The People v. John Giuca

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 2019
Docket38
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. John Giuca (The People v. John Giuca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. John Giuca, (N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 38 The People &c., Appellant, v. John Giuca, Respondent.

Leonard Joblove, for appellant. Mark A. Bederow, for respondent. National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, et al.; Center on the Administration of Criminal Law at New York University School of Law, amici curiae.

DiFIORE, Chief Judge:

The question presented in this appeal is whether the People violated their obligations

under Brady v Maryland (373 US 83 [1963]) by failing to disclose favorable impeachment

material derived from the circumstances of a prosecution witness’s pending burglary case

-1- -2- No. 38

and whether the People failed to correct false or misleading testimony provided by the

witness on that subject at trial. We hold that, to the extent there was any suppression of

impeachment material, there is no reasonable possibility that the verdict would have been

different if the information at issue had been disclosed.

In September 2005, defendant and his codefendant, Antonio Russo, were jointly

tried before dual juries for the murder of Mark Fisher. The prosecution proceeded on

theories of both intentional and felony murder. Relevant to this appeal, the majority of the

People’s witnesses, who were defendant’s friends, testified that defendant made a series of

incriminating statements, including that defendant believed the victim was “disrespecting”

his home, that he supplied codefendant Russo with a gun for the purpose of robbing Fisher,

that Russo intentionally shot and killed the victim, that defendant attempted to cover his

role in the felony murder by asking his friends not to cooperate with the police, and that

defendant arranged for the disposal of his gun after the crime.

In addition to defendant’s inculpatory statements, the evidence at trial established

that, after a night out in Manhattan, Fisher and several other individuals accompanied

defendant to his Brooklyn home, arriving at about 4:00 a.m. on October 12, 2003.

Thereafter, Russo accompanied Fisher to a nearby ATM where Fisher withdrew $20.

Shortly after the two men returned to defendant’s house, the gathering broke up and Fisher

went to sleep on defendant’s couch. At 6:40 am, Fisher was shot and killed. He was shot

five times with a .22 caliber weapon – the same caliber gun that defendant owned prior to

the shooting. Fisher’s body was found a few blocks from defendant’s house, on a

-2- -3- No. 38

distinctive blanket that defendant’s mother identified as one that came from her house. The

individual who disposed of the gun for defendant testified at trial that, a day or two after

the murder, defendant gave him a bag containing a black gun and, pursuant to an

arrangement made by defendant, another individual later took the bag in exchange for

money. Phone records were also introduced at trial, showing that defendant and Russo

placed an unusual volume of calls to each other in both the hours leading up to and the days

following the murder.

A different version of events was provided by a jailhouse informant, JA, who

testified that defendant made certain admissions to him while they were both incarcerated

on Rikers Island – including that defendant himself had participated in the robbery and

beating of the victim.

During JA’s direct testimony, the prosecutor elicited that the witness met defendant

while incarcerated on a burglary charge, that he had since pleaded guilty to third-degree

burglary and that he was sentenced to an 18- to 24-month drug treatment program. JA

testified that he had a 13-year history of drug abuse and “quite a lengthy criminal history”

dating back to 1989. The People elicited from JA his 15 individual prior convictions,

mostly for larcenous crimes. When asked how he was progressing in his current drug

program, JA responded that he was “doing good.” The ADA then asked JA if he had

relapsed during the drug program and he admitted to one relapse. JA denied that he ever

requested or received any promise or benefit in exchange for his trial testimony.

-3- -4- No. 38

On cross-examination, defense counsel elicited the following facts. JA entered the

drug treatment program on April 28, 2005, as part of a conditional sentence in exchange

for his guilty plea on his burglary case and that his next scheduled court appearance was

October 6, 2005 – after his trial testimony. In fact, JA’s negotiated guilty plea provided

that if he successfully completed the drug treatment program, his burglary case would be

dismissed, but if he failed the program, he faced a 3½- to 7-year prison term. JA had

committed several violations since entering the treatment program, including absconding

from the program on the night of June 9, 2005. Earlier that same day, JA had appeared in

treatment court, where the judge reminded him that he faced state prison if he failed the

drug program. On June 13th, police officers associated with defendant’s murder case

returned JA to the drug court on the warrant for absconding.1 JA, who testified that he

began cooperating with the police in June 2005, was not remanded after that violation. Nor

was he remanded after he tested positive for drugs on June 16th, or after two additional

violations (August 24th and September 2nd) – one of which was a second relapse. As JA

admitted, despite his violations of the treatment program conditions, the prosecutors did

not ask for bail. When questioned whether he thought this favorable outcome was related

to his discussions with the police on defendant’s case, JA rejected that suggestion.

1 In response to defense counsel’s request for Rosario material immediately following JA’s testimony, the ADA advised that she had been “present for all [of the police] interviews” with JA. This fact was not elicited before the jury by the prosecutor, likely in order to avoid any claim of improper bolstering of a prior consistent statement by the witness. -4- -5- No. 38

Defense counsel also elicited from JA that he was an admitted “career criminal”

and, as JA further agreed, if counsel were to go through the facts of all of his prior

convictions, “we’d be here until probably Sunday morning.” Counsel then cross-examined

JA as to his extensive criminal record, impeaching the witness when he attempted to

mitigate the serious nature of the underlying facts of certain convictions.

On redirect, JA clarified that, after he absconded on June 9th, he contacted his drug

counselor who (along with the police) walked him over to court, where his counselor and

“the DA” spoke with the judge. Although the trial prosecutor clarified that the judge

presiding in the witness’s drug court was not the judge presiding in defendant’s murder

case, she failed to identify herself as “the DA” who appeared in court with JA on the return

on the warrant. The witness also stated that he believed his drug counselor “got [him]

another shot.”

During the charge conference, defense counsel requested a jury instruction that JA

received consideration for his testimony as a matter of law. Counsel asserted that the

witness violated the terms of his initial guilty plea on five different occasions, including

leaving the drug program three times, and that the People’s failure to request bail in JA’s

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