Central to host Connecticut Supreme Court circuit visit

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The Connecticut Supreme Court will travel to 蜜柚视频 on Thursday, Oct. 19, to hear two cases as part of its 鈥淥n Circuit鈥 program. The visit is the first time that the justices will hear arguments 蜜柚视频 since the program began in 1986.

The program provides students, educators, and the public with a greater understanding of the appellate process. Over the years, the Supreme Court has heard arguments at several universities and colleges throughout the state. 

鈥淚t is our pleasure to help showcase these State Supreme Court proceedings. Our students will have a front-row seat to the judicial process in action,鈥 said Central President Zulma R. Toro.

鈥淐entral prides itself on being an institution that offers an excellent education along with important and relevant experiential learning opportunities, and this is one of those unique opportunities for our students. We thank the justices for allowing a glimpse into the legal process.鈥 

The cases will be heard in Central鈥檚 Torp Theatre at Lawrence J. Davidson Hall in New Britain. The first argument will start at 10 a.m.; the second case is scheduled to start at 11:30 a.m. A 20-minute question-and-answer period with counsel from the case, students, and faculty will follow each argument. Please allow enough time to clear security upon arrival; also, no backpacks or water bottles will be allowed inside the theatre.  

View more information at https:// www. ccsu. edu/connecticut-supreme-court-hearings-central/.

Cases to be heard
The 10 a.m. case is State of Connecticut v. Lawrence Lee Henderson from the Middlesex Judicial District. At issue is whether State v. Arroyo should be modified to prohibit legally inconsistent verdicts, where a defendant is convicted of a lesser included offense involving the same facts, and whether a mistrial should have been granted because of a 25-day delay during deliberations.

The 11:30 a.m. case is Vincent G. Benvenuto v. Kevin Brookman from the Hartford Judicial District. At issue is whether bloggers constitute 鈥渘ews media鈥 under Connecticut鈥檚 press shield law; whether the trial court applied the correct legal standard in striking the defendant鈥檚 constitution-based special defense; whether a discovery order violated constitutional free speech principles; and whether the trial court erred in determining certain anonymous comments on the blog that were in question were defamatory per se.

鈥淢y fellow justices and I are very much looking forward to our first visit to Central as part of the 鈥極n Circuit鈥 program,鈥 said Chief Justice Richard A. Robinson. 鈥淭here are many logistics to tend to, and Central is committed to ensuring that the event achieves the Court鈥檚 goal of educating students about how the appellate process works. We could not be happier with Central as our next venue and appreciate everyone鈥檚 hard work beforehand and the university鈥檚 dedication to providing students with the opportunity to see, in person, real cases argued before the Supreme Court.鈥