697 A.2d 736 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1997
The defendant moves in limine to preclude the prosecution in the present case from offering, in its case in chief, grand jury testimony of the defendant given before an investigatory grand jury convened under General Statutes §
Preliminarily, the defendant also claims that his statement was involuntary, since he testified before the grand juror under subpoena. Beyond the state and the defendant stipulating that the defendant was under subpoena when he testified, the defendant declined to offer further evidence as to involuntariness. The court finds that there is no factual predicate to support a state or federal constitutional violation on this ground.
The fact that grand jury proceedings are and have been, for a "time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary,"1 secret, is beyond dispute. That our common law contains "a long-established policy of secrecy . . . older than our Nation itself" (citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted); Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. UnitedStates,
In 1888, in a case where a defendant who was present as a prisoner in the grand jury room while the grand jury was hearing testimony to decide whether the prisoner should be indicted, the use of the prisoner's incriminatory statements was permitted. That decision, however, was in the context of statements which "were not and could not have been properly elicited by the grand jury. [The grand jury] had no right to allow the prisoner to testify, or even to make a statement. His statements *3
were wholly voluntary, and they appear to have been made when the proceedings were at a standstill — probably while waiting for a witness to come in." State v. Coffee,
It is clear to the court that, at common law in Connecticut, the state was unable to use the testimony of an accused given by the accused before the grand jury which indicted him, in its case in chief, except in a trial for perjury of the witness before the grand jury. Of course, use for impeachment purposes of the testimony of a witness who had also testified before a grand jury was not likely to occur in the state's case in chief under common law. See State v. Whelan,
Indeed, the principle of grand jury secrecy even led to a defendant being denied the use of grand jury testimony for cross examination inState v. Chesney,
In 1978, General Statutes §
Of course, §
The state makes much of a distinction between an investigatory grand jury and an indicting grand jury. The case law, however, does not support such a distinction. "We have not in the past distinguished between investigating and indicting grand juries in recognizing the need to encourage citizen cooperation which underlies the expectation that grand juries normally operate *5
in secrecy. We decline to do so now." In re Final Grand Jury ReportConcerning the Torrington Police Department,
To the extent that Connecticut has a blanket prohibition against the use of grand jury testimony in the prosecution's case in chief, it is surely in a minority of jurisdictions. As noted in State v. Coffee,
supra,
Indeed, under Rule
General Statutes §§
General Statutes §
General Statutes §
Section
Subsection (b) of §
Subsection (f) of §
Subsection (g) of §
In short, the investigative grand jury's records are open to the public unless the court orders that all or part of the record not be disclosed. Moreover, even where the court enters a nondisclosure order: (1) witnesses may obtain a record of their own testimony, unless the court finds that the best interests of justice do not permit it; and, (2) accuseds have a right to a record of their own testimony and a copy of such.
Connecticut courts have looked to federal law for guidance in the area of grand juries, because "[t]he indicting grand jury governed by federal rule and the investigatory grand jury governed by §
It seems anomalous, at first blush, to contemplate that grand jury transcripts can potentially be used in an administrative proceeding but cannot be used in a criminal trial of that same person, now protected by the full panoply of rights afforded to criminal defendants.
There are, to be sure, numerous policy reasons for preserving grand jury secrecy, and while many of those reasons no longer obtain after the conclusion of the grand jury proceedings, certainly the thought that witnesses who learned that their testimony was not sacro-sanct will be deterred from future uninhibited testimony, as will others not involved in that particular grand jury process. See In re Investigation of theGrand Juror into Cove Manor Convalescent Center, Inc., supra,
Our Supreme Court has instructed that where the traditional secrecy of grand jury proceedings is well entrenched in the common law, any change in that law must be strictly construed. State v. Canady, *10
That the prosecution has access to testimony from the grand jury proceeding is clear. From that access it is to be presumed that further investigative work should permit the development of evidence from other sources. In the present case, no request for release of grand jury transcripts for use in the state's case in chief has been made, nor has there been any attempt to demonstrate a "particularized need." Whether, in a particular case, that would be availing, this court does not now decide.
What this court does decide is that in the present case, in which this defendant was given both a promise and a warning of confidentiality and secrecy as to his testimony,3 the state cannot use that testimony in its case in chief. Indeed, since the grand juror imposed an order of secrecy on the witness as to his testimony, it may well be that the defendant would be precluded from taking the stand to deny the accuracy of the transcript, unless released from that order.
This is an issue which the legislature may wish to address, but the decision to change three centuries of *11 this state's common law is one that this court does not believe is its function.
The motion in limine is granted, and the state is precluded from offering any grand jury testimony as direct evidence in the state's case in chief in the present matter.