21 N.Y.2d 265 | NY | 1967
Lead Opinion
The defendants in this case are charged with murder in the first degree. Following their arrests, defendants Burrelle and Weston made admissions and gave statements, each claiming that another of the defendants had shot the victim after the victim had struck the man who allegedly fired the gun. Defendant Grant denied that there had been a robbery or that he had shot anyone. Nevertheless, he did concede that there had been an attempt by “X” to obtain money owed him by the victim and that this precipitated the firing of the shot. They were tried jointly for murder in the first degree, after a pretrial motion for separate trials by defendant Burrelle was denied.
At the outset, it is to be noted that the physical charactéristics of these three defendants were totally different. Indeed, they had in the past acquired the nicknames “ Fats ”, “Slim” and ‘ ‘ Shorty ’ ’. Grant was the heaviest by far of the lot, while Weston was considerably taller than Burrelle. Upon the trial, the statements and confessions of the various defendants were redacted by use of the letter “X” wherever another of the defendants was referred to, whether by their proper name or by nickname, but whatever protection from prejudice this might have afforded the other defendants was vitiated by the testimony of an assistant district attorney and two police officers who, in testifying as to the taking of these statements, recounted how “ Fats ”, “ Slim ” and “Shorty ” were implicated in the crime by the various declarants. This testimony was in accord with the written, redacted confessions previously introduced, with the exception that the persons referred to initially as “ X ” were now unmistakably identifiable to the jury.
Clearly, Burrelle, as movant for a severance, is entitled to a new and separate trial. In like manner the references to defendant Grant as “ Fats ” were very prejudicial and also call for a separate trial. In the unique circumstances of this joint trial defendant Weston must necessarily be tried separately to satisfy standards of justice.
The judgments of conviction should be reversed, and separate trials ordered.
Dissenting Opinion
The guilt of the three defendants is established beyond reasonable doubt by clear and independent proof of circumstances pointing unmistakably to the fact they robbed and killed their victim on the street. The judgments are now being reversed because of the conclusion that the trial court should, in the course of the trial, have sensed the difficulty of concealing from the jury the identification of codefendants in confessions or admissions made by individual defendants and then to have ordered separate trials.
It is felt that the deletions (“ redactions ”) in each of the confessions were insufficient to protect the codefendant whose identity could be spelled out or guessed by the jury. Efforts were made at the trial effectively to delete the hearsay. Most redactions or deletions of this kind give only the illusion of protection and, indeed, when performed thoroughly enough may result
At best deletions in written confessions pique the jury's curiosity and leave incomplete in the record the full effect of both written and oral admissions.
It is settled law, and the court seems not to be changing it, that even when a confession sets forth the name of a codefendant, a separate trial is not mandated, the theory being that the jury will heed the Judge's instruction to consider the confession only in the case of the person who made it (People v. Fisher, 249 N. Y. 419; Delli Paoli v. United States, 352 U. S. 232). If this is based on an unreliable fiction, it is no more unreliable than automatic faith in redactions. To make a rule as to separate trials rest on the effectiveness of redactions is to create a new source of litigation in the criminal law and a new source of speculation on what is effective and what is ineffective deletion in a myriad of different situations. (See, e.g., People v. Aranda, 63 Cal. 2d 518, 531-532; State v. Green, 46 N. J. 192.)
If Fisher is still the law, we should affirm these judgments; if it is not, that decision should be overruled.
The judgments should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Fuld and Judges Van Voorhis, Breitel and Keating concur with Judge Burke; Judge Bergan dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion in which Judge Scileppi concurs.
Judgments reversed and new separate trials ordered.