People v. Calderon

66 A.D.2d 314, 884 N.Y.S.2d 29

This text of 66 A.D.2d 314 (People v. Calderon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State 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. Calderon, 66 A.D.2d 314, 884 N.Y.S.2d 29 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Acosta, J.

The issue in this case is whether defendant’s counsel was ineffective as a result of his failure to request that the court charge the jury on criminally negligent homicide as a lesser included offense of manslaughter in the second degree, the offense of which he was convicted. We find that the record before us is insufficient to deem trial counsel ineffective.

Background

Defendant was indicted for the crimes of murder in the second degree (two counts), manslaughter in the first degree and endangering the welfare of a child, for causing four-year-old Quachaun B.’s death on January 30, 2006. Quachaun lived with his 26-year-old mother, Aleshia Smith, defendant, who was his mother’s 18-year-old boyfriend, and his four sisters, ages 12, 11, 6 and 1.

Quachaun’s 11-year-old sister Nyeshia testified that on January 27, 2006, as Quachaun climbed on furniture in the bedroom, he fell and landed on his back and a television fell on him. Defendant, who was babysitting, began pushing on the child’s chest and blowing air through his mouth. When Quachaun woke up, defendant placed him on a bunk bed, sat down behind him and wrapped both hands around the child’s neck. He then started banging both sides of the child’s head against the wall. Quachaun started to cry and then stopped moving. When Smith came home, Nyeshia told her what happened, but Smith did not take Quachaun to the hospital.

The following day, Quachaun vomited in the family car on the way to an outing. Although Nyeshia pleaded with her mother to [316]*316take him to the hospital, Smith left him with a babysitter while the rest of the family continued on their outing. Defendant was away that day but returned that evening and repeatedly struck Quachaun with his hands and a plastic bat. That evening, Nyeshia saw long black and blue lines on Quachaun’s body. He had stopped talking and was moaning repeatedly.

Quachaun’s condition worsened the following day, but Smith went to a party in the evening and left the children with defendant. Once again, according to Nyeshia, defendant beat Quachaun with his hands and a bat and banged Quachaun’s head against the wall because Quachaun did not eat his food.

Later that night, Nyeshia saw defendant “holding [Quachaun’s] waist and . . . throwing him up and catching him.” She testified that defendant was trying to revive him but Quachaun did not respond. Defendant then began hitting Quachaun in the back with the plastic bat until Nyeshia carried the child to bed.

At 2:35 a.m. on January 30, Smith called 911 and reported that a television had fallen on her son. Defendant took the phone and said that it looked like the child was not breathing and that he was dead. Defendant also told the operator that a television had fallen on the child, but that the child “came out of it ok,” that he was sleeping very well, was calm, but that “today” he was lying in bed and that defendant was checking on him all the time because he “looks a little beaten up.” Defendant added that the child had had a seizure that day and that he had bitten his tongue, twisted his hands and feet and stopped breathing.

A paramedic who responded to the apartment testified that defendant told him in broken English that Quachaun was playing with the other children so he went out for a while and returned to find Quachaun unconscious. When the paramedic asked if Quachaun had been ill, defendant told him that a television had fallen on Quachaun the day before, but that he had taken him to the hospital and that the hospital had released him. Defendant, however, told the EMS supervisor that Quachaun seemed fine after the television accident so he was not taken to the hospital.

On January 31, defendant gave several statements at the precinct. First, he stated that a television set had fallen on Quachaun that Saturday (January 28), but since he looked fine afterwards, he was not taken to the hospital. Four hours later, when Quachaun broke defendant’s stereo defendant struck him [317]*317four times with a belt and seven times with his hand. On Sunday (the 29th), defendant noticed that Quachaun was “drooling a lot” during his bath. After the bath, Quachaun “hit himself in the back of the head” so defendant told Smith to call for an ambulance. Defendant added that he took medication for epilepsy, which made him “aggressive,” and that he had a bad temper.

Defendant also made a videotaped statement with the aid of a Spanish interpreter, where he repeated much of what he had stated earlier, and elaborated on what happened when Quachaun allegedly broke his stereo. After he hit Quachaun four times on the leg with a belt, Quachaun “talk[ed] bad” to him, which caused defendant to go “blind” and to strike “seven blows like crazy” with his open hand. Defendant maintained that he then put Quachaun on a bed and noticed small bruises on Quachaun’s cheek and excrement with blood on the bed, which caused defendant to “get scared.”

The medical examiner testified that Quachaun had extensive blunt force trauma on his scalp, his face and at least 50 more bruises on the rest of his body. There was massive bleeding around the brain and abdominal cavity, and his liver and pancreas had been completely torn apart. He “died from multiple blunt impacts to his trunk and head with lacerations ... of the pancreas and the liver and subdural hemorrhage.” She stated that the large bruises on the child’s face were consistent with a person standing behind the child and grabbing him by the face, wrapping fingers around each cheek and applying force, and that the injuries to his scalp and subdural bleeding were consistent with the child’s head being slammed against a wall. She also testified that the wounds indicated that they had been delivered at different times, over a period of days, shortly before his death.

Defendant testified that he had moved into Smith’s apartment on December 25, 2005, and that she regularly hit her children with a belt and her hands.1 He maintained that she became angry with him when he tried to intervene.

On Friday, January 27, 2006, at approximately 7:00 p.m., he heard Smith arguing with Quachaun and saw her hit him with a belt. He then went to a bar, and when he returned to the apartment, Smith told him that a television had fallen on [318]*318Quachaun. He asked Smith to take the child to the hospital, but she refused, saying the child was fine.

At about noon the following day, he saw Smith hitting Quachaun with her hands. He threatened to end his relationship with Smith and left the apartment. When he returned at 9:00 p.m., he saw that Quachaun was lethargic and noncommunicative, with no appetite. Since he was not the child’s father, defendant did not believe he could take him to the hospital, and Smith would not let him call 911.

Although Quachaun was not moving on Sunday morning, at 9:00 p.m. he told defendant that he wanted pizza and candy. As defendant was about to leave the apartment, he heard Smith arguing with Quachaun and again saw her hit him. Defendant asked her to stop, then grabbed his coat and left the apartment. When he returned at 1:00 a.m., he thought that Quachaun was having an epileptic seizure so he told Smith to call an ambulance.

Defendant maintained that he never struck Quachaun and that Nyeshia’s testimony was not true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A.D.2d 314, 884 N.Y.S.2d 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-calderon-nyappdiv-2009.