People v. Brian M.

48 Misc. 3d 1075, 13 N.Y.S.3d 864
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 2015
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Misc. 3d 1075 (People v. Brian M.) 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. Brian M., 48 Misc. 3d 1075, 13 N.Y.S.3d 864 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

[1076]*1076OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas Farber, J.

Defendant Brian M. moves to dismiss the indictment against him in the interests of justice. The charges in this indictment stem from his conviction by plea of guilty for a drug sale that occurred two years ago, when he was 19 years old.

When he first came before me in May 2013, defendant was a confused young man with a drug addiction and serious mental health issues. Although he was working with the Andrew Glover Youth Program, his issues were so serious that even his lawyer and counselors at the Program told me that he might be better off with a “therapeutic remand.” By November 2013, his lawyer, his family and the Glover Program reported that he had deteriorated to the extent that they were worried that he was a danger to himself. At that time he was remanded for several weeks until Glover could find an inpatient program that could deal with his mental health and substance abuse issues.

Today, Mr. M. stands before me having completed the inpatient mental illness and controlled-substance abuse program and the Glover Program. He is enrolled in college. He is employed full time. He is drug free. He has a handle on his mental health issues. He has serious aspirations to complete college and go on to graduate education.

The People oppose the instant motion, asking that I sentence the defendant to the felony to which he pleaded, thus saddling him for the rest of his life with a felony conviction.

The motion is granted.

Background

On April 3, 2013, defendant was arrested for selling crack cocaine to an undercover police officer. At that time, his situation appeared bleak. Only 20 days earlier he had been sentenced on another indictment to a conditional discharge as a youthful offender for a similar charge. While that case was pending, defendant had been given several chances to complete various programs, one of which he was kicked out of for fighting. He had finally managed to fulfill his obligations with the help of the Andrew Glover Youth Program. As part of the [1077]*1077sentence, he was mandated to continue with the Glover Program.1

When the defendant first appeared before me, his lawyer2 and Angel Rodriguez, the Executive Director of the Glover Program, asked to approach the bench and told me, off the record, that they thought that defendant had a lot of promise, but that he seemed unable to make the types of decisions that had to be made to keep himself out of trouble. Although defendant had made bail, his lawyer and Mr. Rodriguez suggested to me that a “therapeutic remand” (a horrible phrase implying that a brief incarceration would be therapeutic) might be the only thing that would get defendant back on track. Since defendant had not violated the conditions of his release, I did not think it appropriate to remand him at that time. Instead, I tried to speak with him and convince him to cooperate with the Glover Program.

Defendant made some initial progress over the next few months. Mr. Rodriguez appeared with the defendant regularly in court and continued to express his belief in defendant’s potential, while at the same time expressing his concern that the defendant did not seem to have the discipline and maturity to deal with the various life and addiction issues he was facing.

Indeed, Mr. Rodriguez and defense counsel had a difficult, almost impossible, job. They had a client who had squandered his initial youthful offender adjudication and conditional discharge. Now he was indicted for a class B drug felony and had a good chance of going to state prison. They needed to convince the court and the District Attorney to give the defendant a second (or, depending on how you look at it, a third or fourth) chance. And they had to convince a client with a drug problem, mental health issues and (perhaps most importantly) a teenager’s brain riddled with immature concepts of what it meant to be a “man,”3 to undergo a complete life transformation.

[1078]*1078On November 22, 2013, the Glover Program told me that it was “nearly impossible” to work with defendant in his present condition. Defendant was supposed to obey a curfew at Glover, but he instead left a job at Subway and took a job that required him to be out until 3:30 a.m. Defendant was acting up in the Glover Program, cursing at the program managers and was given a summons for riding his bicycle on the sidewalk past his curfew. Defendant appeared to have serious mental health issues. Glover insisted that defendant sign a contract requiring him to abide by his curfew, be drug tested regularly, attend anger management classes, register for college and live at home without problems. In the interim they asked me to remand the defendant. I did.

I re-calendered the case for November 27, 2013, and released the defendant back to the Glover Program. He agreed to abide by the conditions in the “contract” with Glover.

Defendant’s mental health, however, deteriorated. The Program believed that he was using drugs, because he was refusing to be drug tested. He had stopped bathing. The Program thought he might be hallucinating; he had threatened suicide. Glover believed that he had become a danger to himself and others and needed immediate psychiatric help. The deterioration was obvious from defendant’s condition in court. He was staring at the defense table, almost shaking, refusing to engage. On December 17, 2013, I again remanded the defendant, this time for a psychiatric evaluation and for Glover to look for a residential program.

I adjourned the case from week to week, hoping that the Legal Aid Society’s social workers and the Glover Program could find an appropriate residential program; but finding a program for someone defendant’s age that would address all of defendant’s needs was more difficult than anticipated. On January 10, 2014, I was informed that the Promesa program (now Acacia) had a bed for the defendant. At this point the case was still an “open” case. The People requested that defendant plead guilty to the charge before I released him to the program. Defendant agreed to plead guilty.

[1079]*1079Defense counsel and Angel Rodriguez asked the People if they would agree to a “repleader” type of disposition.4 Mr. Rodriguez said, in substance,

“Frankly, I’m not sure he can do this. I’ve challenged him to do this, but I’m not sure he can. But if he can, Judge, let him have the incentive of not having a felony conviction on his record. A conviction for a kid from the projects, it’s a very serious issue for life. If we have an opportunity to make a young person from the projects law abiding, let’s give him a future and not saddle him with a felony conviction.”5

I encouraged the People to agree to this (as they have with other defendants), but the People adamantly refused.6 I told the People to keep an open mind and mentioned the possibility that I could consider a motion to dismiss in the interests of justice.

Defendant pleaded guilty to criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree. The only promise that I made was that if he completed the program, returned to court and stayed out of trouble with the law I would give him a non-jail sentence. He was released to the residential program.

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Related

People v. Rickert
446 N.E.2d 419 (New York Court of Appeals, 1983)
People v. Clayton
41 A.D.2d 204 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 3d 1075, 13 N.Y.S.3d 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brian-m-nysupct-2015.