DocketNumber: File No. CR 6-6301
Judges: George, Jacobs, Kinmonth
Filed Date: 7/9/1962
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The defendant was convicted in a trial to the court upon an information charging that on or about December 18, 1961, at New Haven, he “did commit the crime of policy playing in violation of P.A. 528, § 2 of the General Statutes.” He has as
The statute, § 53-298, as amended, is captioned: “Policy playing; gaming by use of lottery slips or tickets.” The statute is a single, long, involved sentence, “prohibiting a long list of acts done in connection with the making of bets or wagers . . . in any lottery.” State v. Johnson, 140 Conn. 560, 564. It “is lengthy and replete with prohibitions.” State v. Genova, 141 Conn. 565, 571. On its face, the information contained a good charge. Practice Book § 344 (b). The fault, if any, lay in the lack of specific allegations and could have been remedied by a motion for a bill of particulars. State v. Mola, 128 Conn. 407, 410. None was made in this case. The state, by its procedure in the trial, in effect, elected to, and did, rely for conviction of the defendant upon the charge of owning or maintaining a policy office or place. Several times during the course of the trial, the court alluded to “the first part of the statute” as the transgression upon which the accused was being charged and tried; and at another point in the trial it said: “The state, as I understand it, is proceeding under maintaining a place for policy playing.”
An essential element of the crime, then, which the state had to establish beyond a reasonable doubt, if a legal conviction were to follow, was that the
At about 1:05 p.m., a young boy entered the store. He, too, was questioned by the detectives. His statements were mere hearsay and therefore are inadmissible as evidence against the defendant. While under arrest and in custody under a criminal charge, the defendant was taken to the boy’s home and confronted by the boy’s mother, who made accusatory statements in his presence and hearing. He not only heard but fully understood and comprehended the nature of her accusations. The defendant preferred to remain silent. This he had a right to do. “But when the accused is in custody, our law accords to him the right to reply to question or statement, or
In a prosecution for a violation of the statute condemning policy playing, there must be sufficient evidence connecting the accused with the offense charged. 54 C.J.S. 875. It is our view that the evidence in this case was insufficient to establish that the defendant was guilty of the crime charged, for under our adjudicated eases it takes something-more than proof of suspicious circumstances to sustain a conviction. See such cases, involving policy playing, as State v. DelVecchio, 149 Conn. 567 (policy bets and paraphernalia found in defendant’s automobile and on his person; conviction reversed on other grounds); State v. Fico, 147 Conn. 426, 428 (“defendant was arrested in the home of Prank Pagliuca, where there were found ‘Every Day’ lottery bets, tally sheets, and a daily baseball line, all in the defendant’s handwriting”); State v. DelVec-chio, 145 Conn. 549, 552 (defendant admitted that a bag, found to contain policy slips, had been, at his
“As [we] view the case, it is far more important to preserve the requirements of proof required in criminal matters than to hold this particular defendant guilty upon the evidence presented in this record.” O’Sullivan, J., dissenting in State v. Genova, supra, 573. “In the trial of a person charged with the commission of a crime, it is more important to enforce the time-tested safeguards which the law has erected for the protection of the innocent than to distort and subvert them in order to block the escape from punishment of even an apparently guilty person. Such has ever been the policy of this state.” State v. Doucette, 147 Conn. 95,108. We conclude that the evidence taken as a whole is insufficient to sustain a finding of guilty.