State v. Collins

10 A.3d 1005, 299 Conn. 567, 2011 Conn. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 5, 2011
DocketSC 18297
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 10 A.3d 1005 (State v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Collins, 10 A.3d 1005, 299 Conn. 567, 2011 Conn. LEXIS 7 (Colo. 2011).

Opinions

Opinion

NORCOTT, J.

The principal issue in this certified appeal is whether the trial court properly admitted, under § 4-5 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence,1 uncharged misconduct evidence concerning the defendant’s involvement in a prior shooting using the same gun that was the murder weapon in the present case. The state appeals, upon our grant of its petition for certification,2 from the judgment of the Appellate Court [570]*570reversing the judgment of conviction of the defendant, Ricardo Collins, of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a (a), felony murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54c and robbery in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-134 (a) (2). State v. Collins, 111 Conn. App. 730, 961 A.2d 986 (2008). The state claims that the Appellate Court improperly determined that the trial court had abused its discretion by admitting evidence of the defendant’s involvement in the earlier nonfata! shooting of Stephen Rose, his cousin’s husband (Rose shooting). The defendant contends otherwise, and also posits, as alternative grounds for affirming the judgment of the Appellate Court, that the trial court improperly: (1) instructed the jury that the adequacy of the police investigation was not at issue in the case; and (2) determined that he had waived his right to counsel knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently. We reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court.

The record reveals the following relevant facts, which the jury reasonably could have found, and procedural history, much of which are set forth in the opinion of the Appellate Court.3 “The [murder] victim, Calvin Hopkins,4 and his former girlfriend, Quiana Staton, jointly operated a ‘business’ in which Staton sold marijuana and Hopkins sold crack cocaine. At approximately 10:30 on the night of December 2, 2002, Hopkins went to Staton’s Bridgeport apartment in a public hous[571]*571ing project known as the Greens. He came to the apartment carrying a large ‘wad of cash’ and retrieved an additional $500 to $600 from Staton’s safe. Staton testified that Hopkins intended to use the money to purchase additional crack cocaine. Hopkins left Staton’s apartment with the money at approximately 12 a.m. on the morning of December 3, 2002. He spoke to Staton on his cellular telephone approximately one hour later from his car in the parking lot of the apartment complex. During that conversation, Staton looked from her window to see Hopkins in his car talking to two unknown individuals. Staton later attempted to call Hopkins’ cellular telephone at approximately 2 a.m. and again at 3 a.m. but received no answer to either of those calls.

“Later that morning, at approximately 7:15, Bridgeport police were dispatched to a scene a short distance from Staton’s apartment complex where a green sedan was parked in the road preventing a school bus from passing. Upon opening the door to the vehicle, the police discovered Hopkins ‘reclined in the front seat with his head leaning back and what appeared to be a large amount of blood in the interior of the vehicle.’

“At the scene, a physician from the medical examiner’s office recovered a bullet shell casing from Hopkins’ collar, and the currency that Hopkins had been carrying in the earlier hours of the morning was not found on his body. Two anomalous fingerprints were found on the vehicle: the defendant’s fingerprint was found on the exterior of the rear driver’s side door and that of another individual, Anthony Berrios, was found on the exterior of the front passenger door. An autopsy later revealed that Hopkins died from a gunshot wound to the head, and bullet fragments were recovered from his head.

“The defendant became a suspect in this case because of his involvement in the [Rose shooting] in August, [572]*5722002. A firearms examiner testified at trial that the shell casing recovered from Hopkins’ collar at the scene of the homicide was fired from the same weapon that had been used in the [Rose shooting].” Id., 732-34.

“The defendant turned himself in to the Bridgeport police in January, 2003, for the Rose shooting. During the course of the police questioning, the defendant admitted to shooting Rose [with a chrome and black nine millimeter handgun] but also indicated that he had since sold the gun.5 . . . While in police custody for [573]*573the Rose shooting, the defendant was also questioned with regard to the Hopkins homicide. In his statement to police, the defendant admitted meeting with Hopkins in his car to purchase drugs during the night of December 2, 2002, but denied killing him.” (Citation omitted.) Id., 735.

The jury reasonably could have found the following additional facts demonstrating, however, that the defendant did not actually dispose of the chrome and black nine millimeter handgun that he had used in the Rose shooting and, indeed, used it to kill Hopkins in the course of robbing him. Specifically, Ryshon Penix, the defendant’s cousin, also lived in the Greens housing project. When the defendant visited him there on November 28,2002, several days before Hopkins’ death, both Penix and Ivan Ramos, his roommate, noticed [574]*574that the defendant had with him a chrome and black handgun. Further, Kimberly Finney, who had been incarcerated with the defendant at the Bridgeport correctional center, testified that the defendant had confessed to him in a conversation in the dayroom there that he had murdered Hopkins while robbing him. Fin-ney testified specifically that the defendant, while evading the police investigation of the Rose shooting, had unsuccessfully attempted to support himself by selling drugs in the Greens housing project, turned to robbery instead, and elected to rob Hopkins because the defendant, who had purchased drugs from Hopkins before, had seen him with a lot of money. After arranging to meet with Hopkins, ostensibly to purchase drugs, the defendant then attempted to rob Hopkins in his car, and shot him when Hopkins resisted. The defendant told Finney that he had turned himself in for the Rose shooting in an attempt to avoid being considered a suspect in the Hopkins case, figuring that “he [would] never become a suspect in the [Hopkins] case because he had been in jail already.”

“The defendant’s initial trial for Hopkins’ murder was declared a mistrial after the jury returned deadlocked. At the subsequent trial,6 which resulted in the conviction, from which the defendant appeals, the state sought to introduce evidence of the defendant’s role in the Rose [shooting], to which the defendant objected.7 The defendant, who was representing himself at the time, argued that any testimony regarding the Rose shooting would be ‘highly prejudicial’ and of little probative value. He further argued that ‘[t]he state . . . has me [575]*575testifying that I had a gun and it got other evidence, and I was convicted of it, and I really don’t see a need for this testimony here because ... it would inflame the jury .... I’m on trial right now for this murder case, and it’s a shooting case. It’s two shooting cases. And if they was to bring [Rose], I think ... no matter what your instruction would be to the jury . . . that it still would be lingering in them that somebody got shot. And I would ask that you not allow it in.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 A.3d 1005, 299 Conn. 567, 2011 Conn. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-collins-conn-2011.