People v. Altamirano (Mauricio)

CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedMay 11, 2018
Docket2018 NYSlipOp 28150
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Altamirano (Mauricio) (People v. Altamirano (Mauricio)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of 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. Altamirano (Mauricio), (N.Y. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion



The People of the State of New York, Respondent,

against

Mauricio Altamirano, Appellant.


Appellate Advocates (Erin Tomlinson of counsel), for appellant. Kings County District Attorney (Leonard Joblove, Jodi L. Mandel and Joyce Adolfsen of counsel), for respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Criminal Court of the City of New York, Kings County (Desmond A. Green, J.), rendered November 19, 2013. The judgment convicted defendant, upon a jury verdict, of criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree.

ORDERED that the judgment of conviction is affirmed.

Defendant was charged with attempted tampering with physical evidence (Penal Law §§ 110.00, 215.40) and criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree (Penal Law § 265.01 [1]). After a jury trial, defendant was convicted only of the latter charge.

At the trial, a New York City police officer testified that, at approximately 3:45 a.m. on October 1, 2011, he had received a radio call of an assault in progress with a weapon. Two men, one of whom was otherwise known as "Columbia," were arrested. After investigating, the officer learned that one of the people who had been arrested owned a firearm. At approximately 10:00 p.m. on October 4, 2011, the officer and a sergeant went to a hotel and met with defendant, who was employed at the hotel. The officer spoke to defendant primarily in Spanish. The officer asked defendant whether he was aware of a firearm, and defendant replied that he was. The officer and the sergeant drove to defendant's apartment. Defendant told the officer that a gun was inside a garbage can. The officer observed a blanket in the garbage can. The police removed the blanket, observed the firearm, and arrested defendant. After being given his Miranda rights in Spanish, defendant told the officer that he was holding the firearm "for an individual known as Columbia," who "had come and retrieved the firearm" from his home. Columbia "[l]eft with it or came back and put it away at least one or two times." Defendant "was also aware that Columbia had been involved in an incident that had occurred either one or two nights prior that involved the police."

Defendant's written statement, taken at about 1:10 a.m. on October 5, 2011, which defendant signed, was admitted into evidence without objection. The statement read as follows:

"I, Mauricio Altamirano, did [a] favor for Columbia. I did the favor for Columbia and he [*2]told me to save him or safeguard him a bag or case or suitcase. I was outside, I told him go and put [it] in and three weeks [passed] by and then he came back. And he told me that he would come back to pick it up. . . . And he never . . . he did not come. And after that since I already knew it . . . was a gun, I told him to take it and he wrapped it in a blanket [and] placed it inside of a bag but he took it out and said it would be best if he returned and he did not come back. I found out that it was a gun and I told him to take it out of my house. I do not know him or do not know his name because I was friends of some acquaintances. And, that is how it happened. He took it and wrapped it in the blanket that was in my room and put it in a bag and put . . . it in the garbage can or bucket."

After the close of all the evidence, defendant requested that the court charge the jury on the defense of temporary and innocent possession of a weapon. Counsel argued that there was strong evidence that defendant had been unaware that a third party, Columbia, had secreted the gun in a bag which he had asked defendant to store in his home. Counsel also argued that the court should permit the jury to consider defendant's opportunity, if any, to turn the weapon over to the police, and whether and how defendant had disposed of the weapon. Counsel asserted that, at the first opportunity, defendant had turned over the weapon to the police.

The court commented that, "[i]n other words your position is [that defendant] could have kept the gun in his bedroom for the rest of his life without doing something." Counsel disagreed, stating that it was an issue of fact based on the totality of the circumstances. Counsel subsequently argued that defendant "didn't know that it was a gun. It came into his [possession] in his apartment without his knowledge or consent." When defendant learned it was a gun, he made reasonable attempts to dispose of it. It was an issue of fact for the jury, and the People had the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had knowingly possessed a weapon and that such possession was not innocent. There was "uncontradicted evidence" that if defendant "did come into possession at all . . . when he was contacted by the police he turned over the weapon immediately."

The prosecutor argued, among other things, that there was no testimony that "defendant did not know it was a gun," as defendant had acknowledged that he had known that it was a gun, and that defendant had "only cooperated because he knew that he was caught." The court declined to provide the jury with a charge on the defense of temporary and innocent possession.

Following summations, without first informing defense counsel, the court reversed itself and provided the jury with an instruction on the defense of temporary and innocent possession of a weapon. Counsel requested that the court permit him to reopen his summation to "reargue to the jury" in light of the court providing the temporary and innocent possession charge. The court denied the request.

The only issue raised on appeal is whether the Criminal Court erred in sua sponte providing the jury with a temporary and innocent possession charge without permitting defense counsel to reopen his summation. Defendant contends that he was denied the right to an effective summation. The People respond that reversal is not required, as defendant was not entitled to a temporary and innocent possession charge in light of the facts of this case.

In our view, the court erred in providing the jury with a charge on the defense of temporary and innocent possession of a weapon without first informing counsel and without [*3]permitting defendant's counsel to reopen his summation. A court commits error which is prejudicial to a defendant if it reverses "its stance after assuring defendant that it would [not] charge as he requested and after defendant had premised his summation on that theory" (People v Greene, 75 NY2d 875, 877 [1990]; see People v Crumpler, 242 AD2d 956, 958 [1997] [where a defendant's counsel delivers a summation "in reliance upon the assurance of the court" that it would not provide the jury with a specific charge, and the court, after summations, reverses itself and provides the jury with the charge, reversal is required]). By the court doing so, it deprived defendant of the right to an effective summation (see People v Etienne, 220 AD2d 446, 447 [1995]; People v Layer, 199 AD2d 564, 565-566 [1993]; People v Brown, 121 AD2d 326, 328 [1986] [the court charged petit larceny as a lesser included offense after summations without informing counsel]).

However, we find that reversal of the judgment of conviction is not required here, as defendant was not entitled to a charge on the defense of temporary and innocent possession of a weapon based on the facts of the case, even viewed in the light most favorable to defendant. Defendant received an item apparently wrapped in a blanket from a man whose nickname was Columbia, and held it for several weeks. The blanket was placed in a garbage can inside defendant's one-room apartment.

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People v. Altamirano (Mauricio), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-altamirano-mauricio-nyappterm-2018.