Filed Date: 1/17/1977
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, rendered January 15, 1976, convicting him of murder in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. Judgment affirmed. No opinion. Hopkins, Acting P. J., Martuscello, Cohalan and Rabin, JJ., concur; Titone, J., dissents and votes to reverse the judgment and order a new trial, with the following memorandum: Defendant Thomas Cicchetti was convicted of murder in the second degree in the death of one Frank Nocera, who was also referred to at times during the trial as "Frankie Skid”, and of criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. He was accused of having inflicted fatal gunshot wounds upon Nocera during an altercation in a bar. In my opinion the conduct of the trial prosecutor throughout the trial was so prejudicial and outrageous as to render the resulting conviction a monstrous injustice. In People v Crimmins (36 NY2d 230, 238) the Court of Appeals, in discussing the right of an accused to a fair trial, set forth the following explicit caveat: "Not only the individual defendant but the public at large is entitled to assurance that there shall be full observance and enforcement of the cardinal right of a defendant to a fair trial. The appellate courts have an overriding responsibility, never to be eschewed or lightly to be laid aside, to give that assurance. So, if in any instance, an appellate court concludes that there has been * * * such misconduct of a prosecutor * * * or such other wrongs as to have operated to deny any individual defendant his fundamental right to a fair trial, the reviewing court must reverse the conviction and grant a new trial, quite without regard to any evaluation as to whether the errors contributed to the defendant’s conviction. The right to a fair trial is self-standing and proof of guilt, however overwhelming, can never be permitted to negate this right” (emphasis supplied). Those words were never more applicable than they are to the case at bar. The trial, from the prosecutor’s opening statement to the conclusion, was permeated with the prosecutor’s intemperate, prejudicial and inflammatory remarks: Contrary to the assertion of the People on this appeal, no remarks of defense counsel approached the insinuations and allegations made by the trial prosecutor. Typical of the prosecutor’s untoward conduct was a remark made in his opening statement that Nocera, shortly before he died, may have said something to another person "which is inadmissible so I won’t tell you about it.” During the trial and in his summation, he mentioned at least seven times that the victim had either one half or one third of a foot missing. While the condition of decedent’s foot may have certain probative value on the likelihood of his having been the aggressor in the melee, remarks about the foot, such as those contained in the following questions asked defendant by the prosecutor, were irrelevant, inflammatory and calculated to gain the jurors’ sympa