Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Albany County (Breslin, J), rendered March 30, 2001, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of burglary in the seсond degree.
In August 2000, defendant was indicted for burglary in the second degree stemming from a break-in at the home of Nicholas Sabatino (hereinafter the victim) at 56 Forest Avenue in the City of Albany on December 10, 1999. Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of the charge and sentenced, as а second felony offender, to a 15-year prison term followed by a five-year period of postrelease supervision.
On this appeal, defendant first contends that a showup
Albany Police Officer Petеr Isaacson, who had also responded, was parked a few blocks away and observed the victim’s car drive up behind his patrol car. The victim told him that a person described as a black male, approximately 30 to 35 or 35 to 40, dressed in dark clothing and wearing a hat, broke a windоw at his home at 56 Forest Avenue with a brown umbrella and entered into his entranceway. Isaacson broadcast the description of the individual and added the brown umbrella. He then returned to the victim’s home, observed the broken window and, thereafter, drove the victim around the area looking for the intruder.
Leonard observed defendant, who matched the description and carried a brown umbrella, walking eastbound on New Scotland Avenue not far from Forest Avenue. He broadcast that information, stopped defendant asking his name, where he was coming from and where he was going. Defendant gave his name and stated that he had left his girlfriend’s house and was going to St. Peter’s Hospital, which the detective knew was in the opposite direction. Leonard told defendant that he matched the description of a person acting suspiciously and asked if he would wait fоr someone to see if he was the person involved. Defendant agreed and Isaacson brought the victim to the scene for a showup. Isaacson told the victim that there was someone in the area who matched the description and he would be asked to view him and indicatе whether he was the person who entered his home. Upon arrival, the victim observed defendant from the patrol car at a distance of 15 to 20 feet. Defendant, not handcuffed, stood near Leonard and two uniformed officers.
Based upon the foregoing facts, we agree with County Court that the showup was reasonable and not unduly suggestivе. We find that it was “conducted in close geographic and temporal proximity to the crime” (People v Ortiz, supra at 537; see People v Hughes,
Next, defendant argues that County Court erred when it permitted the People to introduce evidence in their case-in-chief оf a different burglary because of defendant’s possession, at the time of his arrest, of various items of property stolen on the same day frоm a home on Glendale Avenue, some two blocks from Forest Avenue. While evidence of the other burglary would not be admissible to show defendаnt’s propensity to commit the burglary charge under consideration, County Court properly admitted it after determining that its probative value on the issue of intent outweighed the potential prejudice to defendant (see People v Beam,
Intent to commit a crime is an essential element of burglary in the secоnd degree (see Penal Law § 140.25). Here, defendant’s intent upon entry into the victim’s home was at issue based upon his statement to the victim when confronted. Hе stated that he entered the victim’s home to advise him that “[another] kid broke the window and ran down the street.” Defendant’s possession of the property stolen from another home in the same neighborhood that day at the time of his arrest was probative of his intent to commit larceny uрon his entry into the victim’s home. Moreover, County Court gave appropriate limiting instructions during the People’s summation and, again, in its final charge tо the jury, that such testimony was not proof of propensity to commit burglary or any other crime but was admitted for the sole purpose of determining the intent of the accused at the time that he was alleged to have entered the victim’s home (see People v Allweiss,
Next, we find unpersuasive defendant’s claim that the sentence imposed was harsh and excessive. We note that defendant has an extensive criminal record and he was eligible to be treated as a persistent felony offender, but County Court exercised its discretion to sentenсe him as a second felony offender. Finding no clear abuse of discretion nor any extraordinary facts warranting modification of the sentеnce, we decline to disturb it (see People v Sawinski,
Finally, we have considered the arguments raised in defendant’s pro se supplemental brief and find that they lack merit.
Mercure, Spain, Carpinello and Kane, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
