DocketNumber: No. CV 92-031053S
Citation Numbers: 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 12988
Judges: MORAN, J.
Filed Date: 12/23/1997
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The State presented evidence that on September 22, 1990, the petitioner fatally shot Howard White four times from close range. (T. 54, 158, 413, 332, 337, 54, 785). David Lisbon was one of the witnesses who testified at trial. Lisbon identified the petitioner as the shooter in a taped statement given to police about a week after the shooting. At trial, however, Lisbon did not identify the petitioner. The earlier, out of court identification, was then admitted into evidence pursuant to Statev. Whelan,
After the verdict but before the sentencing, the defendant's counsel presented to the court, a privately made videotape of a conversation between Lisbon and Greg Carney in which Lisbon contradicts his statement given to the police shortly after the shooting. In the tape, Lisbon states that the petitioner was not the shooter and claims that the police bribed him and that he felt threatened. During the video, Lisbon is engaged in snorting what appears to be crack cocaine.
Christopher Williams filed this petition for a new trial on October 6, 1992, pursuant to General Statutes §
Practice Book § 904 and General Statutes §
"In analyzing the foregoing factors, trial courts are guided by the general principle that a new trial should be granted because of newly discovered evidence only if an injustice was done or it is probable that on a new trial a different result would be reached." Johnson v. State,
The petitioner first claims that the evidence in the videotape could not have been discovered earlier by due diligence. "Due diligence does not require omniscience. Due diligence means doing everything reasonable, not everything possible. . . . The question which must be answered is not what evidence might have been discovered, but rather what evidence would have been discovered by a reasonable plaintiff by persevering application, [and] untiring efforts in good earnest." (Brackets in original; citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Kubeck v. Foremost Foods Co.,
"The petitioner for a new trial must be diligent in his efforts fully to prepare his cause for trial; and if the new evidence relied upon could have been known with reasonablediligence, a new trial will not be granted." (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.) Williams v.Commissioner,
Similarly, in this case petitioner's attorney testified that she prepared an investigation request asking her investigator to find Lisbon. The request indicated that Lisbon was a witness to the shooting. The investigator, however, was unable to locate Lisbon who had moved after a fire. (T. 1,
Petitioner claims the evidence in the videotape is new and therefore not cumulative. "Merely curnulative evidence would be newly discovered evidence of the very same fact and the same attending circumstances, testified to upon the former trial, and . . . of the very same nature as that before offered in proof of that same fact." (Internal quotation marks omitted). Reilly v.State,
In the present case, the new evidence is contained in the videotape in which Lisbon states that the petitioner is not the shooter. Lisbon previously testified at trial that the petitioner Williams was not the shooter. The inconsistency in Mr. Lisbon's statements was apparent at trial. The new evidence is therefore CT Page 12992 merely cumulative.
The petitioner claims that the information given by Lisbon in the videotape is credible and would result in a different outcome in a new trial. "[A] new trial should be granted because of newly discovered evidence only if an injustice was done or it is probable that on a new trial a different result would be reached." Johnson v. State,
In State v. Valentine,
The Supreme Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court. Because an identification was given to the police shortly after the shooting, "the trial court was within its discretion in considering the videotaped statement to be a classic example of a statement that' suffered from a serious element of self-interest' in which the witness attempted to bury her inconsistent statement with a later consistent one." State v. Valentine, supra, 413. Moreover, "prior statements are, necessarily made closer to the event in question when memories are fresher and when there is CT Page 12993 less likelihood that the statement is the product of corruption, false suggestion, intimidation or appeals to sympathy." State v.Whelan,
Similarly, in this case Lisbon identified the petitioner shortly after the crime occurred. On the day of the shooting, Lisbon gave police a tape recording, telling them that the shooter's name was on the end of the tape. That name was Chris. (T. 492, 666). In addition, a week after the shooting, while at the police station on an unrelated arrest, Lisbon gave a tape recorded statement to the police identifying Christopher Williams as the shooter. (T. 608-11). At the trial however, Lisbon did not identify Christopher Williams as the shooter. (T. 570, et.seq.). He insisted that Christopher Williams had not done the shooting. (T. 649). The state, in response, offered Mr. Lisbon's tape recorded statement, identifying Christopher Williams as the shooter, which was admitted for substantive purposes pursuant toState v. Whelan,
In the videotaped conversation, Lisbon reiterates what he said at trial, that Christopher Williams is not the shooter. Lisbon appears to be snorting crack cocaine during the videotape. He further indicates that he felt threatened and in fear of authorities if he did not testify as requested by the police. He also claimed that the New Haven Police had bribed him to identify Christopher Williams as the shooter.
The petitioner was convicted by a jury. At trial, the jury had an opportunity to observe the witnesses and to assess their credibility. The Connecticut Supreme Court, in affirming the convictions, noted "[o]ur review of the record indicates that the state produced compelling evidence of the defendant's identity and guilt. At least two other witnesses provided statements connecting the defendant to the crime." State v. Williams,
The evidence in the videotape could have been discovered by due diligence, is cumulative and would probably not result in a different result in a new trial. The petition for a new trial is denied.
John W. Moran CT Page 12994 Judge of the Superior Court