Bria Lloyd
Investigative ReporterBria Lloyd joined Connecticut Public as an investigative reporter for The Accountability Project in November 2022. She’s also the co-host of the station’s limited series podcast, 'In Absentia'.
Before coming to Connecticut, she spent time in the Washington, D.C. area working at Scripps News, Al Jazeera English and PBS NewsHour.
Bria graduated from George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia with a Bachelor's degree in Communication. In her final semester, she was awarded journalism student of the year. While in college, she interned at NBC4 in Washington, D.C. and local TV station WDVM in Hagerstown, MD. After graduation, she was hired as a multimedia journalist at WDVM.
-
Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim said Tuesday that he received the most votes in the city’s municipal election, but the results may not determine the final outcome of a bizarre race thrown into uncertainty due to allegations of ballot box abuse.
-
The Accountability Project obtained new video in the case of a woman who was charged with false reporting after telling police she was the victim of a sexual assault.
-
Information was missing from some state licensing records. Now, the Medical Examining Board wants to know how DPH will catch sanctions in other states.
-
Our investigation found that the victim is not alone, and many other victims of sexual assault have similar experiences when reporting their assault to the police.
-
An investigation by The Accountability Project found the state denied roughly one-third of all claims for benefits, largely due to missing documentation. A new report out shows those problems are continuing at CT's Paid Leave Authority.
-
Ganim’s lawyer argued at a hearing Tuesday that the mayor has been rehabilitated and sincerely regrets the actions that led to his law license being suspended 20 years ago.
-
False reports of sexual assault are uncommon. But, for police, handling these cases can prove challenging without specialized training, experts say.
-
Connecticut's health department is working to update its physician profiles after an investigation by The Accountability Project found some information about doctor discipline was missing.
-
State medical board drops charges against Dr. Nicholas Bennett as he signs agreement not to renew license.
-
State health officials have asked the Connecticut Medical Examining Board to revoke Dr. Nicholas Bennett's license or take other disciplinary action.