People v. Martinez

2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Bronx County
DecidedMarch 12, 2026
DocketInd. No. 00863-21
StatusUnpublished
AuthorAudrey E. Stone

This text of 2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U) (People v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Bronx County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Martinez, 2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

People v Martinez (2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U)) [*1]
People v Martinez
2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U)
Decided on March 12, 2026
Supreme Court, Bronx County
Stone, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 March 12, 2026
Supreme Court, Bronx County


The People of the State of New York

against

Joseph Martinez, Defendant.




Ind. No. 00863-21

ADA John Miras and ADA Ché Van Eer, Office of the Bronx County District Attorney, for the People.

Troy Smith, Esq., and April Cohen, Esq., for the Defendant.
Audrey E. Stone, J.

On February 24, 1999, Minerliz Soriano, a 13-year-old girl from the Bronx was reported missing from her home at 1540 Pelham Parkway South. Four days later her body was found in a dumpster near a video store at Bay Plaza Shopping Center. For many years, the case remained cold until familial DNA testing linked the defendant to a stain on the decedent's sweater. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner considered the stain semen. Subsequently, in 2021 the defendant was indicted for two counts of Murder in the Second Degree for her death. The Court presided over a lengthy trial of the defendant, in which he was found guilty of Murder in the Second Degree for Intentional Homicide and Murder in the Second degree premised on Felony Murder. The defendant now moves to set aside the verdict under CPL § 330.30(1). The People oppose. The Court denies the motion without a hearing.

A motion under CPL § 330.30(1) permits a trial court to vacate a verdict due to a record-based ground that would require reversal or modification on appeal as a matter of law. As with a direct appeal, the arguments presented by the defendant on a CPL § 330.30(1) motion must be preserved to raise a reviewable issue of law (People v Sudol, 89 AD3d 499, 499-500 [1st Dept 2011]). The arguments raised also cannot, as with a direct appeal, be raised for the first time or premised on facts outside the record (People v Giles, 24 NY3d 1066, 1068 [2014]). Unlike a direct appeal, a trial court's review of a motion under CPL § 330.30(1) is limited solely to issues of law. CPL § 330.30(1) does not grant a trial court the factual review or interests of justice powers possessed by the Appellate Division (People v Carter, 63 NY2d 530, 536 [1984]). With these principles in mind, the Court turns to the defendant's arguments.

Testimony Regarding the Decedent's Interest in Astronomy

At the time of his arrest, the defendant had come to be known in the local community by the moniker "Jupiter Joe." He hosted public events relating to astronomy and telescopic [*2]viewings. While not yet known in 1999 by the public persona of "Jupiter Joe," the People set forth evidence that in interviews the defendant had stated how he developed his interest in astronomy as a child. He had also expressed his desire to share this passion with children who grew up like him with few opportunities for viewing the stars and planets. Before her disappearance, the decedent had spoken to her childhood friend, Kimberly Ortiz, about becoming the first Latina astronaut from the Bronx. The decedent's diary entries included references to space and planets and Minerliz recorded the names of relevant websites that she and Kimberly found in the library.

The People's case was entirely circumstantial. At the time of the decedent's disappearance the defendant lived in the same apartment building as Minerliz. The defendant acknowledged in a videotaped interrogation that he knew Minerliz, that she and her sister sold things like candy and ornaments to him and other residents, and that he had seen her riding her bike in front of the building. The People argued that the presence of semen found on Minerliz's sweatshirt suggested that the defendant must have had a much closer and more intimate interaction with Minerliz than what he had admitted to. Evidence of Minerliz's interest in astronomy the People argued provided a scenario for how such a close encounter between her and the defendant arose.

The defense countered that this evidence had no relevance since there was nothing to support that the defendant knew of their shared interest. The defendant's post-verdict motion sets forth the same argument. The defense does not dispute that the evidence was appropriately viewed as non-hearsay state of mind evidence.

"In New York, the general rule is that all relevant evidence is admissible unless its admission violates some exclusionary rule" (People v Scarola, 71 NY2d 769, 777 [1988]). "Evidence is relevant if it has any tendency in reason to prove the existence of any material fact, i.e., it makes determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence" (Scarola, 71 NY2d at 777). A trial court may still exercise discretion to exclude evidence where the probative value is outweighed by either prejudice or the risk that it will mislead the jury (id.). Here, the unusual nature of the defendant's and decedent's mutual interest added to its relevance. Admission provided an explanation for how the decedent would have been in a setting where the defendant's semen transferred to her clothing. It was thus relevant under New York State evidentiary law, highly probative, and not misleading to the jurors (id.).

Preclusion of Evidence concerning Raymond Robles

The defense argues that the Court erroneously precluded certain evidence concerning the decedent's stepfather, Raymond Robles. The People's case chronicled the police investigation from the point of Minerliz's disappearance through the defendant's ultimate arrest over 20 years later. The elicited testimony included the police initially identifying Mr. Robles as a potential suspect, his exclusion as a contributor to the DNA on Minerliz's sweatshirt, and the police eliminating him as a suspect.

The Court ruled throughout the trial that questions relating to the police investigation of Raymond Robles and others would be permitted a wide berth (cf. Alvarez v Ercole, 763 F3d 223, 231 [2d Cir 2014] [Cross-examination unreasonably restricted where its purpose "was not to show that an alternate perpetrator had in fact committed the crime, but was pursued to demonstrate that there was an alternate suspect that the police had disregarded in their investigation"]). Separately, the Court distinguished that questions of police witnesses solely designed to draw out an inference of third-party culpability would be subject to the balancing [*3]test required by People v Primo (96 NY2d 351, 356-357 [2001]).

During cross examination of the first Detective assigned to the case, the defense began to intimate Mr. Robles' potential culpability by questioning the adequacy of Mr. Robles's alibi. As the question stemmed from inadmissible hearsay, the Court sustained the People's objection. The defense did not request a hearing under Primo, and the questioning of Detective Ryan continued with fulsome exploration of the police investigation. (Alvarez, 763 F3d at 231).

With the next police witness, Detective Malcolm Reiman, the defense informed the Court that it would argue third-party culpability as to Raymond Robles. The Court proceeded to conduct the balancing test required by the Court of Appeals in Primo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2026 NY Slip Op 50308(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-martinez-nysupctbrnx-2026.