People v. McFarlan

191 Misc. 2d 531, 744 N.Y.S.2d 287, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 390
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 Misc. 2d 531 (People v. McFarlan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. McFarlan, 191 Misc. 2d 531, 744 N.Y.S.2d 287, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 390 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Lewis Bart Stone, J.

A Dunaway I Mapp/Wade hearing was held before me on January 29, 2002. Officer Neal Ariano testified and I find him credible. The defendant offered no evidence.

Statement of Facts

On or about May 17, 2001, Officer Ariano, an 11 year veteran of the New York City Police Department assigned to the Grand Larceny Unit of the 19th Precinct, was assigned to investigate a series of pickpockets and larcenies on the New York City bus system. This investigation was based on information provided by eyewitnesses who had seen two male blacks pickpocketing on a Lexington Avenue bus on Manhattan’s upper east side. One witness, Lisa Hordes, provided a description of both individuals.

Based upon Hordes’ information, Ariano had the description of the perpetrators and the crime of larceny imput by a detective into a police department computer programmed to produce a photo array of possible suspects. The six-photograph array thus created contained the defendant’s photograph.1

The next day, on May 18, 2001, Ariano displayed this printout to Hordes who selected therefrom a picture of the defendant as the person she had seen on the bus on May 17 picking a passenger’s pocket; Hordes marked the printout with her initials next to the defendant’s photograph.2

Five days later on May 23, 2001, Ariano and his partner were assigned to patrol the area of 86th Street and Second Avenue in Manhattan. Ariano saw the defendant and separately charged Gary Graham board a Second Avenue bus. Ariano recognized the defendant as the individual whose photograph had been picked out by Hordes in the photo array and boarded the bus with his partner. He observed the defendant and [533]*533Graham standing several feet apart on the bus near the rear door and then saw the defendant bump into an elderly woman while placing his hand near her pocketbook. The defendant and Graham then exited the bus, followed by the two officers who stopped the defendant and Graham and arrested them. The defendant was searched and three metro cards were recovered.3

Later that day, the officers conducted a lineup at the 19th Precinct which consisted of four fillers (from a local shelter) and the defendant. The defendant elected to be number three in the lineup. Kordes and two other civilian witnesses came to the precinct and waited in a room separate from the lineup room.4 They were instructed not to speak about the case and remained with another police officer during this time. All the members of the lineup held cards with numbers and Kordes, when asked to look at the lineup to see if she recognized anyone, chose the defendant and identified him as the person she saw on the Lexington Avenue bus on May 17. A photograph of the lineup was admitted into evidence.

Following the lineup, the defendant was charged with, and later indicted for jostling (Penal Law § 165.25) and other crimes. The People also introduced a printout of a computer generated photo array to show what Kordes had seen. Although the printout Kordes used on May 18 was lost, Ariano testified that the printout in evidence was obtained by providing, to the same detective who had imput the information into the computer on May 18, the defendant’s name as well as the date of original query to the computer. The detective told Ariano that the computer record of May 18, 2001 contained only the array showing the defendant’s photograph, and that the printout was identical to the May 18 printout.

At the hearing, the officer specifically identified the second printout by recognizing the defendant’s photograph and three other photographs in the array. That printout was admitted into evidence.

Conclusions of Law

The defense contends that the defendant was arrested without probable cause and that therefore his subsequent search was illegal. The defense also contends that the lineup [534]*534should be suppressed on three separate grounds: (1) that the lineup is the “fruit” of an illegal arrest, (2) the lineup was tainted because the witnesses were kept together “before, during and after each viewing” by an individual witness, and (3) the lost “original” photo array creates a presumption that the photo identification was impermissively suggestive.

Upon a motion to suppress, the People must present evidence establishing that the police conduct was reasonable and that the procedures used were not unduly suggestive. Once that burden is met, the defense must prove the procedure was unduly suggestive to prevail on its motion. (People v McRae, 195 AD2d 180, 185 [1st Dept 1994].)

The court finds that the police had probable cause to arrest the defendant. The police received information from a citizen informant. The photograph array shown to the informant was based on information and public records available to the police department; the witness identified the defendant as the person who she saw committing a pickpocket. Based on that alone, the police had probable cause to arrest the defendant which they did five days later. In fact, the defendant was seen on an east side bus and observed jostling5 a woman on that bus, the very crime the witness had observed five days earlier. Based on this cumulative information, the police had probable cause to arrest the defendant and arrange a corporeal identification. The police’s restraint in not arresting the suspects immediately in order to observe their subsequent behavior is to be commended rather than penalized by somehow requiring such action to vitiate the validity of the basis of their arrest.

The court further finds the photo array shown to Kordes not unduly suggestive. Although the array printout introduced in evidence and reviewed by the court was not the same printout reviewed by Kordes, the court finds that the program which was used to generate the printout created a printout in the same form as shown to Kordes. In addition, Ariano testified that he recognized four of the six photographs. The array printout accepted into evidence and the testimony presented at the hearing was sufficient to show that the array was not only not suggestive, but was the same as the original printout, except for handwritten notations made by Kordes after her viewing. For this hearing, the court finds accepting this printout into evidence proper. There is no evidence of prompt[535]*535ing or suggestions by police to the witness to select the defendant’s photograph. (People v Garcia, 219 AD2d 541 [1st Dept 1995]; see generally People v Acosta, 176 AD2d 534 [1st Dept 1991].)

Defendant seeks sanctions by reason of the People’s failure to produce the “original” photo array from which Kordes picked out defendant’s likeness, citing the People’s Rosario obligations. Building on this theory, the defendant proposes that the proper sanction would be to impose a presumption that the photo array procedure was impermissively suggestive. If this logic holds, there would be no validity to defendant’s arrest, and as a result, the subsequent lineup would have to be suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. This logic, however, fails. The fundamental flaw to this claim is that the “original” was never lost; the “original” photo array is the information stored in the computer memory.

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Bluebook (online)
191 Misc. 2d 531, 744 N.Y.S.2d 287, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcfarlan-nysupct-2002.