State v. Damone

83 A.3d 1227, 148 Conn. App. 137, 2014 WL 411266, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 49
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 2014
DocketAC34248
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 83 A.3d 1227 (State v. Damone) 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. Damone, 83 A.3d 1227, 148 Conn. App. 137, 2014 WL 411266, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 49 (Colo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

SHELDON, J.

The acquittee, Reginald Damone, who has been committed to the jurisdiction of the Psychiatric Security Review Board (board) since July 1, 1985, following his acquittal by reason of mental disease or defect on two counts of sexual assault in the first degree with a deadly weapon, two counts of kidnapping in the first degree and one count of attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree, appeals from the order of the trial court granting the state’s petition, pursuant to General Statutes § 17a-593 (c), to continue his commitment for a period of up to two years beyond the expiration of his original maximum term on the ground that he remains a person with psychiatric disabilities whose discharge would constitute a danger to himself or others. The acquittee claims that the court erred in granting the petition because the state did not prove by clear and convincing evidence, under controlling legal standards, that he had a current mental illness that caused him to pose a risk of imminent physical injury to himself or others. We disagree with the acquittee’s claim, and, thus, affirm the court’s order extending his commitment by a period of two years.

On October 11,1984, following a jury trial on charges of two counts of sexual assault in the first degree with *140 a deadly weapon under General Statutes (Rev. to 1983) § 53a-70a and two counts of kidnapping in the first degree under General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) involving attacks on two different women, and one count of attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree under General Statutes §§ 53a-49 and 53a-70 involving a third woman, 1 the acquittee was acquitted of all charges by reason of mental disease or defect under General Statutes § 53a-13. As a result of this verdict, the acquittee was committed to the custody of the Commissioner of Mental Health on February 7, 1985, for a maximum term of twenty-five years. Thereafter, on July 1, 1985, he was committed to the jurisdiction of the board for the balance of his twenty-five year term, which was set to expire on February 6, 2010.

On August 26, 2009, the state timely filed a petition for continued commitment, which it amended on August 31, 2009. Pursuant to § 17a-593 (d), the board responded to the petition by filing a report dated November 24, 2009, in which it recommended that the court grant the petition, and thereby order the continuation of the acquittee’s commitment for a period of two years beyond its original maximum term. On December 21, 2011, after conducting a two day hearing on the petition, the court, Handy, J., delivered an oral decision from the bench, granting the petition and ordering the *141 continuation of the acquittee’s commitment for an additional period not to exceed two years beyond its original maximum term. This appeal followed.

I

UNDERLYING FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The following facts, as developed in the record before the court, are relevant to our resolution of the acquittee’s claims. A series of three violent incidents in September, 1983, led to the acquittee’s arrest on charges of two counts of sexual assault in the first degree with a deadly weapon, two counts of kidnapping in the first degree, and one count of attempt to commit sexual assault in the first degree. The background of mental illness against which the acquittee took part in those violent incidents began long before September, 1983. When the acquittee was a child, his mother and his father inflicted physical and psychological abuse upon him. He witnessed his father physically abuse his mother and also saw his mother raped by two men. Between the ages of six and thirteen, the acquittee’s uncle sexually molested him by fondling his genitals, penetrating him anally, and forcing him to perform oral sex. The acquittee’s baby-sitter “ ‘taught [him] how to have intercourse’ ” when he was eleven years old. At age twelve, the acquittee was gang raped by a group of boys. He slept in the same bed as his mother until he was fourteen and was friendless in high school.

As early as age five or six, the acquittee felt anger toward women and fantasized about sexually assaulting them. Later in childhood, he experienced command hallucinations and reported thoughts of cats entering his body and mind and taking control of him. As a teenager, the acquittee dated passive, vulnerable women, whom he threatened and assaulted. At age nineteen, during the six months that he was in the United States Army, he committed his first rape and numerous *142 sexual assaults for which he was never arrested. The acquittee also physically and sexually assaulted his wife, both before and during their marriage. His assaults on his wife involved bondage, beatings, threats, intimidation, degradation, and sexual attacks.

In 1981, the acquittee intentionally drove his car into a telephone pole in a suicide attempt. The acquittee and his wife separated in 1982 because she feared for her life. She fled from their home in South Carolina to her brother’s home in Connecticut for safety. In February, 1982, the acquittee was hospitalized for eleven days due to complaints of severe depression, marital issues, and fears that he might injure his wife.

In 1983, the acquittee moved to Connecticut in an attempt to reconcile with his wife. At that time, the acquittee received outpatient treatment for symptoms of depression, delusions, and labile mood. By the spring of 1983, the acquittee’s longtime use of intoxicants, which had begun with alcohol and marijuana at age fifteen, progressed to psilocybin mushrooms, a hallucinogen, which he ingested on three occasions in 1983. He also became obsessed with the idea of raping women and experienced command hallucinations to do so from cats and snakes, which he believed to live inside him. His delusions caused him to believe, at the time of the incidents which led to his arrest, that if he raped six men and six women, he would inject the snakes into them and be rid of them.

After his arrest, while incarcerated at the Hartford Community Correctional Center, the acquittee displayed psychotic behavior, eating his own feces and believing that a baby Smurf and a snake were living in his stomach and feeding on him. He also started to believe that he was becoming a snake, and so he shaved his face, eyebrows, and eyelashes in an effort to resemble a snake more closely. On February 23, 1984, having *143 given notice of his intent to rely upon the defense of mental disease or defect, the acquittee was transferred to the Whiting Forensic Institute at Connecticut Valley Hospital (CVH) for examination and treatment while awaiting the start of trial.

After his posttrial commitment to the custody of the board on July 1,1985, the acquittee was carefully supervised and monitored for a period of twenty-four years. Initially, the acquittee was supervised at a maximum security psychiatric hospital, but, later, was transferred to less restrictive psychiatric facilities. He was granted several temporary leaves to receive sex offender treatment, drug abuse counseling and other services. Eventually, the acquittee was monitored in the community on conditional release.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 A.3d 1227, 148 Conn. App. 137, 2014 WL 411266, 2014 Conn. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-damone-connappct-2014.