Live federal data · updated daily
ADA Website Lawsuits in Connecticut
Every federal ADA website-accessibility filing we have on record for Connecticut. Pulled daily from CourtListener’s RECAP archive. State-court filings are not included — especially relevant in New York where Mizrahi Kroub and others shifted volume to state Supreme Court.
Total filings
3
YTD
0
2026 so far
Last 90 days
0
rolling
Active districts
1
federal districts in DB
Most active federal districts
Where filings cluster within Connecticut.
- D. Conn.3
Repeat defendants
Businesses with more than one federal filing in Connecticut.
No repeat defendants yet.
Most active plaintiff names
Last names that recur across Connecticut federal filings. Federal Rule 17 permits a single named plaintiff to file dozens of suits per year.
- Grande1
- Antar1
- Nastri1
Recent federal filings in Connecticut
Most recent 3 filings on file. See the full tracker for everything.
| Date | Defendant | Plaintiff | District | Industry | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024-01-03 | Hartford Board of Education | Grande | D. Conn. | education | View case → |
| 2023-10-12 | Grossman | Antar | D. Conn. | other | View case → |
| 2023-01-14 | Dykes | Nastri | D. Conn. | other | View case → |
ADA web litigation in Connecticut, in plain English
- Are ADA website lawsuits common in Connecticut?
- Yes. Connecticut is one of the most active federal jurisdictions for ADA website-accessibility lawsuits. New York, Florida, and California together account for over 70% of these filings nationwide. We track 3 federal filings in Connecticut in our dataset.
- What kinds of businesses get sued in Connecticut?
- Federal ADA website filings target restaurants and food service, retail and e-commerce, lifestyle and fashion brands, hospitality, healthcare, and small consumer brands. Sites with a physical location plus an online presence are the most common targets — the legal theory under Robles v. Domino's clearly applies.
- Can I be sued in Connecticut if my business isn't located there?
- Yes. Federal courts have applied long-arm jurisdiction to website-accessibility cases when a business serves customers in the state. The question is whether your site is reachable from Connecticut, not where you're headquartered.
- How do I check if my own site is at risk?
- Run the same axe-core scan plaintiff firms use. It's free, takes about 60 seconds, and shows roughly what a serial filer's automated tool would find on your site.
See what your Connecticut site looks like to a plaintiff firm
Free, no signup, 60 seconds. Same axe-core engine the demand-letter machines use.