729 N.Y.S.2d 121 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2001
OPINION OF THE COURT
The question before us is whether defense counsel’s conduct in proceeding to trial in this case on the date of defendant’s arraignment on a multi-felony indictment without any prior investigation and after waiving all pre-trial motions and discovery denied defendant effective assistance of counsel.
The facts as presented by the People’s witnesses indicated that at 9:10 p.m. on April 22, 1995, Abdoulaye Balde was backing out of the garage of a building in which he lived on Lacombe Avenue in the Bronx when two cars blocked him in. Four men, including defendant, emerged from the cars and told Balde that they were undercover police officers, and one of them showed him a badge. Two others held guns. Defendant took Baide’s keys, pulled him out of his car and handcuffed him. Another man parked Baide’s car on the street. They all went up to Baide’s apartment, which he shared with Mamadou Conte and Ibrahim Diallo, where they threw Balde down and, identifying themselves as police officers, tied up and hit Diallo. They asked for “the money” and took $30 from Balde and $117 from Diallo. According to the complainants, defendant, who had a gun and who threatened to kill them, gave the orders to the other men. Defendant learned from Diallo that a red BMW parked outside belonged to his cousin, Conte, who had gone to pick up some friends. When Conte returned to the apartment with his friends, defendant and the other men put a gun to his head and said they were police officers. Then they tied up Conte and one of his friends, stomped on the friend’s head and took his money, jewelry and car keys. Defendant took Conte’s car keys, wallet and jewelry. Two of the men took Balde and the women who had arrived with Conte into another room and tied
About a month later, on May 23, 1995, after learning that the Camry had previously been reported stolen and had received three summonses in the vicinity of an address on Bailey Avenue, the police took one of the victims, Diallo, in a surveillance van to the vicinity of that address. Diallo identified defendant when the latter arrived in a vehicle, and defendant was arrested.
Detective Anne Burke testified that she read defendant his Miranda warnings from a “rights card” and wrote out a statement that he gave, neither of which she had defendant sign. According to the statement, defendant told an acquaintance that he needed money and the acquaintance introduced him to five men who told him that they had purchased heroin from some African men who resided in an apartment on Lacombe Avenue and had a lot of money. Defendant and the men drove to the complainants’ building, blocked Balde’s car, handcuffed him and went inside the apartment with him. Defendant looked for money in the apartment but Balde and Diallo told him that they knew nothing about large sums of money. However, Balde told defendant that there were drugs in the car downstairs and gave him the keys. Defendant retrieved the drugs and gave them to two of the men who were waiting downstairs for him in return for $200. He then took a taxi home. When Detective Burke was accompanying defendant to make a videotaped statement, defendant told an assistant district attorney that he was unable to speak English and asked for an attorney, at which point the interview concluded.
Some time later, while canvassing the area with police officers, Balde saw a white Camry, the second car that had blocked his car on the night of the incident. The Camry was parked in front of defendant’s house. Using the keys that had been recovered from defendant at the time of his arrest, the police moved the white Camry and upon a warrantless search of the car they found keys to a BMW, handcuffs, latex gloves, the keys to Conte’s friend’s jeep, and duct tape. Balde and Conte later identified defendant at separate lineups.
At trial, contrary to the unsigned statement, defendant testified that, on April 22, 1995, he went with his friend Gordo to
At the conclusion of the trial, defendant was convicted of one count of criminal impersonation in the first degree, one count of burglary in the first degree, one count of kidnapping in the second degree, and three counts of robbery in the first degree, and sentenced to an aggregate indeterminate term of 51V2 to 103 years in prison.
Defendant, some four years later, moved to vacate the judgment of conviction pursuant to CPL 440.10 on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel, based on the following facts. After defendant’s arrest on May 23, 1995, his brother-in-law hired an attorney, Julio Cesar Rojas, to represent him. Defendant met Rojas for the first time at his Supreme Court arraignment on June 14th. At that time, the People answered ready for trial and, pursuant to CPL 710.30 (1) (a) and (b), gave defense counsel notice of their intention to enter at trial an inculpatory statement made by defendant and three identifications made of him. Rojas responded by stating that he would waive pre-trial motions if the People truly were ready for trial. At the second call of the case, when the prosecutor who would be trying it appeared and answered that he was ready for trial, Rojas again stated that he would waive motions if the People were really ready. The court proceeded to look for a part in which to try the case. At the third call, the court asked Rojas if he actually was agreeing to waive all motions, except for Sandoval, and whether he had discussed this with defendant. After a brief pause in the proceedings, Rojas told the court that he had explained to defendant all the hearings to which he was entitled, namely, Wade and Huntley hearings and a hearing on the suppression of evidence found in defendant’s car, as well as
Defendant’s ineffective assistance argument on the article 440 motion was predicated on counsel’s failure to seek pre-trial discovery or a bill of particulars, to engage in pre-trial investigation, to meet with him before the start of trial, or to prepare a meaningful case file. Moreover, defendant alleged that counsel told him to answer yes to all the arraignment court’s questions about waiving the pre-trial motions, and that he did so because he trusted his counsel and he did not understand the law or the exact meaning of the term, “motions.” Defendant argued that, as a result, he was deprived of the opportunity to have the Grand Jury evidence reviewed for legal sufficiency and to have improperly obtained and highly prejudicial evidence suppressed, including suggestive identifications, items seized in warrantless searches, and his alleged statements made in the absence of Miranda warnings.
The court denied the article 440 motion, finding, inter alia, that defendant had voluntarily waived his rights to any pretrial motions, that he had failed to submit an affidavit from trial counsel, and that he had not met his burden of demonstrating that counsel’s decision was not the result of “a reasoned, professional judgment or that such tactic had a reasonable likelihood of success.” (Quoting People v Shaw, 232 AD2d 174, 175, lv denied 89 NY2d 946.) The court noted that defense counsel’s strategy was “to call the People’s bluff’ that they were ready for trial when in fact they might not have been ready. Moreover, the court opined that, since defendant testified at trial that he was involved not in a robbery but in a disagreement between drug dealers, it was reasonable that counsel determined in the pre-trial stage that the People’s evidence might not be terribly damaging after all.
It is true that ordinarily a complete record adduced through a motion to vacate the judgment of conviction pursuant to CPL 440.10, which includes an affidavit from trial counsel explaining his or her trial tactics, is necessary in order to properly evaluate a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel (see, e.g., People v Figueroa, 254 AD2d 226, lv denied 92 NY2d 1049). The failure to present such an affidavit from the attorney or an explanation for the failure to do so has been held to justify
In any event, this appears to be the “rare case” where the trial record itself permits review of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim on the direct appeal (see, People v Brown, 45 NY2d 852). Indeed, that record amply supports defendant’s contentions on his section 440.10 motion.
“ TW]hat constitutes effective assistance * * * varies according to the unique circumstances of each representation’ * * * [and] ‘[s]o long as the evidence, the law, and the circumstances of a particular case, viewed in totality and as of the time of the representation, reveal that the attorney provided meaningful representation, the constitutional requirement will have been met’ ” (People v Benevento, 91 NY2d 708, 712, quoting People v Rivera, 71 NY2d 705, 708, and People v Baldi, 54 NY2d 137, 147). The core of the inquiry is whether the defendant received “meaningful representation” (id.). Further, a reviewing court must avoid confusing ineffectiveness with mere losing tactics and engaging in retrospective analysis (People v Benevento, supra). Moreover, the defendant has the burden of demonstrating the absence of strategic or other legitimate explanations for counsel’s alleged shortcomings (id.; People v Rivera, supra).
Generally, a showing that defense counsel failed to make a particular pre-trial motion does not, in itself, establish ineffective assistance of counsel (People v Rivera, supra). Where counsel can be shown to have been motivated by strategy or by a reasonable conclusion that there is no colorable basis for a hearing, he or she is not ineffective (id.).
The trial record here, however, demonstrates that counsel’s decision to proceed to trial on the day of arraignment without any prior investigation or pre-trial discovery and after waiving all suppression motions was not the result of “a reasoned, professional judgment.” Counsel explained at arraignment that his reason for being willing to waive pre-trial motions was to test the People’s readiness because, as he stated, the People “have been known to use their state of readiness, so-called readiness, in order not to have the time tolled against them. It
Nor can the alternative explanation advanced by the People and accepted by the motion court regarding counsel’s trial performance be considered strategic or otherwise legitimate. The overarching problem with the People’s argument is that it seeks to justify counsel’s pre-trial actions by what he attempted to do at trial, when it is clear from the record that the defense theory counsel pursued at trial was dictated by his pre-trial failures. If even some of the evidence had been suppressed, the People might have had difficulty in effectively establishing their prima facie case, and counsel might not have had to put defendant on the stand or present any defense at all. Therefore, it was not reasonable for counsel to waive suppression motions at that stage of the proceeding.
The People claim that it was reasonable for defense counsel to forgo suppression of the physical evidence taken from
This is also true of the inculpatory statement defendant made allegedly without having first been read his Miranda rights. Although this statement is listed as part of the “overwhelming evidence” against defendant, the People claim that it was reasonable for counsel not to seek suppression of the statement because it could be used to discredit Detective Burke in support of the theory that defendant was framed. But Detective Burke’s testimony related only to the taking of the statement and the warrantless seizure of the evidence from defendant’s car, and if the statement, as well as the evidence, had been suppressed, Detective Burke would not have testified at all. Therefore, it made no sense to forgo a motion to suppress in favor of trying to persuade the jury that the statement was fabricated and that Detective Burke was part of the alleged frame-up.
The People’s claim that the failure of defense counsel to challenge the out-of-court identifications of defendant by the three complainants who lived in the Lacombe Avenue apartment was inconsequential is similarly infirm. The alleged suggestive identification procedures detailed by defendant should, at the least, have been tested by a motion to suppress, particularly in view of the inability of the other three witnesses in the apartment to identify defendant as one of the perpetrators.
The People rely, as did the motion court, on defendant’s own waiver on the record of all pre-trial proceedings, including motions to suppress. Skepticism is expressed at defendant’s assertion that he did not understand what he was waiving, or the significance thereof, but was merely following his attorney’s instructions to answer “yes” to the court’s questions. While in the absence of any submission by counsel it is not possible to
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, Bronx County (Richard Price, J.), rendered July 17, 1995, convicting defendant, following a jury trial, of robbery in the first degree, burglary in the first degree, kidnapping in the second degree and criminal impersonation in the first degree and sentencing him to consecutive terms of imprisonment of 121/a to 25 years on the robbery and kidnapping convictions and V-h to 3 years on the criminal impersonation conviction and to a concurrent term of 12V2 to 25 years on the burglary conviction, and order, same court and Justice, entered on or about May 15, 2000, which denied defendant’s motion to vacate the judgment pursuant to CPL article 440, should be reversed, on the law and the facts, and the matter remanded for a new trial.
Sullivan, P. J., Mazzarelli, Ellerin, Lerner and Buckley, JJ., concur.
Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County, rendered July 17, 1995, and order, same court, entered on or about May 15, 2000, reversed, on the law and the facts, and the matter remanded for a new trial.