Summary
In Banch, the Court of Appeals noted that when "the Rosario violation is not a complete failure to disclose the material but rather a delay in its disclosure[,]... reversal is not required unless the delay substantially prejudiced the defendant."
Summary of this case from Mayo v. HendersonOpinion
Argued October 16, 1992
Decided December 22, 1992
Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Second Judicial Department, Eugene P. Bambrick, J.
Henry R. Deutsch, New York City, and Philip L. Weinstein for appellant. Richard A. Brown, District Attorney of Queens County, Kew Gardens (Gary Fidel and Barbara D. Underwood of counsel), for respondent.
This appeal centers on the People's conceded failures, during a pretrial suppression hearing and again at trial, to provide defendant with several items of Rosario material. We conclude, for the reasons that follow, that there should be a new hearing and a new trial.
I.
Defendant was convicted, upon a jury verdict, of first degree manslaughter, attempted second degree murder and several related charges stemming from the shooting death of a woman on a Queens sidewalk, and the ensuing pursuit and capture of defendant by witnesses to the shooting. While being subdued, defendant wounded one of his captors, but was himself beaten on the head with an axe handle and shot in the leg.
Following his arrest and treatment for his wounds, defendant made several inculpatory statements. By pretrial motion, he unsuccessfully sought to suppress the statements on the ground that his severe injuries and sleep deprivation rendered the statements involuntary. The People's initial witness at the suppression hearing was Steven Toto, the first police officer to arrive at the scene, who found defendant scuffling with his captors and later arrested him. Officer Toto recovered a gun, holster and axe handle, and transported defendant to the site of the fatal shooting. There, defendant received first aid from an emergency medical technician before being taken to a hospital. After Toto's direct testimony at the suppression hearing, the prosecutor gave defense counsel Rosario material, including what he represented to be Officer Toto's memo book. At the conclusion of Toto's cross-examination and the testimony of other witnesses, the court ruled that defendant had knowingly and intelligently waived his rights, and denied suppression of the statements.
During Toto's subsequent trial testimony, however, it was discovered that the memo book was in fact not Officer Toto's. Defense counsel requested that Toto's trial testimony be stricken or a mistrial declared. When these applications were denied, defense counsel asked to reopen the suppression hearing so that he could cross-examine Officer Toto with the benefit of the correct memo book. The trial assistant opposed the request, stating that the wrong papers were provided "as a mistake" involving no bad faith by the prosecutor. He argued in addition that the contents of the memo book had no bearing on the issues involved in the suppression hearing. The application to reopen the hearing was denied and the trial continued.
Another trial witness, Detective Richard Sheridan, had also testified at the suppression hearing. At the hearing, he testified that he had several times over a four- or five-hour period administered Miranda warnings to defendant; that defendant's doctors had cleared him for questioning; and that he had witnessed successive statements made by defendant both at the hospital on the day of the crime and at the precinct the following day. It was not until Detective Sheridan testified at the trial, however, during defense counsel's cross-examination, that the People made available two affidavits in support of search warrants, which were prepared by Sheridan based in part on statements allegedly made by defendant. Again, the People did not dispute that the affidavits constituted Rosario material. They opposed defendant's motion for a new suppression hearing and a mistrial by asserting that defendant had not been prejudiced by their delay in disclosing the material. The court denied defendant's motions.
The People's apparent inattention to their disclosure obligation was further exposed during the trial testimony of Patrick Yella, a former Assistant District Attorney. Yella had conducted the videotaped interrogation that produced defendant's sixth inculpatory statement. The primary purpose of Yella's testimony was to lay the evidentiary foundation for the tape. He briefly described defendant's physical appearance, noting that defendant had stitches in his head, mouth and lips, and other wounds. He then identified the videotape, which bore his initials, as the one that had been prepared at the time of the interrogation. After the tape was played for the jury, defense counsel learned on cross-examination that the witness had prepared a report concerning his activities on that date.
Defense counsel noted that he hadn't kept a "score card" of police reports and other materials the District Attorney had failed to provide pursuant to his CPL 240.45 demand, but "I think it's becoming legend."
At a sidebar conference, defense counsel requested production of the report. The trial assistant asserted that he was not aware of the report and did not have it in his possession, but believed it could be found quickly. He was given a short recess to locate the document but was unsuccessful. Although he did not have the report and had never seen it, the trial assistant asserted that it constituted attorneys' work product and contained nothing more than the name of the detective assigned to the case and a notation that a statement had been taken from the defendant. Yella, however, added that the report he prepared "also reflects the entire homicide arrest, including the officer who was first upon the scene, the names and addresses of any witnesses who were talked to or things like that." It was prepared, he said, so that the Assistant District Attorney who would present the case to the Grand Jury "could keep track of all the evidence in the case." The court denied defendant's motion to strike the testimony of the witness Yella.
Defendant was convicted of first degree manslaughter and other charges and the Appellate Division affirmed. The court concluded that defendant was not prejudiced by the delay in disclosure of Officer Toto's memo book, and that Yella's report did not contain either the statements of witnesses or interview summaries drawn from statements of witnesses and qualified as work product not subject to disclosure under CPL 240.10 (2). A Judge of this Court granted defendant leave to appeal, and we now reverse.
II.
For more than 30 years, since our decision in People v Rosario ( 9 N.Y.2d 286), it has been a fundamental precept of this State's criminal jurisprudence that the People are obligated to give to the defendant, for use during cross-examination, any nonconfidential written or recorded statements of a prosecution witness that relate to the subject matter of the witness' testimony. Prior to Rosario, the defendant was entitled to see only those statements that, in the judgment of the trial court, contained matter that was inconsistent with the witness' testimony (see, People v Walsh, 262 N.Y. 140, 149).
We concluded in Rosario, however, that the potential impeachment value of a witness' prior statement could best be determined by the "single-minded counsel for the accused" (People v Rosario, supra, at 290) and that the trial court's evaluation was an inadequate substitute. That conclusion, based upon notions of fundamental fairness or, as we termed it in Rosario, "a right sense of justice" (id., at 289), was later endorsed by the Legislature, which codified the Rosario holding and imposed a reciprocal obligation on the defendant (see, CPL 240.45). Our extension of the principle to pretrial hearings (see, People v Malinsky, 15 N.Y.2d 86) was similarly codified (see, CPL 240.44).
The reasoning that spawned the Rosario rule led us also to eschew harmless error analysis in cases arising during direct appeal in which the defendant was deprived of Rosario material at trial (see, People v Jones, 70 N.Y.2d 547; People v Ranghelle, 69 N.Y.2d 56; People v Perez, 65 N.Y.2d 154; People v Consolazio, 40 N.Y.2d 446). Harmless error analysis in such cases would necessarily require weighing the potential impeachment value of the withheld material. An appellate court, however, is ordinarily no better equipped than the trial court to make such an evaluation, and it was the inadequacy of the trial court in that regard — as compared to single-minded counsel for the accused — that compelled the Rosario holding (see, People v Perez, 65 N.Y.2d, at 160, supra). Thus, where a defendant is deprived of Rosario material at trial, a new trial is required.
Underscoring the seriousness of the Rosario obligation, we have recognized only three exceptions to the rule of per se reversal. In cases arising on collateral review pursuant to CPL 440.10, after exhaustion of a defendant's direct appeal, a new trial is required only if the defendant can demonstrate "a reasonable possibility that the failure to disclose the Rosario material contributed to the verdict." (People v Jackson, 78 N.Y.2d 638, 649, on remittal NYLJ, June 16, 1992, at 37, col 3 [ordering new trial].) This exception is grounded in the public interest in the finality of judgments as expressed in CPL 440.10 (1) (f). That statute, under which such collateral claims arise, affords a remedy only upon a showing of prejudice (People v Jackson, supra, at 646).
The two features of Jackson that mandated a showing of prejudice — a statute so requiring and the public interest in the finality of judgments — are not present here, and thus any support the dissent would draw from Jackson is misplaced.
The second exception applies when Rosario material cannot be produced because it has been lost or destroyed (see, People v Martinez, 71 N.Y.2d 937; People v Haupt, 71 N.Y.2d 929). We have rejected the suggestion that the only alternative is dismissal of the charges (see, People v Haupt, supra, at 931). Instead, in such cases the trial court must try to determine the content of the missing material and the circumstances of the loss or destruction. Depending upon the degree of prosecutorial fault and the resulting prejudice to the defendant, the court must then impose an appropriate sanction — preclusion of the witness' testimony or an adverse inference charge, for example (see, People v Martinez, supra, at 940). Appellate review is limited to determining whether the trial court acted within the bounds of its discretion in selecting a sanction (see, People v Wallace, 76 N.Y.2d 953, 955; People v Martinez, supra, at 940). Dismissal of the charges is an extreme sanction which "should not be invoked where less severe measures can rectify the harm done by the loss" of the material (People v Kelly, 62 N.Y.2d 516, 521; see, People v Haupt, supra, at 931). On the other hand, where the People have failed to exercise due care in preserving Rosario material and the defendant is prejudiced by the loss or destruction, it is an abuse of discretion for the court to impose no sanction (People v Wallace, supra, at 955).
Finally, we have not applied the per se reversal rule in cases where the withheld material is the "duplicative equivalent" of material that was disclosed (see, People v Consolazio, 40 N.Y.2d, at 454, supra). In such cases, although a particular document may have been withheld, it cannot be said that the defendant was deprived of the impeachment value of its contents if the duplicative equivalent was made available. In those circumstances, the defendant in effect suffered no deprivation at all (compare, People v Young, 79 N.Y.2d 365, 370).
In addition to these exceptions to the per se reversal rule, we have recognized a separate category of cases in which the Rosario violation is not a complete failure to disclose the material but rather a delay in its disclosure. In such cases, reversal is not required unless the delay substantially prejudiced the defendant (see, People v Ranghelle, 69 N.Y.2d, at 63, supra; People v Perez, supra, at 159).
Against this background, we turn to the Rosario issues raised in the present case.
III.
Officer Toto's Memo Book
We first consider the People's production of the wrong memo book at the suppression hearing. The Appellate Division concluded that defendant deserved no remedy for this Rosario violation because, in the court's view, he was not prejudiced by the delayed disclosure.
Insofar as it concerns trial error, we find no fault in the Appellate Division's analysis. The mistake was discovered and corrected during a voir dire examination concerning the admission of physical evidence recovered by Toto. Thus, defense counsel had the benefit of the correct memo book for cross-examination of the witness at trial, and defendant has made no showing that his cross-examination was hampered by the untimely disclosure of the correct memo book.
Indeed, defendant does not now claim that this Rosario violation requires a new trial. Defendant does claim, however — and we agree — that his request to reopen the suppression hearing should have been granted and that, since the trial court failed to grant that relief, a new hearing must now be ordered.
There can be no doubt that defendant was entitled to have the correct memo book for use in cross-examination of Toto at the hearing (see, People v Malinsky, 15 N.Y.2d 86, supra). If the suppression hearing had been reopened as defendant requested when the mistake was discovered at trial, defendant would have had the opportunity to use the correct book in challenging Toto's hearing testimony. In that case, the Rosario violation would have amounted to a mere delay in disclosure and the appropriate inquiry would be whether defendant was substantially prejudiced by the delay (see, People v Ranghelle, 69 N.Y.2d 56, 63, supra). As it stands, however, defendant was never given the opportunity to cross-examine Toto's hearing testimony with the correct records. Accordingly, with respect to the hearing, the violation must be viewed as a complete deprivation of Rosario material.
The People, recognizing that such a violation is not ordinarily amenable to harmless error analysis, ask us to create a further exception to the per se reversal rule where the Rosario violation occurs at a pretrial suppression hearing rather than at a trial. This we decline to do.
As we have already held, a defendant is entitled to a new hearing as a remedy for a pretrial Rosario violation, without inquiry into prejudice. In Malinsky, the People failed to produce a detective's notes at a pretrial suppression hearing. Then-Judge Fuld (the author of Rosario) wrote for a unanimous Court: "In view of our decision in Rosario ( 9 N.Y.2d 286, supra), the judge presiding may not allow the People to keep from the defendants' counsel statements or notes made by a witness upon the ground that nothing in them could assist the defense or that no prejudice would result from withholding them." ( 15 N.Y.2d, at 90-91; emphasis added.) Accordingly, a new suppression hearing was ordered (id., at 91).
Moreover, the considerations that led us to adopt the per se rule when the People fail to turn over Rosario material in the context of a trial (see, e.g., People v Jones, 70 N.Y.2d 547, 552-553, supra; People v Perez, 65 N.Y.2d 154, 160, supra) apply equally when the defendant is deprived of such material at a pretrial suppression hearing. In either setting, "a judge's impartial determination as to what portions [of Rosario material] may be useful to the defense, is no substitute for the single-minded devotion of counsel for the accused" (People v Perez, supra, at 160) and "there is no way, short of speculation, of determining how it might have been used or how its denial to counsel might have damaged defendant's case." (People v Jones, supra, at 552.)
Furthermore, while there are certainly conceptual and procedural distinctions between suppression hearings and trials, none of those advanced by the People supply a basis for a different standard of appellate review. That the fact finder in a suppression hearing is a Judge, for example, does not improve the trial court's ability, or ours, to reconstruct what might have happened if the violation had not occurred. In short, the People have pointed to no distinctive feature of pretrial suppression hearings, and we perceive none, comparable to those that have justified a departure from the per se reversal rule in other contexts.
We find unworkable the rule advocated by the dissent, whereby a trial or appellate court should look at the trial testimony to gauge prejudice from the pretrial violation (dissenting opn, at 624-625). First, the witness whose statement was recorded in the unproduced Rosario material might not testify at trial. Even if the witness does testify, defense counsel might not use the witness' prior statements on cross-examination. Indeed, defendants seldom revisit suppression issues before the jury and usually have strong incentive not to; one of the primary reasons defendants are afforded pretrial hearings is that information prejudicial to the guilt determination may be elicited on a motion to suppress. Finally, even if the prior statement is used at trial, the differing functions of the two proceedings render it difficult to know whether counsel would have made the same use of the statement at a pretrial hearing. The dissent's approach inevitably would lead to undesirable collateral proceedings testing the identity of the issues at the hearing and trial and defendant's opportunity and incentive for making use of the unproduced Rosario material at trial.
We conclude, therefore, that in the circumstances before us defendant is entitled to a new suppression hearing. We note, however, that the remedy for a pretrial Rosario violation is not automatic reversal of the conviction but a new hearing. Retrial is necessary only if, after that hearing, the motion court concludes that defendant should prevail. Thus, contrary to the dissent, in the pretrial context there is even greater reason to adhere to our precedents eschewing harmless-error analysis: if prejudice from the Rosario violation is in fact trivial, the same result will obtain upon the new hearing and the conviction remains intact.
We order a new trial in this case only because of an independent trial Rosario violation.
Given this disposition, we need not separately address the People's additional Rosario violation with respect to Detective Sheridan.
The Yella Report
The report prepared by former Assistant District Attorney Yella, the People contend, was exempt from disclosure because it falls within the "attorneys' work product" exemption of CPL 240.10 (2). In criminal proceedings, CPL 240.10 (2) extends the exemption only "to the extent that [the material] contains the opinions, theories or conclusions of the prosecutor, defense counsel or members of their legal staffs."
Yella's report, according to the descriptions given by the trial assistant and by Yella himself, contained only factual matter — the names of witnesses and police officers involved in the investigation and the fact that defendant had made a statement. There is no suggestion that it contained an attorney's opinions, theories or conclusions. Accordingly, the report does not fall within the work product exemption.
Moreover, the Appellate Division's conclusion that the report was not subject to disclosure because it "contained neither the statements of witnesses nor interview summaries drawn from statements of witnesses" ( 174 A.D.2d 685, 686) ignores the fact that the author of the report was himself a witness. To the extent the report is a statement by Yella reflecting the activities about which he testified at trial, it constitutes Rosario material and should have been disclosed to defendant.
The People also contend, however, that because the report could not be located, it falls within the exception to the rule of per se reversal that we have recognized for material that has been lost or destroyed (see, People v Martinez, 71 N.Y.2d 937, supra). Thus, they would have us limit our review to considering whether it was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to refuse to strike Yella's testimony — the sanction sought by defendant. The record is insufficient, however, to sustain the People's claim.
The burden of establishing that Yella's report has been lost or destroyed and for explaining its disappearance falls on the People, who are thereby seeking to be excused from their obligation to disclose the material. Disclosure of witnesses' statements to facilitate effective cross-examination is a matter of basic fairness; the obligation should not be lightly treated or lightly excused.
In this case, the record reflects only that the material was not in the People's trial folder and that the trial assistant could not locate the report during a very brief trial recess. That is an insufficient basis for the People's current appellate claim that the report was lost or destroyed. Indeed, no such claim was even made at the trial: the trial assistant simply argued that the report was exempt from disclosure as work product. Accordingly, the trial court did not conduct the inquiry that is required when Rosario material is lost or destroyed — an inquiry into the contents of the material and the circumstances of its disappearance.
Inasmuch as the propriety of the sanction to be imposed depends on both the degree of prosecutorial fault and the resulting prejudice to the defendant, without such an inquiry the court cannot adequately exercise its discretion. Here, the trial court made some effort to discover the contents of the report, but owing to the People's position that the document was exempt from disclosure no findings were made as to the circumstances of its alleged loss or destruction.
Thus, because the record does not support the People's claim that Yella's report was lost or destroyed, and because no other exception applies, our per se reversal rule requires a new trial. The People, of course, are not precluded from establishing at the new trial, if they can, that the report has been lost or destroyed, in which case the court should determine an appropriate sanction.
IV.
The simple principle that underlies Rosario is that the ends of criminal justice are best served by full disclosure of the relevant facts. Neither the rules that have developed in the decades since Rosario nor their underlying principle were honored in the present case.
The dissent's plea for legislative reexamination prompts us to note that in this case the difficulty is not with the Rosario doctrine but with the People's seeming lack of care in discharging their discovery obligation. Whatever the requirement — whether one of open-file or more limited discovery — due care must be taken in gathering, identifying and producing documents; an appellate claim of lack of prejudice or loss or destruction is no substitute.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the case remitted to Supreme Court, Queens County, for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Counts one and nine of the indictment should be dismissed without prejudice to an application by the People for leave to resubmit to a Grand Jury the facts upon which those convictions were based (see, Matter of Anthony M., 63 N.Y.2d 270, 284; People v. Gonzalez, 61 N.Y.2d 633, 635; People v Mayo, 48 N.Y.2d 245, 253.)
Acting Chief Judge SIMONS and Judges TITONE, HANCOCK, JR., and SMITH concur with Judge KAYE; Judge BELLACOSA dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion.
Order reversed, etc.
My vote in this case is to affirm the order upholding the judgment of conviction, upon a jury verdict, for manslaughter in the first degree, attempted murder in the second degree and several other associated crimes. I disagree with the Court's application of the per se reversal and new suppression hearing remedy for the pretrial Rosario violation (People v Rosario, 9 N.Y.2d 286, rearg denied 9 N.Y.2d 908, cert denied 368 U.S. 866). This is not simply a refusal to create "another exception" to the per se remedy, but rather represents a new variety of expansion of that extreme remedy into the pretrial phase of the criminal adjudication process (contrast, People v Jackson, 78 N.Y.2d 638; People v Bin Wahad, 79 N.Y.2d 787).
Thus, while I would not conclude that the Sheridan and Yella instances constitute Rosario trial violations on this record meriting a new trial, I refrain from joining issue in those respects with the majority of the Court because only the pretrial Rosario aspect, with whose resolution, analysis and discussion, I thoroughly disagree, constitutes for me the crucial, new feature of this case.
A revisitation to the origins of the Rosario rule graphically portrays how far the pendulum has swung. In that seminal case, this Court held that the People must disclose all prior statements of its witnesses based on a "right sense of justice" (People v Rosario, 9 N.Y.2d, at 289, supra). The Court then affirmed a conviction for murder in the first degree, cautiously and wisely observing that:
"This court is exceeding[ly] slow to disregard error as harmless under section 542 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, particularly in a capital case. However, in the one before us, we are as convinced as judges may ever be, in view of the overwhelming proof of guilt and the absence of any real inconsistency between prior statement and trial testimony, that the jury would not have decided the case differently even if defense counsel had had the use of the statements in question. In other words, it may not be said that any substantial right of the appellant was prejudiced by the trial court's erroneous ruling" ( id., at 291).
That articulation and application by the Court, which created the Rosario rule, thus instructively reflected a respect for the common law and legislative mandates for proportionality. Decisions subsequent to Rosario continued, for a while, to apply Rosario's own harmless error proportionality (see, People v Hawa, 13 N.Y.2d 718; People v Fasano, 11 N.Y.2d 436, after remittitur 18 A.D.2d 1137, mod 14 N.Y.2d 43; People v Pereira, 11 N.Y.2d 784, cert denied 370 U.S. 962; People v Hernandez, 10 N.Y.2d 774, rearg denied 10 N.Y.2d 885, cert denied sub nom. Ramirez v New York, 369 U.S. 831; People v Turner, 10 N.Y.2d 839, cert denied 369 U.S. 807; People v Hurst, 10 N.Y.2d 939). With respect to Rosario trial errors, the new per se era dawned with People v Consolazio ( 40 N.Y.2d 446, cert denied 433 U.S. 914), People v Perez ( 65 N.Y.2d 154, after new trial 154 A.D.2d 485, lv denied 75 N.Y.2d 774), and, in my view, reached its nadir with People v Ranghelle ( 69 N.Y.2d 56), and People v Jones ( 70 N.Y.2d 547).
This tracing of the history leads me to the conclusion that the Court has strayed far from the course plotted and intended by the primary precedent, Rosario itself. This Court's premier purpose and strength, as a case-by-case common-law adjudicatory body, suffers when it increasingly surrenders its process to automatically triggered rubrics. To be sure, the Court should and does make precedential principles, but it does so incrementally, not by sweeping edicts which imitate legislative black-letter ukases. Individualized justice — Rosario's own "right sense of justice" — is abandoned in both the jurisprudential and practical sense by such per se nostrums. Instead, what emerges is an antithesis of a "right sense of justice" — per se-ness.
I believe it is persuasive, though not controlling, that the Court only recently and painstakingly explored and decided on policy grounds not to inject the per se remedy into the CPL article 440 postjudgment stream of criminal matters (People v Jackson, 78 N.Y.2d 638, supra). Distinct weighty reasons, including the historical perspective and empirical wisdom from repeated applications of the Rosario rule, warrant corresponding judicial forbearance from forcing this latest form of the per se remedy into pretrial phases of criminal proceedings.
While I agree that a pretrial Rosario violation occurred in this case when investigating Officer Toto's memo book was not turned over for cross-examination at the Huntley hearing, I note also that another police officer's book was mistakenly turned over and this miscue was not discovered — or revealed — by anyone, including defense counsel, at that time. Then, the correct cross-examination material was turned over to defense counsel at trial and was used to cross-examine Toto before the petit jury. Thus, the trial court was not left to speculate as to "what portions may [have been] useful to the defense" or how "single-minded" defense counsel might have used those portions at the pretrial violation stage (see, People v Perez, 65 N.Y.2d 154, 160, supra). Since defense counsel was able to use the materials to attempt to discredit the People's witness at trial, a record template exists for the trial court to fashion an appropriate on-the-spot remedy or for appellate courts to gauge the harm, if any, caused by the absence of the material at the pretrial proceedings (contra, majority opn, at 615). It therefore cannot be said, under these circumstances, that "there is no way, short of speculation, of determining how [the materials] might have been used or how [their] denial to counsel might have damaged defendant's case" (People v Jones, 70 N.Y.2d 547, 552, supra). Rather, courts in such instances have better than usual tools and methods to conduct an effective prejudice/harmless error analysis "weighing the potential impeachment value of the withheld material" (majority opn, at 615).
Further support for a more proportioned approach may also be found in a variety of this Court's precedents dealing distinctly with the pretrial versus trial dichotomy. In People v Chipp ( 75 N.Y.2d 327, cert denied 498 U.S. 833), this Court stressed that the claimed right of the defendant to call the complainant as a witness at the Wade hearing must be evaluated in light of defendant's ability "to examine the witness and explore issues relevant to identification at trial" (id., at 338). We further noted that "[a]ny improprieties in pretrial identification procedures can be investigated under the `time-honored process of cross-examination'" at trial (id., at 338, quoting Watkins v Sowders, 449 U.S. 341, 349). In People v Castillo ( 80 N.Y.2d 578 [decided today]), the Court states that "[t]he due process requirements for a hearing may be less elaborate and demanding than those at the trial proper" (id., at 582 [citations omitted for other such illustrations]; see also, People v Morales, 80 N.Y.2d 450, 457).
The balance of remedies approach supports a prejudice/harmless error analysis for whatever range of corrective action is contemplated where the focus of concern in the pretrial hearing — adequate cross-examination — is effectively reproduced at trial before the critical adjudicator of guilt or innocence — the jury. In this case, Toto's credibility was finally and fully explored and subjected to challenge with all required and relevant materials at the time when it really counted. That opportunity subsumes, at least in part, the failure to allow for the earlier exploration on pretrial cross-examination. While there is no full substitute for compliance in the earlier instance, neither is there justification to add another sweeping per se corrective remedy for a demonstrably unmeaningful pretrial Rosario lapse. To do so once again catapults the Rosario remedy into a paramount hierarchical ranking above all other kinds of procedural protections and violations (see, People v Jones, 70 N.Y.2d 547, 555, supra [concurring opn]).
The case before us deals with a pretrial hearing on the voluntariness of the defendant's admissions to the crimes charged. The determination of that question is made by the court alone at the pretrial stage, and then is reviewed again and may be resolved differently by the jury under the dictates of CPL 60.45 and CPL 710.70 (3) (see, People v Graham, 55 N.Y.2d 144). Thus, this additional procedural safeguard further warrants some proportionality in implementing the Rosario remedy in this circumstance because, apart from being able to assess possible harm against a record template, at least some of that harm, if any, based on the pretrial Rosario violation may be directly mitigated and addressed by defense counsel's use before the petit jury of the Rosario material. A proportionate remedy, short of a new hearing, may, for example, include informing the jury of the pretrial violation during the trial cross-examination and in the instructions to the jury. We have said in another, apt Rosario connection: "The determination of what is appropriate is committed to the trial court's sound discretion, and while the degree of prosecutorial fault may be considered, the court's attention should focus primarily on the overriding need to eliminate prejudice to the defendant." (People v Martinez, 71 N.Y.2d 937, 940.)
The urgency for the Legislature to act and remedy this situation cannot be overemphasized. Five years ago, in People v Jones ( 70 N.Y.2d 547, supra), I expressed a strongly held concern that: "The new per se error rule unavoidably plants an uncertainty into every tried criminal case. It is a law enforcer's nightmare and a perpetrator's delight. Insofar as the rule is not constitutionally rooted, I believe it would be useful for the Legislature to consider a specification in CPL 470.05 and article 240, especially CPL 240.20 and 240.45, overcoming the per se-ness of this exalted court-made rule" (id., at 557). That observation was, in part, premised on another perceived flaw:
"This relatively new absolute rule even blinks the legislative direction * * * that `[a]n appellate court must determine an appeal without regard to technical errors or defects which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties'. It must be supposed that the court overrides the statutory prescription by the fiat that all Rosario errors affect `substantial rights' because the court says so. Since the court is the final word, that may be so, even if it is also tautological. The finding in both courts below that the particular nondisclosure was truly harmless, merely duplicative and trivial, accents the extravagance of a per se rule made by a fallible institution which tolerates no imperfection in the law enforcement authorities whose conduct they govern. While the mission of the courts is to render justice, the `right sense of justice' referred to in Rosario itself implies an evenhandedness, not the imbalance created by a per se rule of this kind" (id., at 556-557).
United States Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson sagely admonished in an analogous context that applies as well to this Court: "[The Supreme Court is] not final because [it is] infallible, but [is] infallible only because [it is] final." (Brown v Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 540 [Jackson, J., concurring], reh denied 345 U.S. 946.)
Perhaps the Legislature agrees with this Court's toe-in-the-water per se probe in Consolazio, which has since cascaded into a full body immersion (People v Ranghelle, 69 N.Y.2d 56, supra; People v Perez, 65 N.Y.2d 154, supra; People v Jones, 70 N.Y.2d 547, supra; and majority opn herein). If so, the Legislature ought at least to harmonize the court-made rule that countermands the legislative direction to the courts to disregard "technical errors or defects" (CPL 470.05).
On the other hand, the Legislature might more comprehensively consider halting the wide swing of the Rosario pendulum and restoring it to a proper place of perspective and proportion. One way to accomplish this and effect a sensibly balanced remedy would be open-file pretrial discovery on the criminal side. New York prosecutors, long opposed to this reform, may at long last recognize the lesser price paid by society and victims from prosecutors opening their files to defense counsel in the pretrial discovery phase compared to risking the turmoil and uncertainty of the massive Rosario mine field in countless individual cases. In the end, such a modulated procedural reform would more surely bring about fairness for and less games-playing by both sides, and would definitively restore "a right sense of justice" as an antidote to the spreading threat of the per se virus.