Filed Date: 7/2/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
— Appeal by defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Queens County (Sharpe, J.), rendered July 9,1981, convicting him of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence. 11 Judgment reversed, on the law, and as a matter of discretion in the interest of justice, and new trial ordered. 11 Defendant and his two codefendants were jointly indicted and tried for ro,bbery in the first degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree. All three were acquitted of the robbery but convicted of the weapons charge based upon the recovery of a gun by the police from a paper bag which defendant was carrying at the time of his arrest. H At trial, the complainant testified that on July 22, 1980, at approximately 2:00 A.M., he was walking to a bar located on Queens Plaza when the three defendants announced a stickup and informed him that they all had guns. Defendant Baker pulled a gun out of the bag he was carrying and held it on the complainant, while the codefendants went through his pockets, taking seven dollar bills and change. The complainant also observed a “shiny object” in a bag codefendant Harmon was carrying. Immediately after the robbery, the complainant spotted two transit policemen, Police Officers John Ferrone and Eduardo Martinez, standing on the Queens Plaza train platform. He informed the officers that he had been robbed by three men with guns and pointed to the three defendants who were still in view walking along Queens Plaza. After commandeering a private vehicle, the officers and the complainant followed the trio. At the corner of a building located at the intersection of Queens Plaza and 22nd Street, Officers Ferrone and Martinez stopped the trio. H According to Officer Ferrone, he observed defendant carrying a paper bag and codefendant Lewis carrying a plastic bag. While the men were standing on the sidewalk adjacent to Queens Plaza, he ordered them to put the bags down and to get up against the wall of the building facing 22nd Street. At that moment, codefendant Harmon ran away with a third bag and the officer fired a shot at him. Officer Martinez directed a police emergency service truck, which was driving past, to pursue codefendant Harmon. Officer Martinez testified that while he and his partner were placing defendant Baker and codefendant Lewis up against the wall, he knocked a bag Baker was holding onto the ground, at a location behind the officer. After a search of defendant and codefendant Lewis did not uncover a gun, Officer Martinez asked the complainant, “I thought you said they had guns”. The complainant replied, “It’s here in the bag” and proceeded to pick up the bag which the officer had knocked out of Baker’s hand. Officer Martinez grabbed the bag out of the complainant’s hand and opened it. Inside the bag was a .38 caliber Smith and Wessen special. Thereafter, the police emergency service truck returned with codefendant Harmon. Both officers, over defense counsel’s objection, were permitted to testify that a knife was found inside the bag Harmon had possessed. H The defense at trial was that the complainant had falsely accused the defendants of robbery and had planted the gun in the paper bag in order to take revenge upon codefendant Harmon, with whom he had been involved in