DocketNumber: AC 15416
Judges: Spear
Filed Date: 8/19/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion
The defendant, Thomas M. Smith, appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after a jury trial, of possession of narcotics with the intent to sell in violation of General Statutes § 21a-277.
On the basis of on the evidence adduced at trial, the jury reasonably could have found the following facts. On July 7,1994, Detective Derwyn Hill of the Bridgeport police department received an anonymous telephone tip that drugs were located in the backyard of 34 Sixth Street in Bridgeport. Detective Richard DeRiso and Sergeant Joseph Convertito arrived on the scene first, and went to the rear of the house to investigate. Subsequently, Hill and Detective Nicholas Meriano arrived on the scene and approached the front of the house. As the detectives walked onto the front porch of the house, they saw the defendant and another man standing inside the open doorway of a common hallway area. Both detectives could see down the entire length of the hallway, which was approximately fifteen feet.
When the defendant observed the detectives approaching him, police badges exposed, he threw a black purse, which he held in one hand, behind him onto the hallway floor. One of the detectives picked up the black purse and found pink vials inside. On the basis of his training and experience, he believed them to contain crack cocaine. While being handcuffed, the defendant dropped $65, which the detectives retrieved from the ground. The seventy-three vials from the purse were later determined by laboratory analysis to contain crack cocaine.
After the trial court denied his motion to suppress the cocaine and the $65, the defendant was convicted of possession of narcotics with intent to sell. This appeal followed.
The defendant first claims that the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the element of intent to sell. We disagree.
We apply a familiar two part test in reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim. “We first review the evidence presented at trial, construing it in the light most favorable to sustaining the facts expressly found by the trial court or impliedly found by the jury. We then decide whether, upon the facts thus established and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom, the trial court or the jury could reasonably have concluded that the cumulative effect of the evidence established the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Sivri, 231 Conn. 115, 132, 646 A.2d 169 (1994). “[I]n viewing evidence which could yield contrary inferences, the jury is not barred from drawing those inferences consistent with guilt and is not required to draw only those inferences consistent with innocence. The rule is that the jury’s function is to draw whatever inferences from the evidence or facts established by the evidence it deems to be reasonable and logical.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 132-33.
The defendant asserts that, in order to sustain his conviction, this court must find that the evidence adduced at the trial level “is proof which precludes every reasonable hypothesis except that which it tends to support, and is consistent with the defendant’s guilt and inconsistent with any other rational conclusion.” State v. Carpenter, 214 Conn. 77, 84, 570 A.2d 203 (1990), on appeal after remand, 220 Conn. 169, 595 A.2d 881 (1991), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 1034, 112 S. Ct. 877, 116 L. Ed. 2d 781 (1992);
Here, the defendant maintains that the evidence of intent to sell is insufficient because of the inconsistencies in the testimony of the police, as well as in Hill’s police report. On appellate review, “we construe the evidence in a manner most favorable to sustaining a verdict. . . . [We] will not reweigh the evidence or
The circumstances surrounding the defendant’s arrest are such that the jury reasonably could have concluded that the defendant had the intent to sell narcotics. He was observed with a large quantity of narcotics in one hand and $65 in the other. This court has recognized that “ ‘[t]he quantity of narcotics found in the defendant’s possession [is] probative of whether the defendant intended to sell the drugs.’ ” State v. Glenn, 30 Conn. App. 783, 793, 622 A.2d 1024 (1993); see also State v. Jennings, 19 Conn. App. 265, 270, 562 A.2d 545, cert. denied, 212 Conn. 815, 565 A.2d 537 (1989). Here there was testimony that seventy-three vials were more than a user would have possessed.
The defendant’s sufficiency claim is nothing more than an attack on the state’s witnesses. Such credibility issues are typical grist for the jury’s mill. See State v. Foster, 45 Conn. App. 369, 379, 696 A.2d 1003 (1997). Our review of the evidence convinces us that the jury
II
The defendant next claims that the trial court improperly denied his motion to suppress the crack cocaine. He contends that the police officers framed him by claiming that he discarded the crack cocaine, when, in reality, they seized the cocaine elsewhere. The defendant asserts that such outrageous conduct mandates suppression of the evidence. The defendant did not testify at the hearing on the motion to suppress and did not present any evidence of a “frameup.”
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
General Statutes § 21a-277 (a) provides in relevant part: “Any person who manufactures, distributes, sells, prescribes, dispenses, compounds, transports with the intent to seE or dispense, possesses with the intent to seE or dispense . . . any controEed substance . . . for a first offense, shaE be imprisoned not more than fifteen years . . . and for a second offense shaE be imprisoned not more than thirty years . . . and for each subsequent offense, shaE be imprisoned not more than thirty years . . . .”
“ ‘The trier may not reach a conclusion of guilt where the facts, established by the evidence, including those reasonably and logically inferred
The defendant claims that the trial court, after hearing his trial testimony, should have, sua sponte, reopened the hearing on the motion to suppress to consider his trial testimony. Even if we were to accept such a procedure, the trial court was not required to accept as true the defendant’s claim of a frameup.