Thе defendant was indicted for the murder of Victoria Stuart in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-54a and 53a-8, and informed against for the attempted murder of Donald Stuart in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-54a and 53a-49. The defendant was found guilty of both charges by a jury. He has appealed from the judgments rendered on the guilty verdicts.
They then went to the apartment of Donald Lawlor. It was about 12:45 a.m. on April 5, 1975. They were both very angry because they thought Donald Stuart had vandalized the defendant’s van. The defendant told Lawlor that they would get Donald Stuart for that. The defendant and Siretz insisted that Lawlor return a gun they had left with Lawlor. Siretz acted out a pantomime depicting how she would “blow Donald Stuart away.” The defеndant and Siretz asked Lawlor what the perfect alibi would be. He suggested cheeking into a hospital. The defendant and Siretz said they were going to “blow . . . Stuart away.” While still at Donald Lawlor’s apartment, the defendant asked Siretz if she knew how to fire a gun. When she answered “yes,” he pointed to his head, between his eyes, and told her to shoot both Donald Stuart and his wife Victoria there to make sure they were dead. The defendant told her to leave the gun under a washing machine at a friend’s building after she
The defendant’s first assignment of error is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss based on the state’s failure to provide him with a speedy trial.
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The defendant was arrested and incarcerated on April 5,1975. His first trial, which ended
The sixth amendment guarantee of a speedy trial is a fundamental right applicable to the states through the fourteenth amendment.
Klopfer
v.
North Carolina,
The state in its brief gives several reasons for the delay: (1) the crowded criminal docket; (2) the complex nature of the case; (3) the need to secure the testimony of Siretz, the young woman who actually fired the shots; 3 (4) the three changes in defense counsel; and (5) scheduling problems due to the fact that this was a jury trial and there were twenty-two witnesses.
In
Barker
v.
Wingo,
supra, 531, it was stated that a neutral reason such as an overcrowded docket should be weighed less heavily than a deliberate attempt to delay on the pant of the state; but nеvertheless, the delay, if for this reason, should be considered since the ultimate responsibility for such circumstances must rest with the state rather than with the defendant. See also
State
v.
Brown,
supra, 536-37. The claim of time spent negotiating with Siretz’ counsel cannot be considered as there is nothing in the record to substantiate this claim. This is not to be construed as disbelief of the state’s assertion in its brief, but rather as a necessary application of appellate procedure that claims made in briefs must be supported by the record.
Furber
v.
Administrator,
“[T]he defendant’s assertion of or failure to assert his right to a speedy trial is one of the factors to be considered in an inquiry into the deprivation of the right.” Barker v. Wingo, supra, 528. According to the record, the defendant first asserted his right to a speedy trial by motion on August 28, 1975, four and one-half months after his arrest. He reasserted this right on four separate occasions. The record contains no indication that, even though defense counsel was changed three different times, the defendant requested any continuances. Thus, no element of waiver operates to weaken the defendant’s claim as far as the change of counsel is concerned. It is to be noted, however, that neither the record nor those portions of the transcript referred to indicate that the motiоns made had significant weight or were not purely pro forma objections. Barker v. Wingo, supra, 529.
The final factor in the balancing test is prejudice to the defendant. “Prejudice, of course, should be assessed in the light of the interests of defendants which the speedy trial right was designed to protect. . . . [The United States Supreme] Court has
In the present case, the defendant claims he was prejudiced by the “oppressive” conditions he had to endure in jail, by the substantial delay itself, and by the inability of two key witnеsses to remember “specifics” about the conversations the defendant and Jean Siretz had with them.
This court is not insensitive to the needs ,and feelings of criminal defendants. While the testimony adduced at the defendant’s bail reduction hearing, however, does not paint a pretty picture of incarceration, it does not describe oppressive conditions that constitute prejudice per se.
Bell
v.
Wolfish,
Further, an important consideration in this regard is the effect, if any, the delay had upon the defendant’s memory or his ability to get witnesses in his behalf. Nowhere do the record or briefs indicate that the defendant’s memory was dimmed as to his whereabouts or activities on the night and morning in question. The portions of the transcript referred to indicate that the defendant’s memory was acute and definitive. The defendant makes no claim that he was unable to obtain any witnesses or any exculpatory evidence because of the delay.
In balancing the factors, it is clear that the length of the delay between the arrest and the trial was substantial. The defendаnt does not claim bad faith on the part of the state, but merely asserts that the delay is attributable to the state. The record supports this claim but it also supports the state’s contention that the delay was not excessive or unreason
The defendant next assigns as error the court’s denial of his petition of nolle. He argues that General Statutes § 54-90 (c) (Rev. to 1977) (now § 54-142a [c]) is applicable and requires the dismissal of the charges against him. The relevant language of the statute is: “Whenever any charge in a criminal ease has been continued in the superior court . . . and a period of thirteen months has elapsed
since the granting
of such continuance during which period there has been no prosecution or other disposition of the matter, the charge shall be construed to have been nolled as of the date of termination of such thirteen-month period . . . .”
In his third assignment of error, the defendant contends that the trial court erred in charging the jury that the intent of the perpetrator of the crime was irrelevant and that the jury should disregard the allegations in the indictment and the information relating to the perpetrator’s intent. The defendant’s attack is two-pronged: first, he claims that the charge was erroneous because it amended the indictment and the informаtion; and second, he contends that it was error as a matter of law for the court to charge that Siretz’ intent was irrelevant.
In its charge, the trial court specifically instructed the jury to disregard the use of the word “intent”
The short answer to the defendant’s claim is that neither the indictment nor the information was amended: the court read to the jury verbatim the indictment returned by the grand jury and the information prepared by the state’s attorney and the jury had the unaltered documents with them during their deliberations.
State
v.
Edwards,
The main thrust of the defendant’s argument is that the court, by charging that Siretz’ intent was irrelevant, excused the state from proving one of the essential elements of the crimes charged in contravention of
In re Winship,
The defendant was charged as a principal with murder and attempted murder under § 53a-8 of the General Statutes. In the indictment, information
In its charge, the court instructed the jury that General Statutes §53a-9 6 governed the situation and that “the mental state or intent of Miss Siretz is irrelevant.” He went on to note that: “You may disregard that word ‘intent’ ,as far as she is concerned. Her intent is not a necessary element. . . . It is surplusage in the indictment.”
While conceding that under
State
v.
Griffin,
supra, the state did not have to prove that Siretz had the capacity to formulate the intent necessary to convict her of murdеr, the defendant argues that Siretz’ intent or lack thereof was relevant since under § 53a-8, as interpreted by
State
v.
Griffin,
supra, and
State
v.
Teart,
The defendant’s fourth claim of error is that the court erred in admitting a prior consistent statement of the state’s principal witness, Jean Siretz, to rehabilitate her credibility. She testified for the state that she actually shot the Stuarts but that the defendant instructed her to do so. To impeach her credibility, the defense, during cross-examination,
On redirect examination, when the state sought to offer into evidence, a third statement given on April 7, 1975, defense counsel objected to it on several grounds, among them that it was inadmissible hearsay because it was made subsequent to the prior inconsistent statements by which she was impeached. The court allowed the state to introduce the statement on the ground that prior consistent statements can be used to rehabilitate a witness’ credibility, regardless of when the inconsistent statements were made.
The defendant urges us to adopt the rule that when the testimony of a witness is impeached by a prior inconsistent statement, the prior consistent statement, to be admissible, must have been made prior to the statements by which the witness was impeached or before there was inducement to make them because of pressure or personal interest. The аnnotation in
The third statement was consistent with Siretz’ in-court testimony.
7
It was introduced to rehabilitate the witness, not to establish the truth of her prior in-court testimony. Moreover, the trial court, in its charge to the jury, made it clear that this third statement was admitted on the issue of credi
In the present case, the sequence of the statements involved is unimportant. All three statements were made less than forty-eight hours after the crime occurred and more than twenty-one months prior to her testimony at the trial. The first statement was made before Siretz was arrested, when she stated that neither she nor the defendant was involved in the crime. The second statement was made on the day she was arrested and after she had been told that the defendant had implicated her. In
It is not unusual for an accused to make inconsistent statements concerning the innocence or guilt of himself or his accomplices prior to, at, and shortly after an arrest, especially when it becomes apparent that the authorities have learned of evidence implicating the accused and his accomplice.
All three statements are part and parcel of Siretz’ utterancеs made at or near the time of arrest. There is no hint in the portion of the transcript referred to us by the defendant that any promise or arrangement was made with the state to induce a change of statement other than the interrogation commonly present at or near the time of arrest. It is true that between the first and second statements, she was told that the defendant had implicated her; however, she still made the second statement exonerating the defendant and implicating herself. There is nothing in the record or the portion of the transcript referred to us by the defendant to indicate any motive, bias or interest which occurred between the second and third statement that would taint it with revenge or self-interest.
As all of the statements may be considered as having been made at or about the same time, the issue of sequence is not critical. Requiring that the prior consistent statement be made before a prior inconsistent statement is “ ‘an unnecessary refinement.’ ”
United States
v.
Scholle,
This is not inconsistent with the recent holding in
State
v.
Dolphin,
The defendant’s final claim of error is that the court erroneously admitted testimony that tended to show prior criminal misconduct on the part of the defendant. On direct examination, Siretz testified that she met the defendant in October of 1973, and that she saw him in Brooklyn, New York, a few days later. She was then asked when she next saw him and over objection and exception was allowed to answer that she saw him in the Brooklyn House of Detention for Men in Brooklyn, New York. Later, on direct, in explaining why she, and not the defendant, shot the Stuarts, she stated that she had asked the defendant, “Why can’t you do it?” and he had replied, “I’m in enough trouble with New York.” When she was asked what that response meant or referred to, upon objection, the jury was excused. On voir dire, she testified that the defendant had told her he had shot his wife. Defense counsel objected to the admission of this testimony on the grounds that: Siretz was incompetent to testify as
Criminal cases, by their very nature, are fertile ground for prior misconduct evidence. Thus, this court has repeatedly faced this issue and has laid down rather explicit rules for evaluating the admissibility of this type of evidence. “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.
Holliday,
The central issue in this trial was not whether the defendant actually pulled the trigger and shot the Stuarts, but whether he, exerting control over Jean Siretz, planned the shootings and aided and abetted her in committing them. To this end, evidence that the defendant was already “in trouble” for another shooting was highly relevant to establishing a motive for the reason why the defendant had Siretz carry out the act while he attempted to secure an alibi for himself. It also was relevant to establishing the existenсe of a preconceived plan, the existence of which w,a.s necessary to show a unity of purpose on the part of the defendant and Siretz.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Although the denial of a motion to dismiss is ordinarily not assignable as error;
State
v.
Peay,
4/22/75 Bench warrant issued. Bond $200,000.
4/23/75 Bench warrant returned. Advice of rights.
4/23/75 Bond review - continued on same bond of $200,000.
4/24/75 Motion for bill of particulars filed.
4/24/75 Motion for discovery filed.
5/2/75 Motion for bill of particulars and motion for discovery partially granted.
6/4/75 Motion for separate grand jury proceedings filed and denied.
6/9/75 Motion addressed to grand jury proceedings filed and denied.
6/9/75 True bill returned by grand jury; case continued for plea to 6/11/75.
6/11/75 Arraignment continued to 6/13/75 to permit appearance by special public defеnder.
6/11/75 Bill of particulars filed.
6/11/75 Disclosure filed.
6/11/75 Attorney Joseph Brophy appointed special public defender.
6/13/75 Plea to first count - pleaded not guilty - election: jury of 12 - date: 7/10/75.
6/13/75 Bond review continued on same bond of $200,000 without prejudice.
7/8/75 Motion to quash the indictment.
8/13/75 Motion to quash the indictment denied.
8/28/75 Motion for speedy trial filed.
9/16/75 Motion for speedy trial denied.
12/19/75 Motion to dismiss filed.
1/21/76 Oral motion to reduce bond granted. Bond reduced to $150,000 and jail notified.
6/16/76 Motions to dismiss filed.
7/20/76 June 16 motions to dismiss denied.
9/15/76 Motion to dismiss filed.
9/15/76 Petition for nolle filed.
9/30/76 September 15 motion to dismiss and petition for nolle denied.
11/3/76 Oral renewal of motions “to dismiss” and “petition to nolle” denied.
11/8/76 List of jurors filed.
11/16/76 Mistrial granted.
The state claims that it had to negotiate through her counsel to effectuate a modus vivendi so that her testimony would be available at trial.
Jean Siretz pleaded guilty and was sentenced on November 5, 1976.
In regard to the indictment, the court said: “You may disregard thаt word 'intent’ as far as she is concerned. Her intent is not a necessary element. It is unnecessary. It is surplusage in the indictment.” In regard to the information, the court charged: “Now again, you may disregard, the word 'intent’ as far as Miss Siretz is concerned. Because of Section 53a-9 it is not a necessary element for the State to prove under these circumstances. It is surplusage in the information.”
“[General Statutes] See. 53a-9. lack of criminal responsibility; ABSENCE OF PROSECUTION OR CONVICTION NOT A DEFENSE. In any prosecution for an offense in which the criminal liability of the defendant is based upon the conduct of another person under section 53a-8 it shall not be a defense that: (1) Such other person is not guilty оf the offense in question because of lack of criminal responsibility or legal capacity or awareness of the criminal nature of the conduct in question or of the defendant’s criminal purpose or because of other factors precluding the mental state required for the commission of the offense in question . . . .”
See
People
v.
Manson,
In her third statement, Siretz stated that she shot Donald and Victoria; that she wore gloves and later hid them; that for a week before the crime, the defendant had been telling her that he wanted Donald Stuart dead; that the defendant told her where they could get a gun; that the defendant thought that Donald Stuart had broken the windshield of his van; that the defendant was the one who asked Lawlor for the gun; that the defendant looked to see if the gun was loaded and asked her if she knew how to use it; that the defendant asked her if she knew what to do; that the defendant told her to
Defense counsel interrogated her about the inconsistent statements which she allegedly made after April 5 and about her discussions with the state’s attorney’s office, raising the inference that she had fitted her testimony so suit the needs of the prosecution. She was asked about the discussion she had had with her supervisor at the Connecticut Correctional Institution, Niantie. She was questioned extensively about the arrangement whereby she had pled to a manslaughter and an assault charge for shooting the Stuarts. Defense counsel, through a series of questions, established her early parole date. Implications were made that the state had prevailed upon her to testify favorably to its interests. She was questioned about her use of LSD.
