Monday, May 8, 2017

City of Stamford, CT has settled a lawsuit filed by the Badger family of three girls who died in a Christmas morning house fire that also killed their grandparents.












The suit said the city failed to properly inspect renovations at the home. The suit alleged the city and some officials were reckless by giving Borcina a building permit even though he had no contractor’s license, and approved plans that didn’t include smoke detectors in the girls’ third-floor bedrooms, which were legally required.

The suit also said the city “engaged in a cover-up” when it tore down the house the day after it burned, thus eliminating evidence. 


 A Connecticut city on Tuesday announced that it has settled a lawsuit filed by the family of three girls who died in a Christmas morning house fire that also killed their grandparents.

Terms of the settlement announced by Stamford legal affairs director Kathryn Emmett were not disclosed, but include a $250,000 donation from the city to a charity or school to be determined by the girl’s family.

The Dec. 25, 2011, fire killed 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah Badger, 9-year-old Lily Badger, and their maternal grandparents, Lomar and Pauline Johnson.

The girls’ father, Matthew Badger, sued on their behalf.

He died in February, but his brother, Sherwin Campbell Badger, took over as executor. Jury selection had started in the case, and a trial was expected to begin this month.

“The parties consider the settlement to be fair,” Emmett said in a statement to The Advocate newspaper. “The city is sympathetic to the tremendous losses suffered by the Badger family.”

The defendants did not admit any liability or fault in the settlement.

“I appreciate that the Stamford defendants have agreed to resolve this case,” Campbell Badger said in the joint statement.

Matthew Badger filed the lawsuit in 2012 and also named several contractors who had worked on the large home overlooking Long Island Sound. The general contractor, Michael Borcina, was dating the girls’ mother, Madonna Badger, at the time, and both of them escaped the blaze.

Borcina and other contractors previously settled claims against them for a total of more than $8 million.

The suit said the city failed to properly inspect renovations at the home. The suit alleged the city and some officials were reckless by giving Borcina a building permit even though he had no contractor’s license, and approved plans that didn’t include smoke detectors in the girls’ third-floor bedrooms, which were legally required.

The suit also said the city “engaged in a cover-up” when it tore down the house the day after it burned, thus eliminating evidence.

The city’s lawyers had denied all the allegations in the suit.

The fire was blamed on fireplace ashes placed in a bin and left in a mudroom. Borcina initially told authorities that he put the bin in the mudroom, but later said in a deposition that Madonna Badger placed the ashes there.




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Father of girls killed in Stamford Christmas fire has died

By Nelson Oliveira
Updated 11:30 pm, Thursday, February 9, 2017



Matthew Badger, father of the three girls killed in a tragic 2011 Christmas Day fire in Stamford’s upscale Shippan neighborhood, has died.

The Lily Sarah Grace Fund said Matthew Badger’s family announced his death on Thursday, but the cause was not disclosed. Badger, 51, of New York City, co-founded the organization in April 2012, five months after he lost his daughters.


In a public post on her Facebook page, Madonna Badger, the girls’ mother and Matthew’s former wife, said his death was sudden.

“He was a wonderful man with a generous heart,” she wrote. “He was an amazing Dad to his girls, Lily, Sarah and Grace. His death was sudden and peaceful. He is with his children and his parents and his brother, Mark. Please send him light and love. My heart is broken. But also joyous that they are together.”

The massive blaze at the home of Madonna Badger that killed Lily, 9, her 7-year-old twin sisters Sarah and Grace, and their grandparents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson, prompted lawsuits by the girls’ parents against the city of Stamford, which immediately demolished the charred home and carted away the debris without notifying the family.