41 Conn. App. 169 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1996
The defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of burglary in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-102. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly admitted evidence of his prior acts of misconduct. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. The victim, Cindy Askew, a nineteen year old female, lived in a two-story row house located in the Southfield Village housing project in Stamford, along with her mother, grandmother and two younger brothers. The area is highly populated. The victim’s house is an end unit and the victim had her own bedroom on the second floor. The room had one window, which had a broken lock. The window was recessed in the wall, forming a sill. The victim’s bed was located against the wall with the foot of the bed in front of the window. Below and to the left of the window on the outside was a small awning that covered the front entrance of the house. A forty-three inch high fence extended out from the house next to the front door. At night, the area is brightly lit. A high intensity sodium light is affixed to the outside of the victim’s house four feet from her bedroom window. Two additional high intensity lights are located about forty-seven feet from the bedroom window on a lamp post.
The victim screamed, got out of bed, unlocked the bedroom door and ran to her mother’s bedroom. She called the police from her mother’s room. The police arrived at 4:50 a.m. The intruder was described as a black male with dark skin and short hair on his head and face. He appeared to be between twenty-five and thirty-five years of age, and was wearing a dark jacket with a light-colored collar, a white scarf and tan pants. The police were unable to locate anyone fitting that description in the immediate area. The intruder gained entrance to the victim’s bedroom by climbing onto the fence and then onto the awning.
Approximately two or three weeks after the incident, the victim saw the intruder standing near a playground in Southfield Village. A few weeks later, she saw him at a bus stop in Southfield Village. The police were unable to locate the intruder on either occasion. On May 5,1992, the victim selected the defendant’s picture from a photographic array and identified him as the man who had climbed in her window on January 12, 1992. The victim did not know the defendant but she did know his sisters and mother. The victim also made a positive in-court identification.
The defendant claims that the trial court improperly admitted evidence of his prior misconduct. During the state’s case-in-chief, the prosecuting attorney sought to introduce evidence of the factual basis that led to the
In an offer of proof, the state presented the testimony of B,
On the night of March 5,1982, B went to bed between 11:30 p.m. and midnight. She was alone in her bedroom, and her mother and younger sister were also in the house. B had two windows in her bedroom and left one open one inch. This window had a roof beneath it, and below that roof was an awning that covered an entrance to the residence. She also left the window shade up so that air could get into her room. Light came into the room from a light post outside the window. Numerous other lights illuminated the area around her house.
Sometime prior to 2:20 a.m. on March 6, B woke up and felt someone on top of her. She had been sleeping on her stomach, and the intruder turned her over onto her back. B started to scream, and the intruder told her to shut up or he would kill her. The intruder put his hands around her neck and choked her. He then used one hand to rip off her underwear and stuffed a sock in her mouth. The intruder pushed B’s legs apart with his legs and raped her. He choked her throughout the rape until she almost passed out.
When the intruder had finished raping B, he told her to stay in bed or he would kill her. He then climbed
B believed that the man who raped her was the defendant, Jonathan Henry, but she was too afraid to tell this to the police. B had previously seen the defendant around her neighborhood and knew his sisters, but she was not acquainted with him. Two days after the rape, B saw the defendant standing in front of a building in Southfield Village and identified him as the man who had attacked her. B subsequently selected the defendant’s photograph from an array of photographs and later made an in-court identification of the defendant as the man who had raped her on March 6, 1982.
Following the state’s offer of proof and the arguments of counsel, the court indicated that it would reserve decision until the following day but advised that if it decided to permit the state to introduce the prior crime evidence, it would limit B’s testimony regarding the sexual assault in response to the defendant’s claim that the circumstances of the crime were inflammatory. The court stated: “If I were to allow this evidence in, I’d find the following circumstances as far as similarities go, because the question might come in, why would someone enter a building in a highly populated area, well lit, comer buildings on streets in Southfield Village at this hour in the night through the second floor in a building that is occupied?”
The trial court then stated what it considered to be the similarities in that “(1) both homes were in Southfield Village and were occupied at the time of the break-in; (2) in both cases, entiy was made during the early morning hours; (3) both houses were end units in buildings located on public streets; (4) in each case, entry
The trial court stated: “So there are, despite the defendant’s contention to the court, extraordinary and striking similarities of a bold entry in a public, [illuminated] area of a corner building on a second floor in early morning hours, into a room, occupied by a young female, by someone agile enough to climb onto the roof and get into the building. . . . [M]y present thinking is these circumstances are very similar, strikingly so. So I would not call this a run of the mill-type entry in the night season — usually those entries are made in covert situations, in dark places that are not illuminated, when one is sure that the building may not be occupied or the residents may be asleep. In each case, the victim was asleep, and was awakened by the intruder. So there are striking similarities.”
The court noted that, in regard to identity, the circumstances were “strikingly similar” and that “the person who committed the previous crime in a rather extraordinary manner and was identified by that previous victim, may very well be the person who committed the present crime in the same extraordinary manner. At least it’s something for the jury to give consideration to.” Regarding intent, the court stated: “[T]he state must prove that the defendant had some intent. And evidence of having
On the following day, the court ruled: “After considering this matter overnight, I have determined that the similarities between the incident described by [B] and the incident and the description in the present case by the present victim are so unique, as to warrant a reasonable inference that the person who performed one [misdeed] also did the other, if the jury [decides] to give credit to the testimony of [B]. . . . In balancing the issue as to the probative value of this matter, together with the prejudicial effect of the introduction of the evidence, I’m going to limit the testimony of [B] to those aspects of her experience that would weigh on the two issues that the state claims that this testimony’s being introduced for. That is for identity and for intent. . . . Insofar as the state claims that the intent which the evidence is being introduced for would be intent to commit a sexual assault, I’m going to limit [B’s] testimony, not to the horrendous experience she underwent with regard to the actual actions, but to a statement that she was threatened and assaulted sexually, period, without describing the course of conduct that occurred. ... I believe that that will remove some of the prejudicial aspects of the introduction of the earlier evidence. Also, there is a time gap of almost ten years. Now, the court is cognizant, but the jury will not be made aware of the fact that most of that time was accounted for by the defendant being incarcerated for various other crimes; not only the [B] crime, but for other offenses. The jury will not, unless on some other basis, hear about these previous convictions. And I will instruct the jury that [the] passage of ten years might very well affect [B’s] ability to adequately recollect the
“Finally, I will give a specific charge, both at the time of the introduction of [B’s] testimony, and at the time of the final charge, that will limit their consideration of that testimony, solely for the purposes for which it was introduced. So, I think, under these circumstances, the probative value being offered, especially with regard to the establishment of identity, limited as I have indicated I will limit it, and surrounded by the specific instructions, [out]weighs the prejudicial value, obviously, that any of the introduction of testimony would have.”
Prior to the introduction of B’s testimony, the trial court instructed the jurors that her testimony was not to be considered by them for the purpose of showing that the defendant is of bad character, or has a propensity or disposition to commit crimes of any sort. The court concluded: “[T]he state has offered this and is offering this testimony, and you may consider it only insofar as it might assist you in determining one or more of the elements of a crime. And specifically the state claims, and it is only the claim of the state, that [B’s] testimony might be of assistance to you in determining the identity of the assailant in the present case, or the intent of the assailant in the present case, if you find it was of the alleged burglar in the present case, or the intent of the alleged burglar in the present case, if you find there was such a person.”
Following B’s testimony, the trial court instructed the jury that her testimony “has not been admitted, nor should you consider it, for the purpose of showing that the defendant in this case is a man of bad character, or a man who has a propensity or disposition to commit
The defendant claims that the trial court improperly admitted the evidence of the sexual assault of B either as to identity or as to intent.
“ ‘As a general proposition, evidence of guilt of other crimes, because of its prejudicial nature is inadmissible to prove that a defendant is guilty of the crimes with which he is charged.’ ” State v. Baldwin, 224 Conn. 347, 354, 618 A.2d 513 (1993). Evidence of a defendant’s prior misconduct is admissible provided that it is relevant and material to intent, identity, malice, motive, a system of criminal activity or the elements of a crime and, also, that the probative value of that evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect. State v. Cooper, 227 Conn. 417, 424-25, 630 A.2d 1043 (1993). The determination of whether the probative value of evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect is made in the exercise of judicial discretion, and will not be disturbed on appeal absent clear abuse of discretion, with every reasonable presumption given in favor of the trial court’s ruling. State v. Woodson, 227 Conn. 1, 17, 629 A.2d 386 (1993).
Our review of the record leads us to conclude that the trial court properly determined that evidence of the sexual assault of B was relevant and material to the issue of identity. While no one circumstance is sufficiently unique to warrant an inference, we nevertheless recognize, as did the trial court, the distinctive combination of circumstances that may justify such an inference by the trier of fact. Both victims were nineteen year old black females who knew the defendant’s sisters, and both were able to identify the intruder as a black male with short hair on his head and face. In addition,
In balancing the probative value of the evidence against its prejudicial tendency, the trial court considered the probability and degree to which the jury might be inflamed by the evidence, and ruled that B’s testimony concerning the assault would be limited to the fact that the defendant had threatened and sexually assaulted her, without any additional details. The court also ruled that the jury would not be informed that the defendant had been convicted of and incarcerated for other crimes.
We conclude that the trial court acted properly and did not abuse its discretion in determining that the evidence was relevant and material and that the probative value of the witness’ testimony outweighed any potential prejudicial effect on the jury.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
We protect the identity of the victim, as did the trial court.
Having so concluded, we find it unnecessary to review the court’s determination that evidence of the sexual assault of B was relevant and material to the issue of intent.
The fact of the defendant’s arrest and subsequent conviction for the sexual assault of B was also not disclosed to the jury.
The defendant does not raise remoteness as an issue of relevancy; he concedes that, he was incarcerated during most of those ten years.
The court, instructed the jury, before and after B’s testimony and again in the final charge, that this testimony could not be considered for the purpose of showing that the defendant was a person of bad character or
“So in the event there was any misunderstanding about what I said on the drawing of inferences, I tell you now that just because you find [B’s] testimony believable and credible, it does not necessarily require that you would draw any inference with regard to the situation involving the present crime alleged on behalf of [this victim]. You may draw that inference if you find that you can draw such an inference logically and credibly, but you are not mandated to draw any such inference.”