Court Opinion

ID: 6028532
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-13 12:35:45.683449+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:51:07.355479
License: Public Domain

Nardelli, J.,
concurs in a memorandum as follows: I agree with the conclusion of the majority that the hearing court properly denied defendant’s motion to suppress on the merits. I also agree that the People’s renunciation of the statutory presumption did not warrant dismissal of the indictment and that by pleading guilty defendant waived his present challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence before the Grand Jury. However, I do not agree with defendant that the hearing court should not have permitted the prosecution to renounce reliance upon the statutory automobile presumption (Penal Law § 265.15 [3]) for the first time after the close of the suppression hearing.
The People’s decision to waive the presumption was simply a tactical one. At the hearing, there was testimony from the cab driver that he actually observed the defendant enter the cab with the weapons. Accordingly, the People could have noted that defendant had no automatic standing since the additional evidence supported the charge without the use of the statutory presumption. Instead, they forthrightly disclaimed use of the presumption, which actually weakened their case. We must *659not forget that if defendant had not pleaded guilty, upon the trial of the action, the People would have been bound by their waiver of the presumption that defendant, as an occupant of the automobile, possessed weapons found in the automobile. Thus, the People chose a course in which they had to prove “actual” possession by the testimony of the cab driver. This tactical choice made by the prosecutor a year after the Grand Jury presentation did not invalidate the evidence the Grand Jury had heard. Nor did it somehow deceive the Grand Jury. When the evidence was presented to the Grand Jury, the prosecutor was relying on the presumption and defendant does not show or even allege that there was a plan, conscious or otherwise, to disavow such presumption.