OPINION OF THE COURT
Milonas, J. P.Defendant was convicted, following a jury trial, of various counts of burglary in the first degree, attempted robbery in the first degree, criminal possession of a weapon in the second and third degrees and criminal possession of stolen property in the second degree. In that regard, the evidence clearly demonstrates that on the afternoon of July 1, 1986, defendant entered an apartment located at 240 East 24th Street in Manhattan where, armed with a stolen gun, he forced the occupants, 72-year-old Phillip Vogt and his retarded adult daughter, into a bedroom while he searched the premises for valuables. Finding nothing of substance, he departed only to be observed, about a half hour later, still in possession of a gun, on the fenced roof patio of an apartment on the sixth floor of 226 East 24th Street as he was picking pieces of glass out of the partially broken patio door. The occupant of the apartment, Karen Breen, immediately contacted the police. When the police arrived shortly thereafter, they began searching the roof and patios of the building and soon spotted defendant, who had a jacket and briefcase at his feet, standing on the patio of the apartment adjoining that of Breen. Defendant ignored the officers’ orders to stop and ran down the building stairwell, leaving his jacket and briefcase behind. He was captured and brought down to the street where Breen identified defendant as the man who had invaded her patio. In addition, the briefcase was found to contain identification cards bearing defendant’s photograph, a fully loaded and operable Baretta handgun, a supply of ammunition, a crowbar, two screw drivers and knives.
On appeal, defendant challenges his conviction on three grounds, only one of which constitutes reversible error. Two of the arguments raised by defendant relate to the court’s instructions to the jury. Thus, he urges that the Judge inappropriately charged that "[i]n this case, too, there was a statement made by the defendant, Jean St. Martine. The statement was made in this case to Officer Napolitano and to Officer [sic] Ryan. You must be convinced that any statement *38the defendant made was made in a voluntary and in a truthful way.” It is defendant’s contention that the failure to use the word "alleged” in connection with his statement was improper since it may have led the jury to believe that the court had already determined that any statements attributed to defendant were actually made by him. However, examining the totality of the court’s instructions to the jury and considering the overwhelming proof of defendant’s guilt and the fact that defense counsel argued at length that defendant had not uttered the statements in question, any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt (People v Crimmins, 36 NY2d 230). As for defendant’s assertion that the court was obliged to submit the lesser included offense of second degree criminal trespass with respect to the two apartments on whose patios he was seen, there is simply no reasonable view of the evidence upon which the jury could have found that defendant committed the lesser offense but not the greater (see, CPL 300.50 [1]; People v Glover, 57 NY2d 61). Certainly, it is simply incredible that an individual who has entered a locked, fenced apartment patio, carrying a loaded gun and burglar’s tools, and who is observed picking glass from the door, merely intended to commit a trespass, particularly when a short time earlier, he had utilized the gun in a burglary and attempted robbery of an apartment on the next block.
Defendant’s more substantial argument concerns the admission into evidence of certain inculpatory statements made by him to Officer Napolitano and Detective Ryan. While defendant concedes that he received notice within 15 days of arraignment of some of his statements, he claims that the People were improperly permitted to introduce testimony with respect to other statements about which he was not timely advised. Indeed, the voluntary disclosure form, supplied to defendant at his arraignment, stated that "Defendant asked Officer Napolitano if that was his gun; Defendant admitted to trying to rob Phil[l]ip Vogt but said that he did not get anything and that [the] old man had ulcers and a retarded daughter and that he started to cry and so defendant left him $10.00 U.S.C.” Defendant subsequently served upon the People, in part, a motion to suppress any and all of his statements on the basis of involuntariness.
An evidentiary hearing was thereafter conducted in connection with his request to suppress his statements to the police, as well as physical evidence and identification testimony. Prior to the commencement of the hearing, the District Attor*39ney provided defense counsel with Rosario material, including, the People assert, complete copies of defendant’s statements to Detective Ryan. After Officer Napolitano had testified (he was not the first witness called), the hearing was adjourned for four days, and then Detective Ryan took the stand. During the course of his testimony, he detailed certain admissions by defendant which had not been specifically outlined in the voluntary disclosure form. In any event, defendant cross-examined Detective Ryan about the circumstances under which each of defendant’s statements had been obtained, and the hearing was adjourned in the midst of this cross-examination at defendant’s request. Five weeks after the hearing was last adjourned, defendant moved to preclude defendant’s statements to Detective Ryan on the ground that the voluntary disclosure form did not include all of defendant’s statements, and, therefore, he was not given the notice mandated by CPL 710.30. The People, in response, explained that it would have been extremely difficult to summarize all of defendant’s statements within 15 days of his arraignment and that the full contents of all of his comments to the police were furnished as part of the Rosario package supplied before the hearing began. In denying defendant’s motion, the court noted that defendant had possessed copies of all of his statements for many weeks during the period of the adjourned hearing. Defendant’s attorney then concluded his cross-examination of Detective Ryan, and the hearing, following additional adjournments, was completed more than two months after it had commenced. The court eventually denied defendant’s motion to suppress in all respects and determined, among other things, that his statements had been voluntary beyond a reasonable doubt.
In opposition to the argument that the People failed to furnish the statutorily required notice of their intention to offer at trial evidence of defendant’s statements to the police, the prosecution relies upon subdivision (3) of CPL 710.30. According to this provision: "In the absence of service of notice upon a defendant as prescribed in this section, no evidence of a kind specified in subdivision one may be received against him upon trial unless he has, despite the lack of such notice, moved to suppress such evidence and such motion has been denied and the evidence thereby rendered admissible as prescribed in subdivision two of section 710.70.” However, contrary to the People’s contention, the statute does not mean that the prosecution’s lack of compliance with the 15-day *40notice requirement is excused whenever a hearing ensues and the court ultimately renders a decision denying the motion to suppress. As the Court of Appeals observed in People v O’Doherty (70 NY2d 479), wherein it rejected the prosecution’s attempt to avoid the consequences of an untimely notice by asserting the "[f]or good cause shown” exception contained in CPL 710.30 (2), "acceptance of the argument advanced by the People would require that permission to serve late notices be granted routinely. Such an approach would effectively abrogate the 15-day requirement and invite a return to the practice of giving notice at a much later date, even on the eve of trial. Such a result was not the Legislature’s intention” (at 488).
The exemption in CPL 710.30 (3) provides that if a defendant, notwithstanding the absence of appropriate notice, somehow becomes aware of the existence of a particular statement and moves for its suppression, the People will not be precluded from introducing this statement in the event of a favorable court ruling merely because of the technical lack of timely notice. Indeed, pursuant to the language of CPL 710.30 (3), "no evidence of a kind specified in subdivision one may be received against him upon trial unless he has, despite the lack of such notice, moved to suppress such evidence and such motion has been denied” (emphasis added). Clearly, the purpose of this law is to authorize admission of evidence in a situation in which a defendant is, in fact, already cognizant of the statements) which the People intend to use; it is not to enable the prosecution to escape from being penalized even in connection with statements) concerning which an accused, as occurred herein, possess no prior knowledge and of whose existence he does not learn until immediately before the commencement of the hearing or while it is in progress. Defendant, in the instant matter, did not, by seeking to suppress any and all statements, in effect waive his right to object to the admission of statements of which he was at the time of the motion still unacquainted. To construe the statute otherwise would, as the Court of Appeals noted in People v O’Doherty (supra) virtually eviscerate the 15-day-notice requirements in any case in which a hearing is subsequently held, probably the situation in the vast majority of occasions in which the defendant makes some sort of admission. In People v O’Doherty, where, significantly, a hearing was also conducted, and the trial court there denied the motion to suppress, the Court of Appeals, in reversing the conviction *41and remanding the matter for a new trial, declared (70 NY2d, supra, at 488-489):
“Although CPL 710.30 retains as its central purpose that of providing a defendant with the opportunity to obtain a pretrial ruling on the admissibility of statements to be used against him, the 1976 amendment was designed to serve an ancillary goal—the orderly, swift and efficient determination of pretrial motions. The impetus for the amendment was the enactment of article 255 of the Criminal Procedure Law (L 1974, ch 763, § 1), the omnibus pretrial motion provisions which sought to impose order and speed on pretrial motion practice by requiring the defendant to make substantially all pretrial motions at one time, on one set of papers before one Judge, within 45 days after arraignment (see, CPL 255.20; Bellacosa, Practice Commentary, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 11 A, CPL 255.10, at 437-438). Until the 1976 amendment, however, these goals were compromised by the prosecutor’s ability under CPL 710.30 to serve a notice on defendant at any time before trial, which triggered the defendant’s right to make an additional pretrial motion, requiring a hearing and resulting in additional delay. It was to alleviate this problem that the 1976 amendments to CPL 710.30, requiring notice to defendant within 15 days after arraignment, along with conforming changes to CPL 255.20 and CPL 700.70, were proposed (see, 21st Ann Report of NY Jud Conf, 4th Ann Report by Advisory Committee on CPL, at 339-340, 348-349 [1976]).
“Thus, not only considerations of fairness to the defendant, but also concerns for the efficient conduct of criminal prosecutions underlie the Legislature’s directive. The exclusionary sanction for failure to comply contained in CPL 710.30 (3) reflects a judgment that the loss of the use of the evidence is an acceptable price to pay to achieve the desired goals. Although the People complain that the price is too high and the requirements of the statute burdensome, we cannot dilute or disregard the requirements in an effort to avoid exacting the price without trespassing on the Legislature’s domain and undermining the purposes of the statute.”
While the People herein timely furnished a portion of defendant’s statements to law enforcement officials through the voluntary disclosure form, it is undisputed that the full contents were not made available during the requisite 15-day period. However, to distinguish People v O’Doherty (supra), from the present situation simply because, unlike in that case, *42here there was at least partial disclosure, thereby permitting, as the People urge, the prosecution to use all statements so long as it has provided some part thereof, would not only be irrational but would remove any incentive for the People’s having to comply with the statutory speedy disclosure mandates. Consequently, only when a defendant moves to suppress particular statement^) and then procures a ruling from the court may he be deemed to waive the 15-day-notice requirement as to those statements only (see, People v Peck, 68 NY2d 928). Otherwise, admission of the statements is barred, and the failure to give timely notice may not be deemed harmless error (People v O’Doherty, supra). Therefore, the People should be precluded from introducing any statements other than those mentioned in the voluntary disclosure form.
Judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Jerome Hornblass, J.), rendered on September 30, 1987, convicting defendant, following a jury trial, of four counts of burglary in the first degree, two counts of attempted robbery in the first degree, one count of criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, one count of criminal possession of a weapon in the third degree and criminal possession of stolen property in the second degree and sentencing him, as a persistent violent felony offender, to concurrent indeterminate terms of imprisonment of from 22 years to life, should be reversed, on the law, and the matter remanded for a new trial.