83 A.D.2d 630 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1981
Appeal by the Deputy Attorney-General for Medicaid Fraud Control, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Queens County (Balbach, J.), dated December 17, 1980, as, upon petitioner’s motion to quash or modify a subpoena requiring his attendance before a Queens County Grand Jury, modified the subpoena so as to preclude the questioning of petitioner about facts discussed during his appearance before a New York County Grand Jury on March 13, 1979. Order affirmed insofar as appealed from, without costs or disbursements. On March 13, 1979, petitioner, a wholesale meat salesman, testified before a New York County Grand Jury which was conducting an investigation into alleged criminal activities in the health care industry in Néw York County. In his testimony petitioner denied any knowledge of persons in the meat industry having paid kickbacks to persons in the nursing home industry. Petitioner also denied that he had ever paid or discussed kickbacks. As a result of his testimony, he was indicted on three counts of perjury in the first degree, a class D felony. The prosecution was conducted by a Special Deputy Attorney-General assigned to the New York City regional office of the Hospital Division of the' Deputy Attorney-General for Medicaid Fraud Control. Petitioner pleaded not guilty. Thereafter, he made several motions, including motions to dismiss the indictment in whole or in part. The Trial Judge denied petitioner’s motions to dismiss, although he did remark that one of them involved “a very gray area”. He did, however, grant petitioner’s motion to suppress one of the tape recordings which was to be used as evidence of his peijury. According to one of petitioner’s counsel, after the Trial Judge had made these rulings, he invited counsel into his chambers, indicated that he thought that the case was an “appropriate case for disposition”, and asked counsel to return in a week with some sort of proposal with regard to disposition of the case. As a result of the ensuing negotiations triggered by the Trial Judge’s request, petitioner pleaded guilty two months later to one count of perjury in the second degree, a class E felony, in full satisfaction of the indictment. He was sentenced to five years’ probation and a fine of $2,500. This sentence was imposed in accordance with the Judge’s promise that if petitioner pleaded guilty to a class E felony, he would receive probation and a fine. The Judge apparently arrived at this sentence upon his review of a prepleading report prepared by the probation department and without reference to any agreement by the parties concerning what they perceived to be an appropriate sentence. Before sentencing petitioner, the court noted that he was 61 years of age, had never had any prior
. Petitioner’s motion was made in Queens County. A motion by the Deputy Attorney-General to change venue to New York County was denied and later withdrawn.
. The hearing court observed that petitioner’s defense counsel were “well-known in their field, competent and highly respected” and had been practicing law for more than 30 years and almost 50 years, respectively.
. We observe that a promise of this nature made by a prosecutor in the New York regional office of the Special Prosecutor is binding upon the Special Prosecutor’s office as a whole, including the members of the Long Island regional office. “The staff lawyers in a prosecutor’s office have the burden of ‘letting the left hand know what the right hand is doing’ or had done” (Santobello v New York, 404 US 257, 262, supra).