, revealed that he was recorded on surveillance video in Hartford, with Troconis riding with him in a pickup truck, disposing of items that later tested positive for Jennifer Dulos’ blood.
Norm Pattis, an attorney for Fotis Dulos, said Tuesday he was not surprised by the arrests but does not believe his client will be convicted. Fotis Dulos has denied any involvement in his wife's disappearance.
“What these charges tell us is the state has evidence and doesn't know what to make of it," Pattis said. “And what it intends to do is throw as much against the wall and let the jury decide what happened. Our position is that's not good enough for Fotis Dulos.”
At a later press conference Tuesday, Pattis said that they "categorically deny that Mr. Dulos had any involvement in the disappearance of his wife Jennifer, and we defy the state to prove that she is in fact dead."
A day later, after the arraignment, Pattis said, "There doesn't appear to be a crime scene weapon, there doesn't appear to be any admissions or statements. There's no body. What we have is a suspicious disappearance and an entirely circumstantial case."
Although it is not known what role it may or may not have played, Pattis did say authorities took an ax from inside the garage of Dulos' home, though didn't think there was any significance to it.
"We'd heard for weeks they were looking for an ax and there was a discussion about whether we should give it to them. My opinion was, no, you don't walk into the police saying, 'here's an ax,'" Pattis said. "If there was going to be significance to it, I doubt it would have been sitting in plain view for them to see when they came into the house."
Pattis also said he expects the three cases to be consolidated.
As for what happened to Jennifer Dulos, Fotis Dulos and his attorneys have offered a series of scenarios, including one where Jennifer Dulos ran off to punish him, like the female lead in the novel and film "Gone Girl."
In the new arrest warrants released Tuesday, police revealed allegations that Mawhinney's cellphone pinged a tower May 31 near the Windsor Rod & Gun Club, where hunters had found a hole dug into the ground May 18.
The hunters said that the hole was big enough for a human body, and that inside the hole was a tarp and unopened bags of lime, which officials say can be used to cover the smell of dead bodies.
The hole was found covered up in June. Police later dug up the site but did not find anything. Mawhinney's cellphone also pinged a tower near the club in March, police said.
Mawhinney was known to police prior to Tuesday's arrest. He was arrested twice in 2019 in an unrelated case. The first was a domestic violence incident in January 2019 in which he was arrested on charges of sexual assault, disorderly conduct and unlawful restraint. The second arrest, according to police, was for violating a protective order that was put in place as a result of the first arrest after he allegedly attempted to use a third party to contact the victim.
In a statement following news of the arrests, Jennifer Dulos' family said in part: "Although we are relieved that the wait for these charges is over, for us there is no sense of closure. Nothing can bring Jennifer back. We miss her every day and will forever mourn her loss."
Her body still has not been found. According to arrest warrants, a medical examiner determined she was killed by “some combination of traumatic, blunt-force injuries such as a bludgeoning/beating, and/or sharp-force injuries such as a stabbing/slashing.” The examiner cited bloodstains at her home, apparent cleanup efforts and blood spatter analysis.
Last year, Connecticut State Police released a 38-page arrest affidavit for Fotis Dulos laying out step-by-step their allegations of evidence tampering in his wife's disappearance. Evidence included blood stains in his estranged wife's New Canaan home, missing vehicle seats, a mystery trip to an auto detailer and a license plate in a drain, among other reported pieces to the puzzle. Read the full affidavit below.
In a new state warrant release Tuesday, investigators revealed extensive DNA evidence, including Jennifer's found in various locations and Dulos' fingerprint on a garbage bag dumped in a trash receptacle in Hartford. They also found a logo from a bicycle police believe the 52-year-old took from his garage, brought to New Canaan and rode to Jennifer's house.
Investigators theorize that Fotis Dulos waited before going on the attack, then used zip ties to "secure and incapacitate Jennifer for some time" as he put her body in her SUV which he then drove to and left at a nearby park.
The couple's five children have been living with Jennifer Dulos' mother, Gloria Farber, in her Upper East Side townhouse, supposedly under armed bodyguard protection, since their mother went missing. Fotis Dulos has been banned from any sort of contact with the kids.
Farber has filed for sole custody of the children; Fotis Dulos has battled her claim and recently sought to dissolve his divorce proceedings, arguing that his estranged wife has not been present to appear in court to propel them forward.
The Disappearance of Jennifer Dulos
Suburban mother of five from Connecticut vanished May 24, 2019
Jennifer Dulos' family has rejected Fotis Dulos' defenses at every turn.
For those in the town of New Canaan, where Jennifer was from and was last seen, news of the arrest did not come as a surprise, but rather with a sense relief. Many in the town had been waiting on Fotis Dulos to be arrested for months, and had been wondering why he hadn't yet faced charges.
"I think the community really wants to find the killer because for anyone to do that anywhere ... they should get justice. And if [Fotis Dulos] did it, he should go to prison," said neighbor Brian Sullivan.
Some in the town said that as soon as the news broke, people started honking car horns to alert one another of the update.