The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
Oswaldo Sanche
z
Appellant.
2002 NY Int. 86
Defendant was convicted, after a jury trial, of "depraved indifference" murder (Penal Law § 125.25[2]) for the shooting death of Timothy Range. The sole issue before us is whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the verdict.
Range and defendant were the boyfriends of two sisters,
Monon Washington and Candace Johnson. Range and Monon were
together for ten years, and their union had produced two
children. The relationship between Candace and defendant existed
for about a year. The occasion for their being together on the
The People's case rested upon the testimony of Monon Washington and her mother, Rose Liburd. Monon testified that she and Range had a cordial relationship with Candace and defendant, and that Range and defendant got along and used to lift weights together. That evening, however, harsh words were exchanged in a hallway near the foyer entrance of the apartment when Range implied that defendant was unfaithful to Candace. From an adjoining room, Monon heard their voices raised and the sound of a scuffle, then Range telling defendant to step outside. She summoned Rose Liburd, who was the only actual eyewitness to the incident. Liburd first observed defendant walking through the entrance doorway from the hallway where her two grandchildren were playing to the foyer, away from Range, who was behind the partially opened door. Then she saw defendant abruptly turn around, fire a gun pointed at Range's chest and flee. The entire incident was over in a matter of seconds. Range collapsed after phoning 911 from the kitchen. He was taken by ambulance to a hospital where he expired.
The forensic evidence was that the bullet entered
Defendant testified that, during the confrontation described by the other witnesses, Range pulled a gun, they grappled for it and it accidentally discharged into Range's chest.
The indictment charged defendant with one count each of intentional murder (Penal Law § 125.25[1]) and depraved indifference murder, and various weapons possession offenses. As agreed to by the defense, the court charged manslaughter in the first and second degrees as lesser-included offenses. The jury was instructed to consider no additional homicide charge in the event that it found defendant guilty of one of the murder counts. Defendant was acquitted of intentional murder but convicted of depraved indifference murder and criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree. The Appellate Division affirmed defendant's conviction.
Under Penal Law § 125.25(2), a person commits murder in
the second degree when "[u]nder circumstances evincing a depraved
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
People, as we must, a rational jury could harbor a reasonable
doubt that the homicide of Range was intentional -- i.e., that
defendant's "conscious objective [was] to cause [Range's death]"
(Penal Law § 15.05[1]). The two men were friends, had engaged in
activities together and socialized because of their intimate
relationships with the sisters. The shooting itself appeared to
have been sudden, spontaneous and not well-designed to cause
imminent death. Rose Liburd testified to first seeing defendant
A: Poppy [defendant] walked out and Tim [Range] was just standing there, and no sooner than he walked out he turned right back around and came in and drew the gun. * * *
A: His arm came around the door. When he stepped back in, his arm came around the door and he pulled the trigger.
* * *
A: He stepped off the step from the hallway into the foyer.
Q: When you say off the step, do you mean there is a step there?
A: Yes, there is a step right there.
* * *
A: He stepped off this step and he turned right back around and stepped back up and came with his arm through the door and shot him.
Although the gun was discharged at point blank range, the bullet
only struck Range in his upper left chest. The trajectory of the
bullet through Range's body indicated that the gun was fired at
an angle toward Range, a fact consistent with Rose Liburd's
description of defendant's movements and Range's position behind
the door. The jury may also have taken into account the pre-
It is noteworthy that defendant agreed that the court would charge manslaughter in the second degree as a lesser- included offense -- in effect conceding that there was a "reasonable view of the evidence which would support a finding that the defendant committed [reckless homicide] but did not commit [intentional murder]" (CPL § 300.50[1]). Had the jury convicted defendant of the reckless homicide of manslaughter in the second degree, he would have been precluded from making the argument he makes here, that the People's proof was only consistent with intentional murder (see id.; People v Borst, 232 AD2d 727, 728 [3d Dept 1996], lv denied , 89 NY2d 940 [1997]; see also People v Ford, , 62 NY2d 275, 283 [1984]).
Alternatively, defendant argues, and one of our dissenting colleagues agrees, that there was no reasonable view of the evidence to support a finding that defendant acted under circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life. We
are unpersuaded. To the contrary, accepting the jury's
determination that the killing of Range was not intentional (see
Judge Rosenblatt concludes, however, that even the
highest level of risk from the perpetrator's conduct -- making
death all but inevitable -- would be insufficient alone, because
the "unchanging core requirement" of depraved indifference murder
is proof of an additional mens rea element to recklessness, that
is, the defendant's "uncommonly evil and morally perverse frame
of mind" (Rosenblatt, J., dissenting, __NY2d __, slip op, at 5-
6). Requiring not only extreme risk but also an unusually evil
mental state is necessary, Judge Rosenblatt says, in order to
prevent the merger of intentional and depraved indifference
murders (see Rosenblatt, J., dissenting, __NY2d__, slip op, at
Such a requirement is not consistent with our precedents in construing and applying the lead-in phrase "under circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life" in the definition of reckless murder under the revised Penal Law of 1967. The meaning of the phrase was directly debated in People v Register. There, the proof was that defendant arrived at a crowded bar room with a loaded handgun, drank continuously for four hours and announced several times that he was "going to kill somebody tonight" (60 2 at 275). After his companion got into an argument with another patron named Mitchell, defendant fired at Mitchell but missed, striking another patron. He then shot Mitchell in the stomach at close range, injuring but not killing him, and turned and fired at yet a third patron, resulting in that person's death.
The issue before the Court in Register was whether the
defendant's intoxication could negate the demonstration of
depraved indifference to human life elevating the homicide from
manslaughter to murder. The dissenters in Register construed the
phrase as referring to a mens rea element additional to
recklessness. Hence, they concluded that the jury should have
been instructed to consider whether defendant was so drunk as to
be incapable of consciously being indifferent to the risks his
conduct entailed. The Register majority, however, focused on the
first words of the phrase, referring to "circumstances evincing"
"[t]his additional requirement refers to neither the mens rea nor the actus reus. If it states an element of the crime at all, it is not an element in the traditional sense but rather a definition of the factual setting in which the risk creating conduct must occur -- objective circumstances which are not subject to being negatived by evidence of defendant's intoxication" (id. at 276 [emphasis supplied]).
Thus, the Register majority explained that the requirement of circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life under Penal Law § 125.25(2) murder focuses not on the subjective intent of the defendant, "but rather upon an objective assessment of the degree of risk presented by defendant's reckless conduct" (id. at 277 [citations omitted]). As Register instructs, objective circumstances of exceptionally high, unjustified risk of death constitute the primary means by which the Legislature differentiated between the reckless state of mind sufficient to establish the mental culpability of manslaughter and the extreme recklessness of murder under Penal Law § 2).
Contrary to the repeated assertions of Judge
Rosenblatt's dissent, the majority writing in Register does not
hold that "ordinary recklessness" is sufficient to establish
depraved indifference murder (see Rosenblatt, J., dissenting, __
NY2d__, __, __,__,__,__,__,__, slip op, at 7, 8, 11-12, 23, 25,
"In sum, the statutory requirement that the homicide result from conduct evincing a depraved indifference to human life is a legislative attempt to qualitatively measure egregiously reckless conduct and to differentiate it from manslaughter (id. at 279 [emphasis supplied]).
Later cases have consistently followed and by now have
made settled law of Register's conclusion that the crux of murder
under Penal Law § 125.25(2) is recklessness exaggerated by
indifference to the circumstances objectively demonstrating the
enormity of the risk of death from the defendant's conduct. We
There may, of course, be other circumstances
manifesting depravity -- including the brutal, barbaric or savage
nature of a defendant's reckless conduct -- as relied upon in the
dissents. That would be especially relevant where the risk of
death merely meets the statutory threshold of being grave.
These, however, are only "collateral to the basic proposition of
known risk" of death (Gegan, A Case of Depraved Mind Murder, 49
St. John's L Rev 417, 450 [1974]). They are not necessary when
the risk of death is manifestly extreme and unjustified. Then, a
defendant's disregard of the risk elevates and magnifies the
degree of recklessness, itself establishing the required
circumstances evincing depraved indifference to human life.
People v Roe, a Russian roulette case, perfectly illustrates that
reckless disregard of an unjustified extreme risk of causing
death can establish the necessary manifestation of depravity,
without proof that the defendant's state of mind was also in some
way "uncommonly evil." Roe would also have to be overruled if
Register's focus on an objective assessment of an exceedingly high degree of risk that the defendant created and ignored, which differentiates reckless murder from reckless manslaughter, is completely consistent with the English common law antecedents of depraved mind murder, as well as with modern criminal law theory. At common law, a homicide with "malice aforethought" was murder, and included not only intentional and felony murders but a killing resulting from extremely reckless conduct (see 2 Encyclopedia of Crime and Justice, at 859). "'[M]alice' was 'implied' when the act was so reckless as to evince a 'heart regardless of social duty and fatally bent on mischief'" (Wechsler and Michael, A Rationale of the Law of Homicide, 37 Colum L Rev 701, 703 [1937]). Reckless murder was distinguished from manslaughter "by the relatively greater danger of the act and the consequently greater indifference to the safety of others manifested by it" (id. at 709-710 [emphasis supplied]).
Modern scholarship on the law of homicide is also consistent with Register and its progeny regarding reckless murder. W.R. LaFave and A.W. Scott, Jr. posit a continuum of risks from homicidal behavior, forming the basis to distinguish lower grades of homicide from murder (2 LaFave and Scott, Substantive Criminal Law § 7.4, at 200):
"Grossly negligent conduct, or reckless conduct, which results in
death may serve as the basis for manslaughter liability, but it will not do for murder. "For murder the degree of risk of death * * * must be more than a mere unreasonable risk, more even than a high degree of risk. Perhaps the required danger may be designated a 'very high degree' of risk to distinguish it from those lesser degrees of risk which will suffice for other crimes."[1]
The American Law Institute's Model Penal Code is especially instructive. Our Penal Law Revision Commission, having drafted and proposed the 1967 revised Penal Law, acknowledged its special debt to the Model Code, pointing out that the Code's chief reporter, Professor Herbert Wechsler, was also a member of the Commission (see New York State Temporary Commission on Revision of the Penal Law and Criminal Code, Proposed New York Penal Law, Commission Forward, at v-vi [1964]). The Model Penal Code's version of reckless murder is a homicide "committed recklessly under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life" (Model Penal Code § 210.2 [1980]).[2]
As the commentary to the Model Penal Code explains, the
"purposeful or knowing homicide demonstrates precisely such indifference to the value of human life. Whether recklessness is so extreme that it demonstrates similar indifference is not a question, it is submitted, that can be further clarified. It must be left directly to the trier of fact under instructions which make it clear that recklessness that can fairly be assimilated to purpose or knowledge should be treated as murder and that less extreme recklessness should be punished as manslaughter" (id. at 22).
Nowhere in these modern formulations of depraved mind or depraved
indifference murder is there a requirement that, in addition to
the extremely reckless nature of the homicidal conduct, there
must also be proof in some other sense of an "uncommonly evil and
morally perverse frame of mind" (Rosenblatt, J., dissenting,
__NY2d__, slip op, at 5-6), in order to distinguish the crime
from intentional murder or manslaughter.[3]
Indeed, not once in
We disagree with Judge Rosenblatt's suggestion that
Darry v People (10 NY 120 [1854]) continues to provide the
bedrock of our reckless murder jurisprudence. The previous
discussion demonstrates that our contemporary statutory and
decisional law of that form of murder leaves Darry far behind.
In Darry, the defendant was convicted of depraved mind murder of
his wife, for inflicting severe blows to her head and stomach
with his fist and a chair over a sustained period of three days,
resulting in her death. The Darry majority's apprehension that
an affirmance would obliterate the distinction between "depraved
mind" murder and manslaughter (see 10 NY at 148) -- not the
distinction between such murder and intentional murder -- caused
it to impose two substantive requirements in addition to extreme
recklessness, neither of which was mandated at common law (see
Gegan, A Case of Depraved Mind Murder, 49 St. John's L Rev at
427-431), and neither of which even arguably applies today. They
were that the conduct causing death must be "aimed at no one in
particular" and must "endanger[] indiscriminately the lives of
many" (Darry, 10 NY at 146). Both are entirely obsolete under
the current statute. The first requirement, that the reckless
conduct must not be directed at a particular person, was
Thus, the properly framed issue before us is whether,
on this record, based on an objective assessment of the risk
defendant recklessly created and disregarded, the likelihood of
causing death from defendant's conduct was so obviously severe
that it evinced a depraved indifference to human life. Surely,
pointing a gun at Range, without the slightest justification,
discharging it within not more than 18 inches of his body and
striking him in the chest, would permit a jury rationally to
conclude that defendant demonstrated an indifference to human
life so depraved as to be deserving of the same punishment as
intentional murder; that it was virtually a knowing, although not
intentional, homicide.[4]
Defendant's disregard of such an
exceedingly high likelihood that his conduct would result in
That his conduct involved such a high risk of death that it could also lead to the conclusion that it was intentional supports rather than detracts from characterizing it as evincing depraved indifference to human life. As the commentary to the Model Penal Code cogently points out, purposeful homicide itself is the ultimate manifestation of indifference to the value of human life.
Nevertheless, the two murder crimes are by definition
clearly distinguishable with respect to their differing mental
states, and the Register formulation of depraved indifference
murder does not at all blur that distinction. Adding further
mens rea elements or substantive requirements of subjectively
defined characteristics of the defendant's acts will only confuse
rather than clarify. Juries properly instructed are capable of
making the distinction between the two crimes. The appropriate
judicial safeguard against any such merger is the traditional one
provided by statute and decisional law, employed here -- an
examination of the record to determine whether there is any
reasonable view of the evidence which would permit a jury
rationally to acquit of intentional murder and convict of
depraved indifference murder. Neither the defendant nor the
As this case demonstrates, the trial court was well
aware of the law on depraved indifference murder -- this is not a
new invention since Register. Further, this jury was instructed
both as to the severity and the gradations of the crime.
Clearly, there was no "unfairness" as to this defendant (see
Rosenblatt, J., dissenting, __NY2d__, slip op, at 22). The court
explained to the jury that generally reckless criminal conduct is
regarded "less serious and blameworthy than a crime committed
intentionally, but when reckless conduct is engaged in under
circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life, the
law regards that conduct as so serious, so egregious, as to be
Moreover, on the facts presented here, viewed in a light most favorable to the People, there is a valid line of reasoning by which the jury could have found defendant guilty of depraved indifference murder. The firing of a loaded gun in an enclosed space within 18 inches of another person was undoubtedly imminently dangerous and presented a grave risk of death. We are persuaded, moreover, that defendant, like the close-range shooter in Roe, acted in objective circumstances manifesting depraved indifference. Defendant felt insulted by his victim, a person known to him; they were both celebrating the birthday of the three-year-old daughter of defendant's paramour. Instead of amicably settling their dispute, defendant -- with at least one other person (the eyewitness) in the hallway -- spontaneously turned, his arm came from around the door, he pointed the gun in the direction of the victim who was standing behind the door, and he pulled the trigger. The bullet hit the victim in the left upper chest and moved in a downward trajectory. Defendant fled. On these facts, the jury could reasonably have concluded that defendant's conduct was either reckless and depraved, or intentional. The jury chose the former, and, as there is evidence in the record to support that determination, we must uphold it.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the order of the
Appellate Division should be affirmed.
NYS INDICTMENTS CONTAINING PL 125.25(01) AND P 125.25(02) COUNTS (1989-2001)
YEAR
INDICTED
125.25
(01) & (02)
CONVICTED
125.25 (01)
CONVICTED
125.25 (02)
CONVICTED
125.25 OTHER
SUBSECTION
CONVICTED
OTHER
ARTICLE 125
OFFENSE ONLY
CONVICTED
NON-
ARTICLE 125
OFFENSE
ONLY
ACQUITTED
ALL
CHARGES
DISPOSED
OTHER
NOT
DISPOSED
1989
183
50
20
1
77
5
7
10
13
1990
251
48
25
1
99
11
19
37
10
1991
191
41
16
2
76
9
17
16
10
1992
257
64
32
4
85
14
15
30
18
1993
348
89
29
6
114
24
27
46
11
1994
427
131
42
3
130
37
29
31
27
1995
381
128
40
8
104
19
29
32
22
1996
385
118
35
8
102
28
24
51
13
1997
365
93
33
7
128
27
26
28
20
1998
356
96
38
6
95
34
40
23
26
1999
360
93
28
5
89
27
20
31
65
2000
360
78
24
4
91
14
16
18
116
2001
373
21
7
1
27
3
2
9
302
(Source, Division of Criminal Justice Services, Indictment Statistical System, June 2002. Numbers for 2001 should be considered preliminary.) 06/04/2002
No. 70 SMITH, J. (dissenting):
This case illustrates the problems attendant to using a charge of depraved indifference as a proxy for intentional murder. Defendant was indicted on charges of intentional murder (Penal Law § 125.25[1]) and depraved indifference murder (Penal Law § 125.25[2]). While defendant was acquitted of intentional murder and convicted of depraved indifference murder, the trial evidence is insufficient to establish that conviction. Because of the lack of evidence, the conviction should be reduced to manslaughter in the second degree, the lesser included offense of depraved indifference murder. I, therefore, dissent.
The events of July 31, 1998 can reasonably be understood to support a conviction of intent to commit murder or intent to inflict serious bodily injury resulting in death.
On July 31, 1998, defendant was attending a birthday
party at the home of his girlfriend, Candace Johnson. Three
Just inside the front door, there is a vestibule. A glass door separates the vestibule from the rest of the house. If one faces that vestibule door, the rooms of the house are situated in a line on the right going back _- the front room, bedroom, dining room and kitchen. A hallway of approximately 15 feet runs the length of the house and is situated to the left of the row of rooms. Two more bedrooms and a bathroom are located in the back of the downstairs area. The shooting took place at the vestibule door, at one end of the 15 foot hallway. The witness viewed the shooting from the other end of the hallway.
Washington testified that while she was sitting in the front room of the house, she observed through a window Candace greet Range and the two proceed into the house. She testified further that she heard Range accuse defendant of cheating on Candace by "talking to a girl on Church Avenue." She heard some sort of scuffle, the sound of something hitting the door and Range tell defendant to step outside. Washington testified that she told Liburd that defendant and Range were about to fight, and Liburd left the dining room, running to the hallway.
Liburd testified that she heard Range arrive and move down the hall toward the back bedroom. Fifteen minutes later, Liburd heard voices. The people were speaking in normal tones, although Liburd could not hear what they were saying. When Liburd was told that Range and defendant were about to fight, she went into the hallway. Range was standing down the hall behind the door (to the vestibule). The door was partially open and Range was against the wall. She saw defendant walk out of the door from the hallway. Liburd described the shooting in this manner:
Q. And what happened after you saw Poppy [defendant] walking out?
A. Poppy walked out and Tim [Range] was just standing there, and no sooner than he walked out he turned right back around and came in and drew the gun.
Q. And what did he do?
A. He drew the gun and he shot Tim and he ran.
Liburd testified further that there was no fighting between the two men.
Defendant presented an entirely different set of facts
to support a justification defense. He testified that upon
arriving, he met Candace. He walked to the back room, greeted
Terrence and attempted to greet Range, who had a mean look on his
face. Range told defendant that he heard something about
defendant and demanded that they talk outside. Defendant
Defendant testified that he was afraid as he walked down the hall. Defendant stopped by the door, and Range got right in his face and told defendant, "I should kill you for the bullshit that you did." Defendant stated that Range suddenly lifted his shirt and pulled out a gun. Because Range was so close to him, defendant feared that he would be shot in the back. Defendant grabbed Range's hand, which was on the gun, and turned his wrist away. Range pushed defendant against the wall, and the two struggled. Defendant's hand was wrapped around Range's, and Range's hand was on the trigger. The gun was facing Range when it went off. Defendant then fled.
A forensic scientist, Dr. Beverley Leffers, testified that the cause of death was a gunshot to the chest which perforated the lung. She testified that she examined the tee- shirt that Range had been wearing and found a black deposit consistent with gun powder, which indicated that the gun was held at close range, no more than 12 to 18 inches away.
The court submitted charges for intentional murder and
depraved indifference murder, to be considered in the
alternative. The court also submitted intentional and reckless
manslaughter as lesser included offenses of the respective murder
counts. These lesser charges were to be considered only if the
defendant was found not guilty of intentional murder and depraved
indifference murder. Defendant objected to the charge for
"I see there is no reasonable view of the evidence to indicate that that should be charged. There is nothing to indicate in this record that defendant at any time acted in a depraved manner, which would require him to do some thinking about it, and recklessly, which would reach that particular point where murder in the second degree reckless and depraved should be charged."
In support of the depraved indifference murder charge, the People argued that defendant's act could be considered reckless because "he fired the gun a few feet from two small children." The court specifically stated that the depraved indifference murder count did not go to the small children, but nonetheless denied defendant's motion to dismiss that count, observing, "Some people can conclude from the record that pointing a loaded gun at someone and pulling the trigger at point blank range within 18 inches is depraved, as well as intentional."
The jury found defendant not guilty of intentional murder but guilty of depraved indifference murder. Prior to sentencing, defendant made a CPL § 330.30(1) motion to set aside the verdict, arguing that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish depraved indifference murder. Supreme Court denied the motion, and the Appellate Division affirmed.
That the Legislature sought to distinguish intentional
killings from non-intentional killings is obvious from the
Depraved indifference murder is not a substitute for intentional murder. A finding of depraved indifference murder should be based on evidence that the defendant killed another under circumstances which demonstrate a wanton disregard of human life or a depravity of mind (People v Register, , 60 NY2d 270, 274, 279 [1983]). In other words, defendant must have indulged in highly reckless behavior, indeed gravely risky behavior, but it is behavior that falls short of a certainty of death or serious injury. Intentional behavior, by contrast, requires that defendant subjectively intend to commit murder.
The defendant in Register drank heavily throughout the
Defendant was tried for both intentional and depraved
indifference murder. In rejecting the defense of intoxication to
negate culpability for depraved murder, the Court emphasized that
the applicable mens rea of depraved mind murder was recklessness.
Depraved indifference murder "refers to neither the mens rea nor
the actus reus. If it states an element of the crime at all, it
is not an element in the traditional sense but rather a
definition of the factual setting in which the risk creating
conduct must occur - - objective circumstances which are not
subject to being negatived by evidence of defendant's
intoxication" (id. at 276). The Court examined the statutory
development of the crime and noted that the Legislature sought to
structure the degree of risk which must be present in
nonintentional killings by "providing that in a depraved mind
Thus, in Register, the "objective circumstances" evincing a grave risk of death were to be found in defendant's getting drunk, carrying a loaded gun and shooting it three times in a crowded public place, a setting where the risk of danger to people was very substantial. The "objective circumstances" reveal the peril to which defendant subjected everyone in that bar.
We have found depraved indifference where the defendant
indulged in behavior evidencing a grave risk of death, but again
it is behavior that falls short of a certainty of death. In
People v Roe (, 74 NY2d 20 [1989]), this Court, citing Register,
reasoned that depraved indifference to human life is assessed
"based on an objective assessment of the circumstances
There is, however, a point at which the risk of death or risk of serious bodily injury approaches a certainty, and it defies logic to charge or to make a finding of depraved indifference. Such a case is presently before us.
We are obliged to view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the People, bearing in mind that credibility is a
matter to be determined by the trier of fact (see People v
Malizia, , 62 NY2d 755, 757 [1984]). The People contended that
defendant was stepping out of the front door, that he turned
around, came back through the door, aimed his gun at the victim
and shot him at close range, from between 12 and 18 inches away.
Thus, the evidence reasonably supported a charge that the
defendant intended to kill the victim or intended to cause
serious bodily injury to the victim. The evidence did not
support a charge of depraved indifference murder because the risk
of death or serious bodily injury from a shot at that close range
was a certainty and not merely a "grave risk" (see Register, , 60 NY2d 270 [grave risk where defendant shot three times in a
crowded bar]; People v Roe, , 74 NY2d 20 [grave risk where
defendant randomly mixed live and dummy ammunition in a shotgun
in a game of Russian Roulette]; see also People v Magliato, 110
Because the jury did not consider the lesser included
offenses of first and second degree manslaughter (People v
Johnson, , 87 NY2d 357, 361 [1996][where inconsistent counts, jury
should consider top counts before considering the lesser included
of either count]), and because the jury's acquittal of
intentional murder and finding of guilt as to depraved
indifference murder raise double jeopardy issues as to any
retrial on the manslaughter first degree charge, the only remedy
is to reduce the conviction to manslaughter in the second degree
and remand to the trial court for re-sentencing.
Rosenblatt, J. (dissenting):
I agree with Judge Smith's conclusion but write separately to emphasize my concern over the way in which the concept of depraved indifference murder has been increasingly expanded. By asking us to affirm this conviction, the People would have us extend the concept even further. In my view, any additional enlargement of depraved indifference murder is unwarranted and incompatible with the Legislature's carefully drawn gradations for homicide.
Depraved indifference murder is characterized by "extremely dangerous and fatal conduct performed without specific homicidal intent but with a depraved kind of wantonness: for example, shooting into a crowd, placing a time bomb in a public place, or opening the door of the lions' cage in the zoo" (Denzer and McQuillan, Practice Commentaries, McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 30, Penal Law § 125.25, at 235 [1967]). To be guilty of depraved indifference murder, the defendant must evince more than mere indifference to human life. The indifference must be so extreme -- so wicked and mischievous -- as to constitute a depraved indifference. That inhuman frame of mind is what equates the crime's blameworthiness with intentional murder.
In my view Judge Smith correctly points out that an
affirmance here would allow depraved indifference murder to serve
Depraved indifference murder goes back to the common
law. As recounted in Darry v People (10 NY 120 [1854]), a person
who took someone's life while evincing a "general malice or
depraved inclination to mischief, fall where it may" was guilty
of murder (id. at 143). From the earliest stages of its
development, the crime was reserved for those "cases of depraved
and reckless conduct, aimed at no one in particular, but
endangering indiscriminately the lives of many, and resulting in
the death of one or more" (id. at 146). The Darry Court, in
Seventy years later, in People v Jernatowski (238 NY
188 [1924]), we interpreted a successor statute (former Penal Law
§ 1044)[8]
almost identical to the one in Darry. Jernatowski fired
multiple shots into a house knowing that people were inside, and
killed one of them. Describing the defendant's conduct as
"barbarous and depraved" (id. at 193), the Court concluded that a
In its 1967 recodification, the Legislature replaced
Penal Law § 1044 with Penal Law § 125.25(2).[9]
The new statute,
at issue on this appeal, changed "depraved mind" to "depraved
indifference to human life" (Penal Law § 125.25[2]). The
concept, however, remained the same. Indeed, the Temporary State
Commission on Revision of the Penal Law and Criminal Code
expressly noted that Penal Law § 125.25(2) was "substantially a
restatement" of the former statute.[10]
Thus, contrary to the
majority's assertion that the 1967 recodification left Darry and
its progeny "far behind" (Majority Opinion, at 15), the
Legislature's clear intent was merely to restate the law, not to
abrogate this State's decisional law on the requisite mens rea
People v Poplis (, 30 NY2d 85 [1972]) was our first
opportunity to pass on Penal Law § 125.25(2). The defendant
killed a three-year-old child by beating him repeatedly over a
five-day period. Arguing that his actions did not fall within
the depraved indifference murder statute, Poplis contended that
there was no meaningful difference between depraved indifference
murder and reckless manslaughter. The Court rejected his
argument, pointing out that depraved indifference murder
contemplates conduct that is more than reckless: it envisions
actions so extreme as to be "brutal, callous and inhuman"
(Poplis, 30 NY2d at 87). In reaching this conclusion (and
maintaining the depravity standard), we drew on Jernatowski and
Darry. Although those cases dealt with the threat of danger to
more than one person,[11]
they stressed the unchanging core
requirement that the killer exhibit such utter indifference to
human life as to constitute depravity -- that the killing,
although not intentional, reflects the defendant's uncommonly
evil and morally perverse frame of mind. Often, but not
necessarily, this state of mind is revealed by the brutal or
People v Register (, 60 NY2d 270) marked a turning point
in the Court's analysis. There we addressed depraved
indifference murder but dealt principally with the question
whether the trial court erred in refusing to consider
intoxication as a defense to depraved indifference murder. In
affirming Register's depraved indifference murder conviction, the
Court, for the first time, held that the requisite mens rea for
that crime was ordinary recklessness -- the exact same mental
In dissent, Judge Jasen (joined by Chief Judge Cooke
and Judge Meyer) argued -- compellingly to my mind -- that the
mens rea element of depraved indifference murder is depraved
indifference and not, as the majority concluded, mere
recklessness. The dissenters pointed out that ever since the
crime of depraved indifference murder was codified under the
Revised Statutes of 1829, the culpable mental state had been
depravity -- a mental state far more egregious than ordinary
recklessness (see id. at 285-286). In the dissenters' view,
Register dealt chiefly with the defense of intoxication, but ironically, the case has served as the fulcrum for what has become a steadily growing prosecutorial practice of charging defendants with depraved indifference murder as a companion count to intentional murder. The Register majority brushed aside the dissenters' prediction that the decision would "result in wholesale depraved mind murder prosecutions for what are essentially intentional murders" (id. at 279). That prediction proved prescient, however, as revealed by the enormous growth in depraved indifference murder companion counts post- Register. III. The Development of Depraved Indifference Murder in the Aftermath of People v Register
After deciding Register, this Court considered several depraved indifference murder cases. None has gone so far as to justify a conviction for depraved indifference murder in a shooting of the type before us.
In People v Gomez (, 65 NY2d 9 [1985]), the defendant
deliberately drove his automobile at 40 miles per hour down a
busy sidewalk, striking several people and killing two. We
In People v Roe (, 74 NY2d 20 [1989]), the Court affirmed
a conviction for depraved indifference murder where the
defendant, a 15-year-old high school student, deliberately loaded
a mix of "live" and "dummy" shells into the magazine of a 12-
gauge shotgun and fired the weapon at the victim, who was
standing only ten feet away. Over a vigorous dissent, the Court
concluded that the evidence was legally sufficient to support the
conviction (id. at 28).[14]
We have also affirmed depraved indifference murder convictions in cases where the defendant fired several shots at a number of people (see People v Fenner, , 61 NY2d 971 [1984]), where the defendant brutally beat a child (see People v Bryce, , 88 NY2d 124 [1996]; People v Cole, , 85 NY2d 990 [1995]; People v Best, , 85 NY2d 826 [1995]), and where the defendant killed six patients by injecting them with a neuromuscular blocking agent (see People v Angelo, , 88 NY2d 217 [1996]). Finally, in People v Russell (, 91 NY2d 280 [1998]), we affirmed a conviction for depraved indifference murder where the defendant, along with other participants, engaged in a gun battle that resulted in the death of an innocent bystander who was struck by a stray bullet.[15]
Even though we have allowed more and more cases to fall within the definition of depraved indifference murder, our language in Russell remains cogent and relevant. "To constitute depraved indifference, conduct must be so wanton, so deficient in a moral sense of concern, so devoid of regard of the life or lives of others, and so blameworthy as to warrant the same criminal liability as that which the law imposes upon a person who intentionally causes the death of another" (id. at 287-288 [internal quotation marks omitted] [emphasis added]).
This formulation, which is consistent with the criteria
Until Register was decided, this heightened standard, which forcefully articulates the essence of depravity, had always been the unquestioned law of this State. Interestingly, the New York Criminal Jury Instructions recognize the heightened mens rea standard by providing that "conduct evincing a depraved indifference to human life creates a much more serious threat to human life than conduct which is merely reckless. * * * Under our law, a defendant acts with depraved indifference to human life when, in the judgment of the jury, his conduct, beyond being reckless, is so brutal, callous, dangerous and inhuman, so devoid of regard for human life, as to constitute conduct equivalent in law to intentionally causing death" (2 CJI[NY] PL 125.25[2], at 316-323 [emphasis added and in original] [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Notwithstanding this stringent standard, we have seen a
proliferation of depraved indifference murder prosecutions at the
trial level and a seemingly growing tolerance for them at the
Appellate Division level.[17]
After having been limited, for decades, to the most
horrendous killings, depraved indifference murder counts have
become routine escorts to intentional murder counts. While
observers have sensed it and criminal lawyers on both sides of
the fence would no doubt attest to it anecdotally, the statistics
indisputably confirm it. According to the Division of Criminal
Justice Services (DCJS),[18]
in 1989 only 19% of all Penal Law
§ 125.25 indictments contained a count of depraved indifference
murder. By 2001, prosecutors charged depraved indifference
murder in 70% of all murder indictments. During that same
period, while the number of murder indictments fell by 50% from
1315 to 666 per year, the number of depraved indifference murder
charges nearly doubled from 246 to 468 annually (see Division of
Criminal Justice Services, Indictment Statistical System, "New
York State Indictments Containing at Least One Penal Law Section
125.25 Charge" [Feb 2002] [reproduced in Appendix,
In addition to the seismic increase (in raw numbers) in
Undisputedly, defendant shot the gun directly at the
victim's chest at point-blank range. When the defense objected
to the trial court submitting depraved indifference murder to the
jury, the court responded: "I think some people can conclude from
the record that pointing a loaded gun at someone and pulling a
trigger at point blank range within 18 inches is depraved, as
well as intentional. So I am satisfied that the evidence will
support the charge, so that's denied." This explication of the
law is simply wrong. It erroneously conflates intentional murder
The distinction between depraved indifference murder
and intentional murder has been recognized as critical not only
by our own Legislature and Practice Commentary authors but by
other commentators. In their treatise, LaFave and Scott list
types of conduct that various jurisdictions have held to be
depraved: firing a bullet into a room of occupants; starting a
fire at the front door of an occupied building; shooting into a
moving train or automobile; throwing a beer glass at someone
carrying a lighted oil lamp; playing "Russian roulette"; and
shooting twice from eight feet away, not aiming at the victim,
but with the bullets ricocheting in unpredictable directions
after hitting hard surfaces (see 2 LaFave and Scott, Substantive
Criminal Law § 7.4[a], at 202-203 [footnotes omitted]). The
There is, however, a glaring omission from this list.
The list does not (and cannot possibly) include intentionally
shooting someone in the head (or, as here, in the chest) at
point-blank range. The reason is simple: such an act should be
prosecuted only as intentional murder under Penal Law
§ 125.25(1). Indeed, if intentional murder qualifies as depraved
indifference murder, there is nothing left of the depraved
indifference murder statute. Any such killing would
automatically be both intentional and depraved indifference
murder. That result is not only illogical but also discordant
both with our decisional law and the statutory scheme's
heightened requirements for depraved indifference murder.
Moreover, it would equate homicides that should not be equated.
The defendant who causes a person's death by opening a lion's
cage, derailing a train or detonating a bomb in a public area
should not be placed in the same classification as the defendant
who uses a knife or a gun to kill an antagonist in a bar fight.
Lumping these defendants together destroys the foundations of the
The People nevertheless ask us to adopt the Trial Judge's erroneous formulation and endorse it as the law of this State. In their summation at trial, the People pressed the same theory they unwaveringly advanced from the inception of the case through this appeal: defendant intended to kill the victim. In arguing before the jury, the prosecutor elaborated in words that could not have been plainer or more emphatic: "defendant is guilty of intentional murder because when he shot the gun at [the decedent] * * * [h]e shot at his heart. You can intend no other result when you shoot a gun at someone's chest, other than to kill him and he did kill him, and that is why he is guilty of intentional murder (emphasis added).
Echoing the Trial Judge, the People continue to argue
that this very act of shooting the gun at the decedent's chest at
point-blank range is so depraved (and evinces such indifference)
In conversational terms, most people would have little
difficulty in characterizing as depraved the behavior of someone
who selects a victim, points a gun at that victim's head or chest
and pulls the trigger. And yet we know that this act is and
should be punishable not as depraved indifference murder but as
intentional murder. Of course, we could call it depraved
A finding of depravity in this fashion entails policy
implications that are deeply troubling. Primarily, it makes it
too easy for prosecutors to seize upon depraved indifference
murder as a fallback position whenever their proof for
intentional murder fails to satisfy the jury. Resultingly,
whenever there is insufficient evidence to make a case for
intentional murder, the prosecution will inappropriately have a
second chance at a murder conviction rather than one for
manslaughter in the first degree under Penal Law § 125.20(1).
Moreover, by diverting the jury to consider depraved
indifference murder, trial courts (unwittingly, but palpably
nonetheless) will mislead jurors into believing that depraved
indifference murder is a milder charge readily available either
when intentional murder has not been proved or as a means of
extending a measure of leniency. The result is predictable: if
and when a trial court in an intentional murder case erroneously
authorizes a jury to consider depraved indifference murder, there
is the very real possibility that the jury will improperly find
the defendant guilty of depraved indifference murder. The jury
cannot possibly realize the unfairness in it because they are not
familiar with the refinements of the statutory scheme for
homicides. They will go home believing (wrongly) that they
convicted the defendant of a lesser grade of homicide.
Furthermore, by diverting juries to consider depraved
To the extent that it endorses Register, the majority also conflates depraved indifference murder with reckless manslaughter. After today, depraved indifference murder can thus be used as a proxy for not one but two separate crimes.
In concluding that depraved indifference murder has a
mens rea of ordinary recklessness, the Court in Register
essentially took the "depraved" out of depraved indifference, so
that depraved indifference murder is virtually indistinguishable
from reckless manslaughter. According to Register, depraved
Register conflates the two crimes not only by giving
them the same mens rea, but also by seeking to differentiate them
only in terms of "objective circumstances" that are all but
indistinguishable. For the fact-finder, everything turns on
whether the defendant's conduct created a "grave" risk of death
as opposed to a "substantial" risk of death. I think it is too
much to ask of any juror. The difference between reckless
manslaughter, which carries a minimum punishment of 1 year in
prison, and depraved indifference murder, which carries a minimum
punishment of 15 years in prison, should not turn on the razor-
thin distinction between "substantial" and "grave."[23]
Indeed, the Register Court's formulation has the effect
of treating defendants with the exact same mental culpability
unequally by giving them vastly different sentences even though
their moral culpability is identical. This consequence violates
a fundamental principle of the criminal law, which seeks to
punish defendants in proportion to the blameworthiness of their
offense. A person who intentionally kills another is considered
more culpable (and deserving of greater punishment) than one who,
through mere carelessness, causes the death of another. The
Penal Law (as well as the Model Penal Code) recognizes this by
creating different levels of culpability, with negligence being
the least culpable and intentionality being the most culpable
(see Penal Law § 15.05; ALI Model Penal Code § 2.02).[24]
If
Although the majority cites the Model Penal Code in support of its analysis, that reliance is misplaced. The Code reinforces the proposition that depraved indifference murder contains a different and much more culpable mens rea requirement than reckless manslaughter. This is clear for several reasons.
To begin with, the Code expressly provides that the
"extreme indifference standard states a culpability requirement
in addition to those used generally throughout the Code" (ALI
Model Penal Code, § 210.2, at 22 n 37 [emphasis added]). The
Moreover, in discussing the role of the jury in a prosecution for depraved indifference murder, the Code cautions that a trial court should provide "instructions which make it clear that recklessness that can fairly be assimilated to purpose or knowledge should be treated as [depraved indifference] murder and that less extreme recklessness should be punished as manslaughter" (id. [emphasis added]). Given the Code's meticulous gradations of culpability into four neat categories (negligence, recklessness, knowledge and purpose), it is notable that the Code describes the requisite mens rea for reckless manslaughter as "less extreme recklessness" than the mens rea for depraved indifference murder. For the latter, the mens rea is closer to intent. As the Code Commentary notes, depraved indifference murder "reflects the judgement that there is a kind of reckless homicide that cannot fairly be distinguished in grading terms from homicides committed purposely or knowingly" (id. at 21 [emphasis added]). If depraved indifference murder had a mens rea of simple recklessness, the crime would be less blameworthy than intentional murder and would "fairly be distinguished in grading terms from homicides committed purposely or knowingly" (id.).
Second, the Code states that its formulation for
depraved indifference murder "reflects both the common law and
much pre-existing statutory treatment usually cast in terms of
conduct evidencing a 'depraved heart regardless of human life' or
Third, the Code uses precisely the same examples of acts constituting depraved indifference murder as have been described elsewhere in this opinion and, indeed, as this Court itself described 150 years ago in Darry. The familiar examples cited by the Code are "shooting into a crowd or into an occupied house or automobile" (id.). These illustrations epitomize a mental depravity and indifferent frame of mind considerably more heinous than mere recklessness.
The distinction between ordinary recklessness and
depravity is important because it differentiates depraved
indifference murder from manslaughter in the second degree (mere
recklessness) and consigns depraved indifference murder to a very
narrow class of inordinately horrific homicides. Indeed, the
1967 Commentaries to Penal Law § 125.25 highlight this
If we are to be faithful to the meaning and rationale
of the depraved indifference murder statute -- and thus require
extreme recklessness evincing depraved indifference as the mens
rea -- the People's case must fail. Never did the People argue
to the jury that defendant's conduct was reckless in any degree.
They never deviated from their contention that defendant intended
to kill the decedent. Accordingly, in my view, defendant's
conviction for depraved indifference murder cannot stand.[27]
In addressing the majority's writing, it is useful to discuss where we agree. Astutely, the Court recognizes the need to "differentiate[] between the reckless state of mind sufficient to establish the mental culpability of manslaughter and the extreme recklessness of murder under [the depraved indifference murder provision]" (Majority Opinion, at 9 [emphasis added]). I agree entirely. I disagree with the majority's assertion, however, that Register recognizes this difference.
It is true, as the majority points out, that the Court
in Register once used the phrase "egregiously reckless"
(Register, 60 NY2d at 279). However, no court has ever
interpreted these words, as today's majority does, to require a
"significantly heightened recklessness" for depraved indifference
murder (Majority Opinion, at 10). Nor, I submit, did Register
itself. Indeed, the Register Court plainly stated that
"recklessness is the mens rea, and the only mens rea," for
depraved indifference murder (Register, 60 NY2d at 278 [emphasis
added]; see also id. at 276 ["recklessness is the element of
mental culpability required"]). "Recklessness," the Court
The Register Court repeatedly emphasized that, in its view, the only element that elevates reckless manslaughter to depraved indifference murder is the entirely objective circumstance of whether the degree of risk created by the defendant's conduct is "grave" as opposed to "substantial" (see id. at 276-277). The majority now asserts that the degree of risk somehow elevates the defendant's culpable mental state to a "heightened recklessness" (Majority Opinion, at 10). Register, however, did not say this. On the contrary, the Register Court expressly stated that "the depraved mind murder statute requires * * * not only that the conduct which results in death present a grave risk of death but that it also occur '[under] circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life.' This additional requirement refers to neither the mens rea nor the actus reus." (id. at 276 [emphasis added]).
Plainly, the Register Court refused (improperly, I
submit) to consider depraved indifference as an element, and
referred only to the "factual setting in which the risk-creating
conduct must occur -- [i.e., the] objective circumstances * * *"
(id.). Accordingly, Register cannot be read to hold that the
factual setting somehow elevates the requisite mens rea to a
Register
The lower courts have similarly understood (and have
uniformly applied) Register's holding that the two crimes share
precisely the same mens rea of ordinary recklessness (see People
v Shabaz, 173 AD2d 498, 499 [1991] [holding that depraved
indifference murder has a mens rea of recklessness, "the same
mental state required for manslaughter, second degree"]; People v
Kalwasinski, 160 AD2d 732, 732 [1990] [holding that "[t]he only
culpable mental state required for depraved indifference murder,
like reckless manslaughter, is 'recklessness'"]; People v
Zeborwski, 198 AD2d 716, 718 [1990] [holding that, like reckless
In my view, the majority's analysis is inapt because in defining the mens rea requirement of depraved indifference murder, it continues to focus almost entirely on the "objective circumstances" and improperly fails to recognize the defendant's depraved indifference to the value of human life as the central mens rea element. Nearly two centuries of decisional law and statutory enactments clearly require that to prove depraved indifference, the People must show far more than mere recklessness (i.e., mere disregard of a substantial risk). The defendant must evince a wicked and mischievous disregard (i.e., utter indifference) for the nearly certain consequences of his or her irresponsible act. It is this extreme wickedness -- this abject moral deficiency -- that, in the final analysis, places the defendant's culpability on an even plane with the intentional murderer.
In now recognizing a "heightened recklessness" standard
There are four possible resolutions to this appeal based on a number of theories. The People seek affirmance; the majority affirms on a somewhat different theory; Judge Ciparick and defendant would reverse and dismiss; and Judge Smith and I would reduce the conviction to manslaughter in the second degree (Penal Law § 125.15[1]). Having discussed both the People's arguments and the majority's grounds for affirmance, I think it important to consider the other possible resolutions.
Defendant claims -- and Judges Ciparick, Smith and I
agree -- that a conviction for depraved indifference murder
should be foreclosed. Judge Ciparick agrees with defendant,
however, in his contention that because there is no evidence of
recklessness, the conviction cannot be reduced to manslaughter in
the second degree, and the case must therefore be dismissed.
While I agree that the facts rule out a conviction for depraved
indifference murder, a reduction to manslaughter in the second
Recklessness is, of course, lesser-included within depraved indifference murder. It is impossible for someone to be so reckless as to be guilty of depraved indifference murder, and not at the same time be "merely" reckless. On the facts before us, I am not prepared to say that defendant's conduct was in any way reckless. But that is not the end of the matter. Defendant himself agreed to a lesser-included instruction on manslaughter in the second degree, and the court charged it to the jury. Under these circumstances, defendant has waived any argument as to the insufficiency of proof as to recklessness and may not now be heard to say that he deserves an outright dismissal (see CPL 300.50[1]; People v Ford, , 62 NY2d 275, 283 [1984]; see also People v Richardson, , 88 NY2d 1049, 1051 [1996]; People v Heath, 269 AD2d 701 [2000]; People v Dennis, 263 AD2d 618 [2000]; People v Green, 205 AD2d 637, 638 [1994]; People v Maldonado, 196 AD2d 778 [1993]).
The jury, after all, found that defendant engaged in
highly culpable conduct. It is extremely unlikely -- almost
inconceivable -- that they would have acquitted defendant
entirely if depraved indifference murder were taken out of the
case. In all likelihood, they would have convicted defendant of
manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law § 125.20[1]) or
manslaughter in the second degree (Penal Law § 125.15[1]). First
degree manslaughter is inapt. Unlike second degree manslaughter,
Reduction to second degree manslaughter is authorized
by statute (see CPL 470.15[2][a]; 470.40[1]; 470.20[4]) and amply
supported by decisional law (see People v Asaro, 182 AD2d 823,
824 [1992] [reducing the conviction from depraved indifference
murder to reckless manslaughter where the defendant beat the
victim with a baseball bat in a barroom brawl]; People v
Magliato, 110 AD2d 266, 270-271 [1985], affd , 68 NY2d 24 1986]
[reducing the conviction from depraved indifference murder to
reckless manslaughter where the defendant shot the victim]; see
also People v Thacker, 166 AD2d 102 [1991] [reducing the
defendant's conviction from depraved indifference murder to
reckless manslaughter]; People v Sika, 138 AD2d 935, 935, lv
denied , 72 NY2d 866 [1988] [same]; People v France, 57 AD2d 432
[1977] [same]; see generally People v Stewart, , 40 NY2d 692, 699
[1976]). Even though I cannot say that defendant's conduct was
reckless, I note that the majority concludes that it was. If we
The Court, of course, has the power to overrule Register expressly and restore depraved indifference as the key mens rea element. This, I suggest, would be the appropriate way to remedy the logical bind that Register presents when pushed to its limits. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
Appendix New York State Murder Indictments: 1989-2001
Indictment year
All murder indictments (PL 125.25) Indictments for depraved indifference murder (PL 125.25[2],[4]) Indictments for both intentional murder and depraved indifference murder Number of charges Percent of murder charges Number of charges Percent of murder charges 1989 1315 246 18.7 183 13.9 1990 1463 358 24.5 252 17.2 1991 1462 317
Notes: "Murder indictments" may include indictments for first degree murder under Penal Law § 125.27. Figures available only since 1989 and 2001 figures are preliminary.
Data provided by: Division of Criminal Justice Services, Indictment
Statistical System (February 2002).
No. 70 CIPARICK, J. (dissenting):
While I agree with my dissenting colleagues that the evidence presented at trial does not support a conviction for depraved indifference murder, and that after today the once prominent distinction between depraved indifference murder (Penal Law § 125.25[2]) and intentional murder (Penal Law § 125.25[1]) has been regrettably obscured, I disagree with their proposed disposition. Instead, I believe that no reasonable view of the evidence supports a finding of recklessness, on any level. This Court's only recourse is to reverse defendant's conviction of depraved indifference murder and dismiss that count of the indictment. I cannot concur with the dissent's recommendation to reduce defendant's sentence to manslaughter in the second degree (see Penal Law § 125.15[1]).
A reduction to second degree manslaughter proves
problematic. The evidence supports a finding of intentional
conduct, not recklessness (see Penal Law § [3]).
Indeed, the sole eyewitness to the shooting, Ms. Liburd, claims
that defendant "walked out [of the apartment] turned right back
around and came in and drew the gun * * * and he shot Tim and he
ran." The witness's description of the incident does not sustain
a finding of reckless conduct but rather one of pure intent.
Furthermore, defendant's acquiescence to a lesser included instruction on second degree manslaughter did not, in my opinion, operate as a waiver precluding him from raising an argument as to the insufficiency of the People's proof.
1 LaFave and Scott also agree with Register's holding that "drunkenness does not negative a depraved heart by blotting out consciousness of risk" (see id. at 205).
2 The influence of this formulation in the Model Penal Code on the definition of reckless murder in Penal Law § 125.25(2) has also been pointed out (see Model Penal Code § 210.2, Comment 4, at 26; 2 LaFave and Scott, Substantive Criminal Law § 7.4, at 201 & n 12).
3 The Model Penal Code commentary expressly disclaims any mens rea requirement overlaying its standard of extreme recklessness. The defendant does not "need [to] be aware that his [or her] state of mind constitutes recklessness" (Model Penal Code § 210.2, Comment 4, at 22 n 37). That duplicative awareness was the position of the Register dissenters, which Judge Rosenblatt would have us adopt.
4 It is also worth noting that while the Model Penal Code defines murder in its primary form as a homicide committed "purposely or knowingly" (Model Penal Code § 210.2[1][a], we limit that form of murder to a homicide committed "with intent to cause death" (Penal Law § 125.25[1]). The Register majority formulation would cover such a homicide, even in the absence of proof of the existence of some other immoral mens rea.
5 In this regard it is noteworthy that statistics for the same years as those cited in the appendix to Judge Rosenblatt's dissent do not support his contention that, "by diverting the jury to consider depraved indifference murder, trial courts * * * will mislead jurors into believing that depraved indifference murder is a milder charge readily available either when intentional murder has not been proved or as a means of extending a measure of leniency" (Dissenting Opinion of Judge Rosenblatt, slip op, at 20). To the contrary, the statistical evidence establishes that the proportion of depraved indifference convictions has remained essentially stable, despite the increase in so-called depraved indifference "companion counts" in intentional murder cases (see Division of Criminal Justice Services, Indictment Statistical System, "NYS Indictments Containing PL 125.25(1) and 125.25(2) Counts (1989-2001)" [June 2002] [reproduced in Appdx]).
The number of indictments itself is not surprising. In 1990, the statute was changed to add a new category of depraved indifference murder of children. Also, at the presentation stage, the prosecutor may not have a developed theory of the case, and therefore might well seek both charges of intentional and depraved murder, which are narrowed at the time of trial.
7 In 1854 (and before that), it was unruly horses; today, driving automobiles at high speeds into crowds (see e.g. People v Gomez, , 65 NY2d 9 [1985]). The crime is the same.
8 Former Penal Law § 1044 provided: "The killing of a human being, unless it is excusable or justifiable, is murder in the first degree, when committed * * * 2. By an act imminently dangerous to others, and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without a premeditated design to effect the death of any individual."
9 The Penal Law (L 1965, ch 1030) became effective September 1, 1967. Section 125.25(2) states that a person is guilty of murder when "[u]nder circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to human life, he recklessly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of death to another person, and thereby causes the death of another person."
10 See Temporary State Comm on Revision of Penal Law and Criminal Code, Proposed NY Penal Law § 125.25 (1964).
11 I agree with the majority that this circumstance (i.e., more than one victim) is not required under the present statute.
12 See People v Lynch, , 95 NY2d 243, 247 (2000) ("brutal and sustained"); People v Bryce, , 88 NY2d 124, 126 (1996) (involving the killing of a seven-week-old baby by fracturing his skull); People v Best, , 85 NY2d 826 (1995), affg on opinion below 202 AD2d 1015 (1994) (involving the killing, by repeated beatings, of a nine year-old child); People v Roe, , 74 NY2d 20, 27 1989) ("macabre game of chance" resulting in the victim's death); People v Gomez, , 65 NY2d 9, 11 (1985) ("wanton indifference to human life or depravity of mind" where the defendant struck a child with his car, accelerated, and then struck and killed another child); People v Poplis, , 30 NY2d 85, 88 1972) ("continued brutality" in beating a three-year-old child); People v Rios, 230 AD2d 87, 88 (1997) ("brutal"); People v Gonsa, 220 AD2d 27, 29 (1996) ("brutal"); People v Tinning, 142 AD2d 402 (1988) (involving the smothering death of a three month-old infant); People v Swartz, 130 AD2d 288 (1987) (involving the beating death of a two-year-old child); People v Brensic, 119 AD2d 281, 284 (1986), revd on evidentiary grounds , 70 NY2d 9 (1987) ("brutal" killing by beating the victim and shoving rocks down his throat); People v Knapp, 113 AD2d 154, 164 1985) ("barbaric"); People v Millson, 93 AD2d 899 (1983) (involving the beating death of a two-year-old child); People v McNeeley, 77 AD2d 205, 212-213 (1980) (involving the beating death of a two- year-old child); People v Lilly, 71 AD2d 393, 396 1979) ("cruelty and hardness of heart").
13 "Recklessness" is defined under Penal Law § 15.05(3). That section provides: "A person acts recklessly with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offense when he is aware of and consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that such result will occur or that such circumstance exists. The risk must be of such nature and degree that disregard thereof constitutes a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation. A person who creates such a risk but is unaware thereof solely by reason of voluntary intoxication also acts recklessly with respect thereto."
14 In dissent, and echoing the warning of the three dissenters
in Register, Judge Bellacosa argued that by sustaining depraved
indifference murder indictments against defendants whose actions
were merely reckless, the Roe Court unduly expanded the scope of
depraved indifference murder. "Prosecutors will find the
temptation legally and strategically irresistible, and
overcharging traditional reckless manslaughter conduct as the
more serious murderous conduct will become standard operating
procedure. * * * That devastating advantage, among others, given
to the prosecution provides an unjust double opportunity for a
top count murder conviction and an almost certain fallback for
conviction on the lesser included crime of manslaughter" (Roe, 74
NY2d at 35-36). A review of the case law shows that after
Register there was a substantial increase in depraved
indifference murder charges (see n 14,
15 See generally Donnino, New York Court of Appeals on Criminal Law § 35:28, at 35-21_-35-29 (2d ed 1997).
16 Reckless manslaughter is a class C felony (see Penal Law § 125.15[1]) whereas intentional murder and depraved indifference murder are class A-I felonies (see Penal Law § 125.25[1],[2]).
17 See e.g. People v Lyons (280 AD2d 926 [2001] [affirming the depraved indifference murder conviction of a man who shot his lover's husband in the chest and head during a struggle]); People v Sawyer (274 AD2d 603, 607 [2000] [affirming the defendant's depraved indifference murder conviction where the "defendant deliberately thrust a steak knife into (the victim's) chest with significant force"]).
18 We may properly take judicial notice of facts appearing in the public records of this State (see People ex rel. Nichols v Board of Canvassers, 129 NY 395, 420 [1891]; see also Matter of Siwek v Mahoney, , 39 NY2d 159, 163 n 2 [1976] ["Data culled from public records is, of course, a proper subject of judicial notice"]).
19 From People v Natal (102 AD2d 496 [1984]) to People v Crawford ( AD2d , 2002 NY Slip Op 04567 [June 3, 2002]), the Appellate Divisions have considered over 100 convictions stemming from twin-count indictments, the vast majority in the last ten years. I need not list them all.
20 It is also wrong in suggesting that the act is at once both depraved and intentional. Under the law, it cannot simultaneously be both (see People v Gallagher, , 69 NY2d 525, 529 [1987]). The trial court corrected this error only insofar as it allowed the jury to consider intentional murder and depraved indifference murder in the alternative. Depraved indifference murder should not have been charged at all.
21 I am not suggesting that prosecutions for killings such as the one before us be the least bit relaxed. On the contrary, when a person shoots another in the chest at point-blank range, it deserves the most rigorous prosecutorial response. Defendant was appropriately charged with intentional murder and the question was put to the jury. The jury, however, acquitted defendant of that crime. They should have been directed to then consider manslaughter in the first degree. When a jury acquits a defendant of intentional murder, it should not be an automatic signal or invitation to consider depraved indifference murder as an alternative. In rare cases it would be proper; in most it would be unfair.
22 Moreover, merely reciting an accusation of this kind to the jury -- when it does not belong in the case -- exacerbates the unfairness of the practice. Indeed, the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, in State v Lagasse (410 A2d 537, 540 1980]), cautioned prosecutors on this point.
23 Courts and commentators alike have severely criticized Register and its progeny (see Jones v Keane, US Dist Ct, SD NY, Brieant, J., 02 Civ 1804 [describing the Register Court's attempt to distinguish depraved indifference murder from reckless manslaughter as circular and unsuccessful]; Gegan, More Cases of Depraved Mind Murder: The Problem of Mens Rea, 64 St John's L Rev at 436 [opining that "so tenuous is the [Register] court's rationale for refusing to recognize depraved indifference as a mens rea element, and so superfluous did its interpretation render the statutory language, that one can speculate that the court was simply reaching a desirable result on the precise issue before it: whether evidence of intoxication can negate the necessary mental element of depraved mind murder"]; 8 Zett, NY Crim Prac, ¶ 69.2[2][c], at 69-37 [2002] [opining that "[i]f the distinction between that recklessness which will render the actor liable for manslaughter and that which will render him liable for murder is to be a meaningful one, the courts must strive and have sought to refine the tests necessary to make such a distinction"].
24 There is no reason why the list of mental states outlined in Penal Law § 15.05 should be considered exhaustive (i.e., should preclude a mens rea of "depraved indifference"). As one commentator notes, "While the legislature may reasonably be understood to gather into one place uniform definitions of standardized terms that can then be used throughout the rest of the statute, it is not sensible to suppose that the standardized terms necessarily suffice for the statement of all specific crimes. If the legislature wants to create some non-standard, culpable mental state ad hoc in a particular crime, it should not be hobbled in doing so. To interpret the definitional section in an exclusive manner converts it from a tool for the legislative drafter into his master" (Gegan, More Cases of Depraved Mind Murder: The Problem of Mens Rea, 64 St John's L Rev at 434). The Model Penal Code supports this argument. Although the Code has four culpable mental states, it expressly provides that the mental state for depraved indifference is "in addition" to those four (ALI Model Penal Code, § 210.2, at 22 n 37).
25 The Code emphasizes this point on several occasions, stating that the depraved indifference murder provision "includes within the murder category cases of homicide caused by extreme recklessness * * *" and also that "[w]hether recklessness is so extreme that it demonstrates similar indifference [as would a purposeful killing] is not a question, it is submitted, that can be further clarified" (ALI Model Penal Code, § 210.2, at 22 [emphasis added]).
26 Although the language of the depraved indifference murder
provision has changed slightly over time, the distinction between
that crime and reckless manslaughter continues. Depraved
indifference murder, unlike reckless manslaughter, contains the
far more culpable mens rea requirement of depraved indifference.
Indeed, section 125.25(2) of the Penal Law is "substantially a
restatement"
27 Register does not compel affirmance, even applying its ordinary recklessness standard which the majority seemingly disavows. Register concluded that the defendant committed depraved indifference murder by shooting three people in a "packed" barroom. Register had entered the bar with a loaded gun, saying he was "going to kill somebody tonight" (Register, 60 NY2d at 275). After having been told to put the gun away, he fired three times, killing one person and wounding two others. By having no particular victim in mind when he entered the bar and then shooting three people, Register's actions approximated the depravity of defendants like Jernatowski and others who fired multiple shots into a house knowing there were people inside. Here, defendant's actions did not evince (or even approach) the level of depravity or indifference contemplated by the statute or described in our case law.