People v. Ferro

66 Misc. 2d 752, 322 N.Y.S.2d 354, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1542
CourtCriminal Court of the City of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 Misc. 2d 752 (People v. Ferro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Criminal Court of the City 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. Ferro, 66 Misc. 2d 752, 322 N.Y.S.2d 354, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1542 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Shirley R. Leyittah, J.

Thirteen defendants, charged in separate multi-count informations with contempt of a G-rand Jury, move to dismiss the informations. Common issues of law are presented by all defendants, and they and the District Attorney have stipulated that as to those issues the objections presented by any defendant are advanced in behalf of all. Some defendants have presented additional issues applicable to themselves only.

Nine of the defendants have not yet been tried. The defendants Anthony Ferro and Angelo G-rieco were tried before a jury. [754]*754Ferro was found guilty of 13 counts and not guilty of one. Grieco was found guilty of seven counts. The defendants Louis Avitable and Felix Eessa waived juries and were tried by the court.

The defendants Ferro and Grieco move also to set aside the juries’ verdicts. The motions are entertained as motions to dismiss the informations. The defendants Avitable and Eessa move for judgment of acquittal.

The Fourth April 1968 Grand Jury of New York County was impanelled to inquire into the commission of bribery of labor union representatives, violations of gambling and usury laws, and conspiracy to commit those crimes. Each of the said crimes is enumerated in the Code of Criminal Procedure (§ 619-d) as one to which a grant of immunity from prosecution is applicable under section 619-c. The informations charge in each count that the respective defendant was interrogated and declined to answer under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution upon the grounds (1) that the answer might tend to incriminate or degrade him; (2) that no statute can grant him immunity from prosecution co-extensive with his constitutional privilege against self incrimination; (3) that a New York Grand Jury cannot grant him immunity from possible prosecution by another jurisdiction, such as the Federal Government; (4) that the Assistant District Attorney’s description to him of the scope of the immunity offered to him by the Grand Jury tendered an immunity which was not “transactional”; (5) that any immunity conferred by the Grand Jury will not protect him against civil and administrative penalties, pains and forfeitures and loss of licenses; (6) that he was a target of the investigation; (7) that his attorney was not permitted to be present in the Grand Jury room; (8) that the District Attorney has multiplied a single contempt into plural counts; and (9) that the investigation was based upon illegal methods, such as eavesdropping, and is unfair. In all cases but one the Grand Jury voted formally to confer immunity, and in all cases the witnesses were directed by it to answer. They persisted in their refusals and, after adjournments, so persisted after direction by a Justice of the New York Supreme Court to answer. They are charged in the informations with contempt of the Grand Jury in 1968 (Penal Law, § 215.50, subd. 4).

The defendants assail the constitutionality of the legislation underlying their prosecutions. In effect, they controvert the sufficiency of the informations. They protest that no crime is stated by the charge that one contumes a Grand Jury by refusal to testify in exercise of his constitutional privilege against self incrimination, notwithstanding the purported statutory grant [755]*755of immunity from prosecution in exchange for the privilege. They argue that no such exchange may constitutionally be imposed upon them, and that no such exchange actually occurs. All immunity statutes, they contend, are inherently unconstitutional, and also impotent to effectuate their stated purpose, since no immunity can possibly be full requittal for the confiscated privilege.

At the outset it might seem that in the three quarters of a century since the decision of Brown v. Walker (161 U. S. 591 [1896]) the abundance of judicial literature on the subject has conclusively established the viability of immunity devices, subject to the condition that they formulate an equation between the immunity conferred and the privilege sacrificed; and that no present quarrel with their legitimacy is possible if they satisfy that equation. Indeed, the defendants’ arguments were articulately and impressively professed by the dissenting Justices in Brown v. Walker (supra). The defendants accordingly argue the minority view. However, fairness requires recognition that other dissents of yesteryear have become today’s majority opinion; and the recency of judicial observation of the minority view invites mention of it. Just this year Mr. Justice Brehhah in his dissent in Piccirillo v. New York (400 U. S. 548) took notice of it (p. 562, n. 7). On its face the Fifth Amendment does not sanction an involuntary barter of the privilege in return for any immunity. However, even in dissent, Justice Brehhah (Justice Marshall concurring) expressly declined to reopen the debate characterizing the inquiry as foreclosed and unnecessary since, in his view, 1 transactional ’ ’ immunity offers a well-conceived alternative to the privilege. This court at nisi prius may not venture where such others would not tread. To do so would be immodest departure from stare decisis and, indeed, to ‘1 thresh old straw.” (See Hofstadter, The Fifth Amendment and the Immunity Act of 1954, 10 Record of Bar Assn. of New York 453).

But, argue the defendants, assuming arguendo the possibility of a constitutional immunity statute, the one underlying their prosecution is not such a one. Variously, they argue that section 619-c of the Code of Criminal Procedure fails to accord them “transactional” immunity from prosecution, forfeiture, penalty or pain on account of the transaction concerning which they were directed to testify, but only offers “ use ” or “ testimonial ” immunity from subsequent use of the compelled testimony or its fruits in a criminal proceeding; or, alternatively, that it does confer transactional immunity from prosecution by the State but exposes them to Federal prosecution where they are clothed with only use immunity; and that it fails the constitutional test [756]*756that the breadth of the immunity must be fully coextensive with the scope of the privilege itself.

In its own terms the immunity conferred by section 619-c is defined in subdivision 2 to constitute both transactional immunity from any prosecution, penalty or forfeiture on account of the transaction concerning which testimony or evidence was compelled, plus use immunity in any criminal proceeding against the witness. The Court of Appeals has held the immunity to be transactional (Matter of Gold v. Menna, 25 N Y 2d 475).

The controversy nonetheless importunes because of judicial swithering in the interpretation of the Fifth Amendment privilege since Counselman v. Hitchcock (142 U. S. 547 [1892]). Counselman, at its minimum, held expressly that a statute is unconstitutional which attempts to supplant the privilege with immunity only from the use of the actual testimony, but omits to grant immunity from employment of the ‘ ‘ fruits ’ ’ or leads of that testimony. But the opinion went further to say that in order to be constitutional the statute must confer transactional immunity.

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105 Misc. 2d 942 (New York Supreme Court, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
66 Misc. 2d 752, 322 N.Y.S.2d 354, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ferro-nycrimct-1971.