State v. Searles

155 A. 213, 113 Conn. 247, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 155 A. 213 (State v. Searles) 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. Searles, 155 A. 213, 113 Conn. 247, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 183 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Aveey, J.

The information in three counts charges assault with intent to commit murder. In the first *248 count, the accused was charged with shooting a police officer, Wilbur Simpson, at Danbury, September 19th, 1930. In the second, he was charged with shooting Police Officer Healey at Greenwich, November 22d, 1930. In the third, he was charged with shooting Police Officer Teufel also at Greenwich a little later on the same day.

At the trial, the State claimed to have proved, as to the first count, these facts: About three-thirty in the morning, September 19th, 1930, Officer Simpson, while on patrol duty in Danbury, heard a noise in a yard at the rear of a store. Accompanied by Officer Schulze, he entered the yard and found there a Ford sedan. Turning a searchlight upon the automobile, he saw the accused seated behind the driving wheel who, on being asked his name, where he was from, and what he was doing, said he was from Stamford. The officer stepped to the front of the car to observe the registration numbers, and seeing they were not numbers issued in Stamford, returned to the door and engaged the accused in further conversation. Meanwhile Officer Schulze noticed, in the automobile leaning against the seat, a shotgun and rifle, and ordered the accused to hand them out to him, which was done. The shotgun was a Remington twelve gauge automatic with four or five fully loaded shells therein. The rifle was a .38 caliber repeater with five or six shells loaded with ball therein. Officer Simpson stepped around the rear of the car to the right-hand door, which was open, reached in and placed a handcuff on the right wrist of the accused, and ordered him to get out of the car, the officer holding in his left hand the other part of the handcuff. When partly out, while one foot was on the running board, the accused, with a revolver held in his left hand, fired a shot at the officer. The latter, having the flashlight in his right *249 hand, and observing the quick motion of the accused, struck with the flashlight at his left hand holding the revolver. The shot hit the end of the finger of the officer’s left hand holding the handcuff attached to the right wrist of the accused. The latter immediately pulled away and ran out of the alley leading from the yard; and, when five or six feet distant, fired another shot which took effect in the door of the automobile near which the officer was standing, and then made his escape. A companion of the accused was nearby the automobile while these incidents occurred. The two had just burglarized the building; and in the rear of the automobile, covered with a blanket, was a large quantity of merchandise taken from the store, including, among other things, a number of shotguns, rifles, revolvers and automatic pistols, with about fifteen hundred rounds of ammunition therefor. The accused, at the trial, took the witness stand on his own behalf and admitted shooting Officer Simpson, but claimed the latter did not strike the revolver with his searchlight when the first shot was fired, and that it was fired at the officer’s hand to enable the accused to get away, and with no intention of inflicting serious injury. He further claimed that the second shot was fired into the ground, and was not intended to, and did not, hit anyone.

As to the second and third counts, the State claimed to have shown that early in the forenoon of November 22d, 1930, the accused, with a companion named Morgan, was traveling toward New York on the Boston Post Road in a Cadillac automobile, which he had stolen in New Haven the preceding evening. Previously, he had stolen another Cadillac which bore Louisiana registration numbers; and, after leaving New Haven and before reaching Milford, had removed the registration numbers issued by the State of Ohio, *250 and placed upon the automobile numbers issued by the State of Louisiana removed from the other car. While driving in the town of Darien, the accused was seen by two police officers' patrolling the road. Observing the Louisiana numbers upon the car, and having been advised to be on the lookout for a Cadillac bearing such registration, these Darien police officers pursued him, but he succeeded in escaping. In the town of Greenwich, William E. Pyne, a motor-cycle officer of the Greenwich police department, patrolling the road, who had been advised to be on the lookout for a Cadillac bearing Louisiana markers, met the accused and turned and pursued him. The latter, while being so pursued, drove the car upward of seventy miles an hour, attaining the highest rate of speed with which he was able to operate it. Officer Pyne, while pursuing the accused, twice came alongside and ordered him to stop, but he did not obey the officer’s command, continuing on. Officer Pyne then fired four shots at the rear of the car, endeavoring to puncture the gasoline tank. These shots, however, took effect in a spare tire mounted on the rear, and in the rear fender. While the officer was pursuing and was behind approximately one hundred feet, through the window in the rear of the car he saw the accused discharge a revolver in his left hand over his right shoulder in an endeavor to shoot the officer through the window. This shot, however, took effect in a cushion in the back of the rear seat. . While being pursued, the accused inquired of his companion, Morgan, also armed, if he knew how to use his gun, and told Morgan to “Use it if you have to.” Succeeding in escaping from Officer Pyne, the accused continued on, until required to stop at an intersecting street where traffic was crossing. James Healey, a traffic officer of Greenwich, was doing duty at this point. An auto *251 mobile had come to a stop at this intersection and the accused stopped behind and close to it, and endeavored to get into such a position as to hide his car, or its registration markers, from the observation of Officer Healey. The latter, who was on the lookout for a Cadillac bearing Louisiana registration numbers, and seeing that they were the numbers for which he was looking, drew his revolver and stepped to the side of the ear, close to the door opposite the driver’s seat. The window was down. Holding his revolver in his right hand in front and fairly close to his chest, the officer laid the barrel over the window sill in the door at the driver’s seat, and ordered the accused to move over to the side of the street. The latter said, “All right; I will move over”; but with his right hand immediately whipped around a revolver and fired point blank at the officer who was only about two feet distant. The bullet wounded the fore and middle fingers and thumb of Officer Healey’s right hand, where they came together in gripping his revolver, and knocked it out of his hand and into the street. Another automobile, just coming up, passed over the revolver, rendering it impossible to regain it. The officer, thus disarmed, moved somewhat toward the rear of the car and bent down to shield himself. The accused immediately fired two more shots at the officer, one of which took effect in the casing of a window of a bank about eighteen feet distant. At this time, the officer was about twelve feet from the accused, who thereupon started his car in motion and escaped. After driving some nine or ten blocks, he and his companion abandoned the car and proceeded through a side street on foot, and took shelter in a piece of woods.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 A. 213, 113 Conn. 247, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-searles-conn-1931.