DEFENDANT WAS CONVICTED OF STABBING THE VICTIM AT A CROWDED PARTY BUT NO ONE SAW DEFENDANT WITH A KNIFE; DEFENSE REQUEST FOR THE CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE JURY INSTRUCTION SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED; CONVICTION REVERSED (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing defendant’s murder conviction, determined that the defense request fot eh circumstantial evidence jury instruction should have been granted. It was alleged defendant stabbed the victim but no one saw the defendant with a knife:
The victim was stabbed five times at a crowded house party where there were multiple ongoing fights, and the evidence established that the victim was involved in physical altercations with at least two other partygoers. One of the wounds was almost five inches deep, meaning that the blade of the knife must have been at least five inches long. None of the witnesses who observed defendant fighting with the victim observed anything in defendant’s hand during the altercation, and no blood was discovered in the room in which defendant and the victim engaged in their altercation. All of the evidence at trial required the jury to infer that defendant was the perpetrator who had the knife and that he used that knife to stab the victim. We thus conclude that a circumstantial evidence instruction was warranted … . Contrary to the People’s contention, this is not “the exceptional case where the failure to give the circumstantial evidence charge was harmless error” … . People v Swem, 2020 NY Slip Op 02435, Fourth Dept 4-24-20
