Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of St. Lawrence County (Nicandri, J.), rendered September 29, 1997, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crimes of sodomy in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree.
A jury convicted defendant of sodomy in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree for his inappropriate sexual contact with a six-year-old girl on two occasions. County Court imposed concurrent prison terms of 4½ to 9 years for the sodomy conviction and 1½ to 3 years for the sexual abuse conviction. Defendant appeals.
The record does not include any inadmissible hearsay. The victim’s father testified that he had a conversation with the victim which led him to call the police, but he did not specify the substance of that conversation. While the police officer disclosed the substance of his interview with the victim, that testimony was elicited by defense counsel in an apparent effort to raise inconsistencies between the victim’s interview statements and trial testimony. Defendant cannot now complain of testimony which he elicited.
Defendant received the effective assistance of counsel. His claim, based on counsel’s failure to object to hearsay testimony, is meritless, as there was no sustainable objection to be raised. Counsel’s alleged conflict of interest based on his former representation of a key prosecution witness is not properly before us, as it is based on evidence outside the record (see People v Hanna,
The victim’s unsworn testimony regarding the sexual abuse charge was sufficiently corroborated. A defendant cannot be convicted solely on the basis of unsworn testimony from a seven-year-old witness (see CPL 60.20 [2], [3]). The unsworn testimony may be sufficiently corroborated “by evidence tending to establish the crime and connecting defendant with its commission” (People v Groff,
The victim here testified to one incident when defendant touched her private parts, which she identified in court by pointing to her genital area, during a time that the family was watching a Yankees baseball game. She testified that her grandmother and aunt went to get drinks, her mother was taking a nap in an adjoining room, and her brother went to the bathroom, leaving her alone with defendant. Her mother testified that all of the individuals named by the victim were watching the baseball game that afternoon, and that beverages would be stored in a room on another level of the house. The grandmother testified that she did not remember leaving the victim alone with defendant, but she may have left to go to the bathroom, and the aunt was intermittently watching the game and cleaning another room in the house. This evidence established that defendant could have been alone with the victim at the time and place that the abuse was alleged to have taken place (see People v Zuke,
Defendant’s argument that the evidence on the sexual abuse charge was not legally sufficient must likewise fail. Contrary to defendant’s argument, the victim’s testimony regarding her age was corroborated; it was readily apparent from her appearance at trial that she was less than 11 years old (see CPLR 4516; CPL 60.10 [making civil evidence rules applicable to criminal matters]; People v Blodgett,
Regarding the charge of sodomy in the first degree, the victim testified about an incident when she was in the yard and defendant grabbed her, got on his knees, pulled her bathing suit aside and licked her private parts. No record evidence corroborates the victim’s unsworn testimony regarding this act of sodomy. Defendant’s statement admitted only one “mistake” with the victim, and cannot be interpreted to constitute corroboration of more than one incident (see People v Guerra,
Defendant’s remaining arguments have been reviewed and found to be without merit.
Mercure, J.P., Peters, Spain and Mugglin, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is modified, on the law, by reversing
