OPINION OF THE COURT
In lаte 2002, defendant Phillip Riback, a pediatric neurologist, was charged with criminal conduct involving sexual contact with 14 young male patients whom he treated between 1997 and 2002. There was extensive media coverage of defendant’s arrest and the charges he faced. At a lengthy trial in June 2004, the prosecution presented testimony from the 14 boys and their parents; the two police investigators who interviewed these children; a medical conduct investigator for the New York State Department of Health; a pediatric neurologist; and Dr. Richard Hamill, a psychologist who oversees one of the State’s largеst sex offender treatment programs. The defense called personnel from defendant’s medical practice—the administrator, nursing supervisor, medical secretary, and defendant’s secretary; and the parents of four other boys whom defendant had treated. Defendant did not testify. The defense theory, pursued through cross-examination of the People’s witnesses and in defendant’s direct case, was that any unusual behavior that defendant displayed toward his patients was designed to create rapport and put them at ease; and that the most damning accusations made against him were the distorted or mistaken product of suggestive and coercive questioning by parents and police.
The jury convicted defendant of 12 felonies and 16 misdemeanors, and County Court imposed a determinate sentence of 48 years of imprisonment and five years of postrelease supervision. Defendant then moved pursuant to Criminal Procedure Law § 440.10 to vacate the judgment of conviction and sentence based upon evidence turned up during discovery in follow-on civil litigation and his posttrial diagnosis with Asperger’s syndrome. County Court issued an order denying the motion, and the Appellate Division granted defendant permission to aрpeal the order, which was consolidated with his direct appeal. The Appellate Division subsequently affirmed both the judgment and the order, with one Justice dissenting as to the judgment (
We may resolve “any question of law involving alleged error ... in the criminal court proceedings . . .
regardless
of whеther such question was raised . . . upon the appeal to the intermediate appellate court” (CPL 470.35 [1] [emphasis added];
see People v Colon,
Here, defense counsel did not object when the prosecutor askеd Dr. Hamill to define the term “ephebophilia.” As a result, defendant’s argument to us—that the trial judge erred when he allowed this testimony because it was not helpful to the jury and was potentially very prejudicial—is not preserved for our review. Defendant did, however, preserve this argument with respect to Dr. Hamill’s testimony on the meaning of “sexual fetish” and “pedophilia.” This is apparent from the judge’s on-the-record exрlanation—after untranscribed conferences with the attorneys to hash out the scope of Dr. Hamill’s testimony—of why he decided to allow the People to “inquire into the area of sexual fetish,” which was followed by a discussion regarding the permissible extent of Dr. Hamill’s testimony about “pedophilia.” Defense counsel objected after the explanation, and again after the discussion. Although these objections were general in nature, the judge’s rulings only make sense as a response to arguments that Dr. Hamill’s testimony about “sexual fetish” and “pedophilia” would not be helpful to the jury and was potentially very prejudicial.
As to the merits, we conclude that the trial judge did not err when he allowed Dr. Hamill to explain what the term “sexual fetish” means and to give some examples, none of which described any specific bеhavior that defendant was alleged to have exhibited. This testimony, which County Court took obvious care to circumscribe, was beyond the ken of the average
The prosecutor told the jurors that they “heard the definition of a pedophile, didn’t you? Did you hear the definition of a pedophile from Dr. Richard Hamill? [Defendant] can’t stop.” A little later he again linked defendant and the word “pedophile,” reminding the jurors that they “heard the definition of pedophile. He’s having sex with bоys in his office. He’s not concentrating on medicine. He’s not concentrating on medical questions. He’s concerned with gratifying his own sexual desire.”
Over objection and for a limited purpose, the trial judge аllowed one of the police investigators to tell the jury that she interviewed 49 boys whom defendant had treated. In summation, the prosecutor parlayed this information into the following:
“[prosecutor]: [The рolice investigator] told you that 49 interviews had taken place, and she said some of the—they’re only charges because she talked to the parents, and the parents didn’t want to put their children through this. Yоu got 15 sets of parents out here right now who are probably thinking the same thing after they heard what’s going on this week.”
“[defense counsel]: Objection, Your Honor.
“the court: Sustained, stricken. Disregard that, ladies and gentlemen.
“[prosecutor]: Do you blame those parents?
“[defense counsel]: Objection, objection.
“[prosecutor]: Who doesn’t want [not] tо put their children through this?
“[defense counsel]: Objection, objection.
“the court: Sustained, sustained. Move on.”
This passage suggested to the jurors that defendant had sexually abused dozens of victims, and that these crimes had not been charged only because many parents were understandably unwilling to subjеct their children to the rigors of a trial. No evidence supported this suggestion, which was irrelevant to the charges against defendant even if true.
Further, one of the 14 boys recalled nothing except that dеfendant tickled him during examinations that took place roughly three years before the trial. When offered a copy of his grand jury testimony, this witness said the minutes would not refresh his recollection; that he couldn’t “rеally remember anything about” any of his visits to defendant’s office; and that “[i]t’s just foggy.” Although the charges related to this boy were subsequently dismissed, the prosecutor placed an incriminating gloss on his appearance on the witness stand:
“I picked up a copy of [the boy’s] Grand Jury testimony, which says what he told the police happened to him with [defendant], and I said, I’ll give you a copy of this piece of paper with the words on it from the Grand Jury; will that help you remember what’s going on[?] [The boy] says, no. [The boy] didn’t want to remember, doesn’t want to remember. He wants it to go away . . .
“Does that give you an idea of how difficult it is to walk into a сourtroom when you’re fourteen or twelve or ten, place your hand on the Bible ... in front of fifteen strangers, and talk about what happened to you at the hands of that man? That is a little hint about what it’s like.”
Thus, the prosecutor invited the jury to conclude that the boy’s grand jury testimony recounted sexual abuse and that his lapse of memory showed how hard it was for children to acknowledge or disclose what defendant hаd done to them.
The prosecutor also advised the jury that the case was not “complex” even though there were “a lot of kids” because
“[a]ll you have to do is believe one kid. You believe one child, and it’s over, because this huge grand conspiracy . . . , it’s a house of cards . . .
“If you believe one child, you can believe all.”
These comments potentially diverted the jurors from their obligation to consider defendant’s guilt or innocence as to еach
As the dissenting Justice in the Appellate Division put it, these numerous “summation misstatements of fact and law . . . when combined with thе opinion by the prosecutor that defendant’s acts were those of a pedophile . . . rose to such a level that defendant was deprived of the fair trial to which he was entitled”
(People v Riback,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Chief Judge Lippman and Judges Ciparick, Graffeo, Smith, Pigott and Jones concur.
Order reversed, etc.
