The petitioner was convicted on July 6, 1993 after a jury trial of risk of injury to a child in violation of General Statutes § 53-2 and misdemeanor coercion in violation of General Statutes §
The essential facts underlying the jury's verdict are set forth in the opinion of the Appellate Court. State v. Payne,
"T and her sons approached Officers Brian Morris and John Dalton of the New Haven police department in the courtyard of the housing project. T informed the police officers of the incident and described the defendant. Morris and Dalton told T to return home and to wait for their telephone call. In an effort to locate the defendant, Morris and Dalton proceeded to a nearby parole office. Morris and Dalton described the defendant to a parole officer who stated that the defendant was currently in the building attending a drug and alcohol recovery meeting. Morris and Dalton then telephoned T and requested that she and her sons meet them there. At the [parole] office, R and A positively identified the defendant as the man who had forced them to urinate. The police arrested the defendant and, upon searching him, seized a small plastic bottle of urine they found hidden in the waistband of his underwear." State v.Payne, supra,
On July 31, 1998, the petitioner filed a pro se petition with this court seeking a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner asserted that his conviction was illegal on the grounds of trial irregularity, ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial and police misconduct. The petitioner further claimed that "States attorney and his agent police CT Page 12222 officer tampered with two (2) of my key witnesses thus cousing(sp) them not to appear at court."
Attorney William B. Westcott was appointed on September 29, 1998 to represent the petitioner in the instant action. On May 2, 2000, after a full examination of the record and circumstances surrounding the petitioner's conviction, Attorney Westcott filed the subject motion to withdraw his appearance on the grounds that there are no meritorious claims available to the petitioner to warrant habeas relief.
Practice Book §
The primary issues raised by the petitioner in his pro se petition and reiterated in his response to the motion to withdraw revolve around his claim that the state engaged in misconduct by preventing "L", who was one of the children who urinated into a cup and who supported the petitioner's claim that no threats or coercion were involved in the incident, from testifying at his criminal trial.
A criminal defendant has the constitutional right under the
CT Page 12223 "A claim that the state has intimidated a defense witness raises serious questions that go to the core of the constitutional right to a fair trial." State v. O'Brien,
The petitioner may seek habeas relief based on the claim that his appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to raise the argument on appeal that the state unconstitutionally interfered with his right to compel the attendance of an exculpatory witness at trial. To prevail on this claim, the petitioner must satisfy the two-part test for determining whether a criminal defendant has been deprived of his constitutional right to effective assistance of counsel established in Strickland v. Washington,
While appellate counsel is not under an obligation to raise every conceivable issue and it is possible to leave out a dispositive issue on appeal and nevertheless to have furnished a petitioner with adequate counsel under the
Since I have determined that the petitioner's habeas case is not wholly without merit, habeas counsel's motion to withdraw his appearance is hereby denied and counsel is directed to proceed with the case.
Judge Jon M. Alander CT Page 12224
