Opinion
The defendant, Ricardo Pereira, appeals from a judgment of conviction after a jury trial for murder and kidnapping in the first degree in violation
The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. At the time of the incident giving rise to his convictions, the defendant was distraught because his former girlfriend had terminated their relationship. The defendant “still wanted to be with [her, but] she didn’t want anything to do with [him].” In the wake of this loss, the defendant spent a great deal of his free time at William MacLellan’s small basement apartment in Waterbury. Through MacLellan, the defendant met the victim, Lisa Orgnon, in October, 1997. Over the course of approximately one month, the defendant and the victim socialized at drinking establishments in the Waterbury area “a couple of times.” The victim, MacLellan and the defendant planned to spend the evening of November 18, 1997, together.
At roughly 9 p.m. on the evening of the incident, the victim, MacLellan, and the defendant walked from MacLellan’s apartment to “Champ’s Cafe.” They shared four pitchers of beer, “did some shots of Goldschlager”
At MacFairlawn’s, MacLellan and the victim continued to play billiards and the defendant ordered another pitcher of Heineken beer and “stayed at the bar and talked to the bartender.” The three left the bar together at closing time and drove back to MacLellan’s apartment. At this point, MacLellan decided to turn in for the evening. The defendant asked the victim to accompany him to a movie theater that he used to frequent near his former girlfriend’s Southington home. The defendant “knew [the theater] was closed” before he suggested the excursion. The victim drove the defendant to the theater at 2 a.m., at which time she learned that the theater was closed while the defendant feigned surprise.
The defendant then told the victim to “drive around” and, keeping their destination a secret, directed her to an area of Southington which he knew to be his former girlfriend’s neighborhood. He did not inform the victim that his former girlfriend lived in the area. Moments later, they were driving down the defendant’s former girlfriend’s residential street. As they passed by her house, the defendant reached across the victim’s seat and hit her steering wheel as she was trying to drive, blasting the vehicle’s horn in order to disturb his ex-girlfriend’s household after 2 a.m. The defendant then ordered the victim to stop the vehicle on an adjoining street, Autran Avenue.
In addition to the injuries from the previous punching and strangling, the vehicle mangled and crushed the victim’s body. Evidence introduced at trial established that the victim sustained multiple blunt force trauma to her head and face, including a large and deep L-shaped laceration to her entire right cheek, and another laceration above her right eye. Her nose was scored and abraded, her lips and right forehead were bruised, and the entire left side of her face, from her chin to her ear, was scraped deep purple. Two major lacerations split the back of the victim’s head, straight through to her skull. A mass of blood pooled at the back of the victim’s head, between her skull and scalp. Inside, a film of blood covered the victim’s brain, which had suffered heavy bruising. In addition to the injuries to the victim’s neck due to strangulation, the vehicle caused linear abrasions to her neck. The victim suffered extensive blunt force trauma to her chest. Her rib cage was crushed, with fractures at the front and back. Both of her lungs were severely bruised in the process, filling with almost a pint of blood. Lower in the victim’s abdomen, her liver was “essentially tom in half.”
The victim, Orgnon, died in the early morning of November 19,1997. The medical examiner certified the cause of death to be “multiple blunt force trauma of the head and chest.” The medical examiner found no sign of any natural cause that would otherwise account for her death.
It was life as usual for the defendant that day. He awoke at the ordinary time and arrived at the site of his job with his father’s construction company. However, after the victim’s mother reported the victim missing, the Naugatuck police interrupted the defendant’s schedule, asking him for information.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder and kidnapping in the first degree. The defendant was sentenced to a total effective sentence of seventy-five years imprisonment. Further facts and procedural history will be set forth where necessary.
First, we take up the defendant’s claim that the state committed prosecutorial misconduct during cross-
The defendant did not raise these prosecutorial misconduct issues at trial. The defendant seeks to prevail, nonetheless, under State v. Golding,
We first set forth our standard of review for claims of prosecutorial misconduct. “To prove prosecutorial misconduct, the defendant must demonstrate substantial prejudice. ... In order to demonstrate this, the defendant must establish that the trial as a whole was fundamentally unfair and that the misconduct so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the conviction a denial of due process.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Singh,
“Prosecutorial misconduct may occur in the course of cross-examination of witnesses; State v. Hafner,
“ [Pjrosecutorial misconduct of constitutional proportions may [also] arise during the course of closing argument, thereby implicating the fundamental fairness of the trial . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Singh, supra,
In determining whether a defendant’s right to a fair trial has been violated, “[w]e do not focus alone . . . on the conduct of the prosecutor. The fairness of the trial and not the culpability of the prosecutor is the standard for analyzing the constitutional due process claims of criminal defendants alleging prosecutorial misconduct. State v. Palmer,
“In determining whether prosecutorial misconduct was so serious as to amount to a denial of due process, [our Supreme Court], in conformity with courts in other
The defendant first argues that the state should not have asked the defendant to comment on the veracity of other witnesses. While we agree that some of the state’s questions were improper, we hold that the impropriety did not cause substantial prejudice. It is not reasonably possible, given the strong physical evidence of the defendant’s guilt that “the improprieties in the cross-examination either contributed to the jury’s verdict of guilty or . . . foreclosed the jury from ever considering the possibility of acquittal.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 539.
The following additional facts are relevant to our resolution of this issue. When the defendant took the stand in his own defense, he testified inconsistently with signed and oral statements that the police said he had given. As a result, his testimony contradicted the
At one point, the defendant denied knowing in advance that the movie theater to which he and the victim had driven on the evening in question would be closed before they arrived. The state challenged this testimony as follows:
“Q. And, one of the things that Detective Shanley testified to is that you told him that you knew that the movie theaters were closed that night?
“A. No, sir. I never told him that.
“Q. Okay. So, when Detective Shanley puts that in his report, he’s filing a false report, isn’t he?
“A. I never said that to him.
“Q. Well, that’s not my question. My question is, if he puts that in his report, that’s false, isn’t it?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Okay. And, when Detective Shanley takes the witness stand, and sits in the very chair that you are in, and swears under oath to the truth, and he says that you told him that, Detective Shanley is lying, isn’t hel
“A. Yes, sir.
íjí if:
“Q. So, you never said that?” (Emphasis added.)
“Q. Okay. So, they made that part [of your written statement] up?
“A. Well, I told them we did go to Showcase [Cinemas], yes.
“Q. What about the part whether or not you knew it was closed?
“A. No, I never told them that, no.” (Emphasis added.)
Later, the state challenged the defendant’s current version of the incident itself. On direct examination, the defendant had stated: “You know, I just — I just lost control. And I just began, I began to swing at her and she just tried to get away.” Defense counsel specifically asked the defendant, “Did you strike at her?” and the defendant responded, “Yes, sir.” In a written statement taken by the Waterbury police, the defendant stated: “I don’t know why but I started punching Lisa in her face and head even though she had done nothing wrong. I punched her four or five times and she jumped out of the car.” In an oral statement to the police, the defendant had stated that he clenched his hands around the victim’s neck and choked her for the dual purpose of preventing her escape and injuring her. On cross-examination, however, the defendant reversed his position on these points, stating that he never choked the victim or punched her, but had merely slapped her a single time. The defendant stated:
“A. It was more of like pushing . . . more pushing her away.
* * *
“Q. Okay. So more of a push. Okay. So you slapped her once, and then pushed her.
“A. Yes.”
The state tested the credibility of this more recent testimony as follows:
“Q. Now, if you recall, you made a statement to the Waterbury detectives, correct?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And, in that statement, do you recall telling the detectives, I don’t know why, but I started punching Lisa in her face and head, even though she had done nothing wrong. I punched her four or five times?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Okay. Did you say that to the Waterbury detectives?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Now, when you gave that statement, they testified that you’d been read your rights, twice. And, do you remember having them read you your rights?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. . . . [Y]ou swore to the truth of this. You’ve raised your right hand, and swore to it, didn’t you?
“A. No, not to that, no.
^ ^ ^
“Q. And, they testified that you swore to the truth of that statement, that I’ve just made reference to?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Okay. So you didn’t [do] that either?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Okay. So, when Officer Clary and Coyle and Shan-ley testified, that you swore to the truth of that, that was not accurate?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Okay. And, you never told them, that you hit her four or five times, correct?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Okay. Now, Detective Shanley and Sergeant Palm-ieri also said that you told them on the ride back, in the cruiser, that you choked her. You had your hands around her neck, and you were trying to stop her from getting away. And you were choking her. Did you tell Detective Shanley and Sergeant Palmieri that?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. So, when they came in, and they testified, and they sat in that chair that you were in, and were under oath, that you said that, they were lying?
“A. I never said that to him.
“Q. That makes them liars, doesn’t it?
“A. I’m not here to judge anybody.
“Q. That’s very true, isn’t it. In fact, they were lying, weren’t they?
“A. I never said that to them, no.
* * *
“Q. But there’s no possible way that you could have choked her?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. That’s something you’d remember?
“A. Yes, sir.” (Emphasis added.)
The state later asked whether the entire confession during the defendant’s drive with the Southington police “was completely made up” by the police. The defendant replied that he was “quiet the whole ride” and that the
The state also cross-examined the defendant about his testimony that he did not kick the victim while she lay bleeding in the street after he ran her over with her own car and “dragged her up the road.” In his written statement to the Waterbury police, the defendant had stated, “I stopped the car- and got out and kicked her in her face and body about five or six more times. Lisa wasn’t moving at all now.” That statement was followed by the defendant’s handwritten initials. The state cross-examined the defendant about this subject matter as follows:
“Q. Now, you gave a statement to the Waterbury police department. And in your statement, what you say is, I stopped the car and got out and kicked her in her face and body about five or six more times. Lisa wasn’t moving at all now. And your testimony here, today, is that you never kicked her?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. Now, do you remember giving that statement to the Waterbury police?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. You have no recollection, whatsoever, [of] giving that statement to the Waterbury police department?
“A. Never told them that. No, sir.
“Q. Okay. And, with respect to that statement, you’ve already testified that you never swore to the truth of that statement. The officers were not being truthful when they said that you had?
“A. No, sir.
* * *
“Q. Okay. So is your testimony, here today, and I want you to listen to this carefully. Is your testimony here today, that you didn’t tell the Waterbury police detectives, Officers Clary and Coyle, that you kicked her? Or is your testimony here today, that you can’t recall telling them that you kicked her?
“A. I never told them that I kicked her.
“Q. Okay. So, they fabricated that part of your statement, as well? . . .
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. They made it up?
“A. I never told them that, sir.
“Q. All right. And so they made it up?
“A. I never told them that, yes.” (Emphasis added.)
The state also asked the defendant to explain a discrepancy concerning whether he had returned to the location where he dumped the victim’s car. In the same written statement, the defendant stated that he returned to the vehicle on the following day to remove bloody clothing that he had hidden under the seat. The defendant denied this on the witness stand. The state asked:
“Q. So where it says that you went back to maybe retrieve bloody clothes in the vehicle, that’s made up, correct?
“A. Yes, sir.” (Emphasis added.)
In light of the inconsistencies between the defendant’s written statement and recent testimony, the state asked the defendant whether he had any “inkling idea how that document came to be prepared?” The defendant responded, “I mean, I told them, I told them my
“Q. So, when the Waterbury officers got up and testified how that document came to be prepared, they were lying?
“A. I never said that to them, no.” (Emphasis added.)
The state then began to lead the defendant through the statement, paragraph by paragraph, and asked whether the defendant had told the police the substance of it. At first, the defendant attempted to advert to his current testimony, but the state considered this nonre-sponsive. The testimony was as follows:
“A. I just spoke to the statement I gave them, was what I spoke here today. [Sic.]
“Q. Okay. Well, that’s a good answer. But it’s not the answer to my question. My question is, did you tell them that?”
The defendant finally answered that he had relayed one piece of information in that paragraph, but that the remainder was false. Subsequent testimony revealed, however, that the defendant wanted to modify this position, admitting that he had relayed to the police another fact that appeared in that paragraph. This testimony was as follows:
“Q. Okay. And you did not tell them that you had taken Lisa out a few times?
“A. Yeah, that was discussed.
“Q. Okay. Well, you just told me the only part of that paragraph you told them was about [your former girlfriend]?
“A. Well, I didn’t give this statement, so.”
The state’s frustration reached a nadir:
“Q. Okay. But you understand, I’m asking you questions about this statement?
“A. Yes, but I—
“Q. And we’re going to go through it, and I’m going to find out what you told them, and what all those police officers were lying about. Okay? So we’re going to go through this?
“A. Well, I never—
“Q. And it might be quicker if you answer my questions?”
As the state ventured into the substance of the statement related to the incident itself, it asked the following:
“Q. Now, we’re on page two of a four page statement, right?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And, at this point, it seems that there have been a lot of lies, in connection with other witness’ testimony. Is that accurate?
“A. I can’t answer for no one else.” (Emphasis added.)
The state’s questioning in which it sought to force the defendant to characterize other witnesses as “liars” or their testimony as “lies” is improper under our Supreme Court’s recent holding in State v. Singh, supra,
In the context of the entire trial, however, these instances of improper questioning did not cause substantial prejudice or undermine the fairness of the trial. To assess whether substantial prejudice flowed from the misconduct, we.first consider the factors suggested in State v. Williams, supra,
As the quoted extracts show, the misconduct was relatively frequent throughout cross-examination. The state asked the defendant whether other witnesses were “liars” or “lying” eight times. The state asked the defendant whether other witnesses had “made up” or “fabricated” conflicting evidence six times. The misconduct was also relatively severe. It pushed the defendant to condemn and characterize the testimony of others as lies, and their very nature as “liars.” The defendant did not object or request curative measures and the court did not give any curative instruction. The improper questions do not appear to have been invited by the conduct of defense counsel. The misconduct was addressed largely to the written and oral confessions that the defendant made to the police, an important part of the state’s case. There was, however, much other overwhelming evidence of guilt apart from the defendant’s inculpatory pretrial statements.
The misconduct was not prejudicial. The state’s case against the defendant was strong, absent any unfair
First of all, the universe of physical evidence admitted in this case indicates unequivocally that the defendant engaged in a prolonged series of brutal assaults of the victim prior to her death; the defendant’s version of the confrontation as a single slap followed by a push is flatly contradicted. Dr. Edward T. McDonough, deputy chief medical examiner, testified at length about several injuries to the victim which strongly support the inference that the defendant did, in fact, strangle her. For example, McDonough found that the victim suffered petechial hemorrhages to the conjunctiva, i.e. the lining, of both eyes: an injury which is “consistent with choking.” The cartilage of the victim’s larynx, i.e. “voice box”, was fractured and the strap muscles in her neck were hemorrhaged. These injuries also indicated strangulation. The defendant himself had physical injuries consistent with a sustained struggle. The defendant had scratches on his neck, shoulders, back and flank. McDo-nough took fingernail scrapings from the victim and nine of her ten fingernails later tested positive for the presence of blood. There was no evidence that the victim had burrowed nine of her ten fingernails into any other person’s skin that evening, and the defendant’s own trial testimony indicated that she was in his presence the entire evening and following morning until she perished. The defendant attempted to explain away his physical scratch wounds by saying that he had been in a fight with his father that same evening. But the defendant’s father denied that any such fight took place, and no physical evidence indicating that the father had been in a fight was introduced. The physical evidence presented was thus consistent with the defendant’s having received these scratches from the victim’s attempts to defend herself from his attacks. Further, the defen
The defendant’s version of having accidentally run the victim over is also contradicted by the physical evidence. On the stand, the defendant testified that after the victim fled the car, he simply did not notice where she went, and somehow accidentally ran her over with the car. The defendant claimed that he had no way of knowing he had run her over until he heard a curious “bump” from the back of the car. Forensic evidence of the caí’ and victim, however, revealed that the car hit the victim head-on, with its front bumper and front wheel. This was consistent with the defendant’s earlier pretrial statements, which he denied on the witness stand, that he purposely chased and ran the victim down with her own car as she fled for her life. McDonough discovered a compound lower leg fracture, nine inches
Further still, the physical evidence supported the state’s theory that the defendant had kicked the victim in the head after running her down with her own car. The defendant stated on the witness stand that he had done no such thing, denying that he even made his earlier statement that he had “kicked her in the head.” Acting on a search warrant, the state seized the sneakers that the defendant was wearing that evening and conducted forensic testing. A scientist at the forensic biology unit of the state forensic science laboratory recovered hair from the defendant’s left sneaker. Under a comparison microscope, the hair had characteristics identical to a known sample taken from the victim’s head during autopsy. This scientist testified that she had never seen a false match in her fifteen years of experience. This evidence of kicking the victim in the head, after she had had already been run over by a car,
The jury reasonably could have found that the defendant’s concerted effort to hide the victim’s body and dump her vehicle coupled with his failure to contact any emergency personnel also evinced his consciousness of guilt. If the entire calamity were, as the defendant most recently testified, an accident, he would be less likely to secret her body, dispose of the car, and lie to the Naugatuck police about having no idea what could have happened to her. The defendant deliberately kept the homicide a secret, leaving the victim’s family to search for her frantically until her dead body was discovered by chance almost thirty-six hours later.
Finally, the raw incredibility of the defendant’s testimony on its own terms concerning the incident also lessens the impact of the state’s improper cross-examination. The idea that the defendant simply did not see the victim in front of the car he was driving, and somehow hit her only with the rear of the car, is illogical. The defendant testified that the victim was “g[etting] away” from him after he had struck her. The idea that he simply did “not notice” that she was running down the road in front of the car is implausible. The concept that he, for some urgent need unrelated to a desire to run her over, coincidentally sped down the road at her is not credible. The idea that his first realization of hitting anything was a curious bump at the rear of the car is unbelievable. Her body would not, and did not, pass without event under or around the front of the vehicle. Rather, the front bumper smashed into her right leg and the front wheel ran her over and crushed her. The patent incredibility of the defendant’s testimony also lessens any prejudicial impact from the improper questioning. Thus, the defendant suffered no substantial prejudice from the impropriety on cross-examination.
In State v. Thompson,
In the recent case of State v. Payne,
In his last claim of prosecutorial misconduct, the defendant argues that the state improperly stated the law to the jury during closing arguments. Specifically, the defendant contends that the prosecutor’s statement that “a person normally intends the natural consequences of his actions . . . invited the jury to conclude that if the defendant were driving the victim’s car when it hit her, that he intended to cause her death.”
While it is true that such language is improper as an isolated statement of law; see Sandstrom v. Montana,
Furthermore, in the context of the surrounding argument, the language in question was qualified and clarified in such a way that its function as argument about permissible inferences and the strength of the evidence is unmistakable. In that context, the quoted language from the state’s arguments should not be mistaken to be a binding statement of the law. “The functions of final argument by the attorneys and jury instructions by the court are obviously quite different. We know of no authority, reason or policy to equate the two in the context of this case.” State v. Velez,
The state began the sentence in question with the phrase, “In short,” indicating that what was to follow would be a synopsis, rather than a perfectly accurate statement. In the very next sentence, the state made the qualified, interpretive role of this argument difficult to misunderstand. The relevant context was as follows: “In short, you intend the natural consequences of your acts. An intent can be inferred from the natural consequences of your acts. We can’t see into people’s minds. We can’t read people’s minds. . . . And, when I say you intend the natural consequences of your actions,
The defendant offers no legal authority to the contrary. In fact, this claim is inadequately briefed, lacking citation of all of the language complained about related to any appropriate legal analysis or citation. See State v. Brown,
In his next claim, the defendant argues that the court’s instructions to the jury about intent as an element of the crimes charged were improper, and that it is reasonably possible that these instructions misled the jury. More specifically, the defendant argues that the court’s instructions on the law of inferences, proximate cause and intent contradicted one another and relieved the state of its burden to establish beyond any reasonable doubt that the defendant intended to cause the death of the victim.
Although the defendant is expected to object “immediately after the conclusion of the charge”; (internal quotation marks omitted) State v. Snook,
On the merits, however, the defendant’s claim fails. To prevail on an unpreserved claim of trial court error under Golding, the defendant must demonstrate, inter
We first set forth the relevant law for a claim of instructional error. “When reviewing the challenged jury instruction ... we must adhere to the well settled rule that a charge to the jury is to be considered in its entirety, read as a whole, and judged by its total effect rather than by its individual component parts.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Aponte,
“[I]n appeals involving a constitutional question, [the standard is] whether it is reasonably possible that the jury [was] misled. . . . State v. Rodriguez,
First, the defendant contends that the trial court improperly included a section of the statutory definition of intent in its instruction on that element. The defendant likens his case to the facts of State v. DeBarros,
However, this case is a far cry from DeBarros. As the state notes, the allegedly problematic charge is not
Next, the defendant observes that the trial court instructed the jury that “[i]t does not matter whether this particular kind of harm, that results from the defendant’s act, be intended by him.” The defendant implies that this instruction conflicts with the court’s other instructions on the state’s burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intended to cause
Finally, the defendant argues that the court’s instruction to the jury that they had a “duty to draw all reasonable and logical inferences” conflicted with the court’s instructions on the state’s burden of proof beyond any reasonable doubt of every element of the crimes charged. While we agree that this portion of the charge was technically inaccurate, we hold that it is not reasonably possible that the jury was misled in reaching their verdict. The same conduct and surrounding circum
The defendant raised another claim concerning the adequacy of language in the jury instructions defining the term “reasonable doubt.” The defendant concedes that prevailing case law from our Supreme Court bars review of this claim. This case was initially briefed for submission to our Supreme Court, where the defendant hoped to persuade the court to alter the standard. We have no such power, and, thus, are bound to apply the existing law of this state as dictated by our Supreme Court.
The defendant’s next claim on appeal is that the trial court improperly denied his motion to suppress his written statement to the Waterbury police. The defendant argues that based on the totality of the surrounding circumstances, his written statement was involuntarily rendered. We disagree.
The defendant’s motion to suppress alleged that he was not adequately advised of his constitutional rights
The defendant did raise on appeal the claim that his confession was involuntary. A relevant section of the defendant’s brief reads: “The trial court should have found the confession involuntary, under the totality of the circumstances.” Although the defendant’s brief deals chiefly with aspects of alleged police coercion, these aspects are, as the defendant points out, within the totality of the circumstances that the trial court was bound to consider in assessing the voluntariness of the confession. That being said, the defendant is restricted to the record of evidence before the trial court indicating those circumstances. Insofar as the defendant failed to present evidence of coercion, we will not entertain such an argument with speculation.
The trial court found the following additional facts, which are relevant to our resolution of this claim. When he arrived at the Waterbury police department, in the company of his mother, the defendant was advised by Detective Eugene Coyle that he was not under arrest and that he was free to leave at any time. He again was
“Whether the defendant has knowingly and intelligently waived his rights under Miranda
On the basis of all of the circumstances indicated in the record before us, the trial court properly concluded that the November 20, 1997 statement was admissible. The defendant had been given Miranda warnings orally and in writing several times. He stated repeatedly that he understood these rights and was willing to make the written statement anyway. He signed and dated two written documents indicating his willingness to cede these rights and initialed in the margin after the written description of each right waived. In all, he signed or initialed the statement itself fourteen times. He was literate. He had attained a high school diploma and had completed some collegiate course work. He read a full paragraph of the written statement aloud to the police by which they determined his literacy. The defendant was calm during questioning, showing no signs of emotional distress. The defendant had no clinical history of mental disease or retardation. He came into the police station voluntarily with a parent and confessed orally to killing the victim before he was in custody, within a half an hour to forty-five minutes of arriving at the station. He did not arrive at the station until almost 6 p.m.
There was no evidence of any threat, promise or physical coercion of him prompting any such inculpa-tory statement. The defendant correctly points out that he was detained for roughly three hours during the process of giving the statement, and there was no evidence that he ate or drank during that period. However, these facts alone do not render his statement involuntary under the totality of the circumstances. The defendant did not ask for food or water or indicate at any time that he was hungry, thirsty or fatigued. A three hour period is not an unusual stretch without food,
Therefore, on the basis of the totality of the surrounding circumstances, the court reasonably concluded that the defendant’s confession was voluntarily rendered.
Finally, the defendant claims that the court improperly applied, as a factor in sentencing, its belief that the defendant had lied when testifying. The defendant contends that considering his dishonest testimony in sentencing impermissibly burdened his right to testify on his own behalf, as guaranteed by the constitution of Connecticut. The defendant also argues that his state constitutional due process rights were violated because he suffered increased punishment for a crime that was never charged, perjury. This claim is unpreserved, and the defendant again seeks review under State v. Golding, supra,
The defendant concedes that his federal due process rights were not violated. In United States v. Grayson,
The defendant’s claim depends, therefore, on the proposition that the constitution of Connecticut contains some distinct provision that prevents consideration of whether he testified dishonestly, despite its relevance as a factor in assessing his potential for rehabilitation. The defendant first points to article first, § 8, of the constitution of Connecticut, which provides in relevant part: “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have a right to be heard by himself and by counsel. ... No person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty
This argument fails for two basic reasons. First, the phrase in question does not create a right for the defendant to testify on his own behalf. In 1818, when Connecticut adopted this language as part of our first constitution, a criminal defendant was prohibited from testifying on his own behalf. State v. Gathers,
Second, even if the phrase “to be heard by himself’ embodied the right to testify on one’s own behalf in a criminal case, this does not distinguish the phrase from the constitution of the United States. The constitution of the United States also guar antees a criminal defendant the right to testify on his or her own behalf. For example, the United States Supreme Court considers the “right to testify on one’s own behalf at a criminal trial” to be “one of the rights that ‘are essential to due process of law in a fair adversary process.’ Faretta v. California,
Nor are we persuaded that a claimed “chilling effect” on the legitimate exercise of the right to testify overrides the trial court’s duty to consider all record evidence relevant to the question of the defendant’s potential for rehabilitation. It is often a daunting task for the trial judge to attempt to assess accurately a particular defendant’s capacity for rehabilitation. No fact-finding process can be perfect and enforcing a standard of perfection in fact-finding would bring government to a standstill. “Although we acknowledged that, as a general matter, principles of due process prohibit the state from penalizing a person for exercising his
The defendant fares little better in his argument that any increased punishment for dishonest testimony must take the form of a full-dress charge and trial for the crime of perjury. The defendant notes that he has suffered increased punishment even though facts required to establish that his testimony was dishonest might not have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt in the trial by jury. This argument is identical to that raised in Grayson, and we see no reason to depart from Gray-son in this respect under our state constitution. Taken to its logical extreme, the defendant’s argument would forbid a sentencing court from considering any and all facts reflecting negatively on his capacity for rehabilitation, since they result in increased punishment. The application of the proof beyond a reasonable doubt standard does not turn on whether the facts in question
It will often be the case that facts indicating a lack of potential for rehabilitation happen to coincide with elements of crime. This is simply to say that the legislature has done its job competently in criminalizing antisocial conduct. A sentencing court should not be hamstrung from considering the most relevant facts to its sentencing duty, simply because it is possible to be separately charged with the crime of perjury and sentenced if those facts are proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Our holding today is consistent with the general rules governing the nature of evidence that may be considered by a sentencing court. “Generally, due process does not require that information considered by the trial judge prior to sentencing meet the same high procedural standard as evidence introduced at trial. Rather, judges may consider a wide variety of information. . . . United States v. Robelo,
“To hold otherwise would be to adopt an unrealistic view of both the plea bargaining and sentencing processes, a view that would only deter judges from articulating their reasons for a particular sentence fully and prevent correction when the sentencing judge relied on information which was truly unreliable, inaccurate or patently wrong. Trial judges ought not be reprimanded for acknowledging on the record the impact of information they have gained in the plea bargaining or sentencing processes unless the use of such information confounds reason and a just result. See United States v. Campbell, supra [
Our holding is also consistent with other dicta stated in our case law. For example, in State v. Coleman,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
General Statutes § 58a-54a (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty ol' murder when, with intent to cause the death of another person, he causes the death of such person . . . .”
General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) provides in relevant part: “A person is guilty of kidnapping in the first degree when he abducts another person and ... (2) he restrains the person abducted with intent to (A) inflict physical injury upon him or violate or abuse him sexually . . . .”
The defendant asserted several explanations for his sudden rage. At trial, he claimed that he was suffering from a sort of displaced rage about his ex-girlfriend that he then misdirected toward the victim. In his written statement, he claimed: “I don’t know what came over me, but I got real mad at myself. I knew that I shouldn’t be with Lisa because I still loved Kerry. I don’t know why, but I started punching Lisa in her face and head even though she had done nothing wrong.” (Emphasis added.)
The Naugatuck, Waterbury and Southington police departments all assisted in the investigation of this homicide.
If we determined that a constitutional violation did clearly exist, Golding would then require us to consider whether the state has failed to prove that the violation was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Golding, supra,
As the court later instructed, the defendant must have intentionally abducted and restrained the victim to be guilty. The acts of abduction and restraint implicate conduct as well as a result.
See Miranda v. Arizona,
In United States v. Dunnigan,
As we observed in State v. Shinn,
