Outing v. Commissioner of Correction ( 2019 )


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    J’VEIL OUTING v. COMMISSIONER
    OF CORRECTION
    (AC 41224)
    Lavine, Moll and Bishop, Js.
    Syllabus
    The petitioner, who had been convicted of murder in connection with the
    shooting death of the victim, sought a writ of habeas corpus, claiming,
    inter alia, that his trial counsel and appellate counsel had rendered
    ineffective assistance. The petitioner alleged, inter alia, that his trial
    counsel improperly failed to present an alibi defense and to rebut the
    testimony of N and R, who had given statements to the police indicating
    that they had seen the petitioner shoot the victim and had identified
    him from police photographic arrays. The petitioner further alleged that
    his trial counsel improperly failed to obtain a ruling from the trial court
    as to the admissibility at trial of certain testimony by his expert witness,
    D, concerning the reliability of witness identifications. D’s proffered
    testimony had been excluded during a previous hearing on the petition-
    er’s unsuccessful motion to suppress the identification evidence of N
    and R after they had recanted their statements to the police and their
    identifications of the defendant, which they claimed were the result of
    police coercion. After N and R disavowed their statements to the police,
    the petitioner’s trial counsel decided not to present D’s testimony at
    trial on mistaken identity and changed her approach to the case from
    one of mistaken identification to a claim of police coercion. The habeas
    court concluded that the petitioner had failed to establish deficient
    performance or prejudice with respect to his claims of ineffective assis-
    tance of trial or appellate counsel. The habeas court thereafter rendered
    judgment denying the petitioner’s habeas petition, from which the peti-
    tioner, on the granting of certification, appealed to this court. Held:
    1. The habeas court properly determined that the petitioner’s trial counsel
    did not render ineffective assistance:
    a. There was ample support for the habeas court’s conclusion that trial
    counsel’s decision not to present an alibi defense was not constitution-
    ally deficient; trial counsel testified that she was concerned that pre-
    senting an alibi defense could do more harm than good, as the purported
    alibi witnesses placed the petitioner in the vicinity of his home, which
    was approximately one mile from the murder scene, at various times
    during the early evening of the murder, their testimonies were inconsis-
    tent and varied as to the times that they saw the petitioner and as to
    their descriptions of him, and many of the witnesses conceded that they
    could not account for the petitioner’s whereabouts throughout the entire
    time period during which the events at issue occurred.
    b. Trial counsel was not ineffective in deciding to forgo additional investi-
    gation and rebuttal of the eyewitness statements of N and R, and to
    forgo D’s testimony at trial on the issue of misidentification: the record
    reflected that part of trial counsel’s third-party culpability theory was
    to establish that the statements to the police that were made by N and
    R were the product of police coercion, her cross-examination of N and
    R advanced that theory, and although additional investigation into the
    statements by N and R may have shed more light on their credibility,
    the evidence in the record did not support a conclusion that trial coun-
    sel’s failure to conduct that additional investigation was unreasonable;
    moreover, the record was clear that trial counsel’s decision not to call
    D as an expert witness at trial was based on concern that doing so
    would have potentially detracted from the petitioner’s coercion defense
    and, thus, was a reasonable tactical choice under the circumstances.
    c. Trial counsel did not perform deficiently by not preserving for appel-
    late review a claim related to the trial court’s exclusion of D’s testimony
    regarding factors concerning eyewitness identifications; because trial
    counsel already reasonably determined not to present D’s testimony at
    the petitioner’s criminal trial, she would have had no strategic reason
    to preserve the court’s exclusion of evidence on a matter that she
    reasonably believed had been rendered moot by her tactical choice not
    to pursue a theory of mistaken identification, at the time of the criminal
    trial, decisional law did not permit expert testimony on the subjects for
    which trial counsel initially sought to present D’s testimony, and to
    impose on counsel the duty to foretell what tack the Supreme Court
    would take on that subject would represent the height of post hoc
    reasoning, which is not the task of a court on habeas review.
    2. The petitioner could not prevail on his claim that his appellate counsel
    was ineffective in failing to claim, in his direct appeal, that the trial
    court incorrectly denied the petitioner’s request to present surrebuttal
    evidence; appellate counsel made a reasonable, strategic decision not to
    raise the surrebuttal issue, which fell within the wide range of reasonable
    professional assistance, and a court will not second-guess an appellate
    counsel’s tactical decision to limit the claims briefed to those that he
    or she reasonably viewed as most critical to the appeal.
    3. The petitioner’s assertion that the habeas court incorrectly determined
    that he did not prove his claim of actual innocence was unavailing, that
    court having aptly concluded that the mosaic of evidence presented by
    the petitioner did not constitute affirmative proof of actual innocence,
    as it did not tend to establish, in relation to the other evidence in the
    case, that he could not have committed the crime.
    Argued March 14—officially released June 11, 2019
    Procedural History
    Amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus,
    brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of
    Tolland and tried to the court, Oliver, J.; judgment
    denying the petition, from which the petitioner, on the
    granting of certification, appealed to this court; there-
    after, the court, Oliver, J., granted the petitioner’s
    motion for rectification. Affirmed.
    David R. Kritzman, assigned counsel, with whom,
    on the brief, was Joshua C. Shulman, assigned counsel,
    for the appellant (petitioner).
    James A. Killen, senior assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, were, Patrick J. Griffin, state’s
    attorney, and Adrienne Russo, deputy assistant state’s
    attorney, for the appellee (respondent).
    Opinion
    BISHOP, J. The petitioner, J’Veil Outing, appeals from
    the judgment of the habeas court denying his petition
    for a writ of habeas corpus. On appeal, the petitioner
    claims that the habeas court erred in concluding that
    his trial counsel had not provided ineffective assistance
    in failing (1) to properly investigate and present an
    alibi defense, (2) to properly investigate and rebut the
    testimony of the eyewitnesses to the murder at issue,
    and (3) to adequately preserve an issue regarding expert
    testimony on eyewitness identification. The petitioner
    also claims that the court erred in concluding that his
    appellate counsel was not ineffective for failing to raise
    the issue, on direct appeal, of the trial court’s refusal
    to permit surrebuttal evidence. Finally, the petitioner
    claims that the court incorrectly determined that he
    had not met his burden of proof regarding his claim
    of actual innocence. We affirm the judgment of the
    habeas court.
    The record reveals that, after a jury trial, the peti-
    tioner was convicted on March 20, 2006, of murder in
    violation of General Statutes § 53a-54a. Thereafter, the
    petitioner was sentenced to fifty years of imprisonment.
    The petitioner’s conviction was affirmed on direct
    appeal. State v. Outing, 
    298 Conn. 34
    , 86, 
    3 A.3d 1
    (2010), cert. denied, 
    562 U.S. 1225
    , 
    131 S. Ct. 1479
    , 
    179 L. Ed. 2d 316
    (2011).1 In that appeal, our Supreme Court
    recited the following underlying facts that the jury rea-
    sonably could have found:
    ‘‘At approximately 6:50 p.m. on June 23, 2005, Nadine
    Crimley was walking in a northerly direction on Canal
    Street in New Haven, pushing her infant son in a stroller.
    To her left, she saw her brother, Ray Caple, standing
    on the porch of her residence at 150 Canal Street. As
    Crimley walked up the street, she saw the [petitioner],
    whom she previously had seen in the neighborhood,
    pass her on his bicycle. Another unidentified man rode
    a bicycle in front of the [petitioner]. Crimley then turned
    her attention back to her son. When she heard a series of
    popping noises, she looked up and saw the [petitioner],
    who was about ten feet away from her, firing a gun at
    the victim, Kevin Wright. The victim fell to the ground,
    and the [petitioner] ran from the scene.
    ‘‘Caple, who had gone to high school with the [peti-
    tioner] and had known him for three and one-half years,
    also watched the [petitioner] as he rode his bicycle up
    Canal Street. As Caple watched, the [petitioner] moved
    his right hand toward his waist. Caple believed that the
    [petitioner] was reaching for a gun and was going to
    shoot him, but decided against doing so because Caple
    was holding his two year old daughter. Caple’s mother
    and the victim were inside the residence at 150 Canal
    Street. Just after the [petitioner] passed the residence
    on his bicycle, the victim exited through the back door
    of the residence, retrieved his bicycle from the backyard
    and walked with it in an easterly direction on Gregory
    Street toward its intersection with Canal Street. As
    Caple stood on the porch, he heard a gunshot and the
    sound of a bicycle falling to the ground. When he looked
    around the corner of the porch, he observed Crimley
    and her son standing very close to the [petitioner], and
    he also saw the [petitioner], who had dismounted from
    his bicycle, fire three more shots at the victim. The
    [petitioner] then ran away, leaving his bicycle in the
    street. Caple ran to the victim, who was unresponsive.
    The victim died from a single gunshot wound to the
    chest.
    ‘‘Shortly, after 10 p.m. on the day of the shooting,
    Crimley gave a statement to the New Haven police in
    which she indicated that she had been able to get a
    good look at the shooter and would be able to identify
    him. On June 27, 2005, four days after the shooting,
    Stephen Coppola, a New Haven police detective, inter-
    viewed Crimley and presented her with an array of eight
    photographs, including one of the [petitioner]. Crimley
    identified the [petitioner] as the shooter and signed and
    dated the photographic array. Coppola tape-recorded
    his interview of Crimley. On the same day, Coppola
    also tape-recorded a statement from Caple and pre-
    sented him with a second photographic array. Caple
    also identified the [petitioner] as the shooter and signed
    and dated the photographic array.
    ‘‘Prior to trial, both Caple and Crimley recanted their
    statements to the police and their identifications of the
    [petitioner], claiming that they had been pressured by
    the police into giving the statements and making the
    identifications. Thereafter, the [petitioner] filed
    motions to suppress the identification evidence, claim-
    ing that the evidence was unreliable and the product
    of an unnecessarily suggestive police identification pro-
    cedure. At a hearing on the [petitioner’s] motions, both
    Crimley and Caple testified that they did not know who
    had killed the victim, that they had been pressured by
    the police to give false statements about the events
    surrounding the shooting, and that the police had pres-
    sured them to falsely identify the [petitioner] as the
    shooter. Crimley and Caple acknowledged that they
    were extremely frightened about being called as wit-
    nesses for the state and identifying the [petitioner] as
    the shooter. Coppola and Alfonso Vasquez, a New
    Haven police detective who had been present during
    Coppola’s interviews of Crimley and Caple, testified
    that each of the witnesses had identified the [petitioner]
    as the shooter by selecting the [petitioner’s] photograph
    from the photographic array spontaneously and without
    hesitation. The two detectives unequivocally denied
    that they had pressured or influenced either Crimley
    or Caple in any way.
    ‘‘At the conclusion of the detectives’ testimony, the
    state maintained that the tape-recorded statements that
    Crimley and Caple had given to the police met the
    requirements for admissibility set forth in State v.
    Whelan, 
    200 Conn. 743
    , 753, 
    513 A.2d 86
    , cert. denied,
    
    479 U.S. 994
    , 
    107 S. Ct. 597
    , 
    93 L. Ed. 2d 598
    (1986).
    The trial court found that the testimony of Crimley
    and Caple that they had been pressured to give false
    statements and to falsely identify the [petitioner] as the
    shooter was not credible. The court further concluded
    that the statements that they had given to the police
    met the Whelan admissibility requirements for purposes
    of the suppression hearing.
    ‘‘Thereafter, at a continuation of the suppression
    hearing, the [petitioner] made an offer of proof regard-
    ing the testimony of his expert witness, Jennifer Dysart,
    concerning the reliability of eyewitness identifications.
    The state objected to the testimony, and the court sus-
    tained in part and overruled in part the state’s objection
    to Dysart’s proffered testimony. Dysart thereafter
    offered her opinion that the identification procedures
    used generally were not reliable. The trial court there-
    after denied the [petitioner’s] motions to suppress the
    photographic identifications that had been made of the
    [petitioner] by Crimley and Caple.
    ‘‘At trial, Crimley and Caple testified that the police
    had pressured them to give false statements and to
    falsely identify the [petitioner] as the shooter. They
    further testified that the [petitioner] definitely was not
    the shooter and that they did not know who had shot
    the victim. Upon the state’s motion pursuant to Whelan,
    the trial court admitted redacted tape recordings of the
    statements Crimley and Caple had given to the police
    as prior inconsistent statements. The trial court also
    admitted as exhibits copies of the photographic arrays
    that Crimley and Caple had signed and dated. The [peti-
    tioner] did not call Dysart as a witness at trial.
    ‘‘Thereafter, the jury found the [petitioner] guilty of
    murder, and the trial court rendered judgment in accor-
    dance with the verdict, sentencing the [petitioner] to a
    term of imprisonment of fifty years.’’ (Footnotes omit-
    ted.) 
    Id., 38–41. After
    our Supreme Court affirmed his conviction, the
    petitioner filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
    dated October 5, 2010. The matter was tried on the
    petitioner’s fifth amended petition, dated February 26,
    2015, in which he set forth claims of ineffective assis-
    tance of trial and appellate counsel, a due process claim
    regarding the presentation of evidence at trial, and a
    claim of actual innocence.2 The hearing on this matter
    before the habeas court, Oliver, J., began on March
    21, 2016, and continued intermittently for eight days,
    concluding on November 22, 2016. Following the receipt
    of posttrial briefs, the court issued its memorandum of
    decision on November 20, 2017, denying the petition.3
    In denying the petition, the habeas court concluded that
    the petitioner had not met his burden of establishing
    either deficient performance or prejudice with respect
    to several of his ineffective assistance of trial counsel
    claims, including the claims that his trial counsel failed
    to properly investigate and to present an alibi defense,
    to investigate and to rebut the testimony of the state’s
    eyewitnesses, and to preserve the record concerning
    the trial testimony of an expert witness on witness
    identifications. The court further concluded that the
    petitioner failed to sustain his burden of establishing
    deficient performance or prejudice with respect to his
    ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim, and
    that the petitioner failed to establish his actual inno-
    cence. The court deemed the remainder of the petition-
    er’s ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel
    claims to be abandoned on the basis of the petitioner’s
    failure to address them in his posttrial brief. The court
    granted the petitioner’s petition for certification to
    appeal, and this appeal followed.4 Additional facts and
    procedural history will be set forth as necessary.
    I
    The petitioner raises three claims that his trial coun-
    sel rendered ineffective assistance. Before addressing
    each claim, we set forth the relevant legal principles
    and our well settled standard of review governing inef-
    fective assistance of counsel claims. ‘‘In a habeas
    appeal, this court cannot disturb the underlying facts
    found by the habeas court unless they are clearly erro-
    neous, but our review of whether the facts as found by
    the habeas court constituted a violation of the petition-
    er’s constitutional right to effective assistance of coun-
    sel is plenary.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Mukhtaar v. Commissioner of Correction, 158 Conn.
    App. 431, 437, 
    119 A.3d 607
    (2015); see also Buie v.
    Commissioner of Correction, 
    187 Conn. App. 414
    , 417,
    
    202 A.3d 453
    , cert. denied, 
    331 Conn. 905
    , 
    202 A.3d 373
    (2019).
    ‘‘In Strickland v. Washington, [
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984)], the United States
    Supreme Court established that for a petitioner to pre-
    vail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, he
    must show that counsel’s assistance was so defective
    as to require reversal of [the] conviction. . . . That
    requires the petitioner to show (1) that counsel’s perfor-
    mance was deficient and (2) that the deficient perfor-
    mance prejudiced the defense. . . . Unless a
    [petitioner] makes both showings, it cannot be said that
    the conviction . . . resulted from a breakdown in the
    adversary process that renders the result unreliable.
    . . .
    ‘‘To prove that his counsel’s performance was defi-
    cient, the petitioner must demonstrate that trial coun-
    sel’s representation fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness. . . . Competent representation is not
    to be equated with perfection. The constitution guaran-
    tees only a fair trial and a competent attorney; it does
    not ensure that every conceivable constitutional claim
    will be recognized and raised. . . . A fair assessment
    of attorney performance requires that every effort be
    made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to
    reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged
    conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s
    perspective at the time. Because of the difficulties inher-
    ent in making the evaluation, a court must indulge a
    strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within
    the wide range of reasonable professional assistance;
    that is, the [petitioner] must overcome the presumption
    that, under the circumstances, the challenged action
    might be considered sound trial strategy. . . . [C]oun-
    sel is strongly presumed to have rendered adequate
    assistance and made all significant decisions in the exer-
    cise of reasonable professional judgment.’’ (Emphasis
    added; internal quotation marks omitted.) Moye v. Com-
    missioner of Correction, 
    168 Conn. App. 207
    , 217–18,
    
    145 A.3d 362
    (2016), cert. denied, 
    324 Conn. 905
    , 
    153 A.3d 653
    (2017).
    ‘‘With respect to the prejudice component of the
    Strickland test, the petitioner must demonstrate that
    counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the [peti-
    tioner] of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.
    . . . It is not enough for the [petitioner] to show that
    the errors had some conceivable effect on the outcome
    of the proceedings. . . . Rather, [t]he [petitioner] must
    show that there is a reasonable probability that, but
    for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. . . . A reason-
    able probability is a probability sufficient to undermine
    confidence in the outcome.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Mukhtaar v. Commissioner
    of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    158 Conn. App. 438
    ; Holloway v.
    Commissioner of Correction, 
    145 Conn. App. 353
    , 365,
    
    77 A.3d 777
    (2013).
    Finally, ‘‘there is no reason for a court deciding an
    ineffective assistance claim to approach the inquiry in
    the same order or even to address both components
    of the inquiry if the defendant makes an insufficient
    showing on one. In particular, a court need not deter-
    mine whether counsel’s performance was deficient
    before examining the prejudice suffered by the defen-
    dant as a result of the alleged deficiencies. The object
    of an ineffectiveness claim is not to grade counsel’s
    performance. If it is easier to dispose of an ineffec-
    tiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient preju-
    dice . . . that course should be followed.’’ Strickland
    v. 
    Washington, supra
    , 
    466 U.S. 697
    . Guided by these
    principles, we turn to the specific claims made by
    the petitioner.
    A
    We first turn to the petitioner’s claim that his trial
    counsel failed to properly investigate and to present an
    alibi defense. The following additional information is
    relevant to our discussion of this claim. The record
    reflects that on June 23, 2005, the New Haven police
    received a telephone call regarding a shooting at 6:55
    p.m. on Canal Street in New Haven, a separate call
    regarding a street fight in the neighborhood of the peti-
    tioner’s residence at 7:10 p.m., and another call relating
    to the fight at 7:23 p.m. The record reflects, as well,
    that the police received a call at 7:57 p.m. regarding a
    scooter chase. At the time, the petitioner lived at 24
    Harding Place in New Haven.
    During the habeas hearing, the petitioner presented
    the testimony of then Attorney Auden C. Grogins,5 who
    had represented the petitioner in the underlying crimi-
    nal trial. Grogins testified that, although she had investi-
    gated the potential alibi defense and that either she or
    an investigator retained by her had reached out to some
    of the alibi witnesses identified by the petitioner, she
    had ultimately concluded that an alibi defense was not
    strong and that presenting such a defense could, in fact,
    be harmful to the petitioner at trial. Grogins’ reasoning
    in that regard was multifaceted. She stated that she had
    considered the quality of the alibi witnesses and the
    fact that all of them were either family members or
    close friends with the petitioner’s family. She also had
    considered that, although all of the alibi witnesses saw
    the petitioner on the street near his home during the
    day of the murder, none of them could pinpoint the
    petitioner’s whereabouts at the time of the shooting.
    She further indicated that sightings of the petitioner
    shortly after the murder at locations less than one mile
    from the murder scene would have not only been
    unhelpful to the petitioner, but would, in fact, have
    placed him in the vicinity of the crime.
    Grogins testified, as well, that her determination not
    to present an alibi defense was informed by her knowl-
    edge that the petitioner initially had stated to the police
    when he was arrested that he did not recall where he
    was at the time of the murder, but had then provided
    a list of alibi witnesses the next morning, facts she
    believed would have undercut any alibi testimony.
    Finally, in regard to an alibi defense, she indicated that
    presenting such a defense could have detracted from a
    third-party culpability defense, which she had believed
    was stronger. Grogins further testified that she had
    ultimately concluded, on the basis of her experience
    as a trial attorney, that the presentation of an incom-
    plete alibi defense, bolstered only by friends and rela-
    tives of the accused, often undermines the defendant’s
    defense in a murder trial.
    Evidence also was presented at the habeas hearing
    that the petitioner had given Grogins a list of potential
    alibi witnesses and that he had asked her to present
    an alibi defense. In particular, the petitioner presented
    several witnesses at the habeas hearing who claimed
    to have seen the petitioner in his neighborhood close
    to the time the shooting occurred. Nakia Black-Geter,
    a close friend of the petitioner’s sister, testified that
    the petitioner was present when she had arrived at his
    home between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. She testified, as well,
    that the petitioner had been present during the fight,
    although she could not say whether he was there for
    the entire time. Finally, she could not recall whether
    the petitioner was riding a bicycle when she had seen
    him in the vicinity of the fight.
    Additionally, Antjuan Martin, the petitioner’s cousin,
    agreed with defense counsel that he had started ‘‘hang-
    ing out’’ with the petitioner at 11 a.m. on the day in
    question and that he had seen the petitioner riding
    around on a mountain bicycle during the fight. He indi-
    cated, as well, that the petitioner had been out of his
    sight for approximately ten minutes while the petitioner
    rode his bicycle to Moe’s Market before the fight
    started.6 Martin had no recollection of the clothes that
    the petitioner had been wearing or the color of the
    bicycle that he had been riding. Dijon Wiggins, who
    lived across the street from the petitioner’s home, also
    testified that he had observed the petitioner at the fight
    and later during the scooter chase. Wiggins recalled
    that the petitioner had been riding on a mountain bicy-
    cle, but he did not recall whether the petitioner had
    been on the bike before the fight began.
    Furthermore, Natasha Outing, the petitioner’s sister,
    testified that she arrived home from work between 5
    p.m. and 5:30 p.m. She indicated that the petitioner had
    been present for the fight and had been riding a ten
    speed bicycle up and down the street, although she
    conceded that she had not seen the petitioner the entire
    time. She recalled that the petitioner had been wearing
    a blue dickey7 shirt, jeans, and a baseball cap. She indi-
    cated, as well, that kids in the neighborhood had been
    in the habit of sharing bicycles.
    Finally, Eric Williams, a cousin of both the petitioner
    and the victim, indicated that he had a close relationship
    with the petitioner and testified that the petitioner had
    been present at the beginning of the fight. Williams also
    testified that the petitioner was in Moe’s Market when
    Williams’ mother had called to tell him about the shoot-
    ing. Williams recalled that the petitioner had been wear-
    ing a dickey shirt, but no hat, during the fight, that the
    petitioner had been riding either a mountain bicycle or
    a ‘‘baja’’ bicycle, and that he had not seen the petitioner
    on the bicycle during the fight. He also indicated that
    he had not been with the petitioner prior to the time
    he witnessed the petitioner watching the fight.
    The petitioner also presented evidence from Donald
    Light, a private investigator retained by Grogins, and
    Mike Udvardi, a private investigator retained by habeas
    counsel. Light testified that he had attempted, with vary-
    ing success, to contact the alibi witnesses whose names
    had been given to him by Grogins. He testified, as well,
    that he had operated without substantial direction from
    Grogins and had free rein to follow leads as they devel-
    oped. Udvardi testified that the fight and scooter chase
    had occurred ‘‘at or about presumably the time of the
    shooting . . . .’’ Specifically, he testified that, after his
    own investigation, he had been able to determine that
    calls were made to the New Haven Police Department
    at 7:10 p.m. and 7:23 p.m. regarding the fight, and that
    the dispatch time for the scooter chase was approxi-
    mately 8 p.m. Udvardi indicated, as well, that his review
    of Grogins’ trial file revealed no police reports or other
    records indicating an effort on Grogins’ part to ascertain
    the timing of these events.
    In assessing the petitioner’s alibi witness claim, the
    habeas court concluded that the petitioner failed to
    meet his burden of proof both as to ineffectiveness and
    prejudice. The court concluded that Grogins’ decision
    not to present an alibi defense was a matter of trial
    strategy and that her strategy was both well considered
    and reasonable. The court concluded, as well, that even
    if Grogins’ trial strategy had been deficient, the peti-
    tioner failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced by
    Grogins’ decision not to present an alibi defense
    because the testimony of alibi witnesses would not, in
    fact, have exculpated the petitioner. The court reasoned
    that the timing of the murder and the locations where
    the petitioner was sighted within the time frame
    reflected in the record would have allowed the peti-
    tioner to commit the murder and return to his neighbor-
    hood in time to have been observed by the alibi
    witnesses that he presented.
    On the basis of our careful review of the record, we
    find ample support for the habeas court’s conclusion
    that the petitioner failed to prove that Grogins provided
    ineffective assistance in failing to pursue and to present
    an alibi defense. Our Supreme Court has acknowledged
    ‘‘that counsel need not track down each and every lead
    or personally investigate every evidentiary possibility
    before choosing a defense and developing it. . . . [T]he
    failure of defense counsel to call a potential defense
    witness does not constitute ineffective assistance
    unless there is some showing that the testimony would
    have been helpful in establishing the asserted defense.
    . . . [Particularly] [w]hen the failure to call a witness
    implicates an alibi defense, an alibi witness’ testimony
    has been found unhelpful and defense counsel’s actions
    have been found reasonable when the proffered wit-
    nesses would fail to account sufficiently for a defen-
    dant’s location during the time or period in question
    . . . .’’ (Citations omitted; emphasis added; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Johnson v. Commissioner
    of Correction, 
    330 Conn. 520
    , 548–49, 
    198 A.3d 52
    (2019).
    In Johnson, our Supreme Court discussed whether
    trial counsel’s failure to present an alibi witness in that
    case constituted ineffective assistance. Although the
    underlying facts are, of course, not identical, the reason-
    ing of the court in Johnson on this issue is instructive.
    The court indicated that ‘‘counsel testified to a variety
    of strategic reasons for [her] decision not to present
    an alibi defense,’’ and that it was ‘‘required to indulge
    [in the] strong presumption that counsel made all signif-
    icant decisions in the exercise of reasonable profes-
    sional judgment.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    
    Id., 550. The
    court noted the significance of trial coun-
    sel’s reasoning for not presenting the alibi defense, par-
    ticularly, the fact that ‘‘the alibi witnesses were family,
    the alibi placed the petitioner in close proximity to the
    crime scene, and the alibi witnesses testified that the
    petitioner was home but not within their line of sight.’’
    
    Id., 552. The
    court concluded that ‘‘counsel made a
    reasonable strategic decision because the proffered wit-
    nesses would [have] fail[ed] to account sufficiently for
    [the petitioner’s] location during the time or period in
    question . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    
    Id., 554. The
    court concluded, as well, that ‘‘[e]ven if
    there [was] some showing that the [alibi] testimony
    would have been helpful in establishing the asserted
    [alibi] defense . . . defense counsel made a strategic
    decision that presenting an alibi defense had the poten-
    tial to be more harmful than helpful to the petitioner’s
    case.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) 
    Id. In the
    matter at hand, Grogins repeatedly testified at
    the habeas hearing that she believed that the third-party
    culpability defense was her strongest strategy at the
    petitioner’s criminal trial and that she was concerned
    that presenting an alibi defense could do more harm
    than good. In addition, some of the purported alibi
    witnesses indicated that they had seen the petitioner
    in the vicinity of the fight, which was first reported to
    the police approximately fifteen minutes after the first
    report of the murder to the police, while some witnesses
    stated that they had observed the petitioner near the
    scene of a scooter chase, which took place shortly
    before 8 p.m. in the vicinity of the petitioner’s house.
    Many of the witnesses conceded, as well, that they
    could not account for the petitioner’s whereabouts
    throughout the entire time period during which these
    events occurred. Although the witnesses each placed
    the petitioner in the vicinity of his home, approximately
    one mile from the scene of the murder at various times
    during the early evening, their testimonies were incon-
    sistent and varied as to the time they saw the petitioner
    and their descriptions of the petitioner’s clothing and
    bicycle. Accordingly, we agree with the habeas court
    and conclude that Grogins’ decision not to present an
    alibi defense was not constitutionally deficient.
    B
    The petitioner next claims that Grogins was ineffec-
    tive for failing to properly investigate and to rebut the
    testimony of the eyewitnesses to the murder. This claim
    has two interwoven parts. First, the petitioner claims
    that Grogins unreasonably failed to investigate the relia-
    bility of statements given by Crimley and Caple. Second,
    the petitioner asserts that Grogins unreasonably failed
    to preserve the record regarding potential expert testi-
    mony on the subject of eyewitness identification.
    The following additional information is pertinent to
    our discussion. As previously noted, on June 23, 2005,
    Crimley gave a statement to the police indicating that
    she had witnessed the shooter pass her on a bicycle
    and fire a gun at the victim; four days later, she identified
    the petitioner as the shooter after being presented with
    a photographic array. State v. 
    Outing, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 38
    –39. Caple, who was a former high school classmate
    of the petitioner and had known him for a few years,
    also identified the petitioner as the shooter from a pho-
    tographic array after indicating that he had witnessed
    the shooter ride his bicycle on Canal Street and shoot
    the victim. 
    Id. Prior to
    the start of the petitioner’s crimi-
    nal trial, both Crimley and Caple recanted their state-
    ments to the police and their identifications of the
    petitioner, alleging that they had been coerced into mak-
    ing the statements. 
    Id., 39. Thereafter,
    at the hearing on
    the petitioner’s motion to suppress the identifications,
    Crimley and Caple testified that they did not know who
    the shooter was and that the police had coerced them
    into making the statements. 
    Id., 39–40. At
    the petition-
    er’s criminal trial, Crimley and Caple testified, more
    adamantly than they had at the suppression hearing,
    that they were coerced into identifying the petitioner
    as the shooter.
    During the habeas trial, Grogins indicated that when
    she was confronted with the initial statements from
    Crimley and Caple, she initially had intended to elicit
    Dysart’s expert testimony concerning the fallibility of
    eyewitness identification. Grogins changed course,
    however, when she learned that Crimley and Caple had
    disavowed their statements and had, instead, alleged
    that their statements had been coerced by the police.
    From Grogins’ perspective, the new assertions made
    by Crimley and Caple had changed her approach
    because she was no longer confronting an issue of mis-
    taken identity but, rather, a claim of police coercion.
    Grogins also testified that presenting Dysart’s testimony
    on mistaken identify would have been inconsistent with
    her trial strategy of undermining the identifications by
    demonstrating that police coercion had occurred.
    Accordingly, she decided not to present the testimony
    of Dysart at trial.
    Grogins testified, as well, that she had directed her
    investigator, Light, to interview Crimley and Caple in
    an effort to develop their claim of police coercion, but
    Light had been unsuccessful in reaching them. Later in
    her testimony, Grogins indicated that she did not recall
    whether she had instructed Light to make ongoing
    efforts to meet with Crimley and Caple after their sup-
    pression hearing testimony and prior to trial, but stated
    that she would not have any reason to dispute evidence
    indicating that such efforts had been made. Light also
    testified regarding his efforts to contact Crimley and
    Caple. He indicated that he had tried to contact Crimley
    and Caple, but those attempts had been unsuccessful.
    He indicated, as well, that Grogins had never provided
    him with specific instructions to meet with Crimley or
    Caple prior to the criminal trial.
    In assessing Grogins’ decision not to present Dysart’s
    testimony and not to vigorously pursue Caple and Crim-
    ley before trial, the habeas court noted that, during the
    cross-examinations of Crimley and Caple at the criminal
    trial, Grogins concentrated on the issue of coercion
    and not whether their initial statements were borne of
    mistaken identifications of the petitioner. The court
    determined that Grogins had sufficiently articulated the
    tactical reasoning behind her method of investigation
    and examination of Crimley and Caple. The court also
    determined that Grogins had made the tactical decision
    not to produce an eyewitness identification expert at
    trial and that her decision not to pursue a theory of
    mistaken identity was reasonable under the circum-
    stances.
    The petitioner asserts that, even after Crimley and
    Caple had recanted their identifications of the petitioner
    at the suppression hearing, Grogins should have made
    efforts to contact them in the time period leading up
    to the criminal trial and, had she done so, she could
    have developed additional evidence regarding the relia-
    bility of their statements. The issue before us in this
    appeal, however, is not whether all reasonable lawyers
    would have made the same tactical decision as Grogins,
    but whether her decision to forgo additional investiga-
    tion and rebuttal of the eyewitnesses’ statements, which
    included forgoing expert testimony on the issue of mis-
    identification, fell within the broad parameters of her
    decisional discretion. ‘‘Paramount to the effective assis-
    tance of counsel is the obligation by the attorney to
    investigate all surrounding circumstances of the case
    and to explore all avenues that may potentially lead to
    facts relevant to the defense of the case. . . . We are
    mindful that, under certain circumstances, the failure
    to use any expert can result in a determination that a
    criminal defendant was denied the effective assistance
    of counsel. . . . Nevertheless, the question of whether
    to call an expert witness always is a strategic decision.
    . . . [S]trategic choices made after thorough investiga-
    tion of law and facts relevant to plausible options are
    virtually unchallengeable; [but] strategic choices made
    after less than complete investigation are reasonable
    precisely to the extent that reasonable professional
    judgments support the limitations on investigation.’’
    (Citations omitted; emphasis omitted; internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) Arroyo v. Commissioner of Cor-
    rection, 
    172 Conn. App. 442
    , 467, 
    160 A.3d 425
    , cert.
    denied, 
    326 Conn. 921
    , 
    169 A.3d 235
    (2017).
    In the case at hand, we do not fault the habeas court’s
    conclusion because we believe it accords appropriate
    deference to Grogins’ tactical decision making in regard
    to forgoing additional investigation into Crimley’s and
    Caple’s statements and omitting Dysart’s expert testi-
    mony on misidentification at trial. The record reflects
    that part of Grogins’ third-party culpability theory at
    trial was to establish that the statements made by Crim-
    ley and Caple were the product of police coercion.
    Grogins’ cross-examination of Crimley and Caple at the
    criminal trial advanced that theory by eliciting testi-
    mony that they were coerced. Although we acknowl-
    edge that additional investigation into Crimley’s and
    Caple’s statements may have shed more light on their
    credibility as witnesses, evidence in the record does
    not support a conclusion that Grogins’ failure to do
    so was unreasonable. See Moye v. Commissioner of
    
    Correction, supra
    , 
    168 Conn. App. 218
    (‘‘To prove that
    his counsel’s performance was deficient, the petitioner
    must demonstrate that trial counsel’s representation fell
    below an objective standard of reasonableness. . . .
    Competent representation is not to be equated with
    perfection.’’ [Internal quotation marks omitted.]). In
    sum, we agree that Grogins’ approach to the handling
    of these eyewitnesses fell within the wide range of
    reasonably effective assistance. In addition, the record
    is clear that Grogins’ decision not to call Dysart as an
    expert at trial was based on her concern that doing so
    would have potentially detracted from the petitioner’s
    coercion defense.8 Thus, we also agree that Grogins’
    decision to forgo Dysart’s expert testimony was a rea-
    sonable tactical choice under the circumstances and,
    accordingly, conclude that Grogins’ performance was
    not deficient in this regard.
    C
    The petitioner next claims that Grogins was ineffec-
    tive for failing to preserve for appellate review the trial
    court’s exclusion of certain aspects of Dysart’s expert
    testimony on eyewitness identification. Specifically, the
    petitioner claims that Grogins was ineffective for failing
    to obtain a ruling at trial as to the admissibility of five
    eyewitness identification factors about which the trial
    court had precluded Dysart from testifying at the hear-
    ing on the petitioner’s motion to suppress.
    The following additional information, as set forth by
    our Supreme Court in the petitioner’s direct appeal, is
    relevant to our resolution of this claim. Prior to the
    start of the criminal trial, ‘‘[b]y way of a proffer, Dysart
    testified that . . . there is an undue risk of misidentifi-
    cation resulting from the identification procedure if,
    as occurred in the [underlying criminal] case: (1) the
    photographs are shown to the witness simultaneously
    rather than sequentially; (2) after advising the eyewit-
    ness that the perpetrator may or may not be in the
    photographic array, the police provide the witness with
    a form that does not contain a line on which the witness
    may indicate that the array does not include the perpe-
    trator; and (3) the police do not use a double-blind
    identification procedure, that is, one in which the per-
    son administering the procedure does not know the
    identity of the suspect. Dysart also explained that she
    intended to testify that (1) the perpetrator’s use of a
    disguise can impair the ability of a witness to make an
    accurate identification (disguise effect); (2) under the
    principle of unconscious transference, a witness is
    more likely to identify a person as the perpetrator if
    that person looks familiar to the witness; (3) a witness
    tends to focus on the perpetrator’s weapon instead of
    on the perpetrator, thereby reducing the likelihood of
    an accurate identification (weapons focus effect); (4)
    there is little or no correlation between the reliability
    of an identification and the witness’ confidence in the
    identification; (5) a witness who is under stress while
    observing the commission of the crime is less likely to
    make an accurate identification of the perpetrator; and
    (6) witness collaboration can adversely affect the relia-
    bility of an identification. The state objected to Dysart’s
    proffered testimony, claiming, inter alia, that it was
    inadmissible in light of this court’s determination in
    State v. Kemp, 
    199 Conn. 473
    , 476–77, 
    507 A.2d 1387
    (1986), and State v. McClendon, 
    248 Conn. 572
    , 586–87,
    
    730 A.2d 1107
    (1999), [both overruled in part by State
    v. Guilbert, 
    306 Conn. 218
    , 253, 
    49 A.3d 705
    (2012)],
    that such testimony generally is within the common
    knowledge and experience of the average person and,
    therefore, it would not aid the fact finder in evaluating
    the identification evidence.’’ (Footnote omitted; inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) State v. 
    Outing, supra
    ,
    
    298 Conn. 42
    –43.
    ‘‘In reliance on Kemp and McClendon,9 the trial court
    precluded Dysart from testifying that the reliability of
    the identification can be adversely affected by witness
    stress, witness collaboration, the perpetrator’s use of
    a disguise and the perpetrator’s use of a weapon, and
    that the witness’ confidence in the accuracy of the iden-
    tification bears little or no relation to the accuracy of
    the identification. In support of its ruling, the court
    explained that such testimony was unnecessary
    because it was within the realm of . . . common sense
    and . . . experience.’’ (Footnote added; internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) 
    Id., 43 n.7.
    The court, however,
    ‘‘concluded that, out of an abundance of caution, Dysart
    could testify [at the suppression hearing] on the issues
    of the simultaneous presentation of photographs, police
    instructions to the witness, double-blind administration
    of the identification procedure and the theory of uncon-
    scious transference. The trial court emphasized that it
    was limiting its ruling to the testimony at the hearing
    on the motion to suppress . . . and left the issue open
    should the [petitioner] seek to introduce Dysart’s testi-
    mony at trial.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 43–44. After
    Dysart’s testimony, the court denied the
    petitioner’s motion to suppress. See 
    id., 45–46. In
    addition, ‘‘at trial, the [petitioner] made a motion
    requesting that Dysart be permitted to provide testi-
    mony concerning the four factors pertaining to the relia-
    bility of eyewitness [identification] procedures about
    which the trial court had allowed Dysart to testify at
    the suppression hearing. The trial court granted the
    [petitioner’s] motion. With respect to the other five fac-
    tors about which the trial court precluded Dysart’s testi-
    mony at the suppression hearing, however, the
    [petitioner] never renewed his request that Dysart be
    permitted to testify at trial with respect to those factors.
    In fact, the [petitioner] did not call Dysart as a trial
    witness at all.’’ 
    Id., 63. The
    petitioner appealed, claiming,
    inter alia, that the trial court had improperly precluded
    him from introducing Dysart’s testimony regarding the
    additional five factors. See 
    id., 62–63. Our
    Supreme
    Court held that this issue was not preserved for appel-
    late review. 
    Id., 63. For
    the same reason as stated in part I B of this
    opinion, we do not fault Grogins for failing to preserve,
    for appellate review, a claim concerning the trial court’s
    order disallowing the proffer of Dysart’s testimony con-
    cerning the additional five factors that reduce the relia-
    bility of eyewitness identification. Because Grogins
    already had reasonably determined not to present
    Dysart’s testimony at the petitioner’s criminal trial, she
    would have had no strategic reason to preserve the
    court’s exclusion of evidence on a matter that she rea-
    sonably believed had been rendered moot by her tacti-
    cal choice not to pursue a theory of mistaken
    identification. ‘‘[T]here is no requirement that counsel
    call an expert when [s]he has developed a different trial
    strategy.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Davis v.
    Commissioner of Correction, 
    186 Conn. App. 366
    , 379,
    
    199 A.3d 562
    (2018), cert. denied, 
    330 Conn. 962
    , 
    199 A.3d 560
    (2019).
    Moreover, at the time of the underlying criminal trial,
    our decisional law did not permit expert testimony on
    the subjects for which Grogins initially sought to pre-
    sent expert testimony. Although State v. 
    Kemp, supra
    ,
    
    199 Conn. 473
    , was overruled in part by State v. Guilb-
    
    ert, supra
    , 306 Conn. 253,10 recent decisions of this court
    that have addressed claims of ineffective assistance of
    trial counsel arising from counsel’s decisions on the
    issue of expert testimony on eyewitness identification
    in between our Supreme Court’s opinions in Kemp and
    Guilbert have held that counsel’s decision not to pre-
    sent the testimony of an eyewitness identification
    expert did not constitute deficient performance. See,
    e.g., Davis v. Commissioner of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    186 Conn. App. 378
    (‘‘[a]lthough Kemp was overruled . . .
    we consider [counsel’s] performance in light of the stan-
    dards in effect at the time of the petitioner’s criminal
    trial . . . and conclude that the habeas court did not
    err in concluding that [counsel’s] performance was not
    deficient’’); Bennett v. Commissioner of Correction,
    
    182 Conn. App. 541
    , 562, 
    190 A.3d 877
    (‘‘because the
    law in effect at the time of the criminal trial discouraged
    the use of expert testimony on the issue of eyewitness
    identification, [counsel] did not perform deficiently by
    not presenting expert testimony’’), cert. denied, 
    330 Conn. 910
    , 
    193 A.3d 50
    (2018). To impose on counsel
    the duty to foretell what tack our Supreme Court would
    take on this subject represents the height of post hoc
    reasoning, which is not the task of a court on habeas
    review. See Ledbetter v. Commissioner of Correction,
    
    275 Conn. 451
    , 462, 
    880 A.2d 160
    (2005) (Counsel is
    not ‘‘required to change then-existing law to provide
    effective representation. . . . Counsel instead per-
    forms effectively when he elects to maneuver within
    the existing law . . . .’’ [Citation omitted; internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.]), cert. denied, 
    546 U.S. 1187
    , 
    126 S. Ct. 1368
    , 
    164 L. Ed. 2d 77
    (2006). Accordingly, we
    agree with the habeas court and conclude that Grogins
    did not perform deficiently by not preserving for appel-
    late review a claim related to the trial court’s exclusion
    of Dysart’s expert testimony regarding the additional
    five factors concerning eyewitness identifications.
    II
    The petitioner next claims that his appellate counsel
    was ineffective for failing to claim, in his direct appeal,
    that the trial court incorrectly denied the petitioner’s
    request to present surrebuttal evidence at trial.11 We
    note briefly our standard of review of a claim of ineffec-
    tiveness of appellate counsel. ‘‘A criminal defendant’s
    right to the effective assistance of counsel extends
    through the first appeal of right and is guaranteed by
    the sixth and fourteenth amendments to the United
    States constitution and by article first, § 8, of the Con-
    necticut constitution. . . . To succeed on a claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel, a habeas petitioner
    must satisfy the two-pronged test articulated in [Strick-
    land v. 
    Washington, supra
    , 
    466 U.S. 687
    ] . . . . Our
    Supreme Court has, however, distinguished the stan-
    dards of review for claims of ineffective assistance of
    trial counsel and of appellate counsel. . . . For claims
    of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, we must
    assess whether there is a reasonable probability that,
    but for appellate counsel’s failure to raise the issue on
    appeal, the petitioner would have prevailed [on] appeal,
    i.e., [obtaining] reversal of his conviction or granting
    of a new trial.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Smith v. Commissioner of Correction,
    
    148 Conn. App. 517
    , 530, 
    85 A.3d 1199
    , cert. denied, 
    312 Conn. 901
    , 
    91 A.3d 908
    (2014).
    Additionally, ‘‘[j]ust as with a claim of ineffective
    assistance of trial counsel, success on a claim of ineffec-
    tive assistance of appellate counsel requires the peti-
    tioner to establish that appellate counsel’s
    representation fell below an objective standard of rea-
    sonableness considering all of the circumstances. . . .
    [Although] an appellate advocate must provide effective
    assistance, [she] is not under an obligation to raise
    every conceivable issue. A brief that raises every color-
    able issue runs the risk of burying good arguments
    . . . in a verbal mound made up of strong and weak
    contentions. . . . Indeed, [e]xperienced advocates
    since time beyond memory have emphasized the impor-
    tance of winnowing out weaker arguments on appeal
    and focusing on one central issue if possible, or at most
    on a few key issues. . . . Moreover, [a] habeas court
    will not, with the benefit of hindsight, second-guess
    the tactical decisions of appellate counsel.’’ (Emphasis
    added; internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 531. The
    following additional information is relevant to
    this claim. As previously noted, Grogins pursued a claim
    of third-party culpability at the petitioner’s criminal
    trial. In furtherance of this claim, Shaniah Outlaw testi-
    fied on behalf of the petitioner that she had overheard
    Darrell Mayes confess to the shooting. Once the peti-
    tioner’s defense rested, the state called Vasquez as a
    rebuttal witness. Vasquez testified that when he had
    interviewed Outlaw, she denied ever telling anyone that
    she had overheard Mayes confess. In light of this testi-
    mony, Grogins sought to introduce surrebuttal testi-
    mony from Allison Carter, Outlaw’s mother. By way of
    a proffer, Grogins indicated that Carter would testify
    that she was present when her daughter told Vasquez
    of the purported confession by Mayes. See State v.
    
    Outing, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 71
    . The court denied the
    request to present Carter’s surrebuttal testimony, and,
    on appeal, the petitioner’s appellate counsel, Attorney
    James B. Streeto, did not claim that the trial court had
    abused its discretion in denying the petitioner’s request
    for Carter’s surrebuttal evidence. See 
    id. Streeto testified
    at the habeas trial that, given page
    limitations for briefing, he did not have the space to
    include an argument on this issue and that he had deter-
    mined not to present such an argument because, in his
    view, it was one of the petitioner’s weaker arguments.
    Streeto also testified that the level of deference afforded
    a trial court’s decision not to allow surrebuttal evidence
    had impacted his assessment of whether to raise it as
    an issue on appeal. He believed, as well, that the inclu-
    sion of this relatively weak argument could have
    detracted from his presentation on the arguments he
    briefed.
    The habeas court concluded, and we agree, that
    Streeto made a reasonable strategic decision not to
    raise the surrebuttal issue on appeal, and that his deci-
    sion fell within the wide range of reasonable profes-
    sional assistance. Our case law is clear that a court
    will not second-guess an appellate counsel’s tactical
    decision to limit the claims briefed to those claims that
    he or she reasonably viewed as most critical to the
    appeal. See, e.g., Smith v. Commissioner of 
    Correction, supra
    , 
    148 Conn. App. 532
    (petitioner failed to prove
    appellate counsel’s performance fell below objective
    standard of reasonableness where counsel had
    ‘‘reviewed the pleadings and transcripts, identified the
    possible issues and then strategically determined which
    issues had the best chance of winning’’ [internal quota-
    tion marks omitted]); Saucier v. Commissioner of Cor-
    rection, 
    139 Conn. App. 644
    , 652, 
    57 A.3d 399
    (2012)
    (appellate counsel’s performance not deficient where
    counsel had ‘‘made his tactical decision to focus on the
    strongest of the petitioner’s claims on appeal . . . after
    considering the relevant case law and whether the claim
    was properly preserved, and after consulting with other
    experienced counsel’’), cert. denied, 
    308 Conn. 907
    , 
    61 A.3d 530
    (2013). Accordingly, we conclude that the
    court properly determined that the petitioner failed to
    prove that Streeto’s performance was deficient.
    III
    Finally, the petitioner claims that the habeas court
    incorrectly determined that he did not prove his claim
    of actual innocence. ‘‘[T]he proper standard for evaluat-
    ing a freestanding claim of actual innocence, like that
    of the petitioner, is twofold. First, the petitioner must
    establish by clear and convincing evidence that, taking
    into account all of the evidence—both the evidence
    adduced at the original criminal trial and the evidence
    adduced at the habeas corpus trial—he is actually inno-
    cent of the crime of which he stands convicted. Second,
    the petitioner must also establish that, after considering
    all of that evidence and the inferences drawn therefrom
    as the habeas court did, no reasonable fact finder would
    find the petitioner guilty of the crime.’’ Miller v. Com-
    missioner of Correction, 
    242 Conn. 745
    , 747, 
    700 A.2d 1108
    (1997).
    ‘‘Actual innocence is not demonstrated merely by
    showing that there was insufficient evidence to prove
    guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. . . . Rather, actual
    innocence is demonstrated by affirmative proof that
    the petitioner did not commit the crime. . . . Affirma-
    tive proof of actual innocence is that which might tend
    to establish that the petitioner could not have commit-
    ted the crime even though it is unknown who committed
    the crime, that a third party committed the crime or
    that no crime actually occurred.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Carmon v. Commissioner of Correc-
    tion, 
    178 Conn. App. 356
    , 371, 
    175 A.3d 60
    (2017), cert.
    denied, 
    328 Conn. 913
    , 
    180 A.3d 961
    (2018).
    This court has stated that ‘‘[a] claim of actual inno-
    cence must be based on newly discovered evidence.
    . . . This evidentiary burden is satisfied if a petitioner
    can demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence,
    that the proffered evidence could not have been discov-
    ered prior to the petitioner’s criminal trial by the exer-
    cise of due diligence.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Ampero v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    171 Conn. App. 670
    , 687, 
    157 A.3d 1192
    , cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 953
    , 
    171 A.3d 453
    (2017).
    In support of his claim of actual innocence, the peti-
    tioner relies on third-party culpability evidence pre-
    sented at the habeas trial, which he claims points either
    to Antwan Baldwin or Mayes as the shooter. In particu-
    lar, the petitioner relies on the fact that Baldwin’s finger-
    prints were found on a bicycle left at the murder scene,
    which Baldwin acknowledged he owned but claimed
    had been stolen from him. The petitioner relies, as well,
    on the negative inferences that he contends may be
    drawn from Mayes’ invocation at the habeas trial of
    his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
    Additionally, the petitioner relies on testimony from his
    alibi witnesses that they saw him at the fight and on
    testimony from Crimley that the petitioner was not
    the shooter.
    Given the well established parameters of decisional
    law on the topic of actual innocence, this claim warrants
    little discussion. The habeas court’s conclusion is apt:
    ‘‘Even assuming arguendo that the evidence in support
    of an actual innocence claim was not required to be
    newly discovered, the court finds that the mosaic of
    evidence presented by the petitioner does not constitute
    affirmative proof of actual innocence, as it does not
    tend to establish that the petitioner could not have
    committed the crime as it relates to the other evidence
    in the case.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) The
    court’s apt rejection of this claim needs no embel-
    lishment.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The habeas court took judicial notice of the decision in State v. 
    Outing, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 34
    , during the habeas trial.
    2
    In particular, the petitioner raised twenty-nine ineffective assistance of
    counsel claims in regard to his trial counsel, including that counsel was
    ineffective for failing to properly investigate and present an alibi defense,
    failing to properly investigate and rebut the state’s eyewitnesses, and failing
    to preserve the record concerning the trial testimony of an expert witness
    on witness identifications. The petitioner also claimed that his due process
    rights were violated by the trial court’s denial of his request to present
    surrebuttal evidence; his appellate counsel provided ineffective assistance
    by failing to raise a claim on appeal challenging the trial court’s denial of
    his request to present surrebuttal evidence; he was actually innocent; and
    the cumulative impact of both his trial and appellate counsels’ errors
    deprived him of his right to the effective assistance of counsel and due
    process.
    3
    The parties filed several motions for extensions of time to file their
    posttrial briefs. On July 21, 2017, after receiving the parties’ posttrial briefs,
    the habeas court reserved the decision on its ruling.
    4
    The only ineffective assistance of trial counsel claims that the petitioner
    raises in his brief on appeal are that his trial counsel failed (1) to properly
    investigate and to present an alibi defense, (2) to investigate and to rebut
    the testimony of the state’s eyewitnesses, and (3) to preserve the record
    concerning the trial testimony of his expert witness on witness identifica-
    tions. Thus, the petitioner’s other ineffective assistance of trial counsel
    claims raised in his amended petition are deemed abandoned. See Merle S.
    v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    167 Conn. App. 585
    , 588 n.4, 14
    3 A.3d 1
    183
    (2016) (claims of ineffective assistance of trial counsel not pursued on
    appeal are deemed abandoned).
    5
    Attorney Grogins has since become a judge of the Superior Court. With
    no disrespect intended to Judge Grogins, we follow our normal practice in
    this opinion of referring to witnesses by their last names after initially
    identifying them by their full names.
    6
    The record reflects that Moe’s Market is located at the intersection of
    Dixwell Avenue and Harding Place, about a three minute bicycle ride south
    of the petitioner’s residence and, therefore, between his residence and Canal
    Street, the scene of the shooting.
    7
    ‘‘Dickey’’ shirt may refer to the ‘‘Dickies’’ brand of apparel. In the habeas
    trial transcripts, the term is spelled as ‘‘dickey’’ or ‘‘Dickey.’’ For consistency,
    we maintain the spelling as ‘‘dickey.’’
    8
    Our Supreme Court reached the same conclusion in the petitioner’s
    direct appeal, albeit in the context of the petitioner’s claim that the trial court
    had improperly barred him from presenting portions of Dysart’s testimony
    at his criminal trial. See State v. 
    Outing, supra
    , 
    298 Conn. 64
    (‘‘[m]oreover,
    it is reasonable to conclude that the [petitioner’s] decision not to call Dysart
    as a trial witness was a tactical one predicated on the concern that to do
    so might detract from the [petitioner’s] claim that Crimley and Caple had
    not made a good faith but mistaken identification of the [petitioner] as
    the shooter but, rather, had been coerced by the police into identifying
    the [petitioner]’’).
    9
    In State v. 
    Kemp, supra
    , 
    199 Conn. 477
    , and State v. 
    McClendon, supra
    ,
    
    248 Conn. 586
    , our Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s exclusion of
    expert testimony on eyewitness identification after observing that such
    testimony had previously ‘‘been excluded on the grounds that the reliability
    of eyewitness identification is within the knowledge of the jurors and expert
    testimony generally would not assist them in determining the question.’’
    10
    After the petitioner’s criminal trial and direct appeal, our Supreme Court
    decided State v. Guilb
    ert, supra
    , 
    306 Conn. 218
    , in which it expressly over-
    ruled Kemp and State v. 
    McClendon, supra
    , 
    248 Conn. 572
    , and held that
    ‘‘the reliability of eyewitness identifications frequently is not a matter within
    the knowledge of an average juror’’; State v. Guilb
    ert, supra
    , 251; and ‘‘expert
    testimony is an effective way to educate jurors about the risks of misidentifi-
    cation.’’ 
    Id., 252. 11
           ‘‘Surrebuttal evidence is that which is offered to meet evidence raised
    in rebuttal. [O]nly evidence to explain away new facts brought forward by
    the proponent in rebuttal . . . is properly admissible [in surrebuttal]. . . .
    [Our Supreme Court previously has] stated that there is no constitutional
    right to present surrebuttal evidence. . . . The presentation of surrebuttal
    evidence is a matter resting squarely within the discretion of the trial court.
    . . . The defendant must demonstrate some compelling circumstance and
    the proffered evidence must be of such importance that its omission puts
    in doubt the achievement of a just result.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Goriss, 
    108 Conn. App. 264
    , 272, 
    947 A.2d 1041
    , cert. denied,
    
    289 Conn. 904
    , 
    957 A.2d 873
    (2008).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC41224

Judges: Lavine, Moll, Bishop

Filed Date: 6/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024