Maia Nehme
Staff Reporter
Maia Nehme covers cops, courts and Latine communities for the News. She previously covered housing and homelessness. Originally from Washington, D.C., she is a sophomore in Benjamin Franklin College majoring in History.
Author Archive
¡Fiesta Latina! promotes Peabody, community resources for Spanish speakers

Hosted by Junta for Progressive Action and the Yale Peabody Museum, this year’s event, unlike the celebrations of the last two decades, expanded to two days of programming.

Activists boycott the Graduate hotel, New Haven restaurants for alleged labor abuse

At a Saturday protest outside the Graduate New Haven hotel and Mexican restaurant Te Amo Tequila, Mecha de Yale and Unidad Latina en Acción organizers launched a boycott against six New Haven businesses for alleged labor exploitation.

Dozens march through the Hill for police shooting victim

Friends of Jebrell Conley and local activists convened to call for police accountability a week after Conley was shot and killed by three officers at a West Haven car wash.

Incarcerated hunger strikers call for Connecticut prison reform

Two prisoners at MacDougall-Walker Correctional Institution have refused to eat since Sept. 16, citing flawed mental health treatment and excessive lockdowns at the facility.

NHPD, YPD plan crackdown on “Kia Boyz,” auto thefts

University and municipal police departments around New Haven county are negotiating setting up a task force to deal with heightened auto theft in the area — largely by adolescents.

Department of Justice requires youth correctional facility to end disciplinary isolation

A recent agreement between the Justice Department and the state Department of the Correction will eliminate disciplinary isolation and improve conditions at Manson Youth Institution.

Audit uncovers financial mismanagement, delayed medical care at Department of Correction

The Department of Correction overpaid an employee by over $163,000 in 2020 and 2021, according to a recent audit that also spotlighted 20 related findings.

State subcommittee strives to support girls in juvenile justice system

The group will develop rehabilitative policies for girls in the juvenile justice system and streamline human trafficking data collection — an approach that has been questioned for its gender-specific scope.

Civil rights attorney stepping into interim prison oversight role

DeVaughn Ward, who has litigated cases against Connecticut’s Department of Correction, will soon oversee the department as interim ombudsman starting Sept. 23.

Governor Lamont nominates new chief justice, vacancy still stands

If appointed, Associate Justice Raheem Mullins would become the second Black chief justice on Connecticut’s Supreme Court, yet his nomination still leaves the open seat on the court.

Coalition urges Governor Lamont to boost diversity of state judiciary

An opening on the state Supreme Court has sparked discussion of the value of demographic and professional diversity in a judiciary dominated by former corporate attorneys.