Opinion
November 26, 1991
Appeal from the Supreme Court, New York County (Gerald Sheindlin, J.).
Defendant robbed a young man at gunpoint in a well-lit stairwell of the complainant's building. Although he directed the complainant to face the wall, the complainant took two opportunities to get a look at defendant's face and clothing. The complainant gave chase as defendant fled the building. Friends of the complainant, who were nearby, pursued defendant, and police officers in a passing radio car followed the cab defendant had hailed and apprehended him. Defendant was taken to the precinct, and two officers returned to the complainant's address in order to pick him up and bring him to the precinct. There, the complainant was asked to wait in the civilian waiting area. Instead, he got up, and as he walked around, he saw defendant at the front desk. The complainant immediately screamed that that was the man who had robbed him.
We agree with the hearing court's finding that this viewing at the precinct was accidental and did not warrant suppression as an unduly suggestive police-arranged identification procedure (People v. Acevedo, 102 A.D.2d 336; cf., People v. Riley, 70 N.Y.2d 523). The complainant had not been told anyone was in custody, and had been asked to wait in an area from which the front desk was not visible. The officers did not know where defendant might be when they arrived with the complainant. Given the short time between the robbery and the identification, the lack of misconduct on the part of the police, and the spontaneous nature of the identification, there was not a substantial likelihood of misidentification (People v. Diaz, 155 A.D.2d 612, 613).
The prosecutor's questions of the complainant and the arresting officer regarding the release of vouchered property did not violate the unsworn witness rule (People v. Paperno, 54 N.Y.2d 294, 300-301). The questions merely sought to explain that only a portion of the money was introduced at trial because the remainder had been released to the complainant through the intervention of the prosecutor, and established the chain of custody of the money in evidence.
Concur — Murphy, P.J., Rosenberger, Ellerin and Asch, JJ.