Bueno v. Commissioner of Correction ( 2017 )


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    ELEONES BUENO v. COMMISSIONER
    OF CORRECTION
    (AC 38662)
    Prescott, Mullins and Beach, Js.
    Argued March 21—officially released June 13, 2017
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Tolland, Sferrazza, J.)
    Vishal K. Garg, for the appellant (petitioner).
    Nancy L. Walker, deputy assistant state’s attorney,
    with whom, on the brief, were Stephen J. Sedensky III,
    state’s attorney, and Randall Blowers, former special
    deputy assistant state’s attorney, for the appellee
    (respondent).
    Opinion
    BEACH, J. The petitioner, Eleones Bueno, appeals
    following the denial of his petition for certification to
    appeal from the judgment denying his petition for a
    writ of habeas corpus. The dispositive issue is whether
    the habeas court abused its discretion in so doing. We
    conclude that it did not and, accordingly, dismiss the
    appeal.
    The petitioner is a citizen of the Dominican Republic
    who was admitted as a lawful permanent resident of the
    United States in 1992. On April 11, 2012, the petitioner
    appeared before the trial court to enter into a plea
    agreement concerning two separate criminal matters.
    At that time, he was represented by Attorney Robert
    Koetsch. The petitioner first pleaded guilty, in docket
    number CR-11-0141887-S, to one count of larceny in the
    fifth degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-125a.
    The petitioner then pleaded guilty, in docket number
    CR-11-0141917-S, to one count of larceny in the second
    degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a–123 (a)
    (3). In its canvass of the petitioner, the court inquired
    as to whether the petitioner had ‘‘had enough time to
    talk with’’ Koetsch and whether he was ‘‘satisfied with
    his legal advice’’; the petitioner responded affirmatively.
    The court further advised the petitioner as follows: ‘‘If
    you’re not a citizen of the United States, do you under-
    stand the conviction for these offenses might have a
    consequence of deportation, exclusion from admission
    or denial of naturalization, pursuant to federal immigra-
    tion law?’’ The petitioner answered, ‘‘Yes, sir.’’ The court
    then found the pleas to be knowingly, intelligently and
    voluntarily made with the assistance of competent
    counsel. In accordance with the terms of the plea
    agreement, the court sentenced the petitioner to a total
    effective sentence of eighteen months incarceration and
    three years of probation.
    Eleven months later, the petitioner again appeared
    before the trial court.1 At that time, he pleaded guilty,
    in docket number CR-13-0415495-S, to one count of
    escape in the first degree in violation of General Statutes
    § 53a-169, stemming from his failure to return to a ‘‘tran-
    sitional supervision community release’’ facility. In can-
    vassing the petitioner, the court informed the petitioner
    that, as a result of his plea, he ‘‘could be deported,
    excluded from the [United States], or denied naturaliza-
    tion.’’ In response, the petitioner stated, ‘‘I understand.’’
    The court sentenced the petitioner to a term of one
    year incarceration, execution suspended after six
    months, with one day of conditional discharge.
    While the petitioner was incarcerated, the United
    States Department of Homeland Security commenced
    a removal proceeding against him. Its notice to appear
    articulated two distinct grounds for removal. First, it
    charged the petitioner with violating ‘‘[§] 237 (a) (2)
    (A) (iii) of the Immigration and Nationality Act . . . as
    amended, in that, at any time after admission, you have
    been convicted of an aggravated felony . . . relating
    to a theft offense . . . or burglary offense for which
    the term of imprisonment [of] at least [one] year was
    imposed.’’ Second, the notice charged the petitioner
    with violating ‘‘[§] 237 (a) (2) (A) (ii) of the Immigration
    and Nationality Act, as amended, in that, at any time
    after admission, you have been convicted of two crimes
    involving moral turpitude not arising out of a single
    scheme of criminal misconduct.’’ Following a hearing,
    the United States Immigration Court on February 20,
    2014, issued an oral decision in which it found both
    grounds proven and ordered the petitioner to be
    removed to the Dominican Republic. The petitioner
    filed an appeal from that decision, which the Board of
    Immigration Appeals dismissed on June 9, 2014. In its
    written decision, the Board of Immigration Appeals
    expressly indicated that the removal order was predi-
    cated solely on the petitioner’s convictions for larceny
    in the second degree and larceny in the fifth degree
    in violation of Connecticut law.2 The petitioner was
    removed to the Dominican Republic in August, 2014.
    Approximately three months after the immigration
    court issued its removal order, the petitioner filed an
    application for a writ of habeas corpus in the Superior
    Court. The operative pleading, the petitioner’s April 30,
    2015 amended petition, contains two intertwined claims
    regarding the immigration consequences of his guilty
    plea in docket number CR–11–0141917-S, to one count
    of larceny in the second degree.3 Specifically, the peti-
    tioner alleged that (1) his guilty plea ‘‘was not made
    knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily because [he]
    did not know or understand [its] immigration conse-
    quences’’ in violation of his right to due process, and
    (2) Koetsch rendered ineffective assistance of counsel
    by failing to properly research and advise him of those
    consequences.4
    The respondent, the Commissioner of Correction,
    thereafter moved to dismiss the petition on mootness
    grounds, alleging that, in light of the petitioner’s other
    unchallenged convictions that would prevent the peti-
    tioner’s reentry into the United States, the habeas court
    could provide him no practical relief. Prior to the com-
    mencement of trial on September 18, 2015, the court
    discussed that motion with the parties. At that time,
    the court deferred consideration of the matter due to
    the representation of the petitioner’s habeas counsel
    that a witness who was ‘‘necessary for the motion to
    dismiss’’ had not yet arrived. A two day trial followed,
    at which the court heard testimony from four individu-
    als—the petitioner, Koetsch, Warren Murray, a prosecu-
    tor for the state, and Justin Conlon, an immigration
    attorney.
    The petitioner testified via videoconference with the
    aid of an interpreter. In his testimony, the petitioner
    stated that Koetsch ‘‘never spoke about immigration
    consequences’’ of his pleas with him. The petitioner
    testified that, at the time that he entered his pleas, he
    did not know that deportation would result from his
    guilty pleas. He further testified that, if he had been
    so advised, he ‘‘would have never [pleaded] guilty to
    the crimes.’’
    Koetsch offered contrasting testimony. He stated
    unequivocally that he apprised the petitioner that ‘‘[h]e
    will be deported’’ as a result of his guilty pleas. In a
    colloquy with the petitioner’s habeas counsel, Koetsch
    elaborated on his conversation with the petitioner
    regarding the immigration consequences of a guilty
    plea:
    ‘‘[The Petitioner’s Counsel]: . . . I see you told him
    he will be deported?
    ‘‘[Koetsch]: Yes. Then we did have a conversation
    regarding that and . . . he told me that he had a con-
    versation with his father, after I had met with him at
    the correctional facility, and [the petitioner] told me he
    didn’t care if he got deported and that he would just
    come back in the country anyway.
    ‘‘[The Petitioner’s Counsel]: Did you give him any
    advice as to whether he would be able to come back
    in the country?
    ‘‘[Koetsch]: I told him once he’s deported he’s not
    going to be able to come back in. I don’t know how he
    intended to come back in. I don’t get involved in how
    they come back in the country.’’
    Conlon testified on the petitioner’s behalf as to the
    immigration consequences of the petitioner’s larceny
    pleas, as well as his March 14, 2013 plea of guilty to
    escape in the first degree. Conlon opined that the latter
    conviction did not constitute an aggravated felony or
    a crime involving moral turpitude under federal immi-
    gration law. Conlon also acknowledged that the immi-
    gration court had found that the petitioner’s convictions
    of larceny in the second degree and larceny in the fifth
    degree constituted crimes involving moral turpitude.
    In addition, Conlon provided testimony regarding the
    petitioner’s guilty plea to a crime involving the assault
    of a public safety officer a decade earlier in Florida
    (Florida plea).5 Conlon noted that the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has held that,
    under Connecticut law, a conviction of assaulting a
    public safety officer for which a defendant was sen-
    tenced to at least one year imprisonment constituted
    an aggravated felony under federal immigration law.
    See Canada v. Gonzales, 
    448 F.3d 560
    , 564–73 (2d Cir.
    2006). Although he was not familiar with such an
    offense under Florida law, Conlon opined that a felony
    conviction of assaulting a public safety officer likely
    would have adverse immigration consequences for a
    defendant, provided that it was accompanied by ‘‘a one
    year sentence or more . . . .’’
    Days after the habeas trial concluded, the court
    issued its memorandum of decision. In that decision, the
    court first granted the respondent’s motion to dismiss,
    finding that the matter was moot in light of the Florida
    plea. In so doing, the court acknowledged that ‘‘[n]o
    transcript [or] court record of the Florida proceeding
    was introduced before this court. Neither party
    requested that the court take judicial notice of the laws
    of Florida concerning deferred adjudications nor sup-
    plied reference to specific statutes governing that pro-
    cedure. However, the petitioner testified at the habeas
    hearing, and, on cross-examination, he recalled that he
    entered a guilty plea in the Florida case. Also, his crimi-
    nal history in 2013 disclosed a 2002 Florida felony
    record for the offense in question.’’6 Accordingly, the
    court found that, ‘‘[a]lthough the evidentiary record is
    scant, the petitioner’s admission to pleading guilty in
    Florida, in conjunction with his recorded criminal his-
    tory corroborating the same, persuade this court that,
    for purposes of immigration law, the petitioner would
    be regarded as having been convicted of an aggravated
    felony. This conviction forms an absolute bar to his
    reentry into the United States.’’
    The court continued: ‘‘Usually, this conclusion would
    terminate the court’s adjudicative process. However, it
    is possible that an appellate tribunal would disagree
    with this court’s determination of a lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction, either because of an insufficiency
    of evidence regarding the Florida disposition or because
    a legal conclusion that bar to reentry does not moot this
    habeas case. Therefore, the court will, as an alternative,
    also address the merits of the petitioner’s claims.’’ The
    court noted that ‘‘[b]oth the petitioner’s due process
    violation and ineffective assistance claims hinge on
    proof that the petitioner was unaware that his guilty
    plea to larceny second degree would automatically com-
    pel his deportation by the federal authorities when he
    decided to plead guilty to that charge . . . .’’ The court
    then expressly credited Koetsch’s testimony that he
    advised the petitioner that he definitely would be
    deported as a result of his guilty plea to the charge of
    larceny in the second degree. The court discredited the
    petitioner’s testimony to the contrary, finding that ‘‘the
    petitioner was prudently and adequately advised that
    deportation was certain to follow his conviction.’’ The
    court further found that ‘‘the [petitioner] decided to
    accept the plea offer because the agreement signifi-
    cantly reduced his possible prison sentence, he was
    likely to be convicted of deportable offenses in any
    event, and because of his misplaced reliance on his
    father’s advice as to the ease with which he could return
    to the United States legally or otherwise.’’ For those
    reasons, the court concluded, ‘‘the amended petition
    is dismissed, or, alternatively, denied.’’ The petitioner
    subsequently filed a petition for certification to appeal
    to this court, which the habeas court denied, and this
    appeal followed.
    ‘‘When the habeas court denies certification to
    appeal, a petitioner faces a formidable challenge, as we
    will not consider the merits of a habeas appeal unless
    the petitioner establishes that the denial of certification
    to appeal amounts to an abuse of discretion.’’ Jefferson
    v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    144 Conn. App. 767
    ,
    772, 
    73 A.3d 840
    , cert. denied, 
    310 Conn. 929
    , 
    78 A.3d 856
     (2013). To prevail, the petitioner must demonstrate
    ‘‘that the issues are debatable among jurists of reason;
    that a court could resolve the issues [in a different
    manner]; or that the questions are adequate to deserve
    encouragement to proceed further.’’ (Emphasis altered;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) Simms v. Warden,
    
    230 Conn. 608
    , 616, 
    646 A.2d 126
     (1994).
    At the outset, we note that two distinct issues are
    presented in this appeal. The first concerns the question
    of mootness; the second involves the merits of the peti-
    tioner’s due process and ineffective assistance of coun-
    sel claims. To demonstrate that the court abused its
    discretion in denying certification to appeal, the peti-
    tioner must establish that both issues satisfy the stan-
    dard enunciated in Simms v. Warden, supra, 
    230 Conn. 616
    .
    I
    We first consider the mootness question, which impli-
    cates the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. See
    Council v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    286 Conn. 477
    ,
    486–87, 
    944 A.2d 340
     (2008). ‘‘It is a well-settled general
    rule that the existence of an actual controversy is an
    essential requisite to appellate jurisdiction; it is not the
    province of appellate courts to decide moot questions,
    disconnected from the granting of actual relief or from
    the determination of which no practical relief can fol-
    low. . . . When . . . events have occurred that pre-
    clude an appellate court from granting any practical
    relief through its disposition of the merits, a case has
    become moot.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Rivera v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    254 Conn. 214
    ,
    225–26, 
    756 A.2d 1264
     (2000). Our review of the question
    of mootness is plenary. Council v. Commissioner of
    Correction, 
    supra, 487
    .
    The present case involves a petitioner who has been
    removed from this country by federal decree following
    proceedings before the immigration court. In recent
    years, our courts have considered the mootness ques-
    tion in this context. The seminal decision is State v.
    Aquino, 
    279 Conn. 293
    , 
    901 A.2d 1194
     (2006), in which a
    defendant, who had been residing illegally in the United
    States, appealed from the trial court’s denial of his
    motion to withdraw a guilty plea. Id., 294. In that motion,
    the defendant claimed that his plea ‘‘was not knowingly
    and voluntarily’’ made because counsel never advised
    him of the ‘‘certainty of deportation as the result of the
    plea.’’ Id. The trial court denied that motion and, while
    an appeal was pending, the defendant was deported.
    Id., 297. Our Supreme Court thereafter determined that
    the defendant’s appeal was moot, stating: ‘‘The defen-
    dant did not produce any evidence at the hearing on
    his motion to withdraw his guilty plea—indeed, he did
    not even claim—that he would be deported solely as
    the result of his guilty plea. . . . There is no evidence
    in the record as to the reason for his deportation. If it
    was not the result of his guilty plea alone, then this
    court can grant no practical relief . . . .’’ Id., 298. Our
    appellate courts have adhered to that precedent on
    numerous occasions. See, e.g., Quiroga v. Commis-
    sioner of Correction, 
    149 Conn. App. 168
    , 174, 
    87 A.3d 1171
     (observing that ‘‘Aquino requires proof that the
    larceny plea was the exclusive basis of the petitioner’s
    deportation, rather than a primary or likely one’’), cert.
    denied, 
    311 Conn. 950
    , 
    91 A.3d 462
     (2014); State v.
    Chavarro, 
    130 Conn. App. 12
    , 17–18, 
    21 A.3d 541
     (2011)
    (appeal moot because defendant failed to establish that
    his deportation was result of guilty plea alone).
    The record reflects, and the respondent does not
    dispute, that the petitioner’s removal was based solely
    on his guilty plea to larceny in the second degree, as
    the immigration court found that conviction to be both
    an aggravated felony under federal immigration law
    and one of two crimes involving moral turpitude. See
    footnote 2 of this opinion. Accordingly, the ‘‘narrow
    inquiry before us is whether there is evidence to suggest
    that, in the absence of the [larcency in the second
    degree] conviction underlying the present habeas peti-
    tion, the petitioner would be allowed to reenter this
    country or become a citizen.’’ St. Juste v. Commis-
    sioner of Correction, 
    155 Conn. App. 164
    , 175, 
    109 A.3d 523
    , cert. granted, 
    316 Conn. 901
    , 
    111 A.3d 470
     (2015);
    see also State v. Aquino, supra, 
    279 Conn. 298
    –99 n.3
    (noting that ‘‘there is no evidence to suggest that, in
    the absence of the guilty plea, the defendant would be
    allowed to reenter this country or become a citizen’’).
    In the present case, the court’s mootness determina-
    tion was predicated on its conclusion that the Florida
    plea constituted an aggravated felony under federal
    immigration law that was ‘‘an absolute bar to [the peti-
    tioner’s] reentry into the United States.’’ Both at trial
    and on appeal, the petitioner has challenged that deter-
    mination.7 For two reasons, we conclude that the court’s
    determination is untenable. First, the record does not
    disclose the precise crime to which the petitioner
    pleaded guilty under Florida law. As the Second Circuit
    has noted with respect to aggravated felonies under
    federal immigration law, ‘‘[t]o determine whether an
    offense is a crime of violence . . . we must look to
    the elements and the nature of the offense of conviction,
    rather than to the particular facts relating to [the] peti-
    tioner’s crime.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Canada v. Gonzales, 
    supra,
     
    448 F.3d 565
    . The paucity
    of evidence regarding the Florida plea precluded such
    review in the present case, as the record before the
    habeas court did not disclose the specific offense to
    which the petitioner pleaded guilty under Florida law.
    Second, although the petitioner acknowledges that a
    plea to a crime involving the assault of a public safety
    officer may give rise to adverse immigration conse-
    quences, he maintains that it does so only in instances
    in which a defendant receives a sentence of at least one
    year.8 The Immigration and Nationality Act enumerates
    dozens of aggravated felonies. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
     (a)
    (43) (2012). Among those is ‘‘a crime of violence . . .
    for which the term of imprisonment [is] at least one year
    . . . .’’ 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
     (a) (43) (F) (2012). In Canada v.
    Gonzales, 
    supra,
     
    448 F.3d 573
    , the Second Circuit held
    that a ‘‘conviction for assaulting a peace officer, in viola-
    tion of [General Statutes] § 53a-167c (a) (1), constitutes
    a ‘crime of violence’ . . . thus permitting removal of
    [the] [p]etitioner as an aggravated felon . . . .’’ In that
    case, the petitioner was ‘‘sentenced to a total of four
    years’ imprisonment . . . .’’ Id., 563.
    In his appellate brief, the respondent avers ‘‘that the
    offense of battery of a public safety officer meets the
    definition of a crime of violence.’’9 It nonetheless
    remains that the habeas court was presented with no
    evidence that the petitioner received a ‘‘term of impris-
    onment [of] at least one year’’ in connection with the
    Florida plea, as federal law requires. See, e.g., United
    States v. Martinez-Gonzalez, 
    286 Fed. Appx. 672
    , 673
    (11th Cir. 2008) (noting that although defendant’s ‘‘prior
    conviction for battery on a law enforcement officer
    constituted a ‘crime of violence’ under [federal law]
    . . . it did not meet the requirements of an ‘aggravated
    felony’ because he was sentenced to less than one year
    of imprisonment’’). The only evidence regarding the
    terms of the Florida plea came during the petitioner’s
    testimony, in which he acknowledged that he per-
    formed community service after pleading guilty to the
    unspecified criminal offense, but ‘‘was never impris-
    oned.’’ The record, therefore, lacks evidence on which
    the court could conclude that the petitioner’s plea to the
    unspecified Florida offense constituted an aggravated
    felony under federal immigration law that permanently
    barred his reentry into the United States. See Placide
    v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    167 Conn. App. 497
    ,
    501 n.1, 
    143 A.3d 1174
     (considering additional convic-
    tion that did not serve as basis of petitioner’s deporta-
    tion and concluding that ‘‘we are not convinced that the
    petitioner’s other conviction . . . would bar reentry as
    a crime of moral turpitude’’), cert. denied, 
    323 Conn. 922
    , 
    150 A.3d 1150
     (2016). Accordingly, the court
    improperly determined that the petition was moot as
    a result of the Florida plea.
    II
    That determination does not end our inquiry, as the
    petitioner also must demonstrate that the merits of his
    due process and ineffective assistance of counsel claims
    are debatable among jurists of reason, could be resolved
    in a different manner, or are adequate to deserve
    encouragement to proceed further. Simms v. Warden,
    supra, 
    230 Conn. 616
    . In resolving those claims, the
    court expressly credited the testimony of Koetsch and
    discredited the petitioner’s testimony as to whether the
    petitioner was advised that deportation would result
    from his guilty plea. As our Supreme Court recently
    observed, an appellate court ‘‘does not . . . evaluate
    the credibility of the witnesses. . . . Rather, [it] must
    defer to the [trier of fact’s] assessment of the credibility
    of the witnesses based on its firsthand observation of
    their conduct, demeanor and attitude. . . . The habeas
    judge, as the trier of facts, is the sole arbiter of the
    credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given to
    their testimony.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Taylor v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    324 Conn. 631
    ,
    643–44, 
    153 A.3d 1264
     (2017); see also Eastwood v.
    Commissioner of Correction, 
    114 Conn. App. 471
    , 484,
    
    969 A.2d 860
     (appellate court does not second-guess
    findings of habeas court related to credibility of wit-
    nesses), cert. denied, 
    292 Conn. 918
    , 
    973 A.2d 1275
    (2009). This court, therefore, cannot disturb those
    determinations.
    In light of its assessment of the relative credibility
    of the testimony offered at trial by the petitioner and
    Koetsch, as well as the admonition on immigration con-
    sequences provided to the petitioner by the trial judge
    during the plea canvass, the habeas court found that
    ‘‘the petitioner was prudently and adequately advised
    that deportation was certain to follow his conviction’’
    and that ‘‘the petitioner decided to accept the plea offer
    because the agreement significantly reduced his possi-
    ble prison sentence, he was likely to be convicted of
    deportable offenses in any event, and because of his
    misplaced reliance on his father’s advice as to the ease
    with which he could return to the United States legally
    or otherwise.’’ Those findings are substantiated by the
    evidentiary record before us. We therefore conclude
    that the petitioner cannot demonstrate that his due
    process and ineffective assistance of counsel claims
    are debatable among jurists of reason, could be resolved
    in a different manner, or are adequate to deserve
    encouragement to proceed further. Simms v. Warden,
    supra, 
    230 Conn. 616
    . Accordingly, the court did not
    abuse its discretion in denying the petition for certifica-
    tion to appeal.
    The appeal is dismissed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The petitioner was represented by Attorney Matthew Ramia at that pro-
    ceeding.
    2
    Both the decision of the United States Immigration Court and the subse-
    quent decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals reflect that the basis
    of the removal order was the immigration court’s findings that (1) the
    petitioner’s conviction for larceny in the second degree constituted an aggra-
    vated felony under federal immigration law, and (2) his convictions for
    larceny in the second degree and larceny in the fifth degree both constituted
    ‘‘crimes involving moral turpitude’’ thereunder.
    3
    As the petitioner reiterated in his appellate brief, he ‘‘is only challenging’’
    his conviction for larceny in the second degree in this habeas action.
    4
    The petition also alleged that Koetsch rendered ineffective assistance
    by failing to ‘‘make [his] immigration status . . . part of the plea bargaining
    process . . . .’’ At trial, Koetsch testified that, in negotiating the petitioner’s
    pleas, he asked the state to consider a ‘‘lesser larceny’’ charge that would
    minimize the immigration consequences of a guilty plea. His attempt was
    unsuccessful. Prosecutor Warren Murray, who handled the petitioner’s lar-
    ceny pleas on behalf of the state, corroborated that testimony by providing
    a detailed explanation as to why the state would not entertain such a request.
    Even if the petitioner had offered to serve a greater total effective sentence,
    Murray testified that he ‘‘would have wanted a robbery. It was a crime of
    violence . . . where a citizen was struck and I would probably want some
    type of conviction . . . I think society should know that he was engaged
    in some type of behavior which was rather serious.’’
    In that respect, we note that the long form information in CR-11-0141917-
    S was admitted into evidence at the habeas trial. Count one alleged that
    the petitioner committed robbery in the third degree in violation of General
    Statutes § 53a-136 (a) and stated in relevant part that ‘‘at the City of Danbury
    . . . at approximately 8:15pm, on or about the 22nd day of July 2011, [the
    petitioner] did commit a robbery where in the course of committing a
    larceny, he used or threatened the immediate use of physical force upon
    another person for the purpose of overcoming resistance to the taking of
    the property, to wit: he and/or another demanded money from [the victim]
    and when refused he did strike [the victim] and took his wallet and cellular
    phone . . . .’’ Count two of the information alleged that the petitioner com-
    mitted larceny in the second degree, while the third and final count alleged
    assault in the third degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-61 (a) (1).
    That count alleged in relevant part that the petitioner ‘‘with the intent to
    cause physical injury to another person [caused] such injury to another
    person, to wit: he did strike [the victim] in the head causing pain and/or
    swelling . . . .’’ At the plea hearing, the trial court remarked to the peti-
    tioner: ‘‘Sir, I understand you’re disappointed that you’re not receiving a
    completely suspended sentence, but I want to tell you your attorney fought
    very hard for you and, in fact, the state is giving you consideration in the
    sense that the plea agreement, as I understand it, does not require a plea
    to the robbery charge, which would require you to serve 85 percent.’’ In
    this appeal, the petitioner has not raised any claim regarding Koetsch’s
    alleged failure to make his immigration status part of the plea bargaining
    process.
    5
    In his testimony at the habeas trial, the petitioner acknowledged that,
    in 1999, he was arrested in Florida and charged with an unspecified offense
    pertaining to the assault of a public safety officer. The petitioner further
    testified that he ‘‘pled guilty’’ to that charge, for which he was ordered to
    perform community service and ‘‘was never imprisoned.’’
    6
    The transcript of the petitioner’s March 14, 2013 plea hearing on the
    charge of escape in the first degree was admitted into evidence at the habeas
    trial. At the outset of that proceeding, a bail commissioner reviewed the
    petitioner’s criminal history, stating in relevant part: ‘‘His most recent [con-
    viction] was . . . April of 2012, for larceny second from a person. . . .
    Also April of 2012 . . . a larceny five . . . . He has a Florida record dated
    back to 2002, which was a felony.’’ The record before us contains no further
    documentation of that unspecified offense.
    7
    As the petitioner’s counsel argued at the habeas trial, ‘‘there’s no reason
    for this court to find that [the Florida plea] would be an aggravated felony
    that would prevent the petitioner’s reentry or that [it] was an alternative
    basis for deportation.’’
    8
    The respondent contends that this distinct claim was not presented to
    the habeas court and, thus, is unpreserved. In response, the petitioner, citing
    Michael T. v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    319 Conn. 623
    , 635 n.7, 
    126 A.3d 558
     (2015), argues that his claim is ‘‘subsumed within or intertwined with
    arguments related to the legal claim raised at trial.’’
    We note that the respondent made no reference whatsoever to the Florida
    plea in either his August 21, 2015 motion to dismiss or his accompanying
    memorandum of law in support thereof. Rather, those pleadings focused
    entirely on the petitioner’s larceny and escape pleas in Connecticut. The
    respondent first mentioned the Florida plea during his cross-examination
    of Conlon, the final witness at the September 18, 2015 proceeding. At that
    time, the respondent informed the court that he had ‘‘a reasonable basis to
    believe that the petitioner has been convicted of battery against a police
    officer, a public safety officer in the state of Florida in 2002 or 2003.’’
    9
    Apart from being a crime of violence pursuant to 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
     (a)
    (43) (F), the respondent has not identified any other basis on which the
    Florida plea could constitute an aggravated felony under federal law.