DEFENSE COUNSEL PURSUED A REASONABLE ALTERNATIVE STRATEGY IN MOVING TO SUPPRESS DEFENDANT’S STATEMENTS THAT DID NOT REQUIRE AN INVESTIGATION INTO DEFENDANT’S MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE; THEREFORE DEFENSE COUNSEL’S PURPORTED FAILURE TO INVESTIGATE DID NOT CONSTITUTE INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE (CT APP).
The Court of Appeals, in a full-fledged opinion by Judge Troutman, over an extensive dissenting opinion, determined defense counsel’s purported failure to investigate defendant’s mental health and substance abuse history in order to challenge the voluntariness of defendant’s statements to police did not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. Counsel’s decision to employ an alternative strategy was reasonable:
Defendant’s assigned counsel later moved to suppress defendant’s statements. At a pretrial hearing, counsel argued that defendant provided those statements while operating under a reasonable belief that he would be given immunity in exchange for his information, and therefore the statements were involuntary. Counsel supported that argument with a variety of evidence, including, among other things, defendant’s refusal to offer any statements until he could speak with an assistant district attorney (ADA), an unrecorded conversation with an ADA, and a note in the police file in defendant’s handwriting stating that he would need immunity and payment in exchange for his information. Counsel also relied upon defendant’s Miranda waiver form, on which he crossed out “defendant” and wrote in “C.I.,” for confidential informant. Defendant also testified at the suppression hearing that he had been offered immunity by the ADA during the unrecorded conversation. * * *
In 2019, while his direct appeal was still pending, defendant moved to vacate the judgment pursuant to CPL 440.10. He argued that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to investigate his history of mental health disorders and substance abuse. The court ordered a hearing, at which defendant’s trial counsel testified. Counsel asserted that although he was aware of defendant’s mental health and substance abuse history, defendant “had given [counsel] such a clear picture” of what happened that “was supported by documentary evidence” and that in counsel’s “50 years of practicing [he had] never had a case where [he had] seen, or known of a case where [he had] seen that a person” who shared defendant’s mental health diagnosis successfully suppress a statement on that ground. People v Fernandez, 2026 NY Slip Op 03915, CtApp 6-23-26
Practice Point: Although defendant’s mental health and substance abuse history may have been used to argue his statements to police were not voluntary, defense counsel felt that argument would fail and pursued a reasonable alternative strategy which did not require a mental-health and substance-abuse investigation. Defense counsel was therefore not “ineffective.”

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