47 A.D.2d 562 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1975
Appeal by defendants from two judgments (one as to each defendant) of the County Court, Orange County, both rendered May 9, 1972, convicting them of burglary in the second degree and grand larceny in the third degree, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. Judgments affirmed. Defendants admittedly were drug addicts on November 5, 1971 when the above-mentioned crimes were committed. Both had police records involving drug-related crimes. They admittedly commited the crimes resulting in the judgments under review. Their sole defense was the affirmative defense of entrapment (Penal Law, § 35.40 [eff. Sept. 1, 1967, renumbered § 40.05 in March, 1968]). The prosecution's principal witness, both before the Grand Jury and at the trial, was an undercover police officer employed by the City of Newburgh. On the date of the crimes, and prior thereto, he was engaged in undercover police activity to ferret out criminal drug activity in that city. In the course of his undercover activity, he became friendly with defendants. He knew them to be addicts. To further his undercover activity, he led them to believe he was drug oriented and would resort to unlawful conduct to obtain drugs. According to his testimony, when he met with defendants on the evening of November 5, 1971 in Newburgh, they told him they contemplated burglarizing a house that night in order to obtain money for “ dope ”. They sought to enlist his aid in that contemplated burglary since they did not have an automobile, and he had a car and could drive them to a house which they could “ rip off ”. Defendants said they would share the drugs to he purchased with the burglary proceeds. According to this officer, he sought to dissuade defendants from committing that crime, but was unsuccessful. He tried to contact his superior officers, but could not. Then, to conceal his identity as an undercover police officer, he drove them, under their direction, to New-