Williams died July 24, two days after Hartford police said he fell from his family's apartment window while he and his four siblings were left home alone.
DCF had last met with the family in mid-June and was preparing to close a case that was opened in April, DCF Commissioner Vannessa Dorantes said in a statement released Friday.
Imagineers LLC, the company that oversees the Section 8 federally subsidized apartment where Frank and the children lived on Capitol Avenue, required the building's owners in May to fix a list of violations that included clogged plumbing, deteriorating paint, mold on the ceiling and walls and missing carbon monoxide detectors that were required to be replaced in 24 hours, according to an inspection report obtained by the city of Hartford and shared with Hearst Connecticut Media Group.
The inspection report indicates that repairs were made by May 30 when a second inspection of the apartment occurred. The city does not routinely inspect apartments unless a complaint has been filed, a spokesperson for Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin said Friday. Frank and her landlord had not filed any complaints with the city about the building since she moved into the apartment in 2021, the spokesperson said.
It is unclear how often Imagineers LLC is required to conduct inspections as a service provider for the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, which administers the Section 8 subsidized housing program. A call to Imagineers LLC was not returned Friday. The owners of the building doing business as 1079-93 Capitol Ave LLC also did not return a call or an email Friday.
In their reports, police described Frank's apartment as "abysmal" when they responded after Williams fell from the window. Police said there were cockroaches, piles of dirty laundry that smelled of feces, stacks of unwashed dishes and dirt on the floor that stuck to the children's clothes.
After Williams' fall, a DCF social worker arrived at the scene and told police when they last checked on the family in mid-June, the apartment appeared "not that abysmal." The agency had set Frank up with services and was preparing to close their child protection case when Williams died, Dorantes said in a statement.
"The last contact with the children was in mid-June 2023 and based on the assessment at the time, further child protective services was not warranted — and the case was in the process of being closed — resulting in no additional visits or contact," Dorantes said in the statement.
Neighbors told officers that the children were often home without an adult, according to police reports. But it is unclear if anyone called DCF to report the concern.
"A simple gesture of offering help may change the life of a child and their caregiver," Dorantes said.