Attorney Denise P. Ansell
Born in Brooklyn, N.Y.
B.S., Business Administration with a minor in Far Eastern
Philosophy from Salve Regina College (now university),
Newport, R.I.
M.B.A. in Finance and Accounting, Emporia State University,
Emporia, Canada
J.D., University of Connecticut Law School
Marital Status: Twice divorced. She was once married
to her law partner, attorney Adam Laben. Though the marriage
did not work out, they reunited years later and now live
together in Waterford. She has no children of her own but is
a devoted aunt and mentor to several young people.
Public Service: Ansell is vice president of the board
of directors for the Mystic Ballet. She has been active with
the American Cancer Society and is an alternate to the
Zoning Board of Appeals in Waterford. She is a loyal
Democrat and is committed to helping Joseph Courtney get
elected as a U.S. Representative in 2006. Courtney is using
the second floor of her New London law office as a satellite
campaign office.
Favorite Animal: Her Siberian Husky, Kimokimo. She
rescued him from an abusive situation, and now he presides
over her law office. Kimokimo helps with her young clients
and is a good judge of character, Ansell says. “The good
kids that I yell at, he stays in my office. The ones who
have already turned, he leaves.” She is joking when she says
D-O-G spelled backwards is G-O-D, but there’s no doubt she
worships her blue-eyed sweetie.
Source of Pride: Ansell bought two run-down
Mansard-style Victorian homes in New London, including her
law office on Broad Street and a rental property on Granite
Street. She is working to rehabilitate both properties,
which she said were “eyesores.” She feels good about owning
property in the struggling city. |
| |
 |
|
Balancing Act
New London Attorney strives for fairness above all
Reprinted with permission from
The Day
Publishing Co.
ATTORNEY
DENISE P. ANSELL favors quality fabrics and rich colors, like the
silky scarf of navy, gold and cream she wore over crisp slacks and a
turtleneck recently as she showed a visitor the antiques in her
Broad Street office.
Then there was the plush leather jacket, belted at the waist, that
she threw over her workout clothes before leaving Old Lyme’s DNA
Wellness yoga studio on a raw night. After more than an hour of
focused breathing and meditation, her long, honey-colored hair still
looked perfect as she climbed into her sleek black Lexus that bears
the vanity plate, “ANSELL.”
She likes custom jewelry, Persian rugs and ballet, which she says is
“a way for women to develop poise and move forward with grace.” Her
significant other and law partner, Attorney Adam A. Laben, is tall,
dark and handsome.
But make no mistake. This 53-year-old attorney-with-an- MBA is no
Barbie. Somebody who didn’t know Ansell well once said she was “too
blond,” but the fairness she values most in herself is a quality of
her character, not her appearance. She wears minimal makeup except
when she is trying to “liberate people from their money” at a
charitable or political fund-raiser. Then, she says, it’s “full
regalia.” When she stands before a judge in court, she is more
concerned with protocol and decorum than her looks.
“If you don’t have respect for the system, how can the public have
respect?” she said.
Ansell cared for both of her parents in their final years and
decided to go to law school after her father died. She worked as a
sales-woman at the Sears store in Crystal Mall while attending the
University of Connecticut’s law school. Customers must not have
known what hit them.
“People came in to buy towels, and they left with a whole kitchen
because I had to go to law school,” she said.
Ansell keeps a sense of humor despite the serious nature of her
work. Thumbing through client files on a busy morning at New
London’s G.A. court while repeatedly adjusting her shawl and pushing
her hair off her face, she laughed about the way Hollywood portrays
attorneys.
“They never show the lawyer dropping her files or spilling her
change all over the place,” she said.
Knowing some people don’t hold attorneys in high regard, she joked,
“I like to think people think of me as ‘good pond scum.’ ’’
Justice and karma
It is an uncanny coincidence that the Old English form of Ansell’s
surname describes the method for balancing the scales of justice. In
one of her most notable cases, she won reversal of the conviction of
Angelo Joyner, who had been imprisoned for eight years because his
attorney, Samuel Dixon, was incompetent. Dixon, who was holding
settlement funds from a wrongful death case involving Joyner’s
father, talked Joyner into using the funds to pay Dixon to defend
Joyner on charges that he had raped and beaten his ex-girlfriend
after a night of drinking and drugging.
Joyner wanted a more experienced defense attorney, but agreed to let
Dixon handle the case. Dixon convinced Joyner to plead not guilty by
reason of insanity, and Joyner was convicted and sentenced to 50
years. It turned out Dixon actually spent the settlement funds on
himself. With help from Laben, who is a certified public accountant,
and certified public accountant H. Bruce Fielding, she followed the
money to expose Dixon’s misuse of the settlement funds.
Superior Court Judge Richard Rittenband, who presided over the case, wrote about the Joyner case
in his book, “The Truths of Justice.”
“She did a thorough and effective job,” the judge wrote of Ansell.
“Her performance was outstanding.”
Ansell once represented a client, Jancis Fuller, who was accused of
shooting at a judge’s house. She moved to recuse all state judges
from the case because they all would appear to have a conflict of
interest. Conflicts like that seem to fall in her lap, she says,
suggesting it is her “karma.”
Though she can’t talk about it because of a gag
order, another attorney said Ansell once sued one of New London
County’s most prestigious law firms in a conflict of interest case.
A lawyer who had represented her and her ex-husband was now
representing her ex-husband in a case against Ansell. The case was
settled in her favor.
In another case, the state “mysteriously” failed to renew her
contract for court-appointed juvenile cases after she moved to
recuse a judge from a case in which her court-appointed client was
threatening to file a grievance against a former court-appointed
attorney.
Her colleagues respect her even though, and perhaps because, she has
challenged the system several times. Assistant State’s Attorney
Sarah E. Steere said Ansell walks a fine line in cases where she
serves as a court-appointed “guardian ad litem” for children. Her
duty is to recommend to the court what she thinks is in the best
interest of her client, though the child’s family might not agree.
“She does a great job,” Steere said. “She’s in a tough field. She
deals with a lot of really sad problems. Some of the cases she
hears, it rips your heart out.”
Together, they have been able to help first offenders get back into
school or reunite with their families.
“Sometimes we get creative,” Steere said. She said Ansell often
checks back with her clients long after their cases are adjudicated.
Public Defender Jennifer Nowak said Ansell is “very professional and
prepared.”
“She’s got a nice demeanor,”Nowak said. “She puts everybody at ease,
yet doesn’t back down from what she thinks is right.”
Others said Ansell is aggressive and sometimes loud and fights hard
for her clients. They said she is obsessive about doing things
right.
Ansell knows people often wonder how an attorney can represent
people who are obviously guilty.
“It’s a matter of how much punishment is enough,” she said.
Defense law is still, in her opinion, a bit of a boy’s club.
“It’s the last respite and most stubborn of any area of the law to
accept women,” she said.
When she is not poring over files, meeting with clients or appearing
in court, Ansell is serving on nonprofit and community boards and
campaigning for Democrats such as Second District congressional
candidate Joe Courtney. She vacations in Newport and in Florida,
where her sister lives, and spends time with her best friends and
Laben’s family.
Ansell is concentrating on her health as she continues to heal from
an illness and cope with the changes that come with age. Practicing
Kundalini yoga helps. She said she intends to celebrate, not mourn
“that time of life when women come into their wisdom.”
“I’ll be damned,” she said. “I’m not going to avoid aging. I’m going
to enjoy it.”
In the end, she wants to be remembered in the sense of the Old
English word for her last name, as somebody who worked to keep the
scales of justice in balance.
“I’ll be happy if it says on my grave, ‘She did the right thing,’”
she said.

|