State v. Johnson , 165 Conn. App. 255 ( 2016 )


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    STATE CONNECTICUT v. EFRAIN JOHNSON
    (AC 37577)
    Gruendel, Mullins and Sullivan, Js.*
    Argued October 13, 2015—officially released May 10, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Fairfield, Kavanewsky, J.)
    Glenn W. Falk, assigned counsel, for the appellant
    (defendant).
    Susann E. Gill, supervisory assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, were John C. Smriga, state’s
    attorney, Joseph T. Corradino, senior assistant state’s
    attorney, and Peter D. Markle, assistant United States
    attorney, for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    SULLIVAN, J. The defendant, Efrain Johnson, appeals
    from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury
    trial, of one count of felony murder in violation of Gen-
    eral Statutes § 53a-54c and one count of kidnapping in
    the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-
    92 (a) (2) (A) for his participation in events that led to
    the death of the victim, Tina Johnson.1 On appeal, the
    defendant claims that (1) there was insufficient evi-
    dence to sustain either of his convictions and (2) the
    trial court improperly instructed the jury on the third
    element of felony murder. We affirm the judgment of
    the trial court.
    By way of an amended information dated December
    18, 2013, the state charged the defendant with six
    offenses: as a principal in the felony murders of three
    individuals, namely, the victim, James Reid, and Basil
    Williams (counts one, two, and three, respectively), and
    as a principal in the kidnapping in the first degree for
    those same people (counts four, five, and six, respec-
    tively).2 On the basis of the evidence presented at trial,
    the jury reasonably could have found the following
    facts. For most of the time relevant to this case, Azibo
    Aquart3 headed a criminal organization selling crack
    cocaine and marijuana in certain cities in southern Con-
    necticut. As part of this operation, Azibo used certain
    apartments at 215 Charles Street in Bridgeport, in par-
    ticular using apartment 211 on the second floor to con-
    duct transactions. Azibo considered the apartments his
    ‘‘turf’’ and had driven away competitors on prior
    occasions.
    Azibo’s enterprise involved a number of individuals in
    a variety of tasks. Two such confederates were Azibo’s
    brother, Azikiwe Aquart,4 and Rodney Womble. Other
    individuals employed by Azibo included: Frankie
    Hodges, who sold crack cocaine out of apartment 211
    at 215 Charles Street; John Taylor, who sold marijuana
    on Azibo’s behalf in Norwalk; Lashika Johnson, the
    defendant’s sister, who sold crack cocaine and mari-
    juana on behalf of Azibo and, later, Azikiwe, and who
    was dating Azibo for much of the time relevant to this
    case; and the defendant, who purchased marijuana from
    Azibo both for personal use and to resell. A number
    of the individuals working for Azibo’s drug enterprise
    either began as customers or were otherwise users of
    Azibo’s product themselves.
    During much of August, 2005, the victim, Reid, and
    Williams lived in apartment 101 at 215 Charles Street.
    Both the victim and Reid used crack cocaine and regu-
    larly purchased it from Azibo’s operation in apart-
    ment 211.
    In early August, 2005, the quality of the crack cocaine
    that Azibo was selling in 215 Charles Street decreased
    substantially. At about this time, the victim stopped
    purchasing crack cocaine from Azibo’s operation on
    the second floor and began selling crack cocaine out
    of apartment 101. As a consequence, Azibo began losing
    a number of customers.
    Azibo was displeased by the victim’s actions and sub-
    sequently attempted on at least two occasions to break
    into apartment 101 with the assistance of various con-
    federates. During one such instance, Hodges heard a
    knock on the door of apartment 211 in the middle of the
    night. Looking through the peephole, Hodges observed
    Azibo, who was wearing black clothing, a black ban-
    dana, and plastic gloves and motioning for Hodges to
    join him in the hallway. Azibo whispered to Hodges to
    go to the first floor and knock on the door to a specific
    apartment. As Hodges and Azibo headed downstairs,
    Hodges perceived that three people were in the second
    floor laundry room; although he avoided looking at the
    people’s faces, he could see that all of them also were
    wearing plastic gloves. While Azibo hid in the stairwell,
    Hodges knocked on the door to apartment 101, but
    nobody came to the door. Relieved that no one had
    answered, Hodges informed Azibo and returned to the
    second floor while Azibo and the three other individuals
    went downstairs.
    Taylor also was present for two of the attempts to
    enter the first floor apartment. In the first attempt,
    Taylor received a phone call from Azibo. Taking the
    train from Norwalk to Bridgeport, Taylor met up with
    Azikiwe and Azibo; at Azibo’s direction, the group drove
    to a Walgreens store, where Azibo purchased duct tape.
    The three then drove to the diner near 215 Charles
    Street. By the time they arrived at the diner, it was dark
    outside. The group waited at the diner until Azibo got
    a phone call, at which point they went out to the parking
    lot. The defendant met the three men in the parking lot
    of the diner. He brought two bats with him, giving one
    to Azikiwe and retaining the other. The bats were the
    first weapons that Taylor observed among the four men.
    In the parking lot, Azibo told Taylor, Azikiwe, and the
    defendant that there were people selling drugs out of
    his building, ‘‘[h]e had a problem’’ with this, and the
    group was going to go in and ‘‘confront them.’’ The four
    men voluntarily put on masks and latex gloves provided
    by Azikiwe,5 entered the building, and waited down the
    hall while a young woman knocked on the door to
    apartment 101. When no one answered, Azibo, Azikiwe,
    and Taylor went upstairs, and the defendant left with
    the bats.6
    A second attempt involving Taylor to enter apartment
    101 occurred a few days after the first attempt. During
    the day on August 23, 2005, the defendant contacted
    Azibo about getting more marijuana. Azibo brought the
    marijuana over to the defendant and, giving the defen-
    dant two additional bags, stated that he might need
    a favor later. That evening, the defendant, with the
    assistance of Lashika and others, promoted a party at
    a Bridgeport club. Between approximately 1:30 to 2:30
    a.m. on August 24, 2005, the group finished cleaning up
    and went to a restaurant in Orange. While there, Lashika
    received a phone call from Azibo, who asked to speak
    with the defendant. The defendant did not look upset
    after receiving this phone call. After finishing their meal,
    Lashika and the defendant left the restaurant in separate
    vehicles. Returning home, Lashika saw Azibo outside
    her apartment, though she did not see the defendant;
    after seeing Azibo, Lashika went to sleep.
    Taylor also received a phone call from Azibo and
    drove to Bridgeport that night, where he met up with
    Azibo and Azikiwe. Azikiwe drove the group to the
    parking lot underneath the apartments at 215 Charles
    Street. Exiting the car, Taylor saw the defendant walk-
    ing up to them. The defendant again brought two bats
    with him, which were the first weapons that Taylor had
    observed among the four men on this occasion as well,
    and all of the men put on latex gloves and masks pro-
    vided by Azikiwe. Taking care not to be seen, the group
    went upstairs to apartment 101. During this period,
    Taylor observed that both the defendant and Azikiwe
    were armed with baseball bats, while Azibo had a gun.
    Once there, one or more members of the group forced
    open the door to apartment 101, and the four men
    entered the apartment.
    Inside the apartment, Azibo instructed Taylor to
    stand by the living room window and to take a lookout
    position. Azibo and Azikiwe then proceeded to use duct
    tape to bind the victim and Reid in the first bedroom.
    While duct taping these two individuals, Azibo’s gloves
    ripped, and he replaced them; Azikiwe similarly
    replaced his gloves while in the apartment. The defen-
    dant likewise participated in binding the victim’s wrists
    and ankles to some degree. While in the apartment,
    Taylor also observed the defendant standing in the hall-
    way by the bathroom near the first bedroom. Walking
    between the window at which he was stationed and
    the bedroom, Taylor saw both Azibo and Azikiwe strike
    the victim and Reid in the head multiple times with the
    baseball bats. At some point while the men were in the
    apartment, Williams was bound and injuries similar to
    those suffered by the victim and Reid were inflicted
    upon him. Additionally, one of the four participants
    inserted several screws into the doorjamb of the front
    door from the inside before leaving through the win-
    dow. Again, Taylor did not observe the defendant being
    threatened by, or try to stop, Azibo and Azikiwe during
    their time in apartment 101.
    Eventually, the four left the apartment: Taylor and
    Azikiwe in one vehicle, and the defendant and Azibo
    in another. The defendant observed a black drill in a
    bag that Azibo brought with him to the car after leaving
    the apartment. The defendant, Azibo, and Azikiwe
    reconvened at Lashika’s apartment, where the defen-
    dant frequently stayed. Lashika was awakened by
    voices in her living room, two of which she was able
    to identify as the defendant and Azibo. Leaving her
    bedroom, she discovered the defendant, Azibo, and
    Azikiwe sitting in the living room. Azibo and Azikiwe
    were wearing only undershirts, shorts, and socks. Azibo
    asked Lashika to take the garbage bags and a black
    electric drill belonging to Azibo to a dumpster down
    the street. Lashika disposed of the bags as requested,
    wearing plastic gloves to move the items. When she
    returned, Azibo asked her to move his car and retrieve
    clothing for him from his apartment, which she did.
    Azibo, Azikiwe, and the defendant were all there when
    she came back from this second errand.
    Later that morning, the victim’s son, Leroy Whittin-
    gham, attempted to call his mother multiple times, but
    was unable to reach her. At or about 10 a.m., he walked
    over to his mother’s apartment; getting no response
    when he knocked on her front door, he walked around
    the side of the building to the window of her bedroom.
    Discovering the window open, Whittingham pushed the
    blinds aside and saw the victim and Reid. Both parties
    were bound in duct tape on the floor, and there was
    blood on the floor and ceiling. Whittingham entered
    the apartment and called 911 from his cell phone. An
    ambulance and police were dispatched.
    Karen O’Donnell, an emergency medical technician
    for American Medical Response, and her partner,
    Rosanna Mendoza, received the call at approximately
    10:15 a.m. Driving toward the address to which they
    were directed, O’Donnell saw a person waving them
    down and pointing to the apartment building behind the
    diner. O’Donnell and her partner entered the building;
    while they were walking up the stairs toward the apart-
    ment, Whittingham kicked open the front door. Dis-
    covering the victim and Reid in the first bedroom and
    Williams in the second bedroom, O’Donnell and her
    partner quickly determined that all three residents
    were deceased.
    Investigators processed the apartment over the
    course of three days. They discovered the screws that
    had been affixed to the front door and door frame from
    inside the apartment, which would have prevented the
    door from being opened. Investigators also discovered
    various items and removed them from the apartment
    for further examination; these items included pieces of
    latex and latex gloves, samples of blood-like sub-
    stances, the duct tape used to bind the head, hands,
    and feet of the three residents, and two plastic bags
    stuck together with duct tape. Additionally, after remov-
    ing the duct tape binding the victim’s wrists, investiga-
    tors discovered a piece of latex attached to the inside
    of the duct tape. No weapons were recovered from
    the apartment.
    The items collected were turned over to the state
    forensic laboratory, and forensic testing determined
    that many of the fingerprints that were discovered in
    the apartment or on the items seized as evidence were
    attributable to Azikiwe and Azibo. DNA was also
    extracted from the various gloves, latex fragments, and
    other items recovered from apartment 101, and was
    submitted for further testing. This testing compared
    DNA profiles developed from these recovered samples
    to profiles of known samples taken from the involved
    parties. The profiles developed for each sample were
    then cross-referenced with a database, which allows
    the technicians to determine the frequency with which
    an individual within the three major population groups
    of Connecticut (African-American, Caucasian, or His-
    panic) would be expected to be a contributor. This
    testing identified Azikiwe, Azibo, and the defendant as
    contributors to the various samples, while none of the
    three of them or Taylor could be eliminated as a contrib-
    utor to other samples.7 Only the defendant was a con-
    tributor to the sample of DNA taken from the latex
    fragment recovered from the duct tape binding the vic-
    tim’s wrists; each of the other known samples was elimi-
    nated. The expected frequency of a person being a
    contributor to that particular sample was one in seven
    billion individuals from the three population groups.8
    Frank Evangelista, associate medical examiner for
    the state, conducted the autopsy of the victim in August,
    2005. External and internal examinations revealed pro-
    found and substantial injuries to the victim’s wrist, face,
    skull, and brain.9 These injuries, both external and inter-
    nal, were consistent with blunt force trauma and would
    have required multiple blows. Consequently, Evange-
    lista concluded that the victim’s death had been caused
    by blunt head trauma inflicted by another party. The
    autopsies of Reid and Williams revealed that they had
    suffered similar injuries, which caused their deaths.
    A few days after August 24, 2005, the defendant went
    to a music concert with Lashika, Azibo, and Azikiwe,
    and when the defendant’s sister drove him to Philadel-
    phia a few weeks later, Azikiwe joined them. Although
    the defendant did not know that Azikiwe would be
    joining them on the trip to Philadelphia, he did not
    voice any reluctance about Azikiwe joining them. When
    Lashika eventually inquired about what happened at
    215 Charles Street, the defendant responded that he
    had not hurt or killed anyone, though he had ‘‘roughed
    somebody up,’’ that he had helped tie up someone, and
    that the group had gotten rid of the bats they had with
    them in the apartment.
    On March 6, 2007, the defendant was interviewed by
    Christopher Munger, a special agent with the Federal
    Bureau of Investigation (FBI), at its Bridgeport office.
    When asked about his involvement in the events at 215
    Charles Street, the defendant changed his story multiple
    times. He first claimed that he had not been there for
    seven to nine years. When told that his DNA had been
    recovered from apartment 101, the defendant asked if
    he could ‘‘start over.’’ In his second version of events,
    the defendant told the agent that he had been asked
    by Azibo on August 23, 2005, to go up to the door and
    pretend to be interested in buying crack cocaine, that
    he got into a verbal altercation with the woman who
    opened the door, that during this incident, he spit in her
    face, she slammed the door, and that he left afterward.
    When told that the DNA had been recovered from the
    latex glove fragment in the duct tape bindings, the
    defendant asked to start over again. This time, the
    defendant provided an account of his involvement that
    placed him in the apartment binding the victim’s wrists
    and feet with duct tape on the day that she was killed.
    Over the course of the investigation, cell phones were
    seized from the defendant and Azikiwe, and investigat-
    ing detectives became aware of a phone number that
    ultimately was attributed to Azibo. Information was
    obtained both from these cell phones, and from records
    of the associated service providers for these phones
    and numbers associated with Womble, Taylor, the vic-
    tim, and Lashika. Analyzing this information, agents
    with the FBI were able to identify a number of calls
    during the days leading up to the murders between the
    phones associated with Azibo, Azikiwe, the defendant,
    and Taylor. In particular, this information showed that:
    the phone seized from the defendant had been in con-
    tact with the phone associated with Azibo seven times
    on August 24, 2005, the first time being at 1:47 a.m. and
    the last at 5:50 a.m.; the last phone to call the phone
    associated with Azibo was the phone associated with
    Taylor; there was no contact between the phone associ-
    ated with Azibo and any other phone between 5:04 and
    5:43 a.m.; and the first number that the phone associated
    with Azibo called after 5:43 a.m. on August 24, 2005,
    was the phone associated with the defendant.
    Following a jury trial, the defendant was found guilty
    of felony murder and kidnapping involving the victim;
    the jury also found the defendant not guilty as to all
    other charges and lesser included offenses. The trial
    court, Kavanewsky, J., sentenced the defendant to a
    total effective term of fifty years imprisonment. This
    appeal followed.10 Additional facts will be discussed
    as necessary.
    I
    First, the defendant claims that the evidence did not
    support his convictions for felony murder or kidnapping
    in the first degree, arguing that there was insufficient
    evidence to show that he possessed the requisite intent
    to commit an assault or kidnapping, respectively. We
    disagree.
    ‘‘The standard of review we apply to a claim of insuffi-
    cient evidence is well established. In reviewing the suffi-
    ciency 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 upon the facts so con-
    strued and the inferences reasonably 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. Crespo, 
    317 Conn. 1
    , 16, 
    115 A.3d 447
    (2015). ‘‘On appeal, we do not ask whether
    there is a reasonable view of the evidence that would
    support a reasonable hypothesis of innocence. We ask,
    instead, whether there is a reasonable view of the evi-
    dence that supports the [finder of fact’s] verdict of
    guilty.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 17. Both
    of the defendant’s sufficiency claims go to
    whether he had the requisite specific intent to commit
    the crimes for which he was convicted. Pursuant to
    General Statutes § 53a-3 (11), ‘‘[a] person acts ‘inten-
    tionally’ with respect to a result or to conduct described
    by a statute defining an offense when his conscious
    objective is to cause such result or to engage in such
    conduct . . . .’’ ‘‘Intent is generally proven by circum-
    stantial evidence because direct evidence of the
    accused’s state of mind is rarely available. . . . There-
    fore, intent is often inferred from conduct . . . and
    from the cumulative effect of the circumstantial evi-
    dence and the rational inferences drawn therefrom.
    . . . Intent is a question of fact, the determination of
    which should stand unless the conclusion drawn by the
    trier is an unreasonable one.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) State v. Booth, 
    250 Conn. 611
    , 656, 
    737 A.2d 404
    (1999), cert. denied sub nom.
    Brown v. Connecticut, 
    529 U.S. 1060
    , 
    120 S. Ct. 1568
    ,
    
    146 L. Ed. 2d 471
    (2000). ‘‘[I]ntent may be inferred from
    the events leading up to, and immediately following,
    the conduct in question . . . the accused’s physical
    acts and the general surrounding circumstances. . . .
    An accused’s own words . . . constitute particularly
    compelling, direct evidence of his intent.’’ (Citations
    omitted.) State v. Winot, 
    294 Conn. 753
    , 768, 
    988 A.2d 188
    (2010). We will examine in turn the evidence regard-
    ing each of the defendant’s convictions.
    A
    The defendant first argues that there was insufficient
    evidence that he entered the victim’s apartment with
    the intent to commit an assault therein, which was
    required to sustain his conviction of the felony murder
    charge. We disagree.
    In count one of the amended information, the state
    charged the defendant with felony murder for the vic-
    tim’s death in the course of and in furtherance of a
    burglary in the third degree, specifically, a burglary
    in which the defendant and his associates unlawfully
    entered apartment 101 with the intent to commit an
    assault in the third degree.
    Section 53a-54c provides in relevant part: ‘‘A person
    is guilty of murder when, acting either alone or with
    one or more persons, such person commits or attempts
    to commit . . . burglary . . . and, in the course of and
    in furtherance of such crime or of flight therefrom, such
    person, or another participant, if any, causes the death
    of a person other than one of the participants . . . .’’11
    ‘‘There is no requirement under the felony murder stat-
    ute, nor was there such a requirement under common
    law felony murder, that the state prove that the respon-
    dent had the general intent to commit the murders.
    . . . The state must simply prove all the elements of
    the underlying felony and then prove that the deaths
    were in the course of and in the furtherance of that
    felony, or that the deaths were caused in flight from
    the commission of the felony.’’ (Citation omitted.) In re
    Michael B., 
    36 Conn. App. 364
    , 372, 
    650 A.2d 1251
    (1994).
    General Statutes § 53a-103 (a) provides in relevant
    part: ‘‘A person is guilty of burglary in the third degree
    when he enters . . . unlawfully in a building with
    intent to commit a crime therein.’’ Finally, General Stat-
    utes § 53a-61 (a) provides in relevant part: ‘‘A person
    is guilty of assault in the third degree when . . . [w]ith
    intent to cause physical injury12 to another person, he
    causes such injury to such person or to a third person
    . . . .’’ (Footnote added.)
    When appraising whether a party had the requisite
    intent to commit burglary, the jury could consider
    whether ‘‘[t]he time, manner and forcible nature of the
    entry permitted a reasonable inference, based on
    human experience, that the unlawful entry by the defen-
    dant was hardly without purpose, but rather was with
    the intent to commit a crime therein.’’ (Internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) State v. Drake, 
    19 Conn. App. 396
    ,
    400, 
    562 A.2d 1130
    (1989), quoting State v. Little, 
    194 Conn. 665
    , 675, 
    485 A.2d 913
    (1984). Similarly, with
    respect to whether an accused intended to commit an
    assault, ‘‘[i]ntent may be gleaned from circumstantial
    evidence such as the type of weapon used, the manner
    in which it was used, the type of wound inflicted and
    the events leading up to and immediately following the
    incident.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Ramirez, 
    107 Conn. App. 51
    , 64, 
    943 A.2d 1138
    (2008),
    aff’d, 
    292 Conn. 586
    , 
    973 A.2d 1251
    (2009).
    The evidence produced at trial demonstrated that
    Azibo previously had run out competitors to his drug
    operation in the apartments at 215 Charles Street and
    that he sought to protect his drug operation from the
    increased competition by the victim at the time when his
    product was suffering. The defendant brought baseball
    bats to a meeting among Azibo, Azikiwe, Taylor, and
    the defendant, at which Azibo articulated his issues
    with the victim’s selling drugs in his building and his
    intention ‘‘to confront’’ the victim. Importantly, all four
    participants were involved in Azibo’s drug operation.
    Subsequently, the defendant was involved in at least
    two attempts to enter the apartment on the first floor.
    Each of these attempts occurred late at night, and the
    group took efforts to evade detection or identification,
    including the use of masks and latex gloves and hiding
    from another resident of 215 Charles Street. During the
    first attempt in which both Taylor and the defendant
    participated, the group left when it became apparent
    that no one was going to answer the door.
    Further, although the defendant contended that he
    had not seen a weapon prior to entering apartment 101,
    the jury heard testimony that the defendant brought
    baseball bats to, and was armed with, one of these bats
    during at least two attempts to enter apartment 101,
    including the attempt that ultimately resulted in the
    deaths of the victim, Reid, and Williams. The jury also
    heard testimony that the group entered apartment 101
    on August 24, 2005, only after Azibo kicked down the
    door. The jury reasonably could have relied on this
    evidence of a violent entry in determining that the entry
    into the apartment was for the purpose of an assault.
    See State v. 
    Ramirez, supra
    , 
    107 Conn. App. 64
    ; State
    v. 
    Drake, supra
    , 
    19 Conn. App. 400
    ; see also State v.
    DeMarco, 
    311 Conn. 510
    , 519–20, 
    88 A.3d 491
    (2014)
    (‘‘[i]t is the exclusive province of the trier of fact to
    weigh conflicting testimony and make determinations
    of credibility, crediting some, all or none of any given
    witness’ testimony’’ [internal quotation marks omit-
    ted]); State v. Meehan, 
    260 Conn. 372
    , 381, 
    796 A.2d 1191
    (2002) (‘‘[i]t is axiomatic that evidentiary inconsis-
    tencies are for the jury to resolve’’).13
    The evidence further demonstrated that Azibo and
    Azikiwe proceeded to bind the residents of the apart-
    ment, with some assistance from the defendant, imme-
    diately after entering the apartment, and that they used
    the baseball bats to strike both the victim and Reid in
    the head. During this period, both the defendant and
    Taylor served as lookouts, with the defendant posi-
    tioned outside the bedrooms in the hall.
    Further, Taylor testified that he did not observe any
    of the four participants threatened or ordered to partici-
    pate during either attempt, and that no one in the group
    tried to stop the beatings in the apartment. Lashika also
    testified that although she had never received a call
    from Azibo when he was trying to reach the defendant
    prior to August 24, 2005, the defendant did not look
    upset after getting such a call at the restaurant. She
    also stated that, when she inquired after the fact about
    what had occurred at 215 Charles Street, the defendant
    admitted that ‘‘he roughed somebody up’’ during the
    incident. Although he testified that he was merely pre-
    sent on the night that the murders occurred and that
    he participated only out of fear for his own safety, the
    defendant also agreed with the prosecutor that he knew
    that ‘‘trouble was coming’’ for the residents of apart-
    ment 101 and that, based on the size of the group and the
    dark clothing that they were wearing, that ‘‘[s]omething
    that ain’t right’’ was about to occur.
    Taken as a whole, the evidence demonstrates that:
    the defendant brought baseball bats to a meeting after
    dark near the 215 Charles Street apartments; at this
    meeting, Azibo explained to the defendant and the oth-
    ers in attendance that he intended ‘‘to confront’’ the
    victim for selling in his building; subsequent to learning
    this, the defendant knowingly participated in two
    attempts to enter apartment 101; during each attempt,
    the participants took considerable pains to avoid identi-
    fication or interference prior to entry into the apart-
    ment; and, during the second attempt to enter the
    apartment, the baseball bats that the defendant brought
    were used to beat the victim and Reid after the defen-
    dant assisted Azibo and Azikiwe in binding the victim’s
    wrists and while the defendant stood as a lookout in
    the hallway.
    In support of his contention that there was insuffi-
    cient evidence to demonstrate that he had the necessary
    intent, the defendant notes that there is no evidence
    that he knew, or had any particular vendetta against, the
    residents or that he personally committed any assaults
    directly on their person, which he argues weighs against
    a finding that he had a specific intent to commit an
    assault in the apartment. Neither proof of motive14 nor
    the actual commission of the intended crime on which
    a burglary conviction could be based15 is required, how-
    ever, to find that the defendant had the specific intent
    to commit an assault at the time of his unlawful entry.
    The defendant further contends that merely bringing
    the baseball bats to apartment 101 does not prove his
    intent to commit an assault therein and that any reckless
    or negligent state of mind that could be proved is insuffi-
    cient for the defendant to be liable for the crime alleged
    in the information. In support of these arguments, the
    defendant relies on two cases, State v. Crosswell, 
    223 Conn. 243
    , 
    612 A.2d 1174
    (1992), and Warwick v. United
    States, 
    528 A.2d 438
    (D.C. 1987). Both of these cases
    are distinguishable from the facts before the court, as
    the evidence in each case demonstrated that, although
    the defendant or one of his associates was armed at
    the time of the illegal entry into the residence, the pur-
    pose of the invasion was to deprive the residents of
    property. Thus, the assault that occurred after the entry
    into the residence with the weapon meant to facilitate
    that purpose was not enough to show that the assault
    was intended or planned prior to the time of entry. See
    State v. 
    Crosswell, supra
    , 263–64; Warwick v. United
    
    States, supra
    , 442. In the present case, however, the
    clear weight of the evidence suggests that the purpose
    of the entry into apartment 101 was the assault itself,
    rather than a larceny or robbery in which one or more
    participants merely were willing to use force if required.
    ‘‘[W]hen a jury evaluates evidence of a defendant’s
    intent, it properly rel[ies] on its common sense, experi-
    ence and knowledge of human nature in drawing infer-
    ences and reaching conclusions of fact.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) State v. 
    Winot, supra
    , 
    294 Conn. 768
    ; see also State v. Washington, 
    155 Conn. App. 582
    , 589, 
    110 A.3d 493
    (2015) (‘‘[t]he juror must use all
    his [or her] experience, his [or her] knowledge of human
    nature, his [or her] knowledge of human events, past
    and present, his [or her] knowledge of the motives
    which influence and control human action, and test the
    evidence in the case according to such knowledge and
    render his [or her] verdict accordingly’’ [internal quota-
    tion marks omitted]). In determining whether sufficient
    evidence existed that an accused party had the requisite
    intent for the crime of which he or she was convicted,
    we look to the totality of the evidence and all reasonable
    inferences that can be drawn from it. See State v. Best,
    
    56 Conn. App. 742
    , 753–59, 
    745 A.2d 223
    , cert. denied,
    
    253 Conn. 902
    , 
    753 A.2d 937
    (2000); see also State v.
    
    Booth, supra
    , 
    250 Conn. 654
    –58.
    Consequently, the jury reasonably could have deter-
    mined that the defendant, by bringing baseball bats and
    participating in the attempts to enter apartment 101
    with the knowledge that the plan to enter apartment
    101 involved some degree of physical harm to the resi-
    dents, and in light of the time and manner of entry
    and the relationship between the participants, shared
    Azibo’s intent to inflict physical injury on the victim.
    See State v. Ortiz, 
    312 Conn. 551
    , 565, 
    93 A.3d 1128
    (2014) (‘‘it is a permissible, albeit not a necessary or
    mandatory, inference that a defendant intended the nat-
    ural consequences of his voluntary conduct’’ [emphasis
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted]). Even
    assuming arguendo that evidence in the record could
    support that the defendant intended something other
    than an assault, it was the jury’s responsibility to deter-
    mine which of these alternative and supported explana-
    tions was the most likely. See State v. 
    Booth, supra
    ,
    
    250 Conn. 655
    . We, therefore, conclude that there was
    sufficient evidence on which the jury could have found
    the defendant guilty of the felony murder of the victim.
    B
    The defendant also claims that there was insufficient
    evidence to support his conviction for kidnapping in
    the first degree because there was insufficient evidence
    that he intended to inflict physical injury on the victim.
    We disagree.
    ‘‘A person is guilty of kidnapping in the first degree,
    pursuant to General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A), if he
    abducts another person and . . . restrains the person
    abducted with intent to . . . inflict physical injury
    upon him . . . . General Statutes § 53a-91 (2) defines
    abduct as restrain[ing] a person with intent to prevent
    his liberation by either (A) secreting or holding him in
    a place where he is not likely to be found, or (B) using
    or threatening to use physical force or intimidation.
    The term restrain is also defined in § 53a-91 (1) as
    restrict[ing] a person’s movements intentionally and
    unlawfully in such a manner as to interfere substantially
    with his liberty by moving him from one place to
    another, or by confining him either in the place where
    the restriction commences or in a place to which he
    has been moved, without consent.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Wilcox, 
    254 Conn. 441
    , 464–65,
    
    758 A.2d 824
    (2000).
    In support of his claim that there was insufficient
    evidence that he intended to inflict injury on the victim,
    the defendant relies on his assertion that there was no
    evidence that he ever inflicted any physical injury on
    the victim. Even if we were to accept that there was
    no such evidence,16 we would reject this reliance. Not
    only does the statute merely require the intent to inflict
    physical injury, not the consummation of that intent;
    see General Statutes § 53a-92 (a) (2) (A); the jury was
    charged by the court that the defendant could be found
    liable either as a principal or as an accessory.17 Given
    the defendant’s knowledge and actions prior to entering
    the apartment and the violent manner in which that
    entry was effected, the jury reasonably could have
    inferred that his actions in binding the victim’s wrists
    and standing in the hallway as a lookout were for the
    purpose of aiding Azibo and Azikiwe, who were both
    armed with baseball bats that the defendant had
    brought to the apartment, in inflicting injury to the
    victim.
    Further, as we previously articulated in part I A of
    this opinion, on the basis of the evidence submitted at
    trial, the jury reasonably could have found that the
    defendant possessed the specific intent to inflict physi-
    cal injury on the victim when he and his cohorts entered
    the apartment carrying baseball bats. Once inside the
    apartment, the defendant was given duct tape and par-
    ticipated, at least briefly, in using that duct tape to bind
    the victim’s wrists and ankles. At some point after both
    the victim and Reid were bound, Azibo and Azikiwe,
    armed with the baseball bats that the defendant had
    brought to the apartment, used those bats to strike the
    victim and Reid while the defendant was standing in
    the hallway between the two bedrooms acting as a
    lookout. The defendant did not try to stop these
    beatings.
    Thus, because we already have determined in part I
    A of this opinion that the jury was permitted, although
    not required, to infer that ‘‘[the] defendant intended
    the natural consequences of his voluntary conduct’’;
    (emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted)
    State v. 
    Ortiz, supra
    , 
    312 Conn. 565
    ; we agree with the
    state that the jury reasonably could have found that the
    defendant possessed the same intent as his cohorts
    and, accordingly, conclude that there was sufficient
    evidence supporting the defendant’s conviction for kid-
    napping in the first degree.
    II
    The defendant also claims that the trial court commit-
    ted a number of errors in its jury instructions concern-
    ing the third element of felony murder. Under the
    relevant portion of § 53a-54c, a defendant is liable only
    for a death caused ‘‘in the course of and in furtherance
    of [the predicate crime] or of flight therefrom . . . .’’
    We disagree with each of the defendant’s claims of error
    with respect to the trial court’s instructions on this
    element and consider each one separately.
    A
    Instructions that Death Must Occur
    ‘‘in the Course of’’ the Burglary
    The defendant asserts that the court improperly
    instructed the jury with respect to the requirement that
    the death must occur ‘‘in the course of’’ the burglary
    in two respects. The defendant argues that the trial
    court, by adding certain language in its charge, (1)
    improperly expanded the scope of felony murder and
    (2) took a disputed issue away from the jury.
    1
    Preservation
    The state argues that neither of these claims was
    preserved because the defendant’s request to charge
    and exceptions at trial were inadequate to alert the trial
    court to the errors. The state further argues that this
    court should not consider these unpreserved claims
    because the defendant either induced these errors or
    has waived them pursuant to State v. Kitchens, 
    299 Conn. 447
    , 
    10 A.3d 942
    (2011).18 The defendant responds
    that these claims were preserved at trial and, to the
    extent that the claims were not preserved, review is
    appropriate under State v. Golding, 
    213 Conn. 233
    , 
    567 A.2d 823
    (1989); see also In re Yasiel R., 
    317 Conn. 773
    ,
    781, 
    120 A.3d 1188
    (2015) (modifying Golding’s third
    condition). We agree with the defendant that his claims
    were preserved.
    The following additional facts are relevant to our
    consideration of these issues. On December 17, 2013,
    defense counsel submitted proposed jury instructions
    in court, which included an extensive charge on each
    element of felony murder. With respect to the third
    element, the defendant’s proposed instructions pro-
    vided in relevant part: ‘‘The third element of felony
    [murder] is that the defendant or another participant
    caused the death of Tina Johnson (as to Count One)
    James Reid (as to Count Two) and Basil Williams (as
    to Count Three) while in the course of, and in further-
    ance of, the commission or attempted commission of
    the crime of burglary in the third degree, or, in the
    immediate flight from the crime. This means that as to
    each count, the death occurred during the commission
    of the burglary and in the course of carrying out its
    objective.
    ‘‘ ‘In the course of the commission’ of the burglary
    means during any part of the defendant’s participation
    in the burglary. The phrase ‘in the course of the commis-
    sion’ is a time limitation and means conduct occurring
    immediately before the commission, during the com-
    mission or in the immediate flight after the commission
    of the burglary. Thus, the respective deaths of Tina
    Johnson, James Reid, and Basil Williams must have
    occurred somewhere within the time span of the occur-
    rence of the facts which constitute the charged
    burglary.’’
    On December 18, 2013, the court stated on the record
    that it had e-mailed portions of its proposed charge to
    counsel the prior evening and that full copies of the
    charge were being printed for counsel to review.19 At
    about noon, the court indicated that it would dismiss
    the jury until 2 p.m. and that, during this break, it would
    meet with counsel to discuss the full charge and provide
    copies to them. Subsequently, the parties met in cham-
    bers, where defense counsel attempted to articulate
    certain objections to the court’s charge, and the trial
    court indicated that it would hear these objections on
    the record during the charge conference.20
    When court reconvened later that afternoon, the
    court stated that it had e-mailed much of its proposed
    charge to counsel on December 17, 2013, that counsel
    had been given a full copy of the charge during the
    lunch recess, and that the court would make a few
    changes to its instructions. It then reviewed its pro-
    posed instructions with counsel and sought comments
    from counsel. In response to defense counsel’s con-
    tention that she had only a few objections, the court
    noted that any objections covered by the defendant’s
    written request to charge did not have to be restated.
    Consequently, defense counsel expressed concern only
    with the court’s intention to give instructions on con-
    sciousness of guilt, which the court withdrew after clos-
    ing arguments.
    On December 19, 2013, the court indicated on the
    record that it had made some changes to its felony
    murder charge suggested by defense counsel; the court,
    however, did not articulate those changes.21 It then
    charged the jury. During its charge on felony murder,
    the court recited the statutory language of § 53a-54c
    and charged the jury on each of the elements of fel-
    ony murder.22
    Following its charge, the court inquired whether
    either party had any exceptions. The prosecutor had
    none. Defense counsel, however, took exception to sev-
    eral aspects of the charge. She excepted to the court’s
    charge on accomplice testimony. Defense counsel also
    excepted to the charge concerning the third element
    of felony murder, noting that it had included proposed
    language on both the ‘‘in the course of’’ and ‘‘in further-
    ance of’’ aspects, and that the court improperly had
    added the language ‘‘in the course of carrying out its
    objective’’ to its instructions defining the former
    aspect.23
    Immediately following this exception and as defense
    counsel was about to articulate her exception to the
    instructions on the affirmative defense to felony mur-
    der, the trial court indicated that it considered pre-
    served any requested instruction contained within the
    defendant’s submitted request to charge that had not
    been given as proposed, regardless of whether the devi-
    ation concerned the omission of, or an addition to, the
    instruction as proposed.24 In light of these statements
    by the court, defense counsel briefly excepted to the
    court’s instructions on the statutory defense to felony
    murder, duress, and kidnapping; the court then over-
    ruled the defendant’s exceptions.
    Pursuant to Practice Book § 42-16, ‘‘[a]n appellate
    court shall not be bound to consider error as to the
    giving of, or the failure to give, an instruction unless
    the matter is covered by a written request to charge
    or exception has been taken by the party appealing
    immediately after the charge is delivered. Counsel tak-
    ing the exception shall state distinctly the matter
    objected to and the ground of exception. . . .’’ Thus,
    ‘‘a party may preserve for appeal a claim that an instruc-
    tion, which was proper to give, was nonetheless defec-
    tive either by: (1) submitting a written request to charge
    covering the matter; or (2) taking an exception to the
    charge as given. . . . Moreover, the submission of a
    request to charge covering the matter at issue preserves
    a claim that the trial court improperly failed to give an
    instruction on that matter.’’ (Citations omitted.) State
    v. Ramos, 
    261 Conn. 156
    , 170, 
    801 A.2d 788
    (2002),
    overruled in part on other grounds by State v. Elson,
    
    311 Conn. 726
    , 754, 
    91 A.3d 862
    (2014).
    Under either method, some degree of specificity is
    required, as a general request to charge or exception
    will not preserve specific claims. See State v. 
    Ramos, supra
    , 
    261 Conn. 170
    –71 (‘‘[i]t does not follow, however,
    that a request to charge addressed to the subject matter
    generally, but which omits an instruction on a specific
    component, preserves a claim that the trial court’s
    instruction regarding that component was defective’’
    [emphasis in original]); State v. Lee, 
    138 Conn. App. 420
    , 453 n.19, 
    52 A.3d 736
    (2012) (‘‘[i]n order to preserve
    an objection to a proposed jury instruction, the defen-
    dant must plainly put the trial court on notice as to
    the specific basis for his objection’’ [internal quotation
    marks omitted]). Thus, a claim concerning an improp-
    erly delivered jury instruction will not be preserved for
    appellate review by a request to charge that does not
    address the specific component at issue; see, e.g., State
    v. 
    Ramos, supra
    , 169–71 (proposed jury instructions
    on self-defense did not include charge on provocation
    exception); or by an exception that fails to articulate
    the basis relied upon on appeal with specificity. See
    State v. Payne, 
    121 Conn. App. 308
    , 318, 
    996 A.2d 302
    (neither precharge objection nor postcharge exception
    included ground for objection), cert. denied, 
    297 Conn. 919
    , 
    996 A.2d 1193
    (2010); see also State v. 
    Lee, supra
    ,
    453 (defense counsel voiced concern about definition
    of conspiracy but not about instruction on intent ele-
    ment of conspiracy). Where the defendant has submit-
    ted a request to charge with proposed instructions on
    the issue, however, our Supreme Court ‘‘never ha[s]
    required . . . [the] defendant . . . also to take an
    exception to a contrary charge, and such a requirement
    would contravene the plain language of [Practice Book
    § 42-16].’’ State v. Paige, 
    304 Conn. 426
    , 443, 
    40 A.3d 279
    (2012); see also State v. Johnson, 
    316 Conn. 45
    ,
    55–56, 
    111 A.3d 436
    (2015) (claim preserved by request
    to charge where court gave requested charge, but selec-
    tively omitted certain passages);25 State v. Ross, 
    269 Conn. 213
    , 337–38, 
    849 A.2d 648
    (2004) (instructional
    claim that trial court used different word than statutory
    requirements preserved where defendant did not take
    exception, but had ‘‘file[d] a specific request to charge
    on the issue’’).
    In the present case, the defendant filed a request to
    charge, which included proposed instructions on each
    element of felony murder. In it, the defendant included
    the phrase ‘‘in the course of carrying out its objective,’’
    but only at the beginning of the charge, where the
    phrase primarily serves as a gloss on the ‘‘in furtherance
    of’’ requirement.26 Consequently, the court added the
    proposed language in its charge in the place requested,
    but also included similar language elsewhere in the
    charge and added unrequested language concerning the
    specific ‘‘objective’’ of the burglary. Given that the
    defendant filed a request to charge and the trial court’s
    charge deviated as to a specific component from these
    proposed instructions, the defendant’s request to
    charge has preserved these issues for appeal.27
    As we consider these claims preserved, we do not
    reach the defendant’s or the state’s claims concerning
    whether this court should address these claims if they
    were unpreserved. With respect to the state’s arguments
    that the defendant induced the error of which he now
    complains, we briefly note that in addressing whether
    a defendant’s claims of instructional error should not
    be reviewed pursuant to State v. 
    Golding, supra
    , 
    213 Conn. 233
    , because they were induced, our Supreme
    Court has distinguished cases where the language to
    which the defendant objects is precisely that which
    the defendant requested from situations where the trial
    court has modified the language requested. See State v.
    Cruz, 
    269 Conn. 97
    , 106, 
    848 A.2d 445
    (2004), discussing
    State v. Whipper, 
    258 Conn. 229
    , 
    780 A.2d 53
    (2001),
    overruled in part by State v. Cruz, 
    269 Conn. 97
    , 106,
    
    848 A.2d 445
    (2004), and in part on other grounds by
    State v. Grant, 
    286 Conn. 499
    , 535, 
    944 A.2d 947
    , cert.
    denied, 
    555 U.S. 916
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 271
    , 
    172 L. Ed. 2d 200
    (2008).
    In the present case, the language ‘‘in the course of
    carrying out its objective’’ can be found in the defen-
    dant’s request to charge, where it was used primarily
    to clarify the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong of the third
    element; neither the phrase nor the language concern-
    ing the precise ‘‘objective’’ of the burglary, however,
    appears in this section of the defendant’s request to
    charge. The record also suggests that the court made
    changes to the felony murder charge, but it did not
    explain the extent of those changes, and the partial
    and complete charges that the court distributed to the
    parties prior to this statement have not been provided
    to this court. Therefore, this case is more analogous to
    Whipper than to Cruz, and we conclude that the errors
    from which the defendant appeals generally were not
    induced in his request to charge.28
    2
    Merits
    We turn to the substance of the defendant’s two
    claims of error with respect to the trial court’s charge
    on the ‘‘in the course of’’ prong. With respect to the
    defendant’s first claim of error, the defendant contends
    that the court erred by including the phrase ‘‘and in the
    course of carrying out its objective’’ when defining how
    this prong could be met. With respect to the second
    claim of error, he argues that the court’s unequivocal
    statement that ‘‘the objective [of the burglary] was an
    assault’’ took away a disputed factual issue from the
    jury’s consideration.
    ‘‘Our analysis begins with a well established standard
    of review. When reviewing the challenged jury instruc-
    tion . . . we must adhere to the well settled rule that
    a charge to the jury is to be considered in its entirety,
    read as a whole, and judged by its total effect rather
    than by its individual component parts. . . . [T]he test
    of a court’s charge is not whether it is as accurate upon
    legal principles as the opinions of a court of last resort
    but whether it fairly presents the case to the jury in
    such a way that injustice is not done to either party
    under the established rules of law. . . . As long as [the
    instructions] are correct in law, adapted to the issues
    and sufficient for the guidance of the jury . . . we will
    not view the instructions as improper. . . .
    ‘‘It is . . . constitutionally axiomatic that the jury be
    instructed on the essential elements of a crime charged.
    . . . The due process clause of the fourteenth amend-
    ment protects an accused against conviction except
    upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact
    necessary to constitute the crime with which he is
    charged. . . . Consequently, the failure to instruct a
    jury on an element of a crime deprives a defendant of
    the right to have the jury told what crimes he is actually
    being tried for and what the essential elements of those
    crimes are. . . .
    ‘‘[I]n reviewing a constitutional challenge to the trial
    court’s instruction, we must consider the jury charge
    as a whole to determine whether it is reasonably possi-
    ble that the instruction misled the jury. . . . The test
    is whether the charge as a whole presents the case to
    the jury so that no injustice will result. . . . We will
    reverse a conviction only if, in the context of the whole,
    there is a reasonable possibility that the jury was misled
    in reaching its verdict. . . . A jury instruction is consti-
    tutionally adequate if it provides the jurors with a clear
    understanding of the elements of the crime charged, and
    affords them proper guidance for their determination of
    whether those elements were present. . . . An instruc-
    tion that fails to satisfy these requirements would vio-
    late the defendant’s right to due process of law as
    guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment to the United
    States constitution and article first, § 8, of the Connecti-
    cut constitution. . . . The test of a charge is whether
    it is correct in law, adapted to the issues and sufficient
    for the guidance of the jury. . . . The primary purpose
    of the charge is to assist the jury in applying the law
    correctly to the facts which they might find to be estab-
    lished. . . . The purpose of a charge is to call the atten-
    tion of the members of the jury, unfamiliar with legal
    distinctions, to whatever is necessary and proper to
    guide them to a right decision in a particular case.’’
    (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Griggs, 
    288 Conn. 116
    , 124–26, 
    951 A.2d 531
    (2008).
    The defendant’s first claim is that, by adding the
    phrase ‘‘in the course of carrying out its objective’’ to
    its instructions on the ‘‘in the course of’’ prong, the trial
    court improperly enlarged the scope of felony murder.
    Because ‘‘[i]t is axiomatic that the state is required to
    prove all the essential elements of the crimes charged
    beyond a reasonable doubt in order to obtain a convic-
    tion . . . [a] jury instruction that effectively relieves
    the state of its burden to prove an essential element of
    the crime charged implicates the defendant’s right to
    due process.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Jacobson, 
    87 Conn. App. 440
    ,
    463, 
    866 A.2d 678
    (2005), aff’d, 
    283 Conn. 618
    , 
    930 A.2d 628
    (2007).
    In the present case, the trial court provided the fol-
    lowing instructions on the requirement that the death
    must occur ‘‘in the course of’’ the underlying felony:
    ‘‘Now, in the course of the commission of the burglary
    means during any part of the defendant’s participation
    in the burglary. The phrase, in the course of the commis-
    sion, is a time limitation and means conduct occurring
    immediately before the commission or during the com-
    mission of the burglary and in the course of carrying
    out its objective.
    ‘‘Thus, the death of the decedent named in each count
    must have occurred somewhere within the time span
    of the occurrence of the facts which constitute the
    burglary and in the course of carrying out its objective.
    ‘‘Also, the immediate murder of a person to eliminate
    a witness to a crime or to avoid detection is also in the
    course of the commission. In this regard, if you find
    one or more persons—or one or more of the decedents,
    I should say—was killed simply to eliminate him as a
    witness to the crime or to avoid detection, that killing
    is also in the course of the commission of the underly-
    ing felony.’’
    The defendant argues that the burglary was complete
    at the point that he and the other men entered apartment
    101. Therefore, as there was testimony at trial that the
    residents were still alive at the time the defendant left
    the building, the addition of the language by the trial
    court, the defendant contends, improperly expanded
    the time frame under which the jury could find that
    the death occurred ‘‘in the course of’’ the burglary.29
    We disagree.
    ‘‘Felony murder occurs when, in the course of and
    in furtherance of another crime, one of the participants
    in that crime causes the death of a person who is not
    a participant in the crime. . . . The two phrases, in the
    course of and in furtherance of, limit the applicability
    of the statute with respect to time and causation.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Montgom-
    ery, 
    254 Conn. 694
    , 733, 
    759 A.2d 995
    (2000). ‘‘The phrase
    in the course of focuses on the temporal relationship
    between the murder and the underlying felony. . . .
    We previously have defined the phrase in the course
    of for purposes of § 53a-54c to include the period imme-
    diately before or after the actual commission of the
    crime . . . .’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 734. Our
    Supreme Court previously has held that a jury
    instruction phrasing these two requirements in the dis-
    junctive was in error because the statute requires that
    both prongs be met for this element to be satisfied.
    State v. Scognamiglio, 
    202 Conn. 18
    , 26, 
    519 A.2d 607
    (1987).30 Thus, an instruction that would allow the jury
    to find this element met by evidence that satisfies only
    one prong would be in error. See id.; see also State v.
    Young, 
    191 Conn. 636
    , 641 n.5, 
    469 A.2d 1189
    (1983).
    We agree with the defendant that the primary purpose
    of the language as used in our model instructions seems
    to be as a gloss on the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong of
    this element.31 This does not mean, however, that the
    language ‘‘in the course of carrying out its objective’’
    refers solely to the causality requirement of this element
    and not also to its temporal requirement. Indeed, we
    have relied on precisely this language in finding that a
    challenged instruction sufficiently instructed the jury
    as to the ‘‘in the course of’’ prong of this element. See
    State v. Cooke, 
    89 Conn. App. 530
    , 541–42, 
    874 A.2d 805
    (instructions adequately instructed jury on temporal
    requirements when ‘‘the court explained that the death
    must have been caused during the commission of the
    robbery and in the course of carrying out its objective’’
    and explicitly stated that ‘‘the death must have occurred
    during the actual commission of robbery in the first
    degree’’ [emphasis added; internal quotation marks
    omitted]), cert. denied, 
    275 Conn. 911
    , 
    882 A.2d 677
    (2005).
    In the present case, the ‘‘in the course of carrying
    out its objective’’ language in the trial court’s instruc-
    tions on the ‘‘in the course of’’ prong was surrounded
    by language that focused upon the temporal require-
    ments of this prong. In particular, the court instructed
    that ‘‘[t]he phrase, in the course of the commission, is
    a time limitation and means conduct occurring immedi-
    ately before the commission or during the commission
    of the burglary . . . .’’ It also stated that the death
    ‘‘must have occurred somewhere within the time span
    of the occurrence of the facts which constitute the
    burglary . . . .’’
    Further, under the facts of this case, there is not a
    reasonable possibility that any error in including this
    language could have misled the jury for two additional
    reasons. First, the phrase that the court used is
    expressed in the conjunctive rather than the disjunctive;
    therefore, under the defendant’s theory that ‘‘in the
    course of carrying out its objective’’ requires proof com-
    parable to ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong, the state would
    be required to prove both the ‘‘in the course of’’ and
    the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong to prove the ‘‘in the course
    of’’ prong. Thus, the inclusion of this language does not
    mandate reversal, either in that its inclusion would have
    no effect on the outcome because proof of meeting, or
    failing to meet, this prong similarly would meet or fail to
    meet the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong, or, in the alternative,
    because it benefits the defendant by imposing a heavier
    burden on the state than is required. See, e.g., State v.
    Gradzik, 
    193 Conn. 35
    , 39, 
    475 A.2d 269
    (1984) (instruc-
    tional errors that benefit defendant not grounds for
    reversal); State v. Cochran, 
    191 Conn. 180
    , 187–88, 
    463 A.2d 618
    (1983) (same).
    Second, although liability for a burglary premised on
    an unlawful entry attaches upon a defendant crossing
    the threshold; see State v. 
    Little, supra
    , 
    194 Conn. 675
    (‘‘the crime proscribed by § 53a-103 [a] is complete once
    there has been an unlawful entering . . . in a building
    with the intent to commit a crime in that building’’);
    authority exists that a burglary, once begun, continues
    until all parties participating in the burglary have left
    the property. See 12A C.J.S. 207, Burglary § 55 (2014)
    (‘‘burglary does not end when a burglar enters the prem-
    ises, but continues for as long as the burglar is on the
    premises with the intent to commit the crime’’), citing
    Flanders v. Meachum, 
    13 F.3d 600
    , 603 (2d Cir. 1994)
    (applying Connecticut law); see also 12A C.J.S., supra,
    p. 138 (liability of aider or abetter ‘‘is consider[ed] ongo-
    ing during the time that the perpetrator remains inside
    the structure’’); 40 C.J.S. 481, Homicide § 62 (2014) (‘‘[a]
    burglary is deemed to be in progress, for purposes of
    a felony-murder charge, while the burglar is on the
    premises’’). Although we have not discovered any
    explicit statements in our precedent to this effect, our
    courts have upheld felony murder determinations when
    the predicate crime was a burglary and the deaths
    occurred at some point after an unlawful entry. See In
    re Michael 
    B., supra
    , 
    36 Conn. App. 374
    (probable cause
    existed to find that murders ‘‘occurred after the respon-
    dent unlawfully entered the home and before he left
    the . . . home . . . and therefore within the temporal
    limitation of when the alleged burglary began and
    ended’’);32 see also State v. MacFarlane, 
    188 Conn. 542
    ,
    543, 
    450 A.2d 374
    (1982) (homeowner, who had been
    asleep in residence when burglars entered, awoke and
    was strangled ‘‘during the course of the burglary’’).
    The defendant did not argue at trial that his initial
    entry was lawful; rather, he relied at trial on the affirma-
    tive defense presented in § 53a-54c and on his claim
    that he acted only under duress. He has not presented
    any argument to the contrary on appeal. We also note
    that all of the evidence presented at trial indicates that
    the victim’s death occurred inside apartment 101 and
    was committed while either the defendant or one of
    his associates was present. Therefore, we conclude that
    there is not a reasonable possibility that the inclusion
    of this language misled the jury.33
    The defendant’s second claim is that, by stating
    unequivocally that the objective of the burglary was an
    assault, the trial court committed error because the
    determination as to what the defendant, Azibo, Azikiwe,
    and Taylor intended in entering the apartment is solely
    within the province of the jury. He claims this instruc-
    tion prejudiced his defense because it removed from
    the jury’s consideration the possibility that the purpose
    of the burglary was a robbery and limited the defen-
    dant’s ability to persuade the jury that he lacked the
    objective to commit an assault although he was present
    at the scene. We are not persuaded by this argument.
    In the present case, the court instructed the jury on
    the third element of felony murder, framing this element
    as follows: ‘‘The third element is that the defendant or
    another participant caused the death of the decedent
    named in each count while in the course of and in
    furtherance of the commission of the crime of burglary.
    This means that the death occurred during the commis-
    sion of the burglary and in the course of carrying out
    its objective. And that objective was an assault.’’
    To begin, we note that the statement by the court
    ‘‘that [the] objective [of the burglary] was an assault’’
    followed the court’s reading of the amended informa-
    tion and the immediately preceding statements con-
    cerning the third element generally; thus, this statement
    would have been understood by the jury as relating the
    general elements of the crime to the specific allegations
    contained within the amended information in a manner
    that illustrated what the state had to prove. The risk that
    this statement would be perceived as an unequivocal
    direction to the precise purpose of the alleged burglary
    was also undercut by both the court’s earlier instruc-
    tions as to the state’s general burden to prove each
    material element of any crime alleged and its detailed
    instructions on the state’s specific burden to prove that
    the defendant committed the predicate burglary in the
    manner alleged by the state.34 Following the particular
    language at issue, the trial court again reminded the
    jury that the state bore the burden of proving beyond
    a reasonable doubt each of the four elements of felony
    murder. Finally, with the exception of the statement at
    issue, which, as previously noted, is equivocal in con-
    text, there were no other definite statements by the
    trial court that reasonably could have compelled the
    jurors to believe that the court was instructing them that
    the objective of the burglary must have been an assault.
    For these reasons, this case is distinguishable from
    those relied upon by the defendant. See State v. Theri-
    ault, 
    182 Conn. 366
    , 376–80, 
    438 A.2d 432
    (1980) (in
    accessorial liability case, harm caused by ‘‘very conclu-
    sive nature’’ of trial court’s instruction that ‘‘[n]o ques-
    tion’’ had been raised about defendant’s mental state
    and jury could ‘‘treat him as having the mental state
    required for the commission of the crime if [it found]
    that he [was] the actual one that did it’’ not overcome
    by other portions of charge, including text that immedi-
    ately followed challenged statement [internal quotation
    marks omitted]); State v. Rodriguez, 
    7 Conn. App. 470
    ,
    475–76, 
    509 A.2d 72
    (1986) (where state alleged hinder-
    ing prosecution in first degree, unequivocal statements
    by court, which charged jury that murder had been
    committed and listed time, date, and party responsible
    for that murder, removed issue from jury’s consider-
    ation). On the record before us, we conclude that there
    is not a reasonable possibility that the jury was misled
    by this statement.
    B
    Instructions that Death Must Occur
    ‘‘in Furtherance of’’ the Burglary
    The defendant’s final claim of error concerns the
    court’s instructions as to the requirement that the death
    of the victim must have occurred ‘‘in furtherance of’’
    the burglary. The defendant argues that the charge that
    the court gave provided insufficient guidance to the jury
    as to a key aspect of his defense. We are not persuaded.
    In this case, the defendant requested the following
    instruction concerning the requirement that the death
    be in furtherance of the underlying felony: ‘‘ ‘In further-
    ance of’ the burglary means that the killing must in
    some way be causally connected to or as a result of
    the burglary, or the flight from the burglary. The state
    would have to prove that the deaths of Tina Johnson,
    James Reid, and Basil Williams were caused by the
    defendant or another participant in the burglary in the
    course of, and in furtherance of the crime of burglary.
    The phrase ‘in furtherance of such crime’ imposes the
    requirement of a logical nexus between the felony and
    the homicide. The connection between the underlying
    felony and homicide must be more than the mere coinci-
    dence to time and place. The nexus or connection must
    be one of logic or plan. This means that the felony
    murder statute excludes those deaths which are so far
    outside the plan of the felony and its execution as to
    be unrelated to them. In other words, a felony murder
    does not include any killing incidentally committed with
    the felony but only includes those felonies in the
    attempted execution of the felony of burglary. Although
    the homicide itself need not be in the common design,
    the act which results in death must be in furtherance
    of the unlawful purpose. In other words, the victims’
    deaths must have been caused in furtherance of com-
    mitting the burglary and not merely incidental to it.
    ‘‘For instance, a murder for personal motive is an
    example of a death that is so far outside the ambit of the
    plan of the felony and its execution as to be unrelated to
    them. A murder for personal motive, then, is not a death
    ‘in furtherance of’ the underlying felony.’’
    At trial, the court gave the following instruction to
    the jury: ‘‘In furtherance of the burglary means that the
    killing must be in some way causally connected to or
    as a result of the burglary. The actions of the defendant
    that caused the death of the decedent named in each
    count must be done to aid the burglary in some way
    or to further the purpose of the burglary.
    ‘‘It does not matter that the act that caused the death
    may have been committed unintentionally rather than
    with the intention to cause. The defendant is as guilty
    when committing this form of murder as he would be
    if he had intentionally committed the act that caused
    the death.’’
    Following the charge, the defendant objected that his
    request to charge had included language from Connecti-
    cut and New York cases concerning the ‘‘in furtherance
    of’’ prong.35 On appeal, he claims that by omitting the
    requested theory of defense instruction, the court pro-
    vided insufficient guidance to the jury on his defense
    that ‘‘even if the Aquarts murdered the victims ‘in the
    course of’ the burglary, their personal, business-related
    motive for the murders was so far outside the plan
    of the underlying burglary with its alleged purpose of
    committing a misdemeanor assault that it was not ‘in
    furtherance of’ that burglary.’’ We disagree.
    ‘‘Our review of the defendant’s claim requires that
    we examine the [trial] court’s entire charge to determine
    whether it is reasonably possible that the jury could
    have been misled by the omission of the requested
    instruction. . . . While a request to charge that is rele-
    vant to the issues in a case and that accurately states
    the applicable law must be honored, a [trial] court need
    not tailor its charge to the precise letter of such a
    request. . . . If a requested charge is in substance
    given, the [trial] court’s failure to give a charge in exact
    conformance with the words of the request will not
    constitute a ground for reversal. . . . As long as [the
    instructions] are correct in law, adapted to the issues
    and sufficient for the guidance of the jury . . . we will
    not view the instructions as improper.’’ (Internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) State v. Baltas, 
    311 Conn. 786
    ,
    808–809, 
    91 A.3d 384
    (2014).
    With respect to the defendant’s framing of this argu-
    ment, we agree with the state that the requested instruc-
    tion on the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong goes to a material
    element of the crime itself and, thus, is not the type of
    theory of defense instruction that our courts are
    required to give. ‘‘A theory of defense instruction con-
    sists of an explanation of the defendant’s theory of
    defense . . . .’’ State v. 
    Baltas, supra
    , 
    311 Conn. 814
    .
    ‘‘Courts in Connecticut generally do not provide a the-
    ory of defense instruction at the defendant’s request,
    nor is there any requirement that such an instruction
    be provided. Instead . . . [w]hen a defendant admits
    the commission of the crime charged but seeks to
    excuse or justify its commission so that legal responsi-
    bility for the act is avoided, a theory of defense charge
    is appropriate. A defendant must, however, assert a
    recognized legal defense before such a charge will
    become obligatory. A claim of innocence or a denial
    of participation in the crime charged is not a legally
    recognized defense and does not entitle a defendant to
    a theory of defense charge.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 814–15. When
    the claim
    of error goes to a material element of a crime rather
    than a separate legal defense, that claim properly is
    characterized as a failure to instruct adequately on that
    element and will be reviewed accordingly. See 
    id., 816–18. Turning
    to the substance of the charge, our Supreme
    Court in State v. 
    Young, supra
    , 
    191 Conn. 640
    –41, noted
    the genesis of the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong of § 53a-
    54c in New York law. The court then reviewed New
    York case law construing this requirement: ‘‘Faced with
    a claim that in furtherance of meant in aid of or in
    advancement of, the New York courts have construed
    the phrase to impose the requirement of a logical nexus
    between the felony and the homicide. . . . More than
    the mere coincidence to time and place . . . the nexus
    must be one of logic or plan. Excluded are those deaths
    which are so far outside the ambit of the plan of the
    felony and its execution as to be unrelated to them.
    . . . The phrase was viewed as incorporating into the
    New York felony murder provision the previous limita-
    tion upon the applicability of the felony murder rule
    adopted in People v. Wood, 
    8 N.Y.2d 48
    , [
    167 N.E.2d 736
    , 
    201 N.Y.S.2d 328
    ] (1960) [abrogated by People v.
    Hernandez, 
    82 N.Y.2d 309
    , 
    624 N.E.2d 661
    , 
    604 N.Y.S.2d 524
    (1993)]. In that case, where the defendant had been
    indicted for the deaths of an accomplice as well as of
    an innocent bystander in a gun battle with the police,
    both of whom were shot by a tavern owner who was
    assisting the police, the court upheld the dismissal of
    the indictment. A felony murder embraces not any kill-
    ing incidentally coincident with the felony . . . but
    only those committed by one of the criminals in the
    attempted execution of the unlawful end . . . .
    Although the homicide itself need not be within the
    common design . . . the act which results in death
    must be in furtherance of the unlawful purpose.’’ (Cita-
    tions omitted; emphasis in original; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. 
    Young, supra
    , 641–42.
    Our Supreme Court agreed with the manner in which
    New York courts had construed this language: ‘‘[T]he
    phrase in furtherance of was intended to impose the
    requirement of a relationship between the underlying
    felony and the homicide beyond that of mere causation
    in fact, similar to the concept of proximate cause in
    the law of torts. Primarily its purpose was to limit the
    liability of a person whose accomplice in one of the
    specified felonies has performed the homicidal act to
    those circumstances which were within the contempla-
    tion of the confederates to the undertaking, just as the
    liability of a principal for the acts of his servant is
    similarly confined to the scope of the agency. All who
    join in a common design to commit an unlawful act,
    the natural and probable consequence of the execution
    of which involves the contingency of taking human life,
    are responsible for a homicide committed by one of
    them while acting in pursuance of, or in furtherance
    of, the common design.’’ (Emphasis omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 642. Thus,
    ‘‘[t]he phrase
    serves to exclude those murders that are committed
    during the course of an underlying felony but that are
    wholly unrelated . . . but does not serve to exclude
    killings that were not intended.’’ (Citation omitted.) In
    re Michael 
    B., supra
    , 
    36 Conn. App. 375
    .
    Pursuant to New York law, a murder wholly caused
    by a personal motive of an accomplice does not occur
    ‘‘in furtherance of’’ the underlying felony just because
    it occurs during the felony. See, e.g., People v. Lewis,
    
    111 Misc. 2d 682
    , 685, 
    444 N.Y.S.2d 1003
    (1981) (‘‘[e]ven
    when the homicide is committed by one of the persons
    engaged in the underlying felony, if that person acts for
    a private purpose unrelated to the felony, the remaining
    members of the group are not liable for the murder’’);
    see also People v. 
    Wood, supra
    , 
    8 N.Y.2d 52
    (‘‘[w]here
    . . . the felon kills someone during the felony, but in
    a separate and distinct act and to satisfy his own end,
    his accomplice in the felony is not guilty of murder’’).
    Neither our Supreme Court nor this court, however,
    has ever required affirmatively an instruction as to the
    effect of a separate personal motive on this prong. In
    State v. Allen, 
    216 Conn. 367
    , 386–88, 
    579 A.2d 1066
    (1990), our Supreme Court considered a claim of
    instructional error similar to the one advanced by the
    defendant,36 but determined that the trial court’s
    charge37 adequately instructed the jury on the required
    causal connection between the felony and the deaths.
    Further, we note that, prior to its decision in State v.
    
    Young, supra
    , 
    191 Conn. 636
    , our Supreme Court upheld
    jury instructions that were substantially less descriptive
    as to the requirement that the resulting death must
    occur in furtherance of the defendant and his associ-
    ates’ shared design. See State v. 
    MacFarlane, supra
    ,
    
    188 Conn. 551
    (court did not define ‘‘in furtherance of’’
    in its charge).
    Finally, our courts have recognized that burglary is
    a crime that, by its nature, involves a recognizable risk
    of injury and death to others. See In re Michael 
    B., supra
    , 
    36 Conn. App. 376
    (‘‘[i]t is very likely that in the
    course of committing a burglary a burglar will encoun-
    ter an occupant of the dwelling, who may resist, and,
    in furtherance of the burglary, death of the dweller may
    likely result’’), citing State v. 
    MacFarlane, supra
    , 
    188 Conn. 553
    . This risk of death is especially clear when
    the burglary itself is predicated on a plan to commit
    an assault. See People v. Henderson, 
    25 N.Y.3d 534
    , 541,
    
    35 N.E.3d 840
    , 
    14 N.Y.S.3d 770
    (2015) (‘‘there is a clear
    logical nexus between defendant’s felony of unlawfully
    entering the victim’s apartment to assault him and the
    homicide, which was certainly not coincidental’’).
    In this case, the trial court’s instructions on the ‘‘in
    furtherance of’’ prong, which essentially mirror those
    in our model jury instructions; see Connecticut Criminal
    Jury Instructions (4th Ed. 2008 [Rev. to November 17,
    2015]) § 5.4-1, available at http://jud.ct.gov/ji/criminal/
    Part5/5.4-1.htm (last visited April 29, 2016); adequately
    explained the causal connection required by this prong.
    The court’s remaining instructions concerning the ele-
    ments of felony murder, which either are unchallenged
    or which we already have determined were not in error;
    see part II B 2 of this opinion; included a direction that,
    to find that the defendant participated in the crime
    of burglary, he must have knowingly and unlawfully
    entered the apartment with the specific intent of com-
    mitting an assault.
    Finally, the court instructed the jury on the defen-
    dant’s affirmative defense pursuant to § 53a-54c38 and
    on his claim of duress,39 both of which advanced the
    concerns of the defendant’s proposed instructions that
    he did not share the motivations of Azibo and Azikiwe
    in their execution of the burglary. Therefore, because
    the jury necessarily accepted that the defendant entered
    the apartment intending to commit an assault and there
    was evidence from multiple sources that the baseball
    bats that the defendant brought were likely the instru-
    ments causing the deaths of the residents, we cannot
    conclude that there was a reasonable possibility that
    the jury was misled because the act that caused the
    residents’ death—specifically, being repeatedly struck
    by baseball bats40—would have remained within the
    reasonable contemplation of the participants to this
    burglary.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    * The listing of judges reflects their seniority status on this court as of
    the date of oral argument.
    1
    The victim is unrelated to the defendant.
    2
    The defendant was acquitted as to the counts arising from the felony
    murder and kidnapping of Reid (counts two and five) and Williams (counts
    three and six).
    3
    Azibo is known by a number of nicknames, including ‘‘Dee’’ and ‘‘Dready.’’
    4
    Like his brother, Azikiwe was known by a number of nicknames, includ-
    ing ‘‘Z,’’ ‘‘Ziggy,’’ and ‘‘Ozzie.’’
    5
    Taylor did not observe anyone threatened, forced, or ordered to put on
    the gloves or masks.
    6
    It is unclear whether the incident that Hodges observed was, in fact, the
    same unsuccessful attempt in which Taylor participated. Hodges did not
    recall seeing the defendant or Taylor there that night and did not see Azibo
    or his men holding weapons.
    7
    Each of the decedents also was identified as a contributor to, or was
    not eliminated as a contributor to, many of the samples.
    8
    This statistical frequency applies to all potential contributors to a sample.
    9
    In particular, Evangelista’s external examination of the body revealed
    multiple visible injuries to her head and face as well as a wrist fracture
    that, although not visible, could be felt clearly through the skin. During his
    subsequent internal examination, Evangelista observed numerous internal
    injuries consistent with blunt force trauma, including lacerations and bruises
    to the exterior of the victim’s head, damage to her left eyeball, fractures in
    her skull and cheekbones, and bruising and bleeding in the brain.
    10
    The defendant originally appealed to this court from the judgment of
    conviction on April 17, 2014. On November 6, 2014, the appeal was trans-
    ferred from this court to the Supreme Court pursuant to Practice Book § 65-
    1 and General Statutes § 51-199 (c). Subsequently, on February 4, 2015, the
    Supreme Court transferred this appeal back to this court.
    11
    Subsequent to the defendant’s 2013 conviction, § 53a-54c was amended
    by No. 15-211, § 3, of the 2015 Public Acts; these amendments made technical
    changes and added a separate predicate felony, neither of which are relevant
    to this appeal. Therefore, we refer to the current revision of the statute.
    12
    General Statutes § 53a-3 (3), in turn, defines ‘‘physical injury’’ as ‘‘impair-
    ment of physical condition or pain . . . .’’
    13
    The defendant provided a different account for the group’s entry into
    the apartment, stating that: he had been instructed by Azibo to knock on
    the door, pretending to be a customer seeking crack cocaine, and then to
    get out of the way when the door opened; he knocked on the door as
    instructed; and once the door was opened, the remaining members of the
    group forced the defendant into the apartment in their efforts to get in them-
    selves.
    This alternate account, even if believed, remains unhelpful to the defen-
    dant’s position for two reasons. First, it corroborates Taylor’s testimony
    that the group’s entry into apartment 101 was accomplished by force, but
    merely changes the precise manner in which that entry was achieved. Sec-
    ond, in the context of appraising an accessory’s liability for an assault
    accomplished or attempted by another, this court has held on two prior
    occasions that the accessory intended harm to the victim where he or she
    knew of the principal’s motive and knew that the principal was armed,
    but nevertheless accompanied that principal to the victim’s residence and
    attempted to get the victim in a favorable position for the principal to act.
    See State v. VanDeusen, 
    160 Conn. App. 815
    , 832–33, 
    126 A.3d 604
    , cert.
    denied, 
    320 Conn. 903
    , 
    127 A.3d 187
    (2015); State v. Scheck, 
    106 Conn. App. 81
    , 85–87, 
    940 A.2d 871
    , cert. denied, 
    286 Conn. 918
    , 
    945 A.2d 979
    (2008).
    14
    Our Supreme Court has opined on the limited circumstances in which
    the absence of a proof of motive might be sufficient to prove lack of intent:
    ‘‘While motive is not an element of a crime that the state has the burden
    of proving, the presence of evidence of motive may strengthen the state’s
    case. . . . It is conceivable that the evidence adduced in a particular case
    would be so inconclusive that without evidence of motive a judgment of
    acquittal might be required because the jury could not rationally find that
    the state had proved the elements of the charged offense beyond a reasonable
    doubt. In such a case, a judgment of acquittal might be required not because
    motive was an element of the offense, but because evidence of motive would
    strengthen the state’s otherwise insufficient evidence of an element of the
    offense, such as identification or intent. There is, however, only a very
    limited category of cases in which a lack of proof of motive would mandate
    a judgment of acquittal.’’ (Citation omitted.) State v. Pinnock, 
    220 Conn. 765
    , 773, 
    601 A.2d 521
    (1992). The present case is ‘‘not in that category.’’
    
    Id., 773–74. 15
          ‘‘The crime proscribed by the provisions of . . . § 53a-103, is committed
    completely once a person enters or remains unlawfully in a building with
    the intent to commit a crime therein. . . . Therefore, the state need not
    prove that a completed crime occurred to convict a defendant of burglary.’’
    (Citation omitted; emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Sherman, 
    127 Conn. App. 377
    , 383–84 n.4, 
    13 A.3d 1138
    (2011).
    16
    Neither the defendant nor Taylor testified at trial that the defendant
    had injured anyone directly while in apartment 101. Lashika testified, how-
    ever, that the defendant had told her, in seemingly contradictory terms, that
    he had ‘‘roughed somebody up’’ while in the apartment, but had not hurt
    or killed anyone.
    17
    General Statutes § 53a-8 (a) provides: ‘‘A person, acting with the mental
    state required for commission of an offense, who solicits, requests, com-
    mands, importunes or intentionally aids another person to engage in conduct
    which constitutes an offense shall be criminally liable for such conduct and
    may be prosecuted and punished as if he were the principal offender.’’
    Although ‘‘[a]n accessory must have both the intent to help the principal
    and the intent to commit the crime’’; State v. Vincent, 
    194 Conn. 198
    , 207,
    
    479 A.2d 237
    (1984); ‘‘[t]he mental state of an aider and abettor incorporated
    in § 53a-8 does not require that the accused know of or endorse every act
    of his coparticipant in crime.’’ State v. McCalpine, 
    190 Conn. 822
    , 832, 
    463 A.2d 545
    (1983).
    18
    ‘‘Although we note that our Supreme Court recently granted certification
    to decide whether Kitchens should be overruled in State v. Herring, 
    151 Conn. App. 154
    , 
    94 A.3d 688
    , cert. granted, 
    314 Conn. 914
    , 
    100 A.3d 849
    (2014), the holding in Kitchens presently remains binding upon this court.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Young, 
    161 Conn. App. 552
    , 562
    n.5, 
    129 A.3d 127
    (2015).
    19
    Neither of the court’s drafts of its proposed charges is in the record or
    was otherwise submitted to this court.
    20
    We rely on the preceding statements, presented by the defendant in his
    January 22, 2014 renewed motion for a judgment of acquittal or, in the
    alternative, for a new trial, to the extent that the state has not disputed
    them and nothing in the record contradicts them. See State v. Bharrat, 
    129 Conn. App. 1
    , 17 n.9, 
    20 A.3d 9
    (relying on factual assertions in state’s brief
    that prior versions of charges not contained in record ‘‘encompassed the
    same instructions that the court ultimately delivered to the jury’’), cert.
    denied, 
    302 Conn. 905
    , 
    23 A.3d 1243
    (2011).
    21
    In his posttrial motion, however, the defendant provided greater detail,
    noting that ‘‘the felony murder charge was revised after counsel for both
    parties consulted and agreed that the [trial court’s] instruction was insuffi-
    cient because it failed to articulate the elements of burglary, the predicate
    offense for felony murder.’’
    22
    In particular, the court provided the following instructions on the third
    element of felony murder: ‘‘The third element is that the defendant or another
    participant caused the death of the decedent named in each count while in
    the course of and in furtherance of the commission of the crime of burglary.
    ‘‘This means that the death occurred during the commission of the burglary
    and in the course of carrying out its objective. And that objective was
    an assault.
    ‘‘Now, in the course of the commission of the burglary means during any
    part of the defendant’s participation in the burglary. The phrase, in the
    course of the commission, is a time limitation and means conduct occurring
    immediately before the commission or during the commission of the burglary
    and in the course of carrying out its objective.
    ‘‘Thus, the death of the decedent named in each count must have occurred
    somewhere within the time span of the occurrence of the facts which
    constitute the burglary and in the course of carrying out its objective.
    ‘‘Also, the immediate murder of a person to eliminate a witness to a crime
    or to avoid detection is also in the course of the commission. In this regard,
    if you find one or more persons—or one or more of the decedents, I should
    say—was killed simply to eliminate him as a witness to the crime or to
    avoid detection, that killing is also in the course of the commission of the
    underlying felony.
    ‘‘In furtherance of the burglary means that the killing must be in some
    way causally connected to or as a result of the burglary. The actions of the
    defendant that cause the death of the decedent named in each count must
    be done to aid the burglary in some way or to further the purpose of
    the burglary.
    ‘‘It does not matter that the act that caused the death may have been
    committed unintentionally rather than with the intention to cause. The
    defendant is as guilty when committing this form of murder as he would
    be if he had intentionally committed the act that caused the death.’’
    23
    Defense counsel stated the following: ‘‘On the felony murder instruction
    we had substituted proposed language on the ‘in the course of’ language
    to—that defined proximate cause. We had also included language that further
    defined ‘in furtherance’ that was taken from the Supreme Court decision[s]
    of State v. Allen [
    216 Conn. 367
    , 
    579 A.2d 1066
    (1990)] and State v. Young
    [
    191 Conn. 636
    , 
    469 A.2d 1189
    (1983)]. Those citations are in the request.
    ‘‘We had also articulated language from New York courts, which had been
    cited in the Allen case, that were consistent with our theory of defense,
    which is that it cannot be in furtherance of if it was—the homicide was
    committed for the personal motive of one of the participants involved.
    ‘‘Your Honor had added language to the ‘in the course of’ element to say
    that it could happen in the course of the burglary or in the course of carrying
    out its objective. And the carrying out of its objective portion, we submit,
    is not consistent with the law.’’
    24
    The following exchange took place between the court and defense
    counsel:
    ‘‘The Court: I will say—and I appreciate your wish to articulate—but to
    the extent—just so that you have your record protected, to the extent that
    you filed a request to charge and I have not given the proposed instructions,
    I acknowledge that I have not . . . and you have those preserved.
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Then the only thing I’ll add just because it’s not—
    it’s the—Your Honor added language instead of failing to . . . incorporate
    what we proposed, is on the affirmative defense. . . .
    ‘‘The Court: Well—but again, I would say, if I failed to charge either by
    way of addition or subtraction, any deviation from your request to charge,
    I’ll acknowledge that and you can have that on the record.’’ (Emphasis
    added.)
    25
    We note that both Paige and Johnson involved whether a party subse-
    quently had waived an issue initially preserved by a request to charge by
    failing to also take an exception to the charge and involved slightly different
    factual circumstances, in that the defendant filed a request to charge, the
    court either failed completely to include the charge as given or omitted
    certain paragraphs from the requested language, and the defendant failed
    to take an explicit exception to the language. See State v. 
    Johnson, supra
    ,
    
    316 Conn. 53
    –57; State v. 
    Paige, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 438
    –46.
    26
    We do not believe, however, that the language acts solely as a gloss on
    the ‘‘in furtherance of’’ prong. See part II A 2 of this opinion.
    27
    We, therefore, do not have to address whether the defendant’s exception
    to the charge as given sufficiently stated the ground for the exception to
    preserve the claim on appeal.
    28
    The defendant challenges three instances of the phrase ‘‘in the course
    of carrying out its objective’’ in the trial court’s instructions to the jury on
    the third element of felony murder. The latter two such instances distinctly
    occurred during the trial court’s discussion of the ‘‘in the course of’’ prong.
    In the first such instance, however, the trial court used the phrase in precisely
    the same manner that the defendant did in his request to charge. Thus,
    although the gravamen of the defendant’s claim survives, the defendant
    cannot rely on this first instance because any error arising from it was
    induced.
    29
    The defendant does not contest, however, that the actions which led
    to the victim’s death occurred while the Aquarts were still in the apartment.
    30
    The court, however, held that it was not reasonably possible that the
    jury was misled due to the remainder of the charge. See State v. Scognamig-
    
    lio, supra
    , 
    202 Conn. 26
    –28.
    31
    ‘‘The third element [of felony murder] is that the defendant or another
    participant caused the death of  while in the
    course of, and in furtherance of, the commission or attempted commission
    of the crime of , or, in immediate flight from the
    crime. This means that the death occurred during the commission of the
     and in the course of carrying out its objective.’’
    Connecticut Criminal Jury Instructions (4th Ed. 2008 [Rev. to November 17,
    2015]) § 5.4-1, available at http://jud.ct.gov/ji/criminal/Part5/5.4-1.htm (last
    visited April 29, 2016).
    32
    In In re Michael 
    B., supra
    , 
    36 Conn. App. 373
    , there was no direct
    evidence that the respondent had entered the home with the residents’
    permission, but circumstantial evidence supported an inference that the
    respondent had entered the residence in the late morning, when he knew
    none of the residents would be home. Further, although there was no direct
    evidence that the respondent had possessed the intent when he had entered
    the residence, there was circumstantial evidence that he had formed such
    an intent while he unlawfully remained when, inter alia, he shot the residents’
    dog and fired bullets into the bedrooms of the residents in the late morning
    or early afternoon. 
    Id., 367, 373–74.
    Thus, as evidence suggested that the
    two deaths at issue occurred between 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. when the two of
    the residents returned home; 
    id., 367–68; any
    burglary pursuant to § 53a-
    103 was potentially ongoing for several hours prior to the residents’ deaths.
    See 
    id., 373–74. 33
          Accordingly, we also reject the defendant’s unpreserved claim that this
    same alleged instructional error necessitates a new trial on the kidnapping
    count as well.
    34
    The trial court offered the following instructions: ‘‘The first element is
    that the defendant, acting either alone or with one or more person, commit-
    ted the crime of burglary. Here, of course, the state claims that the defendant
    acted with one or more persons.
    ‘‘For purposes of the crime of felony murder, the state must prove that
    the defendant committed a burglary. The gist of the crime of burglary is
    the knowing and unlawful entry into a building with the intent to commit
    a crime therein. . . .
    ‘‘The state claims that the defendant intended to commit the crime of
    assault. An assault is the intention to cause physical injury to another person,
    coupled with causing such injury to such person or to a third person.’’
    The court then clarified what was required for the jury to find that the
    defendant acted intentionally and the manner in which the jury could deter-
    mine such behavior before repeating that ‘‘the burden of proving intent
    beyond a reasonable doubt is on the state.’’
    35
    The state does not contest that this claim is preserved.
    36
    Relying on New York cases, the defendant in Allen requested the follow-
    ing instructions: ‘‘8. A murder for personal motive is an example of a death
    that is so far outside the ambit of the plan of the felony and its execution
    as to be unrelated to them. A murder for personal motive, then, is not a
    death in furtherance of the underlying felony. . . .
    ‘‘9. Similarly, where a felon kills someone during the commission of a
    felony, but in a separate and distinct act and to satisfy his own end, his
    accomplice in the felony is not guilty of murder.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) State v. 
    Allen, supra
    , 
    216 Conn. 386
    n.8.
    37
    ‘‘Specifically, the trial court in Allen instructed: [T]he State . . . would
    have to prove that the death of [the victim] was caused by [the defendant]
    or [his accomplice] in the course of, and in furtherance of the crimes of
    either burglary or robbery. The phrase in furtherance of such crime imposes
    the requirement of a logical nexus, that is a connection between the felony
    and the homicide. The connection between the underlying felony and homi-
    cide must be more than the mere coincidence of time and place. The nexus
    or connection must be one of logic or plan. This means that the felony
    murder statute excludes those deaths which are so far outside the plan of
    the felony and its execution as to be unrelated to that. In other words, a
    felony murder does not include any killing incidentally committed with the
    felony but only includes those felonies in the attempted execution of the
    felony of burglary and robbery. Although the homicide itself need not be
    in the common design, the act which results in death must be in furtherance
    of the unlawful purpose. In other words, [the victim’s] death must have
    been caused in furtherance of committing the burglary or robbery and not
    merely incidental to it.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. 
    Allen, supra
    , 
    216 Conn. 387
    –88.
    38
    ‘‘Pursuant to § 53a-54c, if a defendant charged with felony murder was
    not the sole participant in the underlying crime, that defendant may claim
    as an affirmative defense that he or she: (1) [d]id not commit the homicidal
    act or in any way solicit, request, command, importune, cause or aid the
    commission thereof; and (2) was not armed with a deadly weapon, or any
    dangerous instrument; and (3) had no reasonable ground to believe that
    any other participant was armed with such a weapon or instrument; and
    (4) had no reasonable ground to believe that any other participant intended
    to engage in conduct likely to result in death or serious physical injury. The
    defense is only effective if all four elements are met. The burden of proving
    these elements is on the defendant, who must prove their existence by a
    preponderance of the evidence.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State
    v. Small, 
    242 Conn. 93
    , 99–100, 
    700 A.2d 617
    (1997).
    39
    General Statutes § 53a-14 provides: ‘‘In any prosecution for an offense,
    it shall be a defense that the defendant engaged in the proscribed conduct
    because he was coerced by the use or threatened imminent use of physical
    force upon him or a third person, which force or threatened force a person
    of reasonable firmness in his situation would have been unable to resist.
    The defense of duress as defined in this section shall not be available to a
    person who intentionally or recklessly places himself in a situation in which
    it is probable that he will be subjected to duress.’’
    40
    We recognize that there was some testimony that Womble kept a table
    leg in apartment 211 and that the blood spatter located in apartment 101
    would be consistent with the use of either a baseball bat or a table leg.
    Nevertheless, the weight of the testimony at trial, including the statements
    which the defendant’s sister attributed to him, concerned baseball bats
    being brought to apartment 101, subsequently used in the murders, and
    discarded afterward.