Failure to Exercise Peremptory Challenge Not Ineffective Assistance
In a full-fledged opinion by Judge Smith, the Court of Appeals determined the failure to exercise a peremptory challenge against a juror (Peters) who was a long-time friend of the prosecuting attorney did not amount to ineffective assistance of counsel:
…[D]efendant can prevail on his ineffective assistance claim only by showing that this is one of those very rare cases in which a single error by otherwise competent counsel was so serious that it deprived defendant of his constitutional right (see People v Turner, 5 NY3d 476, 478 [2005]). We held in Turner that this had occurred where a lawyer overlooked “a defense as clear-cut and completely dispositive as a statute of limitations” (id. at 481). The mistake that defendant accuses defense counsel of making here was not of that magnitude.
It could be argued that counsel’s decision not to use a peremptory challenge on Peters was a mistake for two reasons: because Peters, as a juror, would be biased in the prosecution’s favor; and because, by not using a peremptory challenge to excuse him, counsel failed to preserve for appeal any claim that the court erred in rejecting the for-cause challenge. We consider those arguments separately.
The first argument is a weak one, because defense counsel may reasonably have thought Peters an acceptable juror from the defense point of view. * * *
The second argument — that counsel erred by failing to preserve the issue of the for-cause challenge for appeal — gives us somewhat more pause. The trial court’s decision to deny the challenge for cause may have been error … . Counsel’s choice not to exercise a peremptory challenge deprived defendant of the opportunity to make that argument on appeal; under CPL 270.20 (2), where a defendant has not exhausted his peremptory challenges, a denial of a challenge for cause “does not constitute reversible error unless the defendant . . . peremptorily challenges such prospective juror.” Considering the poor odds of acquittal that defendant was facing, it is hard to see how keeping a particular juror — no matter how strong defense counsel’s hunch that he would be favorable -could justify the loss of a significant appellate argument.
We conclude, however, that counsel’s mistake, if it was one, was not the sort of “egregious and prejudicial” error that amounts to a deprivation of the constitutional right to counsel… . People v Thompson, 144, CtApp 10-10-13