State v. Rivera

671 A.2d 371, 40 Conn. App. 318, 1996 Conn. App. LEXIS 70
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1996
Docket14991
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 671 A.2d 371 (State v. Rivera) 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. Rivera, 671 A.2d 371, 40 Conn. App. 318, 1996 Conn. App. LEXIS 70 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

HEIMAN, J.

The defendant appeals1 from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly excluded testimony of the victim’s mother relating to the victim’s statement to her ten days prior to his death concerning his fear of his demise. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

[319]*319The jury could reasonably have found the following facts. On the morning of December 31, 1993, Shawn Suarez went to 40 Crystal Avenue, a high rise apartment building in New London, to visit Miguel Morales, whose girlfriend resided on the sixth floor of the building, also known as building C. Suarez was accompanied by Edwin Conception. They arrived at building C and found Miguel Morales in his girlfriend’s apartment with Miguel’s brother, Benjamin, and some others. Later in the morning, the defendant arrived. The defendant had his girlfriend’s young son with him.

The group sat around the apartment, watching television and talking. Later in the morning, Suarez, Conception, Miguel Morales and the defendant left the apartment and went down to the first floor of building C. The four men went outside onto the plaza. The defendant walked off by himself. None of the men saw in which direction he went. The other three men decided to return to the apartment.

As the three men entered the building, Suarez saw Richard Morales2 standing in the lobby of building C. Suarez knew Richard Morales because they had grown up together. Suarez stopped to talk with Richard Morales while Conception and Miguel Morales went down the hallway to the elevator to return upstairs. When Suarez stopped to talk with Richard Morales, no one else was in the lobby.

As Suarez and Richard Morales stood talking, the defendant entered the lobby from the hallway and stood against a pillar in the lobby area. The defendant and Richard Morales did not speak to each other. Richard Morales’ back was turned toward a set of glass doors, and his right side was exposed to the defendant. The defendant was wearing a black jacket, black jeans and [320]*320a black hood mask that covered parts of his forehead and nose, and had holes cut into the mask for the eyes. The mask was one that Suarez had loaned to the defendant a few days before December 31, 1993.

After he spoke with Richard Morales, Suarez started to walk toward the elevator. No one else was in the lobby other than the defendant and Richard Morales, and no one was outside the doorway. As Suarez walked down the hallway toward the elevator, he heard a loud bang and began to run. Suarez ran upstairs to the apartment occupied by Miguel Morales’ girlfriend.

Several minutes later, the defendant knocked and entered the apartment. The defendant had the nickname “Sick.” The defendant said, “I’m sick, that’s why they call me Sick.” The defendant then said, “I busted that nigger” or “I bust him.” The word bust, used in that context, means to shoot.

The defendant, Suarez, and Benjamin Morales then went to the lobby and observed a number of police officers as well as other persons in the lobby. The victim, whom the police identified as Richard Morales, was lying on the floor in front of the glass doors. The police were taking photographs of people in the lobby area.

Officer Christopher Miller responded to an emergency call regarding the shooting and, when he arrived at the scene, he found the victim lying on the floor in the southeast comer of the lobby. The victim was lying on his back with his head toward the wall and his feet toward the lobby. Miller observed that the victim had suffered a gunshot wound to the head. The victim was breathing and was bleeding from his forehead. Soon after Miller’s arrival on the scene, ambulance personnel transported the victim to Lawrence and Memorial Hospital.

[321]*321Later in the day, the defendant went to Suarez’ house on Redden Avenue. The defendant and Suarez had a conversation in the parking lot and the defendant said to Suarez, “I ain’t no joke.” Suarez interpreted “I ain’t no joke” to mean that the defendant was not a person to “mess with.”

The next night, the defendant again went to Suarez’ house. The defendant told Suarez several times that “he was no joke,” and also said several times that he “ain’t nothing to be messed with.” He also said that he “got his propts,” an expression that means he “got his respect.” The defendant also asked Suarez: “Are the brothers mad at me for I had to do what I had to do?” Suarez asked the defendant if he felt bad about “busting” someone, and the defendant answered that “he wasn’t thinking about that.” The defendant and Suarez went into the bathroom and Suarez asked the defendant how he had killed the victim. The defendant answered, “I blasted that nigger.”

The victim died on January 3, 1994, at Lawrence and Memorial Hospital. An autopsy established that the victim died as a result of a gunshot wound to the head with extensive injury to the brain. The bullet had entered the back of the head in the occipital region on the right side. A forensic examination of the distribution of numerous particles of gun powder residue on the back of the victim’s sweatshirt indicated that the bullet that killed the victim was fired from a distance of one to two feet.

On January 5, 1994, detectives interviewed the defendant. He admitted that he was at 40 Crystal Avenue on the day of the shooting, and said that he was there visiting with Benjamin and Miguel Morales at their apartment. He said that Suarez and Conception were also at the apartment. He stated that at the time of the shooting, he was in the apartment and that someone in the apartment noticed a commotion in the parking [322]*322lot and that, subsequently, he went downstairs to see what was happening. He also told the police that, on the day of the shooting, he was wearing a green colored coat and a hat. The defendant denied any involvement in the killing of the victim. A few days after the shooting, the defendant was arrested.

Following a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a. On appeal, the defendant asserts as his only claim that the trial court improperly refused to permit the victim’s mother to testify about statements that the victim made to his mother concerning his fear that something was going to happen to him because he owed a debt to his girlfriend’s mother. We are unpersuaded.

Certain additional facts are necessary to an understanding of our resolution of this issue. Prior to resting his case-in-chief, the defendant made an offer of proof consisting of a statement made by Eugenia Morales, the mother of the victim, to the New London police on January 3, 1994. The defendant asserted that he had Eugenia Morales under subpoena, and that he was offering her statement as indicative of what she would testify to if called as a witness. According to the defendant’s synopsis of her statement,3 Eugenia Morales said that “she saw her son, [the victim], the Tuesday prior to Christmas4 at her apartment. At that meeting [the victim] was crying and he told his mother that if anything happens to him that she, his mother, should tell her sister or her brother the following. That [his girlfriend’s] mother told him he got somebody from New York who can do something about it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
671 A.2d 371, 40 Conn. App. 318, 1996 Conn. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rivera-connappct-1996.