Connecticut Statutes
§ 53a-147 — Bribery: Class C felony.
Connecticut § 53a-147
This text of Connecticut § 53a-147 (Bribery: Class C felony.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 53a-147 (2026).
Text
(a)A person is guilty of bribery if he promises, offers, confers or agrees to confer upon a public servant or a person selected to be a public servant, any benefit as consideration for the recipient's decision, opinion, recommendation or vote as a public servant or a person selected to be a public servant.
(b)Bribery is a class C felony.
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Related
United States v. Richard Foley, Jr.
73 F.3d 484 (Second Circuit, 1996)
Canada v. Gonzales
448 F.3d 560 (Second Circuit, 2006)
United States v. Triumph Capital Group, Inc.
260 F. Supp. 2d 444 (D. Connecticut, 2002)
Legislative History
(1969, P.A. 828, S. 149; P.A. 80-479, S. 2; P.A. 03-259, S. 46.) History: P.A. 80-479 included bribery of persons selected to be public servants in provisions and bribery consisting of promises of benefits for recipient's decision, opinion, recommendation of vote, deleting reference to “other exercise of discretion”; P.A. 03-259 amended Subsec. (b) to change bribery from a class D felony to a class C felony. Offense of offering gratuity requires element of proof, specific intent, which is not needed to prove greater offense of bribery; it is no defense for crime of bribery that police officer had no authority to take action desired by bribe given; covers crime of bribery in broad terms and is not limited to administration of justice and attempts to influence legislation. 172 C. 458. Sec. 29-9 is not lesser included offense to this charge, and acceptance of guilty plea to said section was nullity. Id., 608. Cited. 1 CA 524; 5 CA 125; 9 CA 15; 14 CA 322; 21 CA 386. The term “offer” is undefined, but section language is similar to federal bribery statute, 18 USC 201(b), and, under federal law, a bribery conviction must be based on more than evidence of mere preparation, but must progress to the point that defendant made an offer that consisted of an expression of a desire and an ability to pay the public official for performing a proscribed act. 156 CA 650.
Nearby Sections
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Affirmative defense to burglary.Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
Connecticut § 53a-147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ct/53a-147.