People v. Addison

51 Misc. 3d 498, 24 N.Y.S.3d 879
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 Misc. 3d 498 (People v. Addison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Addison, 51 Misc. 3d 498, 24 N.Y.S.3d 879 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jeanette Rodriguez-Morick, J.

By decision and order, dated September 2, 2015, this court denied as untimely the People’s motion for an order authorizing the taking of a saliva sample from defendant Muhammad Addison. The People now move to reargue.1

In their original moving papers, the People argued that they were entitled to such an order under CPL 240.40 based on the material and relevant evidence that a subsequent DNA comparison would yield. Though defendant opposed the motion based on untimeliness under CPL 240.90 (1), the People never acknowledged the motion’s late filing nor proffered good cause for the delay, as required by CPL 240.90 (1).

On reargument, the People make the following assertions: (1) this court erroneously held that the People’s motion implicates defendant’s constitutional rights; (2) even assuming the People were obligated to demonstrate good cause, the material and relevant evidence yielded by a DNA comparison should have warranted a finding that CPL 240.90 (l)’s good-cause requirement was satisfied and the delay therefore should have been excused; (3) defendant failed to demonstrate that he was prejudiced by the delay or that the delay was a result of prosecutorial bad faith; and (4) the length of delay between defendant’s arraignment and the People’s motion to compel a saliva sample—here, 340 days—was de minimis, and, accordingly, the court should have ignored the lapse (People’s reargument motion at 5).

Compelling Defendant to Submit to the Taking of a Buccal Swab Implicates Defendant’s Constitutional Rights under the Fourth Amendment

The People argue that because a saliva sample is evidence that is non-testimonial in nature, no constitutional rights are implicated by the instant motion—and as such, any delays in [500]*500seeking orders compelling defendants to submit to buccal swabbing are merely technical (People’s reargument motion at 5). They rely on a line of appellate court cases in which untimely CPL 240.40 motions have been held harmless.

The People properly characterize saliva samples as non-testimonial evidence. Indeed, not only saliva samples but handwriting and voice exemplars, and hair and blood samples have all been held to be non-testimonial in nature and their compelled production not in violation of the Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory self-incrimination (see e.g. People v Lewis, 44 AD3d 422, 423 [1st Dept 2007] [affirming a conviction where trial court compelled defendant to produce handwriting exemplars despite an untimely motion by the People to compel the same under CPL 240.40 and implicitly holding no constitutional violation]; People v Finkle, 192 AD2d 783, 788 [3d Dept 1993] [“Because a writing exemplar is not testimonial evidence, no constitutional rights were implicated in this case”]; People v Smith, 86 AD2d 251, 252 [3d Dept 1982] [noting that it is a “well-established principle that a person’s voice, in contrast to the content of what is said, is merely an identifying physical characteristic, similar to one’s physical appearance, handwriting, fingerprints, or sample of one’s blood or hair, and that compelling a criminal defendant to speak solely for the purpose of physical identification of his voice . . . does not violate the privilege against self-incrimination”]).

But the People’s ostensible rebuttal of the Fifth Amendment analysis—an argument advanced neither by defendant nor relied on by the court—is an attack on a straw man. This is so because the relevant constitutional analysis is provided by the framework found not in the Fifth but in the Fourth Amendment (People v Hall, 10 NY3d 303, 307 [2008] [recognizing a post-Schmerber v California (384 US 757 [1966]) “judicial consensus . . . that visual body inspections are constitutionally distinct from searches that require the police to intrude beyond the surface of a person’s body and that the two types of searches are therefore subject to different legal standards”]; Schmerber, 384 US at 767 [noting that, “if compulsory administration of a blood test does not implicate the Fifth Amendment, it plainly involves the broadly conceived reach of a search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment”]; United States v Dionisio, 410 US 1, 14 [1973] [“The required disclosure of a person’s voice is thus immeasurably further removed from [501]*501the Fourth Amendment protection than was the intrusion into the body effected by the blood extraction in Schmerber” (emphasis added)]; Smith, 86 AD2d at 253 [“Dionisio establishes that seizure of a voice exemplar does not involve the severe, though brief, intrusion upon cherished personal security, or any intrusion into the body, and, therefore, like the seizure of fingerprints or handwriting, does not itself impinge upon any interest protected by the Fourth Amendment” (emphasis added and internal quotation marks omitted)]; Matter of Abe A., 56 NY2d 288, 295, 297 [1982] [applying a “Fourth Amendment inquiry . . . focusing on the bodily intrusion itself”]).

While a buccal swab is unquestionably a safe procedure,2 it nevertheless constitutes an intrusion into the body and is therefore subject to Fourth Amendment protections (see id.; see also Schmerber; Dionisio; Abe A.). The lapse here then presents no mere technicality.

The Materiality of the Evidence Yielded by Granting the People’s Motion to Compel Does Not Serve to Excuse the Motion’s Late Filing

According to the People, given the obvious relevance, materiality, and incontrovertible nature of the evidence yielded by a DNA comparison, i.e., “scientific evidence bearing upon either the guilt, non-guilt, or the innocence of a criminal defendant” (People’s reargument motion at 4), no time constraints should be strictly enforced and good cause should be deemed satisfied where motions compelling the procurement of DNA evidence are concerned.

[502]*502But such a reading ignores the plain language of CPL 240.90,3 which provides that “[a] motion by a prosecutor for discovery shall be made within forty-five days after arraignment” (CPL 240.90 [1] [emphasis added]). In the law, words should be read to say what they mean.4 “It is an axiom of statutory construction that the legislative intent is to be ascertained from the language used, and that where the words of a statute are clear and unambiguous, they should be literally construed” (People v Munoz, 207 AD2d 418, 419 [2d Dept 1994], lv denied 84 NY2d 938 [1994]; People v Golo, 26 NY3d 358, 361 [2015] [“As the clearest indicator of legislative intent is the statutory text, the starting point in any case of interpretation must always be the language itself, giving effect to the plain meaning thereof”]). Here, the plain and ordinary language of the statute compels the conclusion that the prosecutor is required to make all discovery motions within 45 days of defendant’s arraignment (see id.; see also McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 76 [“Where words of a statute are free from ambiguity and express plainly, clearly and distinctly the legislative intent, resort may not be had to other means of interpretation”]).

Nevertheless, the People insist on an interpretation that renders meaningless statutory time limits for a whole subset of discovery motions and urges this court to ignore the first clause of CPL 240.90 (1) based on precedent.

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Related

People v. Jones
55 Misc. 3d 743 (New York Supreme Court, 2017)
People v. Sanon
53 Misc. 3d 1008 (New York Supreme Court, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Misc. 3d 498, 24 N.Y.S.3d 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-addison-nysupct-2016.