People v. Vickers

2019 NY Slip Op 496
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 24, 2019
Docket108193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 NY Slip Op 496 (People v. Vickers) 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. Vickers, 2019 NY Slip Op 496 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

People v Vickers (2019 NY Slip Op 00496)
People v Vickers
2019 NY Slip Op 00496
Decided on January 24, 2019
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: January 24, 2019

108193

[*1]THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Respondent,

v

ROBERT VICKERS, Also Known as RASHAD ABDUR-RAHMAN, Appellant.


Calendar Date: December 12, 2018
Before: Clark, J.P., Mulvey, Devine and Rumsey, JJ.

George J. Hoffman Jr., East Greenbush, for appellant.

P. David Soares, District Attorney, Albany (Emily Schultz of counsel), for respondent.



MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Mulvey, J.

Appeal from a judgment of the County Court of Albany County (Lynch, J.), rendered January 7, 2016, upon a verdict convicting defendant of the crime of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree (six counts).

Following a seven-month investigation beginning in the summer of 2013 and ending in March 2014, as relevant here, defendant was charged in three indictments, later consolidated, with six counts of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree [FN1]. The charges stem from defendant's sale of heroin between September 2013 and January 2014 to a detective with the City of Albany Police Department (hereinafter APD) who, working as an undercover officer, made 11 controlled purchases of heroin from defendant. The transactions were captured on recording equipment and occurred under surveillance by numerous law enforcement officers. The undercover officer had received defendant's cell phone number from a confidential informant (hereinafter CI) who was working with the APD on the investigation into defendant's narcotics activities; according to the officer, the CI was not present at any of the drug sales. The CI was also simultaneously working on an investigation being conducted by members of the New York City Police Department (hereinafter NYPD), among other agencies, with assistance from the APD, into an unsolved 1972 murder of two police officers for which defendant was a suspect.[FN2]

At trial, defendant admitted providing the heroin to the undercover officer, but advanced an agency defense and asserted that he had been entrapped by police because he was [*2]suspected of being involved in the police murders. The jury convicted defendant of all six counts. Following his unsuccessful motion to set aside the verdict, County Court imposed on each conviction a seven-year sentence, followed by two years of postrelease supervision, and ordered that the sentences on the first three counts were to be served consecutively for an aggregate sentence of 21 years, and that the sentences on the remaining three counts were to be served concurrently. Defendant appeals.[FN3]

We affirm. Defendant challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence and also contends that the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence. Specifically, he argues that the People failed to prove that he did not act as an agent for the buyer, and that the jury should have concluded that he had been induced by police to commit the drug sales and, therefore, that he had been entrapped. Initially, although defendant moved for a trial order of dismissal, he only argued that the affirmative defense of entrapment had been established. As defendant did not raise the arguments now advanced regarding his agency defense, his challenge to the legal sufficiency of the evidence that he did not act as the buyer's agent is not preserved for our review (see People v Hawkins, 11 NY3d 484, 492-493 [2008]; People v Roulhac, 166 AD3d 1066, 1067 [2018], lv denied ___ NY3d ___ [Dec. 31, 2018]). "We will nevertheless evaluate whether the elements of the charged crimes were proven beyond a reasonable doubt upon our weight of the evidence review" (People v Cruz, 152 AD3d 822, 823 [2017], lv denied 30 NY3d 1018 [2017]; see People v Scippio, 144 AD3d 1184, 1185 [2016], lv denied 28 NY3d 1150 [2017]).

The People were required to prove that defendant knowingly and unlawfully sold a narcotic drug, heroin (see Penal Law §§ 15.05 [2]; 220.39 [1]) and, as defendant asserted an agency defense, the People were also required to prove that he had not acted "solely as the agent of a buyer" (People v Watson, 20 NY3d 182, 185 [2012] [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]; see People v Valentin, 29 NY3d 150, 155 [2017]). Defendant admitted at trial that he provided heroin to the undercover officer, but argued that he had acted as an agent of the officer, the buyer, in procuring heroin for him and that his transfer of drugs was not done with intent to sell heroin (see Penal Law §§ 220.00 [1]; 220.39). "Under the agency doctrine, a person who acts solely as the agent of a buyer in procuring drugs for the buyer is not guilty of selling the drug to the buyer, or of possessing it with intent to sell it to the buyer[,] . . . [which] is generally a factual question for the jury to resolve on the circumstances of the particular case" (People v Peterkin, 135 AD3d 1192, 1192 [2016] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]; see People v Lam Lek Chong, 45 NY2d 64, 73 [1978], cert denied 439 US 935 [1978]; People v Jones, 77 AD3d 1170, 1172 [2010], lv denied 16 NY3d 896 [2011]). An agency defense is "not a complete defense[,]" but, instead, "permit[s] the jury to find [a] defendant [to be] an agent of the buyer, rather than [an agent of the] seller, and treat him [or her] accordingly" (People v Davis, 14 NY3d 20, 24 [2009]; see People v Vickers, 156 AD3d 1236, 1237 [2017], lvs denied 31 NY3d 980, 988 [2018]). Assertion of this defense requires the jury to consider several factors, including "the nature and extent of the relationship between the defendant and the buyer, whether it was the buyer or the defendant who suggested the purchase, whether the defendant has had other drug dealings with this or other buyers or sellers and, of course, whether the defendant profited, or stood to profit, from the transaction" (People v Lam Lek Chong, 45 NY2d at 75; accord People v Watson, 20 NY3d at 186; People v Vickers, 156 AD3d at 1237; People v Peterkin, 135 AD3d at 1192).

We are not persuaded that the jury's rejection of the agency defense was against the weight of the evidence. The trial testimony established that, after APD officers obtained information from several sources that defendant was selling drugs, they arranged for the CI to make contact and develop a relationship with defendant under the ruse that they were cousins. The CI befriended defendant and suggested that if he helped the CI expand his drug business in Saratoga County where defendant resided, the CI would help defendant expand his heroin business in Albany County. The CI introduced defendant to a heroin supplier, from whom [*3]defendant thereafter obtained some of the heroin he sold, although defendant's conversations with the CI reflected that defendant had ready access to other suppliers. The CI referred the undercover officer to defendant, representing that the officer was his brother-in-law and telling defendant that the officer was a heroin user and potential customer.

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2019 NY Slip Op 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-vickers-nyappdiv-2019.