Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Queens County (Balbach, J.), rendered January 11, 1979, convicting him of rape in the first degree and robbery in the first degree, upon a jury verdict, and sentencing him to concurrent, indeterminate terms of imprisonment of 6% to 20 years.
Judgment affirmed.
On July 15,1977, the complainant identified defendant as the rapist from a photographic array consisting of six photographs of males similar in age and appearance. Thereafter, the complainant viewed at least 100 projections on a Miraquic computer and identified only defendant’s picture. Defendant was apprehended three months later on an unrelated charge and, on October 26, 1977, the complainant identified defendant as the rapist from a six-man lineup conducted at Rikers Island. The participants in the lineup were similar in age and appearance. When asked at the lineup from where she recognized defendant, complainant admitted that she paused before answering the question and stated, in substance, that she wanted to be sure that she recognized defendant from the night of the crime and not the photograph. She stood there until she was sure and then responded: “From the night I was raped. He raped me”.
Defendant contends that the complainant’s lineup and in-court identifications should have been suppressed as the tainted product of impermissibly suggestive police conduct, i.e., showing the complainant, within a short time period, two pictorial displays, each of which contained defendant’s picture. Additionally, defendant argues that the lineup identification should be suppressed because one of the detectives present during the lineup badgered the complainant into responding that she recognized defendant from the night of the rape. With respect to the latter
We are cognizant that the danger of misidentification will be increased if the police show a witness pictures of several persons among which the photograph of a single individual resembling the perpetrator recurs. When a misidentification occurs, the witness is apt to retain in his memory the image of the photograph rather than the person actually seen, reducing the trustworthiness of a subsequent lineup or courtroom identification (Simmons v United States,
Moreover, even if we were of the view that the identification procedures were impermissibly suggestive, it would not require the suppression of the victim’s in-court identification. The People established by clear and convincing evidence at the suppression hearing that the proffered in-court identification had an independent origin based on the victim’s ample opportunity to observe the rapist in close quarters during the commission of the crime (see, People v Parks,
Defendant next contends that the trial evidence failed to establish the rapist’s identity beyond a reasonable doubt. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the People (People v Lipsky,
We also reject defendant’s contention that it was error for the trial court to refuse to conduct a Sandoval hearing with respect to the prior vicious and immoral acts intended to be relied upon by the prosecution in impeaching him. In order to obtain an advance ruling limiting the scope of cross-examination, the burden is upon the defendant to inform the court of the prior misconduct which might unfairly affect him as a witness in his own behalf (see, People v Poole,
Defendant further contends that the trial court erred in refusing to permit him to introduce in evidence Louis Wilson, the man accused of being the second assailant, solely as a physical exhibit rather than to call him as a witness. Defendant additionally argues that the prejudicial effect of disallowing Wilson’s use as an exhibit was compounded by the trial court’s erroneous ruling that if Wilson intended to invoke his 5th Amendment right against self-incrimination in response to inquiries, as Wilson’s counsel had informed the court, Wilson would have to do so in front of the jury. We disagree with defendant’s contentions.
Since relevancy must be established (People v Flanigan,
Although informed by Wilson’s counsel that Wilson would invoke his 5th Amendment privilege in response to any further questions, it was not reversible error to compel Wilson to invoke said privilege in the presence of the jury. Reversible error is not invariably committed whenever a witness claims his privilege not to answer (Namet v United States,
The only other question which Wilson refused to answer was asked by defense counsel for the purpose of dispelling any inference that defendant had something to hide by not asking Wilson questions during direct examination. Defense counsel asked Wilson to disclose his whereabouts on the evening of the crime. Wilson’s refusal to answer this question did not add “ ‘critical weight’ ” to the People’s case (West v State, supra, p 401, p 681, quoting from Price v State,
Attempting to provide an explanation for the five-inch discrepancy in height existing between defendant and the complainant’s original description of the rapist, the prosecutor elicited Officer Coughlan’s opinion that it is difficult to determine the height of a person who is sitting or lying in a car. The trial court erred in overruling defendant’s objection to this opinion evidence (see generally, Richardson, Evidence § 361 [Prince 10th ed]). However, the admission of this commonsense opinion was not sufficiently grave to warrant a reversal, especially in view of the officer’s admission that the complainant had never told him that it was hard for her to estimate the height of her assailants. It was also error to have admitted, over defendant’s objections, his former counsel’s opinion that the composition of the lineup was fair. However, we conclude that this error also does not warrant reversal. A photograph of the lineup was admitted into evidence so that the jury could form its own opinion. Furthermore, defendant’s contention with respect to the suggestiveness of the lineup did not pertain to the physical characteristics of the men composing said lineup.
Defendant’s objection to the receipt of testimony during the prosecutor’s redirect examination of Detective Gustine that the slides in the Miraquic computer were of people who have been arrested is without merit. To demonstrate that the complainant’s in-court identification of defendant was not trustworthy, defense counsel attempted to prove that the complainant had not made a positive identification from either the photographic array or the Miraquic computer and that she had merely retained in her memory at the time of the lineup identification the image of defendant’s photograph rather than that of the actual rapist. Consequently, on cross-examination of Detective Gus-tine, defense counsel submitted into evidence the photographic array and elicited how the Miraquic computer operates, including the information that the slides are of people who have been arrested. Having opened the door, the redirect testimony of Detective Gustine, which in substance repeated the information first elicited by defendant on cross-examination, is not error and, if error, nonprejudicial in the context of this trial (see, People v Brown,
Defendant’s contentions with respect to the propriety of the prosecutor’s summation have not been preserved for appellate review as a matter of law (see, CPL 470.05 [2]). In any event, we
