State v. Jackson , 183 Conn. App. 623 ( 2018 )


Menu:
  • ***********************************************
    The “officially released” date that appears near the be-
    ginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will be pub-
    lished in the Connecticut Law Journal or the date it was
    released as a slip opinion. The operative date for the be-
    ginning of all time periods for filing postopinion motions
    and petitions for certification is the “officially released”
    date appearing in the opinion.
    All opinions are subject to modification and technical
    correction prior to official publication in the Connecticut
    Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the event of
    discrepancies between the advance release version of an
    opinion and the latest version appearing in the Connecticut
    Law Journal and subsequently in the Connecticut Reports
    or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the latest version is to
    be considered authoritative.
    The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the
    opinion as it appears in the Connecticut Law Journal and
    bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the
    Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not
    be reproduced and distributed without the express written
    permission of the Commission on Official Legal Publica-
    tions, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut.
    ***********************************************
    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. RAASHON JACKSON
    (AC 40433)
    Lavine, Alvord and Beach, Js.
    Syllabus
    Convicted of the crimes of murder, conspiracy to commit murder and assault
    in the first degree in connection with a shooting, the defendant appealed,
    claiming, inter alia, that the trial court deprived him of a fair trial and
    his right to present a defense when it denied his motion in limine to
    preclude certain testimony of W, the state’s expert witness, pertaining
    to cell phone site location data. The defendant and R, who also was
    involved in the shooting, were tried jointly to a jury. R’s cousin, A, had
    driven the defendant and R to and from the scene of the shooting. The
    state had retained W to analyze certain global positioning system and
    cell phone data to determine the locations of the defendant, R and A
    at the time of the shooting. During jury selection seven days before
    trial, the state disclosed to the defense a PowerPoint presentation that
    W had created. The court denied the defendant’s motion in limine to
    preclude W’s testimony, concluding that the state had not acted in bad
    faith in making the late disclosure and that the defendant had not been
    prejudiced. The court also denied the defendant’s request for a six week
    continuance so that he could consult with an expert of his own. Held:
    1. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the defendant’s
    motion in limine to preclude W from testifying or in denying the defen-
    dant’s request for a six week continuance to consult with his own expert:
    that court determined that the state had not acted in bad faith, nor did
    the defendant claim bad faith by the state, defense counsel, in clarifying
    the issues that were the basis for the motion, stated that he was con-
    cerned about a portion of W’s PowerPoint presentation that contained
    hearsay, which the court ultimately precluded, and given that twenty-
    one days had elapsed between the state’s disclosure of the PowerPoint
    presentation and W’s testimony, the court reasonably could have con-
    cluded that a six week continuance would have been too disruptive to
    the trial; moreover, defense counsel failed to renew his request for a
    continuance at the conclusion of the state’s direct examination of W,
    the denial of a continuance was not so arbitrary as to vitiate logic and
    was not based on improper or irrelevant factors, and although the court
    improperly determined that the defendant was not prejudiced, as the
    defendant was prevented from potentially presenting the testimony of
    his own expert, the court ameliorated the prejudice by precluding a
    portion of W’s PowerPoint presentation that defense counsel claimed
    contained hearsay, and by permitting defense counsel to confer with W
    regarding changes to the PowerPoint presentation, and defense counsel
    conducted an effective cross-examination of W; furthermore, even if
    the court abused its discretion, the defendant failed to demonstrate that
    the claimed error was harmful, as the state’s case against him was
    relatively strong, W’s testimony was corroborative of other testimony,
    and the jury viewed surveillance video and still images from the crime
    scene, as well as photographs and a text message from R that were
    recovered from the defendant’s cell phone.
    2. This court declined to review the defendant’s unpreserved evidentiary
    claim that the trial court improperly permitted W to testify without first
    conducting a hearing pursuant to State v. Porter (
    241 Conn. 57
    ) as to
    his qualifications and the reliability of his methodology: the defendant
    failed to request a Porter hearing, he conceded to the trial court that
    the evidence W offered was admissible through a proper expert and
    requested to voir dire W only as to his qualifications, and although this
    court has recognized that the rule set forth in State v. Edwards (
    325 Conn. 97
    )—that a police officer must be qualified as an expert witness
    before testifying about cell phone data and that cell phone data evidence
    is of a scientific nature requiring a Porter hearing—is retroactively appli-
    cable to pending cases, that did not compel the conclusion that an
    evidentiary claim made pursuant to Edwards is reviewable where, as
    here, the claim is unpreserved; accordingly, because the defendant failed
    to request a Porter hearing, his unpreserved evidentiary claim that the
    trial court erred in failing to hold a Porter hearing was not reviewable.
    3. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in precluding the defendant
    from presenting testimony from his investigator to rebut W’s testimony;
    it was not clear from defense counsel’s proffer whether the investigator
    had sufficient knowledge regarding the cell site accessed by the defen-
    dant’s phone, defense counsel did not request a hearing outside the
    presence of the jury to proffer the investigator’s testimony or inform
    the trial court that he intended to rely on certain of W’s conclusions,
    and defense counsel’s proffer did not include whether the investigator
    had knowledge as to the geographical coverage area of the cell site
    at issue.
    4. The defendant could not prevail on his claim that he was deprived of his
    right to present a defense when the trial court prevented him from
    introducing evidence that a gun used in the shooting had been found
    one year later on a person who was unrelated to the shooting; the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the proffered
    evidence was too remote in time to be relevant to show a lack of identity
    of the defendant as one of the shooters, as the court reasonably could
    have concluded that the fact that the weapon was found in the possession
    of a different individual almost one year after the crimes at issue did
    not render it either certain or more probable that the defendant was
    not one of the shooters.
    5. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting certain conscious-
    ness of guilt evidence concerning the defendant’s failure to appear in
    court on unrelated matters subsequent to the shootings: the jury reason-
    ably could have inferred that the defendant’s failure to appear could
    have been influenced by his involvement in the shootings and indicated
    a consciousness of guilt in the shooting incident, and the evidence of
    his failure to appear was not more prejudicial than probative, as there
    was nothing in the record to indicate that it created a side issue that
    unduly distracted the jury, no significant amount of time was expended
    on the issue, and the jury reasonably could have inferred from a text
    message sent by R to the defendant that the defendant was aware
    that the police might seek him out in connection with the shootings;
    moreover, even if the defendant had presented evidence that he failed
    to appear in court because he had fled from the scene of an accident
    in which the police found a gun in the car he had been operating, the
    jury was entitled to make contrary inferences, and even if the court had
    considered the transcript of a prior proceeding in which defense counsel
    made representations about his unsuccessful efforts to contact the
    defendant about his failure to appear in court, the transcript did not
    compel the conclusion that the defendant did not have notice of the
    court date.
    Argued January 29—officially released July 24, 2018
    Procedural History
    Substitute information charging the defendant with
    four counts of the crime of assault in the first degree,
    and with the crimes of murder, conspiracy to commit
    murder and criminal possession of a firearm, brought
    to the Superior Court in the judicial district of Fairfield,
    where the court, Kavanewsky, J., granted the defen-
    dant’s motion to sever the charge of criminal possession
    of a firearm; thereafter, the court granted the state’s
    motion to consolidate the case for trial with that of
    another defendant; subsequently, the matter was tried
    to the jury; thereafter, the court denied in part the
    defendant’s motion to preclude certain evidence, and
    denied the defendant’s motions for a continuance and
    a mistrial, and to introduce certain evidence; verdict of
    guilty; subsequently, the court denied the defendant’s
    motion for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial; there-
    after, the state entered a nolle prosequi as to the charge
    of criminal possession of a firearm, and the court ren-
    dered judgment in accordance with the verdict, from
    which the defendant appealed. Affirmed.
    Pamela S. Nagy, assistant public defender, for the
    appellant (defendant).
    Timothy F. Costello, assistant state’s attorney, with
    whom, on the brief, were John C. Smriga, state’s attor-
    ney, C. Robert Satti, Jr., supervisory assistant state’s
    attorney, and Pamela J. Esposito, senior assistant
    state’s attorney, for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    ALVORD, J. The defendant, Raashon Jackson,
    appeals from the judgment of conviction, rendered after
    a jury trial, of one count of murder in violation of Gen-
    eral Statutes § 53a-54a (a), one count of conspiracy to
    commit murder in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-
    48 (a) and 53a-54a (a), and four counts of assault in
    the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-
    59 (a) (5). On appeal, the defendant claims that the trial
    court: (1) abused its discretion and deprived him of his
    rights to a fair trial and to present a defense when it
    denied his motion to preclude the testimony of the
    state’s belatedly disclosed expert witness and refused
    to afford him a continuance to retain his own expert,
    (2) abused its discretion in admitting the testimony of
    the state’s expert without conducting a Porter hearing,1
    (3) abused its discretion and deprived him of his right
    to present a defense when it excluded exculpatory evi-
    dence in the form of his investigator’s testimony, (4)
    deprived him of his right to present a defense when it
    excluded exculpatory evidence regarding the discovery
    of a gun used in the crimes, and (5) abused its discretion
    in admitting certain consciousness of guilt evidence
    and instructing the jury as to that evidence. We affirm
    the judgment of the trial court.
    On the basis of the evidence presented at trial, the
    jury reasonably could have found the following facts.
    On September 10, 2013, Roderick Rogers called his
    cousin, David Anderson, seeking a ride. At 2:10 p.m., a
    social worker, William Muniz, went to Rogers’ house
    in Bridgeport to discuss a job opportunity. Rogers told
    Muniz that he had to go somewhere but could be back
    in one hour. Muniz asked that Rogers call him when
    he returned home. As Muniz was leaving, Anderson was
    arriving. Anderson was on probation at the time, and
    his movements were tracked by a global positioning
    system (GPS) device he wore on his ankle.
    Anderson and Rogers left the house together, and
    Rogers directed Anderson to drive toward Palisade Ave-
    nue, a street a couple of blocks away from Rogers’
    house. After turning on Palisade Avenue, Rogers saw
    the defendant, who was a friend called Red Dreads.
    Anderson stopped the car, and the defendant got in on
    the rear passenger side. Rogers told Anderson to drive
    from the east side of the city to the ‘‘Terrace,’’ located
    in the north end of Bridgeport. After turning into the
    Terrace, Rogers directed Anderson to turn around, park
    on a side street off Reservoir Avenue, and wait because
    he and the defendant would be right back. Rogers asked
    Anderson if he had an extra shirt, and Anderson told
    him to check the trunk. Rogers and the defendant got
    out of the car, went to the open trunk, shut the trunk,
    and walked down a hill.
    At the time, a group of young men was gathered
    outside the Beardsley Terrace public housing complex.
    Rogers and the defendant approached the group and
    said, ‘‘y’all just came through the Ave shooting Braz,
    you all f’d up,’’2 and began shooting. Rogers and the
    defendant then ran off with the weapons in their hands.
    They returned to Anderson’s car, and Rogers told
    Anderson to drive back down Reservoir Avenue. They
    drove to the corner of Stratford Avenue and Hollister
    Avenue, and Anderson parked the car. The defendant
    told Rogers he thought he had dropped a clip. After
    opening and shutting the car door, the defendant got
    out of the car, and walked toward Stratford Avenue.
    Anderson then drove Rogers home. Rogers called Muniz
    at 2:46 p.m., and Muniz returned to Rogers’ home by
    3 p.m.
    Seven shell casings were recovered from the scene,
    and forensic analysis revealed that four were fired from
    one gun and three were fired from a different gun.
    One of the victims, LaChristopher Pettway, died from
    a gunshot wound to his mid-left back. Four others sus-
    tained gunshot wounds, including Tamar Hamilton, who
    was shot in the heel; Leroy Shaw, who was shot in the
    arm; Jauwan Edwards, who was shot in the buttocks;
    and Aijholon Tisdale, who was shot in the upper thigh.
    On September 16, 2013, Rogers was arrested. That day,
    Rogers sent a text message to the defendant indicating
    that ‘‘[d]ey taken [me].’’
    On March 10, 2014, the defendant was arrested. He
    was charged in the operative information with murder,
    conspiracy to commit murder, and four counts of
    assault in the first degree.3 Upon the state’s motion, the
    defendant’s case was consolidated for trial with that of
    Rogers. After the presentation of evidence, a jury found
    the defendant guilty on all counts of the information.4
    The jury also answered ‘‘yes’’ to a set of written interrog-
    atories indicating that the state had proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant used a firearm
    during the commission of each crime. The defendant
    was sentenced to a total effective term of fifty-five years
    of incarceration. This appeal followed. Additional facts
    will be set forth as necessary.
    I
    The defendant first claims that he was ‘‘deprived of
    a fair trial and of his right to present a defense when
    the court denied his motion to preclude the testimony
    of [Hartford Police Sergeant Andrew] Weaver.’’ The
    defendant contends in the alternative that ‘‘[e]ven if the
    court’s decision not to preclude Weaver’s testimony
    was proper, it was certainly an abuse of discretion to
    deny a reasonable continuance for [the] defendant to
    consult with an expert.’’ In a supplemental brief, the
    defendant further claims that ‘‘[t]he trial court abused
    its discretion when it allowed . . . Weaver to testify
    as an expert without ever conducting a Porter hearing
    to determine if he was qualified to testify as an expert
    and whether the methodology he used to support his
    opinion that [the] defendant was in the same location
    as Anderson and Rogers at the time of the crime was
    reliable.’’ See footnote 1 of this opinion.
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to these claims. The defendant served a
    request for disclosure on the state in April, 2014, and
    filed a ‘‘motion for disclosure and hearing re: state’s
    expert witnesses’’ dated April 21, 2015. In his motion,
    the defendant sought, inter alia, disclosure of the names
    of each expert witness the state intended to call at trial
    and the opinions to which each witness was expected
    to testify. The court addressed the motion during a
    hearing on April 29. The defendant anticipated that the
    state might offer an expert with respect to ‘‘pin-
    point[ing] cell phones relative to towers and things like
    that,’’ and stated that it was ‘‘unclear’’ what that expert’s
    opinion may be with respect to the defendant’s cell
    phone. The defendant anticipated that if the state dis-
    closed an expert on this issue, he might file a motion
    in limine. The court responded: ‘‘Okay. So, what you’re
    asking for is, if the state’s going to call an expert to
    give opinion evidence about the proximity of [the defen-
    dant’s] cell phone to a tower somewhere that you
    [would] like to know who that is and [what] they’re
    going to say?’’ The defendant confirmed that was the
    disclosure he sought, and the state responded that it
    had no objection to providing that information, but
    stated that it ‘‘can’t definitively say who that might be
    at this time because we’re still analyzing the data
    . . . .’’ The court responded: ‘‘But, I mean, if you
    selected somebody and they say, look, in my opinion,
    this cell phone was within, like, 100 feet of this tower
    . . . which is on this building, you’ll disclose that to
    the defense?’’ The state replied that it would do so.
    Jury selection began on August 3, 2015. On that date,
    the state provided the defendant with a list of potential
    witnesses that included Weaver’s name under the head-
    ing of Hartford Police Department, but did not identify
    him as an expert witness. Throughout jury selection, the
    state identified Weaver to venire panels as a potential
    witness. On October 1, 2015, seven days before evidence
    began and while jury selection was still ongoing, the
    state provided the defendant with Weaver’s resume and
    a file containing a PowerPoint presentation Weaver cre-
    ated. On October 7, the defendant filed a motion in
    limine seeking to preclude Weaver’s testimony, specifi-
    cally as it related to cell site location information, or,
    in the alternative, ‘‘a reasonable continuance in order
    that a defense expert may be retained (e.g., apply for
    and obtain funding authorization from the Office of
    the Chief Public Defender, allow for expert’s review of
    necessary materials, etc.)’’. The defendant argued that
    he had not been provided foundational information for
    Weaver’s opinion, and that the late disclosure caused
    him undue prejudice. The defendant claimed that he
    needed to hire his own expert, and that he could not
    identify, hire, and obtain funding for an expert, provide
    the potential expert with the material for review, and
    confer with the expert in the presentation of the defen-
    dant’s defense in the short time before evidence was
    set to begin.
    The court held a hearing on the defendant’s motion
    in limine on October 20, 2015. The court referred to the
    defendant’s argument regarding the state’s late disclo-
    sure of Weaver and then stated: ‘‘Also, from a more
    substantive point of view, I understand the motion in
    limine to say this . . . that Sergeant Weaver purport-
    edly used . . . two devices or sets of data or software
    programs—I’m not sure how to characterize them—
    that the defense feels are problematic. One is cell tower
    related information that is accessible to law enforce-
    ment, and that’s referenced in the moving papers.
    Accessible to law enforcement and it’s not reflected on
    the data that’s been produced pursuant to subpoena
    and witnesses here in court. And that [the] other is the
    use of what I’m just going to call a GeoTime . . . com-
    puter program. . . .
    ‘‘[T]hose are really the issues that I’m trying to give
    the short version of [w]hat I see the defense raising as
    problematic. And what I would like to do is to approach
    it this way. Let me just say one more thing. The other
    area, in fairness to the defense, is the reliability of this
    GeoTime software and whether Sergeant Weaver is
    qualified as an expert to do what he’s done. I think that
    fairly covers everything.’’
    Defense counsel then responded: ‘‘Just two things,
    Your Honor. In terms of sergeant—well, I guess it’s
    related. In terms of Sergeant Weaver’s qualifications to
    testify as an expert and the state’s memorandum in
    opposition, which seems to focus largely on the issue
    of whether or not the proffer[ed] purpose of Sergeant
    Weaver’s testimony was generally inadmissible . . . I
    don’t think we ever really contested that this type of
    information can be presented to a jury if coming in
    through a proper expert. And in terms of Sergeant Weav-
    er’s qualifications, we would just like to voir dire him
    during his testimony if he’s allowed to testify. So, that’s
    not really a basis. And then also—and I think there was
    one issue. . . . One issue that we see as substantive
    with respect to the—to the PowerPoint presentation
    slideshow that he—that Sergeant Weaver has presented
    to us for review, and that is in particular the second
    page, which is that entire summary page.’’
    Defense counsel then called Weaver to the witness
    stand. Weaver testified that the state’s attorney’s office
    had contacted him ‘‘two to three weeks ago’’ to inquire
    whether he would be willing to assist with a case in
    Bridgeport. The state’s attorney’s office sent Weaver
    hard copies and compact discs (CDs) of call detail
    records from three carriers: AT&T (for a cell phone
    number the state associated with Anderson), Sprint PCS
    (for a cell phone number the state associated with the
    defendant), and Metro PCS (for a cell phone number
    the state associated with Rogers). Weaver learned that
    the Metro PCS records contained the wrong set of tower
    information, and he downloaded the correct tower
    information from the National Cellular Assistance Data
    Center (NCADC) in the form of an Excel spreadsheet.5
    Weaver included that spreadsheet on the CD he created,
    made a second copy for the defense, and advised the
    state attorney’s office that the records were ready.
    Weaver also e-mailed the PowerPoint presentation to
    the state. The state never picked up the two copies of
    the CD and told Weaver that it believed that it had the
    information it needed.
    After the conclusion of Weaver’s testimony during
    the hearing on the motion in limine, defense counsel
    argued that the state violated Practice Book § 40-11
    by failing to disclose Weaver.6 Defense counsel further
    argued that he had never received the CDs Weaver
    prepared, which contained the cell tower records in
    the form of an Excel spreadsheet and a version of the
    PowerPoint presentation that contained a video, rather
    than a still image.7 Reciting his efforts to obtain an
    expert even in the absence of the underlying tower data,
    defense counsel argued that he had been prejudiced in
    his ability to meaningfully challenge Weaver’s testi-
    mony. Defense counsel requested that the court pre-
    clude Weaver’s testimony, or in the alternative, grant
    him a reasonable continuance of at least six weeks.
    The state explained that it had understood the court’s
    April 29, 2015 order to require the state to disclose
    expert opinion evidence once the state received it. The
    state claimed that it provided Weaver’s name on August
    3, and that the ‘‘very first research of Sergeant Weaver
    by the Internet would give certainly an indication as to
    what he does.’’ The state further responded that as soon
    as it became aware of Weaver’s testimony in a Milford
    case, it provided the transcript to the defendant. The
    state claimed that it did not meet with Weaver until the
    ‘‘end of September’’ because it was in the process of
    jury selection for this trial and that another trial was
    going forward. With respect to the CDs, the state stated
    that it had ‘‘no answer’’ to explain why they were not
    picked up or disclosed, and represented that it had not
    seen them.
    With respect to prejudice, the state argued that it had
    ‘‘provided information from this file’’ early on in the
    case, that ‘‘everybody knew the cell phone evidence was
    clearly in this case and it was part of the investigation
    certainly from the early stages,’’ and that defense coun-
    sel knew Anderson wore a GPS bracelet. In response
    to a question from the court regarding why the state
    delayed in retaining and meeting with Weaver, the state
    responded that both the state and defense counsel were
    preparing for other trials, and that in June, 2015, this
    case had been postponed until August.
    In an oral ruling, the court stated: ‘‘[T]he problem
    I’m having is, while I know that we are all busy people,
    I don’t think it’s a fair interpretation of what the Practice
    Book requires and what the court orders were in this
    case to say that, okay, as soon as we have it we’ll give
    it to you notwithstanding when we have it. I mean, what
    does that mean? Now, that would mean that you engage
    an expert and you have the product that you intend to
    offer through him the date before the evidence starts.
    I know that didn’t happen here, but the product was
    delivered in October, October the first or thereabouts
    and the evidence started on October the eighth. I just
    don’t—you know, these obligations for disclosure,
    which were filed, [somewhat] generic, others were
    much more specific made months ago. And while I don’t
    disagree with the state that this type of evidence cannot
    be said to be unanticipated, the problem is that until
    the defense knows . . . what the state is going to pre-
    sent . . . it can’t prepare to, you know, meet that evi-
    dence by either consulting other experts or retaining
    other experts or what have you. That’s the problem I
    have. That’s the problem I have here.
    ‘‘I’m not saying that there was bad faith involved. I’m
    just saying that notwithstanding our schedules, I believe
    that . . . this was all an avoidable situation. You know,
    had—or have we been pressed, you know, the state
    could well have said, Your Honor, I need two days off
    from jury selection to go meet with expert so and so
    to see if we’re going to use him, and that didn’t happen.
    I’m . . . just troubled by the way that this all unfolded.
    Again, not that there was bad faith involved, but this
    was . . . in my mind, an avoidable situation.’’
    In concluding that the defendant had not suffered
    prejudice, the court explained that ‘‘what the state
    intends to present here by way of cell phone evidence,
    the movement of these phones and . . . the GPS, is
    not what I would call a . . . matter that is so novel or
    cutting edge or unusual that the defendant would suffer
    prejudice as a result of allowing its use here in court in
    testimony through the witness.’’ The court accordingly
    denied the defendant’s motion in limine, but precluded
    from evidence two slides of Weaver’s PowerPoint pre-
    sentation, one depicting the video the defendant had
    never received; see footnote 7 of this opinion; and
    another containing hearsay. Defense counsel inquired
    whether the court also was denying the defendant’s
    request for a continuance, to which the court replied
    that it was and that ‘‘[y]ou can renew your motion if
    you need be at the . . . end of direct. But based upon
    what I’ve heard so far, been presented with so far, I’m
    denying the request for a continuance.’’ The defendant
    then moved for a mistrial, which the court denied.
    Defense counsel also requested a copy of the Excel
    spreadsheet, and the state indicated that it was copying
    the CDs to provide to the defendant. The state further
    indicated that Weaver was returning to his office to
    redact the precluded information. The next afternoon,
    before Weaver was set to testify before the jury, defense
    counsel informed the court that in addition to making
    redactions to the PowerPoint presentation, Weaver had
    made other revisions, including changing the represen-
    tation of cell site coverage areas from ovals to pie
    wedges, which had the effect of narrowing the coverage
    areas. The court ordered a ten minute recess to allow
    defense counsel to confer with Weaver regarding the
    changes. Back on the record, defense counsel stated
    that although he had a better understanding of the
    changes, he was still unclear as to the reason for them.
    Defense counsel renewed his requests for preclusion
    and for a mistrial. In the alternative, the defendant
    sought a continuance in order to obtain the transcript
    from the prior day’s hearing, or at a minimum, a continu-
    ance ‘‘until tomorrow to have an opportunity to digest
    all this material’’ and prepare for cross-examination the
    following day. Defense counsel noted that the state had
    given him CDs the day before, but that the CDs were
    not responsive to the defendant’s requests and that new
    CDs provided that morning had not yet been reviewed
    by defense counsel. The court granted a continuance
    until the following morning and asked defense counsel
    whether he believed that time to confer with Weaver
    would be useful to him, to which defense counsel
    replied that he did. The court ordered Weaver to remain
    available to defense counsel from the time it adjourned,
    which appeared to be sometime after 4 p.m., until 4:45
    or 4:50 p.m. The court further ordered the state to pro-
    vide any of Weaver’s spreadsheets that it had not yet
    provided to defense counsel.
    The next morning, defense counsel informed the
    court that he had spent twenty minutes or one-half hour
    with Weaver, who ‘‘provided some clarification relative
    to the changes in his presentation.’’ For the reasons
    that he previously had offered, the defendant then
    renewed his objection to the state’s late disclosure of
    Weaver. Defense counsel stated: ‘‘But specific as to the
    changes, I can’t say to the court that I’m not prepared
    to go forward today and address those changes as
    needed.’’ He further implied that the revision to the
    PowerPoint presentation ‘‘just magnifies the import of
    the prejudice to [the defendant] relative to not being
    able to get our own expert.’’ The court inquired of
    defense counsel whether ‘‘these changes in the report
    impair your ability to cross-examine the witness to any
    greater extent [than] you feel you may have been
    impaired when you first made the motion to preclude
    . . . .’’ Defense counsel responded that they did not
    and represented to the court that he felt prepared to
    go forward.
    Evidence then resumed, and the state called Weaver
    to the witness stand. After inquiring as to Weaver’s
    experience and background, the state introduced Weav-
    er’s PowerPoint presentation into evidence. Defense
    counsel conducted a voir dire as to the PowerPoint
    presentation, and ultimately did not object to the pre-
    sentation. Weaver testified that the states attorney’s
    office had provided him with logs for Anderson’s GPS
    device and call detail records for three phone numbers,
    and had asked him to map the location of Anderson’s
    GPS and phone calls made and received for two of the
    phone numbers, which the state attributed to Rogers
    and the defendant. Using software called GeoTime,
    Weaver mapped these locations, which were depicted
    on the maps as a person figure in the center of 120
    degree pie shaped coverage areas. Weaver’s presenta-
    tion contained fifteen different snapshots of maps and
    descriptions indicating Anderson’s GPS location and
    whether the defendant’s or Rogers’ cell phone con-
    nected to a cell site with a ‘‘generally expected coverage
    area’’ in which Anderson’s GPS was also located.
    Snapshots nine through thirteen showed that the
    defendant’s phone connected to a cell site whose cover-
    age area included Anderson’s GPS. Specifically, snap-
    shot nine depicted the defendant’s phone connected to
    a cell site whose coverage area included the location
    of the shootings. Snapshot thirteen depicted Rogers’
    and the defendant’s phones connected to a cell site that
    included the area of Stratford Avenue and Hollister
    Avenue, where Anderson’s GPS was also located.
    Weaver opined that the ‘‘phones moved together or met
    with before and/or after . . . the [victim’s] murder.
    They either traveled to or traveled from. [Rogers’
    phone] moved toward the [victim’s] murder with the
    Anderson GPS. And the [defendant’s] phone, the 6819
    number, moved away and then when they actually made
    phone calls all together . . . within this area of Strat-
    ford and Hollister after the homicide.’’
    At the conclusion of Weaver’s direct examination,
    defense counsel did not renew the defendant’s request
    for a continuance. On cross-examination, defense coun-
    sel questioned Weaver about a call made from Rogers’
    phone to the defendant’s phone at 2:14 p.m. Weaver
    testified that he did not map the 2:14 p.m. call because
    the state’s attorney’s office had asked him only to plot
    the locations when the two phones were together, and
    the two phones were not together at the time of that
    call. Weaver also testified that he did not include any
    other cell sites in the area, and thus, his presentation
    did not depict any coverage overlap between towers.
    Last, Weaver’s snapshots did not depict the movement
    of the phones.
    On December 18, 2015, the defendant filed a motion
    for a judgment of acquittal or, in the alternative, a new
    trial. In his memorandum of law in support of the
    motion, the defendant claimed that the state’s failure
    to timely disclose Weaver, and the court’s failure to
    preclude Weaver’s testimony or afford the defendant a
    reasonable continuance to retain his own expert,
    deprived the defendant of a fair trial. The court heard
    oral argument on January 22, 2016, and denied the
    defendant’s motion.
    A
    We first address the defendant’s claim that the court
    erred in permitting Weaver to testify and denying the
    defendant’s alternative request for a six week continu-
    ance in order to permit him to retain his own expert.
    The defendant claims that the trial court’s ruling consti-
    tuted an abuse of discretion, and further, that it deprived
    him of a fair trial and of his right to present a defense.
    We begin our analysis with the applicable legal princi-
    ples and standard of review. Chapter 40 of the Practice
    Book governs discovery in criminal cases. Section 40-
    5 of the rules of practice provides in relevant part: ‘‘If
    a party fails to comply with disclosure as required under
    these rules, the opposing party may move the judicial
    authority for an appropriate order. The judicial author-
    ity hearing such a motion may enter such orders . . .
    as it deems appropriate, including . . . (2) Granting
    the moving party additional time or a continuance . . .
    (4) Prohibiting the noncomplying party from introduc-
    ing specified evidence . . . (5) Declaring a mistrial
    . . . [or] (8) Entering such other order as it deems
    proper.’’ See also State v. Rabindranauth, 
    140 Conn. App. 122
    , 135–36, 
    58 A.3d 361
     (affirming trial court’s
    preclusion of defense expert’s testimony as sanction
    for late disclosure where defendant failed to comply
    with court’s order requiring disclosure of expert wit-
    nesses by December 17, 2010, and did not disclose
    expert until January 3, 2011, one day before commence-
    ment of evidence), cert. denied, 
    308 Conn. 921
    , 
    62 A.3d 1134
     (2013).
    Practice Book § 40-5 gives ‘‘broad discretion to the
    trial judge to grant an appropriate remedy for failure
    to comply with discovery requirements.’’ State v. Wilson
    F., 
    77 Conn. App. 405
    , 417, 
    823 A.2d 406
    , cert. denied,
    
    265 Conn. 905
    , 
    831 A.2d 254
     (2003). This court pre-
    viously has held that the ‘‘court must consider appro-
    priate sanctions, but is under no obligation to impose
    a penalty.’’ Id., 419. ‘‘Generally, [t]he primary purpose
    of a sanction for violation of a discovery order is to
    ensure that the defendant’s rights are protected, not to
    exact punishment on the state for its allegedly improper
    conduct. As we have indicated, the formulation of an
    appropriate sanction is a matter within the sound dis-
    cretion of the trial court.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. Beaulieu, 
    118 Conn. App. 1
    , 8–9, 
    982 A.2d 245
    , cert. denied, 
    294 Conn. 921
    , 
    984 A.2d 68
     (2009).
    ‘‘In determining what sanction is appropriate for fail-
    ure to comply with court ordered discovery, the trial
    court should consider the reason why disclosure was
    not made, the extent of prejudice, if any, to the opposing
    party, the feasibility of rectifying that prejudice by a
    continuance, and any other relevant circumstances.
    . . . As with any discretionary action of the trial court,
    appellate review requires every reasonable presump-
    tion in favor of the action, and the ultimate issue for
    us is whether the trial court could have reasonably
    concluded as it did.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) State v. Cooke, 
    134 Conn. App. 573
    , 578–79, 
    39 A.3d 1178
    , cert. denied, 
    305 Conn. 903
    ,
    
    43 A.3d 662
     (2012). ‘‘In general, abuse of discretion
    exists when a court could have chosen different alterna-
    tives but has decided the matter so arbitrarily as to
    vitiate logic, or has decided it based on improper or
    irrelevant factors.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Beaulieu, 
    supra,
     
    118 Conn. App. 8
    .
    First, with respect to the defendant’s claim that the
    court erred in not precluding Weaver’s testimony, we
    conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
    We note that even in circumstances where the state
    has committed a discovery violation, ‘‘[s]uppression of
    relevant, material and otherwise admissible evidence is
    a severe sanction which should not be invoked lightly.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Cooke,
    
    supra,
     
    134 Conn. App. 579
    ; see also State v. Hamlett, 
    105 Conn. App. 862
    , 874, 
    939 A.2d 1256
     (denial of proposed
    remedy of exclusion of police officer’s field notes,
    which were not previously disclosed to defense and
    which affected defense strategy of contradicting victim
    through police report, was not abuse of discretion),
    cert. denied, 
    287 Conn. 901
    , 
    947 A.2d 343
     (2008). More-
    over, when the court offered its understanding of the
    defendant’s challenges to Weaver’s qualifications and
    the reliability of the software he used, defense counsel
    replied that those issues were not the bases for his
    motion and that he only wanted to voir dire Weaver
    as to his qualifications. Substantively, defense counsel
    clarified that he was concerned about a portion of Weav-
    er’s PowerPoint that contained hearsay, and the court
    ultimately precluded that portion.
    We further conclude that the court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying the defendant’s alternative request
    for a six week continuance to consult with an expert.
    With respect to circumstances of the untimely disclo-
    sure, although the court described the late disclosure
    as an ‘‘avoidable situation,’’ the court determined that
    the state had not acted in bad faith. Moreover, the
    defendant had not claimed that the state had acted in
    bad faith, describing the focus of his motion to preclude
    as ‘‘the late disclosure on accident by the state.’’ See
    State v. Respass, 
    256 Conn. 164
    , 188, 
    770 A.2d 471
    (‘‘because the noncompliance in this case was inadver-
    tent . . . and there was no prejudice to the defendant,
    the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the
    defendant’s motion to suppress the statement’’ [citation
    omitted]), cert. denied, 
    534 U.S. 1002
    , 
    122 S. Ct. 478
    ,
    
    151 L. Ed. 2d 392
     (2001).
    Regarding prejudice to the defendant, the court con-
    cluded that there had not been ‘‘a true prejudice visited
    upon the [defendant] by these circumstances.’’ The
    court’s prejudice analysis focused on the substance of
    Weaver’s testimony, with the court concluding that the
    proffered evidence was not ‘‘so novel or cutting edge
    or unusual that the defendant would suffer prejudice
    . . . .’’ That analysis overlooks the result of the late
    disclosure, which was that the defendant was prevented
    from consulting with, and potentially presenting the
    testimony of, his own expert. Thus, it is clear that the
    defendant suffered some measure of prejudice as a
    result of the late disclosure. The court did take certain
    steps to ameliorate the prejudice to the defendant,
    including precluding one slide of Weaver’s presentation
    that contained a previously undisclosed video and
    recessing for the afternoon in order to permit defense
    counsel to confer with Weaver regarding changes to
    Weaver’s presentation.
    Although the late disclosure deprived the defendant
    of the opportunity to consult with his own expert,
    defense counsel conducted an effective cross-examina-
    tion of Weaver. See State v. Cooke, 
    supra,
     
    134 Conn. App. 580
     (noting, in concluding that court did not abuse
    its discretion in granting two day continuance for
    defense counsel to prepare to cross-examine expert
    regarding supplemental DNA report, that ‘‘the defen-
    dant was able to raise and did raise challenges to the
    credibility of the DNA results during his cross-examina-
    tion’’). In the present case, defense counsel was able to
    elicit testimony that the defendant’s and Rogers’ phones
    were not together when Rogers called the defendant
    at 2:14 p.m., shortly before the shootings. Weaver also
    testified that he did not include any other cell sites in
    the area, and thus, his presentation did not depict any
    coverage overlap between towers or anything else that
    might affect the signals or coverage area.8
    Having determined that the defendant was not preju-
    diced by the state’s late disclosure, the court had no
    occasion to analyze the feasibility of rectifying any prej-
    udice by a continuance. Although we recognize that the
    requested continuance likely would have cured any then
    existing prejudice to the defendant as a result of the
    late disclosure; see State v. Van Eck, 
    69 Conn. App. 482
    , 498–99, 
    795 A.2d 582
     (court did not abuse discretion
    in electing to continue matter for almost one month for
    defendant to obtain records, which were not previously
    disclosed to him), cert. denied, 
    260 Conn. 937
    , 
    802 A.2d 92
    , and cert. denied, 
    261 Conn. 915
    , 
    806 A.2d 1057
    (2002); we are mindful that granting the six week contin-
    uance requested would have caused a substantial dis-
    ruption to the trial. The state provided Weaver’s
    PowerPoint presentation to defense counsel on October
    1, 2015, while jury selection was ongoing. Jury selection
    was initially completed on October 7, 2015, the day the
    defendant filed his motion to preclude. On the morning
    of October 8, the court conducted additional voir dire
    after one of the jurors was excused, and evidence began
    that afternoon. The hearing on the motion to preclude
    was not held until October 20, 2015. By that date, the
    court already had held seven days of trial, and a lengthy
    continuance certainly would have affected all involved
    in the trial, including the jury. See State v. Brown, 
    242 Conn. 445
    , 460, 
    700 A.2d 1089
     (1997) (trial court took
    into consideration ‘‘the length of the requested continu-
    ance and its potentially negative effect on the jury’’ and
    thus did not abuse its discretion in denying motion for
    continuance). By October 22, when Weaver testified
    before the jury, twenty-one days had elapsed since the
    state’s disclosure, and the court reasonably could have
    concluded, had it reached the feasibility of rectifying the
    prejudice by a continuance, that a six week continuance
    would have been too disruptive to the trial.
    The state argues in its brief that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in declining to order a continuance
    because the defendant abandoned his request for a con-
    tinuance. The state underscores the court’s instruction
    to defense counsel that ‘‘[y]ou can renew your motion
    if you need be at the . . . end of direct,’’ and defense
    counsel’s failure to do so at that time.9 In State v. Sewell,
    
    95 Conn. App. 815
    , 819, 
    898 A.2d 828
    , cert. denied, 
    280 Conn. 905
    , 
    907 A.2d 94
     (2006), this court considered
    the defendant’s claim that the trial court improperly
    denied his motion for a mistrial on the basis of the
    state’s failure to provide material regarding the content
    of a witness’ testimony. Concluding that the trial court
    had not abused its discretion, this court considered that
    the trial court had ‘‘ordered a one day continuance and
    indicated that it would allow defense counsel more
    time if requested.’’ Id., 821. The following day, defense
    counsel did not request additional time, and this court
    concluded that ‘‘the continuance the [trial] court
    granted was a curative action offered to remedy any
    then existing prejudice to the defendant.’’ Id.; see also
    State v. Cooke, 
    supra,
     
    134 Conn. App. 580
     (noting, in
    analysis of whether trial court abused its discretion
    in denying motion to preclude and granting shorter
    continuance than requested to prepare for cross-exami-
    nation of expert witness regarding supplemental DNA
    report disclosed on first day of evidence at trial, that on
    day that court ultimately scheduled cross-examination,
    ‘‘the defendant did not object on the basis of a lack of
    time or ability to have his expert review the supplemen-
    tal report, and the court explicitly asked both parties’
    counsel whether they wanted to be heard on any matter,
    to which both replied in the negative’’).
    We do not construe the defendant’s failure to repeat
    his request for a continuance at the conclusion of Weav-
    er’s direct examination as an abandonment of that
    request. We believe it relevant, however, to the discus-
    sion of whether the court abused its discretion, in that
    the court expressly identified the conclusion of direct
    examination as an appropriate opportunity for defense
    counsel to renew his request, and defense counsel failed
    to renew his request at that moment.
    The question of whether the court abused its discre-
    tion in failing to order a continuance in order to permit
    the defendant to consult with his own expert witness
    is a close one. We disagree with the trial court that the
    defendant suffered no prejudice as a result of the late
    disclosure. Ultimately, however, we cannot conclude
    that the court’s ruling denying the request for a six
    week continuance was ‘‘so arbitrary as to vitiate logic’’
    or was ‘‘based on improper or irrelevant factors.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Beaulieu, 
    supra,
    118 Conn. App. 8
    . We note that the trial court did sanc-
    tion the state for its late disclosure, although the sanc-
    tion issued was mild in comparison to that requested
    by defense counsel.10 Accordingly, we conclude that the
    court did not abuse its discretion.11
    We further conclude that even if the court’s denial
    of the defendant’s request for a continuance constituted
    an abuse of discretion, the defendant has not demon-
    strated that the claimed error was harmful. ‘‘[W]hether
    [an improper ruling] is harmless in a particular case
    depends upon a number of factors, such as the impor-
    tance of the witness’ testimony in the prosecution’s
    case, whether the testimony was cumulative, the pres-
    ence or absence of evidence corroborating or contra-
    dicting the testimony of the witness on material points,
    the extent of cross-examination otherwise permitted,
    and, of course, the overall strength of the prosecution’s
    case. . . . Most importantly, we must examine the
    impact of the . . . evidence on the trier of fact and
    the result of the trial. . . . [T]he proper standard for
    determining whether an erroneous evidentiary ruling
    is harmless should be whether the jury’s verdict was
    substantially swayed by the error.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Toro, 
    172 Conn. App. 810
    , 817,
    
    162 A.3d 63
    , cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 905
    , 
    170 A.3d 2
    (2017). ‘‘[A] nonconstitutional error is harmless when
    an appellate court has a fair assurance that the error did
    not substantially affect the verdict.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Pascual, 
    305 Conn. 82
    , 93, 
    43 A.3d 648
     (2012).
    In the present case, Weaver’s testimony, although
    important to the state’s case, also was corroborative of
    other testimony presented to the jury. The jury heard
    Anderson’s detailed description of the events on the
    day of the shootings. Anderson identified the defendant
    as the man he picked up on Palisade Avenue on the
    afternoon of the shootings. Anderson testified that he
    dropped the defendant and Rogers off near the scene
    of the shootings and heard ‘‘firecracker sounds’’ while
    they were gone. Surveillance videos further corrobo-
    rated much of Anderson’s testimony, including that the
    defendant told Rogers he thought he had dropped a
    clip before getting out of Anderson’s car at Stratford
    Avenue and Hollister Avenue. The jury viewed surveil-
    lance video and associated still images, which depicted
    a man opening and closing the rear passenger door of
    Anderson’s car before getting out at Stratford Avenue
    and Hollister Avenue. The man appeared to have dread-
    locks and was wearing a hat with a visible logo. The
    state entered into evidence photographs recovered
    from the defendant’s cell phone showing the defendant
    with dreadlocks and wearing a hat with a similar shaped
    logo; those photographs were taken on September 17,
    2013, less than one week following the shootings. The
    state also entered into evidence a hat matching that
    worn in the photographs, which was recovered from
    the defendant’s car on September 17, 2013. The jury
    also heard evidence that on September 16, 2013, Rogers
    was arrested and had sent the defendant a text message
    indicating that ‘‘[d]ey taken [me].’’
    Finally, the state’s case against the defendant was
    relatively strong. The jury heard Anderson’s testimony,
    as well as other circumstantial evidence, including that
    of the defendant’s consciousness of guilt. See part IV
    of this opinion; see also State v. Pugh, 
    176 Conn. App. 518
    , 533, 
    170 A.3d 710
     (concluding that ‘‘the state pre-
    sented a strong case against the defendant, even if some
    of the evidence was circumstantial’’), cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 985
    , 
    175 A.3d 43
     (2017); State v. Hayward, 
    116 Conn. App. 511
    , 520, 
    976 A.2d 791
     (concluding that
    state’s case was strong despite fact that evidence with
    respect to defendant’s use of dangerous instrument was
    ‘‘in large part circumstantial’’), cert. denied, 
    293 Conn. 934
    , 
    981 A.2d 1077
     (2009). Accordingly, we conclude
    that even if the court abused its discretion in failing to
    grant the defendant’s request for a continuance, the
    defendant has not demonstrated that the claimed error
    was harmful.
    B
    Following our Supreme Court’s decision in State v.
    Edwards, 
    325 Conn. 97
    , 
    156 A.3d 506
     (2017), the defen-
    dant filed a supplemental brief claiming that ‘‘[t]he trial
    court abused its discretion when it allowed Sergeant
    Weaver to testify as an expert without conducting a
    Porter hearing12 to determine if he was qualified to
    testify as an expert and whether the methodology he
    used to support his opinion that [the] defendant was
    in the same location as Anderson and Rogers at the
    time of the crime was reliable.’’ (Footnote added.) The
    defendant acknowledges that defense counsel did not
    request a Porter hearing, but maintains that the claim
    is reviewable because of ‘‘the presumption of retroactiv-
    ity’’ of Edwards. The state responds that ‘‘[i]t is well
    established that a question of whether evidence satisfies
    the admissibility standards prescribed in Porter is a
    claim ‘of evidentiary dimension,’ which, if unpreserved,
    is not entitled to appellate review.’’ We conclude that
    the defendant’s evidentiary claim is unpreserved, and
    we therefore decline to afford it review.
    In Edwards, our Supreme Court resolved two issues
    of first impression when it held that a police officer
    testifying regarding cell phone data needed to be quali-
    fied as an expert witness and that the cell phone data
    evidence was of a scientific nature such that a Porter
    hearing was required. State v. Edwards, supra, 
    325 Conn. 133
    . In Edwards, the defendant had filed a motion
    in limine ‘‘seeking to preclude the admission of cell
    phone data and requested a hearing pursuant to [Por-
    ter].’’ 
    Id., 118
    . Although our Supreme Court has not
    yet had occasion to address the question of whether
    Edwards applies retroactively to pending cases, this
    court twice has recognized that it does. See State v.
    Turner, 
    181 Conn. App. 535
    , 549 n.13,             A.3d
    (2018) (stating that Edwards ‘‘retroactively applies to
    the present case because ‘a rule enunciated in a case
    presumptively applies retroactively to pending
    cases’ ’’); State v. Steele, 
    176 Conn. App. 1
    , 34, 
    169 A.3d 797
     (concluding that ‘‘Edwards is controlling as to this
    [evidentiary] issue on appeal’’), cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 962
    , 
    172 A.3d 1261
     (2017).
    In the present case, the defendant did not request a
    Porter hearing. Moreover, when the court took up the
    defendant’s motion in limine and reviewed its under-
    standing of the defendant’s issues with respect to the
    state’s late disclosure of Weaver, it stated that ‘‘from
    a more substantive point of view’’ it understood the
    defendant’s motion to include issues surrounding ‘‘the
    reliability of this GeoTime software and whether Ser-
    geant Weaver is qualified as an expert to do what he’s
    done.’’ Defense counsel responded: ‘‘I don’t think we
    ever really contested that this type of information can
    be presented to a jury if coming in through a proper
    expert. And in terms of Sergeant Weaver’s qualifica-
    tions, we would just like to voir dire him during his
    testimony if he’s allowed to testify. So, that’s not really
    a basis.’’
    Notwithstanding his failure to request a Porter hear-
    ing, his concession to the court that the evidence was
    admissible through a proper expert, and his request
    to voir dire Weaver only as to his qualifications, the
    defendant argues on appeal that his evidentiary claim
    that the court failed to hold a Porter hearing is review-
    able on the basis of the presumption of retroactivity.
    He claims that because defense counsel could not have
    anticipated our Supreme Court’s holding in Edwards,
    he ‘‘could not have known that a Porter hearing was
    required before Weaver was allowed to testify, and
    therefore, could not possibly have waived any such
    claim.’’ In support of this argument, the defendant cites
    decisions of our Supreme Court, including State v.
    Hampton, 
    293 Conn. 435
    , 457, 
    988 A.2d 167
     (2009), in
    which the court retroactively applied its decision in
    State v. Salamon, 
    287 Conn. 509
    , 
    949 A.2d 1092
     (2008),
    to a pending appeal despite the defendant’s failure to
    preserve the constitutional challenge to the trial court’s
    instruction, citing ‘‘the general rule that judgments that
    are not by their terms limited to prospective application
    are presumed to apply retroactively . . . to cases that
    are pending . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Hampton, 
    supra,
     462 n.16. The defendant pro-
    vides this court with no authority for the proposition
    that this general rule extends beyond constitutional
    challenges to evidentiary claims, and our appellate case
    law suggests that it does not. See State v. Turner, supra,
    
    181 Conn. App. 549
    –50 (declining to review merits of
    unpreserved claim that defendant’s due process right
    to fair trial was violated by introduction of expert testi-
    mony regarding call detail mapping analysis and admis-
    sion of cell phone coverage maps because claim failed
    to satisfy Golding’s second prong in that it was eviden-
    tiary in nature and not of constitutional magnitude).
    We conclude that this court’s recognition that the
    rule announced in Edwards is retroactively applicable
    to pending cases does not compel the conclusion that
    an evidentiary claim made pursuant to Edwards is
    reviewable in the event the claim has not been pre-
    served. See State v. Martinez, 
    95 Conn. App. 162
    , 166
    n.3, 
    896 A.2d 109
     (concluding that even if new jury
    instruction rule announced in State v. Patterson, 
    276 Conn. 452
    , 
    886 A.2d 777
     [2005], which was not of consti-
    tutional dimension, was retroactive, this court would
    decline to review defendant’s unpreserved evidentiary
    claim that trial court failed to give jury instruction
    regarding credibility of jailhouse informants), cert.
    denied, 
    279 Conn. 902
    , 
    901 A.2d 1224
     (2006); cf. State
    v. Steele, supra, 
    176 Conn. App. 24
    , 27, 31 (reviewing
    preserved claim that court improperly permitted lay
    testimony concerning historic cell site analysis where
    defendant had objected, inter alia, on ground that offi-
    cer was ‘‘ ‘getting into the realm of expert testimony’ ’’
    and had not been qualified as an expert and separately
    had made a motion to strike testimony regarding ‘‘ ‘cell
    phone coverage’ ’’ because officer was not competent
    to testify on that topic). Here, because the defendant
    failed to request a Porter hearing, we decline to review
    the defendant’s unpreserved evidentiary claim that the
    court erred in failing to hold a Porter hearing.
    II
    The defendant claims that the court deprived him of
    his right to present a defense by precluding William
    Smith, the defendant’s investigator, from providing tes-
    timony to rebut Weaver’s testimony.
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to this second claim. At the conclusion
    of Weaver’s testimony on October 22, 2015, defense
    counsel informed the court that he proposed to offer
    Smith’s testimony regarding the unmapped 2:14 p.m.
    phone call made from Rogers’ phone to the defendant’s
    phone. Noting that he had not been able to retain his
    own expert because of the state’s delayed disclosure,
    defense counsel represented that Smith had identified
    the latitude and longitude of the cell site associated
    with the 2:14 p.m. call in the same call detail records
    Weaver had used, put the latitude and longitude into
    Google Maps to plot the location, traveled to that loca-
    tion on the west side of Bridgeport, and photographed
    the building and the cell site located on top of the
    building. The court confirmed that the defendant was
    not seeking a continuance, and defense counsel repre-
    sented that he could have his witness testify that after-
    noon. Defense counsel claimed that this evidence would
    show the defendant’s presence on the west side of
    Bridgeport at the time of the 2:14 p.m. phone call, which
    made it practically impossible for Anderson to have
    picked him up minutes later on the other side of town.
    The state had no objection to the defendant putting on
    this witness.
    The court, however, questioned whether the testi-
    mony was ‘‘supposed to be representative of something
    that existed back in 2013 at the time this happened
    . . . .’’ The court further inquired whether Smith would
    ‘‘be able to testify the tower was up, that the tower
    wasn’t down for repairs? Is he going to be able to testify
    about whether this was, you know, the words were one
    zone or eight zones or three zones?’’ Defense counsel
    responded that he thought that Weaver testified that all
    the relevant towers were three sided. Defense counsel
    further responded that Smith relied on the same records
    Weaver used to obtain the latitude and longitude, and
    had put that information into Google Maps, which he
    represented that Weaver had testified was an appro-
    priate method to locate a point on a map. The court
    remarked that defense counsel could not represent that
    it was the exact tower, to which defense counsel
    replied: ‘‘Is this the tower? I don’t know. But it’s all I
    can offer, Your Honor.’’ Defense counsel argued: ‘‘And
    again, I’m prejudiced . . . .’’
    Accepting defense counsel’s representation as to the
    substance of Smith’s testimony, the court stated that
    even if it were to accept the testimony as true, the
    court did not think it was ‘‘definitive enough, complete
    enough and material enough to’’ change its decision
    regarding a continuance. Defense counsel responded
    that he understood the court’s ruling would not change
    with respect to the continuance, but that he was
    attempting to ameliorate the harm occasioned by the
    court’s denial of his motion in limine by introducing
    evidence of the cell site location associated with the
    2:14 p.m. phone call. Defense counsel noted that in the
    event the court was excluding Smith’s testimony, the
    defendant would renew his request for a mistrial on
    the ground that the information as to the 2:14 p.m.
    phone call was exculpatory and that the failure to dis-
    close it constituted a Brady violation.
    The court then ruled: ‘‘Okay. I don’t think it’s been
    shown to be exculpatory. I don’t think that it’s any
    cause for a mistrial and you were very effective on
    cross in eliciting from Sergeant Weaver that the scope
    of what he was asked to do was very narrow. He could
    have taken this universe of information he had and
    done more with it, but I heard from the witness many
    times that all I was asked to do was to focus on certain
    dates and times and locations. Times and locations.
    And that was at the direction of the state. Be it they—
    they asked him to focus on what he acknowledged to
    be a much greater, you know, source—sources that are
    available to him. So, I understand that.’’ In his memoran-
    dum of law in support of his motion for a new trial, the
    defendant argued that the court’s preclusion of Smith’s
    testimony constituted material error warranting a
    new trial.
    ‘‘[T]he federal constitution require[s] that criminal
    defendants be afforded a meaningful opportunity to
    present a complete defense. . . . The sixth amend-
    ment . . . [guarantees] the right to offer the testimony
    of witnesses, and to compel their attendance, if neces-
    sary, [and] is in plain terms the right to present a
    defense, the right to present the defendant’s version of
    the facts as well as the prosecution’s to the jury so that
    it may decide where the truth lies. . . . When defense
    evidence is excluded, such exclusion may give rise to
    a claim of denial of the right to present a defense. . . .
    A defendant is, however, bound by the rules of evidence
    in presenting a defense. . . . Although exclusionary
    rules of evidence cannot be applied mechanistically to
    deprive a defendant of his rights, the constitution does
    not require that a defendant be permitted to present
    every piece of evidence he wishes.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Sampson, 
    174 Conn. App. 624
    ,
    635, 
    166 A.3d 1
    , cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 920
    , 
    171 A.3d 57
     (2017). ‘‘[T]he proffering party bears the burden of
    establishing the relevance of the offered testimony.
    Unless a proper foundation is established, the evidence
    is irrelevant.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Dee-
    gan v. Simmons, 
    100 Conn. App. 524
    , 540, 
    918 A.2d 998
    , cert. denied, 
    282 Conn. 923
    , 
    925 A.2d 1103
     (2007).
    We conclude that the court did not abuse its discre-
    tion in precluding Smith’s testimony. Although the basis
    the court relied on in precluding Smith’s testimony was
    not clearly articulated, the court’s questions to defense
    counsel were addressed to the foundation for Smith’s
    testimony. It was not clear from defense counsel’s prof-
    fer whether Smith had sufficient knowledge to be exam-
    ined and cross-examined regarding the cell site
    accessed by the defendant’s phone, and defense counsel
    did not request a hearing outside of the presence of the
    jury to proffer Smith’s testimony. Nor did he inform
    the court that he intended to rely on certain of Weaver’s
    conclusions with respect to the generally expected cov-
    erage area of the cell site. Specifically, although defense
    counsel sought to introduce Smith’s testimony as to the
    location of the cell site to which the defendant’s cell
    phone connected, defense counsel’s proffer did not
    include whether Smith had any knowledge as to the
    geographical coverage area of the cell site in question.
    Accordingly, in light of the limited foundation, we con-
    clude that the court did not abuse its discretion in
    precluding Smith’s testimony.13
    III
    The defendant next claims that the court deprived
    him of his ‘‘right to present a defense when it prevented
    him from introducing highly relevant information that
    one of the guns used in the shooting was found on a
    person named Terrance Clark when he was arrested in
    August, 2014.’’ The defendant claims that ‘‘[t]his was
    the only evidence connecting a particular gun to the
    shooting and, significantly, it was not connected to
    the defendant.’’
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to this claim. On October 22, 2015, the state
    filed a motion in limine to preclude the defendant from
    introducing testimonial evidence of Bridgeport Police
    Officer Mark Martocchio and Marshall Robinson from
    the state forensic laboratory regarding the recovery of
    a firearm from Clark upon his arrest on August 23, 2014.
    Specifically, the state argued that the proposed third-
    party culpability evidence was not relevant, as the
    weapon was not found in Clark’s possession until
    almost one year after the crime. The court took up the
    motion in limine, stating that it understood that the
    defendant wanted to present the testimony of Martoc-
    chio, who would testify that he recovered the weapon
    from Clark on August 23, 2014, and Robinson, who
    would testify that the shell casings in evidence were
    discharged from the weapon found in Clark’s posses-
    sion. Defense counsel argued that the evidence was
    ‘‘fundamentally relevant to our defense’’ in that the
    weapon was not found in the defendant’s possession
    or tied to him in any way. The state responded that it
    understood the claim of relevancy to be with respect
    to third-party culpability and argued that the evidence
    was not relevant because it lacked a direct connection.
    Clark’s name previously had never come up during the
    trial, and thus there was no indication that he was
    present at the scene of the crime. The court rejected
    defense counsel’s argument that the delay in finding
    the weapon went to the weight of the evidence, not its
    admissibility. Granting the state’s motion in limine, the
    court stated that it was concerned about the ‘‘fundamen-
    tal relevance’’ of the evidence and questioned how it
    could assist the jury in determining the issues in this
    case.
    We note at the outset that the defendant did not
    challenge before the trial court the state’s view of the
    evidence as purported third-party culpability evidence.
    In fact, defense counsel noted during oral argument
    before the trial court: ‘‘As [the state] recognizes, we
    haven’t submitted, which, we intend, a third-party cul-
    pability instruction, particularly as to Mr. Clark.’’
    (Emphasis added.) In its brief to this court, the state
    argued that the trial court ‘‘properly excluded the prof-
    fered testimony as irrelevant to establish third-party
    culpability.’’ The defendant did not file a reply brief.
    During the rebuttal portion of his oral argument before
    this court, the defendant represented that he had not
    offered the evidence to show third-party culpability,
    but rather to show simply that the gun was found in
    the possession of a third party and was not connected
    to the defendant.
    The trial court clearly found that the proposed evi-
    dence was not relevant to the issues in the case. Given
    that the ‘‘admissibility of evidence of [third-party] culpa-
    bility is governed by the rules relating to relevancy’’;
    (internal quotation marks omitted) State v. Schovanec,
    
    326 Conn. 310
    , 319, 
    163 A.3d 581
     (2017); the court was
    not required to proceed further in its analysis, whether
    the court understood the claim to be one of general
    relevance or one in furtherance of a defense of third-
    party culpability. ‘‘Determining whether evidence is rel-
    evant and material to critical issues in a case is an
    inherently fact-bound inquiry. . . . As a general princi-
    ple, evidence is relevant if it has a tendency to establish
    the existence of a material fact. One fact is relevant to
    another fact whenever, according to the common
    course of events, the existence of the one, taken alone
    or in connection with other facts, renders the existence
    of the other either certain or more probable.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) State v. Rodriguez, 
    107 Conn. App. 685
    , 710, 
    946 A.2d 294
    , cert. denied, 
    288 Conn. 904
    ,
    
    953 A.2d 650
     (2008).
    ‘‘Although the standard for relevancy is quite low, it
    is often applied with some rigor. . . . Evidence is irrel-
    evant or too remote if there is such a want of open and
    visible connection between the evidentiary and princi-
    pal facts that, all things considered, the former is not
    worthy or safe to be admitted in the proof of the latter.
    . . . The determination of relevance must be made
    according to reason and judicial experience.’’ (Citations
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Thomas, 
    177 Conn. App. 369
    , 395–96, 
    173 A.3d 430
    , cert.
    denied, 
    327 Conn. 985
    , 
    175 A.3d 43
     (2017). ‘‘[T]he trial
    court’s ruling on the relevancy of . . . evidence will
    be reversed on appeal only if the court has abused its
    discretion or an injustice appears to have been done.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Rodriguez,
    
    supra,
     
    107 Conn. App. 710
    .
    The defendant argues that because the sole issue
    before the jury was ‘‘whether or not the defendant was
    one of the shooters,’’ the proffered evidence was ‘‘rele-
    vant to show a lack of identity as to the defendant.’’
    We disagree. The trial court reasonably could have con-
    cluded that the fact that the weapon was found in the
    possession of a different individual on August 23, 2014,
    almost one year after the crimes at issue, did not render
    it ‘‘either certain or more probable’’ that the defendant
    was not one of the shooters on September 10, 2013.
    See Sullivan v. Metro-North Commuter Railroad Co.,
    
    96 Conn. App. 741
    , 749, 
    901 A.2d 1258
     (2006) (report,
    offered ‘‘to support the plaintiff’s contention that the
    decedent’s death was foreseeable to the defendant on
    the basis of its knowledge of the statistical data con-
    tained in the report concerning reported crimes at Con-
    necticut [railroad] stations,’’ was not relevant in part
    because it was based on data compiled from 1985
    through 1987, and decedent’s death did not occur until
    1992), rev’d on other grounds, 
    292 Conn. 150
    , 
    971 A.2d 676
     (2009); State v. Skidd, 
    104 Conn. App. 46
    , 63, 
    932 A.2d 416
     (2007) (‘‘[T]he court properly ruled that the
    map was not relevant because it did not depict the
    parking lot as it existed in July, 2003. The court correctly
    determined that the inferences that could be drawn
    from the map would be relevant only if the events had
    occurred in 2001, when the map was created, and were
    not relevant to the incident of July, 2003.’’). Accordingly,
    we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion
    in concluding that the proffered evidence was too
    remote in time to be relevant to show a lack of identity.14
    IV
    The defendant’s final claim is that the court abused its
    discretion in admitting consciousness of guilt evidence
    that ‘‘on two occasions after the shooting, [the] defen-
    dant did not appear in court on an unrelated matter.’’
    The following additional facts and procedural history
    are relevant to this claim. Prior to September 17, 2013,
    the defendant had scheduled court dates in Norwalk
    Superior Court on matters unrelated to the shootings.
    On September 17, 2013, one week after the shootings,
    the defendant was driving a motor vehicle in Bridgeport
    when he was involved in an accident. He left the scene
    of the accident before police arrived. Detective Martin
    Heanue of the Bridgeport Police Department responded
    to the accident and collected evidence from the vehicle,
    including the defendant’s cell phone, two criminal
    appearance bonds for cases unrelated to the shootings,
    and a gun. Heanue learned the phone number of the
    cell phone, and applied for a search warrant for the
    call detail records. Heanue eventually identified the
    driver of the vehicle as the defendant.
    Before Heanue had testified to his investigation of
    the accident, the state had sought to introduce evidence
    that the defendant had failed to appear for two court
    dates in Norwalk as consciousness of guilt evidence,
    and defense counsel objected on the ground of rele-
    vance. In argument outside the presence of the jury, the
    state claimed that the two criminal appearance bonds
    found in the vehicle showed that the defendant had
    notice of the Norwalk court dates. Defense counsel
    responded to the state’s argument by positing that the
    defendant had not appeared in court because he knew
    that the police had recovered a gun from the vehicle
    and that the police were investigating him in connection
    with that gun. Defense counsel further argued that he
    was put in an ‘‘impossible position’’ because he did not
    want to introduce the evidence about the gun.
    The court, recognizing that the jury had not yet heard
    any connection between the appearance bonds and the
    car at issue, ruled that the appearance bonds could
    not yet be admitted as full exhibits, but advised that
    assuming the state could provide the connection, the
    criminal appearance bonds would be admissible subject
    to redaction of the listed offenses. The court further
    stated: ‘‘I understand that the defense has another argu-
    ment they could put forward but simply because he
    can’t put that argument forward, I don’t think that the
    state is precluded from asking the jury to infer that he
    did not appear and argue later that the reason he did
    was because of his implication in a shooting that
    occurred days before.’’ The court indicated that defense
    counsel could renew his objection when the state later
    moved to admit the appearance bonds into evidence,
    and the court would reconsider its ruling if there was
    reason to do so.
    On October 22, 2015, the state and defense counsel
    alerted the court that they had reached an agreement
    regarding the defendant’s failures to appear for his court
    dates. Defense counsel again noted that she objected
    to the evidence coming in at all as ‘‘unduly prejudicial
    and not probative of anything that is pertinent to this
    case, particularly given the lapse in time between the
    incident . . . and the date that [the defendant] didn’t
    appear.’’ Defense counsel further argued that defense
    counsel in the unrelated proceedings had not notified
    the defendant of one of the two court dates. After put-
    ting those arguments on the record, the state and
    defense counsel requested, in the presence of the jury,
    that the court take judicial notice of the following
    facts.15 On September 11, 2013, and September 16, 2013,
    the defendant was scheduled to appear in Norwalk
    Superior Court and he did appear on both of those
    dates. The defendant was scheduled to appear in court
    on October 2, 2013, but he failed to appear on that date.
    He was scheduled to appear in court on October 9, 2013,
    on which date the defendant again failed to appear, and
    he was ordered rearrested. The defendant was arrested
    and taken into custody on October 17, 2013. The nature
    of the charges at issue in the Norwalk proceedings was
    not disclosed to the jury.
    The court agreed to take judicial notice of the facts
    represented and instructed the jury that these matters
    were unrelated to the shootings, and that the jury was
    to draw no adverse inferences against the defendant.
    The court explained that the facts were not offered to
    show that the defendant is a person of bad character.
    In its final charge, the court instructed the jury as to
    consciousness of guilt evidence and stated that the
    ‘‘state claims that in October, 2013, after the shootings
    in Bridgeport, [the defendant] allegedly did not appear
    for an unrelated case he had in Norwalk.’’16 Defense
    counsel took an exception to the instruction ‘‘for rea-
    sons previously stated that are unduly focusing on a
    piece of notice and it being too attenuated to the
    crime.’’17
    On appeal, the defendant claims that ‘‘there was sim-
    ply no basis for concluding that defendant’s failure to
    appear in court in Norwalk was motivated by an attempt
    to evade apprehension for the shooting.’’ In support of
    this claim, he argues that: (1) there was no evidence
    that the defendant was under investigation at the time
    or that he was aware he was under investigation; (2)
    the court was aware that the police had found a gun
    in the car when he fled the scene of the accident; and (3)
    the court was aware that the transcript of the October
    9, 2013 proceeding showed that the defendant did not
    have notice of that court date. We are not persuaded
    by the defendant’s arguments.
    We begin our analysis with a review of the applicable
    legal principles. ‘‘Relevant evidence is evidence that has
    a logical tendency to aid the trier in the determination
    of an issue. . . . One fact is relevant to another if in
    the common course of events the existence of one,
    alone or with other facts, renders the existence of the
    other either more certain or more probable. . . . Evi-
    dence is irrelevant or too remote if there is such a want
    of open and visible connection between the evidentiary
    and principal facts that, all things considered, the for-
    mer is not worthy or safe to be admitted in the proof
    of the latter. . . . Evidence is not rendered inadmissi-
    ble because it is not conclusive. All that is required is
    that the evidence tend to support a relevant fact even
    to a slight degree, so long as it is not prejudicial or
    merely cumulative.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Coccomo, 
    302 Conn. 664
    , 669, 
    31 A.3d 1012
     (2011).
    ‘‘In a criminal trial, it is relevant to show the conduct
    of an accused, as well as any statement made by him
    subsequent to the alleged criminal act, which may fairly
    be inferred to have been influenced by the criminal act.
    . . . Generally speaking, all that is required is that . . .
    evidence [of consciousness of guilt] have relevance,
    and the fact that ambiguities or explanations may exist
    which tend to rebut an inference of guilt does not render
    [such] evidence . . . inadmissible but simply consti-
    tutes a factor for the jury’s consideration. . . . The fact
    that the evidence might support an innocent explana-
    tion as well as an inference of a consciousness of guilt
    does not make [the admission of evidence of conscious-
    ness of guilt] erroneous. . . . [T]he court [is] not
    required to enumerate all the possible innocent explana-
    tions offered by the defendant. . . . [I]t is the province
    of the jury to sort through any ambiguity in the evidence
    in order to determine whether [such evidence] warrants
    the inference that [the defendant] possessed a guilty
    conscience. . . . Moreover, evidence of a defendant’s
    consciousness of guilt is admissible only if its probative
    value outweighs its prejudicial effect.’’ (Citation omit-
    ted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Gonza-
    lez, 
    315 Conn. 564
    , 593–94, 
    109 A.3d 453
    , cert. denied,
    U.S.     , 
    136 S. Ct. 84
    , 
    193 L. Ed. 2d 73
     (2015).
    ‘‘We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for
    abuse of discretion. . . . We will make every reason-
    able presumption in favor of upholding the trial court’s
    ruling, and only upset it for a manifest abuse of discre-
    tion. . . . [Thus, our] review of such rulings is limited
    to the questions of whether the trial court correctly
    applied the law and reasonably could have reached
    the conclusion that it did.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Id., 593.
    Applying these principles to the present case, we
    conclude that the defendant’s failure to appear on two
    dates following the shootings ‘‘may fairly be inferred
    to have been influenced by the criminal act’’ of causing
    the death of one person and the assault of four others.
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Coccomo,
    
    supra,
     
    302 Conn. 671
    . The jury reasonably could have
    inferred that the defendant’s failure to appear for his
    court dates indicated consciousness of guilt in the multi-
    ple shootings. See State v. Davis, 
    98 Conn. App. 608
    ,
    626–30, 
    911 A.2d 753
     (2006) (jury reasonably could have
    inferred that evidence that defendant had complied with
    terms of his parole and attended monthly meetings with
    his parole officer prior to shooting but missed meetings
    after shooting indicated consciousness of guilt), aff’d,
    
    286 Conn. 17
    , 
    942 A.2d 373
     (2008), overruled in part by
    State v. Payne, 
    303 Conn. 538
    , 549, 
    34 A.3d 370
     (2012).
    Although that was not the only possible explanation
    for the defendant’s conduct, ‘‘[t]he fact that the evi-
    dence might support an innocent explanation as well
    as an inference of a consciousness of guilt does not
    make [the admission of such evidence] erroneous.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Coccomo,
    
    supra, 672
    .
    We further conclude that the evidence was not more
    prejudicial than probative. Our Supreme Court ‘‘has
    identified four factors relevant to determining whether
    the admission of otherwise probative evidence is unduly
    prejudicial. These are: (1) where the facts offered may
    unduly arouse the [jurors’] emotions, hostility or sympa-
    thy, (2) where the proof and answering evidence it
    provokes may create a side issue that will unduly dis-
    tract the jury from the main issues, (3) where the evi-
    dence offered and the counterproof will consume an
    undue amount of time, and (4) where the defendant,
    having no reasonable ground to anticipate the evidence,
    is unfairly surprised and unprepared to meet it.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Hill, 
    307 Conn. 689
    , 698, 
    59 A.3d 196
     (2013). ‘‘[A]ll adverse evidence
    is [by definition] damaging to one’s case, but [such
    evidence] is inadmissible only if it creates undue preju-
    dice so that it threatens an injustice were it to be admit-
    ted.’’ (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. Coccomo, 
    supra,
     
    302 Conn. 673
    .
    In the present case, the facts of the failures to appear
    do not rise to the level of prejudice identified in any of
    the four factors. In his brief to this court, the defendant
    argues only that he was prejudiced because ‘‘the evi-
    dence created side issues that unduly distracted the
    jury from the main issue.’’ We disagree. There is nothing
    in the record to support the defendant’s argument that
    the court’s taking judicial notice of the failures to appear
    created an unduly distracting side issue. Furthermore,
    no significant amount of time was expended on this
    issue, which was brief in the context of a trial that
    spanned more than ten days.
    We further reject as contrary to our case law the
    defendant’s argument that the evidence was improperly
    admitted because there was no evidence that he was
    under investigation for the shootings at the time or that
    he was aware he was under investigation. See State v.
    Hill, supra, 
    307 Conn. 700
    –702 (rejecting claim that
    evidence defendant fled from police when they tried to
    stop his vehicle ‘‘prior to the issuance of an arrest war-
    rant and before the police were actively searching for
    [the defendant] in connection with the . . . shootings’’
    was not probative of consciousness of guilt). ‘‘[T]he
    state is not required, as a matter of law, to establish
    that the defendant had actual knowledge that he was
    being charged with a criminal offense before introduc-
    ing evidence of his flight.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) State v. Barnes, 
    112 Conn. App. 711
    , 730, 
    963 A.2d 1087
     (2009) (‘‘[t]he court properly [allowed] the
    state to present evidence of the defendant’s flight even
    if the state failed to introduce direct or inferential evi-
    dence that the defendant knew that he was wanted by
    the police’’ [internal quotation marks omitted]); see also
    State v. Holmes, 
    64 Conn. App. 80
    , 87, 
    778 A.2d 253
    (‘‘the state was not required to show that the defendant
    had knowledge that the police were actively looking
    for him for the evidence of flight to be introduced to
    the jury to infer consciousness of guilt’’), cert. denied,
    
    258 Conn. 911
    , 
    782 A.2d 1249
     (2001). In any event, the
    jury heard evidence that on September 16, 2013, Rogers
    was arrested and had sent the defendant a text message
    indicating that ‘‘[d]ey taken [me].’’ From this evidence,
    the jury reasonably could have inferred that the defen-
    dant was aware that the police might seek him out in
    connection with the shootings.
    We also reject the defendant’s argument that the jury
    could not reasonably have concluded that he failed to
    appear because he had a guilty conscience as to the
    shootings. The defendant maintains that he actually
    failed to appear because the police found a gun that
    he illegally possessed in the car that he owned and that
    he fled following the accident. The defendant chose, as
    a matter of trial strategy, not to present this alternative
    explanation to the jury because he concluded that the
    evidence regarding the gun was damaging. Had he cho-
    sen to present his explanation, the jury reasonably
    could have inferred that the defendant failed to appear
    because of the presence of the gun in the car he was
    operating, but it was also entitled to make contrary
    inferences. See State v. Watts, 
    71 Conn. App. 27
    , 36, 
    800 A.2d 619
     (2002) (evidence that the defendant procured
    false identification badge, which defendant claimed he
    used in another incident, unrelated to charges at issue,
    was properly admitted as consciousness of guilt evi-
    dence, where ‘‘[e]ven if the jury reasonably could have
    inferred on the state of this record that the defendant
    had used the identification badge exclusively in an unre-
    lated activity, it was entitled to make contrary infer-
    ences’’ [emphasis in original]).
    Last, regarding the defendant’s argument that the
    court was aware that the transcript of the October 9,
    2013 proceeding showed that the defendant did not
    have notice of that court date, we conclude that the
    defendant has not demonstrated that the evidence was
    improperly admitted on this basis. In the transcript of
    the October 9, 2013 proceeding, defense counsel repre-
    sented that he had ‘‘not spoken to’’ the defendant and
    that he ‘‘did reach out’’ but had not ‘‘heard from him.’’
    Notwithstanding that the state and defense counsel
    requested that the court take judicial notice of the
    defendant’s court proceedings in Norwalk rather than
    introducing the transcripts of those proceedings into
    evidence, even if the court were to consider the repre-
    sentations of defense counsel during the October 9 pro-
    ceeding, the transcript does not compel the conclusion
    that the defendant did not have notice of the court date.
    Accordingly, we cannot conclude that the court abused
    its discretion in admitting consciousness of guilt evi-
    dence of the defendant’s failure to appear in court.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    See State v. Porter, 
    241 Conn. 57
    , 
    698 A.2d 739
     (1997), cert. denied, 
    523 U.S. 1058
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 1384
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 645
     (1998).Following our Supreme
    Court’s decision in State v. Edwards, 
    325 Conn. 97
    , 
    156 A.3d 506
     (2017),
    the defendant filed a supplemental brief setting forth this claim.
    2
    One of the victims, Aijholon Tisdale, understood Rogers and the defen-
    dant to be showing disrespect by calling them ‘‘a Brazzie’’ because that is
    what they call people from the east end of Bridgeport.
    3
    The court previously had granted the defendant’s motion to sever the
    count of criminal possession of a firearm from the state’s long form informa-
    tion. The state later entered a nolle prosequi as to that count.
    4
    The jury also found Rogers guilty of the same offenses: one count of
    murder in violation of § 53a-54a (a), one count of conspiracy to commit
    murder in violation of §§ 53a-48 (a) and 53a-54a (a), and four counts of
    assault in the first degree in violation of § 53a-59 (a) (5). Rogers and the
    defendant have appealed separately. See State v. Rogers, 
    183 Conn. App. 669
    ,       A.3d      (2018).
    5
    We note that Weaver initially testified during the hearing on the defen-
    dant’s motion in limine that Sprint PCS sent him the wrong set of tower
    information. During his testimony before the jury, however, he stated that
    he had made a mistake in his earlier testimony and that Metro PCS was the
    carrier that sent him the wrong tower data. Accordingly, the data that Weaver
    downloaded from the NCADC database in the form of an Excel spreadsheet
    corresponded to Rogers’ cell phone, not the defendant’s cell phone.
    6
    Practice Book § 40-11 provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Upon written request
    by a defendant filed in accordance with Section 41-5 and without requiring
    any order of the judicial authority, the prosecuting authority, subject to
    Section 40-40 et seq., shall promptly, but no later than forty-five days from
    the filing of the request, unless such time is extended by the judicial authority
    for good cause shown, disclose in writing the existence of, provide photocop-
    ies of, and allow the defendant in accordance with Section 40-7, to inspect,
    copy, photograph and have reasonable tests made on any of the following
    items . . .
    ‘‘(3) Any reports or statements of experts made in connection with the
    offense charged including results of physical and mental examinations and
    of scientific tests, experiments or comparisons which are material to the
    preparation of the defense or are intended for use by the prosecuting author-
    ity as evidence in chief at the trial . . . .’’
    7
    One of the slides of Weaver’s presentation contained a video depicting
    the movement of Anderson’s GPS unit. Because Weaver had e-mailed the
    presentation as a PDF file, however, the video was not viewable. The video
    could only be viewed by opening the records contained on the CDs that
    were never picked up.
    8
    Weaver testified that coverage areas may also be mapped by hand.
    Weaver testified that a coverage area often extends approximately 60 to 70
    percent into the next closest coverage area, [96] and therefore a more precise
    coverage area may be determined by measuring 51 or 61 percent into the next
    closest coverage area, a process Weaver described as ‘‘[v]ery difficult . . . .’’
    9
    We note that defense counsel had made a similar request to preclude
    the testimony of another of the state’s expert witnesses, Heather Degnan.
    The court denied the motion to preclude but stated: ‘‘At the end of her
    direct examination I will excuse the jury for a moment and if you feel you
    need to renew the motion or make any other requests for relief I will hear
    that.’’ At the end of direct examination, the court held a sidebar conference,
    after which defense counsel cross-examined Degnan. After another witness
    testified and the jury was excused for lunch, defense counsel put on the
    record a further objection to Degnan’s testimony as to the ability to conduct
    DNA testing on shell casings.
    The court then stated: ‘‘[I]n terms of the examination of Mrs. Degnan,
    Heather Degnan, I made my ruling before. Counsel’s just putting [on] the
    record why she believes that ruling creates prejudice to her client. But I
    would say this much, too, in fairness to the court, I—I expressly said before
    the start of the examination of Mrs. Degnan, after I made my ruling that at
    the end of her testimony, direct, that I would excuse the jury and give
    counsel an opportunity to be heard further for reconsideration of the ruling
    or for any further relief. I called counsel up to sidebar, and I believe I said,
    correct me if I’m wrong, do you want me to excuse the jury now so you
    can be heard on that matter. This was at sidebar. And counsel did say no,
    we’ll go forward with cross-examination and put it on the record at a later
    time what you just put on the record. . . .
    ‘‘So, you know, there was no request to excuse the jury to say, Judge,
    we ask you to reconsider your ruling and strike the testimony, we ask for
    a continuance in our cross-examination of the witness so that we can look
    into this further. I’m just—you know, I need to complete the record, too,
    as to what did occur. Counsel elected to go directly to cross-examination.
    So, I understand your position, but I just want the record to be complete
    in all respects.’’
    10
    As noted previously, the court first precluded one slide of Weaver’s
    PowerPoint presentation that depicted the movement of Anderson’s GPS
    unit, on the basis of the state’s failure to provide the video to defense
    counsel. Thereafter, upon learning that Weaver had made changes to his
    presentation, the court suspended testimony for the afternoon to permit
    defense counsel to meet with Weaver to prepare for cross-examination.
    11
    Our determination that the court did not abuse its discretion leads us
    to conclude further that the court’s failure to grant a continuance or preclude
    Weaver’s testimony did not violate the defendant’s constitutional rights to
    a fair trial and to present evidence in his defense. In his brief, the defendant
    argues that ‘‘[t]his claim implicates his constitutional rights to a fair trial
    and to present a defense and, therefore, is of constitutional magnitude.’’
    The two cases he cites involve the trial court’s exclusion of evidence offered
    by defendants in their defense, rather than evidence offered by the state,
    and do not support his argument. See State v. Barletta, 
    238 Conn. 313
    ,
    322–23, 
    680 A.2d 1284
     (1996) (concluding that trial court’s exclusion of
    defendant’s proffered expert testimony did not constitute error of constitu-
    tional dimension, where defendant sought to introduce expert testimony to
    impeach witness who had already, in her own testimony, provided jury
    with ‘‘substantial reason to question her reliability and credibility’’); In re
    Adalberto S., 
    27 Conn. App. 49
    , 56–57, 
    604 A.2d 822
     (trial court deprived
    defendant of his right to present a defense, which was offered when it
    excluded evidence of alleged beating he sustained at hands of police when
    they apprehended him in support of his defense of justification to charge
    of interfering with officer), cert. denied, 
    222 Conn. 903
    , 
    606 A.2d 1328
     (1992).
    The defendant presents no authority to support his contention that the
    trial court’s failure to preclude Weaver’s testimony or to grant a continuance
    implicates his constitutional rights to a fair trial or to present a defense.
    Furthermore, this court has previously suggested that a trial court’s failure
    to issue sanctions on the basis of a discovery violation does not implicate
    a defendant’s constitutional rights. See State v. Stanley, 
    161 Conn. App. 10
    ,
    33 n.9, 
    125 A.3d 1078
     (2015) (‘‘[w]hether the court imposes sanctions on
    the state [for discovery violations] does not implicate the defendant’s consti-
    tutional rights’’), cert. denied, 
    320 Conn. 918
    , 
    131 A.3d 1154
     (2016); see also
    State v. Colon, 
    71 Conn. App. 217
    , 241, 
    800 A.2d 1268
     (‘‘Where discovery
    concerns inculpatory evidence, there exists no constitutional right to the
    disclosure of such evidence and, therefore, the rules of the court regulate
    any such disclosure. . . . In that event, [t]he trial court has broad discretion
    in applying sanctions for failure to comply with discovery orders.’’ [Citation
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.]), cert. denied, 
    261 Conn. 934
    ,
    
    806 A.2d 1067
     (2002). Accordingly, we conclude that the defendant has not
    shown a violation of his constitutional right to a fair trial or to present
    a defense.
    12
    See State v. Porter, 
    241 Conn. 57
    , 
    698 A.2d 739
     (1997), cert. denied, 
    523 U.S. 1058
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 1384
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 645
     (1998). ‘‘A Porter analysis
    involves a two part inquiry that assesses the reliability and relevance of the
    witness’ methods. . . . First, the party offering the expert testimony must
    show that the expert’s methods for reaching his conclusion are reliable. . . .
    Second, the proposed scientific testimony must be demonstrably relevant
    to the facts of the particular case in which it is offered, and not simply be
    valid in the abstract. . . . Put another way, the proponent of scientific
    evidence must establish that the specific scientific testimony at issue is, in
    fact, derived from and based [on] . . . [scientifically reliable] methodol-
    ogy.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Steele, 
    176 Conn. App. 1
    ,
    33 n.21, 
    169 A.3d 797
    , cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 962
    , 
    172 A.3d 1261
     (2017).
    13
    Our conclusion that the court properly precluded the evidence leads
    us to conclude further that the preclusion of the evidence did not violate
    the defendant’s constitutional right to present evidence in his defense. See
    footnote 14 of this opinion.
    14
    Our conclusion that the court properly precluded the evidence on the
    ground of relevance leads us to conclude further that the preclusion of the
    evidence did not violate the defendant’s constitutional rights to a fair trial
    and to present evidence in his defense. See State v. Davis, 
    298 Conn. 1
    , 11,
    
    1 A.3d 76
     (2010) (‘‘[i]f, after reviewing the trial court’s evidentiary rulings,
    we conclude that the trial court properly excluded the proffered evidence,
    then the defendant’s constitutional claims necessarily fail’’); State v. Adorno,
    
    121 Conn. App. 534
    , 547–48, 
    996 A.2d 746
     (if proffered evidence is not
    relevant, right of confrontation is not affected and evidence is properly
    excluded), cert. denied, 
    297 Conn. 929
    , 
    998 A.2d 1196
     (2010).
    15
    The court asked the parties whether they were referring to a stipulation.
    The prosecutor responded that ‘‘[w]e’re not asking it be designated as a
    stipulation, merely an agreement for the record.’’ The prosecutor further
    stated: ‘‘What I mean is that the court is going to take judicial notice. In
    other words, [defense counsel] and I agreed that if the court takes judicial
    notice of the following facts that would be acceptable as a presentation to
    the jury.’’ The court agreed to do so, and after counsel recited the agreed
    on facts before the jury, the court instructed the jury that it was ‘‘taking
    judicial notice of what’s just been represented because they represent official
    court proceedings within Norwalk.’’ The court further instructed the jury
    that it could accept the representations as true ‘‘without the need for offering
    further evidence on the matters.’’
    16
    The court instructed, in relevant part: ‘‘Now, in any criminal trial it is
    permissible for the state to show that conduct or statements made by a
    defendant after the time of the alleged offense may have been influenced
    by the criminal act itself; that is, the conduct or statements show a conscious-
    ness of guilt.
    ‘‘The state claims that the following conduct is evidence of consciousness
    of guilt . . . as to Raashon Jackson, the state claims that in October, 2013,
    after the shootings in Bridgeport, he allegedly did not appear for an unrelated
    case he had in Norwalk.
    ‘‘Such acts or statements do not, however, raise a presumption of guilt.
    If you find the evidence proved and you also find that the acts or statements
    were influenced by the criminal act and not by any other reason, you may,
    but are not required to, infer from this evidence that the defendant was
    acting from a guilty [conscience]. Remember, though, that you must limit
    your consideration of this type of evidence to only the particular defendant
    against whom it is alleged.
    ‘‘It is up to [you] as judges of the facts to decide whether either of the
    defendants’ acts or statements, if proved, reflect a consciousness of guilt and
    to consider such in your deliberations in conformity with these instructions.’’
    17
    Defense counsel reiterated his argument on the consciousness of guilt
    evidence in his motion for a new trial.