39 A.D.2d 590 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1972
Appeal hy defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered May 5, 1969, convicting him of possession of a dangerous weapon as a felony, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. The appeal brings up for review an order of the same court entered August 14, 1968 which denied defendant’s motion to suppress evidence after a hearing. Judgment and order reversed, on the law and the facts and in the interests of justice, and new suppression hearing and new trial ordered. In this case the testimony of police officer Di Gennaro given on the suppression hearing and that given by him on the trial are in such basic and flagrant contradiction that in the interests of justice the order denying defendant’s motion to suppress must be reversed and a new hearing held. As a consequence there also must be a new trial. Only a few examples will suffice: (1) At the hearing the officer testified that immediately upon obtaining entrance to the apartment he “ heard * * * [his] partner say they are all under arrest.” At the trial, and apparently having been “ wised up ” that having seen no crime being committed the arrest was improper and anything found upon a subsequent search would be subject to suppression, he conveniently suffered a lapse of memory and was unable to recall any such statement, contending that no arrest was in fact made until after he had seen the exposed gun. (2) At the hearing he testified that the gun was not exposed hut was “ under his [defendant’s] shirt in his pants” and that “it was covered” and “inside a shirt”. At the trial he answered in the affirmative to questions whether he could observe the gun “by looking at him,” and whether defendant “had it in his belt * * * with the handle above the belt.” We do not deem it necessary, in the present posture of this record, to deal with the questionable right of the police to enter the premises in the manner and for the purposes that they allege they did, for we connot sanction a judgment of conviction based upon such palpably inherently inconsistent and contradictory testimony (cf. People v. Berrios, 28 N Y 2d 361, 369). We note, however, that the charge of criminal trespass by the occupants—the alleged basis for the police entering the apartment — was not made until about a month after the arrest and that it was dismissed. Shapiro, Gulotta and Brennan, J J., concur; Munder, Acting P. J., dissents and votes to affirm the judgment, with the following memorandum, in which Latham, J., concurs: Patrolman Di Gennaro and his partner went to the premises in question in response to a call by the landlord. The landlord told the officers that apartment No. 6 was occupied by several people who had no right to be there. They went up to the -apartment with