A DETECTIVE WAS PROPERLY ALLOWED TO IDENTIFY DEFENDANT IN A SURVEILLANCE VIDEO; TESTIMONY ABOUT THE “BLINDED” PHOTO ARRAY IDENTIFICATION PROCEDURE WAS PROPERLY ALLOWED; THE DEFENSE CROSS-EXAMINATION ABOUT A WITNESS’S CRIMINAL HISTORY SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN CURTAILED; ANY ERRORS DEEMED HARMLESS (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, finding any evidentiary errors harmless, determined: (1) a detective was properly allowed to identify the defendant in a surveillance video because the People demonstrated the detective had prior contacts with the defendant; (2) testimony about the “blinded” photo identification procedure was properly allowed; and (3) the defense cross-examination about a witness’s criminal history should not have been curtailed by the judge:
We conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in permitting the challenged testimony because the People presented evidence establishing that the police detective was familiar with defendant based on several prior contacts with defendant over the course of several years. Thus, there “was some basis for concluding that the [police detective] was more likely to identify defendant correctly than was the jury” … . …
Testimony about a photo array procedure, and the array itself, may be admitted where, inter alia, the procedure is ” ‘blinded,’ ” that is, where the person administering the array procedure does not know the suspect’s position in the array (CPL 60.25 [1] [c] [ii]; see CPL 60.30). Here, although the array viewed by the witness was created by the police detective who administered the procedure, the specific procedure conducted was nevertheless blind because the police detective placed three different arrays in envelopes, which he shuffled before having the witness pick one. This procedure is sufficient, in our view, to ensure that, at the time the witness was viewing the array, the police detective did not know the position of defendant in that array … . …
“[C]urtailment [of cross-examination] will be judged improper when it keeps from the jury relevant and important facts bearing on the trustworthiness of crucial testimony” … . … [W]e conclude that the court erred in limiting defense counsel’s cross-examination regarding the underlying facts of a witness’s prior drug conviction that occurred two months before the shooting at issue here, inasmuch as those facts bore on the witness’s credibility and were not remote or cumulative … . People v Griffin, 2022 NY Slip Op 01698, Fourth Dept 3-11-22
Practice Point: Because the detective had prior contact with the defendant, the detective was properly allowed to identify defendant in a surveillance video.
Practice Point: Testimony about the “blinded” photo array identification procedure was properly allowed.
Practice Point: The defense cross-examination about the witness’s criminal history should not have been curtailed.