Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Lament, J.), rendered November 2, 2001 in Albany County, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree.
A police informant agreed to make a supervised buy of crack cocaine from a dealer known to the informant only as Messiah. The suspected dealer was observed immediately before and after the sale by two Town of Colonie police investigators, Andrew Zostant and Alex Rinaldi, located some distance away. The investigators, who did not know the suspected dealer, followed his car and Zostant was able to observe him again from
Defendant argues that his conviction should be reversed because the People failed to serve notice as required by CPL 710.30 of the pretrial photo identification made by Zostant, and possibly by Rinaldi and the informant. Although persuaded that no CPL 710.30 notice was required as to Rinaldi and the informant because the record does not indicate that they made any identification of defendant by reference to his photograph before the trial (see People v Kitchings,
“There are actually two very different classes of identifications that have been labeled ‘merely confirmatory’: those made by an undercover officer in a buy-and-bust operation to confirm that the backup team apprehended the right suspect, and those by a citizen who knows the defendant” (People v Rodriguez,
We also find that Supreme Court made reasonable efforts to secure defendant’s attendance at trial, including postponing trial several times and issuing a warrant for his arrest. The trial in absentia proceeded only after it became apparent that “a further adjournment pending execution of the bench warrant would not likely result in locating [him] within a reasonable period of time” (People v Sumner,
Cardona, P.J., Mercure, Spain and Kane, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
