Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Washington County (Berke, J.), rendered May 21, 1999, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of cruelty to animals.
Defendant was charged in a single-cоunt indictment with the misdemeanor of cruelty to animals in violation of Agriculture and Markets Law § 353 arising from his having left his dog in the basement of his former home when he moved on January 3, 1999. On January 17, 1999, neighbors who heard the dog barking called the police who obtained and executed a search warrant. They observed a completely dark, cold cellar which was partially flooded due to a broken water pipe, a frozen water dish, no evidence of any dog food or a food dish, an old rug which had been chewed, dog feces, including some which had undigested remnants of the rug in it, and а dog that had feces stuck in its fur and which was unable to walk well or keep its eyes open in the dаylight. Subsequent examination by a veterinarian established that the dog’s ribcage was prominent, it was 10 tо 15 pounds underweight and had scabs around its neck, all signs of undernourishment. Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted and sentenced to one year in jail. On this appeal, defendant raises four issuеs which he claims denied him a fair trial: (1) improper joinder for trial of a separate indictment charging his live-in girlfriend with the same misdemeanor; (2) improper admission of expert testimony; (3) the inflammatory nature of the prosecutor’s summation; and (4) ineffective assistance of trial counsеl.
As a preliminary matter, we note that the first three of these issues were not preserved for our review due to the lack of proper and timely objections at trial (see, People v Johnson,
With rеspect to the joint trial issue, defendant asserts that prejudice occurred because his girlfriend’s prior statements to a television reporter would not have been admissible had he been tried alone. Consolidation of the indictments appears to have been improper since it was done by County Court sua sponte (see, CPL 200.40 [2]). Nevertheless, acknowledging that there is some degree of prejudice in every joint trial (see, People v Snare,
Next, defendant argues that the veterinarian was improperly аllowed to express an opinion concerning matters within the understanding of the ordinary juror which resulted in the expert, not the jury, determining guilt. “ ‘[T]he admissibility and scope of expert testimony is committed tо the sound discretion of the trial court’ ” (People v Perry,
With respect to the clаim of prosecutorial misconduct, our review of the summation leads to the conclusion that the prosecutor’s remarks were simply fair comment on the evidence and testimony given at trial and were properly responsive to defense counsel’s summation (see, People v Miller,
Defendant further asserts ineffectiveness of counsel due to the voluntary withdrawal of a suрpression motion addressed to the admissibility of his statement. We conclude that there is no merit tо this claim since our review of the evidence in this record reveals no showing of the likelihood of success of a challenge to the admissibility of defendant’s statement (see, People v Pray,
