261 A.2d 547 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1969
The defendant has moved to dismiss the information. The motion is in three parts. Part A alleges that the state's attorneys are appointed by the judges of the Superior Court and are members of the judicial department and that the assignment of criminal cases for the purposes of motions, pleas, trials and dispositions is made by the state's attorney's office rather than by the clerk. The defendant claims that the method of appointment of state's attorneys violates the separation of powers doctrine of the constitution and that the method of handling criminal cases deprives the defendant of an adversary due process hearing. Part B alleges that the prosecution of this case resulted from an inquiry pursuant to General Statutes §
Although criminal matters are not always assigned in a formal manner like civil cases, they are at all times subject to the control and order of the court as to assignment and priority of hearings and trials, as well as to the granting of continuances. Because criminal cases must be all tried by the state's attorney or his assistant, rather than by different individual attorneys, and because the state's attorney in these times is involved in the prosecution of many different cases, hearings and trials of such cases cannot be arbitrarily assigned. They must be set down for hearing at times that are reasonable to both the state and the accused. There has not been any showing in this case that the defendant has not been accorded due process or that any unfair practice has been used in his case. *357
Neither the method of appointing state's attorneys nor the method of assigning cases for hearing and trial constitutes sufficient grounds for defendant's motion to dismiss.
Although the defendant was not subject to a "custodial police interrogation," the warning given was adequate, in any event. State v. Benitez,
The application for a bench warrant was accompanied by two affidavits by a police officer. One of them refers to the report of the referee who made the inquiry pursuant to General Statutes §
The motion to dismiss is denied.