Opinion
May 11, 1995
Appeal from the Supreme Court, New York County (Rena Uviller, J.).
The victim, who recognized defendant from the neighborhood, immediately made a 911 call to the police, as he did when he saw defendant on two subsequent occasions. As a result of routine police procedure, the three 911 tapes were destroyed 90 days after the transmission, though Sprint reports were found for two of the calls. Prior to trial, when defendant indicated that he would pursue a defense of misidentification, the court indicated that as a sanction for the loss of Rosario material, it would preclude any testimony concerning the contents of the 911 calls or the contents of the Sprint reports, but would permit the People to use the Sprint reports to show that two 911 calls were made. As for the 911 call for which no Sprint report was found, as an additional sanction, the court indicated that it would give an adverse inference instruction. Arguing that identification would be sharply challenged in this single witness identification case, counsel contended that any sanction short of outright preclusion of any reference to 911 calls would be inadequate.
However, at trial, the defense strategy changed, defendant conceding identification but now claiming that the encounter was a tryst and that no robbery had occurred. As such, the destroyed 911 tapes lost the significance that defendant initially contended they had. In any event, the choice of partial preclusion as a sanction was a proper exercise of discretion. Dismissal is an extreme sanction rarely invoked (People v Banch, 80 N.Y.2d 610, 616), and would have been especially inappropriate here since the destruction of the 911 tapes was not intended to frustrate the defendant's ability to conduct cross-examination (People v Paranzino, 40 N.Y.2d 1005), and since the fact of the 911 calls was established by the Sprint reports. Defendant's challenge to the loss of an officer's scratch sheets recording identification evidence is not preserved for appellate review, since defendant explicitly abandoned such challenge when he altered his defense strategy and made no further requests for sanctions (People v Rogelio, 79 N.Y.2d 843).
Concur — Ross, J.P., Nardelli, Williams, Tom and Mazzarelli, JJ.