People v. Wright

146 Misc. 2d 359, 551 N.Y.S.2d 742, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 14
CourtCriminal Court of the City of New York
DecidedJanuary 16, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 Misc. 2d 359 (People v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Criminal Court of the City 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. Wright, 146 Misc. 2d 359, 551 N.Y.S.2d 742, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 14 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Joel L. Blumenfeld, J.

The issue in this case is the propriety of the Queens County [360]*360District Attorney’s Grand Jury practice whereby the Grand Jury stenographers, instead of providing the nisi prius court with a complete transcript of the Grand Jury proceedings upon a motion to inspect Grand Jury minutes, simply replace the transcribed charges with preprinted charge sheets.

On November 9, 1989 this court held a hearing to determine the defendant’s motion to inspect the Grand Jury minutes and to dismiss the prosecutor’s information. After the hearing, the Legal Aid Society petitioned this court to file an amicus curiae brief. This court granted the application and the parties and amicus have filed briefs with this court.

On December 19, 1988, Assistant District Attorney Richard Wissak presented the instant case against the defendant to a Grand Jury. The stenographer in the Grand Jury, Carol Witpen, an employee of the District Attorney’s Office, prepared the transcript in question which was presented at the hearing before this court. This computer-generated transcript contained three pages which are different from the rest. These different sheets are two charge sheets (one for assault in the second degree and one for assault in the third degree) and one closing sheet. The difference between these sheets and the rest of the transcript is that the transcript, without the charge sheets and the closing sheets, are on plain paper and the characters on the page are produced by a dot-matrix printer. The charge sheets and the closing sheet however are printed on bond paper with red-lined margins and the characters are quite different from the dot-matrix characters in the transcript.

Ms. Witpen testified that as Assistant District Attorney Wissak was charging on the law she would record stenographically what he was saying onto a computer cassette. At the end of the case Mr. Wissak handed her the preprinted forms which he had read from, which she then supposedly compared with the computer-generated transcription of his charge to the Grand Jury. After the comparison, the portions of the computer-generated transcript that contained the charges were discarded and the preprinted charges were substituted in their place.

Ms. Witpen further testified that prior to the substitution she compared the two and stated that although there may have been "misstrokes” that she presently couldn’t recall, the two were readily the same. However, the court has doubts about the testimony of the Grand Jury stenographer on this [361]*361point as she does not have any present memory as to the instant Grand Jury proceeding, because she either discarded or destroyed the cassette for this case, and because she furnished the court with a typed copy of Mr. Wissak’s charge that she claimed came from her original notes that included phrases that would only be used in charging a Grand Jury in a multiple defendant case. This was a single-defendant case and Assistant District Attorney Wissak indicated he would not have used these phrases in this case. Based on his testimony, her typed copy appears to track the preprinted forms and not Assistant District Attorney Wissak’s actual charge to the Grand Jury.

Significantly, Ms. Witpen testified that what was done in this case is the general procedure for all Grand Jury presentations. And finally, in accordance with what she testified is the Queens County District Attorney’s Grand Jury practice, neither the transcript nor the three attached sheets are certified.

i

Because the court was not furnished with the original transcript of the charges and closing sheets and since there is no certification of these minutes the defendant moves to dismiss the prosecutor’s information pursuant to CPL 210.20 (1) (c) on the ground that the Grand Jury proceeding was defective within the meaning of CPL 210.35. A Grand Jury proceeding is defective when, inter alla, the proceeding "fails to conform to the requirements of [CPL] article [190] to such [a] degree that the integrity thereof is impaired and prejudice to the defendant may result.” (CPL 210.35 [5].)

Accordingly, in order for the court to dismiss the prosecutor’s information on these grounds, the court must determine whether the Grand Jury proceeding was defective. If so, then the court must ascertain whether that defect is such that the integrity of the Grand Jury proceeding is impaired. If this is also the case, then the court must determine whether prejudice may result as a result from the defect. Only if all three steps are answered affirmatively may the court dismiss the prosecutor’s information as defective.

ii

Contained in CPL article 190 is a procedural requirement which states: "Where necessary or appropriate, the court or the district attorney, or both, must instruct the grand jury [362]*362concerning the law with respect to its duties or any matter before it, and such instructions must be recorded in the minutes.” (CPL 190.25 [6]; see also, People v Percy, 45 AD2d 284, affd 38 NY2d 806; People v Rallo, 46 AD2d 518, affd 39 NY2d 217.)

In the instant case, the Assistant District Attorney stated that he charged the Grand Jury on the offenses of assault in the second degree (Penal Law § 120.05), assault in the third degree (Penal Law § 120.00) and the general duties of the Grand Jury. The stenographer in the Grand Jury allegedly recorded those charges in the minutes. However, that which the People have presented to this court as Grand Jury minutes does not contain the transcription of these charges, but rather the preprinted forms of the charges that the Assistant District Attorney supposedly read from in the Grand Jury. Neither the transcript, nor the three charges are certified.

The Grand Jury stenographer testified that the reason that Grand Jury minutes are not certified (as opposed to court minutes which are) is that the Grand Jury is a secret proceeding and that the Grand Jury stenographers do not sell their minutes as do the criminal court stenographers. The stenographer further testified that this was a "time-saving” procedure (even though she was unable to show how this was so).

The issue of whether Grand Jury transcripts need to be certified was recently addressed by a nisi prius court in People v Velez (144 Misc 2d 18 [Sup Ct, Queens County 1989]). In Velez, the defendant argued "that in the absence of a certification of truth and accuracy of a transcript, the court cannot accept the record for inspection, and is required to dismiss the indictment” citing CPLR 4540 ("Authentication of official record of court or government office in the United States”). (People v Velez, supra, at 20.) CPLR 4540 pertains to the use of copies of documents and requires that such copies must be properly certified. The Velez court held that since Grand Jury minutes in that case were not copies but rather original documents they did not need to be certified. As stated in Velez, the CPL is silent as to Grand Jury minutes certification and it only contains two references to the recording of Grand Jury minutes. One is CPL 190.25 (3) which provides that a stenographer may be present during the proceedings other than deliberations and voting. The other is CPL 190.25 (6) which requires that the instruction concerning the law and the Grand Jury’s duties must be recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Misc. 2d 359, 551 N.Y.S.2d 742, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wright-nycrimct-1990.