Defendant Kenneth Maher was convicted of counts of intentional murder and felony murder and criminal contempt in connection with the shooting death of Ann Kotel, his estranged paramour. The principal issue on appeal is whether hearsay statements of the victim concerning defendant’s prior violent acts and express or implied threats against her, were admissible as evidence-in-chief in the People’s case.
The People presented other evidence that the victim and defendant were involved in an intimate relationship, living together in an apartment until an argument occurred between them on April 20,1990. After two additional incidents on April 24 and 26, Ms. Kotel contacted the police and vacated the apartment. Another altercation occurred on April 30, leading to the filing of a criminal complaint against defendant for menacing and unlawful imprisonment.
After midnight on June 3, 1990, defendant parked his car in a secluded wooded area near Ms. Kotel’s new apartment. Wearing black pants, a black shirt, a black jacket and a black bandanna, and armed with a 12 gauge single-shot sawed-off shotgun, defendant waited outside Ms. Kotel’s apartment until a friend who was visiting left, at which time defendant cut the telephone wires to the building and forcibly entered her apart
The People proposed to introduce certain statements of the victim made to the police and a hospital security officer concerning violent and threatening behavior of defendant on April 24, 26 and 30, 1990, as bad acts probative of defendant’s intent and motive
(see, People v Molineux,
The trial court ruled that the victim’s statements were admissible. These essentially consisted of: (1) an April 26 statement to police concerning incidents on April 24 and 26 in which defendant grabbed her, forced her to the ground and held her down, on one occasion placing his hand over her mouth; (2) an April 30 statement to a hospital security officer when she accompanied defendant to the emergency room of a local hospital, prefatory to his voluntary admission to the hospital’s psychiatric ward, following an incident on that date at the couple’s former apartment. In that statement she described his suddenly coming out of a hiding place in a closet, handcuffing her to him and, while brandishing a pistol, stating "talk to me and I won’t kill you”; and (3) a May 1 recorded telephone conversation with the police, similarly describing the events of the April 30 incident and expressing her fear that defendant would kill her.
In our view, admitting the hearsay statements of the victim into evidence was an unwarranted expansion of People v Geraci, in effect converting a narrow departure from the hearsay rule into a categorical authority for the admissibility of victims’ statements in all homicide cases.
In
Geraci,
we recognized an exception to the defendant’s constitutional right of confrontation as well as to the evidentiary rule against the admission of hearsay evidence upon a showing that a witness had been rendered unavailable to testify in court through the misconduct of the defendant personally, or of others on his or her behalf with the defendant’s knowing acquiescence (
Because of the weighty countervailing interests, that is, the constitutional right of confrontation and the strong New York policy for narrow treatment of exceptions to the hearsay rule
(see, People v Nieves,
For the very same reasons, the
Geraci
exception must not be expanded and applied to circumstances in which the facts giv
Although the victim’s statements should not have been admitted into evidence at defendant’s trial, we conclude that the error was harmless. Since the only objection made against their introduction was the violation of a rule of evidence, the harmless error standard to be applied is whether there is a
significant probability
that the jury would have acquitted the defendant of intentional murder had the victim’s statements not been admitted
(see, People v Crimmins,
We find no such probability here. Defendant did not contest causing the victim’s death. The evidence of defendant’s conduct leading to the murder strongly negated his claim of drug-induced lack of intent and his affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance. He purchased the shotgun shortly before June 3, sawed off part of the barrel, assembled approximately 20 rounds of ammunition, a knife, bungee cord and black gloves. He dressed entirely in black, parked his car near the victim’s home in a secluded area and waited until she was alone. He then cut the telephone wires to the building to prevent any effort to summon rescuers. When she sought to escape, he pulled her back into the apartment and shot her three times with a shotgun requiring reloading and individual cocking each time before it could be fired. All of this conduct reflected a careful plan to take the victim’s life because of her rejection of him and her complaints to the authorities, rather than a spontaneous act committed mindlessly or in a largely uncontrollable, emotional fever.
Lastly, as to the impact of introduction of the victim’s statements, the proffered psychiatric basis for defendant’s claimed extreme emotional disturbance was undermined by his expert’s testimony that she was unaware of aspects of defendant’s careful preparation for the murder. Moreover, the victim’s rejection hardly fulfilled the objective element of the extreme emotional disturbance affirmative defense, its "reasonableness” as an explanation or excuse for the emotional state under the circumstances as perceived by the defendant (see, Penal Law § 125.25 [1] [a];
People v Casassa,
We also conclude that the error, if any, was harmless in admitting into evidence the recording of defendant’s May 1, 1990 telephone conversation with the police regarding the April 30 altercation. As defendant pointed out in his memorandum of law, submitted in support of his pretrial omnibus motion, the statements in that conversation were largely exculpatory of any existing intent to cause the victim’s death.
The remaining contention of the defendant relates to the trial court’s charge to the jury on his affirmative defense of extreme emotional disturbance. As is undisputed by defendant, the trial court extensively and accurately instructed on the subjective and objective elements of the defense and upon the shifted burden of proof
(see,
Penal Law § 125.25 [1] [a];
People v Casassa, supra).
However, in attempting to paraphrase the def
Standing alone, a reference to the absence of "malevolence” in a charge on extreme emotional disturbance could be misleading to a jury because it might wrongly suggest that an absence of intent to kill was necessary to make out that defense, or that the defense was inconsistent with extremely violent homicidal conduct
(cf., People v Moye,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Titone, Bellacosa, Smith, Ciparick and Wesley concur.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. It is conceded by the People that the hearsay statements of the victim admitted as evidence in this case do not fit into any traditionally recognized New York exception to the hearsay rule. For the first time on appeal, the People also urge this Court to uphold the admissibility of these statements under a more "amorphous 'reliability’ test”
(see,
discussion in
People v Nieves,
. A
Sirois
hearing is
the
preliminary evidentiary hearing before the
trial
court to determine whether the factual elements for applying the exception have been established (see,
People v Geraci,
