People v. Disdier

2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedOctober 21, 2024
DocketInd. No. 76289-23
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U) (People v. Disdier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Disdier, 2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

People v Disdier (2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U)) [*1]
People v Disdier
2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U)
Decided on October 21, 2024
Supreme Court, Kings County
Perlmutter, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on October 21, 2024
Supreme Court, Kings County


The People of the State of New York

against

Michael Disdier, Defendant.




Ind. No. 76289-23

People: Kings County District Attorney's Office by ADA Jennifer Da Rin

Defendant: Brooklyn Defender Services by Paul Giovanniello
Adam D. Perlmutter, J.

Michael Disdier stands charged with Attempted Assault in the First Degree [P.L. § 110/120.10(1)], inter alia. The Court conducted pretrial hearings on July 24 and August 20, 2024, pursuant to Dunaway v. New York, 441 U.S. 200 (1979), People v. Huntley, 62 NY2d 134 (1984), and People v. Rodriguez, 79 NY2d 445 (1992). For the reasons stated below, the pretrial motions pursuant to Dunaway and Huntley are denied. The People have failed to demonstrate sufficient familiarity between the parties pursuant to Rodriguez. A Wade hearing is ordered prior to trial.

Findings of Fact


The People called two witnesses: Detective Kaitlyn Walsh-Guzman and Detective Frank Ingenito, and the Court credits their testimony in their entirety.

1) Testimony of Detective Kaitlyn Walsh-Guzman

Det. Walsh-Guzman testified that she has been employed by the New York City Police Department ("NYPD") for a total of thirteen years, spending the last seven years assigned to the 75th Precinct Detective Squad investigating incoming complaints. On April 13, 2023, Det. Walsh-Guzman was assigned to investigate a shooting that occurred at 686 Vermont Avenue, located in Kings County, that very same day. The detective testified that she reported to Brookdale Hospital, where she spoke with an eyewitness of the shooting named Nicole Robinson. Ms. Robinson informed Det. Walsh-Guzman that the shooting occurred as the result of a road rage incident and that the victim was her boyfriend, Louis Linder. Ms. Robinson provided a description of the purported shooter: male, in his sixties, with a salt-and-pepper beard. Additionally, Ms. Robinson informed Det. Walsh-Guzman that she recognized the shooter "from the area" and that he was "her friend Kim's aunt's boyfriend." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 10:8-9. She stated that she had seen this individual "over ten times" throughout the course of her lifetime and "always remembered him being at parties and in the neighborhood." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 10:21-11:4. Ms. Robinson also provided Det. Walsh-Guzman with an address of the individual at 570 Stanley Avenue.

Det. Walsh-Guzman also spoke with Louis Linder while at Brookdale Hospital. Mr. Linder also informed the detective that he sustained a graze wound from a shot to the chest by a male, [*2]around his own age, and with a salt-and-pepper colored beard. Mr. Linder did not recognize the man who shot him. He did, however, identify the shooter's vehicle as a gray Cadillac.

After speaking with Mr. Linder and Ms. Robinson, Det. Walsh-Guzman visited the location of the incident at 440 New Lots Avenue, where she obtained video surveillance depicting Mr. Linder exit his vehicle, approach the driver of a gray Cadillac, and the glass of the Cadillac shatter. Det. Walsh-Guzman also obtained other surveillance video from immediately before and after the incident. These items corroborated Mr. Linder and Ms. Robinson's account of the shooting occurring as the result of a road rage incident.

On April 13, 2023, Ms. Robinson texted a photograph of Michael Disdier to Det. Walsh-Guzman and identified him as the shooter. Ms. Robinson had obtained the photograph from her friend Kim's Facebook account. A screenshot of this text exchange was admitted into evidence as People's Exhibit 1. Det. Walsh-Guzman then asked Ms. Robinson to come to the 75th Precinct to conduct an identification procedure using a photograph of Mr. Disdier on file with the NYPD. Upon reviewing the photograph at the precinct later that day, Ms. Robinson said that the individual depicted in the photograph was "Mike," also known to her as "Kim's uncle." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 18:13. The NYPD photograph used as confirmatory identification of Mr. Disdier was admitted into evidence as People's Exhibit 2.

After Ms. Robinson positively identified Mr. Disdier at the 75th Precinct, Det. Walsh-Guzman searched Mr. Disdier's name through NYPD records. Upon doing so, the detective learned that Mr. Disdier had a gray Cadillac was registered to him. She then issued a probable cause ICARD for his arrest and conveyed this information to Det. Ingenito of the 75th Precinct Warrant Squad in order to apprehend Mr. Disdier.

Det. Ingenito arrested Mr. Disdier on April 18, 2023 and transported him to the 75th Precinct. Det. Walsh-Guzman processed the arrest. She and her partner Det. Columbini began to interview Mr. Disdier approximately 3:30 PM. Mr. Disdier was provided water and cigarettes prior to the interview, and Det. Walsh-Guzman stated that she advised him of his Miranda rights by "read[ing] each part of the Miranda warnings to him" and that "he agreed to each part of them." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 24:2-5. Det. Walsh-Guzman also testified that Mr. Disdier indicated to her that he understood the warnings about his rights and that he agreed to speak with her without any promises or threats made. In the course of the videotaped interview, which was admitted as People's Exhibit 3, Mr. Disdier informed the detectives that there was a road rage incident and that the other individual—presumed to be Mr. Linder—exited his vehicle and began to approach Mr. Disdier's car. Mr. Disdier informed the detectives that he feared for his life and that he thought Mr. Linder had been carrying a knife or an ice pick. Then, Mr. Disdier informed the detectives that he couldn't remember anything after that point, but that if a gun had been used, it was now "in the waters of Canarsie." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 25:16. Finally, Det. Walsh-Guzman identified Mr. Disdier in the courtroom.

On cross-examination, Det. Walsh-Guzman stated that she had never met Mr. Disdier prior to the interview at the 75th Precinct on April 18, 2023. She also stated that she didn't know from personal observation who had driven Mr. Disdier to the Precinct upon his arrest or whether anything, such as threats or promises, had been conveyed to Mr. Disdier in the course of his transportation. Det. Walsh-Guzman also stated during cross-examination that she and Mr. Disdier had a brief exchange in the holding cells, whereupon she "introduced [her]self as his arresting officer, that we were going to go upstairs and have a conversation if he wanted to. And [she] asked if he knew why he was here, and he said in regards to, he thinks, a road rage incident." See Tr. July 24, 2024 at 33:9-[*3]15. Det. Walsh-Guzman was also cross-examined about the manner in which she conveyed the Miranda warnings to Mr. Disdier, stating in sum and substance: "I have to read you your Miranda rights, it's like the movies." See Tr.

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Related

People v. Disdier
2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U) (New York Supreme Court, Kings County, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 51439(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-disdier-nysupctkings-2024.