Evidence keyed to Waltz
State v. Porter
Facts
The defendant’s home was destroyed by a fire on July 20, 1992. He was subsequently charged with and convicted of two counts of arson. The defendant retained Leighton Hammond (“Mr. Hammond”), a polygraph examiner, to conduct a polygraph examination to determine whether the defendant was telling the truth when he claimed that he had no knowledge of, and had not participated in, the burning of his home. The examination results were in the defendant’s favor, and he moved that the trial court admit the results of the polygraph examination. The trial court denied the motion, stating that it was not the place of a trial court to reconsider Connecticut’s traditional per se ban on the admissibility of polygraph evidence.
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