DocketNumber: No. CR 970099809S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 6948
Judges: SCHUMAN, J.
Filed Date: 6/16/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
After an evidentiary hearing, the Court finds the following facts. On November 13, 1997, at approximately 2:15 p. m., Linda Lewis was driving a car southbound on Mechanics Street in Danielson with Tobey Falco in the front passenger seat. Falco observed an unknown male on the west-side sidewalk with his hands in the pockets of a person she recognized as Al Smirnow. Smirnow had his hands in the air. It appeared to Falco that Smirnow was being robbed. Falco asked Lewis to stop the car and Falco alighted. As Falco approached the scene she asked Smirnow whether everything was all right. At that point, the unknown male, who previously had his back to Falco, turned around. Falco then saw the unknown male in broad daylight from a distance of twenty to thirty feet for at least several seconds, and possibly a minute. Falco became scared and returned to the car. The unknown male followed her into the car. From the rear seat area, the unknown male put one arm in the back of Falco's neck and one arm around her stomach and yelled to the driver to stop driving or he would kill Falco. Falco at some point also felt a sensation like that of a cat scratching her. At Falco's urging, Lewis started driving towards the Connecticut State Police Barracks. The unknown male quickly fell or jumped out of the car and then proceeded back toward Smirnow.
Lewis and Falco proceeded directly to the Troop D Barracks in Danielson, where Lewis gave the State Police a description of the suspect. Within minutes, the State Police broadcast a dispatch, apparently based on the information given by Lewis, of an armed robbery on Mechanics Street committed by a black male wearing blue jeans and a dark or black leather jacket. Trooper Terence McFadden was in the area and responded to the scene. A short distance away from the reported location of the robbery, at approximately 2:20 p. m., McFadden noticed the defendant, who fit the description in the dispatch. When the defendant saw the Trooper, the defendant turned away. McFadden asked the defendant whether he was involved in a robbery and whether he would agree to go to the barracks. The defendant responded by asking whether it was for an identification. When McFadden replied in the affirmative, the defendant agreed to go. The defendant rode in the front passenger seat. At no point during this encounter did Trooper McFadden draw his gun.1
At approximately 2:30 p. m., McFadden arrived at the barracks. The defendant alighted from the front passenger seat and McFadden walked around the rear of to eight feet away from CT Page 6950 where the defendant stood, Falco viewed the defendant. She identified the defendant as the robbery and assault suspect with certainty. The State Police then repeated the procedure for Lewis. Lewis was also certain that the defendant was the suspect.
Trooper McFadden placed the defendant under arrest at approximately 2:30 p. m. After processing, Trooper McFadden advised the defendant of the Miranda rights and the defendant signed a form stating that he had been so advised. The defendant, who had been arrested a number of times in the past, then gave a statement to McFadden which McFadden reduced to writing. The defendant refused to sign the statement.
Moreover, even if the police did seize the defendant on Mechanics Street, the State would need only reasonable suspicion, and not probable cause, to justify that seizure because, at that point, the State had only detained the defendant temporarily for an identification and not yet arrested him. "[A] police officer may briefly detain an individual for investigative purposes if the officer has a reasonable and articulable suspicion that the individual has committed or is about to commit a crime." State v.Trine,
"An identification procedure is unnecessarily suggestive only if it gives rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification." Id. at 45. In the case at hand, the one-on-one nature of the show-up, coupled with the presence of State Police Troopers at the State Police barracks, rendered the identification suggestive. The identification was not, however, unnecessarily suggestive. Given the prompt sighting of the defendant after the radio dispatch, it was reasonable for the Troopers to consider a one person show-up rather than a line-up. A line-up unquestionably would have taken more time, thus negating the freshness of the witness's memories. A prompt, reliable show-up would even have been in the defendant's interest if he had not been involved in the robbery and assault. The location of the show-up at the barracks also was reasonable given that the defendant agreed to go to the barracks and that such a location would minimize the inconvenience and any trauma to the witnesses. In short, the exigencies of the situation justified the identification procedure employed. See State v. Wooten,
Furthermore, the show-up in this case was reliable. The factors relevant to the reliability of an identification procedure are: the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime, the witness' degree of CT Page 6952 attention, the accuracy of the prior description of the criminal, the level of certainty demonstrated at the confrontation, and the time between the crime and the confrontation. State v. Casey,
Because the pretrial identification is admissible, the State is under no Constitutional obligation to show an independent basis for any in-court identification that may take place at trial. See State v. Guertin,
The defendant's waiver of his rights was also valid. The State Police advised the defendant of the Miranda rights and the defendant signed a "Notice of Rights" form confirming as much. The defendant then proceeded to give a verbal statement. Although there is no evidence that the defendant explicitly stated that he understood his rights and that he agreed to waive them, the fact that he gave a statement after he had received advice concerning his rights, coupled with the fact that the defendant would also have been aware of the Miranda rights from his prior arrests, CT Page 6953 sufficiently establishes a proper, implicit waiver of his Constitutional rights. See State v. Adorno,
The motion to suppress is denied.
Schuman, J.