OPINION OF THE COURT
The primary issue we address is whether the trial court properly admitted evidence of defendant’s uncharged murder to rebut defendant’s extreme emotional disturbance defense concerning the murder for which he was on trial. Although we have considered the use of Molineux evidence (People v Molineux,
In affirming the order of the Appellate Division, we hold that the evidence was properly admitted. Additionally, we reject defendant’s claim that he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel. Further, defendant’s claim, raised in his pro se supplemental brief, that he did not authorize defense counsel to raise the extreme emotional disturbance defense involves matters which are dehors the record, and is therefore not reviewable by this Court.
I
On September 25, 2003, defendant strangled his then roommate, Victor Dombrova, during an argument in Dombrova’s Brooklyn apartment in which Dombrova expressed that he wanted defendant to vacate the premises. After defendant killed Dombrova, he fled the crime scene. The police investigating the crime discovered defendant’s identity from a resume left at the apartment, and witnesses to the argument verified defendant’s identity. The police further discovered that defendant was wanted for questioning in Buffalo concerning a similar homicide. In the course of their investigation, the police located defendant’s former girlfriend who told them that defendant fled to Florida. They then placed a trap and trace/pin register on her phone, and, about a week after the homicide, defendant called the former girlfriend, was traced to Florida and arrested in that jurisdiction.
In a post-arrest statement, defendant told the police that, as a child, he was subjected to sexual abuse by his father over an extended period of time. Further, in written and videotaped statements, defendant admitted strangling Dombrova saying he “just lost it” and “snapped” when Dombrova grabbed his genitals and made other sexual advances towards him during their argument. Defendant said he strangled Dombrova with his hands and then used his belt to drag him to a closet in the apartment where the body was hidden. Defendant also admitted to strangling Kevin Bosinski in Buffalo on or about July 25, 2002—14 months before the Dombrova homicide—after meeting him in a bar. He said, on the night of the Buffalo homicide, he went to Bosinski’s apartment and fell asleep. According to
Defendant was charged with two counts of murder in the second degree (Penal Law § 125.25 [1], [2]), concerning the death by strangulation of Victor Dombrova.
The People moved in limine, pursuant to Molineux and People v Ventimiglia (
At trial, defendant admitted killing Dombrova and raised a defense of extreme emotional disturbance, claiming his violent response to Dombrova’s unexpected sexual advances was due to mental illness caused by protracted sexual abuse he suffered as a child. Defendant’s expert—Dr. Sanford L. Drob, a psychologist specializing in the areas of clinical and forensic psychology— testified that someone with defendant’s history of abuse and resulting disorders would be prone to “revictimization,” and therefore could experience more than one episode of extreme emotional disturbance when he finds himself in certain similar situations. But, the expert was unable to formulate an opinion to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty whether defendant had acted under extreme emotional disturbance in this case because he could not be sure, based on his discussions with defendant, what happened when defendant killed Dombrova. To rebut the defense, the People introduced defendant’s statements about his strangulation of Bosinski. The jury rejected the extreme emotional disturbance defense and convicted defendant of murder in the second degree, for killing Dombrova. He was sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of 25 years to life. The Appellate Division affirmed Supreme Court’s judgment (
Defendant argues that his statement regarding the Bosinski homicide was inadmissible under Molineux and Santarelli because it had no direct or logical tendency to rebut his extreme emotional disturbance defense. In defendant’s view, this evidence only shows that when he was confronted with sexual aggression, he snapped, facts wholly consistent with his extreme emotional disturbance defense. Defendant further contends that, even if the Bosinski evidence had some probative value, it should have been excluded because that value was minimal compared to its highly prejudicial impact in portraying defendant as someone who targets and kills gay men. For the reasons that follow, defendant’s arguments are unavailing.
First pronounced by this Court in 1901 in People v Molineux (
“objectionable not because it has no appreciable probative value but because it has too much. The natural and inevitable tendency of the tribunal— whether judge or jury—is to give excessive weight to the vicious record of crime thus exhibited and either to allow it to bear too strongly on the present charge or to take the proof of it as justifying a condemnation, irrespective of the accused’s guilt of the present charge” (1A Wigmore, Evidence § 58.2, at 1212; see Rojas,97 NY2d at 36-37 [“propensity evidence invites a jury to misfocus, if not base its verdict, on a defendant’s prior crimes rather than on the evidence—or lack of evidence—relating to the case before it”]).
Thus, “[w]here . . . the evidence proves only criminal propensity and serves no other function in demonstrating defendant’s guilt of the crime charged, there is no legitimate basis for its admission. No degree of care, in assessing its value and possible prejudice and in giving cautionary instructions, can render it otherwise” (Alvino,
To determine whether Molineux evidence may be admitted in a particular case, the trial court must engage in the following two-part inquiry (see Alvino,
III.
In this case, defendant claims that his act of strangling Dombrova, while intentional, was committed under a state of
By asserting the defense of extreme emotional disturbance, defendant necessarily put his state of mind at the time of the Dombrova killing in issue. We have held that where a defendant puts an affirmative fact—such as a claim regarding his/her state of mind—in issue, evidence of other uncharged crimes or prior bad acts may be admitted to rebut such fact (see Alvino,
We last addressed the People’s use of Molineux evidence to rebut a defense predicated on a defendant’s impaired state of mind in Santarelli. In that case, the defendant was charged in connection with the shooting death of his brother-in-law. At trial, he claimed that when the killing took place, he suffered from “temporary insanity,” thus putting his state of mind directly in issue. He sought to establish the defense through lay testimony concerning his unusual behavior in the weeks leading up to the shooting and through expert testimony indicating that his symptoms were consistent with a “break with reality” in the form of a “paranoid delusion” that his brother-in-law was trying to kill him (id. at 249). The prosecution sought to rebut defendant’s claim by establishing that the shooting was a product of the defendant’s explosive personality, not legal insanity. To that end, they offered proof, through testimony, that the defendant had committed a number of unprovoked, violent acts, unconnected with his brother-in-law, prior to the shooting at issue.
This Court reversed the Appellate Division and remitted the case to County Court for further proceedings on the indictment, holding that “evidence of uncharged criminal or immoral conduct may be admitted as part of the People’s case on rebuttal if it has a tendency to disprove the defendant’s claim that he was legally insane at the time of the crime” (Santarelli,
With the foregoing principles in mind, we hold that defendant’s statement concerning the Bosinski homicide was properly admitted during the People’s case on rebuttal. Here, the People sought to introduce the Bosinski evidence for reasons other than to show defendant’s propensity towards violence. This highly probative evidence is directly relevant to defendant’s extreme emotional disturbance defense in that it has a logical and natural tendency to disprove his specific claim that he was acting under an extreme emotional disturbance at the time of the Dombrova homicide (see Santarelli,
Further, the prosecution’s theory was that defendant deliberately targeted and killed gay men, and introducing defendant’s statement regarding the Bosinski homicide was consistent with this theory. Although the Bosinski and Dombrova homicides have strikingly similar characteristics, from the way each victim was killed to defendant leaving town after each killing, and it can be argued that the admission of the Bosinski statement is overly prejudicial propensity evidence, it is equally true that the repetition, duplication and similarity of defendant’s acts have a direct bearing on the question of premeditated intent. By asserting that he killed Dombrova under a state of extreme emotional disturbance, defendant put his state of mind at the
IV
Defendant further argues that he was denied effective assistance of counsel solely for defense counsel’s failure to object to prejudicial comments the prosecutor allegedly made during summation. During her summation, the prosecutor described defendant as a “predator” who systematically preyed upon the vulnerable. Although defense counsel did object to certain of the prosecutor’s summation comments, he did not object to the prosecutor’s characterization of defendant’s conduct as predatory. However, defendant has not shown that counsel lacked a legitimate explanation for not objecting or that, if counsel had objected, a mistrial would have been warranted. Further, the prosecutor’s characterization of defendant’s behavior as predatory was arguably a fair response to defense counsel’s summation argument that defendant’s acts were a reaction to what he perceived as a threat against him. Moreover, it was consistent with the prosecution’s theory of the case, i.e., based on the evidence adduced at trial, defendant acted with premeditation, not under the influence of an extreme emotional disturbance.
Defendant has not shown that defense counsel provided less than meaningful representation (see People v Benevento,
V
We have considered the arguments raised in defendant’s pro se supplemental brief, and conclude they are unreviewable or lack merit.
Chief Judge Lippman and Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Read, Smith and Pigott concur.
Order affirmed.
. In a prosecution for second-degree (intentional) murder, it is an affirmative defense that
“the defendant acted under the influence of extreme emotional disturbance for which there was a reasonable explanation . . . , the reasonableness of which is to be determined from the viewpoint of a person in the defendant’s situation under the circumstances as the defendant believed them to be” (Penal Law § 125.25 [1] [a]).
The extreme emotional disturbance defense “permit[s] the defendant to show that his actions were caused by a mental infirmity not arising to the level of insanity, and that he is less culpable for having committed them” (People v Patterson,
. This weighing of probative value versus potential for undue prejudice is discretionary; as such, our review is limited to determining whether the trial court abused its discretion; however, the threshold question of identifying a material issue to which the evidence is relevant poses a question of law (see Hudy,
. The extreme emotional disturbance defense does not absolve the defendant of criminal responsibility, but allows him/her “to demonstrate the existence of mitigating factors which indicate that” he/she should be “punished less severely” (People v Roche,
. The prior bad acts evidence included defendant’s participation in a barroom scuffle, his beating of a shop steward, and his conviction for possessing a gun.
. The evidence is also relevant to the objective element of the extreme emotional disturbance defense. Under the circumstances, it was arguably foreseeable to defendant that if Dombrova made an unwanted sexual advance toward him, like Bosinski did, he could react violently. Because defendant twice put himself in a position where he could commit a deadly act, a jury could reasonably find that defendant’s emotional response to Dombrova’s advance was unreasonable, as opposed to “an understandable human response deserving of [the] mercy” afforded by the extreme emotional disturbance defense (Harris,
. Since evaluation of defendant’s repetitive actions are not beyond the ken of the average juror, it was not necessary for the People to offer expert testimony to rebut the expert testimony offered by defendant.
