Filed Date: 8/23/2001
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
—Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Micki Scherer, J., at hearing; John Stackhouse, J., at jury trial and sentence), rendered February 24, 2000, convicting defendant of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree, and sentencing her, as a second felony offender, to a term of 4V2 to 9 years, unanimously affirmed.
The court properly determined that, during her cross-examination, defendant opened the door for limited inquiry into her prior New Jersey conviction by her testimony concerning her conversations with the arresting officers while out on bail, in which testimony she attempted to bolster her credibility and portray herself as an innocent person who was in the wrong place at the wrong time and was being victimized by the police. Defendant’s denial that there was anything more to one conversation with a Detective Hernandez opened the door for the People to further cross-examine her with respect to certain aspects of her claims which paralleled her statements concerning the New Jersey conviction, and for the detective to testify in rebuttal (see, People v Melendez, 55 NY2d 445, 451). According to the detective, in one of these conversations, defenr dant raised the New Jersey conviction, stating that she had taken the blame for someone else’s conduct. Such testimony was clearly relevant in that it permitted the jury to fairly as