People v. Daniels

88 A.D.2d 392, 453 N.Y.S.2d 699, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17087
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedAugust 16, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 88 A.D.2d 392 (People v. Daniels) 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. Daniels, 88 A.D.2d 392, 453 N.Y.S.2d 699, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17087 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

O’Connor, J.

Maurice Simms, 10 years old, had just finished his lunch, his mother had left the room to go visiting and he was all alone in their fifth floor apartment watching television. He heard a scream and, as he looked out the living room window onto the third floor roof of the adjacent building, some 50 to 100 feet away, he saw a man wearing blue Lee pants and a plaid shirt, dragging a little baby across the roof. As he watched, they disappeared for a few minutes behind an incinerator but soon reappeared and as he looked on the man pushed the now naked infant off the roof and then ran back into the building.

[393]*393Within five or six minutes, according to his testimony, Maurice saw Housing Authority Police Officers Mackey and Moss, whom he knew, arrive at the scene on the third floor roof and, at his call, they came over to the Simms’ apartment and questioned the boy. In substance Simms described the tragic events he had just witnessed and offered a description of the perpetrator that he repeated the following day to New York City Police Detective Reilly of the Queens Sex Crime Squad: male, black, medium Afro, black hair, medium skin tone, 5 foot 5 inches tall, wearing a blue striped shirt, dungarees and black sneakers, 24 years of age. That description would fit innumerable young black males, but is at substantial variance with the actual physical appearance of the defendant, who at the time, was 35 years old and who then wore a large “wild” Afro hair style “[l]ike sticking all up” in a very unruly and messy fashion.

In the days that followed, Maurice was interviewed at both the local police precinct where he viewed police photographs on a machine and at another location in the county. He did not, however, recant the description he had given, but instead said that he did not know the perpetrator’s name, and, in fact, told Detective Reilly twice that he had never seen the perpetrator before.

On September 27, seven days after the crime, young Simms was interviewed at his grandmother’s house in Far Rockaway. Present were Detectives Miele and Reilly of the New York City Police, and Detective Washington of the Housing Authority Police. There, for the first time and in response to a suggestive question posed by Miele, “Was it Charles?”, Simms answered in the affirmative and said he knew Charles’ last name — Daniels. The arrest, indictment, trial and conviction of defendant followed.

Maurice Simms, the People’s sole identifying witness, for the previous three years a student assigned to a class for emotionally handicapped children, lived with his mother in a housing authority project in Queens County.

Charles Daniels, defendant, resided in an apartment in the same building and on the same floor across the hall from young Simms. The two had been casual neighbors for [394]*394about three years and young Simms was “fully familiar” with and saw Daniels “every day”. Daniels never in any manner threatened Simms nor did he ever strike him or hit him.

Upon the trial young Simms testified that at first he gave the police what he called a “phony description” of the perpetrator because he was scared that he too might be thrown off the roof. He further testified that at the time he accused defendant of the crime, he, Simms, was at his grandmother’s house and “I wasn’t really that much scared and I didn’t want it to happen to no one else.” There was no doubt in his mind at trial that the defendant was the man who threw the baby off the roof and the boy was the only incriminating witness presented by the prosecution.

Charles Daniels, 35 years of age, took the stand in his own defense and testified that he was gainfully employed; that he had never been arrested for or convicted of a crime; and that he was single and lived with his mother in the same building and on the same floor as young Maurice Simms, whom he had casually known since the boy moved into the building some three years before the trial.

The defendant denied categorically and unequivocally that he assaulted any child at the time and place charged or at any other time. His testimony traced, in some detail, his activities shortly before and at and about the time on September 20, 1978 when he allegedly committed the crimes charged against him. In substance, he stated that the day in question was a Wednesday, his day off from work. On that morning he returned home from a neighborhood laundromat between 11:45 and 12:00 o’clock noon. He talked to his mother, who was preparing their lunch, and about 12:30 p.m. he took his radio and went outside where he sat on a bench directly in front of his apartment building. In response to his mother’s call about 12:35 he went back upstairs, took 10 to 12 or 15 minutes to eat a sandwich, again took his radio and went directly downstairs to resume his position on the bench.

It was defendant’s testimony that when he first arrived at the bench before lunch he noticed that a Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Butler were seated there. After a while one Bennie [395]*395Hill “came out and sat beside me.” He testified that after lunch he rejoined Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Butler at the bench and that they were joined in turn by one Wilbert Diselle.

Defendant’s witnesses corroborated his chronology.

Mrs. Frances Daniels, defendant’s mother, testified that at about 12:25 to 12:30 she saw her son sitting on a bench in front of the apartment house with Bennie Hill. From the window she beckoned to him to come in for lunch. She said that she had not asked witnesses to testify for her son but that, as a matter of fact, “[pjeople told me that they were on the bench with him.”

Bennie Hill, a salesman and formerly a clinical laboratory technologist with no criminal convictions, said that at about 12:15 p.m. he looked out his window from his first floor apartment in the same building and saw defendant sitting on the bench with his large radio. Hill got dressed and joined defendant at about 12:20 or 12:30 p.m. He testified that people were “coming and going”, but he specifically said that defendant, Gladys Butler and Sadie Jones were sitting there. He said that he and defendant sat on the bench until the police arrived at 1:30 or 2:00 p.m. He recalled the date — September 20, 1978 — because “the area [was] flooded with police and detectives”. After defendant was arrested, he, Hill, went to Mrs. Daniels and volunteered to testify.

Wilbert Diselle testified that he had never been convicted of a crime. He said that he saw defendant, Bennie Hill, Mrs. Butler and Mrs. Jones sitting on the bench in front of the building at 1:00 p.m., at which time he joined them. About 10 minutes later, according to his testimony, “the police cars [came] swarming around.” It was Diselle’s testimony that he and defendant remained on the bench discussing baseball and a recent prize fight from 1:00 p.m. until about 2:45 p.m. and that the women were seated at the other end of the bench. The ladies carried on their own conversation. Diselle said that he and defendant lived in the same building but were not really more than acquaintances in that they had never visited each other or gone out together. He said that shortly after defendant’s arrest he, Diselle, went to defendant’s mother and volunteered to testify in his behalf.

[396]*396Gladys Butler (not related to Carolyn Butler, the victim’s mother), who had no prior arrests, likewise corroborated the presence of defendant, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.D.2d 392, 453 N.Y.S.2d 699, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-daniels-nyappdiv-1982.