New evidence in Bradway case


 

A former Cornwall man avoided sentencing last week with a request that could send his case to trial.

Michael Bradway, 41, was arrested in September 2006 and charged with crimes that stemmed from a scheme to make money by faking his son’s illness. An arrest warrant described lengthy allegations of a scam that began when his son was 5 and continued for nearly five years.

Bradway, with public defender Damian Tucker, appeared in Litchfield Judicial Court March 6, where he was expected to be sentenced. Instead, he asked to revoke his guilty plea based on new evidence.

The evidence is apparently part of a civil suit filed in New York state on behalf of Bradway’s ex-wife. The suit reportedly states a doctor diagnosed the boy, not Bradway, as his ex-wife claimed during the current case.

The prosecutor’s office said it does not agree this dramatically changes the case at hand.

Bradway, described as a very charming individual by those who knew him, went to elaborate lengths to convince people, including his wife, his in-laws and Salisbury Central School, that his son suffered from cystic fibrosis, a fatal lung disease. He was accused of deliberately denying his son basic needs, such as proper nutrition and exercise. His in-laws gave him $38,500 for medical bills.

Bradway’s plea bargain agreement included charges for another case, in which he allegedly embezzled $19,000 from a former employer, the Hartford nonprofit Love Makes a Family.

He has also been accused of embezzling money while working at Landmark Volunteers in Sheffield.

Bradway’s son was taken from him by the Department of Children and Families months before his arrest. The boy, then 9, was tested at a hospital. It was determined he suffered only from malnutrition. He was reportedly turned over to the custody of his mother.

Bradway is due back in court April 1 when Judge Robert Brunetti will rule on his request to revoke his plea.

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