People v. Raizen

211 A.D. 446, 208 N.Y.S. 185, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10644
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 211 A.D. 446 (People v. Raizen) 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. Raizen, 211 A.D. 446, 208 N.Y.S. 185, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10644 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

Manning, J.:

The charge upon which the defendant was convicted was that on December 10, 1921, she “wilfully, feloniously and of malice aforethought, shot and killed Abraham Glickstein.” Glickstein was a physician, about forty-three years old, a married man anfd father [448]*448of a family. The shooting took place on December 10, 1921, between five and five-thirty p. m. at the doctor’s office No. 535 Bedford avenue, Brooklyn. The bullet entered his chest, penetrated his heart and death was almost instantaneous. The defendant on the day before the tragedy had returned from a trip to Florida, to which place she claimed she had gone for the benefit of her health. On the afternoon of the shooting, and about the time mentioned, the defendant entered the reception room of the doctor’s office and there waited with some other patients -until she was admitted to his consultation room where the actual shooting took place. Glickstein opened the door between the reception ’oom and the consultation room and spoke to the woman, asking b°r to walk in. She said that she preferred to wait until the other patients who were present had been attended to. Shortly thereafter she went into the consultation room carrying in her hand a muff or fur piece in which was concealed the revolver with which she committed the deed. In a few seconds after she had entered the room the door was thrown open and the doctor appeared and fell to the floor bleeding from the nose and mouth, and in a few moments he expired. The revolver with which the crime was committed was found on the floor of the doctor’s office wrapped up in the so-called mu or fur piece. The defendant in the excitement of the momen made her escape from the scene of the shooting, and disappeare . After a few days, however, on the advice of her counsel, she surrendered to the police authorities and made a full and complete confession of the affair to the district attorney. Four lawyers, including one who appears for her on this appeal, and her iat ei were present when this confession was made. The revo ver wi which the shooting was done had been purchased by the defendant on the 2d day of‘ December, 1921, before she left Florida, or ew York, and there is no dispute that prior to the actual buying o e revolver she had written a letter to the- firm from w om i was purchased stating that she desired to procure a revo ver wi a noiseless attachment. This is all that need be s a e as ° actual commission of the crime by the defendan . e 1,. was admitted and the circumstances surrounding e s oo are not disputed here nor were they upon the tria .

At the time-she killed Glickstein the defendant was twenty-nme years old; her mother was dead; her father was vmg, ex' ^ name was Schaefer; but on the 8th day of May, , ’ the May preceding the tragedy, she was married to a man named Charles S Ratei It is undisputed, by the testimony of the defendant herself and by other witnesps in ^ l„fions for defendant and her victim had maintained mere ncio [449]*449four or five years before she killed him. These relations started when she was between twenty-two and twenty-five years of age. Her claim was that the relations began involuntarily on her part and that in the first instance the doctor had assaulted her while he was treating her as a patient. Nevertheless, she continued to visit the doctor afterwards and had sexual intercourse with him on numerous occasions. Her story was that just prior to her marriage these relations were broken off, but she stated upon the trial that shortly before she was married the doctor again tried to prevail upon her to resume their relations, but that she successfully escaped from him. She also claimed that Glickstein had performed an operation on her while these relations continued, the effect of such operation being to make her sterile. Her claim was that all of the ill-treatment to which she had been subjected by the doctor resulted in the unbalancing of her mind; and her defense on the trial was that her mental condition was such that she did not know what she was doing when she killed him and that she did not know it was wrong.

The prosecution contended on the trial and contends on this appeal that the homicide was committed with premeditation, deliberation and intent, and that the claim of insanity and mental disorder, and the so-called unbalancing of the defendant's mind was part and parcel of an ingenious and well-prepared plan to kill the doctor, trusting to her carefully and skillfully timed and widely circulated so-called delusions and obsessions to escape the consequences of her act. And the People further claim that "the evidence adduced on the trial fully sustained this charge.

The defendant contends that the People failed to establish its case against her beyond a reasonable doubt; that the verdict is against the weight of credible evidence; that prejudicial rulings and errors Were made by the trial court, and that having, as they claim, proved the defense of legal insanity, the verdict arrived at by the jury can only be accounted for on the theory of these prejudicial rulings and the unfavorable attitude of the trial court towards the defendant. The judgment of conviction is challenged by the appellant here on six specific grounds: First. That the State has not only failed to establish the sanity of this defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, but, on the contrary, the legal insanity of the defendant was convincingly proved by an overwhelming preponderance of the credible testimony. Second. That the court erroneously excluded evidence fending to show that three well-known alienists examined the defendant at the request of the district attorney very shortly after the commission of the homicide, and [450]*450reported to the district attorney after such examination that she was legally insane. Third. That the court erroneously excluded declarations and statements made by defendant, during her examination by the experts and others shortly - after the commission of the crime-. Fourth. ThT the trial eourt was not vested with authority or discretion arbitrarily to exclude competent- prospective jurors; that the court’s attitude toward talesmen while they were being examined was of such a character as to bring about^ an intimidation of the jury and calculated to suppress their real views and opinions.- . Fifth. That the trial justice was guilty of improper conduct which invoked hostility to and seriously tended to prejudice the defendant’s cause in the minds of the jury; that the trial justice so acted as to excite prejudice and distrust in the minds of the jury against the defendant and her witnesses. Sixth. That the court erred in excluding certain testimony in the nature of some quotations from a book which had been read to. the defendant by a Christian Science healer while the defendant was under treatment by such healer.

Taking up these objections along the lines of orderly procedure, and concerning .the point made that the attitude of the trial judge towards the talesmen-while they were being examined was of such a character as to bring about an intimidation ^ of the jury and calculated to suppress their real views and opinions, the effect of the court’s act being as counsel claims "to prevent an honest expression of their sympathies, sentiments and convictions, so as to-deprive

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 A.D. 446, 208 N.Y.S. 185, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-raizen-nyappdiv-1925.