Speringo v. McLaughlin

202 F. Supp. 2d 178, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7443, 2002 WL 764627
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 25, 2002
Docket00 CIV. 7964(VM)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 202 F. Supp. 2d 178 (Speringo v. McLaughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speringo v. McLaughlin, 202 F. Supp. 2d 178, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7443, 2002 WL 764627 (S.D.N.Y. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

MARRERO, District Judge.

Petitioner Frank Speringo (“Speringo”), represented by counsel, filed a petition for habeas corpus for relief from his New York state conviction of manslaughter and third degree assault. The State of New *183 York (the “State”) opposed his petition. For the foregoing reasons, Speringo’s petition is denied.

I. BACKGROUND

Speringo was charged with second-degree murder and first-degree assault on October 25, 1996. The State’s case against Speringo was that on September 17, 1996, after drinking alcohol, Speringo, an off-duty New York City police officer, carried his loaded gun into a restaurant in the Bronx. There he continued to drink alcohol, precipitated a fight with Enrique Paulino (“Paulino”) and shot two other restaurant patrons. In that incident, Maria Rivas (“Rivas”) was fatally shot and Robert Castillo (“Castillo”) was wounded. On September 26, 1996, Speringo was convicted of lesser included charges: second-degree manslaughter and third-degree assault.

At trial, and over Speringo’s trial counsel’s (“Trial Counsel”) objections, the State introduced Section 105-01 of the Police Department’s Patrol Guide which provides that officers are authorized to carry guns while off-duty but are recommended not to carry them when the officer intends to drink alcoholic beverages (the “Patrol Guide”). (Trial Transcript (“Tr.”) at 428-29, 779-80.) The Court permitted its introduction as relevant to show whether Speringo had a conscious disregard for a known risk. (Tr. at 435.)

According to restaurant personnel who testified at trial, Speringo already had been drinking before he arrived at the restaurant between 4:80 and 5 a.m. on September 17, 1996, with Ramon Vargas (“Vargas”) and another man. Despite the restaurant’s rule against serving alcohol at that hour, the waitress served the group drinks perhaps because Speringo was a police officer. (Tr. at 281-83.) At neighboring tables sat Paulino and his companions. Although none knew the precise cause, Speringo subsequently started a fight with Paulino that resulted in the shooting of Rivas and Castillo, two other restaurant customers.

According to the testimony of three witnesses — Paulino, Carlos Sanchez (“Sanchez”) and Elvis Paulino (“Elvis”) — Sper-ingo first tripped Paulino as he passed Speringo’s table. Vargas diffused the situation by explaining that Speringo was merely drunk and the men shook hands. After that interaction, Speringo threw ice at Paulino. In response, Paulino approached Speringo to ask: “what’s wrong with him.” Speringo responded by grabbing Paulino’s shirt and the two fell down. (Tr. at 140.) Bystanders shouted warnings that Speringo was a cop and the men were separated by other customers, including Paulino’s companions. Indeed, it appeared that the crowd drew back from Speringo upon learning that he was a police officer. After the two were separated, Paulino looked down to straighten his shirt. When he looked up, Paulino saw Speringo pointing a gun at the head of Sanchez. (Tr. at 141, 319, 822.) Paulino grabbed Speringo’s arm, bent it upward, and the gun fired a shot that struck Rivas and Castillo. (Tr. at 141.) Paulino, with the aid of his brother Elvis and the restaurant’s manager, disarmed Speringo. The manager confiscated the gun. At that point Paulino and his friends left.

According to the State’s ballistics evidence, Rivas and Castillo were both hit by a single bullet. The bullet wounded Castillo in the arm before fatally wounding Rivas in the head. The ballistics report further indicated that the bullet removed from Rivas’s body was consistent with those fired from Speringo’s gun. (Tr. at 777-78.) Results of a fingerprint report were introduced at trial: seven latent fingerprints were found on Speringo’s gun *184 but only two could be used for identification purposes. (Tr. at 742.) Neither fingerprint matched Speringo’s. (Tr. at 729, 734.)

Speringo put on a defense. First, he testified and admitted to having had alcohol that night. (Tr. at 877, 883-84, 915.) He denied tripping or throwing ice at Pau-lino. (Tr. at 892.) He stated that Paulino approached him aggressively and grabbed Speringo’s shirt, causing him to slip off his chair. The two men fell to the floor. On the floor, Paulino hit Speringo a couple of times and Elvis kicked him. (Tr. at 892-94.) Also while he was on the floor, Sper-ingo’s shirt came undone and his gun was revealed. Paulino attempted to take the gun when Speringo pushed him off. Sper-ingo stood up carrying the gun with his finger on the safety guard. (Tr. at 894-98.) He was surrounded by Paulino, Elvis and their companions when Paulino grabbed at the gun and put his finger on the trigger. During the struggle between Speringo, Paulino and Sanchez, the gun went off. (Tr. at 899-400.) Speringo argued that he was not the one who killed Rivas or Castillo.

After the shooting, Speringo went to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. There was no evidence that he saw a doctor for treatment of injuries he suffered from the fight or to evaluate whether he was under the influence of alcohol. Trial Counsel introduced photographs of Speringo’s injuries taken at some point after the fight.

Robert Gianelli (“Gianelli”), executive officer of the New York City Police Department’s Special Operations Division, also appeared for the defense. Gianelli testified that, at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital several hours after the shooting, he met with Speringo and found him fit for police duty rather than inebriated.

Trial Counsel did not call Vargas as a witness. According to Speringo, Trial Counsel did not personally interview Vargas prior to making the decision not to call Vargas. However, Trial Counsel did have a private investigator working for the defense interview Vargas.

During summation, the State focused on the jury’s role in evaluating witness credibility. In that vein, the prosecutor commented on the “honesty and the decency” of the restaurant employees who testified. (Summ. at 30.) He opined on the interests and motivations of each witness, and vouched for the credibility of other witnesses called by the State (Summ. at 7, 38-40, 42, 52, 63-64). Finally, the prosecutor commented on Speringo’s testimony and credibility. (Summ. at 7, 67-95.) The jury returned a verdict on the lesser included charges.

Speringo filed a direct appeal raising four issues, whether: (1) testimony regarding the Patrol Guide concerning the carrying of weapons by officers who are off-duty, which provisions are precatory, was properly received into evidence; (2) the evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict; (3) the prosecutor’s summation constituted misconduct; and (4) the sentence was excessive. Of these direct appeal issues, Speringo raises only the first and third in his habeas petition.

On appeal, Speringo first argued that the Patrol Guide evidence should not have been introduced in a criminal prosecution to show a standard of conduct. (See De-fendanb-Appellant’s Brief, at 15-18 (relying on New York state law).) This error was not harmless, he reasoned, because “instead of focusing on what happened, the jury was told to focus instead on whether defendant violated an internal ‘rule.’ ” (Id. at 18.)

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Bluebook (online)
202 F. Supp. 2d 178, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7443, 2002 WL 764627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speringo-v-mclaughlin-nysd-2002.