Citation Numbers: 82 A.D.3d 1650, 921 N.Y.2d 420
Filed Date: 3/25/2011
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Memorandum: Defendant appeals from a judgment convicting him, after a bench trial, of three counts of aggravated criminal contempt (Penal Law § 215.52 [3]) and one count of aggravated harassment in the second degree (§ 240.30 [1] [a]), based upon evidence that he wrote a series of threatening letters to his ex-girlfriend, her mother, and his teenaged daughter. Contrary to the contention of defendant, County Court properly admitted in evidence additional letters to establish his identity as the author of the letters at issue (see generally People v Molineux, 168 NY 264, 293-294 [1901]). Defendant had previously pleaded guilty to criminal contempt on two occasions, admitting that he sent letters threatening one of the victims in this case. The People established the similarities between the letters in those cases and the ones at issue here, including their content, writing style, paper, and envelopes, and they also established that in all cases defendant had sent multiple, nearly identical letters on the same day. Thus, the People presented clear and convincing evidence that defendant committed the prior crimes by using a distinctive and unique modus operandi, which was sufficiently similar to the manner in which the crimes herein were committed to be probative of defendant’s identity as the perpetrator (see generally People v Mateo, 93 NY2d 327, 332 [1999]; People v Alvino, 71 NY2d 233, 242 [1987]; People v Robinson, 68 NY2d 541, 549-550 [1986]). Consequently, the court properly concluded that “ ‘the mere proof that the defendant had committed [the prior] similar act[s was] highly probative of the fact that he committed the one charged’ ” (People v Allweiss, 48 NY2d 40, 47-48 [1979], quoting People v Condon, 26 NY2d 139, 144 [1970]).
Viewing the evidence in light of the elements of the crimes in
Finally, the sentence is not unduly harsh or severe. Present— Smith, J.P, Fahey, Garni, Lindley and Gorski, JJ.