State v. Madigosky

966 A.2d 730, 291 Conn. 28, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 31, 2009
DocketSC 18263
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 966 A.2d 730 (State v. Madigosky) 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. Madigosky, 966 A.2d 730, 291 Conn. 28, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 32 (Colo. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

KATZ, J.

The defendant, Gregg Madigosky, directly appeals, pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199 (b) (3), from the trial court’s judgment of conviction of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a. 1 The defendant contends that the trial court: (1) improperly instructed the jury not to consider the affirmative *30 defenses of mental disease or defect and extreme emotional disturbance unless it first determined that the defendant had committed murder; (2) improperly admitted into evidence a statement given by the defendant’s mother to the police; and (3) exhibited improper conduct toward defense counsel. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. The defendant and Lynn Bossert, the victim, began living together in 1993. During their relationship, he was gainfully employed as a draftsman for Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation. As their relationship continued, the defendant grew suspicious about the victim’s fidelity, and when she became pregnant, he questioned whether he was the father of the baby. In March, 2003, the victim gave birth to a girl, two months premature. The victim and the defendant later hired a nanny, Delores Sowa, to care for the baby while both parents worked.

On September 11, 2003, the defendant arrived home from work at approximately 5:50 p.m., took over the care of the baby and received the daily report from Sowa before she left. When the victim arrived home, she and the defendant, along with the baby, went to a previously scheduled counseling session with a family and marriage therapist, Julie M. Sowell, whom the couple had been seeing for the previous five months. The counseling session ended at 7:45 p.m.

Sometime after 9 p.m. that evening, the defendant and the victim had an altercation in their home, during which the defendant pushed the victim and then strangled her to death. In strangling the victim, the defendant used both of his hands and a dog leash. The strangulation caused extensive petechial hemorrhaging and edema, which indicated that force had been applied to the victim’s neck for a prolonged length of time. The defendant stopped applying pressure to the victim’s neck only after she had ceased struggling. He then *31 ripped a locket from the victim’s neck and left her body lying on the floor in a pool of blood. Sometime thereafter, the defendant wrote what appeared to be a suicide note to his friends and family. 2

At about 7:05 a.m. the following morning, the defendant telephoned Sowa, who was due to arrive shortly before 7:30 a.m., and told her not to come to the house because he was staying home from work that day. Sowa asked to speak with the victim, but the defendant said that she was in the shower. The defendant then put the baby in his car and drove to his parents’ home. As soon as he arrived, he realized that he had forgotten the baby’s diaper bag and returned to his house. There, he packed up the baby’s things, including diapers, wipes, bottles and formula, and returned to his parents’ home. The defendant’s father met him in the driveway, where the defendant told his father that he and the victim had had a fight, that he had pushed her and that “she might be dead.” When the two entered the house with the baby, the defendant’s father awakened his wife and told her that the defendant had said that “[the victim] might be dead.” The defendant went into the bathroom and began sobbing. The defendant’s father left his house to check on the victim. After discovering the victim lying dead on the floor surrounded by blood, he telephoned the police.

While the defendant waited at his parents’ home with his mother, the police surrounded the home. Major Peter Warren of the state police telephoned the house and asked to speak with the defendant. The defendant fully understood and complied with Warren’s instructions to come out of the front door of the house slowly. *32 Once outside, the defendant followed additional instructions that he was given, and he was arrested without further incident.

Following his arrest, the defendant was brought to the police station where he gave a statement to state police Detectives Richard Covello and Brian Van Ness. During the interview, the defendant made several incriminating and remorseful statements. He stated that he did not deserve help because of what he had done to the victim. Then, slumped over with his head down, he began crying. Later, in response to a question regarding what in his past he regretted most, the defendant said, “taking [the victim’s] life.” The defendant admitted to killing the victim, and forensic examination of the victim’s fingernail clippings revealed skin scrapings consistent with the defendant’s DNA.

The record discloses the following additional facts. At trial, the defendant presented two affirmative defenses: that he suffered from a mental disease or defect and that he suffered from an extreme emotional disturbance. In support of those defenses, he offered the testimony of Marvin Zelman, a board certified psychiatrist. Zelman testified that, on February 24, 2003, the defendant went to the police complaining of depression and paranoia. The police brought the defendant to Waterbury Hospital for an emergency psychiatric examination, which resulted in the defendant’s inpatient treatment for nine days and subsequent outpatient treatment. According to the hospital records, the defendant reported that, although he had been prescribed psychiatric medications for mental illness, he had not been taking those medications for the past year. The hospital diagnosed the defendant as having major depression, recurrent, with psychosis. While at the hospital, the defendant initially was prescribed Haldol, an antipsychotic medication, but later was prescribed Risperdal, another anti-psychotic medication effective in the treatment of both *33 schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and Remeron, an antidepressant. The defendant was discharged from the hospital on March 4, 2003, despite his physician’s conclusion that he was, at the time of discharge, a danger to himself and to others. Although he was supposed to remain on his psychiatric medications, in the weeks after his discharge, the defendant gradually reduced and then discontinued taking his medications. In the days before the victim was killed, the defendant suffered from paranoid delusions, believing, in part, that he was being investigated at work for the crash of a helicopter designed by the company. The defendant told Zelman that he had killed the victim because he was angry at her for cheating on him with her former husband or one of his coworkers. Zelman testified that, in his opinion, on the date of the killing, the defendant was “psychotic, and [that] the nature of his illness is schizoaffective disorder, depressive type.” In his opinion, the strangulation was a product or byproduct of the defendant’s mental illness. Zelman explained: “[The defendant] was severely disturbed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
966 A.2d 730, 291 Conn. 28, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-madigosky-conn-2009.