People v. Sullivan

153 A.D.2d 223, 550 N.Y.S.2d 358, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 292
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 8, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 153 A.D.2d 223 (People v. Sullivan) 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. Sullivan, 153 A.D.2d 223, 550 N.Y.S.2d 358, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 292 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bracken, J. P.

On December 8, 1981, the defendant and his accomplice and codefendant, Marco Tedesco, went to the apartment of Andrew Soldo in Selden, New York, in connection with a prearranged drug transaction. Upon entering the apartment, the defendant removed a handgun from his pocket and shot Mr. Soldo in the head. The defendant then proceeded to shoot Richard Bretz and Virginia Carson, two other occupants of the apartment. As the three victims lay wounded on the floor, the defendant fired several more shots into Mr. Bretz, and then instructed his codefendant to "Make sure they’re dead”. Tedesco attempted to comply with this directive by slashing the three victims on their faces and throats, and, with respect to Ms. Carson and Mr. Bretz, he succeeded in fulfilling the defendant’s command. Miraculously, however, Mr. Soldo survived and lived to tell the details of this slaughter to a Suffolk County jury.

The evidence against the defendant and the codefendant in this case was overwhelming. Mr. Soldo was a prior acquaintance of the defendant, and whs able to identify him at trial in an unhesitating manner that left no room for doubt. There was voluminous background testimony which established that the defendant and Mr. Tedesco had previously arranged to meet Mr. Soldo as well as Mr. Bretz at Soldo’s apartment in order to consummate a sale of $2,300 worth of narcotics. The jury also heard the testimony of the pharmacist who identified the defendant as one of the two men who had assaulted him, and who had forcibly stolen drugs from him at gunpoint earlier on the day in question. Bullets later removed from Mr. Bretz’s and Ms. Carson’s bodies were ballistically linked to a Titan pistol, equipped with a silencer, which had been recovered from the defendant’s automobile.1 There was a large volume of additional corroborative evidence which need not be described here.

[226]*226The jury convicted both the defendant and the codefendant. The appeal taken by the codefendant resulted in an affirmance (People v Tedesco, 143 AD2d 155). In the present appeal, the defendant’s primary argument is that he was denied his constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel (US Const 6th, 14th Amends; NY Const, art I, § 6). This argument is premised largely on the fact that the defendant’s trial attorney, during his summation to the jury, did little more than disparage the victims of the defendant’s crimes in terms which any decent person would find offensive. Ms. Carson was referred to as "Mary Poppins getting it right between the eyes”. Mr. Soldo was referred to as the one "junkie” who survived, and was also characterized as a "frog-legged pimp”. All three victims were repeatedly described as being "skells”, "pimps” or "junkies”. These epithets are merely illustrative of the over-all tone of defense counsel’s summation, the basic theme of which was to suggest to the jury that the defendant should be considered innocent, because the victims of the murders and attempted murder were themselves unsavory moral degenerates who, according to the implications to be drawn from the defense counsel’s summation, deserved to die.

The attorneys for the defendant on this appeal to this court take a justifiably dim view of trial counsel’s effort to evade his client’s criminal responsibility by convincing the jury that the victims of the defendant’s rampage received their just deserts. It is now argued that the tactic of disparaging the victim—a tactic which, we must acknowledge, is used to a greater or lesser extent in a number of cases—was ill-suited to the facts of this case, and was used by trial counsel to an unwarranted degree. It is argued that the defense counsel’s verbal assault on the deceased victims and on the chief prosecution witness was so outrageous as to have had precisely the opposite effect from that which the defendant’s trial counsel evidently intended, that is, the provocation of passion directed against the defendant rather than against his victims.

We reject this argument for two reasons. First, we find that however offensive it might have been, the theme of defense counsel’s summation must, in the absence of any proof to the contrary, be presumed to have been devised as part of a trial strategy. Second, we conclude that even if the conduct of the defendant’s attorney be considered as an example of actual misconduct, rather than merely as an example of an ill-conceived trial tactic, under the standard enunciated in [227]*227Strickland v Washington (466 US 668), the defendant is not entitled to a new trial because the alleged misconduct did not affect the outcome of the trial.

It is now a firmly established rule of New York law that a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may not be premised solely upon trial counsel’s unsuccessful employment of a trial strategy, even when the strategy in question may be "daring and innovative” (People v Baldi, 54 NY2d 137, 151; see also, People v Satterfield, 66 NY2d 796, 798). "The right to counsel was not intended to afford a defendant, aided by the wisdom of hindsight, to second guess matters of trial strategy employed by counsel” (People v Aiken, 45 NY2d 394, 399; see, People v Rivera, 71 NY2d 705; People v Benn, 68 NY2d 941; see also, People v Coleman, 142 AD2d 586, 587-588; People v Nevarez, 141 AD2d 861, 862).

The weightier the evidence possessed by the prosecution, the more desperate the tactics employed by the defense counsel are likely to become, and appellate courts consistently refuse, when reviewing claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, to second-guess the employment of questionable or debatable trial strategies, even when such strategies include, for example, counsel’s actually conceding his client’s guilt of some of the charges (see, e.g., People v Bone, 154 Ill App 3d 412, 506 NE2d 1033; State v Berry, 430 So 2d 1005 [La] [counsel conceded defendant’s guilt of robbery in attempt to avoid conviction of murder]; People v Wise, 134 Mich App 82, 351 NW2d 255 [counsel admitted client’s complicity in burglary]; Commonwealth v Stoute, 10 Mass App 932, 413 NE2d 739 [counsel admitted client’s guilt of assault in effort to avoid conviction of a kidnapping]; see also, Annotation, Defense Counsel—Argument, 6 ALR4th 16, §§ 7-9, at 40-44).2 It is not surprising, in the present case, that the defendant’s attorney, having properly assessed his client’s chances of exoneration at the hands of a properly guided and fair-minded jury as being negligible at best, decided, as a tactical matter, to attempt to misguide and to prejudice the jurors, and to have them render a verdict based neither upon the evidence nor upon the law, but rather, upon their emotions, which the defendant’s attorney did his best to inflame. Now that this tactic has failed, the defendant’s appellate attorneys should not be permitted to argue that the defendant’s trial attorney was "ineffective”.

[228]*228The case of People v Wise (64 AD2d 272) illustrates the principle that the misconduct of a defendant’s trial attorney, perpetrated as part of a deliberate stratagem, may not serve as the basis for a claim, on appeal, that the defendant was denied his right to the effective assistance of counsel. In People v Wise (supra),

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Bluebook (online)
153 A.D.2d 223, 550 N.Y.S.2d 358, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sullivan-nyappdiv-1990.