Highlands Current Audio Stories
Retired officer's 'brain health' being evaluated A report by a psychiatric expert hired to evaluate the mental health of Edison Irizarry, the retired Beacon police officer who said he shot his roommate nearly a year ago, is complete. A second, commissioned by prosecutors, is expected next. The findings of the first report have not been released. Once complete, both will be considered as the criminal case against the former 17-year Beacon police officer moves forward. Irizarry, 52 at the time, was arrested July 21, 2025, after Beacon police responded to a 911 call placed by Irizarry, who said he had shot his roommate. Officers found Casey Cuddy, 58, of Beacon, dead inside an apartment at 86 Rombout Ave. The department turned the investigation over to the New York State Police after learning that Irizarry, who retired in 2021, was a former officer. Irizarry is accused of shooting Cuddy, a psychiatric nurse, multiple times with a 9-millimeter semi-automatic Glock pistol. He pleaded not guilty in Beacon City Court on July 22 and was indicted by a Dutchess County grand jury on Aug. 5 on a second-degree murder charge. He is being held at the county jail in Poughkeepsie without bail. In an interview last year with the Times Union, Irizarry said he shot Cuddy in self-defense to prevent "something evil from happening" but would not provide details. On Friday (June 26), Brittney Kessel, the deputy unit chief of the Dutchess County DA's Office, and Alexander Rosen, Irizarry's public defender, replacing Susan Mraz Mungavin, who retired, met for about 10 minutes with Judge Jessica Segal in County Court in Poughkeepsie. Irizarry did not appear. After conferring, Segal announced that the defense's mental health report had been submitted. "That took a very long time to get, but it was helpful," she said. However, there has been "no agreed-upon disposition. That's still being discussed" as professionals assess Irizarry's "brain health," Segal said. She set an Aug. 27 date for attorneys to provide updates. That frustrated Cuddy's sister, Dana Miller, who said Friday that she has tired of the slow pace. "We've been waiting a year for the defense to present a defense," said Miller, who lives in North Texas. "It shouldn't have taken that long."
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