Citation Numbers: 178 A.D.2d 665
Filed Date: 12/30/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/31/2024
— Appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Queens County (Calabretta, J.), rendered August 28, 1989, convicting her of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence.
Ordered that the judgment is reversed, on the law and as a matter of discretion in the interest of justice, and a new trial is ordered.
In the instant trial involving the defendant and the codefendant Allison Williams, it was incumbent upon the court to instruct the jury to consider the evidence of guilt or innocence separately as to each individual (CPL 300.10 [4]; People v Ortiz, 107 AD2d 824; People v Vasquez, 104 AD2d 429). In failing to do so, the court committed reversible error (People v Evans, 63 AD2d 653).
Reversal is additionally warranted based on numerous instances of prosecutorial misconduct consisting primarily of various comments made in summation which did not stay within the " 'four corners of the evidence’ ” (People v Ashwal, 39 NY2d 105, 109; Williams v Brooklyn El R. R. Co., 126 NY 96, 102). In this vein, the prosecutor submitted to the jury that the unfazed demeanor of the defendant’s 14-year-old daughter as she sat in the courtroom and listened to testimonial accounts of rampant drug selling in her apartment building was proof that her mother had exposed her to drug dealing in their apartment. Without any support in the record, the prosecutor also argued that it had been necessary for the defendant to sell drugs because she was no longer working on a full time basis and needed income to support herself and
In view of our decision, we do not reach the other issues raised by the defendant. Thompson, J. P., Bracken, Harwood and Copertino, JJ., concur.