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Tag Archive for: STRIKING OF TESTIMONY

Attorneys, Criminal Law, Evidence

INADMISSIBLE TESTIMONIAL HEARSAY, PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT, AND JUDGE’S ACTIONS TO COERCE THE JURY TO REACH A VERDICT DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL.

The First Department reversed defendant’s conviction, finding several distinct flaws which deprived defendant of a fair trial. Testimonial hearsay which served to bolster the complainant’s identification of the defendant was improperly admitted. The prosecutor improperly referred to stricken testimony in summation. And the judge effectively coerced the jury into reaching a verdict.  With respect to the coerced verdict, the court wrote:

During jury deliberations, the court should have granted defendant’s mistrial motion, made on the ground that any verdict would be reached under coercive circumstances. The court’s statements during jury deliberation were also prejudicial to defendant’s right to a fair trial. The jury returned two notes, on the second and fourth day of deliberations, announcing that the jury was deadlocked; the second note emphatically listed different types of evidence the jury had considered. The court’s Allen charges in response to both notes were mostly appropriate but presented the prospect of protracted deliberations by improperly stating that the jury had only deliberated for a very short time when it had actually deliberated for days … . The court initially informed the jury that its hours on one day would be extended to 7:00 p.m., before reversing that decision and merely extending the hours to 5:00 p.m., and then it extended the hours to 6:00 p.m. on the next day, a Friday. The court improperly described those changes as a “tremendous accommodation” that was “loathed” by the system … .

The court further indicated that the jury would likely continue deliberating into the next week although jurors had been told during jury selection that the case would be over by the aforementioned Friday, raising concerns for one juror who was going to start a new job the following Monday and another juror who was solely responsible for his child’s care in the first three days of the next week … . After the court informed the latter juror that he would be required to show up the next week despite the juror’s purportedly fruitless efforts to obtain alternative childcare, and then brought the juror back into the courtroom solely to reiterate that point more firmly, the jury apparently returned its verdict within less than nine minutes, at about 3:29 p.m. on the Friday … . The totality of the circumstances supports an inference that the jury was improperly coerced into returning a compromise verdict. People v DeJesus, 2015 NY Slip Op 08959, 1st Dept 12-8-15

CRIMINAL LAW (TESTIMONIAL HEARSAY IMPROPERLY ADMITTED)/CRIMINAL LAW (PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT, REFERENCE TO STRICKEN TESTIMONY)/CRIMINAL LAW (COERCED VERDICT, MISTRIAL SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED)/EVIDENCE (TESTIMONIAL HEARSAY IMPROPERLY ADMITTED)/HEARSAY (TESTIMONIAL HEARSAY IMPROPERLY ADMITTED)PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT (REFERENCE TO STRICKEN TESTIMONY)/COERCED VERDICT (JURY IMPROPERLY PRESSURED TO REACH VERDICT BY JUDGE)/VERDICT (COERCED, JURY IMPROPERLY PRESSURED TO REACH VERDICT BY JUDGE)/MISTRIAL (JUDGE IMPROPERLY COERCED JURY TO REACH A VERDICT, MOTION FOR A MISTRIAL SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED)

December 8, 2015
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Attorneys, Criminal Law

DEFENSE COUNSEL’S FAILURE TO OBJECT TO PROSECUTOR’S REFERENCES TO STRICKEN TESTIMONY CONSTITUTED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE REQUIRING REVERSAL.

The Third Department determined defense counsel’s failure to object to the prosecutor’s references to stricken testimony in summation amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel requiring reversal. The defendant was accused of running over his girlfriend with a pickup truck:

Here, during direct examination by the People, the witness testified that he heard defendant yell, “I hope you f***ing die, bitch.” Finding that this testimony went to defendant’s state of mind, County Court overruled counsel’s objection and permitted the statement into evidence. The witness then testified that he assumed defendant was directing such comment toward [the victim]. Upon defendant’s further objection, County Court held that the witness could not speculate as to whom defendant had directed his comment, and the witness’s testimony in that regard was stricken from the record. Despite this evidentiary ruling, during summation, the People twice made improper references to the stricken testimony and twice those references went without objection from defense counsel or curative instructions from the court. Specifically, at one point during closing argument the prosecutor stated, “If this was some sort of an accident, then why would the defendant scream at [the victim], I hope you f***ing die, bitch? Is that consistent with an accident or is that consistent with an intent to injure? If you accidentally just ran over your significant other, is that what you would say to them?” … . People v Ramsey, 2015 NY Slip Op 08874, 3rd Dept 12-3-15

CRIMINAL LAW (INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE, FAILURE TO OBJECT TO REFERENCES TO STRICKEN TESTIMONY)/INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE (FAILURE TO OBJECT TO REFERENCES TO STRICKEN TESTIMONY)

December 3, 2015
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Criminal Law, Evidence, Judges

Exculpatory Evidence Provided by Co-Defendant Should Not Have Been Struck from the Record When Co-Defendant Asserted His Privilege Against Self-Incrimination

The Fourth Department reversed defendant’s conviction because the trial judge, sua sponte, struck all of his co-defendant’s testimony after the co-defendant invoked his privilege against self-incrimination.  The defendant was entitled to have the exculpatory evidence presented by the co-defendant considered by the jury:

County Court erred in sua sponte striking the entire testimony of his codefendant after the codefendant invoked his privilege against self-incrimination, and we therefore reverse the judgment and grant a new trial … . We conclude that the court erred in failing to “weigh the options” in a “threshold inquiry” to determine whether “less drastic alternatives” were available, other than striking the entire testimony of the codefendant … . Here, the codefendant provided testimony that, if allowed to remain in the record, would have supported defendant’s positions that defendant did not engage in any scheme to defraud, and that the codefendant had pleaded guilty with respect to similar charges brought against him in order to avoid harsher penalties, and not because the codefendant had engaged in any fraudulent conduct. We further conclude that defendant had the right to have such “relevant and exculpatory testimony considered by the jury” … . We also conclude that the court’s error in striking the codefendant’s testimony is not harmless inasmuch as “the proof against defendant [is] not overwhelming and there is a reasonable probability that defendant would have been acquitted but for the error” … . People v Chadick, 2014 NY Slip Op 07789, 4th Dept 11-14-14

 

November 14, 2014
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