Lead Opinion
The petitioner, Richard Reynolds, appeals from the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus challenging his sentence of death under General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 53a-46a and his underlying conviction for a capital felony under General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 53a-54b (1).
On appeal, the petitioner raises thirteen separate issues with the habeas court's decision. Most of the issues concern his death sentence, but a few relate to his capital felony conviction.
I
The petitioner first claims that the substitute long form information charging him with a capital felony failed to describe each and every element of the offense charged, thus depriving the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction. The state initially charged the petitioner with a short form information alleging that he committed the offense of capital felony in the city of Waterbury on or about December 18, 1992, in violation of General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 53a-54b (1). The petitioner later filed a motion for a bill of particulars asking for more information about the nature of the charge. The state filed a substitute long form information in response. The long form information alleged that the petitioner "did commit the crime of [capital felony] in violation of Connecticut General Statutes [Rev. to 1991] § 53a-54b (1) in that on or about [December 18, 1992], at approximately [4 a.m.], at or near the intersection of Orange and Ward Streets [in] Waterbury ... the [petitioner] did commit [murder] of a member of a local police department, to wit: [Officer Williams] of the Waterbury ... Police Department." The parties agree that the long form information did not allege that Officer Williams was acting within the scope of his duties at the time of the offense, one of the elements of a capital felony under (Rev. to 1991) § 53a-54b (1).
According to the petitioner, the state's failure to allege every element of the capital felony offense deprived the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction over that charge, thus rendering his conviction and resulting sentence invalid. In response, the respondent, the Commissioner of Correction, asserts that the petitioner did not preserve this issue for our review because he failed to raise this claim before the habeas court, preventing him from raising it for the first time in this appeal. The respondent also argues that the petitioner's claim, even if raised, cannot overcome the procedural hurdles required to mount a collateral attack on the subject matter jurisdiction of the original trial court.
We do not address the respondent's arguments about whether the petitioner is procedurally barred from presenting this collateral attack because, assuming for the sake of argument that we could properly review his claim, which presents a question of law;
Stepney Pond Estates, Ltd. v. Monroe,
An information need not allege every element of an offense to invoke the Superior Court's criminal jurisdiction-it need only allege the statutory citation or name of the offense, along with the date and place the alleged offense occurred.
Once the state files an information with the required allegations, the Superior Court's criminal jurisdiction is invoked and any claim the information lacks enough factual detail to allow the defendant to prepare a defense goes to the sufficiency of the notice given to the defendant. See, e.g.,
State v. Alston,
supra,
It follows from our case law that the trial court in the present case had jurisdiction to hear the capital felony charge against the petitioner. The state filed a short form information charging the petitioner with a capital felony and included the statutory citation for the alleged offense and the date and place the offense allegedly occurred. Nothing more was required to invoke the trial court's jurisdiction. The fact that the substitute long form information contained additional factual allegations relating to some, but not all, of the elements of the crime had no impact on the trial court's jurisdiction.
State v. Crosswell,
supra,
II
The petitioner also claims that his criminal trial counsel did not provide constitutionally adequate representation during the guilt phase of his criminal trial because his counsel failed to effectively use the state's preferential treatment of Anthony Crawford, who was with the petitioner when Officer Williams was murdered, to support the petitioner's defense. Specifically, the petitioner asserts that his trial counsel should have brought a claim of misconduct against the state because the petitioner believes the state improperly granted leniency to Crawford to induce Crawford to testify against the petitioner. The petitioner also argues that his trial counsel did not adequately use the state's favorable treatment of Crawford to challenge Crawford's credibility at the petitioner's trial.
According to the petitioner, the state could have charged Crawford with more severe offenses, including murder and attempted sale of cocaine. Evidence given at the petitioner's trial shows that shortly before Officer Williams was murdered, the petitioner and Crawford were walking down a street in Waterbury, each carrying about 175 bags of cocaine worth approximately $3500.
State v. Reynolds,
supra,
The state charged the petitioner with the murder of Officer Williams and charged Crawford with hindering prosecution based on Crawford's "silence" about the petitioner's involvement in the shooting when police canvassed the neighborhood shortly after the murder. Neither of them were charged with any drug crimes.
The petitioner contends that the state could have charged Crawford as an accomplice in Officer Williams' murder and for the attempted sale of cocaine, but that the state did not do so because it had an undisclosed deal with Crawford to forgo more serious charges in return for Crawford's testimony against the petitioner. The petitioner further claims that the state, as part of its undisclosed "ruse" to secure Crawford's testimony, intentionally bungled its case against Crawford to all but ensure that he would be acquitted on the hindering prosecution charge. The petitioner argues that trial counsel was deficient for failing to argue that the state's charging decisions amounted to misconduct because they "corrupt[ed] the truth seeking function" of the trial. He also argues that trial counsel should have argued the existence of a secret deal between the state and Crawford as a means to attack Crawford's credibility.
The respondent asserts that there was no misconduct for the petitioner's trial counsel to raise, because the state enjoys broad discretion to charge defendants, and was under no obligation to bring more severe charges against Crawford. The respondent also asserts that the petitioner has provided no evidence that a deal existed between the state and Crawford, and notes that both the trial prosecutor and Crawford denied that any deal existed. Consequently, the respondent argues that the petitioner's trial counsel cannot be faulted for failing to make an issue of any purported deal with Crawford. We agree with the respondent and reject the petitioner's claims.
Before turning to the petitioner's claims, we observe that the petitioner's burden and our standard of review are explained in detail in
Small v. Commissioner of Correction,
As for the misconduct argument, the petitioner has not shown that his counsel's performance was deficient because he has not shown that any misconduct occurred. Both the decision to criminally charge an individual and the choice of which crime should be
charged lie within the discretion of the state and are not ordinarily subject to judicial review. See, e.g.,
State v. Kinchen,
But even if the petitioner could show some form of misconduct, the petitioner's claim fails nevertheless because he has provided no argument whatsoever in his briefs about how this alleged deficiency prejudiced him. The petitioner has not provided us any authority
to show what remedy the trial court could have provided the petitioner had his counsel raised a charge of misconduct. The petitioner does not suggest-and we are aware of no authority holding-that the state's leniency toward Crawford somehow precluded the state from charging the petitioner with more severe crimes than Crawford or required his acquittal. Nor has the petitioner suggested that leniency by the state rendered Crawford an incompetent witness.
As for the petitioner's argument that his trial counsel failed to adequately attack Crawford's credibility at trial, we conclude his counsel's actions were reasonable and, thus, not deficient. According to the petitioner, his counsel should have done more to challenge Crawford's credibility by arguing the existence of a clandestine deal. The petitioner faults his trial counsel for not relying on Crawford's acquittal on what the petitioner calls a "bogus" hindering prosecution charge and the state's failure to charge Crawford with homicide or drug charges to argue that the state had "obviously cut a deal" with Crawford in exchange for his testimony.
It is hardly unreasonable for counsel to choose to preserve credibility with the finder of fact by declining to pursue an argument that is supported by nothing more than conjecture. The petitioner has not cited any evidence that a deal existed other than mere speculation based on the state's lenient treatment of Crawford. One of the petitioner's trial attorneys testified that he had no evidence of any deal and Crawford denied that the state had made any promises in exchange for his testimony.
The petitioner's trial counsel also reasonably could have chosen not to imply the existence of a deal to avoid raising an unsupported implication that the state had acted improperly. Had there been a deal, the state would have been obligated to disclose it.
State v. Floyd,
Rather than make such accusations without any supporting evidence, the petitioner's trial counsel opted for the eminently reasonable alternative of questioning Crawford about an unrelated charge pending against him as a means to suggest that Crawford was lying or embellishing his testimony because he hoped, even in the absence of a deal, that the state might be more lenient in his other case.
III
Lastly, the petitioner asserts that the habeas court improperly concluded that international law did not bar his conviction for a capital felony. We decline to address this argument, however, because the petitioner did not adequately brief it. Although the petitioner makes a passing statement that his conviction violates international law, the petitioner's claim appears aimed at his sentence, which is governed by our decisions in
State v. Santiago,
supra,
The judgment of the habeas court is reversed only with respect to the petitioner's claim regarding the sentence of death and the case is remanded to that court with direction to render judgment granting the petition for a writ of habeas corpus as to that claim, vacating the petitioner's sentence of death, and ordering the trial court to impose a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of release; the judgment is affirmed in all other respects.
In this opinion ROGERS, C.J., and PALMER, McDONALD and ROBINSON, Js., concurred.
The petitioner was also convicted of murder in violation of General Statutes (Rev. to 1991) § 53a-54a, but that conviction was merged into the capital felony count.
After the habeas trial, but before the petitioner completed briefing this appeal, the legislature passed No. 12-5 of the 2012 Public Acts (P.A. 12-5), which abolished the death penalty for crimes occurring after its effective date. After its passage, the petitioner asked permission to address for the first time on appeal issues concerning the impact of P.A. 12-5 on his death sentence. We denied the request without prejudice to the petitioner's right to refile after the release of a decision in
State v. Santiago,
Relying on a decision in a civil case,
In re Shamika F.,
This rule is now so well entrenched in our jurisprudence that it is reflected in the requirements for an information set forth in our rules of practice. See Practice Book § 36-13.
It is unlikely that the petitioner would have succeeded on such a claim. Even though the informations did not specifically allege that Officer Williams was acting within the scope of his duties at the time of the offense, the petitioner contested this very element at his trial. The state specifically alerted the trial court and the petitioner that the operative information did not include factual allegations for this element and acknowledged that it had the burden of proving that fact beyond a reasonable doubt. See
State v. Reynolds,
supra,
The petitioner has also claimed, for the first time on appeal, that his trial and appellate counsel's failure to raise this subject matter jurisdiction claim during the criminal trial and direct appeal proceedings amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel. Because the petitioner's stand-alone jurisdiction claim is meritless, his related ineffective assistance claim must also fail.
The petitioner also argues that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance with respect to Crawford at the petitioner's sentencing, but we need not address that argument in the present appeal in light of this court's decisions in
State v. Santiago,
supra,
The state did allege, as part the aggravating factors it put forth in support of its case for applying the death penalty, that the petitioner committed the murder during the commission of an attempted sale of cocaine. That allegation related only to enhancement of the petitioner's sentence, not the crimes he was charged with committing.
Indeed, such a claim would likely fail. We have held that the state is free to unilaterally choose to show leniency toward a witness, and doing so does not violate the defendant's due process rights. See
State v. Ferrara,
At the time of his trial testimony, Crawford had an unrelated charge of escape pending against him.
The petitioner raises, in his brief, an independent claim alleging that the habeas court improperly concluded that it could not consider the cumulative effect of counsel's errors when considering whether those errors prejudiced the petitioner's defense. In support of this claim, the petitioner cites, among other cases,
Kyles v. Whitley,
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with and join parts I, II and III of the majority opinion. With respect to the sentencing issues, I respectfully disagree and note that my opinions as expressed in my dissent in
State v. Santiago,
Dissenting Opinion
I agree with and join parts I, II and III of the majority opinion. With respect to the sentencing issues, I respectfully disagree and note that my opinions as expressed in my dissent in
State v. Santiago,
