Opinion
The respondent, who is the father of the three children involved in this termination of parental rights case, Giovanni C., Wesley C., and Ravan, C., appeals from the judgments of the trial court terminating his parental rights as to the three children.
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1
The
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respondent’s sole claim on appeal is that the burden of persuasion by clear and convincing evidence as used in Connecticut and as applied by the trial court in this case “does not meet the requirements of the constitutional due process clause of the fourteenth amendment required by the United States constitution as set forth by the [United States] Supreme Court in
Santosky
v.
Kramer,
The petitioner, the commissioner of children and families, brought these petitions for termination of parental rights, alleging that the children had been found in a prior proceeding to have been neglected or uncared for and that the respondent had failed to achieve such degree of personal rehabilitation as would encourage the belief that within a reasonable time he could assume a responsible position in the lives of the children. After a full trial, the parties filed posttrial briefs. In his posttrial brief, the respondent cited applicable Connecticut precedents defining the contours of the clear and convincing evidence standard and argued that the evidence adduced did not meet that standard. He did not, however, raise the claim that the Connecticut standard for
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clear and convincing evidence did not meet federal constitutional requirements. The respondent, quoting
Dacey
v.
Connecticut Bar Assn.,
Thereafter, the court issued a lengthy and detailed memorandum of decision finding that the facts alleged had been proven by clear and convincing evidence. In the course of its memorandum of decision, the court devoted one section to the standard of clear and convincing evidence. It quoted specifically from our Supreme Court’s decision in
Miller
v.
Commissioner of Correction,
“Although we have characterized this standard of proof as a middle tier standard;
J. Frederick Scholes Agency
v.
Mitchell,
In his appellate brief, the respondent does not seek to prevail under state v.
Golding,
This record makes clear, therefore, that the respondent is not entitled to raise his constitutional claim in this court. “The fact that [a respondent] has argued [that a] claim is one of constitutional magnitude does not, alone, satisfy the requirements of
Golding.
[A respondent’s] failure to address the four prongs of
Golding
amounts to an inadequate briefing of the issue and results in the unpreserved claim being deemed abandoned. See
[State
v.
Barnett,
The judgments are affirmed.
Notes
The mother also appealed from the judgments terminating her rights with respect to these three children. See
In re Giovanni C.,
In
Cruzan
v.
Director, Missouri Dept. of Health,
supra,
