People v. Ali A.

2025 NY Slip Op 25237
CourtThe Criminal Court of the City of New York, New York
DecidedOctober 29, 2025
DocketDocket No. CR-018210-25NY
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25237 (People v. Ali A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Criminal Court of the City of New York, New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Ali A., 2025 NY Slip Op 25237 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

People v Ali A. (2025 NY Slip Op 25237) [*1]

People v Ali A.
2025 NY Slip Op 25237
Decided on October 29, 2025
Criminal Court Of The City Of New York, New York County
Morales, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on October 29, 2025
Criminal Court of the City of New York, New York County


The People of the State of New York,

against

Ali A., Defendant.




Docket No. CR-018210-25NY

The defendant was represented by The Legal Aid Society, Kenneth Ives, Esq.; for the People, Lucy Shephard, Assistant District Attorney.
Valentina M. Morales, J.

Ali A., hereinafter "defendant," is charged by complaint with one count of Identity Theft in the Third Degree (Penal Law § 190.78 [1]), a class A misdemeanor.[FN1] Defendant appeared before this court, in the alternative to incarceration misdemeanor (ATI-M) part, on September 29, 2025, and again on October 6, 2025. On both occasions, the court informed the People that it would not accept a plea on an accusatory instrument wherein the identity of the aggrieved party is secret and known only to the prosecution. Taking the position that they never need to name the aggrieved party in a misdemeanor complaint, unless by their own grace, the People have refused to provide the identity of the complainant to the defense and to the court — even under protective seal as repeatedly offered here. On October 6, 2025, this court ruled from the bench that the instant complaint is jurisdictionally defective and therefore fails to confer upon the court the requisite power to take a plea. For clarity and a full record, it now memorializes its ruling and reasoning.

Of note, the People indicated on the record their intention to reinstate the felony charges and seek an indictment from the grand jury. This court has cautioned the People — and now does so again — that insofar as the identity of the aggrieved party is clearly subject to CPL 245 disclosure, any such attempt is tantamount to the illegal practice of conditioning a plea on the waiver of discovery (CPL 245.75).

Discussion

The People argue that they need not name the aggrieved party because they can proceed [*2]on a complaint when a defendant waives prosecution by information. However, this argument fails to consider the concerns of this court. The People cite People v Black, 270 AD2d 563 (3d Dept 2000), as authority for their position, despite the fact that Black differs from the instant case in two crucial ways: 1) in Black the challenged felony complaint was "followed and superseded by a valid Grand Jury indictment on which defendant was prosecuted and to which he pleaded guilty" (id. at 564), and 2) in Black there is no indication whatsoever that the identity of the complainant was deliberately and repeatedly withheld by the People. The Black court holds that a felony complaint can contain hearsay where it is later superseded by indictment, and this court does not disagree.[FN2]

Nor is this court persuaded that the People's other cited authority, People v Willis, 44 NY3d 14 (2025), supports their position. Willis, bearing no factual resemblance to the instant case, reiterates the well-settled principle that a facially sufficient misdemeanor complaint "need only set forth facts that establish reasonable cause to believe that the defendant committed the charged offense" (44 NY3d at 22, quoting People v Dumay, 23 NY3d 518, 522 [2014]). Notably, the Willis court also reiterated the equally well-settled principle that misdemeanor complaints must provide "notice sufficient to prepare a defense and [be] adequately detailed to prevent a defendant from being tried twice for the same offense" (44 NY3d at 21, quoting People v Konieczny, 2 NY3d 569, 575 [2004]). Those two criteria are missing from the instant complaint.

It cannot be said here, as it was in Willis, that the defendant "knew from the complaint[] what [he was] accused of doing and where, when, and how [he] allegedly did it." (44 NY3d at 21.) Absent a way to identify the target of the crime — even anonymously — there is no way the complaint can provide adequate notice or ensure against double jeopardy. In People v Dumas, 68 NY2d 729 (1986), for example, the otherwise insufficient misdemeanor complaint identified the undercover officer by a number specific only to that officer, ensuring that, at a later date, there would be no question as to the identity of that individual, and providing the court a mechanism to ensure that no defendant would be tried twice for the same offense. The need for specificity is particularly evident when the charge is identity theft, where it is practically axiomatic to say that the identity of the victim is an essential fact of the crime:

A person is guilty of identity theft in the third degree when such person knowingly and with intent to defraud assumes the identity of another person by presenting themself as that other person, or by acting as that other person or by using personal identifying information of that other person, and thereby: (1) obtains goods, money, property or services or uses credit in the name of such other person or causes financial loss to such person or to another person or persons[.]
(Penal Law § 190.78 [1], emphasis added.)

The defense has a right to this information, as does the court and the public. Open courtrooms and transparent prosecutions are hallmarks of a free society. Where true safety concerns are present — and on the People's instant record, they are not present here — mechanisms [*3]exist to protect sensitive information in a way that does not compromise the integrity of the courts. The prosecution here has declined this court's offer to name the aggrieved party under seal. Such refusal in fact undermines the People's alleged concerns for the complainant's safety; the individual allegedly harmed here would be afforded more robust privacy protection with court-ordered sealing than without.

Similarly without logic are the factual positions the People took at the October 6, 2025 appearance, first claiming that safety demanded secrecy ("[T]he nature of the crime weighs strongly against us revealing the name of our informant, as this is a crime of identity theft, and revealing the name of the informant subjects them to further potential harm. This informant's credit card and other personal identifying information was stolen, and used by the defendant in this case." [Tr at 3, lines 8-14]) — then claiming there was no secrecy ("Your Honor stated that the government is the only entity that knows the complainant, and that there's not been notice to the defendant of the complainant. This is a credit card theft case, the defendant knows the complainant's name." [Tr at 14, lines 9-13]). Such a position is not only logically inconsistent, it employs the constitutionally infirm "he knows what he did" method of double secret prosecution. The People are reminded that the sufficiency of the complaint is confined to its four corners, and that one function of a facially sufficient complaint is to show the court there is reasonable cause to proceed.

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Related

People v. Casey
740 N.E.2d 233 (New York Court of Appeals, 2000)
People v. Hansen
738 N.E.2d 773 (New York Court of Appeals, 2000)
People v. Konieczny
813 N.E.2d 626 (New York Court of Appeals, 2004)
People v. Kalin
906 N.E.2d 381 (New York Court of Appeals, 2009)
People v. Dreyden
931 N.E.2d 526 (New York Court of Appeals, 2010)
People v. Dumay
16 N.E.3d 1150 (New York Court of Appeals, 2014)
People v. Di Napoli
265 N.E.2d 449 (New York Court of Appeals, 1970)
People v. Dumas
497 N.E.2d 686 (New York Court of Appeals, 1986)
People v. Black
270 A.D.2d 563 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2000)
People v. Willis
44 N.Y.3d 14 (New York Court of Appeals, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 25237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ali-a-nycrimctnyc-2025.