Wright v. Commissioner of Correction

68 A.3d 1184, 143 Conn. App. 274, 2013 WL 2397409, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 302
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJune 11, 2013
DocketAC 32941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 A.3d 1184 (Wright v. Commissioner of Correction) 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
Wright v. Commissioner of Correction, 68 A.3d 1184, 143 Conn. App. 274, 2013 WL 2397409, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 302 (Colo. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion

KELLER, J.

The petitioner, Travis Wright, appeals following the denial of his petition for certification to appeal from the judgment of the habeas court denying his amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner claims that the habeas court abused its discretion when it denied the petition for certification to appeal and that it improperly rejected his claims that (1) his trial counsel failed to provide him with effective assistance; (2) his confession, evidence of which was admitted at his criminal trial, was untrustworthy; (3) his appellate counsel failed to provide him with effective [276]*276assistance; and (4) newly discovered evidence demonstrated his actual innocence. Because we conclude that the habeas court properly denied the petition for certification to appeal, we dismiss the appeal.

Following a jury trial, the petitioner was convicted of manslaughter in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-55 (a). The court sentenced the petitioner to serve a term of incarceration of seventeen years. This court affirmed the judgment of conviction. State v. Wright, 76 Conn. App. 91, 818 A.2d 824 (2003), cert. denied, 267 Conn. 911, 840 A.2d 1175 (2004).1

At the petitioner’s criminal trial, the state presented evidence that at approximately 4 p.m. on April 11,1999, police responded to a report of a sick or injured person in the vicinity of Rockland Place and Atlantic Avenue in Stamford. There, officers discovered the deceased victim, Wieston Tamowski, a Polish national who had emigrated to the United States. The victim was found on his back on the reclined passenger seat of an automobile that was located behind a residential structure. The passenger door of the automobile was open, and the victim’s leg extended outside of the automobile. The victim was partially covered with a blanket. The victim exhibited facial injuries, and an autopsy performed by the medical examiner revealed that the victim, who was heavily intoxicated at the time of his death, was stabbed twice in the chest. One stab wound extended through the victim’s chest cavity into one of his lungs. The other stab wound was not as deep, penetrating only as far as the victim’s breast bone.

[277]*277On the morning of June 24, 1999, the petitioner, then seventeen years of age, was apprehended and taken into custody by the Stamford police in connection with an unrelated attempted robbery incident. Concerning this incident, the petitioner was interviewed at the police department, primarily by Officer Gregory Holt. By early afternoon, the petitioner finished providing a sworn, written statement to the police in which he confessed to his involvement in that attempted robbery.

After the petitioner finished providing a statement with regard to the attempted robbery incident, Holt left the interview room briefly. At this time, Stamford police Sergeant Anthony Lupinacci asked the petitioner if he had any information about a stabbing that had occurred in the south end of Stamford. Lupinacci typically posed this question to arrestees in an effort to gain information related to the unsolved crime. The petitioner replied, “What are you going to do for me?” Lupinacci responded that he could speak with the prosecutor on his behalf.

The petitioner told Lupinacci that he had information about the stabbing. He then provided the police with some accurate information about the crime, information not known publicly, but initially he did not implicate himself in the victim’s death. There was evidence that, apart from referring to the fact that a stabbing had occurred in the south end of Stamford, the police did not provide the petitioner with other information concerning the crime. First, the petitioner stated that he had information about the stabbing by way of a friend, Alicia Cobb. When the police indicated that they intended to contact Cobb, the petitioner changed his story and said that he was present at the stabbing. He stated that, on the night of the stabbing, he was at a dance with friends, including a person named Jerry Cook. After the dance, he was walking with approximately ten other people, including Cook, in the south end of Stamford when someone in the group identified [278]*278the victim as a person whom they had robbed a day or two earlier.2 The petitioner stated that Cook approached the victim and stabbed him two to three times while the petitioner and others, including a person named Jamal Grant, were present.

After hearing this version of events, the officers interviewing the petitioner prepared a photographic array from which the petitioner accurately identified a photograph of Cook. Then, Lupinacci informed the petitioner that Cook was imprisoned on the date of the stabbing and, therefore, could not have been present at the crime scene. The petitioner reacted by putting his head down and stating that he had fabricated this version of events.

Ultimately, Lupinacci left the interview room, but Holt continued to interview the petitioner concerning the stabbing. During portions of the interview process, Holt was joined by another Stamford police officer, John Lynch. At one point during the process, the petitioner, after being told that his initial accounts of what transpired were untrue, was informed by the officers that the stabbing was fatal. The petitioner reacted by crying openly and, soon thereafter, confessed that he stabbed the victim. By 11:27 p.m., the petitioner completed a sworn and written statement in which he implicated himself as the perpetrator of the victim’s death. Holt prepared the typewritten statement based on information provided by the petitioner. Later, the petitioner was asked to review the statement. When he was satisfied that it was accurate, he inscribed his initials at the beginning and end of each paragraph and signed it.

The statement provided, in relevant part, that after leaving a dance at a local YMCA, the petitioner walked alone to the area of Atlantic Avenue and Rockland Place on the way to his cousin’s residence, where he planned [279]*279to spend the night. He walked behind a house intending to urinate, at which time he encountered the victim, who spoke with an accent and said something to the petitioner that he could not understand. The victim grabbed the petitioner, but the petitioner walked away. The petitioner then walked back behind the house, where an automobile was located, at which time the victim grabbed the petitioner and began to choke him. In an ensuing struggle, the petitioner, who believed he was in physical danger, removed a knife, approximately six inches in length, from his pants and stabbed the victim twice in the chest. The stabbing occurred near the automobile on April 11, 1999, at approximately 2 a.m. Thereafter, the petitioner fled the crime scene.

While explaining his version of events to the police, the petitioner, using a ruler in place of the knife and Lynch in place of the victim, physically demonstrated his actions in stabbing the victim. He said that the first stab, in the middle of the victim’s chest, struck something hard, but that the second stab “went in like a piece of meat.” This description was entirely consistent with the medical examiner’s report concerning the victim’s fatal injuries. The petitioner told the police that the stabbing occurred in the vicinity of a store that was known by the fact that a dog frequently roamed on its roof.

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Related

State v. Milner
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2020
Oliphant v. Commissioner of Correction
79 A.3d 77 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A.3d 1184, 143 Conn. App. 274, 2013 WL 2397409, 2013 Conn. App. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-commissioner-of-correction-connappct-2013.