State v. Sanchez

146 A.3d 344, 166 Conn. App. 665, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 279
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJuly 5, 2016
DocketAC38310
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 A.3d 344 (State v. Sanchez) 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. Sanchez, 146 A.3d 344, 166 Conn. App. 665, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 279 (Colo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

MULLINS, J.

following *667 a jury trial, the defendant, Luis Sanchez, was convicted of one count of murder in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a and two counts of assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-59 (a)(5). On appeal, the defendant claims that the trial court erred in (1) admitting, as proof of intent, prior misconduct evidence regarding his involvement in a shooting that had occurred fifteen months before the charged crimes, in which he used the same gun that he used in the charged crimes, and (2) charging the jury that this misconduct evidence was admitted to prove the intent elements of the charged crimes. 1 We affirm the judgment of the trial court. *346 The jury reasonably could have found the following facts. On the evening of October 6, 2010, the defendant, his half-brother Justin Bonilla, and his friends Gina Colon, Santos Gonzalez, Gabriel Rivera, and Akeem Wilis attended an "open mic" night at the Franklin Bar *668 and Grill (bar) on the corner of Franklin Avenue and Brown Street in Hartford. Gonzalez drove the group to the bar in his car.

At the bar's entrance, an individual employed by the event's organizer to provide security patted down male patrons to make sure that no one entered with a weapon. Prior to entering the bar, the defendant concealed a gun under the driver's seat of Gonzalez' car.

In the early morning hours of October 7, 2010, someone jostled or spilled a drink on a female patron, precipitating a disturbance near the bar's stage. Bobby Forbes and Joseph Schroeter were onstage with the performer when the disturbance began. Shortly after that disturbance, a fight broke out elsewhere in the bar. At the start of the fight, the defendant, Bonilla, and Wilis left the bar via the Brown Street exit. As the defendant left the bar, a security guard, Quron Zene, heard the defendant say "somebody get a ratchet." 2 After exiting the bar, the defendant retrieved his gun from Gonzalez' car.

After the physical fighting broke out, the bar's owner began ushering patrons to the exits. Before being ejected from the bar, Forbes put an empty beer bottle in the pocket of his red and black jacket. 3 As patrons exited the bar, they congregated at the corner of Franklin Avenue and Brown Street.

The defendant calmly walked from Gonzalez' car to a position in front of a bank across the street from the bar. From there, he fired gunshots into the crowd. He fired an initial volley of shots into the crowd, then *669 paused before firing a second volley of shots in the same direction. In all, he fired twelve shots into the assembled crowd in the two separate bursts. The defendant's gunfire struck Jeanna Flores, who was standing in the crowd, in the back of the head, causing her death. The defendant's gunfire also struck Forbes and Schroeter, causing them injuries. 4

After the shooting, the defendant and his companions fled the scene in Gonzalez' car. As the group drove away, the defendant asked Wilis if he had seen "the way [the defendant] let them have it" and told *347 Wilis that he "had to do it." The following afternoon, the defendant and Colon fabricated an alibi according to which the defendant and Wilis left the bar with some women before the disturbance began.

The defendant and Colon also asked Colon's cousin, Aida Rojas, to corroborate their false alibi by telling the police, if they questioned her, that the defendant had spent the night at her house. A few weeks later, Rojas drove Colon and the defendant to the riverfront in Hartford, where the defendant threw the gun he had used in the shooting into the river.

Sometime thereafter, the police questioned Rojas. Rojas initially gave police the false alibi that the defendant was not at the bar, but rather had spent the night at her house. The defendant also gave the police the false alibi, telling them that he had left the bar before any disturbance and had spent the night at Rojas' house. Rojas later admitted to the police that the alibi was a lie.

The police also questioned Colon. Colon gave the police two different and contradictory statements *670 regarding the shooting outside the bar. When questioned initially, she did not mention that the defendant was present, in keeping with the fabricated alibi. Later, after having been charged with tampering with a witness and hindering prosecution for having solicited Rojas to lie, Colon divulged that on the day after the shooting the defendant told her that "someone pulled out a gun and he had to do what he had to do" because otherwise someone could have been shot, and "it could have been [Colon]."

The following procedural history is also relevant. On October 26, 2011, after the state had convened a grand jury to investigate the events of October 6-7, 2010, Michael Sullivan, an inspector in the cold case unit of the Chief State's Attorney's Office, informed the defendant that he was the target of the investigation. Sullivan told the defendant that he had a right to testify before the grand jury. The defendant denied knowledge of or involvement in the shooting. In response, Sullivan remarked that "there's a lot of ways that people die in a shooting that is not necessarily murder," including when you shoot at someone else in order to protect yourself. The defendant maintained that he had nothing to do with a murder.

Prior to the start of trial, the state filed notice of its intent to offer prior misconduct evidence. Specifically, the state sought to offer evidence that in 2009, an individual named Fred Colby 5 had identified the defendant as one of two individuals who had threatened him with automatic handguns, then fired at him as he fled the scene in his vehicle. The state represented that a 9mm shell casing recovered from the scene of the 2009 incident matched the casings recovered in the present case, *671 thereby establishing that they had been fired from the same gun. The state sought admission of the evidence on two separate bases: (1) as relevant to the defendant's intent to commit murder and assault; and (2) as evidence of the defendant's identity as the shooter because it demonstrated that he possessed the instrumentality or means to commit these crimes.

On September 12, 2013, the court heard argument from the parties as to whether it should admit evidence of the 2009 incident, at the conclusion of which it reserved decision on the matter. On October 10, 2013, *348 the court heard additional argument and preliminarily ruled that the evidence was admissible.

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Related

State v. Franklin
166 A.3d 24 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2017)
State v. Sanchez
149 A.3d 498 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 A.3d 344, 166 Conn. App. 665, 2016 Conn. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sanchez-connappct-2016.