OPINION OF THE COURT
Fabian Ruiz was convicted after a jury trial of intentional murder, depraved indifference murder and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree; his сodefendant, Orlando Ortega, was convicted of manslaughter in the first degree,
On May 13, 1990, Fabian Ruiz, his brother Carlos Ruiz and Orlando Ortega approached their murder victim as he sat in the front seat of a parked car along with the driver and a back seat passengеr. According to certain testimony adduced at trial, Carlos Ruiz wanted to exact revenge against the victim for having fired a gun at him the night before. While Orlando Ortega, gun in hand, ordered the driver out of the car, the Ruiz brothers confronted the victim. When the victim refused to get out of the car, Carlos hit him in the face with a gun. Thereupon, both Fabian and Carlos Ruiz fired shots into the car striking the victim repeatedly. (The record discloses that the victim had been shot 13 times.) As the three defendants broke off the attack and rеturned to their vehicle, the victim crawled out of the driver’s side of the car and onto the driver who was lying in the street.
Thereafter, as the driver held the dying victim, Carlos Ruiz returned and shot the victim once more in the head at pointblank range. According to the testimony of the driver, the victim thereupon became very still and heavy in his arms. The driver thеn got back into his car and left the scene. As they were driving away, the driver and the passenger in the back seat heard more gunshots. Carlos Ruiz has yet to stand trial. He has, аpparently, eluded being arrested.
The defendants, citing People v Gallagher (
Thus, while the court in Gallagher (supra) stated that the defendant could not have had two conflicting states of mind (mens rea) when he shot the victim, the facts show herein that the defendants could have had a different state of mind when they first shot wildly into an occupied car; thereafter when Carlos Ruiz shot the victim in the head at close range in an execution-like manner; and lastly, as the victim lay helрlessly on the ground.
The case at bar also differs substantially from Robinson (supra). In Robinson, the victim did not die directly from the assault itself, but rather from hypothermia after being left bound in a snow-covered public park during the middle of winter. Arguably, if the victim wаs found in time, he could conceivably have been saved. In contrast, the victim herein died from the actual assaults themselves. The evidence permits a finding by the jury that еach assault, by itself, could have resulted in the victim’s death. Thus, in Robinson the jury found no intent on the defendant’s part to cause the victim’s death, while this jury was clearly able to find that defеndants, acting in concert, had intentionally murdered their victim when Carlos Ruiz shot the victim in the head.
Furthermore, it is suggested that Gallagher (supra) should not be read too broadly so as to mean that it is impossible to have both an intentional and a reckless mens rea concerning the same act. Indeed, the New York State Legislature, as well as several lower courts, have determined that it is possible to act both intentionally and recklessly at the same time as long as they concern different levels of culpability.
One of the new crimes created by the aforementioned legislative stаtutes is an additional section of manslaughter in the first degree set forth below:
"§ 125.20 Manslaughter in the First Degree * * *
"4. Being eighteen years old or more and with intent to cause physical injury to a person less than eleven years old, the defendant recklessly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of serious physical injury to such person and thereby causеs the death of such person.”
Readily, we see that there are statutory examples of both mental states combining to constitute a single crime.
Consequently, the rule set forth in Gallagher (supra) does not prеclude the existence of more than one state of mind concerning the same incident. A fact easily ascertainable by the fact finders in the instant case. Our сourts have long held that if conviction of one charge would not necessarily negate the defendant’s guilt on the other charge, then the charges would not be "inсonsistent charges”.
In People v Moloi (
We must likewise consider that where two or more persons act in concert, each may be criminally responsible for the acts of the other but only to the extent of their own mens rea. (Penal Law § 20.00; People v Hardy,
Active participation in the cоmmission of a crime may provide a reasonable basis from which it can be inferred that a defendant acted with the mental culpability for the crimes charged. (People v McClary,
Finally, neither defendant objected to the charge as it was given to the jury. Nor did the defendants object when the verdicts werе read by the jury so as to allow the jury to rectify any conflict. Clearly, neither defendant has preserved this issue for review. (People v Satloff,
Accordingly, both defendants’ motions are denied in their entirety and the court shall proceed with sentencing both defendants.
