People v. Ferringer

120 A.D.2d 101, 507 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1986 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59220
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 10, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 120 A.D.2d 101 (People v. Ferringer) 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. Ferringer, 120 A.D.2d 101, 507 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1986 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59220 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Boomer, J.

In one indictment, defendant was accused of assaulting Judith Hoif at the Holiday Inn in Batavia, New York, and of murdering 17-year-old Christine Acquino minutes later, a short distance away. Upon appeal from his conviction of assault in the third degree and three counts of murder in the second degree, entered upon a jury verdict, defendant raises [103]*103three issues. His principal contention is that the court erred in denying his motion for a severance of the assault count from the murder counts. He also contends that his uncounseled confession to the murder should have been suppressed for two reasons: first, because his right to counsel indelibly attached when the police obtained a warrant to search for evidence concerning the murder; and second, because his right to counsel indelibly attached when he was arraigned on the assault charge, thus barring the police from questioning him, in the absence of counsel, about the murder.

The convictions should be affirmed. Neither the issuance of the search warrant nor defendant’s arraignment on the assault charge barred the police from questioning defendant about the death of Christine Acquino. And, because of the facts peculiar to the two crimes, it was proper to try the assault and murder counts together.

I

On Friday, September 21, 1984, at approximately 11:45 p.m., while Judith Hoff was in the ladies’ room at the Holiday Inn in Batavia, New York, a young man emerged from one of the stalls and, with closed fists, punched her repeatedly in the head and face. The first two blows knocked her down and the young man continued to strike her in the face as she was lying on the floor. She tried to fight back but every time she raised her head from the floor he struck her again. In order to save herself, she stopped screaming and pretended that she had passed out. Only then did her assailant stop hitting her and leave. She gave a detailed description of her assailant to a policeman who arrived a few minutes afterward. As the result of the savage beating, Judith received deep cuts over her eyebrows, lips and forehead, and her face was severely bruised and swollen.

At trial, defendant admitted that he entered the ladies’ room and punched Miss Hoff in the face. He said that he panicked when she started screaming and he struck her "maybe five, six times”, and that he continued to strike her until she stopped resisting. He struck her, he said, because a severe beating about the eyes would make it difficult for her to identify him. He continued to strike her to stop her from screaming because it made his head throb. He fled because he was afraid that many people would arrive in response to her screams.

[104]*104The description Miss Hoff gave of her assailant was broadcast over the police radio. Police Officer Zola heard the broadcast and at 12:27 a.m. he saw defendant, who matched the description, riding a bicycle two blocks from the Holiday Inn. The officer took defendant to the police station where defendant, after being given his Miranda warnings, admitted assaulting Miss Hoff and signed a detailed statement. Among the items taken from defendant at the police station was a buck knife with a four-inch blade, but no sheath.

That morning, a Saturday, defendant was arraigned at the jail by a City Court Judge who advised defendant of his right to an attorney. Defendant did not ask the Judge for an attorney, nor was an attorney assigned at that time.

At about the time defendant was being arraigned on the assault charge, Christine Acquino’s next-door neighbor found her partly nude body in his back yard, less than a block away from the Holiday Inn. Cleat marks and a knife sheath were near the body. The medical examiner found severe head injuries involving bruises, cutting and swelling about the face, eyelids and lips, indicating a beating with a blunt instrument which could have been a fist. She also found sperm and phosphatase in the vagina and a laceration in the opening of the vagina. She concluded that Christine Acquino died from the multiple blows to the face and that she had been raped before she died.

Christine Acquino was last seen alive by her schoolmates at 11:45 p.m. the night before, September 21, as she left a high school dance at nearby Batavia High School. At approximately midnight, as he was walking home from the dance, another schoolmate saw a girl walking in the same direction, 250 to 300 feet ahead of him. He continued to watch her as she was joined by a young man on a bicycle. When he lost sight of them they were within a few hundred feet of where Christine Acquino’s body was found.

After the police learned the details of the homicide, they applied for a search warrant to take defendant’s clothes and a sample of his blood. The warrant was issued at 4:40 that afternoon and defendant’s clothes and his blood sample were taken and tested. As a result of the tests, it was determined that: defendant had type A blood, the same type of blood group substance found in the seminal fluid in Christine’s vagina; a fiber in the knife sheath found at the scene was the same as the fibers of defendant’s shirt; a tuft of fibers on [105]*105defendant’s jacket matched the fibers of Christine Acquino’s ripped bra; a paint chip on her jacket was similar to the paint on the decal of defendant’s T-shirt; a fiber found on the blade of defendant’s knife was similar to the fibers of Christine Acquino’s shirt; the cleat marks found near the body were consistent with the tread of defendant’s boots; and mud on defendant’s boots and pant leg was similar to the soil at the scene of the crime.

After defendant’s clothes were taken and before they were tested, defendant was given his Miranda warnings and questioned about the death of Christine Acquino. He gave an oral and then a written statement, which he signed, describing the murder in detail. He admitted that he struck Christine Acquino in the face "again and again” until she stopped screaming.

Other trial evidence tending to establish defendant’s guilt of the murder was the testimony of his girlfriend, who said that defendant had owned a knife that he carried in a sheath attached to his belt, and that the knife taken from defendant and the sheath found at the scene of the murder looked like defendant’s knife and sheath. Further, an inmate of the Genesee County Jail testified to incriminating statements made by defendant. In explaining the charges against him, defendant said the police were holding him on an assault charge and a trumped-up charge of suspicion of murder; that a female had been murdered near Gateway Drive. Defendant admitted that, in the ladies’ room of the Holiday Inn, he had struck a woman after she screamed. "Then”, said the witness, "he lowered his head and turned away from me and I heard him say something as to the fact of the girl, the girl, and he tried to hit her, he said he tried to hit her, punch her eyes out so she could not identify him. He said that a few times.” Later, defendant repeated, "the girl, the girl”.

Defendant testified that he did punch Judith Hoff in the face 5 or 6 times, but he denied that he had anything to do with the homicide of Christine Acquino. He said that after he left the Holiday Inn he hid for 15 to 20 minutes and then rode his bicycle down the street, where he was stopped by the police.

Although he admitted voluntarily giving the statement about the assault on Judith Hoff at the Holiday Inn, he denied telling the police that he had attacked Christine Acquino.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A.D.2d 101, 507 N.Y.S.2d 938, 1986 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ferringer-nyappdiv-1986.