The People v. Mark A. Hartle

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 2023
Docket17
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. Mark A. Hartle (The People v. Mark A. Hartle) 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. Mark A. Hartle, (N.Y. 2023).

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. 17 The People &c., Respondent, v. Mark A. Hartle, Appellant.

John A. Cirando, for appellant. Matthew L. Peabody, for respondent.

GARCIA, J.:

Defendant, convicted by a jury of multiple counts of rape and sexual abuse of a

fifteen-year-old victim and sentenced to 54 years in prison, asks this Court to deem the

summary denial of his motion to vacate his conviction an abuse of discretion. Because the

evidence proffered by defendant as “newly discovered” consists of incriminating text -1- -2- No. 17

messages and explicit photographs exchanged with the victim that defendant deleted before

his arrest and never sought to retrieve before trial, we decline to do so and affirm the

summary denial of defendant’s CPL 440 motion.

Defendant, 50 years old at the time, was charged in a 31-count indictment with rape

and other sex crimes after the 15-year-old daughter of defendant’s close friend accused him

of raping her repeatedly over several months in 2014. When defendant was arrested, the

police secured his cell phone and kept the phone through the end of trial. The police also

performed a forensic examination of the victim’s cell phone and provided the results,

including more than 1200 text messages, to defendant. No exchanges with defendant were

recovered. Although defendant and his counsel engaged in extensive pretrial litigation,

they never sought to inspect either the victim’s cell phone or defendant’s cell phone, never

informed the People of any relevant evidence on either phone, never filed a motion to

compel the production of cell phone evidence, and never issued a subpoena to defendant’s

cell phone service provider.

The People and defendant’s counsel engaged in plea negotiations, and the People

ultimately offered defendant a plea bargain pursuant to which he would receive a five-year

sentence in exchange for a guilty plea to one count of first-degree sexual abuse. Defendant

rejected this offer and proceeded to trial, where the defense theory was that no sexual

contact occurred. The victim testified and defense counsel conducted a thorough cross-

examination. Defense counsel made ample use of the evidence obtained from the victim’s

cell phone during this examination, referring to text messages she exchanged with her

brother and a close friend and using these messages to question the victim about why she

-2- -3- No. 17

did not inform anyone of defendant’s alleged conduct at the time the incidents occurred.

Defense counsel did not ask the victim whether she and defendant exchanged any text

messages or photographs or whether she had deleted any such communications.

Defendant called no witnesses.

At the close of the People’s case, the trial court dismissed two counts of criminal

sexual act in the first degree in response to defendant’s motion arguing that the People had

failed to prove forcible compulsion. During summation, defense counsel argued that “there

was no corroboration” for the victim’s allegations and that her testimony was “the story of

an unsophisticated person trying to deceive.” The jury convicted defendant on all

remaining counts. Defendant was sentenced to 54 years of imprisonment to be followed

by 10 years of post-release supervision, which was later reduced to 42 years and ten months

to 50 years pursuant to statute. Defendant appealed, and the Appellate Division affirmed

his conviction (People v Hartle, 159 AD3d 1149 [3d Dept 2018]). A Judge of this Court

denied leave to appeal (31 NY3d 1082 [2018]).

Several years later, defendant moved to vacate his conviction pursuant to CPL

440.10 on two grounds, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel and the discovery of new

evidence. Defendant’s new evidence claim was based on the recovery of previously

deleted text messages and photographs obtained through a forensic retrieval process, called

“rooting,” that he asserted was not available at the time of trial. Defendant submitted a

letter from appellate counsel, affirmed by trial counsel, stating that at the time of trial, no

photographs or messages between defendant and the victim were found on the victim’s

phone, and so trial counsel’s “belief was that if any photographs or messages [had] been

-3- -4- No. 17

on the cellphone they had to have been deleted” and that “neither [attorney] knew of any

type of technology that would be able to retrieve such deleted information.” Defendant

also submitted affidavits and reports from a specialist in “the forensic examination of

digital services,” describing his unsuccessful attempts in 2017 to perform the rooting

procedure of defendant’s cell phone to recover the deleted evidence and his ultimate

successful completion of the rooting procedure following an update to the software in 2018.

Defendant included an affidavit from his mother describing conversations she had with

Verizon, defendant’s cell phone service provider, attempting to obtain the deleted

messages.

During a conference before County Court regarding defendant’s motion, after the

People asked defendant for additional materials in advance of their responsive papers,

defense counsel suggested that he was entitled to examine the victim’s phone. County

Court echoed counsel’s interest in understanding the scope of evidence on the victim’s

phone and suggested that the People contact the victim to ask her about the recovered

messages and why they did not appear on her phone. The People declined to do so, later

explaining that they bear no burden on a CPL 440 motion and “it’s not our practice on a

440 collateral attack to contact a child victim and cross-examine them.”1

1 The dissent’s assertion that defendant was entitled to a hearing merely because “the victim’s cell phone was never produced for forensic examination by the defense” is incorrect (dissenting op at 9 n 4). Before trial, defendant was provided with a copy of the entire contents of defendant’s phone. Defendant never requested to inspect the phone before trial. Defendant’s filing of a CPL 440 motion did not entitle him to access the victim’s phone years after his conviction. The dissent’s suggestion that it does is indeed a “burden of production contrary to the statutory language” (dissenting op at 2). -4- -5- No. 17

County Court subsequently denied defendant’s motion without a hearing (People v

Hartle, 64 Misc 3d 1233[A], 2019 NY Slip Op 51395[U] [County Ct, St Lawrence County

2019]). The court rejected defendant’s claim of newly discovered evidence, explaining

that the letter “affirmed by trial counsel is conclusory in nature and fails to demonstrate

due diligence on trial counsel’s part to confirm that retrieval of the deleted media was truly

not possible at the time of trial in 2015,” that the expert affidavit and report “are similarly

flawed, as they fail to address efforts made at retrieval during the time of trial,” and that

“there is no indication that trial counsel made effort[s] to obtain the material from

defendant’s cell phone service provider” (id. at *3). Moreover, County Court rejected the

“portrayal of the recovered photographs and text messages as newly discovered evidence”

because defendant “knew that the media existed prior to trial,” “he actively endeavored to

delete the evidence from his cell phone,” and “was part and parcel to the exchange, and, as

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