Aрpeal from a judgment of the County Court of Albany County (Breslin, J.), rendered July 6, 2000, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of murder in the second degree.
On July 19, 1999, at approximately 5:30 p.m., paramеdics and the police responded to a 911 call that defendant’s three-month-old daughter was unconscious and her head was swollen. The infant was in respiratory distress and exhibited signs of head traumа. Defendant told the paramedics that the baby had fallen off a sofa. The child was immediately transported to a hospital where it was determined that she sustained multiple skull fractures and bleeding within the brain. Unfortunately, the child died the next day.
The record reveals that after defendant’s daughter was transported to the hospital, defendant remained behind and told City of Albany Police Officer Miсhael Romano that she was in a back bedroom of the apartment of her neighbor, David Dunham, while her infant daughter and two-year-old son were on a sofa in the living room. She indicated that she hеard thuds and came out to find her daughter unresponsive on the floor. Romano thereafter transported defendant to the hospital and, after arriving, defendant was questioned by Albany Police Detective Thomas Kubisch. Defendant essentially reiterated her version of the events about the baby falling off the sofa and also expressed concern that her two-year-old son may have been responsible for the infant’s injuries. After privately speaking with the physicians and ascertaining that the baby’s injuries could not have been inflicted by a two-year-old child, Kubisch obtained defendant’s сonsent to search her apartment and left the hospital. Defendant remained in the waiting room with her mother and son. Returning to the hospital at around
At the station, Kubisch and defendant spoke for about an hour resulting in defendant giving a written statement in which she again indicated that, after hеaring thuds from the living room, she went to investigate and found her daughter unconscious on the floor. Defendant then went home and at about 1:00 a.m. was roused by Kubisch. She again agreed to join him at the station fоr questioning. Apparently Dunham had also been questioned by police and Kubisch wanted to discuss with defendant certain inconsistencies in their statements. After defendant arrived, she was administered Miranda warnings and agreed to waive her rights. After over two hours of questioning, defendant gave another written statement between 3:35 a.m. and 4:50 a.m. In that second statement, defendant admitted, inter alia, that, between 10:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. оn July 19,1999, she was alone with her daughter when the child began to cry. Defendant stated that, out of frustration, she repeatedly banged her daughter’s head against the wall on two separate occasions for approximately one minute each time. Defendant also wrote a note apologizing to her daughter. Thereafter, the police took her home and told her she cоuld call the station for a ride to the hospital in the morning. Defendant contacted an attorney the next morning and was later arrested after the infant died.
Defendant was indicted on one count of murder in the second degree and one count of manslaughter in the first degree on July 27, 1999. Defendant moved, inter alia, to suppress her various statements to the police, which motion was denied after a suppression hearing. Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree under circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life (see, Penal Law § 125.25 [4]). Defendant was sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of 25 years to life.
Defendant primarily argues on this appeal that County Court erred in refusing to suppress the written and oral statements that she made to the police. The crux of defendant’s contention is that she was arrested without probable cause and, alternatively, that her statements were rendered involuntary by the “accusatorial, coercive and intimidating interrogation” that she was subjected to by Kubisch. Upon review of the record, we do not agree.
At the outset, we are unpersuaded by defendant’s chаracterization that the entirety of her interaction with the police following their response to the 911 call was a single protracted
Significantly, prior to the time of her second statement, defendant’s movеments were never impaired nor was she ever forced to accompany the police. Indeed, as confirmed by defendant’s own characterization of her encounters with Kubisch, the police never indicated suspicion regarding defendant until the time of her second statement. Moreover, during the questioning surrounding her second statement, defendant was properly administered Miranda warnings and stated that she understood them. Accordingly, County Court did not err in determining that defendant was not in custody prior to the taking of the second statement and all earlier oral and written statements were the product of appropriate investigative inquiries (see, People v Mayerhofer,
We are also unpersuaded that the second statement, as well as the handwritten apology note, were the product оf an “overwhelmingly coercive interrogation” by Kubisch that intimidated defendant to the point that her will was overborne and she confessed to a crime she did not commit. Notably, there is no indicatiоn that defendant was offered inducements which might cause her to falsely incriminate herself (see, People v Johnson,
Next, defendant argues that the People failed to adduce legаlly sufficient evidence to establish murder in the second degree. The appropriate standard for measuring the legal sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal matter is whether, .when viewed in а light most favorable to the People, the evidence supports a finding by a rational finder of fact that every element of the charged offense has been proven beyond a reаsonable doubt (see, People v Carroll, 95 NY2d 375). Here, given the admissibility of defendant’s statements to the police and the corroboration thereof by the medical and physical evidence at trial, we find that the evidenсe was legally sufficient to support the guilty verdict (see, CPL 60.50; People v Guillery,
Defendant next contends that she was improperly denied her request for disclosure of a letter that she wrote from jail to Dunham in July 1999 which was later used by the People during cross-examination of defendant. Assuming, arguendo, that this issue is preserved for appellate review, we conclude that defendant was not entitled to disclosure pursuant tо CPL 240.20.
Turning to defendant’s challenges to the imposed sentence, we find them to be unpersuasive. As defendant’s sentence was clearly within the guidelines available to County Court, defendant’s sentence is not cruel and unusual under the US or NY Constitutions (see, People v Gadsden,
All remaining arguments raised by dеfendant and not specifically addressed herein have been examined and found to be without merit.
Mercure, Crew III, Carpinello and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
CPL 240.20 (1) (a) requires the Pеople to disclose, upon defendant’s request, “[a]ny written * * * statement of the defendant * * * made, other than in the course of the criminal transaction, to a public servant engaged in law enforcement activity or to a person then acting under [the public servant’s] direction or in cooperation with [the public servant].”
