The defendant, a New York City policeman, has been convicted of five counts of perjury and, by a divided court, the convictions have been affirmed (38 A D 2d 522). The main question on this appeal is whether testimony, otherwise inadmissible, was properly received when offered by the People solely for the purpose of supplying allegеdly necessary background material to make the proof of the crimes charged intelligible to the jury.
The defendant was charged with having lied before a Grand Jury which was invеstigating police corruption in the Seventh Division. The charges stemmed from his denial of having gone to the home of Juan and Dolores Carreras to collect prоtection money for the Carreras’ policy business, and from his further denial that on another occasion he, together with three other officers, met with Carreras and two others for the purpose of discussing the method by which Carreras would be allowed to continue his policy business. During his opening the prosecutor, over objection, tоld the jury that he would “ paint a picture ” for them depicting “ (t)he corruption of almost an entire unit of police officers ’ ’ among whom was the defendant who ‘ ‘ used his power * * * to line his own pockets with money.”
Called by the prosecution, Inspector Sachson testified that as a result of information furnished by Patrolman Serpico, an investigation was launched which included corrupt activities of at least five other patrolmen. Then Serpico, who had been assigned duties with some of these men, testified at great length how the police contaсted a number of gamblers, set the prices for protection and made collections for permitting these operations to continue. While Serpico’s testimоny, consisting of some 76 pages of the record on direct, embroiled the defendant and other officers in corruption involving a number of other cases or instances, based, not on an account of corruption in
The Trial Judge permitted the reception of all this testimony on the theory that it served as the background of the extorsive scheme which allegedly functioned under the protection of the defendant and others in the Sеventh Division.
We are in accord with the doctrine that, in cases of this nature, in order to make the subject matter of a defendant’s perjury intelligible to the jury, some general background evidence of the nature and structure of the scheme is permissible (People v. Doody,
Despite our agreement with the principle that some background testimony is permissible in cases of this nature, we emphasize thаt, as in People v. Gleason (
Inspector Sachson’s general review of events leading to the N Grand Jury investigation might be within tolerable limits, but Serpico’s extensivе accounts of transaction after transaction, none of which had any relevancy to the perjury charges, was more than just cumulative. It added facts involving the dеfendant and others in a web of activity which could only be considered by the jury reprehensible, resulting in the perjury testimony becoming only background for the evidence of рolice corruption in the Seventh Division. Surely, the jury did not require a recital of such a prologue to understand fully what had taken place in the defendant’s encounters with Carreras and others. Seldom, in the face of such a panoply, can a court state with any conviction that evidence heard by a jury is not prejudicial to a defendant. In such cases we must attempt to strike a neat balance between possible prejudice to the defendant, and the indispensability of the challenged evidence to the People’s case; and it goes without saying that any substantial doubt on this scóre should weight the scales in favor of the defendant. We are convinced that the reasonable balance between the claimed importance of this background evidence and its potential for prejudicing the defendant’s cаse, was destroyed by the employment of it in an excessive amount, and the conviction should be reversed.
It is argued that the jury could not have been misled since, on each occasion that objection was made to receipt of the “ background ” evidence, the jury was instructed that it was introduced not for its truth and was not binding on the defеndant. That these instructions (required on so many occasions) were precise and impeccable, does not cure the error in permitting
Nor is a contrary result dictated by People v. Doody (
In view of our determination we find it unnecessary to pass upon defendant’s other contentions.
Chief Judge Fuld and Judges Burice, Breitel, Jasen, Jones and Wachtler concur.
Order reversed, etc.
