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TOP STORY: Old Lyme Resident State Trooper to Leave Post After Five Years

September 21, 2025 by Elizabeth Regan

Resident State Trooper Matt Weber and comfort dog, Viera, will be transferring to Connecticut State Police headquarters to support the agency’s peer support program. File photo.

OLD LYME–The resident state trooper in charge of the Old Lyme Police Department for the past five years will be leaving early next month to lead the Connecticut State Police peer support program. 

Connecticut State Police Resident State Trooper Matt Weber on Friday said word came through the day before that he’ll be transferring Oct. 3 to the Middletown headquarters as the coordinator of the State Troopers Offering Peer Support (STOPS) program. 

He said the state police will assign a temporary resident trooper to cover the town while the agency goes through the process of finding a permanent replacement. 

Webe currently oversees five Old Lyme constables with full police powers. The resident trooper program provides leadership in more than 50 towns across the state without independent police departments. 

Weber, who lives in town, described the move as bittersweet. 

“Definitely, it’s a town I love, so hopefully I left it a little bit better than I found it,” he said. 

First Selectwoman Martha Shoemaker on Friday said Weber’s presence has led to a stronger summer ranger program, which places seasonal staff under the police department’s direction to patrol public beaches. She said the resident trooper has also helped curb fights and illegal activity at Sound View Beach. 

Resident State Trooper Matt Weber. File photo contributed by Connecticut State Police.

Shoemaker credited Weber with focusing on hiring new officers rather than exclusively making lateral hires from other departments. 

“His unique approach to build our staff by training officers at the Connecticut Police Academy has allowed us to hire individuals who have always wanted to be police officers and are now serving our town to the best of their ability,” she said. 

Among them are Officer Ethan Kula, a former summer ranger in Old Lyme who was hired in 2022 at the age of 24. Most recently, Patrolman George Sirigos graduated the academy in January as a 31 year old. 

Before Kula, Corporal Dominic Solari was the last Old Lyme officer to go through the academy in 2006. 

Shoemaker said she has not been given a timetable for securing Weber’s permanent replacment. She also has not been told what the town’s role will be in the selection process, though she hopes to sit in on hiring interviews.

She said staff members at the police department and town hall will miss Weber greatly in his professional capacity. But she acknowledged the town resident isn’t going anywhere.

“We’re still going to see him in Big Y,” she said.

Weber will bring 17 years of experience as a state trooper when he takes over the peer support program from state police Sgt. Rodney Valdes. 

Weber said he looks forward to the opportunity to help other troopers, “just for the mental well-being of them.”

He declined to further discuss his time in Old Lyme or his new role, citing the advice of the state police public information officer. 

The state police STOPS program provides peer counseling for troopers and other first responders in personal or professional crises, according to state police. The specially-trained network of troopers also helps during non-crisis situations amid the daily stresses of working for the state police.

Filed Under: Old Lyme, Police & Fire, Top Story, Town Hall Tagged With: Connecticut State Police, Old Lyme Police Department, Old Lyme Resident State Trooper, policing

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jim Lampos says

    September 19, 2025 at 5:01 pm

    Thank you Matt for your excellent work and great dedication. Best of luck with this new opportunity!

  2. Joan Meek says

    September 20, 2025 at 6:00 pm

    Good luck Officer Weber!!!

  3. Mary Jo Nosal says

    September 21, 2025 at 9:46 am

    Officer Matt Webber is the perfect person to lead this important program. Thank you Matt for your dedication and service to Old Lyme, and I wish you continued success.!

  4. Jason Kemp says

    September 21, 2025 at 10:40 am

    We will definitely miss having him and Viera around town, but I’m sure he will be great in his new role. The next resident trooper has big shoes to fill!

  5. Andrea Fenton says

    September 21, 2025 at 12:55 pm

    Good luck and all the best Officer Webber! Thank you for all have done in Old Lyme .

  6. Sloan Danenhower says

    September 22, 2025 at 9:04 am

    Many thanks for your service in Old Lyme. Your next charge sounds interesting; best of luck!

  7. Timothy Griswold - Former First Selectman says

    September 22, 2025 at 10:14 am

    Trooper Weber – you have been an outstanding Resident State Trooper for Old Lyme and you advocated effectively for our police officers. You spent most every weekend during the summer season in Sound View making sure things ran as well as possible. You worked with our schools and the Lymes Youth Service Bureau to help our students stay on track. You organized the Emergency Services Vehicle Parade throughout town during COVID, which brought smiles to appreciative residents’ faces. Congratulations for a job well done!

    Good luck in your new assignment and we look forward to seeing you around town in civilian clothes with Viera.

  8. Barb & Bob Pierson says

    September 23, 2025 at 8:32 am

    A long distance thank you, Barb and I appreciate all that you have done for Old lyme, Good luck with your new assignment.

    Hope to see you when we are in the area.

  9. Bennett Bernblum says

    September 25, 2025 at 5:53 pm

    Dear Matt Weber,
    You’ve made an invaluable contribution to Old Lyme and will be missed dearly. We wish you happiness and reward in your new position, and request that you involve yourself in town activities.
    BJ Bernblum

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