Filed Date: 5/31/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (George B. Daniels, J), rendered September 9, 1997, convicting defendant, after a jury trial, of murder in the second degree, and sentencing him to a term of 25 years to life, unanimously affirmed.
The court properly denied defendant’s motion to suppress his statements to police. His initial questioning was not custodial and did not require Miranda warnings (see Oregon v Mathiason, 429 US 492, 495 [1977]). The test of whether an interrogation is custodial is what a reasonable person in the defendant’s position, innocent of any crime, would have thought (People v Yukl, 25 NY2d 585, 589 [1969]; see also Thompson v Keohane, 516 US 99, 112 [1995]). Here, defendant voluntarily went to the police
The court also properly denied defendant’s motion to suppress the lineup identifications. Even if any of the police questioning of defendant had been unlawful, the lineups were not the product of such questioning, but were the result of other evidence already in the possession of the police.
At trial, the court properly denied defendant’s request to admit an allegedly exculpatory hearsay statement into evidence. The only portion of the statement that was arguably against the declarant’s penal interest, and therefore admissible on that theory (see People v Geoghegan, 51 NY2d 45, 49 [1980]; People v Maerling, 46 NY2d 289, 298 [1978]), was irrelevant to the crime charged. The failure to admit this evidence did not deprive defendant of his constitutional right to present a defense (see People v Robinson, 89 NY2d 648, 654-657 [1997]), since the hearsay statement lacked any indicia of reliability and was not material, in that it would have required the jury to engage in a good deal of speculation to connect the events recounted in the statement to the crime charged. Concur—Andrias, J.P., Friedman, Marlow, Nardelli and Williams, JJ.