Hon. William G. Connelie Superintendent State Police
This response is in answer to the two questions you pose in your letter dated May 7, 1979. In your first question you ask whether a District Attorney may delegate his duty to conduct all prosecutions for petty offenses cognizable by the local courts of his county to the police officer who was either the arresting officer or the complainant upon the accusatory instrument.
Section
Section 10 of the Penal Law defines an "offense" as conduct punishable by imprisonment or by a fine as provided by any State law, any local law, or any order or regulation of any governmental instrumentality authorized by law to adopt such a regulation.
The court of Appeals in People v Van Sickle,
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The delegation to a police officer of authority to prosecute does not in and of itself confer the power to consent or withhold consent to a plea to a petty offense other than that charged in the accusatory instrument. His powers are limited to those specifically delegated to him by the District Attorney. The power to prosecute does not imply the power to consent to the acceptance of a reduced plea. The question was considered in Matter of Blumberg v Lennon,
"[T]he statutory requirement of consent by the People to the acceptance of a reduced plea can hardly be obtained by estoppel against the District Attorney on the basis of his alleged negligence or indifference. Even an express consent by the District Attorney to the acceptance of such a reduced plea in one case (and there is no assertion that the District Attorney has ever so consented in a case of this sort) would be no indication of his consent to accept such a plea in another case. * * * In the absence of express consent by the District Attorney to the acceptance of a reduced plea in a specific case, the court is without jurisdiction to accept such a plea."
This does not mean, however, that the District Attorney when informed of all of the facts cannot delegate to the prosecuting police officer the ministerial duty of consenting to a reduced plea in a particular case.
