Appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered October 28, 1966, convicting him of burglary in the third degree and petit larceny, on a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. The appeal has brought up for review an order of said court dated June 16, 1966, which denied defendant’s motion to suppress certain evidence. Action remitted to the Criminal Term for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith; аnd determination of appeal held in abeyance in the meantime. Defendant on February 11, 1966 was оbserved by a police officer to be in possession of a portable television set and а record player while standing at a street comer. He was asked by the officer for his identification and the source from which he had obtained the articles. He responded by saying that he had obtained them at a pawnshop; and he was unable to produce any identification. He was then taken by thе officer to a station house for further investigation; after more interrogation he and two poliсe officers went to the pawnshop, where it was ascertained that no record of any transaction involving the articles was in existence and that he was not known to the clerk. Upon return to the station house, defendant after further questioning admitted that he had removed the articles from an apаrtment. When the officers and defendant went to the apartment, it was found that the premises had been burglаrized; and defendant said that he had broken into the apartment by use of a screwdriver. Later, the occupant of the apartment identified the articles at the police station as her property. Defendant was tried on July 13, 1966, subsequent to the decision in Miranda v. Arizona (
