139 Misc. 2d 614 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1988
OPINION OF THE COURT
The defendant, Gennero Grandenetti, was arraigned in Criminal Court on June 5, 1987 and charged with the crime of robbery in the first degree. At the time of the defendant’s
The defendant was subsequently indicted for the crime charged and thereafter the People filed with the court and served on the defense a copy of their voluntary disclosure form. This form reasserted the statement notice given at the arraignment and contained the following summary of the defendant’s statement given to a Police Officer Wich: "In substance the defendant stated that he did not rob people. Robbery was not his thing. Defendant did state that he sometimes went with people to cash machines.”
By notice of motion dated July 21, 1987, the defendant moved for pretrial hearings. That application was decided in August of 1987 and among the hearings ordered was a Huntley hearing to test the admissibility of the statements for which the People had served the required CPL 710.30 notice.
Due to various reasons, including the assignment of new counsel in December of 1987, the matter was adjourned numerous times. Pretrial hearings finally commenced on February 23, 1988, over eight months after the defendant’s original arraignment. In reference to the Huntley issue, Police Officer Wich testified that the defendant stated to him, "I don’t rob people. I’m a con man. I sometimes take people to cash machines to get money.” Upon hearing this testimony, the defendant moved to preclude use of the statement at trial, claiming that the notice he had received was prejudicially incomplete.
The fact that the People’s notice did not contain an exact or full report of the defendant’s oral statement does not, in and of itself, negate the sufficiency of such notice. (See, People v Couch, 74 AD2d 582, 583 [2d Dept 1980], citing People v Rivera, 73 AD2d 528 [1st Dept 1979], affd 53 NY2d 1005 [1981].) But, where the difference between the notice served and the statement to be offered at trial serves to frustrate the defendant’s opportunity to fashion an appropriate defense, then the notice does not meet the requirements and serves to defeat the intent of CPL 710.30 (1) (a). (People v Ludolph, 63 AD2d 77, 81 [4th Dept 1978], citing People v Briggs, 38 NY2d 319 [1975].)
In Ludolph (supra) the defendant was charged with criminal possession of stolen property (an automobile). The People had served notice that Ludolph had made an oral admission that he " 'had stolen the car February 18, 1976 and had used the
Here, as in Ludolph (supra), it is clear from the record that Grandenetti’s theory of his defense was abrogated by Officer Wich’s testimony at the Huntley hearing. Up until the hearing, which was to be immediately followed by trial and was held some eight months after the defendant’s arrest, Grandenetti had been prepared to assert, and indeed had been asserting, that the incident leading to his arrest was not a robbery but a marihuana sale gone bad. The omissions and differences between the notice he received and the officer’s testimony precluded on the eve of trial his planned defense. The required statement notice given by the People therefore was legally deficient to the extent of the omissions and differences.
The People argue that even if the court finds, as it does, that the statement notice was defective to the extent of the omission, the defect was cured by the fact that the defendant was given the opportunity to completely challenge the entire statement at the Huntley hearing.
In light of the triology of cases recently decided by the Court of Appeals emphatically binding the People to their statutorily allotted 15 days within which to serve CPL 710.30 notice, the People’s position is not viable. In People v Boughton (70 NY2d 854 [1987]) the prosecution served timely notice of their intention to use the defendant’s oral statements at trial. Upon the defendant’s motion to suppress those statements, the prosecutor indicated that no such statement existed and, therefore, he was withdrawing the notice. However, at the start of jury selection, the prosecutor informed the defendant that the withdrawal was in error, the statements did exist, whereupon the defendant moved for preclusion.