Streater v. Commissioner of Correction, No. Cv96-0389147s (Dec. 17, 1998)
This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 15253 (Streater v. Commissioner of Correction, No. Cv96-0389147s (Dec. 17, 1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A trial to a jury commenced on July 24, 1991, ending in a mistrial on August 13, 1991 after the jury reported it was unable to reach a verdict. A second trial began on January 19, 1993. On February 9, 1993 the petitioner was found guilty of murder and of carrying a pistol without a permit and on March 28, 1993, the petitioner received a total effective sentence of thirty five years imprisonment for said offense.
The petitioner appealed his conviction. The conviction was affirmed on December 13, 1994, State v. Streater,
A hearing on the habeas petition opened on April 17, 1998, continued to May 18, 1998, June 23, 1998 and concluded on July 14, 1998, when both parties rested and closing argument was heard.
By letter dated July 16, 1998, the petitioner requested permission to withdraw his petition without prejudice. On December 11, 1998 a hearing on said request was held, following which the court denied the petitioner's request.
At the time of the habeas hearing Carolyn Cheeks failed to appear. Both Joseph Preston and Donny Andrews did appear and testify at the habeas hearing.
First, taking into account both the evidence produced at trial and the evidence produced at the habeas hearing, the petitioner must persuade the habeas court, by clear and convincing evidence, as that standard is understood and applied in the context of such a claim, that the petitioner is actually innocent of the crime for which he stands convicted.
Second, the petitioner must establish that after considering all the evidence and the inferences drawn therefrom, as the habeas court did, no reasonable fact finder would find the petitioner guilty, Id. at 791, 792.
The Miller court emphasizes that the standard of proof, as applied to a habeas claim of actual innocence, is "a very demanding standard" and one that "forbids relief whenever the evidence is loose, equivocal or contradictory", Id. at 795 (citation omitted).
Measured against this standard, the court finds that the petitioner has fallen far short of meeting his burden of proof, for reasons discussed below.
Donny Andrews also testified at the habeas hearing. Andrews maintained that he lied at the time of trial because he was being pressured, harassed by the police department, the prosecutor's office, by a lot of people. That was why he had testified that the petitioner shot Gamble. A review or the trial transcript, however, reveals that Andrews did not testify he saw the petitioner shoot Gamble. Andrews, in stoutly maintaining he testified falsely that he witnessed the petitioner shoot Gamble, undermined his own credibility. His testimony was loose, equivocal and contradictory and ultimately unpersuasive.
Accordingly, the relief requested is denied and the petition CT Page 15256 is dismissed.
By the Court
Downey, J.
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