32 A.D.2d 781 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1969
Appeal from four judgments of the 'County 'Court, Hassau County, each as to a respective appellant herein, those as to appellants Bell, Chandler and Hatcher rendered on April 26,1967, and the one as to appellant Jackson rendered April 27, 1967 on resentence, each judgment convicting the respective appellant of robbery in the first degree, grand larceny in the first degree and four counts of assault in the second degree, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence; and Chandler and Hatcher also appeal from an order of the same court, entered August 8, 1968, which denied their motion for a new trial and for eorom nobis relief. Appeals from the order dismissed as academic in view of the determination herewith of the appeals from the judgments. Judgments reversed, on the law and as to appellant Bell also in the interests of justice, and new trial ordered. The findings of fact below are affirmed. The judgments against appellants Jackson, Hatcher and Chandler are reversed since their rights of confrontation were violated by the introduction of Bell’s confession (Bruton v. United States, 391 U. S. 123). In his opening to the jury, the prosecutor stated that a detective would testify as to a statement given by Bell which implicated his codefendants, whom the prosecutor then named. When the detective took the stand to testify as to Bell’s statement, the court ordered him, in the absence of the jury, to omit the names of the codefendants and to refer to them only as friends of Bell’s. The detective them repeated ¡Bell’s confession, eliminating the names of the codefendants. In his summation, the prosecutor once more referred to Bell’s statement and implied that the “ friends ” were the codefendants. It is apparent that, despite the trial court’s attempt to accomplish an effective redaction of the confessing defendant’s statement, the jury could not help but conclude that the “ friends ” of Bell