Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Joan C. Sudolnik, J), rendered April 29, 2004, convicting defendant, after a jury trial, of murder in the second degree, and sentencing him to a term of 25 years to life, affirmed.
The People’s evidence showed that, on a subway station staircase, defendant approached the 18-year-old victim, grabbed a gold chain from around his neck, and simultaneously slashed his throat with a box cutter, inflicting a fatal wound. At trial,
On appeal, defendant argues that, because the evidence showed that he intentionally killed the victim, not that he caused the death by acting in an extremely dangerous manner with wanton indifference to the resulting danger to the victim’s life (see People v Feingold, 7 NY3d 288 [2006]; People v Suarez, 6 NY3d 202 [2005]; People v Payne, 3 NY3d 266 [2004]; People v Gonzalez, 1 NY3d 464 [2004]; People v Hafeez, 100 NY2d 253 [2003]), the conviction for depraved indifference murder is not supported by sufficient evidence and should be reversed. Alternatively, defendant argues that, if there was evidence of an unintentional killing, such evidence demonstrated a level of culpability no higher than recklessness, not depraved indifference to human life. As defendant acknowledges, however, these claims of legal insufficiency were not preserved for appellate review by particularized arguments for dismissal in the trial court, and we decline to review them in the interest of justice. We also reject defendant’s contention that the failure to preserve his present legal insufficiency arguments suffices, without more, to establish the ineffectiveness of his trial counsel. In the absence of a record concerning the rationale for counsel’s strategic choices such as would be made on a CPL 440.10 motion, defendant has not overcome “the strong presumption of competent representation” (People v Diaz, 157 AD2d 569, 569 [1990], lv denied 76 NY2d 733 [1990]), especially in view of counsel’s success in securing defendant’s acquittal on the charges of first-degree and intentional second-degree murder.
Defendant also argues that, even if we decline to reach his legal insufficiency arguments, the same reasoning proffered in support of those arguments should lead us to set aside his conviction for depraved indifference murder on the ground that it is against the weight of the evidence. For the reasons more fully stated by Justice Gonzalez in People v Danielson (— AD3d —, 2007 NY Slip Op 02626 [2007] [decided herewith]), we reject the contention that defendant may present an unpreserved legal sufficiency argument in the guise of a weight-of-the-evidence argument. In reviewing the facts on an appeal from a criminal conviction (CPL 470.15 [5]), we are “constrained to weigh the evidence in light of the elements of the crime as charged without objection by defendant” (People v Noble, 86 NY2d 814, 815 [1995]; see also People v Cooper, 88 NY2d 1056, 1058 [1996]). At
We have considered defendant’s remaining arguments and find them unavailing. Concur—Friedman, Gonzalez, Catterson and Malone, JJ.