People v. Rose

11 Misc. 3d 200
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedDecember 9, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 3d 200 (People v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Rose, 11 Misc. 3d 200 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas Rainbow Morse, J.

[201]*201The defendants have moved for dismissal of their driving while intoxicated (DWI) charges because the State Police issued computer generated simplified informations (hereinafter referred to as e-tickets) rather than the multicopy handwritten simplified traffic informations used for decades across New York State (hereinafter referred to as UTTs). Since there are no reported cases regarding the validity of prosecutions based on e-tickets, these two cases were consolidated for purposes of a hearing at which the People presented testimony from the state troopers who arrested the defendants and from Lieutenant Leonard Casper, the officer in charge of technology for the New York State Police.1 As such, he was responsible for coordinating the development of the software and protocols for the use of e-tickets by law enforcement in New York. While rigorous cross-examination of Lieutenant Casper by both defense counsel highlighted several serious areas of concern which might merit further consideration by the law enforcement community and the Legislature, the court finds that the e-tickets filed with this court together with hand signed supporting depositions provide a valid jurisdictional basis upon which these DWI cases may be prosecuted.

Simplified Traffic Informations and Supporting Depositions

The DWI charges in these cases were commenced by filing simplified traffic informations and supporting depositions rather than misdemeanor informations. Under our law as it applies in this case, such a simplified information is

“a written accusation by a police officer . . . filed with a local criminal court, which charges a person with the commission of one or more traffic infractions and/or misdemeanors relating to traffic, and which, being in a brief or simplified form prescribed by the commissioner of motor vehicles, designates the offense or offenses charged but contains no factual allegations of an evidentiary nature supporting such charge or charges. It serves as a basis for commencement of a criminal action for such traffic offenses, alternative to the charging thereof by a regular information, and, under circumstances prescribed in section 100.25, it may serve, either in [202]*202whole or in part, as a basis for prosecution of such charges.”2

As noted by the Court of Appeals, “[t]he simplified information is a statutory creation designed to provide an uncomplicated form for handling the large volume of traffic infractions and petty offenses for which it is principally used. It need not provide on its face reasonable cause to believe defendant has committed the offense.”3 When standing alone, it “must be substantially in the form prescribed by the commissioner of motor vehicles.”4 Two factors distinguish a simplified information from other local court accusatory instruments. First, although it contains specific information regarding the offense, it does not contain “factual allegations of an evidentiary nature.” Secondly, unlike informations, misdemeanor and felony complaints, a simplified information is not a “verified written accusation.”5

If requested, sworn facts will be provided in a supporting deposition from the arresting officer which must “contain! ] allegations of fact, based either upon personal knowledge or upon information and belief, providing reasonable cause to believe that the defendant committed the offense or offenses charged.”6 Importantly, this deposition must be “subscribed and verified.”7 The facts, however, need not be handwritten. Our highest court has sanctioned the use of “fill in the blank” supporting depositions in DWI cases noting that “the factual statements in the deposition are communicated by check marks made in boxes next to the applicable conditions and observations signifying the complainant’s allegations as to the existence of those conditions and the truth of those observations.”8

[203]*203Troopers Loewke and Blum hand signed similar “fill in the blank” verified depositions in the cases before this court. As observed by the Court of Appeals, “[a] verification attesting to the truth of the contents of a document on penalty of perjury is of the same effect as a testimonial oath, which at once alerts a witness to the moral duty to testify truthfully and establishes a legal basis for a perjury prosecution.”9 The failure to properly verify a supporting deposition may result in a jurisdictionally defective accusatory instrument which is subject to dismissal.10

It is within this legislative and common-law context that, as the millennium approached, several segments of state government began thinking about the opportunities presented by maturing computer technologies. The New York State Police and Department of Motor Vehicles started studying e-tickets and the efficiencies of data entry, transfer and retrieval which they presented.11

[204]*204E-Tickets and the Electronic Signatures and Records Act

The advent of the Electronic Signatures and Records Act (ESRA),12 recognized that we had entered a new era in the public and private sectors “relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities,”13 and the rules accompanying the legislation were intended “to be flexible enough to embrace future technologies that comply with ESRA”14 by giving “governmental entities the greatest latitude to determine the most effective protocols for producing, receiving, accepting, acquiring, recording, filing, transmitting, forwarding and storing electronic signatures and electronic records within the confines of existing statutory and regulatory requirements regarding privacy, confidentiality and records retention.”15 The electronic records encompassed by the statute include “information, evidencing any act, transaction, occurrence, event, or other activity, produced or stored by electronic means and capable of being accurately reproduced in forms perceptible by human sensory capabilities.”16

State law predated federal legislation in this area17 and in 2002, the New York definition of “electronic signature” was circumscribed to provide symmetry with federal law.18 Since then, an electronic signature has meant “an electronic sound, symbol, or process, attached to or logically associated with an electronic record and executed or adopted by a person with the intent to sign the record.”19 The statutory framework and legislative history of ESRA illustrate that its main focus is on [205]*205commercial and public record applications rather than law enforcement use. Nonetheless, based on the testimony presented before this court, it would appear that the decision to substitute e-tickets for the often illegible multiple copy uniform traffic tickets was an appropriate and logical extension within the purview of ESRA.

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Related

People v. Abate
2024 NY Slip Op 24023 (New Scotland Town Court, 2024)
People v. Hernandez
31 Misc. 3d 208 (Rochester City Court, 2011)
People v. Patanian
20 Misc. 3d 298 (Sand Lake Justice Court, 2008)
People v. Corletta
12 Misc. 3d 666 (New York Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 3d 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rose-nynyccityct-2005.