The predicate for admission of tape recordings in evidence is clear and convincing proof that the tapes are genuine and that they have not been altered. Absent such proof, the defendant’s concession that the voice on the tapes is his or hers and that he or she recalls making some of the statements on the tapes does not exclude the possibility of alteration and, therefore, does not sufficiently establish authenticity to make the tapes admissible. Moreover, when, as here, tapes which are admitted to prove motive contain evidence of crimes other than that for which defendant is on trial, unrelated to motive or the relevance of which to motive is outweighed by its prejudicial effect, which is not itself otherwise admissible and not explanatory of the acts done or words used in the admissible part of the tapes, such material should be redacted before submission of the tapes to the jury. The tapes admitted in this case having been admitted without sufficient foundation and without proper redaction, the order of the Appellate Division affirming the judgment of conviction should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
I
On February 6, 1982, Raymond Ely was to have commenced overnight visitation with his son, Robert, pursuant to a stipulation entered into during the course of the divorce proceedings between him and defendant, Karen Ely, his estranged wife. On February 5, 1982, however, Raymond Ely was found dead on the рassenger side of the front seat of his station wagon, which was parked behind a bus terminal in downtown Albany. Defendant and Robert Huntington were charged with his murder in an indictment alleging that the deceased was strangled in the cellar of defendant’s Rensselaer home on the night before his body was discovered, and then transported to Albany. Defendant’s primary motive for the killing, the People later would argue, was to deny Raymond Ely the opportunity to visit overnight with their son.
Huntington pleaded guilty to murder in the seсond degree and was the prosecution’s chief witness against defendant at the trial out of which this appeal arises. He testified that during the first week of January 1982, defendant approached him and enlisted his services in the murder of her husband. Pursuant to a prearranged plan, Raymond Ely was invited to
Huntington testified that the purpose of the murder, as he understood it, was to stop the deceased from exercising his "visiting rights * * * for their son, Robert.” According to Raymond Ely’s matrimonial attorney, Paul Oliver, defendant and the deceased had stipulated that defendant would have five successive Sunday visits with their son, after which overnight weekend visitation would commence on Saturday, February 5, 1982. Notably, Huntington told the jury that when on the night of the killing he expressed doubt about carrying out the murder plan, defendant stated, "Don’t back out on me now. We have to do it tonight. We have to do it before the weekend.”
The most damning evidence of motive, however, consisted of three tapes of recorded telephone conversations between defendant and the deceased (exhibits 39, 40 and 41). The recordings were made by the deceased at his attorney’s suggestion during August and September 1981, and were intended for use as evidence in the рarties’ then pending divorce proceeding. Prior to commencement of the trial, defendant’s attorney sought a ruling (see, People v Ventimiglia,
The evidence of foundation presented at trial as to exhibits 39 and 40 came from Raymond Ely’s roommate, who testified that the tapes had been made by him outside their home, at a time and place unknown to her, and then placed by him in a shopping bag which he stored in the living room and later moved into the bedroom closet. After the murder she retrieved the tapes from the closet and turned them over to the police.
As to the tape designated exhibit 41, Paul Oliver testified that, in or about September 1981, he received it from Raymond Ely and thereafter kept it in Ely’s file at his office until he, too, handed the tape to the рolice. He also testified that in his opinion the notations on all three tapes were in the handwriting of Raymond Ely. He conceded, however, that Ely had had exhibit 41 in his own possession "probably” for "anywhere from three weeks to a month” before delivering it to him.
Custody of all three tapes after delivery to the police was established by the testimony of Police Officer Mancuso, and defendant stipulated in court that the female voice on the tapes was hers. In separate rulings as to exhibits 39 and 40 and then as to exhibit 41, the Trial Judge held that sufficient foundation had been established.
A substantial portion of the content of the tapes involved Raymond Ely’s unsuccessful efforts to persuade defendant to allow him visitation with their son. Defendant’s steadfast refusal to acquiesce in such requests is evidenced by those portions of the tape in which she offered to waive her claim to child support, despite her $50 per week wages, in exchange for an agreеment that the deceased would have no visitation rights, and by her repeated statements that he would be afforded visitation "over my dead body.”
Defendant based her position in respect of visitation, at least in part, on her contention that Robert, then about two years old, did not want to see his father because he had done "something” to frighten the boy. But she also maintained that the deceased was not the boy’s father and the tapes include the first conversation during which she sо informed him. In response to Raymond Ely’s statements that he thought that her pregnancy was their attempt at improving a troubled marriage, defendant explained that she would have left the deceased before the child was even conceived but remained
Similar references to the arson charges appear throughout the tapes. On a number of occasions defendant reacted to her husband’s asking, in disbelief that he was not the father of the child, how she could "live a lie” by not revealing that to him earlier, by responding repeatedly that she lied because she had to, in light of her attorney’s advice that she remain married while the arson charge was pending. On one occasion, however, she added thаt if the deceased pressed forward with court proceedings, she would "swear” in court, in support of her claim for child support, that he was Robert’s father, adding that "of course I’ll do what I have to in Court. Doesn’t everybody?”
After the Trial Judge held the foundation of the tapes sufficient, defendant moved that there be redacted from them references to the fire and related arson charge, as well as the fact that defendant’s lawyer had advised her to live with the deceased until the arson charge was dismissed.
Defendant testified in her own behalf, denying involvement in the murder and stating that Huntington had told her that he, alone, killed Raymond Ely. On cross-examination, the prosecutor confronted defendant with a series of statements which, more often than not, she admitted were correctly recorded on the tapes.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree. On appeal from the judgment of conviction, the Appellate Division affirmed (
Defendant appeals by leave of a Judge of this court (
II
Admissibility of tape-recorded conversation requires proof of the accuracy or authenticity of the tape by "clear and convincing evidence” establishing "that the offered evidence is genuine and that there has been no tampering with it” (People v McGee,
A fourth, chain of custody, though not a requirement as to
Were there other foundation proof to overcome that discrepancy, the gap in the chain of custody would affect the weight but not the admissibility of the tapes (People v McGee,
Moreover, the gap in the proof was not remedied by defendant’s admissions during cross-examination that she recalled having made particular statements contained on the tape (see, n 2, supra). Limited as they are to isolated portions of the conversation, these admissions do not satisfy the requirement that the fairness and accuracy of the entire recorded conversation be established as a predicate of admissibility (People v Arena,
Because the evidence presented was insufficient to supply the required foundation, it was an abuse of discretion as a matter of law for the Trial Judge to admit them into evidence.
Ill
There is no question that those portions of the tapes which tended to establish that defendant’s motive for procuring the murder of her former husband was to prevent his having overnight visitation with the child fall within one of the recognized exceptions to the rule proscribing introduction of evidence of uncharged crime (People v Ventimiglia, supra; People v Molineux,
The first, which "is intended to eliminate the danger that a jury may convict to punish the person portrayed by the evidence before them even though not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt of the crime of which he is charged” (People v Ventimiglia,
Thus, that a tape contains relevant evidence is but the beginning of the inquiry, not the end of it. Whether there should be redaction of а tape turns not, as the Trial Judge here ruled, upon whether "there is a flavor to it,” but on whether the material to be redacted is more prejudicial than probative. Nor does it turn on "the integrity of the exhibit,” except as material not itself directly probative is essential to an understanding of what is.
The People argued before the Trial Judge and before us that virtually all of the statements contained in the tapes were probative of motive because they demonstrated not only defendant’s opposition to allowing her husband to visit overnight with their son, but also that she and the deceased lived in a "charade marriage relationship” during the time when the arson charge was pending. They rely upon People v Scott (
It follows from the foregoing principles that the many references to the arson charge should have been, and on retrial should be, redacted, even though the tapes also revealed that the charges had ultimately been dismissed. While a defendant who takes the stand may be interrogated on cross-examination concerning a criminal act committed even though not formally charged with it (Richardson, Evidence § 498, at 483 [Prince 10th ed]), that could not justify introduction as pаrt of the People’s direct case of the arson evidence, unless otherwise admissible. The prejudicial impact of involvement in arson, a crime of violence, is pointed up by the Trial Judge’s Sandoval ruling, which prohibited cross-examination of defendant about her alleged role in the fire for the very reason that such questioning would portray her as a person predisposed to commit violence. Nor can we agree that prejudice would necessarily be obviated by the revelation that the charges had been dismissed, for dismissal of a criminal charge is not tantamount to acquittal (cf. People v Vidal, 26 NY2d
Review of the tape transcripts pursuant to the request for redaction discloses much other material that should be excluded, either on the People’s direct case or entirely. In the former category is defendant’s statement that she would lie under oath, for it is axiomatic that the credibility of defendant as a witness is not in issue until she testifies (see, People v Rahming,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Chief Judge Wachtler and Judges Simons, Kaye, Alexander, Titone and Hancock, Jr., concur.
Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. For example, the tapes contain the following exchange between defendant and the deceased:
"male: I wasn’t going to bed with anybody when we were together, never.
"female: We weren’t together. We were only together because my father asked you to stay. I only told you that [the baby] was yours because I was afraid that I was going to jail if I didn’t have a husband, just the way Paul Sleasman [defendant’s attorney on the arson charge] told me. Now, honest to God, Raymond, just please let it alone.” (Material in brackets added.)
. The People point to the following exchange between the prosecutor and defendant:
"Q. Do you remember saying repeatedly that Raymond Ely would get visitation over your dead body?
"A. Yes, I do.
"Q. Do you remember saying if he got visitation you would move with the child to Florida?
"A. Yes I do.
"Q. Do you remember saying that you wanted your husband out of your life and out of Robert’s life?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. Do you remember Raymond saying on those tapes after you told him for the first time that Robert was not his child, that hе now would have to take Robert off his insurance?
"A. Yes.
"Q. Do you remember telling him not to do that yet?
"A. Yes, I do.”
. For example, defendant denied admitting to her husband in a taped conversation that the only reason she feared that he would kidnap their child was that he had on one occasion been five minutes late in returning the child to her after a visit with him.
. The reference should have been to decedent’s roommate, whose testimony regarding the tapes is summarized above.
. We have considered defendant’s other arguments and find them either unpreserved or without merit.
