State v. Robert R. ( 2021 )


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    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. ROBERT R.*
    (SC 20355)
    Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria,
    Kahn, Ecker and Keller, Js.
    Syllabus
    Convicted of sexual assault in the first degree in connection with the sexual
    abuse of M, the stepsister of the defendant’s girlfriend, S, the defendant
    appealed. At trial, M testified that the defendant had sexually assaulted
    her on four occasions, the first three of which occurred when M was
    a minor and the defendant was in his twenties. The fourth incident,
    which led to the defendant’s conviction, occurred when M was eighteen
    years old. With respect to the latter incident, M testified that she was
    home alone when the defendant knocked on the door and that, after
    she asked him to leave, the defendant entered the home, grabbed her
    arm, pushed her toward the living room couch, and sexually assaulted
    her. M further testified that, after the defendant was startled by an
    outside noise, he went into the kitchen, where he ejaculated into a paper
    towel that he threw into a garbage can. At trial, the defendant denied
    that he ever sexually assaulted M, but he admitted to having consensual
    sex with her during that incident. He also denied that he ejaculated into
    a paper towel and threw it in the garbage. N, a forensic biologist, testified
    at trial regarding tests she conducted on the paper towel, which M had
    provided to the police shortly after the incident. N testified that those
    tests revealed the presence of semen but were negative for spermatozoa.
    P, a forensic science examiner, testified that tests she performed on
    the paper towel revealed the presence of the defendant’s skin cells but
    were inconclusive as to whether his sperm cells were also present.
    Neither N nor P could indicate how the various substances came to be
    on the towel. During closing arguments, defense counsel focused on
    attacking M’s credibility and exposing her motive to falsely accuse the
    defendant. Specifically, defense counsel attempted to present the defen-
    dant’s theory of the case that M had planted evidence by wiping herself
    with the paper towel after engaging in a consensual sexual encounter
    with the defendant and then presenting that paper towel to the police.
    The trial court nevertheless sustained the prosecutor’s objection and
    precluded defense counsel from making that argument, concluding that
    it was not supported by any evidence in the record. On appeal, the
    defendant contended, inter alia, that the trial court had violated his
    constitutional right to the assistance of counsel by precluding defense
    counsel from arguing to the jury that M had planted physical evidence
    on the paper towel in an effort to falsely accuse the defendant. Held:
    1. The trial court improperly precluded defense counsel from arguing to the
    jury during closing argument that M had planted physical evidence on
    the paper towel in an effort to substantiate her false allegations against
    the defendant, in violation of the defendant’s constitutional right to the
    assistance of counsel, and, accordingly, this court reversed the judgment
    of conviction and remanded the case for a new trial:
    a. The trial court improperly restricted the scope of defense counsel’s
    closing argument by barring him from presenting the defendant’s theory
    of the case, as there was sufficient evidence in the record from which
    the jury reasonably could have inferred that M planted the evidence on the
    paper towel to substantiate her false allegations against the defendant:
    defense counsel relied on reasonable inferences from the facts in evi-
    dence, including the conflicting testimony of M and the defendant regard-
    ing the incident and whether the defendant ejaculated into the paper
    towel, testimony that it was M who provided the paper towel to the police,
    the testimony of N and P regarding their findings, and the testimony of
    one of M’s stepsisters that M had a history of making false claims;
    moreover, the evidence presented at trial, namely, that M had a tumultu-
    ous relationship with her family, that she had a history of making false
    claims, and that she had been engaged in a consensual romantic relation-
    ship with the defendant, who married S only months after the incident
    in question, provided a basis for the jury to reasonably infer that M had
    a motive for planting evidence of the defendant’s DNA on the paper towel.
    b. The trial court’s improper limitation on the scope of defense counsel’s
    closing argument deprived the defendant of his constitutional right to
    the assistance of counsel, and, accordingly, the defendant was entitled
    to a new trial; M’s testimony was the only source of evidence from which
    the jury reasonably could have concluded that the sexual encounter
    with the defendant was not consensual, the only argument presented by
    defense counsel to establish reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt
    concerned M’s credibility, and, because the evidence regarding the paper
    towel provided the strongest evidence, from the defendant’s perspective,
    that M lied about the incident, depriving defense counsel of the opportu-
    nity to make that argument was to deprive the defendant of the full and
    fair participation of his counsel in the adversary process.
    2. The defendant could not prevail on his claim that the evidence was
    insufficient to support his conviction of sexual assault in the first degree
    on the ground that the state failed to prove that he used force or the
    threat of force; M’s testimony with respect to the alleged sexual assault,
    including that the defendant grabbed her arm, pushed her toward the
    couch, removed her underwear, and inserted his penis inside of her as
    she tried to push him off and protested, was sufficient to establish the
    force element required for a conviction of first degree sexual assault.
    3. This court declined to address the defendant’s claim that the trial court
    had abused its discretion in admitting the testimony of an expert in
    the field of child and adolescent sexual abuse, insofar as the expert’s
    expertise was in child sexual abuse and M was eighteen years old
    when the incident at issue occurred; although it was possible that the
    defendant’s claim would arise during the defendant’s new trial if the
    prosecutor elected to call the same expert, the trial court may further
    evaluate the issue on remand, as the prosecutor may call that expert
    and probe her experience in working with eighteen year olds or may
    call a different expert, in which case the record would look different
    from the one presently before this court.
    Argued May 6—officially released August 6, 2021**
    Procedural History
    Substitute information charging the defendant with
    three counts of the crime of risk of injury to a child,
    and with one count each of the crimes of sexual assault
    in the first degree and sexual assault in the second
    degree, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial
    district of Fairfield and tried to the jury before Russo,
    J.; verdict and judgment of guilty of sexual assault in
    the first degree, from which the defendant appealed.
    Reversed; new trial.
    Cameron L. Atkinson, with whom, on the brief, were
    Norman A. Pattis, Kevin Smith and Zachary Reiland,
    for the appellant (defendant).
    Matthew A. Weiner, assistant state’s attorney, with
    whom, on the brief, were Joseph T. Corradino, state’s
    attorney, and Ann F. Lawlor, supervisory assistant
    state’s attorney, for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    McDONALD, J. The defendant, Robert R., appeals
    from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury
    trial, of one count of sexual assault in the first degree.
    On appeal, the defendant claims that (1) the trial court
    violated his sixth amendment right to the assistance of
    counsel by precluding defense counsel during closing
    argument from arguing to the jury that the complainant,
    M, had planted physical evidence on a paper towel in
    an effort to substantiate her false allegations against
    the defendant, (2) there was insufficient evidence to
    prove that the defendant used force or the threat of
    force, as required to sustain his conviction of sexual
    assault in the first degree, and (3) the trial court improp-
    erly admitted expert testimony from a witness who
    specializes in child and adolescent sexual abuse. We
    agree with the defendant with respect to his first claim
    and, accordingly, reverse the judgment of conviction.
    The jury reasonably could have found the following
    relevant facts. When M was twelve years old, she moved
    to Bridgeport to live with her father, Louis, stepmother,
    Dora, and stepsister, Isabelle. Another of M’s stepsis-
    ters, Stephanie, was dating the defendant. Stephanie
    and the defendant lived together down the street from
    Louis and Dora. At the time M moved to Bridgeport,
    the defendant was in his mid-twenties. M testified that
    the defendant sexually assaulted her on multiple occa-
    sions and exposed her to sexually inappropriate situa-
    tions when she was between the ages of thirteen and
    eighteen years old. Specifically, M testified to four
    incidents.
    The first incident described by M occurred when she
    was thirteen years old. One evening, the defendant came
    to M’s house because he had an argument with Steph-
    anie. Louis told the defendant that he could ‘‘stay on
    the couch.’’ M testified that, when she brought the
    defendant a blanket, he ‘‘touch[ed] [her] butt,’’ followed
    her to her bedroom, and sexually assaulted her. M testi-
    fied that, the next morning, the defendant sexually
    assaulted her a second time in her bedroom. M told
    Louis about the sexual assaults, and Louis and Dora
    then took her to Bridgeport Hospital. M ultimately left
    the hospital before being examined by a physician.
    Louis’ testimony regarding this incident, however, var-
    ied from M’s. He testified that, on the evening in ques-
    tion, he and the defendant were watching wrestling and
    drinking beer in the living room. The defendant went
    upstairs to use the bathroom. Louis recalled that he
    went upstairs and found the defendant, fully clothed,
    looking in on M while she slept. He then told the defen-
    dant to ‘‘get the hell out,’’ and the defendant left the
    house. Louis also testified that he found the defendant
    hiding in the closet in M’s bedroom one morning but
    could not recall if it was the morning after he first found
    the defendant looking in on M.
    M also recounted a second incident. She testified
    that, when she was thirteen years old, the defendant
    asked her to send him nude pictures of herself. M testi-
    fied that she complied and that the defendant then
    sent her a nude picture of himself. Isabelle, however,
    testified that she was present when the defendant and
    Stephanie informed Louis that M had been sending the
    defendant nude pictures of herself. Isabelle also testi-
    fied that she did not know anything about the defendant
    sending pictures to M. Finally, Isabelle recalled that M
    had a history of ‘‘making false claims.’’
    M described a third incident that occurred when she
    was fourteen or fifteen years old. M testified that, one
    night, when her friend, V, slept over at her house, the
    defendant came into M’s bedroom, removed her clothes,
    and sexually assaulted her. V confirmed that she regu-
    larly slept over at M’s house. She stated that, during
    the sleepovers, she would sleep in M’s twin bed with
    M. V testified, however, that she did not recall the defen-
    dant ever entering M’s bedroom while she slept over.
    Finally, M testified that a fourth incident occurred
    on July 28, 2016, when M was eighteen years old. Specifi-
    cally, M recounted that, after returning home from a
    summer program at a nearby university, she let her dog
    out into her fenced in backyard. Shortly thereafter, the
    defendant knocked on the front door. When M opened
    the door, she saw the defendant holding her dog, and
    he explained that he found the dog down the street
    from M’s house. M took the dog from the defendant,
    and the defendant asked M where Louis was. M
    responded that he had not arrived home from work. M
    then asked the defendant to leave because Louis did
    not want him there when M was home alone. M testified
    that the defendant, instead of leaving, kept inching into
    the home, until he grabbed M’s arm, pushed her toward
    the living room couch, and sexually assaulted her. M
    testified that, during the assault, ‘‘I was trying to push
    him off me with my arms, but he kept holding [them]
    down, so I kept turning my body like this, with my
    knees, trying to push him off me, and he didn’t want
    to get off. And I was yelling, help, can you stop, can
    you get off me, and then he didn’t want to get off me.’’ M
    testified that the defendant ended the assaultive sexual
    intercourse with her suddenly when he was startled by
    a car pulling out of a neighbor’s driveway. According
    to M, the defendant got off of her, went into the kitchen,
    began to masturbate, ejaculated into a paper towel,
    threw the paper towel into a garbage can, and left.
    Following the assault, M called Louis and told him
    what had just transpired. She also texted Isabelle that
    the defendant had ‘‘touched’’ her and that she ‘‘fe[lt]
    disgusted.’’ The police were subsequently called, and
    M reported the incident to officers on the scene and
    provided them with the paper towel into which she
    claimed the defendant had ejaculated. M was then taken
    by ambulance to the hospital, where medical personnel
    performed a physical examination and administered a
    sexual assault evidence collection kit. The defendant
    was interviewed by the police and denied having any
    sexual contact with M.
    In connection with the allegations made by M, the
    state charged the defendant with one count of sexual
    assault in the first degree in violation of General Stat-
    utes § 53a-70 (a) (1), one count of sexual assault in the
    second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-71
    (a) (1), one count of risk of injury to a child in violation
    of General Statutes § 53-21 (a) (2), and two counts of
    risk of injury to a child in violation of § 53-21 (a) (1).
    At trial, the defendant testified in his own defense.
    He denied each allegation, stating that he never sexually
    assaulted M. The defendant, however, did admit to hav-
    ing consensual sex with M on July 28, 2016, when she
    was eighteen years old, a claim that he denied when
    he was initially questioned by the police. He explained
    to the jury that he lied to the police initially because
    he was being interviewed within earshot of Stephanie,
    and she did not know at that point that he had ‘‘cheat[ed]
    on’’ her with M. The defendant testified that he began
    having consensual, physical encounters with M in
    March, 2016. He stated that the encounters began with
    ‘‘romantic conversations’’ in the car, then progressed
    to making out, and eventually led to the two having
    consensual sex. The defendant testified that they had
    consensual sex on two occasions: first, approximately
    one week prior to the July, 2016 incident in M’s home,
    and, the second time, on July 28, 2016.
    With respect to the July 28, 2016 incident, the defen-
    dant testified that he had found M’s dog on the street
    and took it back to her house. When M opened the
    door, she hugged him, and they began to kiss. According
    to the defendant, things quickly progressed, and the two
    began having sex against the doorway. The defendant
    testified that, shortly after moving to the couch, he
    became self-conscious, realizing that this was the time
    that Louis typically arrived home from work, and he
    was worried that Louis would walk in on them. The
    defendant further testified that, as a result, he ended
    the encounter, left the house, and went home. The
    defendant specifically denied M’s claim that he ejacu-
    lated into a paper towel and threw it in the garbage
    can, explaining that, after he stopped having sexual
    intercourse, he just pulled up his pants and left. He
    also testified that M did not seem upset when he left
    the house.
    Jennifer Nelson, a forensic biologist, also testified at
    trial. Nelson testified that she analyzed the bodily fluids
    found on the paper towel at the state forensic labora-
    tory. Specifically, she conducted tests on the paper
    towel, looking for the presence of semen and spermato-
    zoa.1 These tests revealed the presence of semen on
    the paper towel but were negative for spermatozoa.
    Nelson testified that she did not know how the sub-
    stances came to be on the paper towel. Angela Przech,
    who works as a forensic science examiner at the state
    forensic laboratory, testified that she performed DNA
    testing on a stain found on the paper towel. Przech’s
    testing revealed that the defendant’s DNA profile was
    included in a DNA mixture found in an epithelial frac-
    tion sample of the stain.2 Przech testified that she
    assumed that M was the other DNA contributor. Regard-
    ing the DNA profile found in the sperm-rich fraction
    sample, M was eliminated as a source, and the defen-
    dant’s ‘‘profile was inconclusive when compared to the
    evidentiary sample.’’ In short, Przech’s testing revealed
    that the defendant’s skin cells were on the paper towel,
    but her testing was inconclusive as to whether his sperm
    cells were also present. Przech also testified that she
    did not know how the substances came to be on the
    paper towel.
    The jury ultimately found the defendant guilty of sex-
    ual assault in the first degree in connection with the
    events of July 28, 2016, and not guilty of the remaining
    charges. The court sentenced the defendant to a total
    effective sentence of twenty years’ incarceration, two
    of which are the mandatory minimum, suspended after
    eight years, and ten years of supervised probation. This
    appeal followed. Additional facts will be set forth as
    necessary.
    I
    We first consider the defendant’s claim that the trial
    court improperly precluded defense counsel during
    closing argument from arguing to the jury that M had
    planted physical evidence on the paper towel in an
    effort to substantiate her false allegations against the
    defendant, thereby violating the defendant’s right to the
    assistance of counsel under the sixth amendment to
    the United States constitution.
    During closing argument, defense counsel focused
    on attacking M’s credibility and exposing her motive
    to falsely accuse the defendant. Specifically, with
    respect to the events of July 28, 2016, defense counsel
    ‘‘attempted to present [his] theory that [M] wiped her
    genitals with the paper towel after the defendant left
    . . . following their consensual, sexual encounter, and
    then presented that paper towel to the police in an
    effort to manufacture evidence to support her false
    claim that the intercourse was not consensual, but sex-
    ual assault.’’ Specifically, the following exchange tran-
    spired:
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: So, when you look at that event,
    you know, July 28, 2016, [M’s] version is—is not—is
    not credible. And I should say it isn’t a competition
    between which version you find more credible. It is
    whether . . . the evidence that’s presented here con-
    vinces you beyond a reasonable doubt. And, again, the
    judge will instruct you as to what that means, but it
    means more than possibly or probably.
    ‘‘And with respect to the evidence with the paper
    towel, you heard . . . Nelson testify that they did not
    find sperm on that towel, they found components of
    semen. And I did ask her, wouldn’t you expect to find
    sperm on there if there was ejaculate on there? She
    said, well, not necessarily, or something along those
    lines. But—and you heard [the defendant] testify, I
    never touched a paper towel, he doesn’t know what
    they’re talking about. Well, then, how does [his] DNA
    get on the paper towel? And the answer is it comes
    from [M]. That’s her house, her kitchen. And—
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: I’m going to object, Your Honor;
    there was no evidence to that.
    ‘‘The Court: [Defense counsel]?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: It’s argument, Your Honor.
    ‘‘The Court: I don’t think there was any evidence in
    the record of what you are explaining to the jury now.
    I’m going to sustain the state’s objection.
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Very good, Your Honor. So, again,
    the case comes down to credibility, and the center of
    the state’s case is the complaining witness, [M], and
    her testimony is not credible, certainly not credible
    enough to remove the state’s burden of [proof] beyond
    a reasonable doubt.’’ (Emphasis added.)
    During the state’s rebuttal closing argument, the pros-
    ecutor focused on bolstering M’s credibility and attacking
    the defendant’s credibility. The prosecutor also high-
    lighted M’s testimony regarding the paper towel. Specif-
    ically, the prosecutor stated: ‘‘[M] told us how a
    neighbor was pulling out of the driveway, [she and the
    defendant] could hear the neighbor pulling out of the
    driveway. The driveway, according to [M], was right
    next to the—or abutted the living room in the home.
    And the defendant heard that, jumped up, ejaculated
    into a paper towel in the kitchen, which is a big, open
    room, and left.’’
    The defendant contends that defense counsel’s argu-
    ment, that M planted the defendant’s DNA on the paper
    towel, was consistent with the physical evidence col-
    lected from the paper towel and the defendant’s testi-
    mony. Had defense counsel been allowed to argue that
    M planted the evidence on the paper towel, the defen-
    dant claims, M’s ‘‘credibility would have been further
    challenged.’’ In short, the defendant contends that the
    state had the opportunity to fully present its theory of
    the case to the jury but that he was not afforded the
    same opportunity.
    The state disagrees and contends that the defendant’s
    claim on appeal ‘‘is meritless because there was no
    evidence before the jury from which it reasonably could
    have concluded that the semen stains found on the
    paper towel were put there by M.’’ Therefore, the state
    argues, ‘‘the trial court properly precluded [defense
    counsel] from urging the jury to reach a conclusion
    based solely on speculation.’’ Alternatively, the state
    contends that, even if the trial court’s ruling was
    improper, it did not deprive the defendant of his sixth
    amendment right to the assistance of counsel.
    We begin with the standard of review and relevant
    legal principles. ‘‘The sixth amendment guarantee in
    the federal constitution of the right to assistance of
    counsel has been held to include the right to present
    closing arguments.’’3 (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Ames, 
    171 Conn. App. 486
    , 516, 
    157 A.3d 660
    , cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 908
    , 
    170 A.3d 679
     (2017).
    As the United States Supreme Court has explained,
    ‘‘[t]here can be no doubt that closing argument for the
    defense is a basic element of the adversary [fact-finding]
    process in a criminal trial. Accordingly, it has univer-
    sally been held that [defense counsel] has a right to
    make a closing summation to the jury, no matter how
    strong the case for the prosecution may appear to the
    presiding judge.’’ Herring v. New York, 
    422 U.S. 853
    ,
    858, 
    95 S. Ct. 2550
    , 
    45 L. Ed. 2d 593
     (1975).
    ‘‘In general, the scope of final argument lies within
    the sound discretion of the court . . . subject to appro-
    priate constitutional limitations. . . . It is within the
    discretion of the trial court to limit the scope of final
    argument to prevent comment on facts that are not
    properly in evidence, to prevent the jury from consider-
    ing matters in the realm of speculation and to prevent
    the jury from being influenced by improper matter that
    might prejudice its deliberations. . . . [Although] we
    are sensitive to the discretion of the trial court in lim-
    iting argument to the actual issues of the case, tight
    control over argument is undesirable when counsel is
    precluded from raising a significant issue.’’ (Citations
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Arline, 
    223 Conn. 52
    , 59–60, 
    612 A.2d 755
     (1992).
    Although defense counsel may not make speculative
    arguments to the jury, we have explained that ‘‘counsel
    may comment [on] facts properly in evidence and [on]
    reasonable inferences drawn therefrom.’’ (Emphasis
    added.) State v. Kinsey, 
    173 Conn. 344
    , 348, 
    377 A.2d 1095
     (1977).
    It is beyond dispute that, ‘‘[i]f the trial court denies
    the defendant an opportunity to give closing arguments,
    the reviewing court should grant a new trial.’’ State v.
    Plaskonka, 
    22 Conn. App. 207
    , 211, 
    577 A.2d 729
    , cert.
    denied, 
    216 Conn. 812
    , 
    580 A.2d 65
     (1990). We have
    gone further and held that ‘‘[t]he right to present a
    closing argument is abridged not only when a defendant
    is completely denied an opportunity to argue before
    the court or the jury after all the evidence has been
    admitted, but also when a defendant is deprived of the
    opportunity to raise a significant issue that is reasonably
    inferable from the facts in evidence. This is particularly
    so when . . . the prohibited argument bears directly
    on the defendant’s theory of the defense.’’ State v.
    Arline, supra, 
    223 Conn. 64
    .
    Here, defense counsel’s closing argument focused on
    attacking M’s credibility and exposing her motive to
    falsely accuse the defendant of sexual assault. Defense
    counsel sought to present his theory of the case to the
    jury—that M had planted the evidence on the paper
    towel by wiping herself following a consensual, sexual
    encounter with the defendant. It is clear to us that this
    argument was proper because it is based on reasonable
    inferences from facts in evidence. Contrary to the trial
    court’s conclusion that there was no evidence in the
    record to support the argument, we conclude that
    defense counsel’s argument relied on reasonable infer-
    ences from the following evidence: (1) M’s testimony
    that the defendant ejaculated into the paper towel fol-
    lowing the alleged sexual assault; (2) testimony from
    both M and an officer who responded to the scene that
    M provided the paper towel to the police; (3) Nelson’s
    testimony that no spermatozoa were present on the
    paper towel; (4) Przech’s testimony that she assumed
    that the DNA found on the paper towel matched M’s;
    (5) the defendant’s testimony denying M’s claim that
    he ejaculated into a paper towel and his version of
    events that, after he stopped having sex, he just pulled
    up his pants and left; (6) the fact that only M and the
    defendant were home at the time of the incident; and
    (7) according to at least one witness, M had a history
    of ‘‘making false claims.’’
    Moreover, the jury reasonably could have concluded,
    on the basis of various testimony throughout trial, that
    M’s relationship with her family was strained and that
    M and the defendant were engaged in a romantic, con-
    sensual relationship. For example, M testified that she
    was worried that Louis would not believe her about the
    July 28, 2016 assault because she and Dora did not
    have a good relationship. The nature of M and Dora’s
    relationship was confirmed by Dora, who testified that
    she ‘‘tried to have a relationship with [M], but she never
    let me in,’’ and that M told her many times, ‘‘you’re not
    my mother.’’ Dora also told the police that M was ruining
    her relationship with Louis. Additionally, Isabelle testi-
    fied that she was aware of ‘‘a history of [M] making
    false claims.’’ For her part, Stephanie testified that she
    does not speak to Louis and they are not on good terms
    as a result of the July 28, 2016 incident. These facts
    provided a basis for the jury to reasonably infer that
    M had a motive for planting the defendant’s DNA on
    the paper towel.
    As to the nature of the relationship between M and
    the defendant, the defendant testified that, in March,
    2016, he and M began ‘‘having romantic conversations,’’
    they began ‘‘getting intimate,’’ and were in a ‘‘romantic
    relationship . . . .’’ The defendant also testified that,
    by July, 2016, he and M ‘‘were already in a relationship,
    and not a relationship as boyfriend and girlfriend, more
    as we were making out type stuff.’’ Indeed, during her
    rebuttal closing argument, the prosecutor emphasized
    the defendant’s characterization of the nature of his
    relationship with M as a ‘‘love affair . . . .’’ Finally, the
    defendant testified that he was engaged to Stephanie
    and ultimately married her just three months after M
    alleged that he had sexually assaulted her. Again, these
    facts tended to make reasonable the defendant’s theory
    regarding the paper towel.
    It would not have been an unreasonable inference
    for the jury to conclude that M had planted the evidence
    on the paper towel after the sexual encounter with the
    defendant ceased, either because of her tumultuous
    relationship with her family or because she was roman-
    tically interested in the defendant and was not happy
    that he was engaged to Stephanie. Moreover, regardless
    of her motive for allegedly planting the evidence, the
    jury was presented with two versions of events based
    solely on the testimony of M and the defendant. M
    testified that the defendant ejaculated into a paper
    towel. The defendant testified that he did not. Given
    that it is undisputed that the only two people in the
    home at the time of the alleged sexual assault were M
    and the defendant, if the jury accepted the defendant’s
    testimony that he did not ejaculate into a paper towel,
    it would not have been an unreasonable inference to
    conclude that the only other way the defendant’s DNA
    could have gotten on the paper towel was by M’s act
    of placing it there. To be sure, it is no less reasonable
    than an inference that the defendant ejaculated into
    the paper towel. As the prosecutor conceded at oral
    argument, Nelson and Przech did not testify that it was
    more likely than not that the defendant’s DNA ended
    up on the paper towel as a result of the defendant’s
    ejaculating into it. They both testified that they did not
    know how the defendant’s DNA came to be on the
    paper towel. Thus, the jury’s determination as to how
    the defendant’s DNA came to be on the paper towel was
    based solely on the testimony of M and the defendant.
    Defense counsel’s argument was not ‘‘sheer speculation’’
    or ‘‘rhetorical advocacy’’; (internal quotation marks
    omitted) State v. Manley, 
    195 Conn. 567
    , 580, 
    489 A.2d 1024
     (1985); rather, it was based on logical inferences
    from the facts as presented to the jury if it credited the
    defendant’s testimony.
    In Arline, we ‘‘agree[d] with the reasoning of the
    Maine Supreme [Judicial] Court in State v. Liberty, 
    498 A.2d 257
     (Me. 1985).’’ State v. Arline, supra, 
    223 Conn. 65
     n.11. In Liberty, the Maine high court concluded that
    the trial court erred in restricting defense counsel from
    arguing in summation certain evidence that had been
    admitted without objection. State v. Liberty, 
    supra, 258
    .
    The court explained: ‘‘In a closing argument each party
    should be permitted to summarize the case from the
    perspective of that party’s interpretation of all the evi-
    dence in the case and the inferences to be drawn there-
    from. It is not for the presiding [judge] to proscribe
    argument as to a portion of the evidence which the
    jury has heard.’’ 
    Id., 259
    . Likewise, in the present case,
    defense counsel should have been permitted to present
    the defendant’s theory of the case to the jury, just as
    the state did, given that there was sufficient evidence
    in the record from which the jury reasonably could
    have inferred that M planted the evidence on the paper
    towel to substantiate her false allegations against the
    defendant.
    The state nevertheless contends that the defendant’s
    argument relies on ‘‘the assumption that, if the jury
    credited the defendant’s testimony, the only way it
    could have reconciled that testimony with the lab
    results was by concluding that M had wiped her genitals
    after a consensual encounter’’ with the defendant. The
    state purports to negate that assumption by speculating
    about other possible conclusions the jury could have
    reached on the basis of the defendant’s testimony and
    the other evidence in the record. We are not persuaded.
    The defendant is not required to prove that the only
    way the jury could have reconciled the testimony and
    other evidence was by concluding that M wiped herself
    with the paper towel. The defendant need only establish
    that one way the jury could have reconciled all the
    testimony and other evidence was by concluding that
    M wiped herself. In other words, the defendant does
    not have to conclusively establish that the jury would
    have accepted his argument; he need only establish that
    it was a reasonable inference for the jury to make on
    the basis of the evidence. See, e.g., State v. Kinsey,
    
    supra,
     
    173 Conn. 348
     (‘‘counsel may comment [on] facts
    properly in evidence and [on] reasonable inferences
    drawn therefrom’’).
    Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court improp-
    erly restricted the scope of defense counsel’s closing
    argument when it barred counsel from arguing to the
    jury that M had planted physical evidence in an effort to
    substantiate her false allegations against the defendant.
    We next consider whether the trial court’s action in
    denying the defendant the opportunity to present his
    theory of the case to the jury denied him the right to
    the assistance of counsel.
    The right to the assistance of counsel ensures an
    ‘‘opportunity to participate fully and fairly in the adver-
    sary [fact-finding] process.’’ Herring v. New York,
    
    supra,
     
    422 U.S. 858
    . ‘‘It can hardly be questioned that
    closing argument serves to sharpen and clarify the
    issues for resolution by the trier of fact in a criminal
    case. For it is only after all the evidence is in that
    counsel for the parties are in a position to present their
    respective versions of the case as a whole. Only then
    can they argue the inferences to be drawn from all
    the testimony, and point out the weaknesses of their
    adversaries’ positions. And for the defense, closing
    argument is the last clear chance to persuade the trier
    of fact that there may be reasonable doubt of the defen-
    dant’s guilt.’’ Id., 862. ‘‘In a criminal trial, which is in
    the end basically a [fact-finding] process, no aspect of
    [partisan] advocacy could be more important than the
    opportunity finally to marshal the evidence for each
    side before submission of the case to judgment.’’ Id.
    Our appellate courts have previously found reversible
    error when the trial court precluded defense counsel
    from discussing certain issues during closing argument,
    particularly when an issue was significant and ‘‘[bore]
    directly on the defendant’s theory of the defense.’’ State
    v. Arline, supra, 
    223 Conn. 64
    . For example, in Arline,
    this court reversed the judgment of the Appellate Court
    and remanded the case for a new trial when the trial
    court improperly precluded defense counsel from ques-
    tioning the credibility of the complainant during closing
    argument. 
    Id.,
     64–65. Specifically, we concluded that
    the trial court improperly precluded defense counsel
    during closing argument from commenting on certain
    facts that had been elicited from the complainant on
    cross-examination that tended to establish her motive
    or bias. 
    Id.,
     55–56, 62–63. We explained that the defen-
    dant’s theory of defense was centered on attacking the
    complainant’s credibility, and, although there were other
    pieces of evidence that called the complainant’s credi-
    bility into question, the testimony elicited on cross-
    examination provided the only evidence of motive or
    bias. Id., 64. Given the centrality of the issue to the
    case, we concluded that preventing defense counsel
    from arguing motive or bias of the state’s chief witness
    deprived the defendant of his sixth amendment right
    to the assistance of counsel. Id., 64–65; see, e.g., State
    v. Ross, 
    18 Conn. App. 423
    , 433–34, 
    558 A.2d 1015
     (1989)
    (defendant was entitled to new trial when trial court
    prohibited defense counsel from commenting on fact
    that sole eyewitness to shooting, under state’s theory
    of case, did not testify at trial).
    Here, M’s testimony was the only source of evidence
    from which the jury reasonably could have concluded
    that the defendant sexually assaulted her.4 The results
    of the forensic testing and the sexual assault evidence
    collection kit did not establish that the July 28, 2016
    sexual encounter, which the defendant admitted occurred,
    was nonconsensual.5 The only argument presented by
    defense counsel to establish reasonable doubt of the
    defendant’s guilt was directed at M’s credibility.
    Although there were numerous evidentiary bases from
    which M’s credibility could be challenged,6 the testi-
    mony and other record evidence regarding the paper
    towel provided the strongest evidence, from the defen-
    dant’s perspective, that M lied about the July 28, 2016
    encounter. To deprive defense counsel of the opportu-
    nity to argue that the state’s chief witness lied, when
    the linchpin of the defense was attacking the credibility
    of that witness, is to deprive the defendant of the full
    and fair participation of his counsel in the adversary
    process. See, e.g., State v. Arline, supra, 
    223 Conn. 64
    (‘‘The right to present a closing argument is abridged
    . . . when a defendant is deprived of the opportunity
    to raise a significant issue that is reasonably inferable
    from the facts in evidence. This is particularly so when
    . . . the prohibited argument bears directly on the
    defendant’s theory of the defense.’’).
    The trial court’s restriction on defense counsel’s clos-
    ing argument was particularly significant in this case
    because the state argued that M’s testimony was credi-
    ble because she had no motive to fabricate her testi-
    mony. During the state’s rebuttal closing argument, the
    prosecutor argued: ‘‘Why on earth, if [M and the defen-
    dant] are in a sexual relationship, would [M] call [Louis]
    and call and text Isabelle about the defendant sexually
    assaulting her, and then [talk] to the police about it,
    [talk] to the people at the hospital about it? Why would
    she do that? How does [M’s] life get any better by
    making this up? Ask yourselves that.’’ What’s more, the
    prosecutor emphasized to the jury that the defendant
    had lied to the police when he was initially questioned.
    Specifically, the prosecutor stated: ‘‘In assessing the
    defendant’s credibility, I would ask—I would urge you
    to consider the lies that the defendant told, that he
    admitted he told while he was—when he was testifying
    here. We know that he lied to the police about being
    in the house on July 28, 2016. He lied. He was in the
    house. . . . We know that he lied to the police about
    not having sexual contact with [M] on that date. . . .
    He lied to [Stephanie]. He admitted to lying about that.’’
    This case turns on questions of credibility, and we
    find it disconcerting that the defendant was not afforded
    an equal opportunity to emphasize his theory that M
    also lied about the July 28, 2016 incident. The entire
    case with respect to the July 28, 2016 incident centered
    on the credibility of the only two eyewitnesses to that
    incident. The effectiveness of the defendant’s argu-
    ments regarding M’s credibility was critical to the out-
    come, particularly when there was other testimony
    from M’s stepsister, Isabelle, that M had a history of
    ‘‘making false claims.’’ Indeed, this is particularly note-
    worthy because the jury did not credit M’s version of
    events with respect to the other instances of alleged
    misconduct given that it found the defendant not guilty
    of the remaining charges. Accordingly, we conclude
    that the trial court’s limitation of the scope of defense
    counsel’s closing argument was improper and deprived
    the defendant of his constitutional right to the assis-
    tance of counsel.
    Once a violation of the sixth amendment right to the
    assistance of counsel has been established, we need
    not inquire as to whether the error resulted in prejudice
    to the defendant. ‘‘[A] per se rule of automatic reversal
    more properly vindicates the denial of the defendant’s
    fundamental constitutional right to assistance of coun-
    sel guaranteed by the sixth amendment.’’ State v. Meb-
    ane, 
    204 Conn. 585
    , 595, 
    529 A.2d 680
     (1987), cert.
    denied, 
    484 U.S. 1046
    , 
    108 S. Ct. 784
    , 
    98 L. Ed. 2d 870
    (1988); see, e.g., State v. Arline, supra, 
    223 Conn. 65
    .
    We, therefore, reverse the judgment of the trial court
    and remand the case for a new trial.
    II
    We next turn to the defendant’s contention that the
    evidence presented at trial was insufficient to prove
    that he used force or the threat of force, as required
    to sustain his conviction of sexual assault in the first
    degree. Although we have determined that the defen-
    dant is entitled to a new trial, we address this claim
    because, if it is meritorious, a retrial would be barred
    by principles of double jeopardy. See, e.g., State v.
    Hedge, 
    297 Conn. 621
    , 655, 
    1 A.3d 1051
     (2010).
    The defendant concedes that this claim was not prop-
    erly preserved at trial. It is well established, however,
    that ‘‘any defendant found guilty on the basis of insuffi-
    cient evidence has been deprived of a constitutional
    right, and would therefore necessarily meet the four
    prongs of [State v. Golding, 
    213 Conn. 233
    , 239–40, 
    567 A.2d 823
     (1989), as modified by In re Yasiel R., 
    317 Conn. 773
    , 781, 
    120 A.3d 1188
     (2015)]. . . . Accord-
    ingly, because there is no practical significance . . .
    for engaging in a Golding analysis, we review an unpre-
    served sufficiency of the evidence claim as though it had
    been preserved.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Revels, 
    313 Conn. 762
    , 777, 
    99 A.3d 1130
     (2014), cert. denied, 
    574 U.S. 1177
    , 
    135 S. Ct. 1451
    , 
    191 L. Ed. 2d 404
     (2015).
    To establish that the defendant violated § 53a-70 (a)
    (1), the state was required to prove that the defendant
    ‘‘compel[led] another person to engage in sexual inter-
    course by the use of force against such other person
    . . . or by the threat of use of force against such other
    person . . . .’’ The defendant contends that the state’s
    evidence of force or threat of force was improbable and
    unconvincing, and that the state presented no physical
    evidence to support M’s allegation of sexual assault
    by force.
    ‘‘The standard of review [that] we [ordinarily] apply
    to a claim of insufficient evidence is well established.
    In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    a criminal conviction we apply a [two part] test. First,
    we construe the evidence in the light most favorable
    to sustaining the verdict. Second, we determine whether
    [on] the facts so construed and the inferences reason-
    ably drawn therefrom the [finder of fact] reasonably
    could have concluded that the cumulative force of the
    evidence established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Cook, 
    287 Conn. 237
    , 254, 
    947 A.2d 307
    , cert. denied, 
    555 U.S. 970
    ,
    
    129 S. Ct. 464
    , 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 328
     (2008). Importantly,
    we have previously held that ‘‘a single witness is suffi-
    cient to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt.’’ State v. Whitaker, 
    215 Conn. 739
    , 757 n.18, 
    578 A.2d 1031
     (1990).
    Here, with respect to the July 28, 2016 incident, M
    testified: ‘‘[The defendant] grabbed my arm, and I told
    him to let me go, and he did not want to release me.
    And then I ended up tripping toward the couch, where
    he pushed me toward . . . . I was wearing a dress,
    and I had shorts underneath, and he ended up pulling
    down my pants and my underwear and inserting his
    penis inside me. . . . I was pushing him off, yelling,
    telling him to stop and get off me. . . . He kept forcing
    himself on me.’’ She also testified that, during the
    assault, ‘‘I was trying to push him off me with my arms,
    but he kept holding [them] down, so I kept turning my
    body like this, with my knees, trying to push him off
    me, and he didn’t want to get off. And I was yelling,
    help, can you stop, can you get off me, and then he didn’t
    want to get off me.’’ This testimony alone is sufficient
    to establish the force element required for a conviction
    of sexual assault in the first degree in violation of § 53a-
    70 (a) (1).7 See, e.g., State v. White, 
    139 Conn. App. 430
    , 436–37, 
    55 A.3d 818
     (2012) (rejecting sufficiency
    challenge to first degree sexual assault conviction when
    complainant’s testimony, if credited, satisfied all ele-
    ments of § 53a-70 (a) (1)), cert. denied, 
    307 Conn. 953
    ,
    
    58 A.3d 975
     (2013); see also, e.g., State v. Antonio W.,
    
    109 Conn. App. 43
    , 52–53, 
    950 A.2d 580
    , cert. denied,
    
    289 Conn. 923
    , 
    958 A.2d 153
     (2008).
    This evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to
    sustaining the guilty verdict, is sufficient to support the
    defendant’s conviction of sexual assault in the first
    degree.
    III
    The defendant’s final claim is that the trial court
    abused its discretion by admitting the testimony of
    Janet Murphy, an expert in the field of child and adoles-
    cent sexual abuse. Specifically, the defendant contends
    that the trial court improperly admitted Murphy’s testi-
    mony given that her expertise was in child sexual abuse
    and that M was an adult when the July 28, 2016 incident
    occurred. The defendant further contends that ‘‘[t]he
    state failed to show that Murphy had sufficient knowl-
    edge from her experience, training, or education to
    testify as an expert in the field of adult sexual abuse
    . . . .’’ (Emphasis omitted.) As such, the defendant
    claims that Murphy’s expertise was inapplicable to the
    present case. The state contends that this argument is
    unpreserved. Alternatively, the state contends that the
    claim is substantively meritless because M was eighteen
    at the time of the July 28, 2016 incident and Murphy
    testified that she ‘‘see[s] kids really up into the early
    twenties, more up to eighteen, but some delayed adults
    we’ll see into the early twenties . . . .’’
    As a general matter, when our appellate courts reverse
    a judgment and remand the case for a new trial, only
    claims likely to arise on retrial are addressed by the
    reviewing court. See, e.g., State v. T.R.D., 
    286 Conn. 191
    , 195, 
    942 A.2d 1000
     (2008). In this case, we are
    remanding the case for a new trial with respect to the
    charge of sexual assault in the first degree in connection
    with the July 28, 2016 incident. It is undisputed that, at
    the time of this incident, M was eighteen years old.
    Although we cannot say that the claim relating to Mur-
    phy’s expert testimony is unlikely to arise on remand,
    because the state may elect to call Murphy and further
    probe her experience working with eighteen year olds,
    or it may call another expert, that evidentiary presenta-
    tion would involve a record different from the one pres-
    ently before us, and, accordingly, we decline to address
    this claim at this time. See, e.g., State v. Jackson, 
    334 Conn. 793
    , 822, 
    224 A.3d 886
     (2020); State v. Rizzo, 
    266 Conn. 171
    , 250–51 n.44, 
    833 A.2d 363
     (2003). We leave
    it to the trial court to further evaluate the issue if Mur-
    phy is called to testify at the defendant’s new trial.
    The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded
    for a new trial.
    In this opinion the other justices concurred.
    * In accordance with our policy of protecting the privacy interests of the
    victims of sexual assault and the crime of risk of injury to a child, we decline
    to identify the victim or others through whom the victim’s identity may be
    ascertained. See General Statutes § 54-86e.
    ** August 6, 2021, the date that this decision was released as a slip opinion,
    is the operative date for all substantive and procedural purposes.
    1
    Nelson testified that spermatozoa are ‘‘sex cell[s] that [are] deposited
    in semen when ejaculated from a male.’’
    2
    Przech explained that sperm cells and epithelial cells are different: ‘‘[E]pi-
    thelial cells are like your skin cells, and the sperm cells are from sperm.’’
    3
    The sixth amendment to the United States constitution provides in rele-
    vant part: ‘‘In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
    . . . to have the assistance of counsel for his defense.’’
    The sixth amendment right to the assistance of counsel applies to state
    criminal proceedings by incorporation through the due process clause of
    the fourteenth amendment. See, e.g., Gideon v. Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    ,
    342, 
    83 S. Ct. 792
    , 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 799
     (1963).
    4
    As defense counsel emphasized during closing argument, ‘‘[t]his case
    essentially comes down to one witness. All of these accusations stem from
    one individual, the complaining witness, [M]. There are medical reports
    and—and other reports that are there, but she is the source of that informa-
    tion. There isn’t any independent information in those reports. So, we should
    look at her testimony and her credibility and assess [that evidence] to see
    if it supports a finding of [guilt] beyond a reasonable doubt . . . .’’
    5
    Although the results of the sexual assault evidence collection kit estab-
    lished that the defendant’s DNA was included in the sperm-rich fraction
    sample of the vaginal swab, they contained no evidence that the July 28,
    2016 incident was nonconsensual. Indeed, the nurse who administered the
    sexual assault evidence collection kit testified that there was no evidence
    of trauma, scratches, or bruises, and no physical injuries were noted in
    the report.
    6
    For example, although M testified that she was violently sexually
    assaulted, her text to Isabelle indicated that the defendant had ‘‘touched’’
    her. Additionally, the state did not introduce any evidence of physical injuries
    or ripped clothing.
    7
    In addition to M’s testimony, the emergency medical technician (EMT)
    who responded to M’s house on July 28, 2016, testified that M was ‘‘visibly,
    tearfully upset’’ and was ‘‘very . . . uncomfortable . . . .’’