State v. Franklin ( 2015 )


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    STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. ZACKERY C. FRANKLIN
    (AC 37161)
    Gruendel, Lavine and Bishop, Js.
    Argued September 25—officially released December 29, 2015
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of New
    Haven, B. Fischer, J.)
    G. Douglas Nash, for the appellant (defendant).
    Michele C. Lukban, senior assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, were Michael Dearington,
    state’s attorney, and Kevin C. Doyle, former senior
    assistant state’s attorney, for the appellee (state).
    Opinion
    LAVINE, J. The defendant, Zackery C. Franklin,
    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 felony murder
    in violation of General Statutes § 53a-54c, and one count
    of robbery or attempt to commit robbery in the first
    degree in violation of General Statutes §§ 53a-49 (a) (2)
    and 53a-134 (a) (1). The defendant also appeals from
    the judgment of conviction rendered after a trial to the
    court of one count of carrying a pistol without a permit
    in violation of General Statutes § 29-35, and one count
    of criminal possession of a pistol or revolver in violation
    of General Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 53a-217c (a) (1).
    On appeal, the defendant claims that (1) the evidence
    was insufficient to support the judgment of conviction
    on all counts because the state relied on a single eyewit-
    ness whose testimony was contradicted by the physical
    evidence; (2) the verdicts were against the weight of
    the physical evidence, entitling him to a new trial; (3)
    the court erred in admitting prior misconduct evidence
    to show that he possessed the means to commit the
    crimes; (4) the prosecutor engaged in impropriety dur-
    ing closing argument; (5) the court erred in merging
    the convictions for murder and felony murder; and (6)
    the judgment file must be corrected because the convic-
    tion for ‘‘robbery or attempted robbery’’ encompassed
    a unanimous finding on the lesser offense of attempt
    but not the greater completed offense of robbery. We
    reverse the judgment of the court as to the felony mur-
    der conviction. We affirm the judgment in all other
    respects.
    The defendant’s convictions arise from the murder
    of John Claude James (victim). On July 9, 2011, the
    victim was in the area of Howard Avenue and Putnam
    Street in New Haven. At approximately 6 p.m., firefight-
    ers responded to a call that someone had been shot;
    they found the victim on the sidewalk adjacent to the
    entrance to the parking lot behind 518–526 Howard
    Avenue. The victim had been shot three times and he
    died shortly after being taken to the hospital.
    The jury reasonably could have found the following
    facts. The defendant had a motive to kill the victim so
    that he could obtain the victim’s gold chain, holding a
    joker medallion.1 The victim was wearing this chain on
    July 9, 2011. Two witnesses, Carol Boxley and Charles
    Caple, stated individually to police that on or about
    July 9, 2011, they overheard the defendant discussing
    gold jewelry, including the victim’s joker chain. Boxley
    told police that the defendant said ‘‘we’re going to get
    the joker chain ’cause gold is high now.’’ Caple told
    police that on the day the victim was shot, the defendant
    may have said that he was ‘‘gonna get’’ the victim.
    Boxley and her family lived at 536 Howard Avenue.
    Her daughter, Renicka (Nicky) Boxley, had a relation-
    ship with the defendant and was pregnant with his
    child. Boxley’s son, Antonio Lofton, Jr., witnessed the
    victim’s shooting.
    At approximately 5:30 p.m. on July 9, 2011, Dorothy
    Council was on the back porch of 530 Howard Avenue
    when the victim stopped by to greet her. The victim
    left soon after and approximately fifteen minutes later,
    Council heard gunshots and ran inside 530 Howard
    Avenue. Looking through a window, Council saw the
    victim run across the parking lot toward Putnam Street,
    lose his balance, spin around, and fall down at the
    entrance of the parking lot to 518–526 Howard Avenue.
    At this time, Lofton was in his backyard at 536 How-
    ard Avenue, from where he could see across Putnam
    Street and into the parking lot of 518–526 Howard Ave-
    nue. Lofton saw the defendant shoot the victim in the
    chest. The defendant fired ‘‘three or more’’ or ‘‘maybe
    four or five shots’’ while the victim was facing him.
    Lofton saw the defendant, with a ‘‘silvery handgun’’ in
    his hand, and his friend, Earl Simpson, run from the
    back of Putnam Street toward the front of his house.
    He did not see anything in Simpson’s hands. Lofton was
    able to identify the defendant because he had known
    him for about a year. He had known the victim for
    longer, and was able to identify him as well.
    Lofton went into his house using a rear entrance and
    saw the defendant in his kitchen. Both Simpson and
    the defendant offered Lofton marijuana and money,
    which Lofton did not accept. The defendant and Simp-
    son ran out of the apartment toward Carlisle Street and
    got into a waiting black car.
    At this time, Caple was in the area and heard the
    gunshots. He saw a black Acura, which he thought
    belonged to Isis Hargrove, drive by on Carlisle Street.
    Hargrove was Simpson’s sister and Caple was familiar
    with her. He knew that she had been involved with the
    defendant, and had seen her previously driving a black
    Acura in the area. Police later confirmed that she had a
    black Acura registered in her name. The police gathered
    evidence from the area, including several of the victim’s
    belongings, in the front part of the alcove between 518
    and 522 Howard Avenue. The police found the victim’s
    unbroken joker chain on the ground. Although the vic-
    tim had a cell phone with him that afternoon, the police
    recovered only the leather cell phone case that the
    victim was known to wear on his belt. The police found
    six nine millimeter shell casings in the alcove, as well
    as blood-like substances near the alcove and on the
    sidewalk near the entrance to the parking lot where
    the victim was found.
    On July 11, 2011, the police spoke with Hargrove
    about the shooting. On the night of July 12, 2011, the
    defendant and Hargrove, along with Simpson and his
    girlfriend Mikia Gary, rented a car and drove to North
    Carolina. On the way, the car was stopped for speeding
    in New Jersey. The state trooper asked for the occu-
    pants’ identifications, and the defendant gave his broth-
    er’s name. In the following weeks, the defendant was
    not seen in the area of Howard Avenue and Putnam
    Street, although he regularly spent time there prior to
    the shooting.
    On November 16, 2011, the defendant was arrested
    in Virginia. When the deputy making the arrest asked
    the defendant for identification, he gave a YMCA card
    with his photograph on it but with a name other than
    his own. At trial, the state asserted that the defendant’s
    use of false names and his flight from the state were
    indicative of his consciousness of guilt.
    The defendant was brought back to Connecticut and
    charged with five offenses. The charges of murder, fel-
    ony murder, and robbery or attempt to commit robbery
    in the first degree were tried to a jury, which returned
    a verdict of guilty on all three charges. The charges of
    carrying a pistol without a permit and criminal posses-
    sion of a pistol or revolver were tried to the court,
    which found him guilty. The court merged the murder
    and felony murder convictions and imposed a sentence
    of sixty years imprisonment on the murder charge and
    twenty years on the robbery or attempted robbery
    charge to be served concurrently. The court imposed
    a sentence of five years on the conviction of carrying
    a pistol without a permit to be served concurrently,
    and five years on the conviction of criminal possession
    of a pistol or revolver to be served consecutively. The
    total effective sentence was sixty-five years. The defen-
    dant appeals from this judgment. Additional facts will
    be set forth as necessary.
    I
    SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    We first consider the defendant’s claim that the evi-
    dence was insufficient for the jury and court to return
    verdicts of guilty as to all five counts. The defendant’s
    argument is twofold. First, he argues that the jury could
    not rely on Lofton’s testimony because it was ‘‘physi-
    cally impossible’’ for it to be true. Second, he argues
    that without Lofton’s testimony, the remaining circum-
    stantial evidence was insufficient to prove that the
    defendant was guilty of any of the offenses charged.
    We disagree.
    A
    We begin with the defendant’s claim that it was physi-
    cally impossible for Lofton’s testimony to be true. The
    defendant’s claim is not actually one of physical impos-
    sibility, but rather is a challenge to Lofton’s credibility
    and an argument that the jury could draw only one
    inference about where the shooting occurred based on
    the location of the expended shell casings. Prior to
    analyzing the sufficiency of the evidence claim, we
    explain why the defendant’s physical impossibility
    claim fails.
    The defendant’s physical impossibility claim turns
    entirely on where the shooting occurred. The following
    additional facts are relevant to this issue. Lofton was
    the only eyewitness to the shooting and at the time he
    testified, he was twenty years old and testifying pursu-
    ant to a subpoena. The building at 518–526 Howard
    Avenue is an apartment building, and in between each
    unit on the ground floor are recessed alcoves. Each
    alcove is about twenty feet deep and ten feet wide, and
    is enclosed on three sides by the walls of the building.
    Police found the victim’s belongings and the expended
    nine millimeter shells in the alcove between apartment
    518 and 522. Lofton said that he could not see into this
    alcove, but was able to see if people exited from it. The
    defendant asserts that the location of the expended
    shells conclusively proves that the shooting took place
    in this alcove, into which Lofton could not see.
    The state called two witnesses with firearms experi-
    ence, who testified as to where the six shells were
    found and their relation to where the shots were fired.
    One witness, Detective Omaida Nieves, testified that
    where the six shells and blood were found in the alcove
    did not prove that the shots were fired from that loca-
    tion. James Stephenson, a firearms expert from the
    state forensic science laboratory, testified that it was
    impossible to determine the ejection pattern of a fire-
    arm without knowing several variables, such as the type
    of firearm and the position of the shooter’s hand upon
    firing. He refused to speculate as to where the shots
    were fired from based upon the location of the six
    shell casings.
    The defendant asserts that the ‘‘[the experts’ testi-
    mony] established that the only shots fired occurred in
    the alcove, not in the parking lot driveway area as
    claimed by Lofton. The shots were fired from a place
    that Lofton concededly could not see into.’’ A review
    of Nieves’ and Stephenson’s testimony reveals that the
    defendant bases his claim not on facts in the record,
    but on his own conclusory assertions about the infer-
    ences that should be drawn from where the shells were
    found. The defendant relies principally upon State v.
    Hammond, 
    221 Conn. 264
    , 276–78, 
    604 A.2d 793
     (1992),
    in which the defendant prevailed on his claim of physi-
    cal impossibility because the DNA and blood type evi-
    dence conclusively established that the defendant could
    not have committed the crime. In the present case,
    however, it is entirely possible that the victim was run-
    ning away from the alcove when he was shot and that
    the defendant was standing in a place where Lofton
    could see him. Thus, whether Lofton saw the defendant
    shoot the victim is a matter of credibility, not impossi-
    bility.
    ‘‘[B]ecause the jury has the opportunity to observe
    the conduct, demeanor and attitude of the witnesses
    and to gauge their credibility, [i]t is axiomatic that evi-
    dentiary inconsistencies are for the jury to resolve, and
    it is within the province of the jury to believe all or
    only part of a witness’ testimony.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Morgan, 
    274 Conn. 790
    , 800,
    
    877 A.2d 739
     (2005). After concluding that the physical
    evidence did not preclude Lofton from having seen the
    shooting, ‘‘[o]n appeal we cannot revisit the jury’s deci-
    sion to believe the witness.’’2 State v. Robinson, 
    125 Conn. App. 484
    , 489, 
    8 A.3d 1120
     (2010), cert. denied,
    
    300 Conn. 911
    , 
    12 A.3d 1006
     (2011). Thus, the defen-
    dant’s claim that Lofton’s testimony should have been
    rejected based on physical impossibility fails.
    B
    We next turn to the sufficiency of the evidence,
    including Lofton’s testimony, as to each of the defen-
    dant’s convictions. ‘‘The standard of review employed
    in a sufficiency of the evidence claim is well settled.
    [W]e apply a two part test. First, we construe the evi-
    dence in the light most favorable to sustaining the ver-
    dict. Second, we determine whether upon the facts so
    construed and the inferences reasonably drawn there-
    from the [finder of fact] reasonably could have con-
    cluded that the cumulative force of the evidence
    established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. . . . In
    evaluating evidence, the [finder] of fact is not required
    to accept as dispositive those inferences that are consis-
    tent with the defendant’s innocence. . . . The [finder
    of fact] may draw whatever inferences from the evi-
    dence or facts established by the evidence it deems to
    be reasonable and logical. . . . On appeal, we do not
    ask whether there is a reasonable view of the evidence
    that would support a reasonable hypothesis of inno-
    cence. We ask, instead, whether there is a reasonable
    view of the evidence that supports the [finder of fact’s]
    verdict of guilty.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Mendez, 
    154 Conn. App. 271
    , 275–76, 
    105 A.3d 917
     (2014).
    First, the defendant’s challenge to the murder convic-
    tion fails because Lofton’s testimony and the circum-
    stantial evidence were sufficient to establish the
    defendant’s guilt. ‘‘To establish a violation of § 53a-54a,
    the crime of murder, the state must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant, with intent to
    cause the death of another person . . . cause[d] the
    death of such person . . . . [T]he specific intent to kill
    is an essential element of the crime of murder. To act
    intentionally, the defendant must have had the con-
    scious objective to cause the death of the victim. . . .
    Intent is a question of fact, the determination of which
    should stand unless the conclusion drawn by the trier
    is an unreasonable one.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.) State v. Lisboa, 
    148 Conn. App. 769
    , 775, 
    85 A.3d 1244
     (2014).
    Lofton’s testimony alone was sufficient for the jury
    to find the defendant guilty of murder as it reasonably
    allowed the jury to infer that the defendant had commit-
    ted all of the elements of the crime. Lofton testified
    that the defendant shot the victim three times, causing
    the victim’s death. The jury reasonably could have
    inferred from Lofton’s description of the events that
    the defendant intended to shoot the victim. See id., 776
    (‘‘it is a permissible . . . inference that [the] defendant
    intended the natural consequences of his voluntary con-
    duct’’ [internal quotation marks omitted]). It also does
    not matter that Lofton was the sole witness to the shoot-
    ing. ‘‘The credited testimony of even a single witness
    may be sufficient to sustain a defendant’s conviction.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Prosper,
    
    160 Conn. App. 61
    , 73,        A.3d   (2015); see also State
    v. Whitaker, 
    215 Conn. 739
    , 757 n.18, 
    578 A.2d 1031
    (1990). The jury also had circumstantial evidence of
    the defendant’s motive and consciousness of guilt to
    consider along with the eyewitness testimony.
    The defendant’s challenges to the sufficiency of the
    circumstantial evidence regarding his motive, con-
    sciousness of guilt, and possession of means to commit
    the crime also fail. The defendant argues that the evi-
    dence of Simpson’s and his fleeing the scene after the
    crime and leaving the state days later; his offer of money
    and marijuana to Lofton; Boxley and Caple’s testimony
    regarding his motive; and, evidence that he possessed
    a gun in the area of the shooting less than one month
    before it occurred, are ‘‘separately or together’’ insuffi-
    cient to support the convictions of guilty beyond a rea-
    sonable doubt. While perhaps each ‘‘separately’’ might
    be insufficient, we disagree that ‘‘together’’ they do not
    support the jury’s verdicts, especially when considered
    with Lofton’s eyewitness testimony that the defendant
    shot the victim.
    At trial, the state claimed that the defendant’s flight
    from Connecticut and use of false names was indicative
    of his consciousness of guilt. The jury reasonably could
    infer the defendant’s consciousness of guilt from these
    circumstances. See State v. Silva, 
    113 Conn. App. 488
    ,
    497–98, 
    966 A.2d 798
     (2009) (jury can infer conscious-
    ness of guilt from defendant’s flight); State v. Martinez,
    
    95 Conn. App. 162
    , 189, 
    896 A.2d 109
     (jury can infer
    consciousness of guilt from use of alias), cert. denied,
    
    279 Conn. 902
    , 
    901 A.2d 1224
     (2006). The jury also
    reasonably could have inferred from the circumstances
    that the defendant’s offer of marijuana and money to
    Lofton was to persuade him not to tell the police about
    the shooting.
    In regard to the testimony about the defendant’s
    motive, he makes similar challenges to the credibility
    of Boxley and Caple that he made to Lofton. At trial,
    both initially testified that they did not remember mak-
    ing statements to the police relating to the defendant’s
    motive. The jury had all of the evidence and testimony
    in its deliberations that the defendant now uses on
    appeal in his challenges to the witnesses’ credibility.
    We again note we will not question the jury’s credibility
    determinations and the conclusions it reached in resolv-
    ing apparent inconsistencies in the testimony.
    The testimony that the defendant possessed a gun in
    the area weeks prior to the shooting was admitted to
    show that he possessed the means to commit the crime,
    and the jury reasonably could have considered it in
    determining the defendant’s guilt.3
    Second, the defendant’s challenge to the conviction
    of carrying a pistol without a permit fails because the
    evidence was sufficient for the court to find the defen-
    dant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Section 29-35
    (a) provides in relevant part that: ‘‘No person shall carry
    any pistol or revolver upon his or her person, except
    when such person is within the dwelling house or place
    of business of such person, without a permit to carry
    the same issued as provided in section 29-28. . . .’’
    ‘‘Accordingly, the required elements of § 29-35 (a) are
    that the defendant: (1) carried a pistol, (2) for which
    he lacked a permit, (3) while outside his dwelling house
    or place of business.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Davis, 
    156 Conn. App. 175
    , 182, 
    111 A.3d 567
     (2015). At trial, the parties stipulated that the defen-
    dant did not have a permit to carry a firearm. Stephen-
    son testified that the murder weapon was a nine
    millimeter semiautomatic handgun, and the court rea-
    sonably could infer from Lofton’s eyewitness testimony
    that the defendant possessed a pistol outside his dwell-
    ing or place of business.
    Third, in regard to the conviction of criminal posses-
    sion of a pistol or revolver, General Statutes (Rev. to
    2011) § 53a-217c, provided in relevant part: ‘‘A person
    is guilty of criminal possession of a pistol or revolver
    when such person possesses a pistol or revolver . . .
    and (1) has been convicted of a felony . . . .’’ The
    parties stipulated at trial that as of July 9, 2011, the
    defendant was a convicted felon. This stipulation and
    Lofton’s eyewitness testimony were sufficient for the
    court to find the defendant guilty of this count.
    Fourth, the defendant claims that there was insuffi-
    cient evidence to find him guilty of robbery or armed
    robbery in the first degree and, accordingly, of felony
    murder. The defendant concedes that the victim’s pos-
    sessions found in the alcove and the fact that his cell
    phone was missing, considered with the wounds that
    the victim suffered, allow for the inference that a rob-
    bery and murder occurred. Nonetheless, the defendant
    contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict
    him of robbery or attempted robbery because ‘‘none of
    this implicated the [him] . . . . No fingerprints, DNA
    or any evidence identifying [him] as the robber-shooter
    was produced.’’
    Section 53a-134 (a) provides in relevant part: ‘‘A per-
    son is guilty of robbery in the first degree when, in the
    course of the commission of the crime of robbery . . .
    he or another participant in the crime: (1) Causes seri-
    ous physical injury to any person who is not a partici-
    pant in the crime . . . .’’ Section 53a-49 (a) provides
    in relevant part: ‘‘A person is guilty of an attempt to
    commit a crime if, acting with the kind of mental state
    required for commission of the crime, he . . . (2) inten-
    tionally does or omits to do anything which, under the
    circumstances as he believes them to be, is an act or
    omission constituting a substantial step in a course of
    conduct planned to culminate in his commission of
    the crime.’’
    The defendant’s argument fails because it overlooks
    that ‘‘[r]obbery may be proven by circumstantial evi-
    dence and the inferences drawn therefrom.’’ State v.
    Mullings, 
    202 Conn. 1
    , 11, 
    519 A.2d 58
     (1987). At trial,
    the jury heard testimony from the victim’s mother that
    her son always wore his gold chain because it had
    sentimental value to him, as well as testimony from her
    and other witnesses that the victim had his cell phone
    the day of the shooting and that it was never found.
    The victim’s chain was found intact near the alcove,
    and the jury reasonably could have drawn the inference
    proposed by the state in closing argument that the vic-
    tim would not have removed it because of its sentimen-
    tal value unless he had been threatened to do so. The
    jury also could have reasonably inferred that the vic-
    tim’s cell phone was taken, as it was never recovered.
    These inferences must be considered in light of the
    testimony that Lofton saw the defendant shoot the vic-
    tim in the vicinity of where the victim’s belongings were
    recovered. In construing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to sustaining the verdict, we determine that
    the jury reasonably could have concluded that the
    cumulative force of the evidence established the defen-
    dant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt as to the count
    of robbery or attempted robbery, which served as the
    basis for the defendant’s felony murder conviction.
    Mindful that in determining the sufficiency of the
    evidence we consider its cumulative effect, and constru-
    ing the evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining
    the verdict, we determine that the jury reasonably could
    have concluded that the evidence established the defen-
    dant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt on the counts
    of murder, felony murder, and robbery, and that the
    court could have done the same on the counts of posses-
    sion of a pistol without a permit, and criminal posses-
    sion of a pistol or revolver.
    II
    VERDICTS AGAINST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE/
    NEW TRIAL REMEDY
    The defendant claims that he is entitled to a new
    trial, arguing that the verdicts were against the weight
    of the physical evidence. We note that the defendant
    did not preserve this issue by moving for a new trial
    pursuant to Practice Book § 42-53, nor does he claim
    that he is entitled to a new trial based on newly discov-
    ered evidence under the framework of Practice Book
    § 42-55. The defendant seeks review of this claim under
    State v. Golding, 
    213 Conn. 233
    , 239–40, 
    567 A.2d 823
    (1989). However, the defendant’s claims regarding the
    physical evidence are substantively identical to the
    claims we considered in part I of this opinion. Further-
    more, the defendant concedes in his brief that this claim
    turns on whether we discredit Lofton’s testimony, as
    he stated ‘‘should this court agree with the defendant
    that Lofton’s testimony must be rejected but find never-
    theless that other evidence was sufficient to prove guilt,
    the defendant claims that the verdicts should be set
    aside and the lesser relief, which is to order a new trial,
    is required.’’ As we concluded in part I of this opinion,
    we are aware of no reason that prohibited the jury
    from crediting Lofton’s testimony. For this reason, this
    claim fails.4
    III
    PRIOR MISCONDUCT EVIDENCE
    The defendant next claims that the trial court abused
    its discretion by admitting evidence that he had pre-
    viously displayed a gun to prove that he possessed the
    means to commit the crimes. He argues that the trial
    court erred for three reasons: (1) the witness’ descrip-
    tion of the gun she saw was different from that of the
    murder weapon, (2) the purported misconduct was too
    remote in time, and (3) the prejudice outweighed the
    probative value. We disagree.
    The following additional facts are relevant to this
    claim. The defendant filed a pretrial motion to compel
    the state to provide notice of its intention to use evi-
    dence of his prior misconduct. The state apprised the
    defendant of its intention to offer the testimony of a
    ‘‘female friend of the defendant’s girlfriend’’ describing
    a confrontation during which the defendant displayed a
    gun. The female friend was Caprie Ford, Nicky Boxley’s
    cousin. At trial, the state made an offer of proof outside
    the presence of the jury. Ford saw the defendant with
    Hargrove at the circus in Milford on June 14 or 15,
    2011,5 and when she later saw him in the Putnam Street
    area she confronted him about his having been with a
    woman other than Nicky Boxley. The defendant walked
    away from Ford, but returned minutes later pointing at
    her what ‘‘looked like a little gun’’ and threatened to
    shoot her. Ford could see only a portion of the barrel
    because the defendant covered the rest of it with his
    sleeve, but stated that she was sure it was a real gun.
    When cross-examined, Ford testified that she could tell
    what the defendant displayed was not a toy gun because
    it was metal, but she was not sure of whether the
    weapon was a revolver or a semiautomatic pistol. She
    testified that all that she saw was the ‘‘small,’’ ‘‘skinny’’
    ‘‘nozzle of the gun’’ and a part of the barrel.
    The state offered this testimony pursuant to § 4-5 (b)
    of the Connecticut Code of Evidence to show that the
    defendant possessed the means to commit the crimes
    charged. Defense counsel argued that the court should
    preclude Ford’s testimony because there was no show-
    ing that what she saw was the murder weapon, that
    the incident was too remote in time to the shooting of
    the victim, and that there was not an adequate showing
    that what Ford saw was even a gun. The court noted
    that under State v. Rosario, 
    99 Conn. App. 92
    , 104, 
    912 A.2d 1064
    , cert. denied, 
    281 Conn. 925
    , 
    918 A.2d 276
    (2007), there is no requirement that evidence of a means
    to commit the crime must involve the actual weapon
    used in the crime. The court determined that the evi-
    dence was admissible, and that its probative value out-
    weighed its prejudicial effect. It stated it would give a
    limiting instruction after its admission. The jury then
    heard Ford testify about the incident, including the
    defendant’s having threatened to shoot her with the
    gun. She described the gun in the same manner. The
    court then gave a limiting instruction.
    The standard of review regarding uncharged miscon-
    duct evidence is well established. ‘‘Evidence of a defen-
    dant’s uncharged misconduct is inadmissible to prove
    that the defendant committed the charged crime or to
    show the predisposition of the defendant to commit
    the charged crime. . . . Exceptions to this rule have
    been recognized, however, to render misconduct evi-
    dence admissible if, for example, the evidence is offered
    to prove intent, identity, malice, motive, a system of
    criminal activity or the elements of a crime. . . . To
    determine whether evidence of prior misconduct falls
    within an exception to the general rule prohibiting its
    admission, we have adopted a two-pronged analysis.
    . . . First, the evidence must be relevant and material
    to at least one of the circumstances encompassed by
    the exceptions. Second, the probative value of such
    evidence must outweigh the prejudicial effect of the
    other crime evidence. . . . Since the admission of
    uncharged misconduct evidence is a decision within
    the discretion of the trial court, we will draw every
    reasonable presumption in favor of the trial court’s
    ruling. . . . We will reverse a trial court’s decision only
    when it has abused its discretion or an injustice has
    occurred.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Pena, 
    301 Conn. 669
    , 673–74, 
    22 A.3d 611
     (2011).
    ‘‘Evidence indicating that an accused possessed an
    article with which the particular crime charged may
    have been accomplished is generally relevant to show
    that the accused had the means to commit the crime.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Green, 
    62 Conn. App. 217
    , 240, 
    774 A.2d 157
     (2001), aff’d, 
    261 Conn. 653
    , 
    804 A.2d 810
     (2002). ‘‘The state does not
    have to connect a weapon directly to the defendant and
    the crime. It is necessary only that the weapon be
    suitable for the commission of the offense. . . . State
    v. Sivri, 
    46 Conn. App. 578
    , 584, 
    700 A.2d 96
    , cert.
    denied, 
    243 Conn. 938
    , 
    702 A.2d 644
     (1997).’’ (Emphasis
    added; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Pena,
    
    supra,
     
    301 Conn. 675
    .
    First, we are not persuaded by the defendant’s argu-
    ment that the court could not conclude that what Ford
    saw in the defendant’s possession was a gun based on
    her description. Ford stated that she saw a ‘‘real gun’’
    and a ‘‘metal barrel,’’ and the court also noted that
    defense counsel would have the opportunity to cross-
    examine her. The trial court had a sufficient factual
    basis to allow the admission of this testimony, and its
    decision was not an abuse of discretion.
    The defendant argues that Ford’s description of the
    gun was not sufficiently similar to type used to shoot
    the victim. He highlights that in State v. Sivri, supra,
    
    46 Conn. App. 585
    , the victim’s wounds were caused
    by a large caliber gun, and the evidence offered that
    the defendant had the means to commit the crime were
    large caliber weapons. He points out that in State v.
    Pena, 
    supra,
     
    301 Conn. 675
    , the connection between
    the murder weapon and the means to commit the crime
    evidence was more similar, as both weapons were
    described as ‘‘black pistols.’’ The defendant’s conclu-
    sion is that in the present case ‘‘there are no such
    similarities here where the barrel [that Ford described]
    was shown to be very different from the murder
    weapon.’’
    Much of the defendant’s effort to distinguish the pre-
    sent case is premised on the defendant’s speculation
    that Ford only possibly could have seen a revolver, not
    a pistol. Stephenson determined that the gun used to
    kill the victim was a nine millimeter semiautomatic
    pistol. Comparing Ford’s description of the weapon she
    saw in the defendant’s possession with the testimony
    and evidence regarding the murder weapon, we con-
    clude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    in determining that it was relevant to show that the
    defendant possessed the means to commit the crime.
    The jury reasonably could have inferred from Ford’s
    testimony that she saw a handgun, and at that time, the
    defendant possessed a weapon suitable for the commis-
    sion of the offense charged.
    The defendant’s challenge to the relevance of the
    confrontation between the defendant and Ford as too
    remote in time also fails. There is no bright line govern-
    ing when a defendant’s possession of the means to
    commit the crime is too remote to be relevant. ‘‘In Sivri,
    we held that the evidence that the defendant was in
    possession of guns and ammunition three days after
    the disappearance of the victim permitted the jury to
    infer that the defendant had possessed the guns three
    days earlier.’’ State v. Stevenson, 
    53 Conn. App. 551
    ,
    572, 
    733 A.2d 253
    , cert. denied, 
    250 Conn. 917
    , 
    734 A.2d 990
     (1999). In Stevenson, the victim was shot with a nine
    millimeter handgun, and testimony that the defendant
    possessed handguns a couple of weeks later was admis-
    sible to show that the defendant possessed the means
    to commit the crime. 
    Id.,
     571–72. In Pena, the murder
    weapon was a black pistol, and our Supreme Court
    concluded that the trial court did not abuse its discre-
    tion in admitting testimony that the defendant had
    access to a black pistol approximately three months
    before shooting the victim. State v. Pena, 
    supra,
     
    301 Conn. 675
    –76. In the present case, the confrontation
    with Ford occurred approximately three weeks before
    the shooting, which was not too remote in time to be
    relevant.
    We next examine whether the prejudicial effect of the
    admission of Ford’s testimony outweighed its probative
    value. ‘‘[E]vidence may be excluded by the trial court
    if the court determines that the prejudicial effect of the
    evidence outweighs its probative value. . . . Of
    course, [a]ll adverse evidence is damaging to one’s case,
    but it is inadmissible only if it creates undue prejudice
    so that it threatens an injustice were it to be admitted.
    . . . The test for determining whether evidence is
    unduly prejudicial is not whether it is damaging to the
    defendant but whether it will improperly arouse the
    emotions of the jury.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) State v. Rosario, 
    supra,
     
    99 Conn. App. 104
    .
    We conclude that the court properly balanced the
    probative value of the evidence of the defendant’s prior
    possession of a firearm sufficient to commit the charged
    crimes against its prejudice to the defendant. Further-
    more, the court gave a limiting instruction explaining
    to the jury the limited purpose for which it could use
    Ford’s testimony. See State v. Sivri, supra, 
    46 Conn. App. 583
    . The defendant asserts that unfair prejudice
    resulted from the jury being allowed to hear that Ford
    saw the gun in the context of the defendant’s threaten-
    ing to shoot her. While the court in Pena concluded
    that one reason admission of the defendant’s prior pos-
    session of a gun was not unduly prejudicial was because
    ‘‘[t]he testimony did not establish that the defendant
    previously had harmed or threatened any person, acted
    violently, or otherwise call into question the defendant’s
    character’’; State v. Pena, 
    supra,
     
    311 Conn. 676
    ; we note
    that the defendant in the present case did not seek to
    limit Ford’s testimony. He did not raise this issue in
    the state’s offer of proof, nor did he object when Ford
    testified to the entire incident in front of the jury. We
    thus conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion
    in admitting Ford’s testimony regarding the defendant’s
    possession of the means to commit the crime.6
    IV
    PROSECUTORIAL IMPROPRIETY
    The defendant next claims that he is entitled to a
    new trial due to prosecutorial impropriety. Specifically,
    the defendant claims that the prosecutor in closing argu-
    ments (1) misstated Council’s testimony regarding her
    observation of the victim falling down, (2) misstated
    the testimony of the medical examiner, (3) misstated
    Boxley’s testimony regarding the defendant’s motive to
    take the victim’s gold chain, and (4) argued that the
    prior misconduct evidence showed motive when its
    only admissible purpose was to show possession of the
    means to commit the crime. The defendant did not
    object during closing argument, nor did he seek a cura-
    tive instruction on any of the alleged improprieties.
    The applicable law governing claims of prosecutorial
    impropriety is well established. ‘‘[I]n analyzing claims
    of prosecutorial [impropriety], we engage in a two step
    process. The two steps are separate and distinct: (1)
    whether [an impropriety] occurred in the first instance;
    and (2) whether that [impropriety] deprived [the] defen-
    dant of his due process right to a fair trial. Put differ-
    ently, [an impropriety is an impropriety], regardless of
    its ultimate effect on the fairness of the trial; whether
    that [impropriety] caused or contributed to a due pro-
    cess violation is a separate and distinct question . . . .’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Andrews,
    
    313 Conn. 266
    , 279, 
    96 A.3d 1199
     (2014).
    The defendant’s first claim of impropriety involves
    the prosecutor’s summation of Council’s testimony in
    his closing rebuttal argument. Council testified that,
    after she heard gunshots, she saw the victim run, spin
    around, and fall down where emergency medical per-
    sonnel found him. The prosecutor stated ‘‘you heard
    about Miss Council saying what she saw and she claims
    she was good friends with [the victim] and saw him
    running and get shot and turn and landed on his back.’’
    The defendant argues that the prosecutor engaged in
    impropriety because Council did not testify that she
    actually saw the victim get shot. We disagree.
    ‘‘We long have held that a prosecutor may not com-
    ment on evidence that is not a part of the record and
    may not comment unfairly on the evidence in the
    record.’’ State v. Fauci, 
    282 Conn. 23
    , 49, 
    917 A.2d 978
    (2007). However, the prosecutor ‘‘may argue the state’s
    case forcefully, [provided the argument is] fair and
    based upon the facts in evidence and the reasonable
    inferences to be drawn therefrom.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) State v. Luster, 
    279 Conn. 414
    , 429,
    
    902 A.2d 636
     (2006). Furthermore, ‘‘[c]ounsel must be
    allowed a generous latitude in argument, as the limits
    of legitimate argument and fair comment cannot be
    determined precisely by rule and line, and something
    must be allowed for the zeal of counsel in the heat of
    argument.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 428
    .
    ‘‘While a prosecutor is not permitted to interject his
    own opinion generally, he must be permitted to speak
    to the cumulative evidence he has put forth during the
    course of trial. . . . Likewise, [w]e must give the jury
    the credit of being able to differentiate between argu-
    ment on the evidence and attempts to persuade them
    to draw inferences in the state’s favor, on one hand,
    and improper unsworn testimony, with the suggestion
    of secret knowledge, on the other hand. The state’s
    attorney should not be put in the rhetorical straight-
    jacket of always using the passive voice, or continually
    emphasizing that he is simply saying I submit to you that
    this is what the evidence shows, or the like.’’ (Citation
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Ivan G.S., 
    154 Conn. App. 246
    , 255–56, 
    105 A.3d 905
    (2014), cert. denied, 
    315 Conn. 923
    , 
    108 A.3d 1123
    (2015).
    In the circumstances here, we find that the prosecu-
    tor was merely arguing the inferences that the jury
    reasonably could draw in considering the cumulative
    evidence. The defendant relies on State v. Fauci, 
    supra,
    282 Conn. 49
    , in which the prosecutor in rebuttal argu-
    ment definitively asserted the identity of a ‘‘mystery
    woman’’ that one of the defendant’s witnesses refused
    to identify, although there was no evidence in the record
    that supported the prosecutor’s assertion. 
    Id.,
     49–50. In
    the present case, the prosecutor did not propose an
    unreasonable or unfair inference, nor did he make an
    assertion that was unsupported by the record. Council
    testified that she saw the victim fall down at the location
    where emergency medical personnel treated the victim
    for gunshot wounds. The jury reasonably could infer
    from the circumstances when Council testified that she
    saw the victim fall, she actually saw the moment when
    he got shot.
    Second, the defendant’s claim that the prosecutor
    improperly misstated the medical examiner’s testimony
    also fails. The defendant’s theory of the case was that
    the shooting occurred in the alcove, out of Lofton’s
    view, and the victim then ran while injured and fell at
    the spot where the firefighters found him. Evangelista
    gave testimony that supported the theory that the defen-
    dant could have moved after being shot, stating, ‘‘there’s
    no such injury such as like a spinal cord, or a brain
    injury where it would make a person unable to move
    or walk, so in my opinion, yes, he could ambulate or
    walk or run for some time.’’ However, Evangelista also
    stated ‘‘if he didn’t [move] it wouldn’t surprise me
    either.’’ In regards to the wounds, he could not deter-
    mine the sequence of the three gunshots, but stated
    that the wound to the back and through the chest was
    the fatal one, as it perforated the apex of the victim’s
    heart.
    In   rebuttal   argument,    the   prosecutor    stated:
    ‘‘[R]emember something else that Dr. Evangelista told
    you. That was the fatal wound. It perforated the apex
    of his heart and this would have likely brought him
    down quickly . . . . If he got shot in the alcove and
    all these shots happened in the alcove how did he make
    it that far? He wouldn’t have run that far with that type
    of wound. It had to happen after he got out of the
    alcove, and therefore Mr. Lofton told you that from
    here he could see . . . people coming out of the alcove
    area. . . . He made it out of there and that’s why Mr.
    Lofton was able to see this defendant and see [the
    victim].’’
    The defendant’s argument is essentially that because
    the medical expert testified that the victim could have
    moved after being shot, that the only logical inference
    that the prosecutor could propose and the jury could
    draw is that the victim did move. This overlooks Evan-
    gelista’s testimony that he would not have been sur-
    prised if the victim fell immediately after being shot.
    The proposed inferences were not unfair or unreason-
    able, and this portion of the prosecutor’s rebuttal argu-
    ment was not improper.
    Third, the defendant claims that the prosecutor
    engaged in impropriety by summarizing Boxley’s and
    Caple’s testimony regarding the defendant’s motive,
    arguing that their testimony could be used only for
    impeachment purposes. We disagree.
    The following additional facts are relevant to this
    claim. Both Boxley and Caple initially testified that they
    did not remember giving statements to police regarding
    the defendant’s motive to steal the victim’s chain, and
    the prosecutor eventually presented them with portions
    of their statements. During the state’s direct examina-
    tion of both witnesses, the jury heard their statements
    regarding the defendant’s motive.
    The defendant’s argument is that both Boxley’s and
    Caple’s prior statements were not substantively admis-
    sible evidence and could be used only for impeachment
    purposes. However, the defendant did not seek to limit
    the grounds of admissibility, nor did he preserve these
    claims. It is well established that ‘‘[a]n appellate court
    shall not be bound to consider a claim unless it was
    distinctly raised at the trial or arose subsequent to the
    trial.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Cro-
    mety, 
    102 Conn. App. 425
    , 431, 
    925 A.2d 1133
    , cert.
    denied, 
    284 Conn. 912
    , 
    931 A.2d 932
     (2007). ‘‘[A] defen-
    dant may not transform an unpreserved evidentiary
    claim into one of prosecutorial impropriety to obtain
    review of that claim.’’ 
    Id.
     Because the defendant did
    not seek to limit the scope of their testimony, it was
    not improper for the prosecutor in closing argument to
    invite the jury to draw substantive inferences of the
    defendant’s motive from their statements. See State v.
    Rowe, 
    279 Conn. 139
    , 152, 
    900 A.2d 1276
     (2006)
    (‘‘[a]rguing on the basis of evidence explicitly admitted
    cannot constitute prosecutorial [impropriety]’’).
    The defendant’s final claim is that the prosecutor
    engaged in impropriety by arguing that the evidence of
    the defendant’s possession of the means to commit the
    crime also demonstrated the defendant’s character and
    propensity to commit the crimes. The state concedes
    that the prosecutor’s statements on this subject in his
    initial and rebuttal closing arguments were improper.7
    However, we conclude that these comments did not
    deprive the defendant of a fair trial.
    ‘‘Our Supreme Court has indicated that the determi-
    nation of whether any improper conduct by the [prose-
    cutor] violated the defendant’s fair trial rights is
    predicated on the factors set forth in State v. Williams,
    [
    204 Conn. 523
    , 540, 
    529 A.2d 653
     (1987)], with due
    consideration of whether that [impropriety] was
    objected to at trial. . . . These factors include [1] the
    extent to which the [impropriety] was invited by
    defense conduct or argument, [2] the severity of the
    [impropriety], [3] the frequency of the [impropriety],
    [4] the centrality of the [impropriety] to the critical
    issues in the case, [5] the strength of the curative mea-
    sures adopted, and [6] the strength of the state’s case.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. James E.,
    
    154 Conn. App. 795
    , 816–17, 
    112 A.3d 791
     (2015).
    The defendant did not invite the impropriety, as the
    prosecutor made the improper remarks in both his ini-
    tial and rebuttal closing argument. See State v. Alexan-
    der, 
    254 Conn. 290
    , 308, 
    755 A.2d 868
     (2000). The
    improprieties were not frequent, as the prosecutor
    made the improper remarks about Ford’s testimony in
    relatively brief instances, once each in his initial and
    rebuttal closing arguments. The remarks also were not
    severe, as ‘‘we consider it highly significant that defense
    counsel failed to object to any of the improper remarks
    [or] request curative instructions . . . . Defense coun-
    sel, therefore, presumably [did] not view the alleged
    impropriety as prejudicial enough to seriously jeopar-
    dize the defendant’s right to a fair trial.’’ (Internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) State v. Thompson, 
    266 Conn. 440
    ,
    479, 
    832 A.2d 626
     (2003).
    The central issue in this case was the identity of the
    shooter. The defendant asserts that the inference could
    have affected the jury’s determination that the defen-
    dant was the shooter. Even if that were true, the jury
    had the far more probative testimony of Lofton to con-
    sider in determining whether the defendant was the
    shooter, as well as testimony relating to the defendant’s
    motive and circumstantial evidence of the defendant’s
    consciousness of guilt. We are not persuaded that the
    jury would have reached a different conclusion about
    the shooter’s identity had it not heard the brief
    improper remarks.
    Although the trial court did not give specific curative
    instructions, ‘‘[w]e note in this regard . . . that the
    defendant, by failing to bring them to the attention of
    the trial court, bears much of the responsibility for the
    fact that these claimed improprieties went uncured. We
    emphasize the responsibility of defense counsel, at the
    very least, to object to perceived prosecutorial impro-
    prieties as they occur at trial, and we continue to adhere
    to the well established maxim that defense counsel’s
    failure to object to the prosecutor’s argument when it
    was made suggests that defense counsel did not believe
    that it was unfair in light of the record of the case at
    the time.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 483.
    The trial court gave the general instruction to the jury
    not to consider the arguments of counsel as evidence.
    ‘‘In the absence of a showing that the jury failed or
    declined to follow the court’s instructions, we presume
    that it heeded them.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Id., 485.
    Finally, the state’s case against the defendant was
    relatively strong. ‘‘The state’s evidence does not need
    to be overwhelming to support a conclusion that prose-
    cutorial impropriety did not deprive the defendant of
    a fair trial.’’ State v. Felix, 
    111 Conn. App. 801
    , 816, 
    961 A.2d 458
     (2008). Putting aside any potential influence of
    the improper remarks, the jury had Lofton’s eyewitness
    testimony, as well as circumstantial evidence of the
    defendant’s consciousness of guilt and the testimony
    of two witnesses regarding the defendant’s motive. On
    the basis of our analysis of the Williams factors, we
    conclude that the improper remarks did not deprive
    the defendant of a fair trial.
    V
    VACATUR OF FELONY MURDER CONVICTION
    The defendant claims that the trial court erred in
    merging his convictions for murder and felony murder.
    The state concedes that State v. Miranda, 
    317 Conn. 741
    , 751, 
    120 A.3d 490
     (2015), which was pending in
    our Supreme Court when this appeal was filed, controls
    this issue. Pursuant to Miranda, we reverse the judg-
    ment in part and remand the case to the trial court with
    the direction to vacate the defendant’s felony murder
    conviction.
    VI
    CORRECTION OF THE JUDGMENT FILE
    The defendant’s final claim is that the judgment file
    must be corrected because the trial court deprived him
    of his right to a unanimous verdict in instructing jurors
    that on the charge of robbery or attempted robbery the
    jury did not have to be unanimous as to which theory
    it found the defendant guilty, as long as it was unani-
    mous as to one of them. We disagree.
    State v. Jones, 
    193 Conn. 70
    , 
    475 A.2d 1087
     (1984),
    is instructive on this claim. In Jones, the indictment
    stated that under the felony murder statute ‘‘the defen-
    dant did commit or attempt to commit a robbery and
    in the course of and in furtherance of such crime or
    flight therefrom he, or another participant, caused the
    death of a person . . . .’’ (Emphasis in original; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Id., 75. This did not violate
    the defendant’s right to a unanimous verdict because
    ‘‘[w]hile some jurors might have believed that the defen-
    dant attempted the robbery but did not complete it,
    and others might have believed that he did, in fact,
    complete the crime, none could have believed that the
    defendant completed the robbery without first under-
    taking a substantial step toward achieving its object.
    The unanimous verdict of guilty thus necessarily
    encompassed a unanimous finding that the defendant
    had at least attempted to commit robbery.’’ Id., 76–77.
    That analysis is directly applicable to the present case.8
    Furthermore, the defendant has not demonstrated
    what relief he would receive through a correction of
    the judgment file. The defendant was charged with a
    single count of ‘‘robbery or attempted robbery in the
    first degree’’ in violation of §§ 53a-49 (a) (2) and 53a-
    134 (a) (1). Both theories could serve as the predicate
    felony for the conviction of felony murder. See General
    Statutes § 53a-54c. General Statutes § 53a-51 states that
    except for class A felonies, attempt is a crime ‘‘of the
    same grade and degree as the most serious offense
    which is attempted.’’ Section 53a-134 states that robbery
    in the first degree is a class B felony, thus making
    attempt to commit robbery in the first degree a class
    B felony. The defendant faced the same punishment
    under either theory. See State v. Holliday, 
    118 Conn. App. 35
    , 42, 
    982 A.2d 268
     (2009) (‘‘[t]he legislature
    clearly intended attempt . . . to commit a class B fel-
    ony to be punished the same as a class B felony or it
    would have noted otherwise, as it did with class A
    felonies’’), cert. denied, 
    295 Conn. 909
    , 
    989 A.2d 605
    (2010). For this reason, this claim fails.
    The judgment is reversed in part and the case is
    remanded with direction to vacate the felony murder
    conviction; the judgment is affirmed in all other
    respects.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The joker medallion, dangling from the chain, depicts a court jester with
    hands and legs extended.
    2
    The defendant challenges Lofton’s credibility, asserting that his testi-
    mony was inconsistent in some instances with his initial statement to police.
    Cross-examination revealed that police had some concerns that Lofton’s
    initial statements were not completely consistent with the other evidence
    that they found, but Lofton stated multiple times on the witness stand that
    he was sure he saw the defendant shoot the victim.
    Regarding the details of the shooting, Lofton testified that he saw the
    victim get shot in the chest, while the medical examiner, Frank Evangelista,
    forensic pathologist, testified that the fatal shot entered through the victim’s
    back. However, Lofton stated his conclusion that the victim was shot in the
    chest was based on seeing blood in the chest area of the defendant’s shirt.
    The defendant contends that Lofton’s testimony was contradicted by
    Council, who stated that she saw the victim running from the direction of
    the alcove, spin, and then fall at the area where he was eventually found
    in the parking lot. Lofton stated that the defendant was stationary at the
    time he was shot. Defense counsel had the opportunity to cross-examine
    Lofton on all of these issues. On appeal, we will not second-guess the jury’s
    decision about which witnesses it chose to believe, nor its conclusions in
    resolving apparent inconsistencies in the evidence and testimony.
    3
    The defendant challenges the admissibility of this testimony, which we
    consider in part III of this opinion. He argues specifically that the witness
    who testified that she saw the defendant’s prior possession of a gun did
    not describe a gun that was sufficiently similar to the weapon the defendant
    allegedly used to shoot the victim.
    4
    We decline the defendant’s additional request to order a new trial through
    the use of our supervisory authority.
    5
    The parties stipulated at trial that the Coleman Brothers Circus took
    place at the Milford Post Mall on June 14 and 15, 2011.
    6
    Even if we were to conclude that the court abused its discretion and
    improperly admitted Ford’s testimony concerning the defendant’s prior pos-
    session of the handgun, we would conclude, nevertheless, that it was harm-
    less error. ‘‘[W]hether [the improper admission of a witness’ testimony] is
    harmless in a particular case depends upon a number of factors, [including]
    . . . the overall strength of the prosecution’s case. . . . Most importantly,
    we must examine the impact of the [improperly admitted] evidence on the
    trier of fact and the result of the trial.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    State v. Rosario, 
    supra,
     
    99 Conn. App. 105
    –106 n.9. Contrary to the defen-
    dant’s assertions, we find that the state’s case was relatively strong. Putting
    aside Ford’s testimony, the state presented Lofton’s eyewitness testimony
    that he saw the defendant shoot the victim. This was coupled with Boxley’s
    and Caple’s testimony regarding the defendant’s motive, as well as circum-
    stantial evidence of the defendant’s consciousness of guilt.
    7
    In his initial closing argument, the prosecutor stated: ‘‘Within just weeks
    before Mr. James is shot and killed in that area this defendant has access
    to a firearm. Not only is it important that he had access to the firearm but
    remember what Miss Ford said, they had an argument in the street over
    something relatively stupid and she says the defendant walked away. . . .
    So that means he walked and came back and within five minutes what did
    he have? He had the knob of a gun at the end of his sleeve pointing it within
    two feet of Miss Ford . . . .’’
    In his rebuttal argument the prosecutor stated ‘‘it’s important to think
    about motive and means because if a few weeks before Mr. James got shot
    this defendant is willing to pull a gun and threaten to shoot Caprie Ford in
    the same area where this happened. What can you tell about that? Over
    something as dumb as an argument about a girl. And remember, he was
    only gone for five minutes. Does that show he had a gun in that area? What
    can you infer from that?’’
    We agree that the prosecutor in his closing arguments improperly used
    Ford’s testimony to propose inferences regarding the defendant’s character
    and propensity to commit the crimes.
    8
    The defendant relies on State v. Gould, 
    241 Conn. 1
    , 23–24, 
    695 A.2d 1022
     (1997), which is inapplicable because unlike in the present case, the
    defendant in Gould was convicted of robbery and attempted robbery alleged
    as separate counts, and sentenced to separate concurrent sentences. Our
    Supreme Court held that the attempted robbery conviction, as a lesser
    included offense, had to be merged with the robbery conviction.