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Tag Archive for: UNCHARGED THEORY

Criminal Law, Evidence

JUDGE’S RESPONSE TO JURY NOTE ALLOWED JURY TO CONSIDER EVIDENCE OF ACTIONS NOT CHARGED IN THE INDICTMENT, CONVICTION REVERSED AND INDICTMENT DISMISSED.

The Fourth Department determined the trial judge’s response to a jury note allowed the jury to consider evidence of actions not charged in the indictment. Defendant’s conviction for endangering the welfare of a child was therefore reversed and the indictment was dismissed:

As set forth in the indictment and bill of particulars, as well as pursuant to the People’s theory at trial, the endangerment charge was based on the conduct alleged in the preceding six counts of rape in the second degree and incest in the second degree, of which defendant was acquitted. After receiving a jury note during deliberations, the court instructed the jurors that they were not precluded from considering conduct other than the alleged rape and incest when considering the endangerment charge. That instruction allowed the jury to consider conduct not charged in the indictment. ” Because the jury may have convicted defendant of . . . act[s] . . . for which he was not indicted, defendant’s right to have charges preferred by the [g]rand [j]ury rather than the prosecutor at trial was violated’ ” … . Additionally, based on the vague nature of the court’s instruction, “[i]t is impossible to ascertain what alleged act of [endangerment] was found by the jury to have occurred, whether it was one . . . for which he was indicted, or indeed whether different jurors convicted defendant based on different acts” … . People v Utley, 2015 NY Slip Op 09749, 4th Dept 12-31-15

CRIMINAL LAW (JURY ALLOWED TO CONSIDER EVIDENCE OF ACTIONS NOT CHARGED IN INDICTMENT, CONVICTION REVERSED, INDICTMENT DISMISSED)/EVIDENCE (JURY ALLOWED TO CONSIDER EVIDENCE OF ACTIONS NOT CHARGED IN INDICTMENT, CONVICTION REVERSED, INDICTMENT DISMISSED)

December 31, 2015
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Civil Procedure, Criminal Law, Evidence

Father’s Recording of Defendant’s Berating and Threatening Father’s Child Admissible Under the “Vicarious Consent” Theory (Father Vicariously Consented, on Behalf of the Child, to the Recording)/Variance Between Jury Instruction and Charges in the Indictment Was Harmless Error–No Possibility Defendant Was Convicted of a Theory Not Encompassed by the Indictment

The Second Department applied a “vicarious consent” theory to reject the defendant’s argument that the father’s recording of the defendant berating and threatening the father’s child violated the eavesdropping statutes, Penal Law 250.05 and CPLR 4506. Father had called mother’s cell phone which mother answered without speaking. Father could hear the defendant speaking to the child over the phone and recorded the defendant’s words.  In addition to the “vicarious consent” discussion, he Second Department noted that a variance between the jury instructions and the charges in the indictment was harmless error because there was no possibility the guilty verdict was based upon a theory not in the indictment.  With respect to the “vicarious consent” to the recording, the court wrote:

While … Penal Law § 250.05 serves the strong public policy goal of protecting citizens from eavesdropping, we are not persuaded that the New York Legislature intended to subject parents to criminal penalties when, “out of concern for the bests interests of their minor child, they record that child’s conversations” … . Given the similarity between the federal wiretap statute and New York’s eavesdropping statute, and recognizing that the “vicarious consent” exemption is rooted on a parent’s need to act in the best interests of his or her child …, we deem it appropriate to adopt it as an exemption to Penal Law § 250.05.

Here, the People sufficiently demonstrated that the father had a “good faith, objectively reasonable basis to believe” that it was necessary for the welfare of the infant to record the conversation …, such that he could consent to the recording on the infant’s behalf … . Accordingly, the “vicarious consent” exemption applies, and admission of the subject recording was not barred by CPLR 4506. People v Badalamenti, 2015 NY Slip Op 00384, 2nd Dept 1-14-15

 

January 14, 2015
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Appeals, Criminal Law

Where Proof Is Directed Exclusively to a Theory Not Charged in the Indictment, the Proof Is Insufficient to Support the Conviction—Such a Variance Need Not Be Preserved by Objection to Be Raised on Appeal/Conduct of Spectators (Mouthing Words When Victim Testified) Did Not Require that the Spectators Be Removed and Did Not Mandate the Declaration of a Mistrial

The Fourth Department determined that variance between the charges described in the indictment and the proof at trial required the dismissal of several counts.  Such a variance does not need to be preserved for appeal by objection.  The court noted that the trial judge’s failure to exclude spectators who were mouthing word’s during the victim’s testimony was not an abuse of discretion:

“Where the charge against a defendant is limited either by a bill of particulars or the indictment itself, the defendant has a fundamental and nonwaivable’ right to be tried only on the crimes charged” … . We have thus held that, where, as here, a defendant contends that he or she has been convicted upon an uncharged theory of the crime, such a contention does not require preservation… . * * *

“Where there is a variance between the proof and the indictment, and where the proof is directed exclusively to a new theory rather than the theory charged in the indictment, the proof is deemed insufficient to support the conviction” … . Counts two and three of the indictment alleged hand-to-vagina contact, but the victim testified that the only part of defendant’s body that came into contact with her vagina was defendant’s penis. Indeed, when asked specifically if any other part of defendant’s body came into contact with her vagina during the incident encompassed by counts two and three, the victim responded, “No.” Count nine of the indictment alleged penis-to-vagina contact, but the victim testified that defendant touched her vagina with his hand during that incident. Again, when asked specifically if any other part of defendant’s body came into contact with her vagina during the incident encompassed by count nine, the victim responded, “No.” We thus conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the conviction with respect to counts two, three and nine and that defendant was denied his fundamental and nonwaivable right to be tried on only those crimes charged in the indictment. We therefore modify the judgment accordingly.  People v Duell, 2015 NY Slip Op 00014, 4th Dept 1-2-15

 

January 2, 2015
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Criminal Law, Evidence

“Drug Factory” Presumption re: Possession of Drugs to Which the Defendant Is In “Close Proximity” Does Not Apply to A Defendant Who Is Arrested Outside the Building Where the Drugs Are Located and Who Was Not Trying to Escape/Where a Jury Is Instructed It Can Consider Two Different Theories of Possession, and One of Those Theories Should Not Have Been Available for the Jury’s Consideration, the Relevant Convictions Must Be Reversed—the Jury Could Have Based Its Verdict on the Erroneously-Charged Theory

The Court of Appeals, in a full-fledged opinion by Judge Rivera, determined that the trial judge should not have allowed the jury to consider whether the defendant, who was arrested outside the apartment, was in “close proxity” to the cocaine in the apartment.  Penal Law 220.25(2) creates a presumption that persons in “close proximity” to drugs that are being mixed or packaged possesses those drugs (the so-called “drug factory” presumption). The trial judge also instructed the jury they could consider whether the defendant constructively possessed the drugs by virtue of his control over the area where the drugs were found.  Because it can not be determined whether the jury based its verdict on the erroneous “drug factory” charge or the correct “constructive possession” charge, the relevant convictions were reversed and a new trial ordered.  The Court of Appeals went through all the scenarios which have been held to constitute “close proximity” to drugs and concluded that where a defendant is outside the structure where the drugs are located and is not in the process of fleeing, the “drug factory” presumption does not apply:

…[T]he presumption may apply even in cases where a defendant has exited the premises, when the defendant is caught in immediate flight, or apprehended fleeing the premises “upon the sudden appearance of the police” … . We need not determine on this appeal how far from the premises defendant may be apprehended and still be subject to the presumption. We note, however, that the boundary in these cases is not limitless. Suffice it to say, that each incremental enlargement of the distance between the defendant and the premises where the drugs are found tests the underlying justification of the presumption, and makes it susceptible to challenge. …

Applying these principles to the record before us, we conclude that defendant was not in close proximity to the drugs when they were found within the meaning of section 220.25(2). He was not in the room where the drugs were found, in an adjacent room within the same apartment, or in a “closet, bathroom or other convenient recess[].” Nor was he found immediately outside the premises while trying to escape.  People v Kims, 2014 NY Slip Op 07196, CtApp 10-23-14

 

October 23, 2014
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Criminal Law

Conviction Reversed Because Uncharged Theory Considered by Jury

The Fourth Department reversed defendant’s conviction for criminal impersonation because the jury was allowed to consider a theory of prosecution that was not charged:

…[T]he court’s jury instructions with respect to the crime of criminal impersonation in the first degree permitted the jury to convict him upon a theory not charged in the indictment, and thus violated his right to be tried for only those crimes charged in the indictment, as limited by the bill of particulars …. …[W]e address defendant’s contention despite his failure to preserve it for our review … . The fifth count of the indictment alleged that defendant committed the crime of criminal impersonation when he pretended to be a police officer and, “in the course of such pretense, committed or attempted to commit the felony of [r]ape in the first degree.”    The court’s instructions, however, permitted the jury to convict defendant upon finding that he committed any felony in the course of pretending to be a police officer, thus allowing the jury to convict defendant upon a theory not charged in the indictment.  People v Williams, 340, 4th Dept, 6-7-13

 

June 7, 2013
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