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Former GOP Senate leader in Connecticut who resigned amid a legislative probe dies at 89

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FILE - Connecticut state Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, and his wife, Alice DeLuca, embrace as they leave the podium at a news conference at the state Capitol in Hartford, Conn., Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2007. DeLuca, a former Republican leader of the Connecticut state Senate who served 17 years in the General Assembly before reluctantly resigning, died Friday, July 28, 2023, at age 89.

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FILE - Connecticut state Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, former state Senate Minority leader, emphasizes a point as he testifies before a special Senate committee investigating his guilty plea on a threatening charge, at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford, Conn., Monday, Oct. 15, 2007. DeLuca, a former Republican leader of the Connecticut state Senate who served 17 years in the General Assembly before reluctantly resigning, died Friday, July 28, 2023, at age 89.

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FILE - Former Connecticut state Senate Minority Leader Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, comments on his decision to retire from the Connecticut state Senate at the end of the month, during an interview Friday, Nov. 16, 2007, in his office at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford, Conn. DeLuca, a former Republican leader of the Connecticut state Senate who served 17 years in the General Assembly before reluctantly resigning, died Friday, July 28, 2023, at age 89.

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FILE - Connecticut state Sen. Louis DeLuca, R-Woodbury, testifies before a special state Senate committee at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford, Conn., Monday, Oct. 15, 2007. DeLuca, a former Republican leader of the Connecticut state Senate who served 17 years in the General Assembly before reluctantly resigning, died Friday, July 28, 2023, at age 89.

WOODBURY, Conn. (AP) — Louis DeLuca, a former Republican leader of the Connecticut state Senate who served 17 years in the General Assembly before reluctantly resigning, has died at age 89.

DeLuca died on Friday after a long illness, according to Waterbury Republican-American and Legacy.com.

DeLuca left the General Assembly in 2007 as his colleagues were considering whether to force him to turn over records in a federal criminal case. DeLuca at the time had already pleaded guilty to a charge related to him asking a trash hauler with suspected organized crime ties to threaten a man DeLuca believed was abusing his granddaughter.

DeLuca repeatedly stressed he had not violated the public’s trust and the issue was a family matter.

“I believe in my heart that my actions were designed to protect my family and to keep my family whole and safe from the horrible nature of domestic violence,” he said when he announced his resignation.

A fiscal conservative who advocated for the environment, DeLuca was known for being willing to compromise at times with the Democrats. He garnered sympathy as well as appreciation for his legislative work from many of his constituents and remained active in local politics in his hometown of Woodbury until his death.

Woodbury First Selectman Barbara K. Perkinson told the Waterbury Republican-American that she knew DeLuca and his family for more than 50 years, saying the town had “lost a true champion” for the northwestern Connecticut community.

“He was admired and a dedicated statesman who always had the best interest of the public first,” Perkinson said.

The newspaper reported DeLuca received a standing ovation during an appearance at the Woodbury Republican Town Committee nearly two weeks ago.

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