State v. Blackwell

861 A.2d 548, 86 Conn. App. 409, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 546
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2004
DocketAC 25178
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 861 A.2d 548 (State v. Blackwell) 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
State v. Blackwell, 861 A.2d 548, 86 Conn. App. 409, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 546 (Colo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion

McLACHLAN, J.

The defendant, Maurice Blackwell, appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of the murder 1 of Alonta Gaymon. He claims that (1) the court improperly denied his motion to suppress evidence of an eyewitness identification and (2) prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair trial. The defendant argues, in the alternative, that this court should exercise its inherent supervisory authority and reverse the judgment of conviction. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. On the afternoon of August 24, 2000, the defendant and a friend, Jonathan Pierre, drove to Waterbury, where Pierre was to begin attending college in the fall. After driving around Waterbury for some time, the two stopped at a convenience store. Rather than enter the store, the defendant walked away, leaving Pierre waiting in his car. The defendant eventually walked along Grove Street and sat on the front steps of an apartment building. Gaymon sat on the front steps of the apartment building directly across the street at 261 Grove Street, facing the defendant and another unidentified man. The victim was joined by a friend and tenant of 261 Grove Street, Cassandra Norris, and Norris’ friend, Robert *412 McClary. The defendant acknowledged the victim with a wink, but the two did not speak to one another. 2

After approximately ten minutes, the defendant stood up and walked across the street. He stopped within two feet of the victim and Norris, and pulled a double-barreled sawed-off shotgun out of his jacket. Norris ran around the side of the building and heard the victim plead with the defendant, “Please don’t kill me, please don’t kill me.” By the time Norris reached the back of the building, she heard a gunshot. The defendant shot the victim in the back of her head as she attempted to run away. When the defendant pulled out the shotgun, McClary retreated into the building’s front entranceway. The victim also retreated into the entranceway, hiding behind McClary and grabbing him for protection. The victim pleaded with the defendant by name, 3 begging him not to shoot her. The defendant ordered McClary to move out of the way. McClary obliged to avoid being shot, forcing the victim’s hands off of him, and he ran out of the building. As McClary ran away from the building, he heard a gunshot. He looked back and saw the victim fall to the ground.

Shortly thereafter, Pierre drove along Grove Street, looking for the defendant. Pierre saw the victim lying *413 in a pool of blood. Continuing past the crime scene, Pierre turned onto the next block, where the defendant got into the back of the moving car and commanded Pierre to drive away. Pierre saw that the defendant had a shotgun and that he wiped the gun and cartridges with his sleeve to eliminate fingerprints while Pierre drove. The defendant also removed the spent cartridges from the shotgun, wiped them off and threw them out the window as he and Pierre proceeded along Route 8. The defendant told Pierre, “I think she’s dead. I think I got her. I’ll be mad if she’s not dead. I don’t even feel like I did it.” Pierre drove the defendant to Bridgeport. Later that night, Ericka Carlson, an acquaintance of the defendant and friend of the victim, encountered the defendant in the lobby of her apartment building. She noticed approximately ten inches of a gun’s barrel protruding from inside his denim jacket.

Police arrived shortly after the shooting and spoke to witnesses. Norris accompanied the police to the police station, where police presented her with an array of photographs matching the description she gave of the killer. Police included the defendant in the photographic array because he was a suspect in the July, 2000 robbery of the victim. Norris identified the defendant as the shooter. McClary, after viewing a photographic array, also identified the defendant as the shooter. Police arrested the defendant on a warrant shortly thereafter. A forensic DNA test revealed that human tissue found on the defendant’s denim pants, recovered during the execution of a search warrant, came from the victim. The victim died from a single shotgun wound to the back of her head. The defendant was convicted of murder, and the court sentenced him to a term of sixty years imprisonment. Additional facts will be set forth as necessary to address the defendant’s specific claims on appeal.

*414 I

The defendant first claims that the identifications made by Norris, who identified him from a photographic array as the shooter and in court during trial, were improperly allowed into evidence in violation of his right to due process. Specifically, he argues that Norris’ recognition of other men pictured in the array rendered her identification of the defendant unnecessarily suggestive and unreliable.

“To determine whether apretrial identification procedure, such as the photographic array in this case, violated a defendant’s due process rights, the required inquiry is made on an ad hoc basis and is two-pronged: first, it must be determined whether the identification procedure was unnecessarily suggestive; and second, if it is found to have been so, it must be determined whether the identification was nevertheless reliable based on an examination of the totality of the circumstances. ... An identification procedure is unnecessarily suggestive only if it gives rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. . . . The defendant bears the burden of proving both that the identification procedures were unnecessarily suggestive and that the resulting identification was unreliable. ” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. White, 229 Conn. 125, 161-62, 640 A.2d 572 (1994).

Norris spoke to police when they arrived at the scene of the shooting and accompanied them to the police station to give a statement. Police presented Norris with a photographic array that pictured eight young men fitting the shooter’s general description. Norris identified photograph number eight, the defendant, as the man who had crossed Grove Street and pulled a shotgun from his jacket. Norris told police that she had ample opportunity to view the defendant because it was day *415 light and he approached to within two feet of her. Norris also told police, when asked, that she recognized three other men pictured in the array. She did not know any of them well or even by name, but simply recognized their faces.

The defendant claims that the fact that Norris recognized the faces of three other men in the photographic array rendered her identification of him inadmissible.

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State v. Boyd
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State v. Blackwell
867 A.2d 838 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
861 A.2d 548, 86 Conn. App. 409, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blackwell-connappct-2004.