People v. Terrance S.

2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedApril 2, 2025
DocketIndictment No. 2849-17
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U) (People v. Terrance S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Terrance S., 2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

People v Terrance S. (2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U)) [*1]
People v Terrance S.
2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U)
Decided on April 2, 2025
Supreme Court, Kings County
Daniels-DePeyster, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on April 2, 2025
Supreme Court, Kings County


The People of the State of New York

against

Terrance S., Defendant.




Indictment No. 2849-17

For the Defendant:
Bahar Ansari, Esq. - The Legal Aid Society
Dana Wolfe, Esq. - The Legal Aid Society
Lawrence Hausman, Esq. - The Legal Aid Society
Lucy Gubernick, Esq. - The Legal Aid Society

For the People:
Lisa Perlman, Esq. - Kings County District Attorney's Office Claudia Daniels-DePeyster, J.

On April 8, 2017, the defendant, Terrance S.,[FN1] was arrested and charged with Manslaughter in the Second Degree (PL § 125.20[1]), Operating a Vehicle While Under the Influence of Alcohol (VTL § 1192.3), and other related offenses. The grand jury subsequently indicted the defendant under the instant indictment with 33 counts, including Murder in the Second Degree (PL § 125.25[2]), Operating a Vehicle While Under the Influence of Alcohol (VTL § 1192.3), and other related offenses.

On June 11, 2019, the defendant was sentenced to 15 years of incarceration with five years of post-release supervision following his plea of guilty to Manslaughter in the First Degree (PL § 125.20[1]). He now moves to vacate his sentence pursuant to Criminal Procedure Law ("CPL") § 440.47 and impose a new sentence in accordance with Penal Law ("PL") §60.12.[FN2] The [*2]Court conducted an evidentiary hearing, during which the defendant called four witnesses and introduced multiple pieces of evidence.[FN3] The People called two witnesses and introduced multiple pieces of evidence.

Based upon the testimony at the hearing, voluminous exhibits in evidence, and the applicable law, the defendant's motion is GRANTED.

I. HEARING TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE

The record for this hearing is voluminous and detailed. While the court has considered the entire hearing record and all the arguments from both sides, only those portions of the record most relevant to this Court's decision will be discussed herein.

A. Terrance S.

Terrance is 44 years old and originally from Cleveland, Ohio (Feb. 7 Tr. at 306). In support of his motion, Terrance chose to testify on his own behalf.

1. Childhood and Adolescence

When Terrance was three years old, his mother, Vickie, and his father, Thomas, ended their relationship with each other (Feb. 7 Tr. at 306). Terrance remembers their relationship consisted of "a lot of arguing [and] a lot of fighting:" his father yelling at his mother and sometimes slapping and punching her (Feb. 7 Tr. at 306). He described his father as "very mean [and] very loud" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 308).

Terrance explained that he and his father never had much of a relationship (Feb. 7 Tr. at 307). He described how his father denied Terrance was his son from the day he was born, because Terrance "was too dark" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 307). Terrance's mother even had a DNA test done that confirmed paternity, but Terrance's father continued to deny he was his child (Feb. 7 Tr. at 307). Terrance's father constantly reminded him that he thought Terrance was not his son (Feb. 7 Tr. at 308). Terrance described his father as an alcoholic and an addict who was intoxicated around him many times (Feb. 7 Tr. at 306, 308). He said that he could not "describe how awful it was" and that it was a "really bad time" in his life (Feb. 7 Tr. at 308). His father was not financially supportive of Terrance either because "he never really had a job for very long" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 310).

While in high school, Terrance said he was "bullied a lot" for being overweight and because people thought he was gay, though he was not out at the time (Feb. 7 Tr. at 311). They would call him "homo," "faggot," "fat," and "gay" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 311). Because Terrance did not "want to go through any more of the bullying," he signed himself out of high school in July of 1997 and got his GED in October of that same year (Feb. 7 Tr. at 312). Terrance then attended the Ohio Center for Broadcasting (Feb. 7 Tr. at 312).

2. Terrance's Sexuality

Terrance first came out as gay when he was 20 years old, telling friends he went to broadcasting school with: Terrell, Sara, DJ, Sam, and Angel (Feb. 7 Tr. at 313-314; Feb. 26 Tr. at 395). At 22, he came out to his mother and brother, then his aunt and his sister (Feb. 7 Tr. at 314; Feb. 26 Tr. at 395). Terrance's mother said that "she already knew, and that it was okay" [*3]but Terrance said that telling his aunt was "uncomfortable" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 314). Terrance had an uncle who was openly gay, but "a lot of family members didn't agree with his lifestyle and talked about him behind his back a lot (Feb. 7 Tr. at 314-315).

3. Housing

When Terrance first moved to New York, he lived in a single-room occupancy in Flatbush, Brooklyn, through the program CAMBA (Feb. 7 Tr. at 322). The housing was specifically for people with Terrance's medical diagnoses (Feb. 7 Tr. at 322). He lived there for four months until he moved to an apartment at 301 Powell Street in Brownsville, Brooklyn (Feb. 7 Tr. at 323). The apartment was paid through Section 8 and a second housing program (Feb. 7 Tr. at 323, 324; Feb. 26 Tr. at 394-395).

4. Terrance's Relationship with Derrick E.

Terrance met Derrick in April 2015 through a phone chat dating service (Feb. 7 Tr. at 325-326; Feb. 26 Tr. at 408). Terrance described the beginning of their relationship as "good" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 326). He said that they had "smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol" in common, that they "seemed to have fun together," and that he thought Derrick was attractive, "funny, kind of smart, [and] dressed nice" (Feb. 7 Tr. at 326).

a. Derrick Moving in With Terrance

Just after Christmas of 2015, Derrick was on crutches following an injury and told Terrance that "he really needed to live in an apartment on the first floor" and asked Terrance if he could move in (Feb. 7 Tr. at 335; Feb. 26 Tr. at 409). Derrick moved in on January 1, 2016, and according to Terrance, Derrick offered to give him $300 a month for cable and food (Feb. 7 Tr. at 335; Feb. 26 Tr. at 411). Eventually, Terrance did try to "kick Derrick out" of the apartment, but Derrick "threatened to bust out the windows of the apartment," and Terrance was concerned that he would lose his Section 8 if that happened (Feb. 7 Tr. at 364-365; Feb. 26 Tr. at 377).

b. Physical Abuse

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 50429(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-terrance-s-nysupctkings-2025.