(a) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection shall thoroughly investigate the cause, circumstances and origin of all fires or explosions to which the commissioner's attention has been called, in accordance with the provisions of this part, by reason of which any property has been destroyed or damaged, or any person injured or killed, and shall especially examine and decide as to whether such fire was the result of carelessness, design, an incendiary device or any other criminal act. The commissioner may take the testimony under oath of any person supposed to be cognizant of or to have means of knowledge in relation to the matters as to which an examination is being made, and shall cause the same to be reduced to writing and filed in the commissioner's office; and if, in the commissioner's opinion, there is sufficient evidence to warrant that any person should be charged with the crime of arson or any other crime, the commissioner shall forthwith submit such evidence, together with the names of the witnesses and all other information obtained by the commissioner, to the proper prosecuting officer. The commissioner may, in any investigation, issue subpoenas for the purposes of summoning and compelling the attendance of witnesses before the commissioner to testify. The commissioner may administer oaths or affirmations to witnesses before the commissioner, and false swearing therein shall be perjury. The commissioner, or a designee, may, in the performance of his or her duties, enter into and upon the premises or building where any fire or explosion has occurred and premises thereto adjacent in accordance with the provisions of section 29-311.(b) Whenever it comes to the commissioner's knowledge or to the knowledge of any local fire marshal that there exists in any building or upon any premises combustible material or flammable conditions dangerous to the safety of such building or premises or dangerous to any other building or property, or conditions that present a fire hazard to the occupants thereof, the State Fire Marshal, or any local fire marshal, obtaining such knowledge, shall order such material to be forthwith removed or such conditions remedied by the owner or occupant of such building or premises, and such owner or occupant shall be subject to the penalties prescribed in section 29-291c, and, in addition thereto, shall suffer a penalty of one hundred dollars a day for each day of neglect, to be recovered in a proper action in the name of the state.Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-310
(1949 Rev., S. 3680; 1957, P.A. 516, S. 6; 1959, P.A. 560; 615, S. 23; P.A. 77-614, S. 486, 610; P.A. 81-429, S. 2; P.A. 88-130; P.A. 11-51, S. 108; 11-61, S. 91.)
Amended by P.A. 21-0165,S. 8 of the Connecticut Acts of the 2021 Regular Session, eff. 7/1/2021.Amended by P.A. 11-0061, S. 91 of the the 2011 Regular Session, eff. 7/1/2011.Amended by P.A. 11-0051, S. 108 of the the 2011 Regular Session, eff. 7/1/2011. Annotation to former section 29-57: Cited. 119 C. 601. Annotations to present section: Once charred wood flooring samples were lawfully seized pursuant to the cause and origin investigation statutes, defendant no longer possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in them. 246 Conn. 63. Cited. 46 CA 350.