Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Broome County (Mathews, J.), rendered December 6, 1991, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crimes of attempted assault in the second degree and assault in the third degree.
As the result of a domestic dispute during which defendant’s wife was beaten and stabbed, defendant was charged with attempted assault in the first degree and assault in the second degree. Following a hearing, defendant’s motion to suppress an inculpatory statement that he had given was denied and the matter proceeded to trial. At the close of the proof, the second count of the indictment, charging defendant with assault in the second degree, was reduced to assault in the third degree. The jury returned a verdict convicting defendant of this offense and of attempted assault in the second degree, which was charged as a lesser included offense of attempted assault in the first degree. Sentenced as a second felony offender, defendant was ordered incarcerated for 2 to 4 years for attempted assault in the second degree, and received an unconditional discharge on the assault in the third degree conviction. Defendant appeals.
Relying on People v Campbell (
Defendant also urges that because the police were aware that he was represented by counsel on several unrelated charges, and nonetheless continued to question him without counsel present, the statement that he gave in response to this interrogation should have been suppressed. As this issue was not raised at the suppression hearing, it has been waived by defendant (see, People v Harrell,
The record leaves no doubt that defendant’s inculpatory statement was sufficiently corroborated to sustain the verdict; the testimony of Gregory Coole, in whose apartment the attack occurred, coupled with that of the treating physician, amply establishes all that was necessary, proof that a crime was indeed committed (see, People v Daniels,
Nor does County Court’s failure to conduct a Sandoval hearing mandate a reversal here. It is defendant who has the
Raised in defendant’s supplemental pro se brief is a contention that County Court’s treatment of this case contravened the required procedures for family offenses (see, Family Ct Act § 812; CPL 530.11) and, therefore, that County Court was without jurisdiction to hear it. Although defendant contends that the complainant was not provided with sufficient information to make an informed choice of forum as required by statute (see, CPL 530.11 [2]), this is not a jurisdictional defect mandating reversal of defendant’s conviction (see, People v Mack,
Defendant’s other contentions have been considered and found to be without merit, unpreserved or, as with the sentence imposed — he is a second felony offender — matters in which County Court did not injudiciously exercise its discretion. With regard to defendant’s argument, raised in a supplemental memorandum of law, that the holding in People v Antommarchi (
Weiss, P. J., Mikoll, Crew III and Casey, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
