1 No. 15
The People &c.,
Respondent, v. Alan Kassebaum,
Appellant.
2001 NY Int. 17
February 15, 2001
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
Paul Liu, for appellant. Sandra E. Cavazos, for respondent.
GRAFFEO, J.:
In this case, we address whether a New York criminal
court exceeded the bounds of territorial jurisdiction conferred
under Criminal Procedure Law 20.20. For the reasons that follow,
we find that defendant was properly prosecuted in New York for
attempted possession of a controlled substance in the first
degree based on the significant conduct that occurred in this
State for an attempt offense effectuated when defendant and his
accomplices were offered heroin and tested samples of the
narcotic in a neighboring State. At trial, the People offered evidence that defendant
was a member of a conspiracy to procure heroin for sale in New
York and that defendant and his accomplices were guilty of
attempted criminal possession of a controlled substance based on
a series of events that commenced in New York and concluded with
the arrest of defendant and two accomplices in Massachusetts.
Although the jury found defendant guilty of both conspiracy in
the second degree and attempted criminal possession of a
controlled substance in the first degree, on appeal defendant
challenges New York's exercise of territorial jurisdiction over
the latter offense only. Evidence was adduced that the leader of the conspiracy
was Salvatore Lombardi, a resident of Brooklyn, and that other
participants included Rita Bologna, Michael Booth, Joseph Viola
and defendant. Through wiretap surveillance of the telephone
line to Lombardi's residence in January 1992, law enforcement
authorities discovered that Lombardi was raising $120,000 to pay
a courier fee to obtain a large quantity of heroin. Lombardi's
intercepted conversations cryptically identified the various
players in the proposed heroin exchange, including defendant -- a
pharmacologist referred to as the professor. The People
theorized that defendant's role in the enterprise was to test the
purity of the heroin. On January 20, 1992, Lombardi and another individual
discussed defendant's availability for a contract Lombardi
wished to assign him and, upon receiving a telephone call
advising that defendant had been located, Lombardi summoned
defendant to his home. Thereafter, Bologna used Lombardi's
telephone to make airline reservations for three men to fly at
8:00 P.M. that evening to Boston, all under the surname
Coppolecchia. Law enforcement authorities observed defendant,
Booth and Viola board the flight and, at the request of New York
investigators, Massachusetts state troopers followed the
activities of the three men once they arrived in Boston. After
registering at the airport's Hilton Hotel under aliases, they
were seen entering and leaving each other's rooms during the next
24 hours. Using wiretap surveillance, authorities learned that
Lombardi telephoned a woman in Florida from his Brooklyn
residence at 7:25 A.M. on January 21 and informed her that he was
departing to perform a fast * * * up and down job in Boston but
planned to return home before dinner. Bologna also placed a call
from the Lombardi residence, indicating she was taking a day trip
but could not divulge the reason for the excursion. From his home in Brooklyn, Lombardi then telephoned
Viola in Boston and inquired whether the men had made contact
with the drug courier. When Viola stated the connection had not
yet been accomplished, Lombardi asserted that he would page the
individual himself and indicated he was bringing the thing to
Boston that day, a reference which the People maintained was to
the $120,000 courier fee. Later that day, Lombardi arrived in Boston with Bologna
and met with the men at the hotel, remaining a total of 15 to 20
minutes. Undercover officers saw Bologna in the lobby restaurant
during this time interval. As he departed Booth's hotel room,
Lombardi was overheard commenting that he expected to be home at
about 9:00 P.M. that night. At 9:30 P.M., Lombardi paged Special Agent Ganem, an
undercover officer with the United States Drug Enforcement
Agency, who was posing as the Lebanese drug courier with whom the
group was negotiating the heroin exchange. Ganem returned
Lombardi's call using the telephone number displayed on his
pager, which was the number for a Brooklyn restaurant that
Lombardi frequented. During this conversation, Lombardi directed
Ganem to contact Viola at the Hilton to arrange the sale,
indicating Viola was registered at the hotel under the name of
Frank Coppolecchia. Ganem did as he was instructed and, in the
course of his conversation with Viola, agreed to call him in the
morning to arrange the meeting. Viola also expressed a need to
change hotels. Hence, at 10:40 A.M. the following morning,
Viola, Booth and defendant checked out of the Hilton and
registered as guests at a nearby Ramada Inn. Ganem and Viola
scheduled the heroin exchange for 12:30 P.M. that day at the
Ramada Inn.
New York law enforcement officers recorded a telephone
conversation via the wiretap of Lombardi's Brooklyn residence at
11:18 A.M. on January 22 in which Viola advised Lombardi of the
time and location of the meeting. Lombardi directed Viola to
call him after the exchange and indicated that all he needed to
say was: I'm on my way home. Less than an hour later, wearing
a transmitting device, Ganem met Viola in the lobby of the Ramada
Inn and the two men proceeded to Viola's room. Telling Ganem to
wait for him, Viola went to defendant's room, retrieved a green
and red paper bag, and returned to Ganem to display the contents
of the bag _- $120,000 in cash. Ganem then retrieved the drugs
from a vehicle in the parking lot, returning immediately to
Viola's room where he exhibited several packages containing, in
the aggregate, approximately 3.5 kilograms (more than seven
pounds) of heroin. Viola declared his intent to return to New
York that night with the heroin, hoping that he and Ganem could
do a lot of dealing in the future. Indicating the drugs would
be sold in New York City directly to narcotics users, Viola
suggested he and his friends were in a position to buy as much
heroin as Ganem's contacts could supply. Viola removed small samples of the drugs from each
package and left with the money and the samples, claiming he
would return after the purity of the heroin had been tested. A
few minutes later, Viola reappeared, visibly upset, announcing to
Ganem that he had seen someone suspicious in the hotel stairwell.
At trial, one of the plainclothes officers involved in the Boston
surveillance effort testified that he accidentally encountered
Viola in the stairwell. After receiving assurances from Ganem that he had not
been accompanied by anyone, Viola again left his hotel room and
went to defendant's room, which was located on a different floor
of the hotel. About twenty minutes later, Viola rejoined Ganem
and terminated the deal on the basis that the heroin had been
tested but was of insufficient purity. He referred to two tests
that had been performed, an acid and a burn or temperature
test, claiming the narcotic had failed both. Although the
transaction was cancelled, Viola told Ganem he would call him
later that evening from New York. Soon thereafter, defendant, Booth and Viola checked out
of the hotel and boarded a courtesy van destined for the airport.
When they alighted at an airport terminal, they were arrested.
Defendant was carrying $80,000 in cash; Booth and Viola had
$20,000 each. In addition, Booth was found in possession of an
electric burner, coffee pot, thermometer, copper wire and other
materials that could be used to test the purity of heroin. Two
containers of mineral oil of a type that could be used for heroin
testing were found in the hotel room vacated by defendant. Criminal proceedings were commenced against Lombardi,
Bologna, Booth, Viola and defendant in New York Supreme Court.
Each of his codefendants pleaded guilty, but defendant proceeded
to a jury trial. In addition to evidence of the events
articulated above, the People admitted portions of Booth's plea
allocution in which he acknowledged that, had the events gone as
planned, the heroin was to be transported to New York City. In response to defendant's pre-trial assertion that the
prosecution was acting in excess of this State's territorial
jurisdiction under CPL 20.20, the People relied on three
provisions of the statute, CPL 20.20(1)(a), 20.20(2)(b) and
20.20(2)(c), to establish jurisdictional authority.[1]
Consistent
with People v McLaughlin (, 80 NY2d 466), these bases for
jurisdiction were submitted to the jury, which was directed that
defendant could be convicted only if the People established
jurisdiction beyond a reasonable doubt. As evidenced by a
verdict sheet which defendant challenges on appeal, the jury
found defendant was properly prosecuted in New York under each of
the People's theories, and convicted him of conspiracy in the
second degree and attempted criminal possession of a controlled
substance in the first degree. The Appellate Division affirmed
the conviction, as do we. Historically, under the common law, the only State that
could exercise jurisdiction over a felony offense was the State
where the felony was completed (see, People v Werblow, 241 NY 55,
60). Recognizing this common-law territorial principle as the
foundation of our jurisprudence, we have acknowledged that it
has been supplanted by State statutes broadening the territorial
scope of criminal jurisdiction (People v Stokes, , 88 NY2d 618,
624). In New York, the relevant statute is CPL 20.20 which has
generally codified the rule that, for the State to have criminal
jurisdiction, either the alleged conduct or some consequence of
it must have occurred within the State (People v McLaughlin,
supra, 80 NY2d, at 471). In this case, we must venture beyond this basic
articulation of the statute to construe its particular terms,
beginning with the People's first theory of jurisdiction
predicated on CPL 20.20(1)(a), which provides that
a person may be convicted in the
criminal courts of this state of an
offense defined by the laws of this
state, committed either by his own
conduct or by the conduct of
another for which he is legally
accountable pursuant to section
20.00 of the penal law, when:
1. Conduct occurred within this
state sufficient to establish:
(a) An element of such offense.
Interpreting this provision in People v Stokes, we held that New
York properly exercised jurisdiction over a felony murder
prosecution where the death occurred in New York but the
underlying felony was committed in Connecticut, reasoning that
the death of a nonparticipant in the robbery constituted an
element of the offense. Under Stokes, it is clear that our
analysis must begin with a review of the elements of the offense
at issue -_ attempted criminal possession of a controlled
substance in the first degree. Under Penal Law § 110.00, [a] person is guilty of an
attempt to commit a crime when, with intent to commit a crime, he
[or she] engages in conduct which tends to effect the commission
of such crime. We have construed this provision as requiring
proof that defendant engaged in conduct that came dangerously
near commission of the completed crime (see, People v Acosta, , 80 NY2d 665, 670; People v Mahboubian, , 74 NY2d 174, 191; People v
Warren, , 66 NY2d 831, 832). A person is guilty of criminal
possession of a controlled substance in the first degree when he
or she knowingly and unlawfully possesses four or more ounces of
a narcotic drug (see, Penal Law § 220.21[1]). Reading these
statutes in tandem, the People were obliged to establish that
defendant and his accomplices intended to obtain a quantity of
heroin exceeding four ounces and that they came very near
accomplishing this objective. In People v Acosta, we held that a person who arranges
for the delivery of drugs and actually examines them has come
sufficiently close to the completed crime to qualify as an
attempt (supra, 80 NY2d, at 671). Similar to the facts in
Acosta, the jury credited proof in this case that defendant and
his accomplices had sufficient funds to pay the $120,000 courier
fee necessary to acquire the more than seven pounds of heroin,
and that they had been presented with and examined this quantity
of narcotics before declining to complete the transaction due to
the alleged inferior quality of the heroin. Accordingly, there
is no doubt that, had the events occurred entirely within the
State of New York, the People offered sufficient evidence to
support defendant's conviction of the attempted possession
offense. The issue under CPL 20.20(1)(a) is whether the People
established that defendant and his accomplices engaged in conduct
within New York sufficient to establish an element of attempted
criminal possession of a controlled substance as required by the
statute. The People argue this jurisdictional predicate was met
by the offer of proof of conduct in New York which manifested an
intent to commit the crime. In particular, the People rely on
evidence that the plan to purchase the drugs was formed in New
York City by New York residents who intended to immediately
return to this State so the heroin could be sold to narcotics
users in New York City. The actions taken in New York which
manifested this intent included collecting the $120,000 courier
fee necessary to complete the transaction, soliciting defendant
to accompany Booth and Viola to Boston, making travel
arrangements for defendant, Viola and Booth to meet the courier
in Boston, and Lombardi's continuing and repeated efforts in New
York to direct the activities both of Ganem and of defendant and
the other accomplices during their sojourn in Boston. This proof
went beyond mere thoughts or plans which would not meet the
provision's conduct requirement; rather, the People's intent
evidence was in the form of concrete actions of the participants
toward accomplishing the purchase of drugs with the intent to
possess them in New York. As such, we find the People offered
sufficient proof of conduct within New York establishing an
element of the attempted possession offense, namely defendants'
intent to possess more than four ounces of a narcotic drug for
eventual sale in New York. Defendant contends, relying on People v Cullen (, 50 NY2d 168), that any manifestations of intent that preceded the moment
when Viola and Ganem were in the hotel room with both the money
and the heroin planning to complete the transaction are
irrelevant because the mens rea and actus reus elements of the
offense must be present simultaneously. Asserting that the
People failed to demonstrate any manifestations of intent in New
York at that precise moment, defendant maintains New York was
without jurisdiction to prosecute the offense. We disagree. We take issue with defendant's premise that there was a
lack of proof of simultaneous mens rea in New York (intent to
possess heroin in New York) and actus reus in Boston (the meeting
in the hotel room with all of the components necessary to
complete the possession offense). Under New York's concept of
accomplice liability, any defendant possessing the requisite
mental state is chargeable with the conduct of an accomplice
(see, Penal Law § 20.00) and, pursuant to the plain language of
CPL 20.20(1)(a), jurisdiction over all defendants may be
predicated on the conduct of an accomplice within New York.
Defendant and the other accomplices may, therefore, be held
criminally liable for Lombardi's conduct in New York which,
within the hour preceding the meeting, included contacting Viola
and directing the actions of the participants. There is no basis
to conclude Lombardi abandoned the criminal enterprise before
Ganem and Viola met in the hotel room _- in fact, he arranged
with Viola to receive a call after the exchange. Thus, we
conclude that the People offered proof from which the jury could
infer that the mens rea and actus reus elements essential to the
crime of attempted possession co-existed in both jurisdictions,
providing a basis for prosecution in New York.
Defendant's reliance on Cullen is misplaced because
none of the individuals held criminally accountable in Cullen
were present in the prosecuting jurisdiction when the offense was
consummated. In addition, Cullen stands for the proposition that
a defendant does not manifest the knowledge element necessary for
criminal possession of a controlled substance until he or she
takes possession of the narcotic. This holding does not
necessarily apply to an attempt offense which requires proof of a
different mensrea - - the intent to accomplish a criminal
objective. Here, proof was offered that defendants engaged in
substantial conduct in New York that manifested an intent to
obtain heroin and return with it to New York. Standing alone,
this conduct did not rise to a level sufficient to support
criminal prosecution for attempted possession of a controlled
substance because defendants' conduct did not constitute an
attempt until the meeting in the Boston hotel room when
defendants' conduct came dangerously near criminal possession
of heroin (see, People v Acosta, supra, , 80 NY2d 665).
Nonetheless, the conduct committed in New York evidenced
defendant's intent sufficiently to establish the jurisdictional
predicate underlying the prosecution under the CPL 20.20(1)(a)
element requirement. This conclusion is consistent with People v Guidice
where, interpreting a provision which contains language identical
to that in CPL 20.20(1)(a), we held that venue was established in
New York County over the prosecution of all codefendants involved
in an assault that occurred elsewhere based on evidence that one
of the defendants formulated the intent to commit assault in New
York County, having directed the activities of others from that
location (83 2 630, 636). Defendant urges us not to rely on
Guidice because it involved venue rather than territorial
jurisdiction. We acknowledge that it is clear from comparison of
the venue and territorial jurisdiction statutes that the
legislature intended venue to extend more broadly than
territorial jurisdiction (compare CPL 20.20 with 20.40; see,
People v McLaughlin, supra, 80 NY2d, at 471 [The distinct
conceptual differences between venue and territorial jurisdiction
and their different jurisprudential purposes make it virtually
impossible to equate the two]). Recognition of distinctions
between the statutes as a whole, however, does not necessarily
compel that we interpret identical language in discrete
provisions differently. While our review in this case does not
rest entirely on Guidice, this precedent construing the plain
language of the element requirement common to both statutes
lends additional support to our conclusion that defendant's
jurisdictional claim lacks merit.
In sum, we find that the People offered evidence from
which the jury could reasonably infer that the CPL 20.20(1)(a)
element requirement was met beyond a reasonable doubt, thereby
establishing a basis for prosecution in New York. In view of
this holding, we need not address whether the exercise of
jurisdiction was also proper under CPL 20.20(2)(b) or (2)(c) _-
the other two theories submitted to the jury. Defendant's remaining argument, that reversal is
warranted due to the submission of a written verdict sheet which
mirrored the statutory text of the People's jurisdictional
theories, is not properly before us for review. Although
defendant objected to the trial court's failure to include in the
verdict sheet an additional jurisdictional theory not proffered
by the People _- a contention he has abandoned -- he waived the
claim asserted on appeal by explicitly consenting at trial to the
use of the verdict sheet procedure (see generally, People v
Angelo, , 88 NY2d 217, 224). Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should
be affirmed.
Footnotes
1 Because the People expressly declined to rely on CPL 20.20
(1) (c), we have no occasion to address whether it was applicable
in this case.