State v. James

678 A.2d 1338, 237 Conn. 390, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 212, 1996 WL 327163
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 25, 1996
Docket15054
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 678 A.2d 1338 (State v. James) 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. James, 678 A.2d 1338, 237 Conn. 390, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 212, 1996 WL 327163 (Colo. 1996).

Opinions

NORCOTT, J.

The defendant, Anthony James, was convicted after a jury trial of one count of felony murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54c1 and one count of burglary in the third degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-103.2 He received a total effective sentence of fifty years imprisonment.3 He appealed directly to this court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199 (b).4

On appeal, the defendant claims that: (1) the trial court improperly failed to suppress his written confession; (2) the admission of his written confession at trial violated his right to due process under the state constitution because the police had failed to record the confession electronically; and (3) there was insufficient [393]*393evidence to support his conviction. We affirm the judgment of conviction.

The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. On the morning of January 13, 1993, the victim, eighty-one year old Pauline Grincunas, was found with head injuries, lying unconscious on the floor of her apartment in a multiunit house at 13-15 Green Street in Waterbury, by her landlord, Joseph Mariano. The victim was the only tenant occupying the house. A rear exterior door to the house, which led to a first floor apartment, and the front interior door to the victim’s second floor apartment had been pried open. Several items in the apartment were out of their usual places,5 a telephone had been disabled, and the bedroom in which the victim was found had been ransacked.

Waterbury police officers arrived shortly after the victim was discovered. The victim was taken by ambulance to Waterbury Hospital, where she died at 12:30 p.m. from blunt force trauma to the head. An autopsy was performed on January 14, 1993, from which the medical examiner determined that the victim had been struck seven times in the head with an object whose characteristics were consistent with a crowbar.6 No fingerprints were recovered from the doorways of the house in which the victim had resided or from any items in her apartment. From marks left on the doorways, it was determined that a crowbar had been used to gain entry. No such tool was recovered.

[394]*394Waterbury police canvassed the neighborhood around 13-15 Green Street. The defendant lived nearby at the comer of Green and John Streets. The police spoke with the defendant twice in connection with their investigation of the victim’s death, once on January 13, and once on January 14. On both occasions, he gave the police a fictitious name. On January 14, he agreed to go to the police station to discuss the murder and some local burglaries. At the station, he gave the police a second fictitious name, denied his involvement in the crimes, and was driven home.

At approximately 1:30 a.m. on January 15, shortly after the police had received information from an acquaintance of the defendant implicating him in the victim’s murder, several police officers went to the defendant’s apartment and the apartment of Michael Sebastian, a friend of the defendant, who lived next door to him, to question both of them. Both the defendant and Sebastian were brought to the police station for questioning. After several hours, the defendant signed a confession that stated that during the evening of January 12,1993, he and Sebastian had broken into the house at 13-15 Green Street, which he had believed to be unoccupied, and that Sebastian had come upon the victim and had stmck her with a crowbar. The confession included several accurate details of the crime. The defendant was subsequently arrested and charged with felony murder and burglary.

Prior to trial, the defendant moved to suppress his written confession, claiming that it was the fruit of an illegal seizure at his apartment, and that he had not knowingly,' intelligently and voluntarily waived his Miranda7 rights. He also claimed that his confession was not voluntary and that the state must establish [395]*395voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt in order for his confession to be admissible under the state constitution. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court denied the motion, finding that the defendant had not been seized by police at his apartment, but had accompanied them to the police station voluntarily. The trial court further found that the state had established, both by a preponderance of the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant properly had been advised of and validly had waived his Miranda rights, and that the confession was voluntary.

At trial, the written confession, redacted in part, was read to the jury. The defendant testified in his own defense. He claimed that he had not been involved in the break-in and murder and that he had never confessed to those crimes, but had signed a completed typewritten confession after several hours of interrogation because the police had threatened to arrest his fiancee and to remove her children, one of whom was his biological child, from their home. The jury found the defendant guilty as charged. Thereafter, the trial court denied the defendant’s motions for acquittal8 and for a new trial,9 and imposed a total effective sentence of fifty years imprisonment. See footnote 3. This appeal followed. Additional facts will be discussed as they become relevant in the context of the defendant’s specific claims.

I

The defendant first claims that the trial court improperly failed to suppress his confession on a number of grounds. Specifically, he claims that the trial court improperly concluded that: (1) he had not been illegally [396]*396seized at his apartment on the morning of January 15, 1993;10 (2) the state had established that he had knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily waived his Miranda rights;11 and (3) the state had established that his confession was voluntary. The defendant also claims that, under the state constitution, the state was required to prove voluntariness beyond a reasonable doubt in order for the confession to be admissible at trial.12

Before turning to the defendant’s claims, we first review the evidence presented to the trial court on these [397]*397issues. That evidence was substantially the same at the suppression hearing and at the trial. The police officers who went to the defendant’s apartment and subsequently questioned him at the station testified to the following. At 1:30 a.m. on January 15, 1993, Sergeant Neil O’Leary, Sergeant Robert Henderson,13 Detective Phillip Distasio and Detective William Cassada went to the defendant’s apartment. They were not in uniform. Their purpose was to question the defendant concerning the victim’s murder and a number of other burglaries, in light of new information they had received about those crimes from Joseph Fields. Fields was an acquaintance of the defendant, who had given a statement to the police implicating the defendant only one-half hour earlier.14 The officers considered the defendant to be a suspect in the victim’s murder at that time.

O’Leary and Henderson proceeded to the front door of the defendant’s second floor apartment and Distasio and Cassada were stationed at the back door.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
678 A.2d 1338, 237 Conn. 390, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 212, 1996 WL 327163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-conn-1996.