State v. Reilly

61 A.3d 598, 141 Conn. App. 562, 2013 WL 1110708, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 153
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedMarch 26, 2013
DocketAC 33870
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 61 A.3d 598 (State v. Reilly) 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. Reilly, 61 A.3d 598, 141 Conn. App. 562, 2013 WL 1110708, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 153 (Colo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

SCHALLER, J.

The defendant, Kenneth Reilly, appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of three counts of risk of injury to, or impairing the morals of, a child in violation of General Statutes § 53-21 (a) (2). On appeal, the defendant claims that the trial court improperly denied his motion for a mistrial. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The following facts are relevant to this appeal. Prior to his trial, the defendant filed a motion to suppress [564]*564statements that he had given to Waterbury police officers on the grounds that such statements were obtained in violation of his Miranda1 rights and consisted of a confession obtained involuntarily. During the defendant’s suppression hearing, Ruda Pratt, a Waterbury police detective, testified that she was assigned to investigate allegations of sexual assault involving the defendant. The defendant agreed to meet with Pratt and arrived at the police department around 10 a.m. on July 19, 2007. After entering the interview room, Pratt read the defendant a form to waive his Miranda rights, and the defendant agreed to waive his rights.

Pratt further testified that she generated a typed statement contemporaneously with the defendant’s disclosure of the incident, in which the defendant admitted in detail that he had touched the minor victim inappropriately. After Pratt completed the defendant’s statement, the defendant reviewed it and agreed that it was correct. Michael Ponzillo, a Waterbury police sergeant, testified that he then entered the interview room. Pon-zillo stated that he verified that the defendant’s statement was accurate, asked the defendant to initial and sign the statement, and notarized the statement after the defendant signed it. The defendant’s printed statement fisted a start time of 11:10 a.m., which was automatically generated by the computer when the program was initiated. The statement also fisted an end time of 11:12 a.m., which was manually entered by the officer completing the form. Pratt stated that the interview lasted approximately forty minutes, and explained that the end time on the statement indicating that the interview lasted only two minutes was the result of a typographical error.

During the suppression hearing, the defendant testified to the contrary. The defendant denied waiving his [565]*565Miranda rights and specifically stated that he was not given a form to do so. The defendant also denied admitting to any of the allegations contained in the printed statement and testified that Pratt did not type his statement contemporaneously with his disclosures. Instead, Pratt asked the defendant a series of questions, prepared a handwritten statement and then threw that statement away. According to the defendant, Pratt then typed a statement and threatened him with incarceration should he fail to sign it. The defendant testified that after he left the station, Pratt and another officer came to his home and asked him to sign a second statement because the first statement was incomplete. The defendant’s mother corroborated this portion of his testimony. Pratt denied returning to the defendant’s home, and Ponzillo denied having any knowledge of such an occurrence.

The court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress. In so holding, the court found the officers’ testimony more credible than the defendant’s, noting specifically that it found “[t]he defendant’s testimony . . . incredulous.”2 In crediting the officers’ testimony over the defendant’s, the court concluded that “[the] defendant was not in custody at the time of his statement. ... He was never restrained during the interview, threatened, harmed or denied any necessity or any request during the interview. And critically important, he left the interview after it ended proving that he was, in fact, free to go. . . . Therefore, it was not necessary for the police [566]*566to advise the defendant of his Miranda rights. . . . [A]s an alternative basis for denying this suppression motion . . . [the court concluded] that there was a valid waiver of [the defendant’s] Miranda rights” because the defendant was of sufficient age and intelligence to understand the nature of his waiver, he was not restrained or threatened in any way and he was not under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Subsequently, the defendant’s statement was admitted as a full exhibit and read to the jury at trial.

During the defendant’s trial, Pratt and Ponzillo changed portions of their testimony that was given during the defendant’s suppression hearing.3 Specifically, Pratt testified that after reviewing the defendant’s signed statement, she noticed that her name had been omitted. According to her testimony, Pratt informed Ponzillo of the error and he advised her to print a new statement. Pratt also testified inconsistently regarding the error with the statement’s end time. Pratt admitted that the second statement was not taken contemporaneously with the defendant’s disclosures, but, instead, was generated after he had left and the error was discovered.4 Pratt stated that she opened the program at 11:10 a.m. to correct the omission of her name from the defendant’s first statement; she completed this correction in two minutes and thus entered the end time of 11:12 a.m. The end time of 11:12 a.m. was not the result of a typographical error, but was instead the correct end time for the second statement. Ponzillo then accompanied Pratt to the defendant’s house where the defendant signed the corrected statement. Pratt stated that she shredded the defendant’s first statement, and that she [567]*567did not disclose this information during the suppression hearing because at that time she did not recall taking more than one statement, destroying the first statement or returning to the defendant’s home to have him sign a second statement. Ponzillo testified similarly, that at the suppression hearing, he did not recall visiting the defendant’s home to have him sign a second statement.

The defendant filed a motion for a mistrial, arguing that this inconsistent testimony denied him a meaningful suppression hearing and resulted in the admission of improper evidence at trial. In essence, the defendant asserted that the officers’ testimony was so contradictory at the suppression hearing that it rendered the factual findings of the court, Schuman, J., inaccurate. The court, Cremins, J., denied the motion for a mistrial. In so holding, the court acknowledged that a “[h]igh degree of necessity is required before a conclusion may be reached that a mistrial is appropriate.” The court found that although Pratt changed the defendant’s statement to correct the omission of her name, there was no evidence that the substance of the statement was changed. Moreover, the defendant still signed and initialed the second statement. The court further concluded that there was no indication that the defendant requested counsel prior to signing the second statement at his home; thus, the waiver of rights form that the defendant signed at the police station was still in effect. To ameliorate any potential harm to the defendant, the court gave a spoliation instruction, which in essence, instructed the jurors that they may infer that the destroyed statement contained information that would have been damaging to the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.3d 598, 141 Conn. App. 562, 2013 WL 1110708, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reilly-connappct-2013.