Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Lament, J.), rendered October 1, 1999 in Albany County, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of assault in the second degree.
Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted as charged of assault in the second degree for his actions in the City of Albany shortly after midnight on February 3, 1999 in repeatedly beating Allinden Dickson with a metal pipe and wooden crutch (see Penal Law § 120.05 [2] [intentionally causing physical injury by means of a dangerous instrument]). Dickson testified that while babysitting the child of a friend, April Griffin, in
Upon his conviction, defendant was sentenced as a persistent violent felony offender to the minimum indeterminate sentence of 12 years to life imprisonment. Defendant appeals raising several issues, none of which supports disturbing the judgment of conviction.
Initially, while defendant had a statutory right to be present during side bar questioning of prospective jurors on matters of bias or prejudice (see CPL 260.20; People v Vargas,
Next, Supreme Court properly declined defendant’s request to charge assault in the third degree (see Penal Law
Defendant also contends that Griffin’s testimony elicited on direct examination — that after she left her child with Dickson on the evening in question, she went around the corner to get drugs with defendant — required Supreme Court to issue a prompt curative instruction and to strike this testimony or grant his motion for a mistrial. Defense counsel did not request a prompt curative instruction, and we perceive no improvidence in the court’s denial of defendant’s motion to strike and for a mistrial, finding Griffin’s isolated, albeit unnecessary, remark that defendant accompanied her to buy drugs did not deprive defendant of a fair trial (see CPL 280.10 [1]; Burton v State of New York,
Although defendant did not preserve many of his claims regarding the propriety of certain aspects of the prosecutor’s summation, we have reviewed the prosecutor’s summation as a whole and Supreme Court’s several curative instructions and conclude that while the prosecutor improperly attempted to appeal to the jurors’ prejudices and emotions and to personalize the case, the remarks were not so prejudicial as to deprive defendant of a fair trial (see People v Wright,
Addressing defendant’s claims directed at his sentencing as
Cardona, P.J., Peters, Carpinello and Rose, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
