People v. A.P.
This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25280 (People v. A.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
People v A.P. (2025 NY Slip Op 25280) [*1]
| People v A.P. |
| 2025 NY Slip Op 25280 |
| Decided on December 23, 2025 |
| Supreme Court, Bronx County |
| Bowen, 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 December 23, 2025
The People of the State of New York
against A.P., Defendant. |
Ind. No. 000316-18
Mary McGarvey-DePuy, Assistant District Attorney, Bronx County, for the People
Paris DeYoung, The Legal Aid Society, for Defendant E. Deronn Bowen, J.
Summary
The defense application for vacatur of the judgment of conviction and resentencing consideration under the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act is DENIED.On the evening of December 9, 2017, 61-year-old Calixto Palacio López (decedent) was fatally stabbed inside of his Bronx County home. Subsequent investigation led the police to Shamika Mosley, the codefendant and mother of defendant, A.P. The codefendant gave a statement that her then-14-year-old son "stabbed someone up." NYPD homicide detectives interviewed defendant on February 2, 2018. In a recorded statement, defendant admitted that he and his codefendant mother went to the decedent's apartment that evening with the intent to rob him. According to defendant, after the codefendant knocked on the apartment door and the decedent opened it, defendant forced his way into the apartment. The decedent began to scream, and the codefendant told defendant to "shut him up." In compliance with his mother's command, defendant stabbed the decedent three or four times in the lower body with a knife that he had brought with him. The codefendant also stabbed the decedent another three or four times in the chest area using a knife that she retrieved from the decedent's kitchen. Defendant and his mother then left the apartment. Defendant returned alone the next day to retrieve both knives, wrap them [*2]in black plastic bags and bury them in a park.
On February 4, 2020, defendant was convicted, upon a guilty plea, of manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law § 125.20 [1]). On March 4, 2020, pursuant to the plea agreement and the juvenile offender sentencing statute, a negotiated sentence of 3⅓-to-10 years' incarceration was imposed (Denis Boyle, J.) (see Penal Law §§ 10.00 [18] [2]; 70.05).
II. The 440.20 Motion
By motion dated June 26, 2025, made pursuant to CPL 440.20, defendant protests that at the time of sentencing he was not considered for alternative sentencing under the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act (DVSJA) (see Penal Law § 60.12). Defendant notes correctly that, had he been found to qualify for DVSJA alternative sentencing, he "could be sentenced to (1) a determinate sentence between 1 and 5 years' imprisonment followed by 2 ½ to 5 years' post-release supervision, (2) an alternative definite sentence of up to 1 year, or (3) a probationary term of 3, 4, or 5 years" (see Penal Law §§ 60.12 [2] [a]; 65.00 [3] [a] [i]; 70.45 [2] [f]). Defendant complains, first, that the DVSJA is age discriminatory against juvenile offenders, like himself, because, by its express terms, access to the alternative sentencing scheme is limited to defendants who would otherwise be sentenced under select adult felony sentencing statutes (see Penal Law §§ 60.12 [1]; 70.00, 70.02, 70.06, 70.71 [2], [3]). This, defendant asserts, is a state equal protection violation (see NY Const, art I, § 6).
Alternatively, defendant argues that legislative history reveals the Legislature's intent that DVSJA alternative sentencing be available to qualifying juveniles despite express statutory language that commands otherwise. Defendant contends that, in enacting the DVSJA, the Legislature recognized that
"New York State has a responsibility to preserve the human right to live free from violence and provide support for domestic violence survivors, a responsibility that does not end when a survivor becomes involved in the criminal justice system because of the abuse . . . he suffers. In seeking to protect this right and remedy New York's long-held and unjust practice of imposing long and unfair prison sentences on survivors of domestic violence whose crimes are linked to their histories of abuse, the Legislature passed the DVSJA, a groundbreaking statute that empowers judges to consider those histories in fashioning appropriate sentences" (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
Defendant submits that the express statutory limitation of DVSJA alternative sentencing to adult defendants was an unintended "drafting oversight."
"As the result of a drafting oversight, the DVSJA excludes juvenile offenders, sentenced pursuant to P.L. § 70.05, from seeking sentencing relief under P.L. § 60.12. Because this exclusion was both unintentional and runs afoul of the Legislature's stated aims in passing the statute, and because [defendant] was otherwise plainly eligible for DVSJA consideration, the statute violates [defendant's] equal protection rights under both the United States and New York State Constitutions."
The People oppose the 440.20 motion in responsive papers dated October 6, 2025.
III. Analysis
"At any time after the entry of a judgment, the court in which the judgment was entered may, upon motion of the defendant, set aside the sentence upon the ground that it was [*3]unauthorized, illegally imposed or otherwise invalid as a matter of law" (CPL 440.20 [1]). Consequently, "by its plain language, CPL [ ] 440.20 is a statute that only involves the legality of a sentence at the time it was pronounced" (People v White, 69 Misc 3d 425, 434 [Sup Ct, NY County 2020]; see People v Catalonotte, 72 NY2d 641, 645 [1988] ["the validity of the conviction shall be determined as of the time it was entered"]; People v Shilman, 85 Misc 3d 408, 410 [Sup Ct, Bronx County 2024] ["CPL 440.20 is a vehicle post-conviction to set aside a sentence. This provision does not provide a basis to vacate a conviction, reduce a plea, and order a new sentence"]). CPL 440.20 is not a catch-all mechanism for constitutional collateral challenges to sentencing statutes. Nor may CPL 440.20 be used to move for a more lenient sentence based upon later policy, legal or other changes, e.g., if, as defendant claims here, "the statute employs a suspect classification under the newly-amended New York State Constitution" (see People v Smith, 28 NY3d 191, 203 [2016] ["a conviction or sentence does not become unconstitutional merely because the law has changed subsequent to the defendant's direct appeal of that conviction"] [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Defendant, rightly does not contest that, as he was 14 years of age at the time of the criminal act, the juvenile offender sentencing statute was the legislatively designed and designated framework for determining his sentence upon conviction. Defendant also rightly does not claim that the sentence handed down was outside of the permissible bounds of that statutory framework. In other words, defendant concedes that it is not the case here that his "sentence . . . was unauthorized, illegally imposed or otherwise invalid as a matter of law" (CPL 440.20 [1]).
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