State v. Edwards

334 Conn. 688
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 25, 2020
DocketSC19899
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 334 Conn. 688 (State v. Edwards) 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. Edwards, 334 Conn. 688 (Colo. 2020).

Opinion

Page 2 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL February 25, 2020

688 FEBRUARY, 2020 334 Conn. 688 State v. Edwards

STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. LAMONT EDWARDS (SC 19899) Robinson, C. J., and Palmer, McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Kahn and Ecker, Js. Syllabus Convicted of, among other crimes, murder, conspiracy to commit murder, assault in the first degree, and conspiracy to commit assault in the first degree in connection with an incident in which two men opened gunfire on a car and killed a fifteen year old victim and seriously injured two other victims, the defendant appealed to this court, claiming, inter alia, that the trial court improperly had admitted certain out-of-court state- ments by two witnesses, T and M, identifying the defendant as the shooter and improperly instructed the jury on third-party culpability by omitting the names of certain potential third-party culprits. On the day of the shooting, the defendant was attending a social gathering at which numerous other individuals were present, including F, T, C, M and H. The defendant had driven F and an unidentified man wearing a do-rag or a hat to the social gathering in a car that the defendant had been renting for approximately three weeks, but F was separated from the defendant shortly after arriving. At some point thereafter, two armed men approached a black car that was stopped in the vicinity and began shooting into the vehicle. The shooters then ran toward the defendant’s parked car, entered it, and fled the scene, at which point a nearby driver recorded its license plate number. The following day, the defendant spoke to T and C and told them that he had ‘‘done it’’ but that the driver of the black car had been the intended target, not the fifteen year old victim. Subsequently, M came forward and stated to the police that he had seen the defendant by the driver’s side of the black car during the shooting and that the defendant was one of the shooters. The defendant thereafter was arrested while attempting to flee Connecticut for Califor- nia. At the defendant’s trial, the state questioned M on direct examination regarding his statements to the police, but M maintained that he could not recall making those statements or the events surrounding the shoot- ing. The trial court admitted into evidence a portion of a transcript of testimony that M previously had given to a federal grand jury in which M stated that he observed the shooter on the driver’s side of the black car wearing clothes similar to clothing the defendant had been wearing earlier on the day of the shooting and that he also observed the shooters run to the defendant’s car. During redirect examination, the trial court twice overruled defense counsel’s hearsay objection and permitted the state to question M regarding his statements to the police. The state subsequently questioned W, a detective with the New Haven Police Department, about what M had told W about the shooting, but defense counsel objected to that line of questioning on hearsay grounds, and February 25, 2020 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 3

334 Conn. 688 FEBRUARY, 2020 689 State v. Edwards the trial court sustained the objection. The state then objected when defense counsel asked W, on cross-examination, about his interviews of two eyewitnesses to the shooting who had been unable to identify the defendant as the shooter. The trial court overruled the state’s objec- tion but cautioned that the door would be open for the state to question W, during its redirect examination, regarding who had identified the shooter. During redirect examination, the state then asked W how many people had identified the defendant as the shooter, and defense counsel objected, not on the basis of hearsay but because the testimony would be cumulative. The court overruled counsel’s objection, and W testified that M, H, and T, who did not testify at the defendant’s trial, had identified the defendant as one of the shooters. Thereafter, the defendant submit- ted a request to charge the jury with a third-party culpability instruction that named six individuals as potential culprits, including F and J, who was a friend of the defendant, whose fingerprints and DNA were found in the defendant’s car, and who had been arrested on unrelated charges while in possession of a mask similar to one identified by witnesses as being worn by one of the shooters. At a charge conference, the trial court granted the defendant’s request for a third-party culpability instruc- tion but determined that there was sufficient evidence to require the charge only as to J. Defense counsel countered that there was suffic- ient evidence to require a third-party instruction as to F, and the court responded that it would either give a general instruction without nam- ing anyone or one that named only J. Following closing arguments, the court held a second charge conference, at which it reiterated that it would either name only J or refer generally to a third party, and, after the defendant repeated his preference for naming both F and J, the court gave an instruction that omitted the names of the potential third- party culprits. On appeal from the judgment of conviction, held: 1. The defendant’s claim that the trial court improperly admitted hearsay evidence by allowing W to testify that M and T had identified the defen- dant as one of the shooters was unpreserved and, accordingly, was unreviewable: although defense counsel objected on hearsay grounds to W’s testimony during the state’s direct examination regarding M’s out-of-court statements to the police, including M’s identification of the defendant as one of the shooters, counsel’s sole stated basis for objecting to W’s testimony, during redirect examination, regarding M’s and T’s statements identifying the defendant as one of the shooters was that it was cumulative, and, accordingly, counsel failed to apprise the trial court that he continued to object to the admission of the challenged out-of-court statements on the basis of hearsay. 2. The defendant could not prevail on his claim that the admission, through W’s testimony, of T’s out-of-court statement identifying the defendant as the shooter violated his right to confrontation because, even if the admission of that statement violated the defendant’s right to confronta- tion, any such error was harmless: the state satisfied its burden of Page 4 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL February 25, 2020

690 FEBRUARY, 2020 334 Conn. 688 State v. Edwards proving that any error in admitting T’s statement was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, as that statement, which was cumulative of other evidence and which the state did not rely on or refer to during closing argument, was inconsequential in light of the overwhelming, indepen- dent evidence of the defendant’s guilt, including testimony from num- erous witnesses placing the defendant at the crime scene and demon- strating that he drove there in the car in which the shooters later fled, testimony from multiple witnesses that the defendant was one of the shooters, testimony from two witnesses that the defendant admitted that he was involved in the shooting, evidence establishing that the defendant was motivated by revenge against the driver of the black car, who previously had flirted with the defendant’s girlfriend, K, and whose friends had been involved in an altercation with K’s son several months before the shooting, and evidence of the defendant’s consciousness of guilt, including evidence that the defendant returned the rental car the morning after the shooting, K’s testimony that the defendant had denied hearing about the shooting the night it occurred but later devised and implemented a plan to flee to California in K’s car, and evidence that the defendant was apprehended with $1000 in cash and a California address programmed in a navigation device in K’s car. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
334 Conn. 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-edwards-conn-2020.