In re Becker

208 A.D. 224, 203 N.Y.S. 437, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5018

This text of 208 A.D. 224 (In re Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Becker, 208 A.D. 224, 203 N.Y.S. 437, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5018 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Clarke, P. J.:

The respondent was admitted to the bar at a term of the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, in July, 1902. The charge of unprofessional conduct contains two specifications which may be summarized as follows: First, that in 1921 respondent resumed the defense of one Joseph Sorro in a criminal proceeding under circumstances which had disqualified him from so appearing. Second, that on April 18, 1921, before the Honorable Charles C. Nott, Jr., in the Court of General Sessions, and while appearing for the said Joseph Sorro, the respondent made false statements to the court in regard to material matters then under consideration.

On November 24, 1914, Barnett Baff, a West Washington Market poultry man, was shot to death by two assassins. Indictments were found against Joseph Cohen, Abe Graff and others. The indicted persons were not brought to trial by the district attorney. On May 5, 1917, the Governor ordered the Attorney-General to act in place of the district attorney. On May 8, 1917, the respondent, then a Deputy Attorney-General, and Mr. James O’Malley, who was appointed a Special Deputy Attorney-General, were assigned to the charge of the prosecutions. In July, 1917, Joseph Cohen was convicted of the murder of said Baff. One Joseph Sorro was an important witness for the People on said trial. In January, 1919, Sorro made a statement to Assistant District Attorney Pécora to the effect that his testimony upon the Cohen trial was false, said recantation having been sworn to by him before Judge McIntyre of the Court of General Sessions. In February, 1919, Mr. O’Malley, at Baltimore, examined Sorro, and he substantially reiterated his recantation. On February 18, 1919, Sorro appeared before the respondent and withdrew the recantations theretofore made. John Doe proceedings were begun on March 3, 1919, before Judge McIntyre acting as a committing magistrate for the purpose inter alia of ascertaining the facts in regard to Sorro’s alleged perjury. On March 13, 1919, Sorro appeared at the chambers of Mr. Justice Tompkins, who had presided at the trial of Cohen, and was. told that the judge and the Attorney-General would protect him if he would tell the truth. On May 1, 1919, the respondent resigned as Deputy Attorney-General and resumed private practice. In November, 1919, Sorro was indicted for perjury, committed on the Cohen trial. Mr. John Santora was attorney for Sorro, and on April 3, 1920, the respondent was retained as [226]*226counsel for Sorro and appeared for Mm in proceedings in the Court of General Sessions. In January, 1921, an application for a new trial was made on behalf of Cohen, one of the principal grounds being the alleged perjury of Sorro. On February 1, 1921, the respondent was reappomted Deputy Attorney-General, and on the second he filed his oath of office, withdrew as counsel for Sorro, and undertook his assignment to represent the People on Cohen’s application for a new trial.

Now representing the State and assigned to the matters growing out of the Bail murder, the respondent, on February 8, 1921, sent a letter to the district attorney requesting the district attorney to turn over to’him certain papers, among others all the preliminary statements made to the district attorney by witnesses who were called before the grand jury in connection with the Baff murder, also statements of any other witnesses regarding Sorro’s acts taken at the time of the John Doe proceedings and the grand jury investigation, and the minutes of the grand jury relative to Música, Sorro and Deuel in particular, and to the Baff matters in general. The district attorney replied inclosing the statements of some seventeen witnesses and stating: “ Your letters also request copy of the Grand Jury minutes which led to the indictments of Deuel, Música and Sorro. Inasmuch as a motion was made on behalf of Deuel for an inspection of the Grand Jury minutes, wMch motion was denied, I question whether we have authority to divulge these minutes without an order of the Court. * * * As the indictments against Deuel, Música and Sorro are awaiting trial, and as many of the statements which are herewith presented to you relate to proofs wMch tMs office will rely upon in the prosecution of those indictments, I take the liberty of asMng you to mstruct those associated with you to treat those statements as confidential documents of yours and this office.”

To tMs the respondent answered: Your request that I instruct those associated with me to treat the statements listed in your letter as confidential documents of the Attorney General’s and District Attorney’s office has been and will be complied with.”

Pursuant to an order of the court entered on consent of the district attorney, the grand jury minutes in question were delivered to the respondent, as also a copy of the Sorro recantation made to the assistant district attorney.

On March 23, 1921, the justice before whom the motion for a new trial of Cohen was pending, announced that he would not decide it until after the trial of Sorro for perjury was had. On April 4, 1921, the respondent, to use his own words: “ then went back mto the Sorro case, so as to protect not only Sorro but also [227]*227the interests of the State in maintaining the conviction of Cohen which would be jeopardized if Sorro was convicted. That was the purpose of it. I went back into the case, reassumed charge of it, as a sort of semi-official matter.”

On April 6 or 8, 1921, the respondent on behalf of Sorro caused a motion to be made for a special panel of jurors. He was not in court at the time. The assistant district attorney stated to the court his objection to the appearance of respondent in the Sorro case because of his previous activities as a Deputy Attorney-General in the matter of the Cohen motion. The hearing on the motion was adjourned to April eighteenth before Judge Nott. The assistant district attorney having again stated his reasons for objecting to the respondent’s appearance on behalf of Sorro, the respondent said: “It is true that I obtained from the District Attorney’s office the statements and the Grand Jury minutes; but it is also a fact that there was not one statement turned over to me which embodied anything whatever in relation to the Sorro case with the exception of Sorro’s recantation statement which had already been offered in evidence on the John Doe proceeding and had become public property.”

It is conceded that the above statement of the respondent was untrue, and that at that time the respondent was acting as Special Deputy Attorney-General.

The matter was immediately brought to the attention of the grievance committee of the Bar Association by the district attorney. After the hearing before the grievance committee and on May 3, 1921, the respondent withdrew from the Sorro case.

The respondent urges that he earnestly and honestly believed, and still believes, that Cohen was properly convicted of the murder of Baff, and believed that Sorro’s testimony upon that trial was true and his recantation, subsequently also recanted, was untrue, and that it was his duty, in order to prevent a miscarriage of justice in the Cohen case, and also in the Sorro case, to defend Sorro; that when on February 28, 1919, Mr. Justice Tompkins committed Sorro, at his own request, to the custody of an officer, he stated that it was the Attorney-General’s duty to protect Sorro. Mr.

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169 A.D. 622 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 A.D. 224, 203 N.Y.S. 437, 1924 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-becker-nyappdiv-1924.