Hartford, CT – Sergio Correa, convicted of the brutal 2017 murders of three members of the Lindquist family in Griswold, has filed a Sergio Correa appeal to the Connecticut Supreme Court. Correa’s legal team argues that key evidence obtained from his cellphone was unlawfully seized and should have been excluded from his trial.
Challenging the Cellphone Evidence
During oral arguments on March 5, 2025, Correa’s defense contended that the warrant used to access his cellphone data was overly broad and violated his Fourth Amendment rights. Assistant Public Defender Jennifer Smith stated that law enforcement seized Correa’s phone before he was officially a suspect and later used a general warrant to search all its contents without establishing probable cause for such an extensive review.
“The warrant authorized an unlimited search of the entire phone” … “This is a clear violation of privacy protections, and the evidence obtained should have been suppressed.”
Assistant Public Defender Jennifer Smith argued before the justices.
Prosecutors, however, maintain that even if the warrant was flawed, the evidence derived from the phone was not crucial to the case’s outcome. Senior Assistant State’s Attorney Ronald Weller cited the “harmless error doctrine,” asserting that most of the phone data was corroborated by other evidence presented at trial.
A Grisly Crime and a Life Sentence
Correa was convicted in December 2021 for his role in the home invasion, robbery, and murder of Kenneth, Janet, and Matthew Lindquist in Griswold. According to trial testimony, Correa and his sister, Ruth Correa, carried out the attack over a failed guns-for-drugs deal. The siblings brutally beat and stabbed the victims before setting the Lindquist home ablaze to cover their tracks.
Ruth Correa later testified against her brother as part of a plea agreement, receiving a 40-year prison sentence. Sergio Correa, deemed the mastermind of the attack, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, plus 105 years.
Awaiting the Court’s Decision
The Connecticut Supreme Court is expected to deliberate on the case for several months before issuing a ruling. If the court sides with Correa’s defense, it could lead to a reconsideration of his conviction and sentence. However, legal experts suggest that given the extensive corroborating evidence, a full reversal remains unlikely.
The decision in Correa’s appeal will set a precedent for how Connecticut courts handle digital evidence and search warrant limitations in future cases.