OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant is charged with the assault of his girlfriend on a Park Slope street late in the evening of August 2, 2000. At trial, he has presented a statement by the complaining witness asserting her physician-patient privilege, thereby seeking to
The physician-patient privilege was unknown at common law and is not recognized in federal criminal proceedings. In New York, it is codified in CPLR 4504 and prevents a treating physician from disclosing medical information “[ujnless the patient waives the privilege” (CPLR 4504 [a]), and extends to medical records (Williams v Roosevelt Hosp.,
In this case, there is no doubt that the information of the victim’s injuries was obtained as a result of the doctor-patient relationship and was necessary for treatment. In addition, although a defendant may not invoke the privilege on behalf of the patient on the ground that the privilege is to protect the patient and not shield the criminal (Matter of Grand Jury Proceedings [Doe],
This being the case, the court must determine whether the victim/patient had an expectation that her medical condition and treatment be kept confidential and further, whether she has otherwise waived the privilege.
In both respects the court finds that the assertion of the privilege cannot stand. Factually, at least two bystanders witnessed the attack and observed the physical condition of the victim. She was taken by ambulance to the emergency room at Maimonides Medical Center and was observed by and spoke to the police about the assault and her physical complaints. After her release from the hospital she spoke to more than one assistant district attorney about the beating, her condition that night, the treatment she received, the continuity of pain and her present complaints. On August 16, 2000, she testified before a grand jury in detail about her injuries, medication, treatment and then current physical condition.
In other words, she freely spoke of her medical condition in connection with a criminal investigation conducted by the
Viewed in this light, the court finds that the victim did not have an expectation of confidentiality respecting her medical records from Maimonides or her conversations with her physician (Desai v Blue Shield of Northeastern N.Y.,
“once a patient puts the information into the hands of a third party who is completely unconnected to his or her treatment and who is not subject to any privilege, it can no longer be considered a confidence and the privilege must be deemed to have been waived as to that information.” (Citations omitted.)
