People v. Stiglin

238 A.D. 407, 264 N.Y.S. 832, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9513
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 2, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 238 A.D. 407 (People v. Stiglin) 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. Stiglin, 238 A.D. 407, 264 N.Y.S. 832, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9513 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

O'Malley, J.

The defendant, a member of the municipal police force, New York city, has been convicted of perjury. The offense is predicated upon alleged false testimony given in the prosecution of two women for vagrancy under the provisions of section 887, subdivision 4, clause (a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The jury’s verdict included a strong recommendation for mercy.”

The women were charged with having offered to commit an act of prostitution and were tried and convicted in the Ninth, District Magistrate’s Court on March 11, 1929. Their names were Winifred Sakwich, convicted under the name of Winifred Grason (hereinafter called Sakwich), and Jennie Domzalski Pappas, convicted under the name of Margie Wharton, also known as Jennie Domzalski (hereinafter referred to as Domzalski).

The testimony of the defendant on their trial was to the effect that they committed the act charged on March 7, 1929; that he and Officer Lamb had an apartment at No. 224 East Seventy-fourth street under observation at about one-fifty a. m. at which time he saw the women in company with a man named Nick ” Charles (hereinafter referred to as Charles) enter the apartment; that in about ten minutes he and Lamb entered, the door having been opened by one Emanuel Candidas (hereinafter referred to as Canchilas); that he saw the Sakwich girl- seated on a bed with her hat and coat off, and Charles, who had his coat and vest off, was seated with her; that, when he entered, the Domzalski girl jumped off another bed on which she was sitting, at which time she had her hat, coat and shoes off.

The four persons thus found were questioned by the defendant. Without at this time detailing the conversation, suffice it to say that his testimony was sufficient to warrant a conviction of each of the women upon the charge against her. So far as this record discloses, the defendants, testifying in their own behalf, denied none of the material statements made by the defendant except his claim that they had been paid money by Charles and Candillas. Both were sentenced to prison.

In support of the indictment the prosecution showed that no offer of prostitution was made. Chile Acuna, who testified in this and prior prosecutions growing out of the investigation of the Magistrates’ Courts of the City of New York (People v. Tait, 234 App. Div. 433; affd., 259 N. Y. 599; People v. Glenn, 236 App. Div. 825; affd., 262 N. Y. -), and who claims to have been employed by members of the vice squad of the municipal police force, as a “ stool pigeon,” in securing evidence against gambling and houses of prostitution, and who claims to have been used as the “ unknown man ” in this arrest, testified in substance that on [409]*409the evening of March sixth he met the defendant and Officer Drake, and another stool pigeon named Harry the Greek (hereinafter referred to as Harry) at Forty-second street and Third avenue; that the latter informed the officers that he “ had a case uptown on the east side; ” that he telephoned to some person and reported that the girls would not be ready until about eleven o’clock. Accordingly it was arranged that Harry and Acuna should meet the officers at about that time at Seventy-fourth street and Third avenue.

Pursuant to this arrangement they kept the appointment and met the defendant, together with Officers Drake, Lamb and Treubert, and a fourth officer, whose identity was unknown to Acuna; that Harry informed the officers that a friend named Nick (Charles) had agreed to allow him and Acuna to use his apartment at 224 East Seventy-fourth street, for the purpose of entertaining two prostitutes, who were hanging around a “ speakeasy ” in the neighborhood; that while they were standing discussing the matter, Acuna saw two girls come out of Perry’s ice cream store on the west side of Third avenue in company with two men; that the defendant told him to “Go ahead and find out where they go,” whereupon Acuna hurried to the premises 224 East Seventy-fourth street.

Acuna’s testimony was to the effect that he waited on the stoop of the house until he saw Nick and the two girls approaching, and that he then preceded them up the stairs and kept them under observation until they entered apartment No. 17, upon the door of which he placed a chalk mark. He then returned to the street and informed the officers, who gave them ten dollars for their use; that he and Harry returned to the room and knocked on the door which was opened by Nick Charles who was in his shirt sleeves; that while they were thus engaged in conversation with him, the defendant and his fellow officers came and pushed them all into the room. His testimony was to the effect that at the time the officers entered the two girls were fully dressed and were standing in the kitchen of the apartment with two men and that no offer to commit an act of prostitution had been made. He was told by the police officers to return to the station house where he and Harry later met the defendant. He testified: “ We told him, Harry the Greek and myself, why didn’t they give us more time? Why did they come up so soon? In our opinion, if they had given us more time, we would have made a better case. They said it didn’t matter, the girls were wrong. Q. Was anything mentioned about the money? A. Yes. Q. What? A. That we should keep [410]*410the $10. Q. What did you do with the money? A. Harry kept five dollars and I kept five dollars.”

In addition, the People called the two women. Their testimony was to the effect that they were cousins and that both lived with the parents and brother of the Sakwich woman at 229 East Seventy-fourth street, almost directly across the street; that on the afternoon of March sixth the latter was sent by her father to pay a gas bill; that thereafter they went to Brooklyn where they attended a moving picture theatre and returned to Perry’s candy and ice cream store at about eleven-thirty; that prior thereto the Sakwich girl had left a watch at Perry’s store and that she had been instructed by her father to secure it; that when she asked Perry for the watch he said that he had left it with a friend for repairs, and thereupon telephoned to Nick Charles who came to the store; that Charles said that his room mate, Candillas, who was a jeweler, had it and that if the girls would go to his room they would be able to get it; that the girls then proceeded with Charles to his apartment and that on entering, Candillas, who was in bed, came out dressed in a bath robe, and that while the four of them were talking in the kitchen the officers entered and placed them under arrest.

Both girls testified to having seen a man on the front stoop as they entered (presumably Acuna) who, as already noted, testified that he had preceded the girls and Charles to the premises. One of the women testified that the man on the stoop preceded them up the stairs. Both, of course, denied any act which would tend to show that they made an offer of prostitution. They testified that they and Charles were fully dressed and that Candillas was in his bath robe; that they were slapped by the officers and that, notwithstanding that they informed them that they lived across the street, the officers refused to believe them or to investigate. Sakwich claims to have fallen because of being pushed down the stairs and to have sustained an injury to her nose.

Before the magistrate neither woman said anything about having gone to pay a gas bill.

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36 Haw. 153 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1942)
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241 A.D. 38 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)
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240 A.D. 101 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
238 A.D. 407, 264 N.Y.S. 832, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-stiglin-nyappdiv-1933.