STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. CHESTER J.
AC 41403
Appellate Court of Connecticut
April 27, 2021
Lavine, Moll and Sheldon, Js.
The “officially released” date that appears near the beginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will be published in the Connecticut Law Journal or the date it was released as a slip opinion. The operative date for the beginning of all time periods for filing postopinion motions and petitions for certification is the “officially released” date appearing in the opinion.
All opinions are subject to modification and technical correction prior to official publication in the Connecticut Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the event of discrepancies between the advance release version of an opinion and the latest version appearing in the Connecticut Law Journal and subsequently in the Connecticut Reports or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the latest version is to be considered authoritative.
The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the opinion as it appears in the Connecticut Law Journal and bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not be reproduced and distributed without the express written permission of the Commission on Official Legal Publications, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut.
Syllabus
The defendant, who had been convicted of various crimes in connection with the sexual assault of the victim, appealed, claiming, inter alia, that the trial court improperly denied his challenge to the jury panel, which he claimed did not represent a fair cross section of the community in violation of the sixth amendment and had been summoned under a process that violated his right to equal protection. The defendant further invited this court to exercise its supervisory authority to require the collection and/or maintenance of venire panel demographic data. During jury selection, the court conducted a hearing on the defendant‘s objection to the jury panel. Relying on census data, information from the prospective jurors’ questionnaires and the testimony of an expert witness who used a Baysean probability model to predict the race of the prospective jurors, the defendant claimed that the state failed to engage in substantive changes to remedy the underrepresentation of minorities and overrepresentation of Caucasians in prospective jury pools and that the state failed to adopt measures to increase minority participation in jury pools. The questionnaires stated that prospective jurors had the option of providing information as to their race but that they need not do so if they found it objectionable. The defendant also provided testimony from eight witnesses about how venire pools were selected throughout the state and about the nonenforcement of civil penalties on nonappearing jurors. None of the witnesses testified that they or the state entities where they were employed compiled or maintained data as to the racial or ethnic composition of venire panels in the state. The defendant thus claimed that the Judicial Branch had seemingly demonstrated wilful blindness in regard to the statutory (
1. The trial court did not err in denying the defendant‘s challenges to the venire panels in violation of his constitutional rights:
a. The defendant did not establish a prima facie violation of the sixth amendment right that the venire pool represent a fair cross section of the community, as he failed to demonstrate that any underrepresentation of African-Americans and Hispanics resulted from their systematic exclusion in the jury selection process; although the state was generally aware of a lower response rate to jury summonses from certain minority groups, the uncontroverted evidence established that the process by which the Judicial Branch‘s jury administration summons jurors is accomplished without regard to race, and there was no evidence to support a finding that enforcement of civil penalties against nonappearing jurors would lead to greater responsiveness to juror summonses.
b. The court correctly rejected the defendant‘s equal protection claim, as there was no evidence of a jury selection procedure that is susceptible to abuse or is not racially neutral; the defendant did not establish that the state systematically excluded African-Americans or Hispanics from the jury selection process, and the defendant did not provide any evidence of discriminatory intent with respect to excluding African-Americans or Hispanics, rather, the evidence presented by the defendant reflected that Judicial Branch officials were either unaware of the racial and ethnic characteristics of people summoned for jury duty or that such information was not retained or recorded.
2. This court declined to exercise its supervisory authority over the administration of justice to require the state to collect demographic data in accord with the directive of
3. This court declined to review the defendant‘s claim that the trial court erred in prohibiting him from inquiring about certain Probate Court matters that he claimed were relevant to the victim‘s purported bias against him, the defendant having failed to raise that specific claim before the trial court and expressly abandoned it in his principal appellate brief.
Argued March 9, 2020—officially released April 27, 2021
Procedural History
Substitute information charging the defendant with two counts of the crime of sexual assault in the second degree, and with one count each of the crimes of sexual assault in the third degree, sexual assault in the fourth degree and risk of injury to a child, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of Waterbury, where the court, Alander, J., denied the defendant‘s objection to the composition of the venire panels; thereafter, the matter was tried to the jury before Alander, J.; verdict and judgment of guilty, from which the defendant appealed to this court. Affirmed.
Trent A. LaLima, with whom, on the brief, was Hubert J. Santos, for the appellant (defendant).
Ronald G. Weller, senior assistant state‘s attorney, with whom, on the brief, were Maureen Platt, state‘s attorney, and Elena Pelermo, senior assistant state‘s attorney, for the appellee (state).
Opinion
While the defendant‘s appeal was pending, our Supreme Court issued its decision in State v. Moore, 334 Conn. 275, 278, 221 A.3d 40 (2019).3 On the basis of that decision, this court ordered the parties to file simultaneous supplemental briefs addressing the impact of Moore on this appeal. After the parties submitted their supplemental briefs, this court heard oral argument. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. The victim was born in Jamaica and, in 1995 or 1996, when she was seven or eight years old, arrived in the United States following her adoption by the defendant and his wife, H, who resided in Waterbury.4 Shortly after the move, and for many years thereafter, the defendant sexually assaulted the victim. The incidents occurred frequently when the victim would sleep in her parents’ bed during the winter months. The defendant would place his hand in her underwear and touch her clitoris.
The victim and her parents moved to another location in Waterbury in 1999. When the victim was thirteen years old, the defendant began having sexual intercourse with her, which continued until she was approximately twenty-one years of age. Throughout her high school years, the defendant forced the victim to have sexual intercourse with him approximately twice a week. In connection with the defendant‘s sexual advances, the defendant would threaten withholding from the victim basic necessities, such as clothing or money for participation in school activities, if she did not cooperate. The victim‘s grades began to suffer during her sophomore year in high school, and she became suicidal. The defendant employed various measures to conceal his conduct from H.
Following her graduation from high school in 2007, the victim was accepted into a college in upstate New York, but the defendant refused to allow her to attend there, instead requiring that she enroll in a college closer to home. The defendant continued to have sexual intercourse with the victim until she married in 2009, and moved out of her parents’ home. Shortly thereafter, the victim disclosed the abuse for the first time, initially to her mother, H, and several years later, in or about 2015, to her sister. After her disclosure to her sister, the victim eventually contacted the police.
Once the victim made an initial complaint to the police, she recorded two conversations between herself and the defendant regarding the abuse she had suffered. In the first conversation, the defendant expressed his sorrow and asked for forgiveness. In the second conversation,
The defendant subsequently was arrested, and the state charged him by way of a substitute information with one count each of sexual assault in the second degree in violation of
I
The defendant first claims that the trial court improperly denied his challenge to the jury panel on the grounds that (1) the panel did not reflect a fair cross section of the community in violation of the sixth amendment to the United States constitution, and (2) the process by which the panel was summoned violated his right to equal protection under the fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution. Specifically, the defendant contends that there was an underrepresentation of African-Americans and Hispanics in the jury array. Although “[w]e recognize the importance of fairness in our judicial system, and particularly as to our jury selection procedures“; State v. Gibbs, 254 Conn. 578, 585, 758 A.2d 327 (2000); we conclude that the defendant‘s constitutional rights were not violated.
The following additional facts, as set forth in the trial court‘s memorandum of decision or as undisputed in the record, and procedural history are relevant to our resolution of these claims. Jury selection took place over the course of three days, specifically, on November 7, 9, and 13, 2017. Six jurors, plus two alternates, were selected from three venire panels of thirty members each. On the second day of jury selection, the defendant orally objected to the composition of the venire panel. On the third day, November 13, 2017, the defendant filed a written objection to the racial and ethnic composition of the November 7 and 9 venire panels, contending that African-Americans and Hispanics were underrepresented. On November 16, 2017, the defendant filed a motion for the state and the defense to have immediate access to the jury lists and juror questionnaires, which the court granted that same day with respect to the panel assignment lists and the juror questionnaires for the three venire panels.
On November 20 and 30, 2017, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on the
Shari DeLuca, the jury outreach coordinator for the Judicial Branch, testified that she engages in community outreach for the purpose of educating the public about jury duty and that her goal is to increase public responsiveness to jury summonses. To effectuate that goal, she has given presentations at high schools, colleges, and community events. DeLuca also has appeared on Hispanic radio stations.
Girvan Dinnall, an information technology analyst for the Judicial Branch, testified that he compiles data from the Department of Revenue Services, the Department of Motor Vehicles, voter registration rolls, and the Department of Labor to create a master list for the purpose of summoning potential jurors. The information collected from those sources includes names, addresses, dates of birth, and social security numbers, if available. A compilation process—whereby the data, through a series of mostly computerized processes, are placed into a “clean,” standardized master list—yields approximately 3.15 million records (i.e., individuals). The names on the list are separated by, and then randomized for, each of the state‘s thirteen judicial districts, and then all towns within those districts. Individuals are randomly selected to receive juror summonses on the basis of the proportional representation of the population of the town in which they reside in relation to that of their judicial district (based on United States Census Bureau data). Dinnall repeatedly explained that a prospective juror‘s race has no bearing on his work and that he does not have access to that information.
Esther Harris, the jury administrator for the Judicial Branch, is responsible for summoning jurors in Connecticut. Harris testified that the process of summoning jurors is governed by statute, is race blind, and is done randomly. See
Finally, the defendant presented the testimony of Camille Seaberry, a research associate at DataHaven, who was called as an expert witness to opine, as a starting point, on the probable race of those individuals in the ninety person venire who did not provide their racial information on their individual questionnaires. Fifty-nine venirepersons filled out their racial information in their questionnaires, which Seaberry treated as definitive with respect to the venireperson‘s race. With respect to the remaining venirepersons, who did not fill out such information, Seaberry used a Bayesian probability model based on surnames, addresses, and census data to predict their race. Out of the ninety venirepersons, she calculated that seventy-five were white, five were African-American, eight were Hispanic, and two were deemed “other,” likely those of Asian descent. Seaberry drew the following conclusions with respect to the judicial district of Waterbury: (1) Caucasians made up 71.5 percent of its citizens, 68.9 percent of its population of adults aged eighteen to seventy-four, and 83.3 percent of the venire panel, (2) African-Americans made up 10.4 percent of its citizens, 11 percent of its population of adults aged eighteen to seventy-four, and 5.6 percent of the venire panel, and (3) Hispanics made up 15.5 percent of its citizens, 16.8 percent of its population of adults aged eighteen to seventy-four, and 8.9 percent of the venire panel. On the basis of the foregoing percentages, Seaberry calculated an absolute disparity, a comparative disparity, and a standard deviation for the relevant population of adults aged eighteen to seventy-four as follows: (1) with respect to African-Americans, 0.054, 0.494, and 1.644, respectively, and (2) with respect to Hispanics, 0.079, 0.471, and 2.008, respectively.6 Seaberry explained that two
Following the presentation of evidence, defense counsel addressed the court. In support of the defendant‘s objection to the venire panel on fair cross section grounds, defense counsel argued that the state had failed to engage in substantive changes to remedy the underrepresentation of minorities and overrepresentation of Caucasians in the jury pool. With regard to his equal protection claim, defense counsel argued that the state had demonstrated a wilful “institutional blindness” by failing to adopt measures to increase minority participation in jury pools. The state countered that the defendant failed to prove that it systematically had excluded jurors and, rather, the evidence demonstrated that it had engaged in methods to increase minority participation. In addition, the state explained that any underrepresentation of minorities and any lack of responsiveness to jury summonses were not attributable to the jury summoning system because the system is not responsible for the personal conduct of summoned individuals who fail to appear for jury duty.
In its memorandum of decision dated December 15, 2017, the trial court denied the defendant‘s challenge to the venire panels. First addressing the fair cross section claim, the court, applying the three part test set forth in Duren v. Missouri, 439 U.S. 357, 364, 99 S. Ct. 664, 58 L. Ed. 2d 579 (1979), concluded that the defendant had failed to establish a prima facie violation of the sixth amendment‘s fair cross section requirement because the evidence did not demonstrate that the purported underrepresentation of African-Americans and Hispanics resulted from their systematic exclusion in the jury selection process (i.e., the third prong of the Duren test).7 The court observed that “[t]he only aspects of the jury selection process which the defendant points to as
Turning to the equal protection claim, the court applied the three part test set forth in State v. Gibbs, supra, 254 Conn. 578, which requires, as proof of an equal protection violation in jury selection “(1) underrepresentation of a recognizable group; (2) substantial underrepresentation over a significant period of time; and (3) a selection procedure susceptible to abuse or not racially neutral.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 594, citing Castaneda v. Partida, 430 U.S. 482, 494, 97 S. Ct. 1272, 51 L. Ed. 2d 498 (1977). The court concluded that the defendant‘s claim failed because, as in Gibbs, the defendant had not demonstrated that the jury selection process was susceptible to abuse or was racially biased. The court explained that “the defendant . . . failed to establish that the greater propensity of African-Americans and Hispanics to fail to respond to jury summons was due to anything other than external factors, such as poverty, residential mobility, linguistic isolation, or distrust of the legal system. The defendant certainly has not met his burden of showing that the failure to bring any legal action seeking the imposition of civil fines or to initiate focused outreach efforts is subject to abuse or not racially neutral.” Therefore, the defendant‘s claim faltered on the third prong of the equal protection test, i.e., a selection procedure that is susceptible to abuse or that is not racially neutral.
In addition, the court determined that the defendant had failed to meet his burden with respect to the second prong of the equal protection test, requiring a showing of “substantial underrepresentation over a significant period of time.” The court found that, at best, the defendant had shown an underrepresentation in the selection process for one trial. The court further noted that, although Seaberry‘s analysis resulted in a standard deviation for Hispanics aged eighteen to seventy-four of 2.008, once it accounted for those eligible for jury service, i.e., native born and naturalized citizens (as only United States citizens presently can serve as jurors in Connecticut), the standard deviation dropped to 1.7394, “a number which the defendant admits is insufficient to establish a lack of randomness.” On the basis of the foregoing, the court denied the defendant‘s challenge to the jury array.
Before addressing the merits of the defendant‘s constitutional and supervisory authority claims, we provide an overview of State v. Moore, 169 Conn. App. 470, 151 A.3d 412 (2016), appeal dismissed, 334 Conn. 275, 221 A.3d 40 (2019), which largely guides our resolution of those claims. In Moore, the defendant, convicted of murder, claimed that the trial court erred in denying his motion to strike the venire
The trial court denied the defendant‘s motion to strike the venire panel, finding that there was no systematic exclusion of jurors on the basis of race. Id., 481. With respect to the defendant‘s fair cross section claim, the court concluded that there was “insufficient evidence of the racial makeup of the jury pool or any statistical support for the claim that [African-Americans were] underrepresented in the pool.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 483. The court similarly rejected the defendant‘s equal protection claim, ruling that the defendant had failed to demonstrate discriminatory intent on the part of Connecticut‘s jury selection system. Id., 483-84.
On appeal, this court affirmed the judgment, first concluding with respect to the fair cross section claim that “[t]he defendant failed to present evidence to demonstrate that the representation of African-American males in venires from which juries are selected was not fair and reasonable in relation to the number of such persons eligible to serve as jurors in the community.” Id., 485. This court explained that the census data on which the defendant relied was not probative evidence because it reflected the percentage of all African-Americans in Connecticut and New London county, rather than the percentage of African-American males eligible for jury service. Id. Addressing the equal protection claim, this court concluded that there was no evidence that potential jurors systematically were excluded from jury service. Id., 486. Additionally, “[t]he undisputed evidence presented by the defendant reflected that Judicial Branch officials were unaware of the racial and ethnic characteristics of persons summoned for jury duty and that, to the extent that prospective jurors voluntarily provided information related to their race or ethnicity on their confidential juror questionnaire, such information was not retained or recorded.” Id.
Our Supreme Court granted certification to appeal,9 ultimately dismissing the appeal on the ground that certification was improvidently granted. See State v. Moore, supra, 334 Conn. 278. With respect to the defendant‘s supervisory authority claim regarding the collection of racial and demographic data of potential jurors, the court stated the following: “[T]he fact that the legislature has acted in this area by enacting § 51-232 (c)—which specifically makes the provision of racial and ethnic data optional for the juror—renders us reluctant to exercise our supervisory authority in the sweeping manner sought by the defendant . . . .” Id., 279.
Against this backdrop, we now consider the defendant‘s constitutional claims.
A
We begin with the defendant‘s fair cross section claim pursuant to the sixth amendment to the United States constitution.10 “Fair cross section claims are governed by a well established set of constitutional principles. In order to establish a violation of his federal constitutional right to a jury drawn from a fair cross section of the community, the defendant must demonstrate the following: (1) that the group alleged to be excluded is a distinctive
In support of his claim that the trial court improperly found that he had failed to demonstrate systematic exclusion of African-Americans and Hispanics in the jury selection process (i.e., the third prong of the Duren test), the defendant makes two contentions: (1) the state was aware that these minority groups were appearing for jury duty at a lower rate than other groups; and (2) the Office of the Attorney General has failed to enforce the civil penalty prescribed by
First, there exists no basis to equate the state‘s general awareness of a lower response rate to jury summonses among certain minority groups with a finding that it has systematically excluded those groups in the jury selection process. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has explained, “the existence of systematic underrepresentation turns on the process of selecting venires, not the outcome of that process in a particular case.” United States v. Jackman, 46 F.3d 1240, 1248 (2d Cir. 1995). With regard to the process by which the Judicial Branch‘s jury administration summons potential jurors, the uncontroverted evidence established that it is accomplished without regard to race.
Second, as the trial court correctly explained, with respect to the Attorney General‘s nonenforcement of civil penalties on nonappearing jurors pursuant to
In sum, we conclude that the defendant did not establish a prima facie violation of the sixth amendment‘s fair cross section requirement because he failed to demonstrate that any underrepresentation of African-Americans and Hispanics resulted from their systematic exclusion in the jury selection process.12
B
We now turn to the defendant‘s claim that the jury summoning process violated his fourteenth amendment right to equal protection. The defendant largely relies on the arguments made with respect to his sixth amendment claim. For the reasons that follow, this claim is similarly unavailing.
“An equal protection violation in jury selection procedures may be established by proof of (1) underrepresentation of a recognizable group; (2) substantial underrepresentation over a significant period of time; and (3) a selection procedure susceptible to abuse or not racially neutral. . . . Although the equal protection test is similar to the cross section test, the critical difference is that in an equal protection claim the defendant must prove discriminatory purpose.” (Citation omitted; emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Moore, supra, 169 Conn. App. 486; see also State v. Castonguay, 194 Conn. 416, 421, 481 A.2d 56 (1984) (discriminatory intent required to prove equal protection violation).
By way of review, the trial court concluded that the defendant failed to establish an equal protection violation, finding a failure of proof as to each of the prongs of the equal protection test. We need focus our analysis only on the third prong.13 Specifically, the trial court found, and we agree, that the defendant failed to demonstrate that Connecticut‘s jury selection procedure is susceptible to abuse or is not racially neutral. As our Supreme Court explained in Gibbs, the third prong is satisfied when “a defendant [demonstrates] that the jury selection process is equally capable of being applied in such a manner as practically to proscribe any group thought by the law‘s administrators to be undesirable . . . or that the [s]tate [has] . . . deliberately and systematically [denied] to members of [a] race the right to participate as jurors in the administration of justice.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Gibbs, supra, 254 Conn. 596. As set forth in part I A of this opinion, the defendant has not established that the state systematically excluded African-Americans and/or Hispanics from the jury selection process. Furthermore, the defendant
Mindful of the marked similarity between the unsuccessful equal protection claims made in Gibbs and Moore and the claim asserted in the present case, we conclude that the court properly determined that the defendant failed to establish an equal protection violation because, at a minimum, there was no evidence of a jury selection procedure that is susceptible to abuse or that is not racially neutral.
II
The defendant next invites this court to exercise its supervisory authority over the administration of justice to require the collection and/or maintenance of venire panel demographic data in order to allow for analysis of underrepresentation claims. We decline the invitation.
“It is well settled that [a]ppellate courts possess an inherent supervisory authority over the administration of justice. . . . Supervisory powers are exercised to direct trial courts to adopt judicial procedures that will address matters that are of utmost seriousness, not only for the integrity of a particular trial but also for the perceived fairness of the judicial system as a whole. . . . Under our supervisory authority, we have adopted rules intended to guide the lower courts in the administration of justice in all aspects of the criminal process. . . . The exercise of our supervisory powers is an extraordinary remedy to be invoked only when circumstances are such that the issue at hand, while not rising to the level of a constitutional violation, is nonetheless of utmost seriousness, not only for the integrity of a particular trial but also for the perceived fairness of the judicial system as a whole. . . . Indeed, there is no principle that would bar us from exercising our supervisory authority to craft a remedy that might extend beyond the constitutional minimum because articulating a rule of policy and reversing a conviction under our supervisory powers is perfectly in line with the general principle that this court ordinarily invoke[s] [its] supervisory powers to enunciate a rule that is not constitutionally required but that [it] think[s] is preferable as a matter of policy.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Elson, 311 Conn. 726, 764-65, 91 A.3d 862 (2014).
At bottom, the defendant asks us to make mandatory what the legislature, in enacting
Furthermore, in Moore, this court expressed concern with exercising its supervisory authority in a manner that would effectively rewrite the language of
In light of
III
The defendant‘s final claim is that the trial court erred in prohibiting him from inquiring about certain Probate Court matters that he claimed to be relevant to the victim‘s purported bias against him. The state contends, as an initial matter, that because the defendant raises a different claim on appeal than he did at trial, the claim is unreviewable. We agree with the state.
The scope of our appellate review of evidentiary issues on appeal is limited to those issues that were pursued at trial. “Appellate review of evidentiary rulings is ordinarily limited to the specific legal [ground] raised by the objection of trial counsel. . . . To permit a party to raise a different ground on appeal than [that] raised during trial would amount to trial by ambuscade, unfair both to the trial court and to the opposing party.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Bennett, 324 Conn. 744, 761, 155 A.3d 188 (2017).
The following additional background is relevant to our resolution of this claim. On December 6, 2017, during the defendant‘s case-in-chief, the defendant sought to call as a witness Attorney Bryan McEntee, who had been appointed by the Probate Court to represent H. On the state‘s request for an offer of proof as to Attorney McEntee‘s testimony, the defendant proffered three purposes, the second of which is in dispute on appeal.
First, the defendant sought to enter into evidence, through Attorney McEntee, a copy of H‘s passport to show that H was in Jamaica during a particular period of time. The state had no objection.
Second, the defendant sought to offer Attorney McEntee‘s “position about whether [the victim] should be appointed . . . conservator of [H‘s] estate.” When the court questioned the relevance of such evidence, the defendant responded that Attorney McEntee‘s “concern about [the victim‘s] misuse of funds” went to her “truthfulness and trustworthiness,” which, according to the defendant, supported his defense that the victim had fabricated the allegations against him in order to acquire H‘s money and the familial home. The court excluded Attorney McEntee‘s “opinion as to whether [the victim] was misusing funds” as irrelevant and, thus, inadmissible. Notwithstanding the defendant‘s statement in his principal appellate brief that he “is not pursuing the claim that . . . Attorney McEntee‘s opinions regarding [the victim] should have been admitted,” this second category of evidence remains the subject of the defendant‘s evidentiary claim on appeal.
Third, the defendant sought to introduce a bank record indicating that the victim had already paid for H‘s nursing home care in Jamaica before the victim went to Jamaica. According to the defendant, this evidence would demonstrate that the victim lied under oath before the Probate Court when she testified there that her decision with respect to H‘s care was not made until after she visited Jamaica and consulted with her family. The court sustained the state‘s objection on relevance grounds. On appeal, the defendant has expressly abandoned any challenge to the exclusion of this evidence.
On appeal, the defendant claims that the court “wrongly sustained the objection to all evidence regarding the probate matter, wrongly deeming it ‘collateral.’
As our careful review of the trial transcript reveals, the fundamental flaw with the defendant‘s evidentiary claim is that his proffer before the trial court, with respect to the second category of evidence, went no further than to seek Attorney McEntee‘s “position about whether or not [the victim] should also be appointed . . . conservator of the estate,” and “his concern about [the victim‘s] misuse of funds.”16 (Emphasis added.) As stated previously in this opinion, the defendant expressly abandoned in his principal appellate brief “the claim that . . . Attorney McEntee‘s opinions regarding [the victim] should have been admitted.” Accordingly, we conclude that the defendant‘s present claim, which attempts to cast a wider net than the proffer before the trial court, was not raised before the trial court and, therefore, we decline to review it. See State v. Fernando V., 331 Conn. 201, 211-13, 202 A.3d 350 (2019).
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
* In accordance with our policy of protecting the privacy interests of the victims of sexual assault and the crime of risk of injury to a child, we decline to use the defendant‘s full name or to identify the victim or others through whom the victim‘s identity may be ascertained. See
** The listing of judges reflects their seniority status on this court as of the date of oral argument.
Notes
“1. Did the Appellate Court properly conclude that census data pertaining to the entire African-American population in Connecticut and New London county was not probative evidence with respect to the claimed underrepresentation of African-American males in the jury pool?
“2. Did the Appellate Court properly decline, in light of the provisions of
On December 31, 2020, the task force issued its final report, containing recommendations for systemic jury reform in Connecticut. See Jury Selection Task Force, Report of the Jury Selection Task Force to Chief Justice Richard A. Robinson (December 31, 2020), available at https://jud.ct.gov/Committees/jury_taskforce/ReportJurySelectionTaskForce.pdf (last visited April 15, 2021).
