The Connecticut Supreme Court will have nine cases on the docket ranging from criminal law to a wrongful termination and campaign finance law when it opens its sixth session Feb. 20.

Perhaps, though, the most intriguing case will be oral arguments to be heard at 10 a.m. March 1, the court’s last case for the session. In Commissioner of Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection v. Freedom of Information Commission, the court is scheduled to hear a request from the Hartford Courant, the state’s largest newspaper, which requested the department provide it with documents belonging to Nancy Lanza, mother of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter Adam Lanza. The Connecticut State Police had seized the documents pursuant to search warrants, but the evidence was never used in any criminal prosecution.

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