Title: State v. Brown
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: SC20408
State: Connecticut
Issuer: Connecticut Supreme Court
Date: December 6, 2022

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STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. JOVANNE BROWN
(SC 20408)
Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins,
Kahn, Ecker and Keller, Js.
Syllabus
Pursuant to statute (§§ 53a-133 and 53a-136 (a)), a person commits robbery
in the third degree when, in the course of committing a larceny, he uses
or threatens the immediate use of physical force upon another person
for the purpose of preventing or overcoming resistance to the taking
of the property or to the retention thereof immediately after the taking,
or compelling the owner of such property or another person to deliver
up the property or to engage in other conduct that aids in the commission
of the larceny.
Pursuant further to statute (§ 53a-119), ‘‘[a] person commits larceny when,
with intent to deprive another of property or to appropriate the same
to himself or a third person, he wrongfully takes, obtains or withholds
such property from an owner.’’
Convicted of the crimes of felony murder and carrying a pistol or revolver
without a permit in connection with the shooting death of the victim,
the defendant appealed to this court. After agreeing to assist in a drug
transaction in exchange for a large sum of money, the defendant met
with another individual, H, and got into the back seat of H’s car. H told
the defendant that there was a gun on the floor and that the defendant’s
role was to ‘‘make sure that nothing happened.’’ H then parked on a
street near the victim’s parked car. Sometime after their arrival, the
defendant, who never saw any money in H’s car, twice asked H if he
had brought any money with him. Thereafter, the victim entered the
front passenger seat of H’s car, discussed the details of the transaction,
which involved a substantial amount of marijuana, and returned to his
own car. H then drove around the block a few times before returning
and parking his car a second time. H exited his car to retrieve the
marijuana from the victim’s car, after which the victim got into the front
passenger seat of H’s car. The defendant, who was sitting behind the
victim at that point, used the gun on the car floor to exchange gunfire
with the victim, who was shot five times. The defendant was shot once.
H then returned to his car with the marijuana, pushed the victim out
of the car, and drove the defendant to a hospital. The next morning,
the police interviewed the defendant at the hospital. The police told the
defendant that they had viewed surveillance footage of the scene of the
shooting, but the defendant denied knowing anything about the shooting
or the victim’s death. Later that day, the police interviewed the defendant
a second time at his home. At that point, the defendant admitted that
he had participated in the drug transaction and had shot the victim, but
he claimed that the victim had shot him first, after the defendant made
a noise that startled the victim. When asked if ‘‘the intent was to rob’’
the victim of the marijuana, the defendant said ‘‘I guess so.’’ At trial,
the defendant testified and claimed that he had acted in self-defense,
reiterating that he shot the victim only because the victim, who had
been startled by a noise he made, shot at him first. The defendant further
testified that he did not intentionally kill the victim and that he took
nothing from the victim. Although the defendant had been charged with
murder, among other crimes, the jury found the defendant not guilty of
murder but guilty of the lesser included offense of intentional manslaugh-
ter in the first degree, as well as felony murder, with robbery in the
third degree as the predicate felony, and carrying a pistol or revolver
without a permit. The trial court ultimately vacated the conviction of
intentional manslaughter in the first degree on the ground that the
defendant could not be convicted of multiple homicide charges for the
same act. On appeal, the defendant claimed that there was insufficient
evidence to support his conviction of felony murder, that the vacated
conviction of first degree manslaughter could not be reinstated in the
event that this court agreed that there was insufficient evidence to
support his felony murder conviction because the state failed to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that he did not act in self-defense, and that
the prosecutor engaged in certain improprieties during closing argu-
ment. Held:
1. The evidence was sufficient to support the defendant’s conviction of
felony murder, based on the predicate felony of robbery in the third
degree, and, because this court rejected the defendant’s insufficiency
claim, it declined to address his claim related to the vacated manslaugh-
ter conviction:
a. The jury reasonably could have concluded, beyond a reasonable doubt
and on the basis of all of the evidence, that the defendant intended
to commit a larceny, insofar as he intended to deprive the victim of
the marijuana:
The circumstantial evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s conclu-
sion that the defendant had the requisite intent to deprive the victim of
the marijuana, as the defendant knew at the time of the shooting that
H did not have the means to or intend to pay for the marijuana and that
the defendant’s role was to participate in the robbery by using a gun to
make sure ‘‘nothing happened,’’ the defendant shot the victim and then
left the scene with H and the marijuana, the defendant responded, ‘‘I
guess so,’’ when asked by the police if the plan had been to rob the
victim, and, applying common sense, the jury reasonably could have
inferred that the defendant had intended to use the gun to ensure that
the victim, upon getting into H’s car and discovering that there was no
money, would not leave the car to get the marijuana back from H and
that there would have been no reason for the victim to shoot the defen-
dant while H was retrieving the marijuana from the victim’s car unless
the victim believed that H and the defendant had intended to take the
marijuana without paying for it.
Because the jury was entitled to discredit the defendant’s exculpatory
testimony while crediting his testimony that was corroborated by other
evidence admitted at trial, the jury reasonably could have rejected the
defendant’s testimony that he had shot at the victim only after the startled
victim shot at him and reasonably could have concluded that the victim
had shot the defendant because the defendant was attempting to hold
him at bay with the gun, was about to shoot him, or already had shot
him to prevent him from interfering with H’s taking of the marijuana.
Moreover, in light of the fact that the defendant was aware, after his
first interview with the police, that the police had surveillance footage
of the scene of the shooting, that the police suspected that the car in
that footage was the same car in which the defendant arrived at the
hospital, and that the police knew that the defendant had been shot, the
jury reasonably could have found that the defendant must have realized,
after the initial police interview, that his continued insistence that he
had not shot the victim and knew nothing about the incident would
simply not be believable, and that the statements the defendant made
during his second interview with the police, in which he generally tended
to inculpate himself in the victim’s murder, were true, and the jury
reasonably could have rejected the defendant’s claim that he was prom-
ised a large sum of money and provided access to a gun to do nothing
more than sit in H’s car.
b. There was no merit to the defendant’s claim that the evidence was
insufficient to support the conclusion that he had committed a larceny
insofar as there was no evidence that the defendant himself, rather than
H, physically took the victim’s marijuana, as the jury reasonably have
concluded that the defendant wrongfully withheld the marijuana from
the victim:
Pursuant to § 53a-119, a person commits larceny when he ‘‘takes, obtains
or withholds . . . property from [its] owner,’’ the state did not limit its
theory of the defendant’s commission of larceny to any one of those
three statutory terms, the trial court included all three terms in its jury
instruction, and, accordingly, the jury could find that the defendant had
committed larceny if it found that he obtained or withheld the marijuana,
even if he did not physically take it.
Because § 53a-119 did not define the term ‘‘withholds,’’ this court consid-
ered dictionary definitions of that term, including ‘‘[t]o refrain from
giving, granting, or permitting,’’ and concluded that there was sufficient
evidence that the defendant had committed larceny in light of the mean-
ing of that term, as the defendant sat behind the victim in H’s car and
was armed with a gun, the purpose of the defendant’s involvement in
the drug transaction was to make sure ‘‘nothing happened’’ while H
retrieved the marijuana from the victim’s car, and the jury reasonably
could have inferred that the defendant was in the back seat of H’s car
with access to the gun for the purpose of ‘‘refrain[ing] from giving,
granting, or permitting’’ the victim access to the marijuana.
Moreover, the jury also could have reasonably inferred that the defendant
had shot the victim as part of an effort to refrain from permitting or
allowing the victim access to the marijuana once H had effectuated the
plan to deprive the victim of the marijuana without paying for it.
c. The evidence was sufficient to establish, under §§ 53a-133 and 53a-
136a, that the defendant used or threatened the immediate use of force
for the purpose of preventing or overcoming the victim’s resistance
to the taking of the marijuana or compelling the victim to deliver up
the marijuana:
The jury reasonably could have found that H would not have gone to
retrieve the marijuana from the victim’s car unless he and the defendant
had come to an understanding that the defendant would prevent the
victim from interfering with H’s taking of the marijuana and that the
victim would have had no apparent reason to shoot the defendant unless
the defendant was using or threatening to use force to prevent the victim
from interfering with H.
2. The defendant could not prevail on his claim that the prosecutor commit-
ted certain improprieties during closing argument by arguing facts that
were not in evidence and making inferences that were unsupported by
the evidence, in violation of the defendant’s due process right to a
fair trial:
The prosecutor’s remarks that H had brought no money with which to
purchase the marijuana and that the victim was startled by the lack of
money the second time he entered H’s car were supported by the evi-
dence, insofar as the defendant twice asked H whether he had money,
never saw any money in H’s car, and responded that he ‘‘guess[ed]’’ that
it was their intent to rob the victim, and that evidence supported the
inference that H did not have any money to pay the victim for the mar-
ijuana.
Insofar as the other alleged instances of impropriety related exclusively
to the defendant’s claim on appeal in connection with his vacated man-
slaughter conviction, and because that claim was not before this court
in light of its conclusion that the evidence was sufficient to support the
defendant’s felony murder conviction, this court declined to address
those prosecutorial impropriety claims.
Argued January 12—officially released December 6, 2022
Procedural History
Substitute information charging the defendant with
the crimes of murder, felony murder, robbery in the
first degree, conspiracy to commit robbery in the first
degree, and carrying a pistol or revolver without a per-
mit, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district
of Fairfield and tried to the jury before Russo, J.; there-
after, the court granted the defendant’s motion for a
judgment of acquittal as to the charges of robbery in
the first degree and conspiracy to commit robbery in
the first degree; subsequently, verdict of guilty of the
lesser included offense of intentional manslaughter in
the first degree, and of felony murder and carrying a
pistol or revolver without a permit; thereafter, the court,
Russo, J., vacated the conviction as to intentional man-
slaughter in the first degree and rendered judgment of
guilty of felony murder and carrying a pistol or revolver
without a permit, from which the defendant appealed
to this court. Affirmed.
Jennifer B. Smith, for the appellant (defendant).
Melissa L. Streeto, senior assistant state’s attorney,
with whom, on the brief, were Joseph T. Corradino,
state’s attorney, and C. Robert Satti, Jr., former supervi-
sory assistant state’s attorney, for the appellee (state).
Opinion
MULLINS, J. The defendant, Jovanne Brown, was
convicted, following a jury trial, of felony murder in
violation of General Statutes § 53a-54c, with robbery in
the third degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-
136 (a) as the predicate felony; intentional manslaugh-
ter in the first degree in violation of General Statutes
§ 53a-55 (a) (1); and carrying a pistol or revolver without
a permit in violation of General Statutes § 29-35 (a).1
The trial court vacated the manslaughter conviction on
the ground that the defendant could not be convicted
of multiple homicide charges for the same act but other-
wise rendered judgment in accordance with the verdict.
On appeal, the defendant claims that the evidence
was insufficient to support his conviction of felony mur-
der. Specifically, he contends that there was no evi-
dence that he intended to commit a larceny, that he
committed a larceny, or that he used or threatened the
immediate use of physical force to effectuate a taking,
as required to establish that he committed robbery in
the third degree. The defendant also contends that, if
this court agrees with his claim of insufficient evidence
of felony murder, it cannot reinstate his vacated convic-
tion of the intentional manslaughter in the first degree
charge because the state failed to prove beyond a rea-
sonable doubt that he did not shoot the victim in self-
defense. Finally, the defendant claims that his convic-
tion must be reversed because the prosecutor engaged
in prosecutorial improprieties during closing argument.
We reject the defendant’s insufficiency claim and, there-
fore, need not address his claim related to the man-
slaughter conviction. We also reject the defendant’s
claims of prosecutorial impropriety and, therefore,
affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The jury reasonably could have found the following
facts. On the evening of February 24, 2017, the defen-
dant received a phone call from a person known to
him as ‘‘Marley,’’ who asked the defendant whether he
would be willing to assist in a deal involving the pur-
chase and sale of three pounds of marijuana. Marley
offered to pay the defendant $2000 to do so. The defen-
dant agreed to participate in the drug deal so that he
could get the money he needed to fix his car’s trans-
mission.
Shortly after speaking with Marley, the defendant went
to the parking lot of the Duchess restaurant in Bridge-
port, where Willard Hargrove, an individual unknown
to the defendant, drove up in a white Hyundai Sonata.
Hargrove told the defendant to sit in the back seat, so
that the person who they were going to meet could sit
in the front passenger seat and discuss the drug deal.
When the defendant got into the car, Hargrove told
him that there was a gun on the floor2 and that the
defendant’s role was to ‘‘make sure the deal went right’’
or to ‘‘make sure that nothing happened.’’ He also told
the defendant that he should ‘‘wipe [the gun] down.’’
Hargrove drove to Berkshire Avenue in Bridgeport
and parked on the street. The victim, Michael Watkins,
got out of a car that was parked nearby, approached
Hargrove’s car, and got into the front passenger seat.
The defendant was sitting behind him. After discussing
the drug deal with Hargrove, the victim left the car and
returned to his own car. Hargrove then left the scene
and drove around the block a few times.
Meanwhile, Dave Depass, the person who had pro-
vided the victim with the three pounds of marijuana to
sell, was watching the transaction from the window of
his third floor apartment at the corner of Berkshire
Avenue and Orchard Street.3 When Depass saw Har-
grove leave the scene and drive around the block, he
suspected that something was amiss and called the
victim by cell phone and warned him two or three times
not to get back into Hargrove’s car when he returned.
After driving around for several minutes, Hargrove
parked his car on Berkshire Avenue again, at which
point he exited the car and went to the victim’s car to
get the marijuana. Shortly thereafter, the victim got
into the front passenger seat of Hargrove’s car. The
defendant was still sitting in the back seat. Using the
gun that was on the floor of the car, the defendant shot
the victim five times in his back. At some point during
this shooting, the defendant received a gunshot wound
to his right upper chest. The victim died from his
wounds.
After shooting the victim, the defendant crawled over
him and exited the car through the front driver side
door because the childproof safety locks on the back
doors of the Hyundai Sonata were activated. At that
point, Hargrove returned to the car carrying a bag of
marijuana,4 and the defendant told him that he had been
shot. Hargrove got into the driver’s seat, put the bag in
the back seat and pushed the victim out of the car. The
defendant then stepped over the victim and got into
the front passenger seat. Hargrove drove the defendant
to St. Vincent’s Medical Center, a hospital in Bridgeport,
helped him inside and immediately drove away.
The gun that the defendant used to shoot the victim,
a .32 caliber Smith & Wesson revolver, was later found
in an abandoned car in Bridgeport. When the police
searched the crime scene after the removal of the vic-
tim’s body, the only items of evidence they found were
a blood-like substance on the ground and the victim’s
cell phone. During a subsequent investigation, the
police were able to determine that Hargrove possessed
a white Hyundai Sonata, but they never found the car.
At about 12:50 a.m. on the morning after the shooting,
February 25, 2017, Christopher Lamaine, a lieutenant
with the Bridgeport Police Department, went to St. Vin-
cent’s Medical Center to interview the defendant. Brian
Fitzgerald, a captain with the police department, and
Vincent Larrichia, a detective, were there when Lamaine
arrived. Before interviewing the defendant, Lamaine
viewed a surveillance video recording taken from a
house on Brooks Street, adjacent to the scene of the
shooting. The video recording, which was of poor qual-
ity and repeatedly skipped, showed a white car turning
onto Berkshire Avenue and parking at approximately
9:34 p.m. on February 24, 2017. Several minutes later,
an individual exited the driver’s door and walked in the
direction of the victim’s car. A few seconds after that,
the victim approached the back of the white car and
attempted unsuccessfully to open the back door on the
passenger side.
After that unsuccessful attempt to enter the rear of
the car, the victim, at approximately 9:38 p.m., opened
the door to the front passenger seat and got in. Shortly
thereafter, the driver’s door opened, and an individual,
later identified as the defendant, got out. The video
then skipped several seconds, after which the defendant
could be seen following the car as it moved slowly
down the street.5 As the defendant approached the front
driver side door, the car stopped, and the door opened.
The defendant then ran around the front of the car. At
that point, the front passenger side door was opened
from the inside, and a body emerged from the door and
fell to the ground. The defendant stepped over the body,
which appeared to be moving, and got into the front
passenger seat. The car then left the scene.
During the interview with Lamaine, the defendant
stated that, earlier in the evening, he had left his home
on Glenwood Avenue in Bridgeport, on the city’s east
side, to walk several miles to the west side of the city
to buy $10 worth of marijuana from an acquaintance.
While he was walking, a car pulled up beside him, and
a passenger in the car shot him. After he was shot, a
white car pulled up beside him, and an individual whom
he did not know asked him if he was alright. The defen-
dant said that he was not and got into the car, at which
point the individual drove him to the hospital. Lamaine,
who suspected that the white car in which the defendant
had been driven to the hospital6 was the same white
car that was shown on the surveillance video of the
crime scene, told the defendant that he had viewed the
surveillance video.
Lamaine also told the defendant that the victim was
dead and asked the defendant if he knew what hap-
pened to the victim. The defendant denied knowing
anything about the victim’s death. Lamaine also asked
the defendant whether, if the police found the white
car in which the defendant had arrived at the hospital,
they would find his blood in the back seat. The defen-
dant stated that he had initially gotten into the back
seat of the car that picked him up and then climbed
into the front seat.
In the afternoon of February 25, 2017, Fitzgerald and
Larrichia went to the defendant’s home on Glenwood
Avenue in Bridgeport to interview him again. At that
interview, the defendant’s parents, his sister and a
cousin who identified himself as a correction officer
were present. The defendant admitted, at that point,
that he had shot the victim with a revolver. The defen-
dant also told Fitzgerald and Larrichia that the victim
shot him after he made a noise that startled the victim.
The defendant stated that he had agreed to be paid
$2000 to ‘‘make sure that nothing happened’’ during the
drug deal because he wanted the money to fix his car.
When Fitzgerald asked the defendant if ‘‘the intent was
to rob’’ the victim of the marijuana, the defendant said,
‘‘I guess so.’’
Shortly after the interview, the police arrested the
defendant. The police subsequently charged the defen-
dant with murder, felony murder with the predicate
felony of robbery in the third degree, robbery in the
first degree, conspiracy to commit robbery in the first
degree, and carrying a pistol or revolver without a per-
mit. After the prosecutor presented the prosecution’s
case at trial, defense counsel moved for a judgment of
acquittal on the charges of robbery in the first degree
and conspiracy to commit robbery in the first degree.
The trial court granted the motion. The court stated in
its ruling that ‘‘the elements of robbery in the third
degree [which is a lesser included offense of robbery
in the first degree] are: a person is guilty of robbery in
the third degree when he, in the course of committing a
larceny, uses or threatens the immediate use of physical
force [on] another person for the purpose of either
preventing or overcoming resistance to the taking of
the property, or compelling the owner of such property
or another person to deliver up the property. Here, the
court simply is constrained to find any evidence in the
record . . . that would support a finding, at this junc-
ture, that there was a prevention or overcoming resis-
tance to the taking of . . . the marijuana out of the
car or that [the victim] was compelled to deliver up
the property.’’
With respect to the charge of conspiracy to commit
robbery in the first degree, the trial court concluded
that, considered in context, the evidence that the defen-
dant had said ‘‘I guess so’’ when asked whether ‘‘the
intent was to rob’’ and that Hargrove had told the defen-
dant to wipe down the gun was not sufficient to support
the charge. Thus, the jury was left to determine the
defendant’s guilt with respect to the remaining charges,
namely, murder, felony murder with the predicate fel-
ony of robbery in the third degree, and carrying a pistol
or revolver without a permit.7
Thereafter, the defendant testified in his own defense.
He testified that, when he got into a white Hyundai at
the Duchess restaurant on the evening of February 24,
2017, he had never seen Hargrove before. The defendant
did not know where Hargrove was going when they left
the restaurant. He explained that, when they arrived
at Berkshire Avenue and parked, the victim got into
Hargrove’s car. The victim then told Hargrove that he
should go to the victim’s car to get the marijuana while
the victim retrieved the money from Hargrove’s car.
The defendant did not know the victim.
The defendant further testified that, when the victim
got into Hargrove’s car the second time, after Hargrove
and the defendant had returned from driving around
the block, the victim was startled by the rustling of
the defendant’s ‘‘puffer jacket’’ and turned toward the
defendant. The defendant then tried ‘‘to grab for what-
ever [the victim was] reaching for,’’ but, before he could
do so, the victim shot him. When the defendant tried
to leave the car, the victim would not let him and said
that he was going to kill him. The defendant then
grabbed the gun that was on the floor of the car and
shot the victim. The defendant had never seen the gun
before he got into the car. The defendant testified that
he did not intentionally kill the victim and that he took
nothing from the victim.
On cross-examination, the defendant testified that he
had no money when he got into Hargrove’s car and
never saw any money in the car, but he did not know
that there was no money in the car. Hargrove told the
defendant to sit in the back seat of the car when he got
into the car at the Duchess restaurant, but the defendant
was not ‘‘hiding’’ there. The defendant asked Hargrove
twice, after ‘‘he pulled up,’’ whether he had any money.
When the victim got into Hargrove’s car the second
time and pulled out his gun, the defendant grabbed the
gun with his left hand and wrestled with the victim,
even though the defendant, who was five feet, six inches
tall and weighed approximately 120 pounds at the time
of the shooting, was much smaller than the victim, who
was a ‘‘big’’ man, more than six feet tall.
The defendant further testified that, when Hargrove
returned to his car after the defendant shot the victim,
the defendant asked Hargrove if he could call an ambu-
lance for the victim, but Hargrove said that the victim
was already ‘‘gone . . . .’’ The defendant admitted that
he never told the police, after the shooting, that he had
asked Hargrove to call an ambulance. With respect to
thepolice interviewatthehospital, the defendant acknow-
ledged that the police told him that, when they found
the white car that was at the scene of the shooting,
they would do a DNA analysis of any blood that they
found inside the car. The defendant denied that ‘‘the
plan . . . all along . . . was to rob [the victim] of his
property . . . .’’
After the conclusion of evidence, the trial court
instructed the jury that the defendant was claiming self-
defense with respect to the murder charge and the
lesser included offenses of that charge, and on the ele-
ments of that claim. The court further instructed the
jury that, if the jury found that the state had established
the elements of murder or the lesser included offenses
of manslaughter, it must find that the state had dis-
proved one of the elements of self-defense beyond a
reasonable doubt before it could find the defendant
guilty.
The jury found the defendant not guilty of murder
but guilty of intentional manslaughter in the first degree,
felony murder, and carrying a pistol or revolver without
a permit. The jury found, in special interrogatories, that
the defendant had used a firearm to commit intentional
manslaughter in the first degree and felony murder.
At sentencing, the trial court vacated the conviction
of intentional manslaughter in the first degree on the
ground that the defendant could not be convicted of
multiple homicide charges for the same act. See, e.g.,
State v. John, 210 Conn. 652, 695–97, 557 A.2d 93, cert.
denied, 493 U.S. 824, 110 S. Ct. 84, 107 L. Ed. 2d 50
(1989), and cert. denied sub nom. Seebeck v. Connecti-
cut, 493 U.S. 824, 110 S. Ct. 84, 107 L. Ed. 2d 50 (1989).
The trial court sentenced the defendant to an effective
sentence of forty-two years of imprisonment, execution
suspended after forty years, and five years of probation
on the remaining convictions.
This direct appeal followed. The defendant claims
that (1) there was insufficient evidence to support the
conviction of felony murder with the predicate felony
of robbery in the third degree because there was no
evidence that the defendant intended to or did commit
a larceny or that he used or threatened the immediate
use of physical force to effectuate the taking of the
marijuana, and (2) the prosecutor engaged in improprie-
ties during closing argument that deprived the defen-
dant of his right to a fair trial. We reject both claims.
I
We first address the defendant’s claim that there was
insufficient evidence to support his conviction of felony
murder.8 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 evi-
dence in the light most favorable to sustaining the ver-
dict. Second, we determine whether [on] the facts so
construed and the inferences reasonably drawn there-
from the [jury] reasonably could have concluded that
the cumulative force of the evidence established guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt. . . .
‘‘We note that the jury must find every element proven
beyond a reasonable doubt in order to find the defen-
dant guilty of the charged offense, [but] each of the
basic and inferred facts underlying those conclusions
need not be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. . . .
If it is reasonable and logical for the jury to conclude
that a basic fact or an inferred fact is true, the jury is
permitted to consider the fact proven and may consider
it in combination with other proven facts in determining
whether the cumulative effect of all the evidence proves
the defendant guilty of all the elements of the crime
charged beyond a reasonable doubt. . . .
‘‘Moreover, it does not diminish the probative force
of the evidence that it consists, in whole or in part, of
evidence that is circumstantial rather than direct. . . .
It is not one fact, but the cumulative impact of a multi-
tude of facts which establishes guilt in a case involving
substantial circumstantial evidence. . . . In evaluating
evidence, the [jury] is not required to accept as disposi-
tive those inferences that are consistent with the defen-
dant’s innocence. . . . The [jury] may draw whatever
inferences from the evidence or facts established by
the evidence it deems to be reasonable and logical. . . .
‘‘Ordinarily, intent can only be inferred by circum-
stantial evidence; it may be and usually is inferred from
the defendant’s conduct. . . . Intent to cause death
may be inferred from the type of weapon used, the
manner in which it was used, the type of wound inflicted
and the events leading to and immediately following
the death. . . .
‘‘Finally, [a]s we have often noted, proof beyond a
reasonable doubt does not mean proof beyond all possi-
ble doubt . . . nor does proof beyond a reasonable
doubt require acceptance of every hypothesis of inno-
cence posed by the defendant that, had it been found
credible by the [jury], would have resulted in an acquit-
tal. . . . 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 evidence
that supports the [jury’s] verdict of guilty.’’ (Citations
omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
Campbell, 328 Conn. 444, 503–505, 180 A.3d 882 (2018).
‘‘[A]n inference need not be compelled by the evi-
dence; rather, the evidence need only be reasonably
susceptible of such an inference. Equally well estab-
lished is our holding that a jury may draw factual infer-
ences on the basis of already inferred facts.’’ (Internal
quotation marks omitted.) State v. Niemeyer, 258 Conn.
510, 519, 782 A.2d 658 (2001).
To establish the elements of felony murder in the
present case, the state was required to establish that,
acting either alone or with one or more persons, the
defendant committed or attempted to commit robbery
in the third degree and, in the course of and in further-
ance of such crime, the defendant caused the death of
a person other than one of the participants. General
Statutes § 53a-54c. Thus, to secure a conviction of fel-
ony murder, the state was required to prove, beyond a
reasonable doubt, all of the elements of robbery in the
third degree. See, e.g., State v. Lewis, 245 Conn. 779,
786, 717 A.2d 1140 (1998).
Section 53a-136 (a) defines robbery in the third
degree as ‘‘robbery as defined in section 53a-133.’’ Gen-
eral Statutes § 53a-133, in turn, provides: ‘‘A person
commits robbery when, in the course of committing
a larceny, he uses or threatens the immediate use of
physical force upon another person for the purpose of:
(1) Preventing or overcoming resistance to the taking
of the property or to the retention thereof immediately
after the taking; or (2) compelling the owner of such
property or another person to deliver up the property
or to engage in other conduct which aids in the commis-
sion of the larceny.’’
General Statutes § 53a-119 provides in relevant part:
‘‘A person commits larceny when, with intent to deprive
another of property or to appropriate the same to him-
self or a third person, he wrongfully takes, obtains or
withholds such property from an owner. . . .’’ (Empha-
sis added.) ‘‘A person acts ‘intentionally’ 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 . . . .’’ Gen-
eral Statutes § 53a-3 (11). ‘‘[I]ntent [can] be formed
instantaneously and [does] not require any specific
period of time for thought or premeditation for its for-
mation.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
Carter, 317 Conn. 845, 857, 120 A.3d 1229 (2015).
A
The defendant first claims that the state failed to
establish that he intended to commit a larceny because
there was no evidence that he had any intent to deprive
the victim of the marijuana or to appropriate it to him-
self or to Hargrove. See General Statutes § 53a-119.
Rather, the defendant contends, the evidence compels
the conclusion that his only intent was ‘‘to sit in [Har-
grove’s] car while the victim and Hargrove conducted
the sale.’’ The state responds that the ‘‘evidence showed
that the defendant had a dishonest purpose or intention
to deprive the victim of his marijuana by assisting Har-
grove to wrongfully exercise control over it.’’
For the reasons that follow, we agree with the state
that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had the
requisite intent to deprive the victim of his marijuana.
As a result, we need not address whether there was
sufficient evidence for the jury to find that the defendant
also had the intent to appropriate the marijuana to
himself or a third person. See General Statutes § 53a-
119.
The evidence showed that (1) Hargrove told the
defendant that his role was to ‘‘make sure that nothing
happened,’’ that there was a gun on the floor in the
back seat of Hargrove’s car, and that he should ‘‘wipe
[the gun] down,’’ (2) the defendant never saw any
money in Hargrove’s car, and, at some point after arriv-
ing at Berkshire Avenue, he asked Hargrove twice
whether he had any money, (3) the victim told Hargrove,
when he got into Hargrove’s car the first time, that
Hargrove should get the marijuana from the victim’s
car while the victim got the money from Hargrove’s
car, (4) Hargrove did not immediately complete the
drug transaction after meeting with the victim but,
instead, left the scene and drove around the block a
few times, (5) Depass, who had arranged the drug trans-
action, warned the victim not to get back into Har-
grove’s car when Hargrove returned from driving
around the block because Depass was concerned that
something was amiss, (6) after the victim entered Har-
grove’s car the second time, the defendant killed the
victim by shooting him five times in the back, (7) Har-
grove and the defendant left the scene with the bag of
marijuana and the victim dead or dying in the street,
and (8) when asked by the police on the day after the
shooting whether the intent was to rob the victim, the
defendant responded, ‘‘I guess so.’’
Applying the proper standard of review to the evi-
dence in the present case, we conclude that, although
there was no direct evidence that the defendant and
Hargrove intended to rob the victim, the circumstantial
evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s conclusion
that the defendant intended to deprive the victim of his
marijuana. Specifically, the jury reasonably could have
inferred that the defendant knew, at least from the
time that Hargrove parked on Berkshire Avenue for the
second time, that Hargrove did not intend to pay for
the marijuana and that the defendant’s role was to par-
ticipate in the robbery by using the gun to ‘‘make sure
that nothing happened.’’ The defendant then used that
gun to shoot the victim five times in the back. Afterward,
the defendant and Hargrove left with the marijuana.
Indeed, the defendant himself responded, ‘‘I guess so,’’
when asked by the police if the plan had been to rob
the victim.9
On the basis of the foregoing evidence, the jury,
applying common sense, could have inferred that the
defendant had intended to use the gun to ensure that the
victim, upon getting into Hargrove’s car and discovering
that there was no money, would not leave the car to
get his marijuana back, and that the defendant had
intentionally used or threatened to use the gun to pre-
vent the victim from interfering with the plan to deprive
the victim of the marijuana. The jury also reasonably
could have concluded that there would have been no
reason for the victim to shoot the defendant while Har-
grove was retrieving the drugs from the victim’s car
unless the victim believed that Hargrove and the defen-
dant intended to deprive him of his marijuana without
paying for it. Based on all of the foregoing, and constru-
ing the evidence in a light most favorable to sustaining
the verdict, we conclude that the jury reasonably could
have inferred from this evidence that the defendant had
the intent to deprive the victim of the marijuana.
Finally, we note that the jury reasonably could have
rejected altogether the defendant’s testimony that the
victim had been ‘‘startled’’ by a noise and, instead, con-
cluded that the victim had shot the defendant because
the defendant was attempting to hold him at bay with
the gun, was about to shoot him, or already had shot
him to prevent him from interfering with Hargrove.
Indeed, the jury was entitled to discredit the defendant’s
exculpatory testimony while crediting his testimony
that was corroborated by other evidence; see, e.g., Bar-
rila v. Blake, 190 Conn. 631, 639, 461 A.2d 1375 (1983)
(‘‘[a] trier of fact is free to reject testimony even if it
is uncontradicted . . . and is equally free to reject part
of the testimony of a witness even if other parts have
been found credible’’ (citations omitted)); and it would
have been reasonable for it to do so. The evidence
showed that the defendant knew, after his first inter-
view with the police at the hospital, that the police had
a video recording of the scene of the shooting. The
defendant also knew that the police suspected that the
car shown in that video recording was the same car in
which the defendant arrived at the hospital, and they
knew that the defendant had been shot. Moreover, the
defendant knew that, if the police found Hargrove’s car,
they would find the defendant’s blood in the back seat
and the victim’s blood in the front seat.
Accordingly, the jury reasonably could have con-
cluded that the defendant must have realized after the
initial police interview—during which he gave false
information to the police—that his continued insistence
that he had not shot the victim and knew nothing about
the incident would simply not be believable. There were
several hours between that interview and the second
interview at the defendant’s home during which the
defendant, by himself or in consultation with others,
had the opportunity to come up with a version of events
in which he would admit that he agreed to participate
in the drug deal and that he shot the victim—for which
the police already had compelling evidence—but would
claim that he knew nothing about any plan to rob the
victim and that the shooting was in self-defense. Thus,
the jury reasonably could have concluded that the state-
ments that the defendant made during his second inter-
view with the police that were consistent with the other
evidence that the police had—which generally tended
to inculpate the defendant—were true, whereas the
statements that tended to exculpate him were not.
The defendant correctly points out that ‘‘the jury was
not free to infer the opposite of what the defendant
asserted in his statements based solely on its disbelief
of those assertions.’’ State v. Copas, 252 Conn. 318, 343
n.31, 746 A.2d 761 (2000). As we previously explained,
however, there was affirmative evidence and reason-
able inferences the jury could have drawn therefrom
that would support the conclusion that the defendant
did not intend simply to observe a drug deal between
Hargrove and the victim and that he intentionally used
or threatened the immediate use of physical force to
prevent the victim from interfering with Hargrove’s tak-
ing of the victim’s marijuana.
The defendant also relies on this court’s decision in
State v. Stovall, 316 Conn. 514, 115 A.3d 1071 (2015).
In Stovall, the defendant contended that there was
insufficient evidence to support his conviction of pos-
session of narcotics with intent to sell within 1500 feet
of a housing project when ‘‘the state failed to introduce
any evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
he intended to sell narcotics at a particular location in
or within 1500 feet of [the housing project at issue].’’
Id., 522. In support of its claim to the contrary, the state
relied on ‘‘testimony that the defendant regularly visited
[an] apartment in [the housing project] two or three
times per week, that [the housing project was] known
for drug trafficking, that the defendant made a business
arrangement with [an acquaintance] to store items in
the hallway closet in her apartment in [the housing
project], and that narcotics packaged for sale and other
materials suggesting the packaging and sale of narcotics
were recovered from the hallway closet during the
search of [the] apartment.’’ Id., 522–23.
This court concluded that, although the ‘‘evidence
provided ample support for the inference that the defen-
dant intended to store and package narcotics in [the
acquaintance’s] apartment for sale, it did not have any
probative value with respect to the intended location
of the sales, that is, whether the defendant intended to
sell the narcotics in [the] apartment or in another loca-
tion within 1500 feet of [the housing project].’’ Id., 523–
24. ‘‘The evidence was equally supportive of an
inference that the defendant intended to sell the drugs
outside of the prohibited zone or anywhere that the
opportunity presented itself. This court has concluded
that [when] the evidence is in equipoise or equal, the
[s]tate has not sustained its burden [of proof] . . . .
State v. Moss, 189 Conn. 364, 369, 456 A.2d 274 (1983);
see also United States v. Glenn, 312 F.3d 58, 70 (2d Cir.
2002) (if the evidence viewed in the light most favorable
to the prosecution gives equal or nearly equal circum-
stantial support to a theory of guilt and a theory of
innocence, then a reasonable jury must necessarily
entertain a reasonable doubt . . .).’’ (Internal quotation
marks omitted.) State v. Stovall, supra, 316 Conn. 527.
In the present case, the defendant contends that,
under Stovall, the evidence was insufficient to establish
that he intended to commit larceny because, at best, it
would equally support a finding that he participated
in the drug deal simply to ‘‘make sure that nothing
happened’’ and that he shot the victim in self-defense
or a finding that he intended to steal the victim’s mari-
juana and that he used or threatened to use physical
force to prevent the victim from interfering with Har-
grove. We disagree. For the reasons that we already stated,
viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to sus-
taining the verdict, we conclude that the jury reasonably
could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt, on
the basis of all of the evidence, that the victim and the
defendant exchanged gunfire because the defendant was
using or threatening to use force against the victim to
carry out his intent to deprive the victim of his mari-
juana. The jury also reasonably could have rejected the
defendant’s claims that he was promised $2000 and
given a gun to do nothing more than sit in the car and
that he shot the victim during the course of a drug sale
only because the victim shot at the defendant after the
defendant startled him. Accordingly, we reject this
claim.
B
The defendant also claims that there was insufficient
evidence to support the conclusion that he committed
a larceny because there was no evidence that he himself
took the victim’s marijuana. Rather, he claims that the
evidence compels the conclusion that, if there was a
larceny, it was Hargrove who took the marijuana. The
defendant further contends that he cannot be found
guilty as an accessory because the jury was not instructed
on accessorial liability. See, e.g., State v. Williams, 187
Conn. App. 333, 348–49, 202 A.3d 470 (2019); State v.
Holley, 160 Conn. App. 578, 592, 127 A.3d 221 (2015)
(overruled on other grounds by State v. Gore, 342 Conn.
129, 269 A.3d 1 (2022)), rev’d on other grounds, 327
Conn. 576, 175 A.3d 514 (2018).
As we explained, § 53a-119 provides in relevant part
that ‘‘[a] person commits larceny when, with intent to
deprive another of property or to appropriate the same
to himself or a third person, he wrongfully takes, obtains
or withholds such property from an owner. . . .’’ Hav-
ing concluded that there was sufficient evidence to
support a finding that the defendant had the intent to
deprive the victim of his marijuana; see part I A of this
opinion; we must determine whether there was suffi-
cient evidence to demonstrate that the defendant wrong-
fully took, obtained or withheld the marijuana from
the victim.10
At the outset, we note that § 53a-119 provides three
distinct terms that can be used to establish what action
the defendant must engage in to satisfy that element
of larceny: ‘‘takes, obtains or withholds . . . property
from an owner.’’ General Statutes § 53a-119. In interpre-
ting the meaning of these terms, we are mindful of the
‘‘basic tenet of statutory construction that the legisla-
ture [does] not intend to enact meaningless provisions.
. . . [I]n construing statutes, we presume that there is
a purpose behind every sentence, clause, or phrase used
in an act and that no part of a statute is superfluous.
. . . Because [e]very word and phrase [of a statute] is
presumed to have meaning . . . [a statute] must be
construed, if possible, such that no clause, sentence or
word shall be superfluous, void or insignificant.’’ (Internal
quotation marks omitted.) Lopa v. Brinker Interna-
tional, Inc., 296 Conn. 426, 433, 994 A.2d 1265 (2010).
The defendant asserts that the jury could not reason-
ably have found that he committed larceny because he
did not physically take the marijuana and the jury was
not instructed on accessorial liability. Therefore, the
defendant asserts, there is not sufficient evidence to
support the jury’s finding regarding the commission of
the predicate felony of robbery in the third degree under
the instruction as given. We disagree.
In the present case, although the state argued that
Hargrove physically took the marijuana, the state did
not limit its theory of the defendant’s guilt of larceny
to any one of the three statutory terms—takes, obtains
or withholds.11 Consistent therewith, the jury was not
limited to concluding that it could find the defendant
guilty of larceny only if it found that he physically took
the marijuana, as opposed to either obtaining or with-
holding the marijuana. Indeed, the jury was instructed:
‘‘To prove that the defendant was committing or attempt-
ing to commit a larceny, the state must prove beyond
a reasonable doubt that [1] the defendant wrongfully
took property, or obtained property, or withheld prop-
erty from an owner, and [2] that, at the time, he intended
to deprive the owner of the property or to appropriate
such property to himself or a third person.’’ Therefore,
in the present case, in determining whether there was
sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding regard-
ing the defendant’s commission of the predicate felony
of robbery in the third degree, we must consider
whether there was sufficient evidence of any of these
three distinct ways of committing larceny.
We conclude that there was sufficient evidence that
the defendant committed larceny under the term ‘‘with-
holds.’’ The term ‘‘withholds’’ is not defined for pur-
poses of § 53a-119. ‘‘In the absence of a definition of
terms in the statute itself, [w]e may presume . . . that
the legislature intended [a word] to have its ordinary
meaning in the English language, as gleaned from the
context of its use. . . . Under such circumstances, it
is appropriate to look to the common understanding
of the term as expressed in a dictionary.’’ (Internal
quotation marks omitted.) Meriden v. Freedom of Infor-
mation Commission, 338 Conn. 310, 322, 258 A.3d 1
(2021); see also General Statutes § 1-1 (a). Webster’s
Third New International Dictionary defines ‘‘withhold’’
as ‘‘to hold back,’’ ‘‘keep from action,’’ ‘‘check’’ or
‘‘restrain . . . .’’ Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary (2002) p. 2627. The American Heritage Col-
lege Dictionary defines ‘‘withhold’’ as ‘‘[t]o refrain from
giving, granting, or permitting.’’ American Heritage Col-
lege Dictionary (4th Ed. 2007) p. 1574.
In the present case, the evidence established that the
defendant ‘‘was offered some money to go make sure
nothing happened during [the drug] deal.’’ The defen-
dant testified that he was promised $2000. The defen-
dant also testified that, when he got into Hargrove’s
car the first time, he was told that there was a gun in
the back seat and that he should ‘‘wipe it down . . . .’’
The defendant further testified that he had been told
that Hargrove was going to go to the victim’s car to get
the marijuana and that the victim expected to get the
money from Hargrove’s car, in which the defendant
was sitting. The evidence further established that the
defendant was never instructed to pay the victim for
the marijuana; nor did the defendant have any reason
to believe that Hargrove intended to pay the victim.
Indeed, the defendant had no money of his own and
never saw any money in the car, and Hargrove never
affirmed that he had money to pay the victim.
Therefore, the evidence established that the defen-
dant sat in the back seat of Hargrove’s car, behind the
victim, who sat in the front passenger seat, that the
defendant was armed with a gun, and that the purpose
of the defendant’s being in on the deal was to ‘‘make
sure nothing happened’’ while Hargrove got the mari-
juana from the victim’s car. On the basis of the foregoing
evidence, the jury reasonably could have inferred that
the defendant was in the back seat of Hargrove’s car
with the gun for the purpose of ‘‘refrain[ing] from giving,
granting, or permitting’’ access to the marijuana. Ameri-
can Heritage College Dictionary, supra, p. 1574. The
jury reasonably could have also inferred that the defen-
dant shot the victim as part of his effort to refrain
from permitting or allowing the victim access to the
marijuana once his cohort had effectuated their plan
to deprive the victim of the marijuana without paying
for it. On the basis of the evidence and the reasonable
inferences drawn therefrom, we conclude that there
was sufficient evidence for the jury to have found that
the defendant committed larceny.
C
The defendant finally claims that the evidence was
insufficient to establish that he used or threatened the
immediate use of physical force ‘‘for the purpose of:
(1) Preventing or overcoming resistance to the taking
of the property or to the retention thereof immediately
after the taking; or (2) compelling the owner of such
property or another person to deliver up the property
or to engage in other conduct which aids in the commis-
sion of the larceny.’’ General Statutes § 53a-133 (defin-
ing ‘‘robbery’’).12 In support of this claim, the defendant
relies on this court’s holding in State v. Coston, 182
Conn. 430, 435, 438 A.2d 701 (1980), that ‘‘[t]he fact that
the defendant committed a larceny while carrying a
concealed weapon and later assaulted the victims of
the larceny in an attempt to escape does not by itself
permit [this court] to sustain his conviction for attempted
robbery’’ because there was no evidence that the defen-
dant used the weapon with the purpose of preventing
resistance to the taking or compelling the owner to
deliver up the property. We disagree.
We concluded in part I A of this opinion that the jury
reasonably could have found that Hargrove would not
have gone to retrieve the marijuana from the victim’s
car unless he and the defendant had come to an under-
standing that the defendant would prevent the victim
from interfering with Hargrove. We also concluded that
the victim would have had no apparent reason to shoot
the defendant unless the defendant was using or threat-
ening to use force to prevent the victim from interfering
with Hargrove. Thus, the evidence was sufficient to
establish that the defendant used or threatened the
immediate use of physical force for the purpose of
overcoming the victim’s resistance to the taking of the
marijuana or to the retention thereof immediately after
the taking.13
II
The defendant next claims that he was deprived of
his due process right to a fair trial when the prosecutor
engaged in prosecutorial improprieties during closing
argument by arguing facts that were not in evidence
and making inferences that were unsupported by the
evidence. We are not persuaded.
The defendant contends that the prosecutor improp-
erly relied on facts that were not in evidence or made
unsupported inferences on four occasions. First, the
defendant claims that, during the prosecutor’s main
closing argument to the jury, the prosecutor improperly
argued that ‘‘[t]he defendant has agreed that there was
a drug deal that was going to go down, that they showed
up with no money.’’ (Emphasis added.) Second, he claims
that the prosecutor improperly argued that the defen-
dant did not know that he was shot, thereby suggesting
that he was not acting in self-defense when he shot the
victim. Third, he argues that, during rebuttal argument,
the prosecutor improperly argued that the victim was
startled when he got into Hargrove’s car the second
time because there was no money in the car.14 Fourth,
he claims that the prosecutor improperly stated, during
rebuttal argument, that Depass ‘‘assume[d] that [the
victim] had a gun because he had it in the past,’’ when
Depass testified, instead, that the victim told him that
he had a gun.
‘‘[I]n analyzing claims of prosecutorial [impropriety],
we engage in a two step analytical process. The two
steps are separate and distinct: (1) whether [improper
conduct] occurred in the first instance; and (2) whether
that [improper conduct] deprived a defendant of his due
process right to a fair trial. Put differently, [improper
conduct] is [improper conduct], regardless of its ulti-
mate effect on the fairness of the trial; whether that
[improper conduct] caused or contributed to a due pro-
cess violation is a separate and distinct question . . . .
As we have indicated, our determination of whether
any improper conduct by the [prosecutor] violated the
defendant’s fair trial rights is predicated on the factors
set forth in State v. Williams, [204 Conn. 523, 540, 529
A.2d 653 (1987)], with due consideration of whether that
[improper conduct] was objected to at trial.’’ (Internal
quotation marks omitted.) State v. Warholic, 278 Conn.
354, 361–62, 897 A.2d 569 (2006). ‘‘These factors include
the extent to which the [improper conduct] was invited
by defense conduct or argument, the severity of the
[improper conduct], the frequency of the [improper con-
duct], the centrality of the [improper conduct] to the
critical issues in the case, the strength of the curative
measures adopted, and the strength of the state’s case.’’
Id., 361.
‘‘As we previously have recognized, prosecutorial
[impropriety] of a constitutional magnitude can occur
in the course of closing arguments. . . . When making
closing arguments to the jury, [however] [c]ounsel must
be allowed a generous latitude in argument, as the limits
of legitimate argument and fair comment cannot be
determined precisely by rule and line, and something
must be allowed for the zeal of counsel in the heat of
argument. . . . Thus, as the state’s advocate, a prose-
cutor may argue the state’s case forcefully, [provided
the argument is] fair and based [on] the facts in evidence
and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.
. . . Moreover, [i]t does not follow . . . that every use
of rhetorical language or device [by the prosecutor] is
improper.
.
.
.
The occasional use of rhetorical
devices is simply fair argument.’’ (Internal quotation
marks omitted.) State v. Martinez, 319 Conn. 712, 727,
127 A.3d 164 (2015).
We first address the defendant’s claim that the prose-
cutor’s argument that Hargrove had no money with him
was improper because it was supported by no evidence.
We already concluded that the evidence that the defen-
dant asked Hargrove twice whether he had money, that
the defendant never saw any money in Hargrove’s car,
and that the defendant responded ‘‘I guess so’’ to Fitz-
gerald’s inquiry whether ‘‘the intent was to rob’’ the
victim supports the inference that Hargrove did not
have any money to pay the victim for the marijuana.
See part I A of this opinion. Accordingly, we reject this
claim. For the same reason, we reject the defendant’s
claim that the prosecutor improperly argued that the
victim was startled when he entered Hargrove’s car the
second time because he saw that there was no money.
With respect to the defendant’s claim that the prose-
cutor improperly argued that the defendant did not
know that he had been shot when he shot the victim, this
claim appears to relate exclusively to the defendant’s
claim, with respect to his intentional manslaughter in
the first degree charge, that the state failed to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that he was not acting in
self-defense, which we need not address because we
rejected his insufficiency claims. See part I of this opin-
ion. In turn, because the self-defense claim is not before
us, we need not address this claim of prosecutorial
impropriety. We reach a similar conclusion with respect
to the defendant’s claim that the prosecutor improperly
argued that Depass testified that he had ‘‘assume[d]
that [the victim] had a gun because he had it in the
past,’’ when, in fact, Depass testified that the victim
told him that he had a gun. Because the defendant
contends that the claim relates solely to his claim of
self-defense, we need not address it.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
1 Initially, the state had also charged the defendant with, inter alia, robbery
in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-134 (a) (2) and
conspiracy to commit robbery in the first degree in violation of General
Statutes § 53a-48 and § 53a-134 (a) (2). After the prosecutor rested the state’s
case-in-chief, the trial court granted defense counsel’s motion for a judgment
of acquittal on those charges.
2 Some of the evidence presented at trial suggested that Marley may have
told the defendant about the gun. Although the defendant testified that
Hargrove had told him that there was a gun on the floor in the back seat,
Brian Fitzgerald, a captain with the Bridgeport Police Department, testified
that, when he interviewed the defendant on the day after the shooting, the
defendant had told him that ‘‘[h]e was supposed to pick up the gun that
was [going to] be inside a car that he was picked up in . . . .’’ Fitzgerald
also testified that the defendant had indicated that, ‘‘when he was picked
up in [Hargrove’s white Hyundai Sonata] . . . there would be a gun in
the car.’’ Thus, Fitzgerald’s testimony arguably suggests that the defendant
indicated that Marley had told him, before Hargrove picked the defendant
up at the Duchess restaurant, that there would be a gun in the car.
3 Earlier in the evening, Depass explained to the victim that he had made
a deal to sell the marijuana for $9600. Depass had also given the victim a
bag containing the marijuana and watched him place it in his car. At some
point in the evening, the victim told Depass that he was carrying a gun.
4 Depass testified that he saw Hargrove enter the victim’s car and remove
the container of marijuana.
5 The quality of the video recording was not sufficient to allow the identifi-
cation of facial features. Other evidence, including the defendant’s own
testimony that he had shot the victim, established, however, that the defen-
dant was the person who got out of the car and then followed the car as
it moved down the street.
6 Surveillance video taken at the entrance to the hospital showed a white
car pulling up to the entrance and two men exiting from the car. The video
also showed Hargrove and another person, later identified as a bystander,
supporting the defendant as he entered the hospital. Depass testified that,
after the victim was shot, he went to the Bridgeport police station, where
he viewed the surveillance video. He recognized one of the persons who
was supporting the defendant as the person he saw removing the marijuana
from the car on Berkshire Avenue.
7 At oral argument before this court, counsel for the defendant suggested
that the trial court may have violated the defendant’s double jeopardy rights
when it submitted the felony murder charge to the jury after it had ruled that
there was insufficient evidence to support the predicate felony of robbery
in the third degree. There was also some discussion at oral argument about
the possibility that the guilty verdict on the felony murder charge was legally
inconsistent with the trial court’s ruling. Because the defendant did not
raise either of these claims in his brief, we do not address them. See, e.g.,
J.E. Robert Co. v. Signature Properties, LLC, 309 Conn. 307, 328 n.20, 71
A.3d 492 (2013) (‘‘it is well settled that arguments cannot be raised for the
first time at oral argument’’).
8 Although this claim was not raised at trial, ‘‘it is entitled to review under
State v. Golding, 213 Conn. 233, 239–40, 567 A.2d 823 (1989) [as modified
by In re Yasiel R., 317 Conn. 773, 781, 120 A.3d 1188 (2015)], because any
defendant found guilty on the basis of insufficient evidence has been
deprived of a constitutional right, and would therefore necessarily meet
the four prongs of Golding.’’ (Footnote omitted; internal quotation marks
omitted.) State v. Rodriguez-Roman, 297 Conn. 66, 73, 3 A.3d 783 (2010).
9 The defendant testified that he asked Hargrove twice, between the time
that they first arrived on Berkshire Avenue and the time that they parked
there a second time, whether he had any money, and that he never saw any
money in Hargrove’s car. The jury reasonably could have concluded that,
if there was no money visible in Hargrove’s car when Hargrove parked a
second time on Berkshire Avenue, there was no money. Indeed, it would
have made little sense for Hargrove to conceal the money in the car or to
carry it with him to the victim’s car if he intended to pay the victim for the
marijuana. Thus, the evidence supports the inference that the defendant
knew, before Hargrove left the car, that there was no money, that the plan
all along had been to rob the victim, and that the defendant’s role was to
participate in the robbery. It is well established that ‘‘intent [can] be formed
instantaneously and [does] not require any specific period of time for thought
or premeditation for its formation.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State v. Carter, supra, 317 Conn. 857.
At the very least, the defendant’s testimony that he never saw any money
in Hargrove’s car supports the inference that the victim did not see any
money when he got into the car, as there is no apparent reason why the
money would have been visible to the victim but not to the defendant. In
turn, this supports an inference that Hargrove had no intention of paying
for the marijuana. Finally, although the defendant’s response of ‘‘I guess
so’’ to Fitzgerald’s inquiry whether ‘‘the intent was to rob’’ the victim does
not necessarily suggest that that was the defendant’s intent from the outset,
it does support the reasonable inference that the defendant knew, at some
point during the events leading up to the shooting, that Hargrove intended
to rob the victim, and, therefore, that the defendant’s role was to facilitate
the robbery. See, e.g., State v. Green, 261 Conn. 653, 668, 804 A.2d 810 (2002)
(‘‘the jury is not barred from drawing those inferences consistent with guilt
and is not required to draw only those inferences consistent with innocence’’
(internal quotation marks omitted)).
10 After oral argument before this court, we requested supplemental briefs
on the following issues: (1) ‘‘Given that the jury was instructed on all the
statutory elements of felony murder, and the predicate felony of robbery
in the third degree, analyze whether the defendant’s claim that the evidence
was insufficient to support his conviction on the predicate felony of robbery
in the third degree is more properly framed as a claim that the trial court
improperly failed to instruct the jury on the statutory definitions of ‘appro-
priate,’ set forth in General Statutes § 53a-118 (a) (4) (A), and ‘obtain,’ set
forth in § 53a-118 (a) (2). See State v. Russell, 101 Conn. App. 298, 327 and
n.30, 922 A.2d 191 [cert. denied, 284 Conn. 910, 931 A.2d 934] (2007).’’ And
(2) ‘‘[i]f the defendant’s claim is more properly characterized as a claim of
instructional error, was the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the
definitions set forth in § 53a-118 (a) (2) and (4) (A) error and, if so, was
the error harmful? See State v. Spillane, 255 Conn. 746, 757–58, 770 A.2d
898 (2001).’’
After reviewing the supplemental briefs, we conclude that it would not be
appropriate to construe the defendant’s sufficiency claim as an unpreserved
claim of instructional error. Although we acknowledge that it may have
been preferable for the jury to be instructed on the statutory definitions of
these terms; see, e.g., id., 755; neither party requested that the jury be charged
on the statutory definitions or objected to the instructions on that basis.
Moreover, because we find that there was sufficient evidence for the jury
to find that the defendant committed larceny under the term ‘‘withholds,’’
which is not statutorily defined, we need not address this issue. We thus
address the defendant’s sufficiency claim as it was raised on the merits.
Nevertheless, we do caution trial judges to ensure that jury instructions
include statutory definitions of the terms used in statutes defining crimi-
nal offenses.
11 On appeal to this court, the state also does not limit its theory of the
defendant’s guilt to any one of these terms but asserts that the evidence
was sufficient to support the defendant’s conviction under any of these
three terms. Because we conclude that there was sufficient evidence for
the jury to find that the defendant committed larceny under ‘‘withholds,’’
we need not address the other means of committing larceny under § 53a-119.
12 In support of this claim, the defendant points out that the trial court
granted defense counsel’s motion for a judgment of acquittal on the charge
of robbery in the first degree because the court concluded that the state
had failed to prove that ‘‘there was a prevention or overcoming resistance
to the taking of . . . the marijuana out of the car or that [the victim] was
compelled to deliver up the property,’’ and, therefore, the state failed to
establish that the defendant committed robbery in the third degree. As we
already explained, the defendant has raised no claim that the trial court
violated his double jeopardy rights by submitting the felony murder charge,
with the predicate felony of robbery in the third degree, to the jury, or
that his conviction on the felony murder charge is invalid because it was
inconsistent with the trial court’s judgment of acquittal on the charge of
robbery in the first degree. See footnote 7 of this opinion. We conclude,
therefore, that we may consider all of the evidence presented at trial that
the jury considered in determining whether the evidence was sufficient to
establish that the defendant used or threatened to use physical force for
the purposes set forth in § 53a-133.
13 Because we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to establish that
the defendant committed robbery, we need not address the defendant’s
claim that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he attempted to
commit robbery.
14 Specifically, the prosecutor argued that, on the night of the shooting,
‘‘the defendant was there as muscle. And, as part of the role of muscle, is
it reasonable to believe that a conversation occurred that wasn’t testified
to by the [defendant]? [The defendant’s] story is, and I’d suggest that he
wasn’t [going to] change that, that [the victim] gets in the car, and he’s
startled. Remember, [the judge] talked about you can believe some, all or
none of what’s said; you can believe that [the victim] was startled. Was it
reasonable to believe that he was startled when he found out that there
was [$9600] worth of drugs in that car behind him, he was told not to get
in the car, and, when he gets in there, he finds out there’s no money? There’s
no money. That would startle him.’’