
WILLIMANTIC, Conn. (Oct 2025) – The State of Connecticut has agreed to pay more than $2 million to the family of Joyce Grayson, a visiting nurse who was brutally murdered during a home visit in 2023.
Grayson, a 63-year-old nurse employed by a home health agency, was killed while making a scheduled visit to a halfway house in Willimantic. Her patient, Michael Reese, a convicted sex offender under state supervision, attacked and murdered her inside the facility.
The tragedy sparked national outrage and renewed scrutiny of safety policies for home-care and community-based healthcare workers. Following a two-year legal battle, the state reached a wrongful-death settlement with Grayson’s family in September 2025.
According to court documents, the lawsuit alleged that the Department of Correction and Judicial Branch Court Support Services Division failed to ensure adequate monitoring and risk assessment before assigning Grayson to Reese’s residence.
Reese has since pleaded guilty to murder and received a 50-year prison sentence as part of a plea agreement earlier this year.
The case has reignited discussions about the dangers faced by nurses who provide in-home care, particularly for clients with criminal or psychiatric histories.
Advocates are urging agencies to strengthen risk-screening procedures, provide safety escorts for high-risk visits, and implement real-time check-in systems for nurses in the field.
Healthcare unions and nursing associations have also renewed calls for legislation mandating comprehensive safety training and emergency response protocols for home-visiting professionals.
For many in the profession, the Grayson case stands as a painful reminder of the risks inherent in caring for patients outside the structured environment of hospitals and clinics and a call to ensure no nurse is left unprotected while serving in the community.






