State v. Lynch ( 2019 )


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    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. KEVIN LYNCH
    (AC 41420)
    Lavine, Keller and Elgo, Js.
    Syllabus
    The defendant, who had been convicted on guilty pleas under multiple
    informations of three counts operating a motor vehicle while under the
    influence of intoxicating liquor in violation of statute (§ 14-227a), two
    counts of failure to appear in the second degree and of criminal trespass
    in the first degree, appealed to this court challenging the trial court’s
    denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. At sentencing, the
    defendant made an oral motion to withdraw his guilty pleas on the
    ground that he was under the influence of psychotropic medication at
    the time he entered the plea agreement and because the plea canvass
    was deficient. Defense counsel also claimed that he was ineffective.
    The trial court denied the motion to withdraw the guilty pleas and
    sentenced the defendant in accordance with his pleas. Held:
    1. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in failing to conduct an eviden-
    tiary hearing with respect to the defendant’s motion to withdraw his
    guilty pleas; the defendant never requested an evidentiary hearing on
    the motion, the trial court afforded him an opportunity to be heard on
    his various claims, including his motion to withdraw his pleas at the
    sentencing hearing itself, and the defendant failed to provide an adequate
    factual basis to support a further hearing, as the defendant told the
    court during the plea canvass that he was not under the influence of
    drugs, alcohol or medications, he did not provide the names of any
    medications or claim that they rendered his guilty pleas involuntary,
    defense counsel’s assertion that the plea canvass was deficient for failing
    to specify that the defendant’s driver’s license could be revoked perma-
    nently was not a reason among the grounds enumerated in the applicable
    rule of practice (§ 39-27) for the withdrawal of a plea, and neither defense
    counsel nor the defendant provided a factual basis for the assertion
    that defense counsel had been ineffective.
    2. The defendant could not prevail on his claim that the trial court should
    have granted his motion to withdraw his guilty pleas, pursuant to the
    applicable rule of practice (§ 39-27), on the ground that his counsel was
    ineffective, as the defendant failed to satisfy his burden of providing
    that the guilty pleas resulted from the denial of effective assistance
    of counsel; although the defendant claimed that his counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance for failing to investigate his case in several ways,
    defense counsel presented only bare assertions of those claims, and
    the defendant, thus, presented an inadequate factual and legal basis to
    support his assertion, and neither the defendant nor his counsel articu-
    lated or proved that but for counsel’s alleged errors, the defendant
    would not have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.
    3. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by failing to conduct an
    evidentiary hearing prior to terminating the defendant’s participation in
    an alcohol education program, the purpose of which is to allow first
    time offenders of § 14-227a an opportunity to rehabilitate so as to avoid
    further involvement with the criminal justice system while protecting
    the public from persons who operate a motor vehicle while under the
    influence of intoxicating liquor; the defendant had been admitted to the
    program following his second operating a motor vehicle while under
    the influence charge, after which he was arrested for a third such charge
    and entered into a global plea agreement that included guilty pleas to
    three counts of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence as
    a first offender, and it was apparent from the record that the trial court
    recognized that, by pleading guilty to those three counts, the defendant
    effectively conceded that, despite participating in the program, he was
    not entitled to a dismissal of the charge, and in light of the circumstances
    surrounding the defendant’s pleas, the court properly made an indepen-
    dent determination that the termination of the defendant’s participation
    in the program was warranted.
    Argued April 22—officially released October 22, 2019
    Procedural History
    Substitute informations charging the defendant with
    three counts each of the crimes of operating a motor
    vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor
    as a first offender and failure to appear in the second
    degree, with the crimes of risk of injury to a child,
    criminal trespass in the first degree, disorderly conduct,
    failure to appear in the first degree, criminal violation
    of a protective order, violation of the conditions of
    release in the second degree and illegal operation of a
    motor vehicle while his driver’s license was suspended,
    and with the infraction of operating an unregistered
    motor vehicle, brought to the Superior Court in the
    judicial district of Hartford, geographical area number
    fourteen, where the defendant was presented to the
    court, Prats, J., on guilty pleas as to three counts of
    operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of
    intoxicating liquor as a first offender, two counts of
    failure to appear in the second degree, and one count
    each of risk of injury to a child and criminal trespass
    in the first degree; thereafter, the court, Williams, J.,
    denied the defendant’s motion to withdraw and to
    vacate his guilty pleas, and rendered judgments of guilty
    and sentenced the defendant in accordance with the
    pleas; subsequently, the court, Williams, J., vacated the
    conviction of risk of injury of a child in accordance
    with the pleas; thereafter, the state entered a nolle pro-
    sequi as to the remaining charges, and the defendant
    appealed to this court. Affirmed.
    Kevin Lynch,       self-represented,    the   appellant
    (defendant).
    Melissa L. Streeto, senior assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, were Gail P. Hardy, state’s
    attorney, and Michael Weber, senior assistant state’s
    attorney, for the appellee (the state).
    Opinion
    ELGO, J. The self-represented defendant, Kevin
    Lynch, appeals from the judgments of conviction ren-
    dered by the trial court following the denial of his
    motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. On appeal, the
    defendant claims that the court improperly (1) failed
    to conduct an evidentiary hearing on his motion to
    withdraw his guilty pleas, (2) denied his motion to with-
    draw his guilty pleas, and (3) failed to conduct an evi-
    dentiary hearing prior to terminating his participation
    in the pretrial alcohol education program (program).
    We affirm the judgments of the trial court.
    The record reveals the following relevant facts and
    procedural history. On October 7, 2016, pursuant to
    a global plea agreement that encompassed all of the
    defendant’s cases and was reached in accordance with
    State v. Garvin, 
    242 Conn. 296
    , 
    699 A.2d 921
    (1997),1
    the defendant entered guilty pleas to three counts of
    operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of
    intoxicating liquor as a first offender in violation of
    General Statutes § 14-227a, two counts of failure to
    appear in the second degree in violation of General
    Statues § 53a-173, and to one count each of risk of injury
    to a child in violation of General Statutes § 53-21, and
    criminal trespass in the first degree in violation of Gen-
    eral Statutes § 53a-107. In accordance with the Garvin
    agreement, the court, Prats, J., agreed to sentence the
    defendant to a total effective sentence of four years of
    incarceration, execution suspended, with three years of
    probation. Pursuant to that agreement, the defendant’s
    conviction of risk of injury to a child would be vacated.
    The court, however, also advised the defendant that he
    remained subject to a possible sentence of up to four-
    teen and one-half years of incarceration if he violated
    the terms of the Garvin agreement by failing to comply
    with an inpatient alcohol treatment program, by being
    arrested with probable cause on any new charges prior
    to his sentencing, or by failing to appear at the sentenc-
    ing hearing.
    The sentencing hearing was held on February 15,
    2018. At that time, the state indicated that the defendant
    had complied with the conditions of the Garvin agree-
    ment and, therefore, the state was prepared to enter a
    nolle prosequi as to the defendant’s conviction of risk
    of injury to a child, once the court vacated that convic-
    tion. The court, Williams, J., then asked the clerk to
    verify before they proceeded that the program in one
    of the defendant’s cases was previously terminated.2
    The clerk responded that he had no record of that in
    the court’s file. In response, the state argued that the
    ‘‘agreed disposition and the fact that the plea was
    entered . . . more than implies the fact that [the pro-
    gram] was supposed to be terminated . . . .’’
    Defense counsel responded that he believed that a
    notice of successful completion of the program was
    filed with the court by the bail commissioner. He also
    stated that the program had not been terminated and
    that ‘‘there is a valid argument to be made in that file
    that the [successful completion of the program] should
    be acknowledged by the court . . . [a]nd that matter
    should be dismissed . . . .’’ The court then asked
    defense counsel if this issue was raised at the time of
    the Garvin plea. Defense counsel answered: ‘‘No, it was
    not [raised], because in all candor to this court, I did not
    comprehend the procedural history of [the defendant’s]
    several cases . . . . At that point in time, my primary
    focus was to persuade the court . . . to allow for inpa-
    tient treatment for [the defendant].’’
    Defense counsel went on to explain: ‘‘But, I also didn’t
    understand at that time . . . that [the defendant] was
    under [the influence of] about four psychotropic medi-
    cations administered by the Department of Correction.
    And what I also didn’t take up with the court or with
    the state is the history of this particular file and the
    fact that the [program] had been granted by the court.
    I believe Judge Suarez had granted the [program] with
    full knowledge with the preexisting matter then still at
    GA 10 in New London. Also, there was a family violence
    education program granted in this courthouse at about
    the same time in a different but companion matter. And
    there was . . . in that case a successful completion of
    the family violence education program, as well. And
    only since long after October 6 have I become aware
    and better understood the procedural history here. And
    then, while . . . I have learned only in the past week
    that there . . . was an absolute defense to the New
    London failure to appear, to which he [pleaded] guilty
    on October 7, 2016, which I had no understanding about
    it at all. And . . . there is a substantial defense to [the
    failure to appear charge], Your Honor. So . . . the com-
    bination of those . . . factored in the new information,
    is why I would respectfully pray the court to allow me
    to fulfill my obligations to [the defendant] . . . by
    allowing me three or four days to file motions and a
    brief on this issue of [the program]. The last case of
    the operating under the influence occurred after the
    one year dismissal date of the [program], as I recall,
    Your Honor. And the [program] had not been dismissed
    on the scheduled date only because . . . documenta-
    tion from [Connecticut Valley Hospital] had not been
    received by the bail commissioner. So what I’m saying
    in good faith, to the court and to the state, is that there
    is a substantial amount of information that I respectfully
    suggest calls into question the validity of the pleas, to
    the failures to appear, as well as the plea to the file
    that we’ve just confirmed the [program] had not been
    terminated in, at the time of the plea.’’
    The court responded by asking defense counsel if he
    wanted the court to not honor the plea agreement. The
    court also pointed out that the plea agreement was
    entered in 2016, that it involved matters dating back to
    2014, and that the court had granted multiple continu-
    ances in this matter. While defense counsel and the
    defendant conferred, the court stated that the clerk had
    discovered that ‘‘on [program] progress reports . . .
    the defendant, apparently, did not complete the fifteen
    sessions for which he was referred. However, he com-
    pleted detox and residential treatment.’’
    Subsequently, the following colloquy occurred:
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: I would ask Your Honor for sim-
    ply four days to file—
    ‘‘The Court: Well, that’s denied. . . . I said back in
    January that today was the day for sentencing. I made
    that clear. On January 11, I made that abundantly clear.
    This is it. This is the sentencing day. And now I’m
    hearing an oral motion to, I guess, delay sentencing. I’m
    hearing an oral motion to not honor the plea agreement,
    after a full canvass based on information that’s being
    brought to the court’s attention for the first time. So
    are you asking the court—first of all, on the [program],
    your position is that case should be dismissed despite
    the clear plea agreement with Judge Prats?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Yes.
    ‘‘The Court: That’s your motion?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    ‘‘The Court: And separately, you’re asking the court
    not to honor the Judge Prats plea agreement of the
    fully suspended sentence and the vacating of the risk
    of injury?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Well, what I’m asking, Your
    Honor, is the opportunity to provide the court, and
    specifically the state, with documentation regarding the
    failures to appear.
    ‘‘The Court: That you don’t have today on what’s the
    known sentencing date on a case where the pleas were
    entered [in] October, 2016. That request is denied.
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    ‘‘The Court: Anything further from defense at this
    point?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: May the defendant withdraw his
    . . . pleas from October?
    ‘‘The Court: Based on what?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Based on the fact that, Your
    Honor, he was under [the influence of] four psy-
    chotropic medications from [the Department of Correc-
    tion], based upon the fact that the canvass by Judge
    Prats did not specify the penalties that would attach to
    three convictions of operating under the influence.
    ‘‘The Court: Such as what?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: A lifetime revocation and, ah—
    ‘‘The Court: Are you saying that’s part of—it’s some-
    thing that I normally point out. But, where’s your legal
    support for that argument?
    ***
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: From the Practice Book, Your
    Honor, for the canvass of a guilty plea.’’
    Subsequently, the court asked the state if it would
    like to be heard. The state responded by arguing that
    Judge Prats complied with the requirements in Practice
    Book § 39-19 for the acceptance of a plea. The state also
    enumerated the grounds for allowing the withdrawal
    of a plea pursuant to Practice Book § 39-27, and argued
    that the defendant had ‘‘no basis upon which at this
    particular point to withdraw the plea.’’ Accordingly, the
    state argued that the court should go forward with sen-
    tencing.
    Thereafter, the court asked defense counsel if he
    wanted to be heard and the following colloquy
    occurred:
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, I am claiming that
    I was ineffective for [the defendant].
    ‘‘The Court: Why should that not be taken up as part
    of a habeas? The state has pointed out a persuasive
    argument as to why defense counsel’s motion should
    be denied—his oral motion—should be denied. Why
    should that not be a habeas as opposed to vacating the
    plea? Because, then here’s what is going to happen? So
    you’re telling me it’s a habeas. And then you’re going
    to tell me that you’re moving to withdraw, right, for
    trial, because you’re ineffective and shouldn’t be repre-
    senting him going forward, right? That’s where . . .
    this is headed, now.
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: I don’t . . . think that it is,
    Your Honor.
    ‘‘The Court: Okay. So despite a concession that you
    think that you’re ineffective, you’re saying you’d be
    prepared to go forward with this trial, if it were sched-
    uled immediately?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
    ‘‘The Court. Okay. Anything further from either party
    on any of this?
    ‘‘[The Prosecutor]: Judge, I indicated the Practice
    Book sections and the fact that I agree, obviously, with
    the court as I was implying. It’s a habeas matter. I
    can’t see why in the world they should be allowed to
    withdraw at this point.
    ‘‘The Court: Anything further from defense?
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: No, thank you, Your Honor.’’
    Thereafter, the court concluded: ‘‘For the reasons
    cited by the state, the court finds no legal reason to
    vacate the pleas and finds that it would not be in the
    interest of justice to further delay these matters that
    go back four years in some cases. . . . By way of plea
    agreement, in docket number ending in 1617, the court
    terminates the [program]. This was the clear intention
    of both parties when the plea agreement was entered
    in front of Judge Prats, that this would result in a convic-
    tion for driving under the influence, as a triple first
    offender. The defendant is receiving a substantial bene-
    fit by way of a fully suspended sentence and being
    allowed to vacate his felony plea to the risk of injury
    to a child. For all of those reasons, [the program] is
    terminated in [docket number ending in] 1617.’’
    Subsequently, the court sentenced the defendant to
    a total effective sentence of four years, execution sus-
    pended, with three years of probation subject to certain
    special conditions, including a $500 fine for each convic-
    tion of operating a motor vehicle while under the influ-
    ence, as required by law, and 300 hours of community
    service. The defendant also was obligated to comply
    with the ignition airlock device requirements applicable
    to him by law, and he was ordered not to drive without
    a valid motor vehicle license. Pursuant to the plea agree-
    ment, the court vacated the defendant’s risk of injury
    to a child conviction and the state, thereafter, entered
    a nolle prosequi as to that count. This appeal followed.
    I
    The defendant first argues that the court abused its
    discretion by failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing
    on his motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. In response,
    the state contends that the defendant failed to request
    an evidentiary hearing, rendering the claim unpre-
    served, and, in any event, under State v. Simpson, 
    329 Conn. 820
    , 
    189 A.3d 1215
    (2018), the defendant was
    not entitled to an evidentiary hearing. We agree with
    the state.
    We begin with the standard of review and the relevant
    principles of law that govern our analysis. ‘‘It is well
    established that [t]he burden is always on the defendant
    to show a plausible reason for the withdrawal of a plea
    of guilty. . . . To warrant consideration, the defendant
    must allege and provide facts which justify permitting
    him to withdraw his plea under [Practice Book § 39-
    27]. . . . Whether such proof is made is a question
    for the court in its sound discretion, and a denial of
    permission to withdraw is reversible only if that discre-
    tion has been abused. . . . In determining whether the
    trial court [has] abused its discretion, this court must
    make every reasonable presumption in favor of [the
    correctness of] its action. . . . Our review of a trial
    court’s exercise of the legal discretion vested in it is
    limited to the questions of whether the trial court cor-
    rectly applied the law and could reasonably have
    reached the conclusion that it did. . . .
    ‘‘Motions to withdraw guilty pleas are governed by
    Practice Book §§ 39-26 and 39-27. Practice Book § 39-
    26 provides in relevant part: A defendant may withdraw
    his . . . plea of guilty . . . as a matter of right until the
    plea has been accepted. After acceptance, the judicial
    authority shall allow the defendant to withdraw his
    . . . plea upon proof of one of the grounds in [Practice
    Book §] 39-273 . . . .
    ‘‘We further observe that there is no language in Prac-
    tice Book §§ 39-26 and 39-27 imposing an affirmative
    duty upon the court to conduct an inquiry into the basis
    of a defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
    . . . [T]he administrative need for judicial expedition
    and certainty is such that trial courts cannot be
    expected to inquire into the factual basis of a defen-
    dant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea when the
    defendant has presented no specific facts in support of
    the motion. To impose such an obligation would do
    violence to the reasonable administrative needs of a
    busy trial court, as this would, in all likelihood, provide
    defendants strong incentive to make vague assertions
    of an invalid plea in hopes of delaying their sentenc-
    ing. . . .
    ‘‘When the trial court does grant a hearing on a defen-
    dant’s motion to withdraw a guilty plea, the require-
    ments and formalities of the hearing are limited. . . .
    Indeed, a hearing may be as simple as offering the
    defendant the opportunity to present his argument on
    his motion for withdrawal. . . . [A]n evidentiary hear-
    ing is rare, and, outside of an evidentiary hearing, often
    a limited interrogation by the [c]ourt will suffice [and]
    [t]he defendant should be afforded [a] reasonable
    opportunity to present his contentions. . . .
    ‘‘Thus, when conducting a plea withdrawal hearing,
    a trial court may provide the defendant an opportunity
    to present a factual basis for the motion by asking open-
    ended questions. . . . Furthermore, in assessing the
    adequacy of the trial court’s consideration of a motion
    to withdraw a guilty plea, we do not examine the dia-
    logue between defense counsel and the trial court . . .
    in isolation but, rather, evaluate it in light of other
    relevant factors, such as the thoroughness of the initial
    plea canvass. . . .
    ‘‘This flexibility is an essential corollary of the trial
    court’s authority to manage cases before it as is neces-
    sary. . . . The case management authority is an inher-
    ent power necessarily vested in trial courts to manage
    their own affairs in order to achieve the expeditious
    disposition of cases. . . . Therefore, the trial court is
    not required to formalistically announce that it is con-
    ducting a plea withdrawal hearing; nor must it demar-
    cate the hearing from other related court proceedings.
    It may conduct a plea withdrawal hearing as part of
    another court proceeding, such as a sentencing hearing.
    . . . When a trial court inquires into a defendant’s plea
    withdrawal motion on the record, it is conducting a
    plea withdrawal hearing.’’ (Citations omitted; emphasis
    altered; footnote added; internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. 
    Simpson, supra
    , 
    329 Conn. 836
    –39.
    In Simpson, our Supreme Court held that the trial
    court ‘‘conducted a hearing on the defendant’s motion
    to withdraw his guilty plea, after which no further evi-
    dentiary hearing was required, because his allegations
    did not furnish a proper basis for withdrawal under
    Practice Book § 39-27.’’ 
    Id., 835. Our
    Supreme Court
    further determined that the record in that case reflected
    that ‘‘the trial court gave the defendant a reasonable
    opportunity to present his contentions’’ and a ‘‘review
    of the trial court’s approach illustrates the adequacy of
    the hearing.’’ 
    Id., 839. Thus,
    it considered the trial
    court’s inquiry into the defendant’s motion and how the
    trial court ‘‘allowed the defendant to present a factual
    basis for the motion . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id., 839–40. Our
    Supreme Court also explained
    that it was ‘‘irrelevant that the court did not explicitly
    label its inquiry into the defendant’s motion as a hearing.
    Nor [did] it matter that the trial court addressed the
    defendant’s motion during sentencing. The defendant
    and his attorney both had ample opportunity to meet
    their burden of establishing a plausible reason for the
    withdrawal of a plea of guilty.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 841. As
    the state points out, the defendant never requested
    an evidentiary hearing. Instead, the trial court afforded
    the defendant an opportunity to be heard on his various
    claims, including his motion to withdraw his pleas at
    the sentencing hearing itself. The transcript of the sen-
    tencing hearing reveals that the defendant asked if he
    could withdraw his guilty pleas4 and the court asked
    in response: ‘‘Based on what?’’ Accordingly, like the
    trial court in Simpson, the court in the present case
    afforded the defendant the opportunity to ‘‘present a
    factual basis for the motion through an open-ended
    question.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 840. When
    defense counsel responded by stating that the
    defendant was under the influence of medications and
    that the canvass ‘‘did not specify the penalties that
    would attach to three convictions of operating under the
    influence,’’ the court then inquired further with another
    open-ended question: ‘‘Such as what?’’ Additionally,
    after the state argued that Judge Prats had complied
    with the requirements of Practice Book § 39-19 for
    acceptance of a plea, enumerated the grounds for
    allowing the withdrawal of a plea pursuant to Practice
    Book § 39-27, and argued that the defendant had pre-
    sented no factual basis to support the withdrawal of
    the pleas, the court provided the defendant with an
    opportunity to respond.
    At that point, defense counsel stated for the first time:
    ‘‘Your Honor, I am claiming that I was ineffective for
    [the defendant].’’ After suggesting the circumstances
    were more appropriate for a habeas proceeding, the
    court then asked if either party had anything further.
    Although the state made some final remarks, defense
    counsel stated that he had nothing further. The court
    then asked the defendant if he wished to add anything,
    to which the defendant responded that he had nothing
    to add. Finally, the court confirmed with the state that
    it was willing to follow the agreement as to the risk of
    injury to a child conviction. The court then asked
    defense counsel and then the defendant, once again, if
    either had anything further. Both defense counsel and
    the defendant responded that they had nothing further.5
    Thereafter, the court in the present case, like the trial
    court in Simpson, ‘‘terminated the hearing by denying
    the plea withdrawal motion . . . .’’ 
    Id., 841. In
    considering whether the defendant provided an
    adequate factual basis for requiring an evidentiary hear-
    ing, we turn to the specific grounds asserted in the
    defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas. The
    defendant provided three bases on which he sought to
    withdraw his pleas: (1) the defendant was under the
    influence of psychotropic medications at the time that
    he pleaded guilty; (2) the plea canvass was deficient
    for failing to specify that the defendant’s driver’s license
    might be permanently revoked by the Department of
    Motor Vehicles; and (3) defense counsel had rendered
    ineffective assistance. As to the claim that the defendant
    was under the influence of psychotropic medications
    at the time that he pleaded guilty, the defendant did
    not elaborate at the sentencing hearing beyond that
    bald assertion. He did not provide the names of those
    medications, or evidence of those medications and their
    effects. See State v. Stith, 
    108 Conn. App. 126
    , 130–31,
    
    946 A.2d 1274
    (court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying defendant’s motion to withdraw guilty plea on
    basis that he was under influence of medication when
    he entered plea where defendant stated at plea canvass
    that he was not under the influence of any alcohol,
    drugs, or medication and defendant provided at hearing
    on motion to withdraw plea names of medications but
    did not offer proof of their effects), cert. denied, 
    289 Conn. 905
    , 
    957 A.2d 874
    (2008). Additionally, the defen-
    dant did not claim that his use of those medications
    rendered his guilty pleas involuntary.
    ‘‘[O]ur case law requires that a defendant show a
    plausible reason for the withdrawal of a guilty plea . . .
    and allege and provide facts that warrant a trial court’s
    consideration of his motion.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) State v. Anthony D., 
    320 Conn. 842
    , 854, 
    134 A.3d 219
    (2016). Moreover, ‘‘we do
    not view the hearing in isolation but can look to other
    factors, such as the existence of a thorough plea can-
    vass . . . .’’ State v. 
    Simpson, supra
    , 
    329 Conn. 841
    ;
    see also State v. 
    Stith, supra
    , 
    108 Conn. App. 131
    (‘‘[i]t
    is well established that [a] trial court may properly rely
    on . . . the responses of the [defendant] at the time
    [he] responded to the trial court’s plea canvass’’ [inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted]). Our review of the plea
    canvass reveals that the defendant was asked if he was
    under the influence of any alcohol, drugs, or medica-
    tions. The defendant responded: ‘‘No, Your Honor.’’
    Accordingly, on the basis of our review of the record,
    we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion
    in failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the defen-
    dant’s motion to withdraw his guilty pleas due to his
    allegedly being under the influence of drugs at the time
    of his pleas because the defendant failed to demonstrate
    an adequate factual basis to support a further hearing.
    In considering the defendant’s claim that the plea
    canvass was deficient for failing to specify that his
    operator’s license could be revoked permanently, the
    court asked defense counsel to provide legal support
    for that proposition. When defense counsel referred to
    the rules of practice, the court properly concluded that
    the relevant provisions of Practice Book § 39-19 on the
    acceptance of a guilty plea do not require advising the
    defendant of the possible revocation of his driver’s
    license. ‘‘The . . . constitutional essentials for the
    acceptance of a plea of guilty are included in our rules
    and are reflected in Practice Book §§ [39-19 and 39-20].
    . . . The failure to inform a defendant as to all possible
    indirect and collateral consequences does not render
    a plea unintelligent or involuntary in a constitutional
    sense.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Reid, 
    277 Conn. 764
    , 780, 
    894 A.2d 963
    (2006). Thus,
    defense counsel’s assertion that the plea canvass was
    deficient for failing to specify that the defendant’s driv-
    er’s license could be revoked permanently was not a
    reason ‘‘among the grounds enumerated in Practice
    Book § 39-27 for the withdrawal of a plea, and the court
    had no reason to inquire further, such as by way of an
    evidentiary hearing.’’ State v. 
    Simpson, supra
    , 
    329 Conn. 841
    –42. Accordingly, because it is clear, as a matter of
    law, that the defendant could not prevail, we conclude
    that the court did not abuse its discretion in failing to
    conduct an evidentiary hearing.
    As to defense counsel’s assertion that he had ren-
    dered ineffective assistance, on appeal, the defendant
    and the state disagree as to what basis defense counsel
    provided at the sentencing hearing to support his argu-
    ment. The state argues that defense counsel provided
    only a ‘‘conclusory assertion that he had been ineffec-
    tive . . . .’’ In contrast, the defendant argues that
    defense counsel provided evidence of his ineffec-
    tiveness when (1) he told the court that he ‘‘did not
    comprehend the procedural history of [the defendant’s]
    several cases’’; (2) he stated that he was not aware at
    the time of the defendant’s guilty plea that the defendant
    ‘‘was [on] about four psychotropic medications admin-
    istered by the Department of Correction’’; (3) he indi-
    cated that he ‘‘didn’t take up with the court or with the
    state . . . the history of this particular file and the fact
    that the [program] had been granted by the court’’; and
    (4) he stated that he had ‘‘learned only in the last week
    that there . . . was an absolute defense to the New
    London failure to appear . . . .’’ Our review of the
    record, however, indicates that those arguments were
    not made in support of an ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim. Instead, those claims were advanced
    initially to justify a continuance of the sentencing hear-
    ing, which the court denied,6 and then subsequently to
    support a motion to withdraw the guilty pleas.
    At the point that defense counsel stated that he was
    ineffective, neither defense counsel nor the defendant
    provided any factual basis to support that assertion.
    Moreover, after questioning counsel about whether
    these claims more properly were for a subsequent
    habeas proceeding, the court asked counsel and the
    defendant several times whether they had anything fur-
    ther to say regarding the claim of ineffectiveness and
    the withdrawal of the pleas. Neither the defendant nor
    his counsel added any further support or factual basis
    for the ineffective assistance of counsel claim. As we
    have recounted previously, defense counsel did not
    argue his oral motion to withdraw the guilty pleas until
    the court denied his initial request for time to file docu-
    ments with the court. Additionally, once defense coun-
    sel specifically began arguing the motion to withdraw
    the guilty pleas, defense counsel asserted that the guilty
    pleas should be withdrawn because the defendant was
    under the influence of psychotropic medications at the
    time that he pleaded guilty and that the plea canvass
    was deficient for failing to specify that the defendant’s
    driver’s license might be revoked permanently. It was
    only after the state enumerated the specific grounds
    for withdrawing a guilty plea provided by Practice Book
    § 39-27, including ineffective assistance of counsel, and
    argued that defense counsel had not provided a factual
    basis substantiating any ground, that defense counsel
    asserted that he had provided ineffective assistance.7
    ‘‘At the time he made an oral motion to withdraw the
    defendant’s guilty plea, it was incumbent upon defense
    counsel to provide the trial court with specific reasons
    to support the motion, but he failed to do so.’’ State v.
    Anthony 
    D., supra
    , 
    320 Conn. 854
    .
    We observe from the record that the proceeding
    evolved from a motion for a continuance, to a motion
    to withdraw the guilty pleas, to what appears from
    the record to be an impromptu claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel as a basis for withdrawing the
    guilty pleas. The court clearly addressed each issue
    appropriately as they were presented. Under the cir-
    cumstances of this case, we cannot conclude that the
    court abused its discretion in failing to afford the defen-
    dant an evidentiary hearing.
    II
    The defendant next claims that the court abused its
    discretion when it denied his motion to withdraw his
    guilty pleas. Specifically, the defendant argues that the
    court should have granted his motion to withdraw his
    guilty pleas pursuant to Practice Book § 39-27 (4)
    because his counsel rendered ineffective assistance.8
    We disagree.
    We begin with the standard of review and relevant
    principles of law that govern our analysis. As previously
    noted, Practice Book § 39-26 provides in relevant part:
    ‘‘A defendant may withdraw his or her plea of guilty
    . . . as a matter of right until the plea has been
    accepted. After acceptance, the judicial authority shall
    allow the defendant to withdraw his or her plea upon
    proof of one of the grounds in [Practice Book §] 39-27.
    A defendant may not withdraw his or her plea after the
    conclusion of the proceeding at which the sentence
    was imposed.’’
    ‘‘[O]ur standard of review is abuse of discretion for
    decisions on motions to withdraw guilty pleas brought
    under Practice Book § 39-27. . . . Practice Book § [39-
    27] specifies circumstances under which a defendant
    may withdraw a guilty plea after it has been entered.9
    [O]nce entered, a guilty plea cannot be withdrawn
    except by leave of the court, within its sound discretion,
    and a denial thereof is reversible only if it appears that
    there has been an abuse of discretion. . . . The burden
    is always on the defendant to show a plausible reason
    for withdrawal of a plea of guilty. . . .
    ‘‘In determining whether the trial court [has] abused
    its discretion, this court must make every reasonable
    presumption in favor of [the correctness of] its action.
    . . . Our review of a trial court’s exercise of the legal
    discretion vested in it is limited to the questions of
    whether the trial court correctly applied the law and
    could reasonably have reached the conclusion that it
    did.’’ (Citations omitted; footnote added; internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) State v. Lameirao, 
    135 Conn. App. 302
    , 319–20, 
    42 A.3d 414
    , cert. denied, 
    305 Conn. 915
    ,
    
    46 A.3d 171
    (2012).
    ‘‘Almost without exception, we have required that a
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel must be raised
    by way of habeas corpus, rather than by direct appeal,
    because of the need for a full evidentiary record for
    such [a] claim. . . . Absent the evidentiary hearing
    available in the collateral action, review in this court
    of the ineffective assistance claim is at best difficult
    and sometimes impossible. The evidentiary hearing
    provides the trial court with the evidence which is often
    necessary to evaluate the competency of the defense
    and the harmfulness of any incompetency. . . .
    ‘‘Practice Book § 39-27 (4) provides an explicit excep-
    tion to this general rule, however, and allows a defen-
    dant to withdraw a guilty plea after its acceptance if
    the plea resulted from the denial of effective assistance
    of counsel . . . . We recognize, therefore, that the
    defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
    is procedurally correct. Nevertheless, we are mindful
    that on the rare occasions that we have addressed an
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim on direct appeal
    . . . we have limited our review to situations in which
    the record of the trial court’s allegedly improper action
    was adequate for review or the issue presented was
    a question of law, not one of fact requiring further
    evidentiary development. We point out, finally, that irre-
    spective of whether a defendant proceeds by way of
    habeas corpus or direct appeal, our review is the same,
    and the burden remains on the defendant to produce
    an adequate record so that an appellate court may ascer-
    tain whether counsel’s performance was ineffective.’’
    (Citations omitted; emphasis in original; footnote omit-
    ted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Turner,
    
    267 Conn. 414
    , 426–27, 
    838 A.2d 947
    , cert. denied, 
    543 U.S. 809
    , 
    125 S. Ct. 36
    , 
    160 L. Ed. 2d 12
    (2004).
    ‘‘A defendant must satisfy two requirements . . . to
    prevail on a claim that his guilty plea resulted from
    ineffective assistance of counsel. . . . First, he must
    prove that the assistance was not within the range of
    competence displayed by lawyers with ordinary training
    and skill in criminal law . . . . Second, there must
    exist such an interrelationship between the ineffective
    assistance of counsel and the guilty plea that it can be
    said that the plea was not voluntary and intelligent
    because of the ineffective assistance. . . . In
    addressing this second prong, the United States
    Supreme Court held in Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    ,
    
    106 S. Ct. 366
    , 
    88 L. Ed. 2d 203
    (1985), that to satisfy
    the prejudice requirement, the defendant must show
    that there is a reasonable probability that, but for coun-
    sel’s errors, he would not have pleaded guilty and would
    have insisted on going to trial. . . . The resolution of
    this inquiry will largely depend on the likely success of
    any new defenses or trial tactics that would have been
    available but for counsel’s ineffective assistance.’’ (Cita-
    tion omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State
    v. Scales, 
    82 Conn. App. 126
    , 129–30, 
    842 A.2d 1158
    ,
    cert. denied, 
    269 Conn. 902
    , 
    851 A.2d 305
    (2004). ‘‘In its
    analysis, a reviewing court may look to the performance
    prong or to the prejudice prong, and the petitioner’s
    failure to prove either is fatal to a [claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel].’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. 
    Lameirao, supra
    , 
    135 Conn. App. 327
    .
    In his appellate brief, the defendant argues that his
    defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance for fail-
    ing to investigate his case in various ways, including
    failing to investigate his participation in the program,
    the court’s failure to hold a hearing prior to terminating
    his participation in the program, the circumstances of
    one of his arrests, the timing and admissibility of his
    blood test, compliance with General States § 14-227b,
    ‘‘the retaliatory nature’’ of the risk of injury and reckless
    endangerment charges, the charge of failure to appear
    for which defense counsel ‘‘would have uncovered
    exculpatory evidence of the clerk sending the notice
    to the wrong address,’’ and ‘‘if the defendant was under
    the influence of psychotropic medications.’’ In
    response, the state argues that ‘‘[n]one of the defen-
    dant’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel are
    reviewable because they were not raised below, and,
    to the extent that they were [raised below], he presented
    no evidence to support any of them.’’ We agree with
    the state.
    To the extent that the defendant raised these grounds
    before the trial court to support his claim that he should
    be allowed to withdraw his guilty pleas based on the
    ineffective assistance of counsel, all the court had
    before it was the bare assertions that defense counsel
    made at the beginning of the sentencing hearing, well
    before he actually asserted that he had rendered ineffec-
    tive assistance. As we already have discussed, the defen-
    dant presented an inadequate factual and legal basis to
    support those assertions. See Practice Book § 39-26
    (‘‘[a]fter acceptance, the judicial authority shall allow
    the defendant to withdraw his or her plea upon proof
    of one of the grounds in [Practice Book §] 39-27’’
    [emphasis added]). Additionally, with regard to the prej-
    udice prong, neither defense counsel nor the defendant
    articulated before the trial court, much less proved,
    that but for counsel’s errors, the defendant would not
    have pleaded guilty and would have insisted on going
    to trial. In light of the foregoing, we conclude that the
    defendant has failed to satisfy his burden of proving
    that the guilty pleas resulted from the denial of effective
    assistance of counsel. The court, therefore, did not
    abuse its discretion in denying the defendant’s motion
    to withdraw the guilty pleas based on the ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim.
    III
    The defendant next claims that the court abused its
    discretion by failing to conduct an evidentiary hearing
    prior to terminating his participation in the program.
    We disagree.
    The following additional facts are relevant to this
    claim on appeal. The defendant was arrested on May
    5, 2014, and charged with operating a motor vehicle
    while under the influence of intoxicating liquor in viola-
    tion of § 14-227a.10 The defendant subsequently was
    arrested on June 20, 2014, and charged for the second
    time with operating a motor vehicle while under the
    influence in violation of § 14-227a.
    The defendant applied to participate in the program
    pursuant to his second operating while under the influ-
    ence charge. His application was accepted on February
    20, 2015, and the program was granted on the defen-
    dant’s behalf at a hearing held on April 2, 2015.11 The
    transcript of that hearing reveals that the defendant
    was to complete fifteen sessions and the program termi-
    nation date was set for April 1, 2016. No hearing was
    held on the program termination date, however,
    because the court had not timely received the program
    completion report.12
    On May 11, 2016, a little over a month after the sched-
    uled date of termination, the defendant was arrested
    and charged for the third time with operating a motor
    vehicle while under the influence in violation of § 14-
    227a. The defendant, therefore, was facing three counts
    of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence
    in violation of § 14-227a, two counts of failure to appear
    in the second degree in violation of § 53a-173, one count
    of risk of injury to a child in violation of § 53-21, and
    one count of criminal trespass in the first degree in
    violation of § 53a-107. In an effort to secure another
    opportunity to engage in treatment to avoid mandatory
    incarceration for his third violation of § 14-227a, the
    defendant reached a global Garvin agreement with the
    state on his pending charges. That agreement included
    guilty pleas to three counts of operating a motor vehicle
    while under the influence as a first offender in violation
    of § 14-227a, as well as guilty pleas to all other counts
    under the Garvin agreement, with the state agreeing
    to nolle the felony risk of injury to a child charge and
    certain other changes brought against the defendant.
    Subsequently, at the defendant’s February 2, 2018
    sentencing hearing, the court discovered that the defen-
    dant’s participation in the program had not been for-
    mally terminated. Defense counsel requested a continu-
    ance to ‘‘file motions and a brief on the issue of the
    [program],’’ which was denied by the court. The court
    then terminated the program, concluding that, ‘‘[b]y
    way of plea agreement,’’ it ‘‘was the clear intention of
    both parties when the plea agreement was entered in
    front of Judge Prats that this would result in a convic-
    tion for driving under the influence, as a triple first
    offender. The defendant is receiving a substantial bene-
    fit by way of a fully suspended sentence and being
    allowed to vacate his [conviction of] risk of injury to
    a child.’’ The court, thereafter, sentenced the defendant
    according to the plea agreement.
    ‘‘We begin our analysis with a brief discussion of the
    relevant statutory framework. Section 54-56g estab-
    lished the program for individuals charged with vio-
    lating § 14-227a. . . . The trial court has discretion to
    grant or deny an application to participate in the pro-
    gram.’’ (Citation omitted.) State v. Fetscher, 162 Conn.
    App. 145, 150, 
    130 A.3d 892
    (2015), cert. denied, 
    321 Conn. 904
    , 
    138 A.3d 280
    (2016). ‘‘A person admitted to
    the . . . program remains under the jurisdiction of the
    court for control purposes until he has successfully
    completed the program and his charges are dismissed.
    If a defendant satisfactorily completes the program to
    which he has been assigned, the defendant may apply
    for dismissal of the charges against him and the court,
    on reviewing the record of his participation in such
    program . . . and on finding such satisfactory comple-
    tion, shall dismiss the charges. . . . The statute clearly
    requires the trial court to make an independent determi-
    nation of the defendant’s satisfactory completion of the
    prescribed program of alcohol education and treatment.
    The trial court is not . . . relegated to the ministerial
    role of rubber stamping the certification of the program
    provider that the defendant has successfully completed
    the assigned program. While the court may rely heavily
    on the recommendation of the office of adult probation
    or the program provider, such recommendations are
    not conclusive. The court must determine for itself, and
    enter a finding, that the defendant’s completion of the
    program has been satisfactory. Otherwise, there would
    be no purpose to the statutory requirement that the
    defendant, upon completion of the program, return to
    court and apply for dismissal of the charges against
    him.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Descoteaux, 
    200 Conn. 102
    , 106–107, 
    509 A.2d 1035
    (1986).
    The defendant relies on the language of our Supreme
    Court in State v. Hancich, 
    200 Conn. 615
    , 
    513 A.2d 638
    (1986), to support his contention that his removal ‘‘from
    the [program] without a hearing violates [§] 54-56g and
    [his] due process rights.’’ In Hancich, the defendant
    was charged with operating a motor vehicle while under
    the influence in violation of § 14-227a and was, there-
    after, admitted to the program. 
    Id., 616-17. Before
    com-
    pleting the program, however, the defendant again was
    charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the
    influence in violation of § 14-227a. Id, 617. On appeal
    to our Supreme Court, the defendant claimed that the
    trial court improperly refused to dismiss her initial
    operating while under the influence charge. 
    Id., 626. Our
    Supreme Court explained that ‘‘[o]nce [the defen-
    dant] had been admitted to the . . . program, the
    defendant could not be removed unless the trial court
    made an independent determination that she had lost
    her eligibility to continue or that she had not completed
    it successfully. . . . We note that in this case the trial
    court need not have deferred its decision on the defen-
    dant’s motion to dismiss to await the outcome of the
    upcoming trial on the [second operating under the influ-
    ence] arrest. The defendant was entitled to no more
    than a hearing . . . and to an independent determina-
    tion by the trial court that she had committed the act
    underlying [her second arrest], and that based on that
    act, she could not successfully have completed the . . .
    program. Minimum standards of due process would
    further require that the trial court state the reasons for
    this decision on the record.’’ (Citations omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 627. The
    defendant’s reliance on Hancich to support his
    contention that he should have received an evidentiary
    hearing is misplaced. In the present case, the defendant
    pleaded guilty to the charge of operating a motor vehicle
    while under the influence, for which he participated in
    the program. The court terminated the program ‘‘[b]y
    way of plea agreement,’’ concluding that it ‘‘was the
    clear intention of both parties when the plea agreement
    was entered in front of Judge Prats that this would
    result in a conviction for driving under the influence,
    as a triple first offender.’’ The court considered the
    context of the entire plea, and it recognized that, with
    the plea agreement, ‘‘[t]he defendant is receiving a sub-
    stantial benefit by way of a fully suspended sentence
    and being allowed to vacate his felony plea to the risk
    of injury to a child.’’
    The purpose of the diversionary program is to allow
    first time offenders of § 14-227a an opportunity to reha-
    bilitate so as to avoid further involvement with the
    criminal justice system while protecting the public from
    those who operate a motor vehicle while under the
    influence of intoxicating liquor. See, e.g., State v. Desco-
    
    teaux, supra
    , 
    200 Conn. 107
    . A dismissal of the charge
    is incentive for achieving these public policy goals. It
    is apparent from our review of the record that the court
    recognized that, by pleading guilty to three counts of
    operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of
    intoxicating liquor, the defendant effectively conceded
    that, despite participating in the program, he was not
    entitled to a dismissal of that charge. In considering all
    of the circumstances surrounding the defendant’s pleas,
    the court properly made an independent determination
    that termination of the defendant’s participation in the
    program was warranted. Accordingly, the court did not
    err in failing to afford the defendant an evidentiary
    hearing prior to terminating his participation in the
    program.
    The judgments are affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    ‘‘A Garvin agreement is a conditional plea agreement that has two possi-
    ble binding outcomes, one that results from the defendant’s compliance
    with the conditions of the plea agreement and one that is triggered by
    his violation of a condition of the agreement.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. Yates, 
    169 Conn. App. 383
    , 387 n.1, 
    150 A.3d 1154
    (2016),
    cert. denied, 
    324 Conn. 920
    , 
    157 A.3d 85
    (2017).
    2
    The record reveals that the court, Suarez, J., granted the program on
    the defendant’s behalf at a hearing held on April 2, 2015. The defendant
    was to complete fifteen sessions and the program termination date was set
    for April 1, 2016.
    3
    Practice Book § 39-27 provides in relevant part: ‘‘The grounds for allowing
    the defendant to withdraw his or her plea of guilty after acceptance are
    as follows:
    ‘‘(1) The plea was accepted without substantial compliance with [Practice
    Book §] 39-19;
    ‘‘(2) The plea was involuntary, or it was entered without knowledge of
    the nature of the charge or without knowledge that the sentence actually
    imposed could be imposed. . . .
    ‘‘(4) The plea resulted from the denial of effective assistance of coun-
    sel. . . .’’
    4
    We note that, the transcript of the sentencing hearing reveals that defense
    counsel initially sought ‘‘three or four days to file motions and a brief on
    [the] issue of the [program].’’ The court responded to the defendant’s request
    by seeking clarification as it viewed defense counsel as asking the court
    not to honor the plea agreement. After giving defense counsel and the
    defendant time to confer, defense counsel stated: ‘‘I’m not asking to abandon
    . . . the agreement that we reached.’’ The court responded that the defen-
    dant was either asking to not honor the agreement, or he was honoring the
    agreement. Defense counsel then again asked for four days to file papers
    with the court, which request the court denied on the basis that it had made
    clear over a month ago that this was the day for sentencing. The court then
    again sought clarification on what the defendant wanted to do. Defense
    counsel stated: ‘‘[W]hat I’m asking, Your Honor, is the opportunity to provide
    the court, and specifically the state, with documentation regarding the fail-
    ures to appear.’’ The court replied: ‘‘That you don’t have today on what’s
    the known sentencing date on a case where the pleas were entered [in]
    October 2016. That request is denied.’’
    5
    We note that, after responding that he had nothing further, the court
    stated that it found no legal reason to vacate the guilty pleas and then the
    following colloquy occurred:
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: Your Honor—
    ‘‘The Court: You want to say something, go ahead.
    ‘‘[Defense Counsel]: Don’t say anything.
    ‘‘The Court: Absolutely. Go ahead.
    ‘‘[The Defendant]: No, Your Honor, I don’t.’’
    The record reveals that the court gave the defendant ample opportunity
    to discuss his motion and elaborate on his counsel’s arguments, but the
    defendant chose not to do so.
    6
    In denying the defendant’s request for a continuance, the court noted
    that it had already afforded the defendant numerous continuances leading
    up to the sentencing hearing. The court also noted that it had made clear
    to the parties on January 11, 2018, that the court would proceed to sentencing
    on the date finally set for the sentencing hearing, February 15, 2018.
    The record reveals that the defendant was afforded fourteen continuances
    during the sixteen months between the acceptance of his guilty pleas and
    his sentencing hearing; the defendant did not raise a challenge to the pleas
    during those sixteen months.
    7
    We note that the transcript of the sentencing hearing indicates that the
    court questioned the timing of defense counsel’s numerous, unsupported
    assertions, which were brought up for the first time at the date he had
    known for some time was set for sentencing.
    8
    In his appellate brief, the defendant also vaguely alleges that the court
    should have granted his motion to withdraw his guilty pleas, pursuant to
    Practice Book § 39-27 (2), and that his plea canvass was ‘‘improper’’ because
    it ‘‘did not address [his] participation in the diversionary [program].’’ The
    defendant, however, does not cite to authority or provide any analysis to
    support those propositions. See Nowacki v. Nowacki, 
    129 Conn. App. 157
    ,
    163, 
    20 A.3d 702
    (2011) (‘‘It is well settled that [w]e are not required to
    review claims that are inadequately briefed. . . . We consistently have held
    that [a]nalysis, rather than mere abstract assertion, is required in order to
    avoid abandoning an issue by failure to brief the issue properly.’’ [Internal
    quotation marks omitted.]) Moreover, the defendant did not raise those
    claims before the court at the sentencing hearing. See Remillard v. Remil-
    lard, 
    297 Conn. 345
    , 351, 
    999 A.2d 713
    (2010) (‘‘It is well established that
    an appellate court is under no obligation to consider a claim that is not
    distinctly raised at the trial level. . . . The requirement that [a] claim be
    raised distinctly means that it must be so stated as to bring to the attention of
    the court the precise matter on which its decision is being asked.’’ [Citations
    omitted; emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.]). For these
    reasons, we will not address the defendant’s claims that his motion to
    withdraw his pleas should have been granted because the pleas were involun-
    tary, pursuant to Practice Book § 39-27 (2), or that the plea canvass was
    improper for not addressing his participation in the program.
    9
    See footnote 3 of this opinion.
    10
    The record reveals that the matter was eventually transferred from the
    judicial district of New London to the judicial district of Hartford.
    11
    The record reflects that the court accepted the program with full knowl-
    edge of the defendant’s prior operating while under the influence charge.
    12
    The program’s final progress report, dated August 9, 2017, indicates that
    the defendant had satisfactorily completed the assigned program. The report
    states in the comments section, however, that the defendant did not success-
    fully complete the fifteen sessions and, instead, completed an inpatient
    residential treatment from which he was discharged on March 18, 2016.
    Proof of the defendant’s successful completion of the inpatient residential
    treatment was not provided until July 20, 2017, well after the one year
    program termination date set by the court. The report also notes in the
    comments section that the defendant was arrested on May 11, 2016, for his
    third operating a motor vehicle while under the influence charge in violation
    of § 14-227a.