Michael T. v. Commissioner of Correction

999 A.2d 818, 122 Conn. App. 416
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJuly 6, 2010
DocketAC 30046
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 999 A.2d 818 (Michael T. v. Commissioner of Correction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael T. v. Commissioner of Correction, 999 A.2d 818, 122 Conn. App. 416 (Colo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

Opinion

PETERS, J.

This habeas case contests the petitioner’s conviction of sexual assault and risk of injury to a young child. In accordance with Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 104 S. Ct. 2052, 80 L. Ed. 2d 674 (1984), and citing Gersten v. Senkowski, 426 F.3d 588, 607 (2d Cir. 2005), cert. denied sub nom. Artus v. Gersten, 547 U.S. 1191, 126 S. Ct. 2882, 165 L. Ed. 2d 894 (2006), the habeas court held that trial counsel had been ineffective in failing to present expert testimony to challenge the state’s presentation of incriminatory expert evidence on medical issues relating to the child’s symptomatology and on psychological issues relating to her credibility. Concluding that trial counsel’s failure to present such expert evidence had been prejudicial to the petitioner, the court rendered judgment on the petitioner’s behalf. With the permission of the habeas court, the commissioner of correction has appealed. We affirm [418]*418the judgment of the habeas court insofar as it rests on trial counsel’s failure effectively to challenge the state’s inculpatory medical testimony.

On February 9, 2007, the petitioner, Michael T., filed an amended three count petition for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging ineffective assistance of trial counsel and actual innocence with respect to his conviction of sexual assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 53a-70 (a) (2)2 and risk of injury to a child in violation of General Statutes (Rev. to 2001) § 53-21 (a) (2).3 The respondent, the commissioner of correction,4 filed a denial and a special defense alleging that the petitioner had procedurally defaulted by failing to pursue his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in a previous petition for a writ of habeas corpus. After an evidentiary hearing, the habeas court rejected the respondent’s special defense and the petitioner’s claim of actual innocence but granted the petition with respect to his allegation of ineffective assistance of trial counsel. The respondent has appealed.

The factual basis for the criminal judgment against the petitioner is described in the opinion of this court affirming his conviction. State v. Michael T., 97 Conn. App. 478, 480-83, 905 A.2d 670, cert. denied, 280 Conn. 927, 909 A.2d 524 (2006). In 2002, when the child was four years old, she was living at home with her mother, [419]*419her older brothers and the petitioner. At the end of May, 2002, after the child complained of vaginal pain, her mother took her to a clinic in Bridgeport, where testing disclosed that the child was infected with tricho-monas.5 Id., 480.

Because the pediatric clinic nurse who assisted in the examination suspected that the child had been sexually abused, she properly reported the incident to the department of children and families (department). When subsequently questioned by a departmental investigative social worker assigned to the case, the child stated that no one had ever touched her private parts. A subsequent inquiry by a pediatric nurse practitioner affiliated with the child sexual abuse evaluation program at Yale-New Haven Hospital elicited the same response, that nothing had happened to her. Id., 480-81.

In light of the child’s infection, everyone in the child’s family was asked to be tested for trichomonas. Only the child’s mother tested positive for the disease. The petitioner, who had moved out of the family home in the interim, did not keep a scheduled appointment for testing. Id., 480.

Approximately one year later, after attending a “ ‘good touch-bad touch’ ” presentation in her kindergarten class, the child told her mother that the petitioner had touched her inappropriately. She testified to the same effect at his trial. Id., 481.

At the criminal trial, the state presented expert witnesses on two subjects, trichomonas and the reliability of children’s statements. Four expert witnesses who were questioned about trichomonas testified that it was a condition that was sexually transmitted.6 To explain [420]*420the delay in the child’s reporting that someone had touched her inappropriately, an expert witness who was a school psychologist and forensic interviewer testified that, because a four year old child could not be expected to have knowledge of sexual activity, she would not know that she had been abused until she learned what abuse was. Id., 482. Trial counsel challenged this expert testimony only by cross-examination of the state’s witnesses.

The petitioner was the only defense witness to testify at his trial. He denied having sexually abused the child. Defense counsel, in his closing argument to the jury, argued for acquittal either because trichomonas could be transmitted nonsexuaily or because the state had not proven penetration. The jury found the petitioner guilty of sexual assault in the first degree and risk of injury to a child.

In the petitioner’s direct appeal to this court, the only issues that he raised were two challenges to the trial court’s jury instructions. This court affirmed the judgment against him. Id., 490.

At the petitioner’s habeas hearing, senior assistant state’s attorney Cornelius P. Kelly, who had successfully prosecuted the petitioner, testified that the petitioner’s trial counsel, David M. Abbamonte, now deceased, had been given access to everything in the state’s file. There was no evidence, at the habeas trial, that trial counsel had ever requested funding for expert testimony.

The principal witness at the habeas hearing was Suzanne M. Sgroi, a physician who is an adjunct professor at St. Joseph College in West Hartford, the director of the St. Joseph College Institute for Child Sexual Abuse Intervention for the treatment of child sexual abuse and the executive director of New England Clinical Associates, an organization that works with child abuse trauma. Without objection by the respondent, [421]*421Sgroi was found to be qualified as an expert in child sexual abuse and venereal disease. Furthermore, the respondent did not challenge the admissibility of any of her testimony.

The habeas court found that Sgroi’s testimony identifying “mistakes, flaws and omissions” in the petitioner’s criminal trial was highly credible. Sgroi testified that the child had had urinary-vaginal symptomology at least eight months prior to being diagnosed with trichomo-nas. Contrary to the state’s expert testimony at trial linking trichomonas to sexual abuse, she stated that a child could have contracted such an infection by “living in the same home with somebody who had the infection, who wasn’t all that careful about hygiene, perhaps because of not being careful about laundering towels or having community towels in the bathroom, perhaps because of washing the child in bath water already used by adults and the like.” She further testified that guidelines published by the American Academy of Pediatrics do not include trichomonas as a disease that is diagnostic of sexual abuse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
999 A.2d 818, 122 Conn. App. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-t-v-commissioner-of-correction-connappct-2010.