People v. Carvajal

G.B. Smith, J. (dissenting).

Because the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of the State of New York and the laws of the State of New York do not permit a person to be found guilty of criminal possession of a controlled substance on a theory of constructive possession rather than actual possession where both the substance and the defendant are in California, I dissent.

There is no question that defendant was properly convicted of conspiracy. It also appears clear that the defendant could have been found guilty of attempted possession of a controlled substance. Defendant, however, was not found guilty of attempted possession but of constructive possession. The People’s theory is that even though the controlled substances that defendant was found guilty of possessing were never in New York, one element of possession (knowledge) occurred in New York. The People argue further that the drugs were constructively possessed in New York since the drugs were bound for New York and (1) defendant, in California, had conversations with persons in New York, and (2) on one day when he was in New York, defendant had conversations in New York with persons in New York and California, thus exercising dominion and control over those persons.

Facts

At trial, the People offered evidence that defendant, Alvaro Carvajal, was a member of a Colombian drug trafficking opera*318tion that brought cocaine from San Francisco to New York in 1993 and 1994. Defendant’s conviction was the result of a multistate investigation of a drug conspiracy involving parties in San Francisco, New York and Chicago. The New York State Drug Enforcement Task Force began the investigation in 1993 and ultimately focused on a Queens garage called W & G Auto Repair, which was operated by Freddy Lasso (Lasso). Through wiretaps, it was determined that Lasso headed the New York operation with Louis Grueso Camacho (Grueso). The transportation coordinator for the drug network was known as Chicanero, an alias, who was neither arrested nor identified after the arrests of the other members of the conspiracy. Defendant resided in Daly City, California, a suburb of San Francisco.

The possession counts against defendant were for the following: (1) on May 19, 1994, a white Mazda bearing Pennsylvania license plates, driven by Hans Vargas, was stopped and searched by California Deputy Sheriff Gilbert Rodriguez and 21 kilograms of cocaine were found; (2) on May 19, 1994, Special Agent Karl Nichols of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) saw Hector Rivas (Rivas) and Sylvia Jeffries get into a blue Volvo with Pennsylvania plates, a search of which later revealed 30 kilograms of cocaine; and (3) on June 15, 1994 a search of a California stash house, which defendant controlled, revealed 23 kilograms of cocaine.

Phone calls between defendant and other members of the conspiracy were frequent. Defendant, from California, had most of his conversations about the status of the drugs and their shipment with Lasso. Lasso, from New York, originated the majority of the phone calls between the two. On April 13, 1994, Lasso called defendant twice to discuss the status of a shipment of drugs being driven by Hans Vargas (Vargas), who was delayed by his overheated car. On April 14, 1994, when Lasso called the defendant to discuss arrangements, defendant mentioned that Vargas had to be paid $20,000 for his role in transporting drugs to New York, and Lasso told defendant of his plans to buy Volvos with hidden traps. On April 16, 1994, Lasso called defendant to discuss Omar Gonzalez returning from Chicago with drugs in a blue car, Vargas’ payment and the possibility that Chicanero had stolen five kilograms of cocaine. On April 17, 1994, Lasso called defendant to discuss the narcotics exchange between Vargas and Gonzalez.

The cocaine that was seized and that forms the basis for the possession counts against defendant was the result of activities *319occurring in May 1994. On May 17th, Lasso called defendant and told him Grueso wanted defendant to leave the white car the way it was and “fill up the space” in the blue and green cars. Lasso and defendant also discussed how many kilograms of cocaine should be put in each car. Later on May 17th, Lasso called defendant, and defendant told him he would put 21 kilograms of cocaine in the white car so Vargas could pick it up. Defendant also advised Lasso to tell Grueso he would try to send out the white, green and blue cars. On May 19th, Lasso called defendant and defendant assured him that all the narcotics had been removed from the “stash house.” Later on May 19th, Lasso called defendant and defendant told him that a woman may have taken the blue Volvo and Vargas was taking the white Mazda. Defendant again assured Lasso he removed the drugs from the stash house. After Vargas was initially stopped and searched on May 19th on his way to the airport in the white Mazda and no drugs were found, Lasso called defendant who told Lasso he would pressure Chicanero to get the Mazda. Lasso overruled this suggestion and Vargas continued to drive the Mazda until it was stopped and searched again. Twenty-one kilograms of cocaine were found. Law enforcement agents seized the drugs and car; however, Vargas was let go.

Lasso called defendant on May 20th to relay that Rivas was under investigation for being in the blue Volvo and that Chicanero was on his way to Los Angeles. Defendant told Lasso about the police raid of the stash house and Lasso suggested defendant rent an apartment “outside of town” to store the drugs until a worker arrived to retrieve them. Lasso and defendant spoke three more times on May 20th with defendant blaming Victor Hugo (Hugo) for the loss of the stash house and the blue and white cars.

Defendant also made a phone call from New York. On May 14, 1994, while visiting New York to get license plates, defendant used Lasso’s cellular phone to call Hugo in California to give directions to Hugo concerning his departure the following day. During the call, defendant requested that Chicanero get the keys to the blue car from Vargas and give them to Hugo. Defendant also told Chicanero that he was bringing license plates from New York and registration for the blue car with him. Defendant directed Chicanero to take the white car and also took responsibility for Vargas’ traveling expenses.

Defendant also called New York from California on several occasions. On May 17, 1994, defendant called Lasso to assure him *320that he had prepared and checked the kilograms of cocaine that were to be sent to New York. On May 19, 1994, defendant called Lasso in New York to question whether Hugo had parked the blue Volvo containing 30 kilograms of cocaine at the Serramonte Shopping Center. Defendant told Lasso he was parked and waiting for Vargas to arrive so that they could do a “car switch” and Vargas could take the white Mazda. On May 20th, defendant called Lasso to say Hugo informed him that Chicanero had given the Mazda to Hugo. Defendant expressed concern about the drugs being removed from the stash house and told Lasso to speak with Grueso to get Chicanero to New York. Later on May 20th, defendant and Lasso expressed suspicion about Chicanero’s account of the arrests and Lasso emphasized the importance of protecting the narcotics in the green car, which Vargas was driving east so the organization could break even despite the loss of the white Mazda and the blue Volvo.

Other accomplices called Carvajal in California to discuss shipments to New York. On May 17, 1994, Grueso called defendant and discussed Vargas’ aborted trip in the white car and Chicanero’s preparations for Vargas to, instead, drive the blue car. Defendant told Grueso that he would send the “lady” in the green car and Vargas in the blue car. He also promised to “bathe the girls,” meaning he would remove the smell of narcotics from the car.

On June 15, 1994, after conducting surveillance of a house in Daly City, Deputy Sheriff Rodriguez and DEA Task Force Field Supervisor Mark Scheffler knocked on the door, which was answered by Jose Gonzalez. A search of the house revealed a large duffel bag with 23 kilograms of cocaine and, under a bed, a knapsack with $433,070. Wiretaps revealed a conversation between Lasso and Grueso where Lasso relayed that defendant had called earlier to say he and Vargas had entered the garage to the stash house when they saw some strange people and left. Lasso told Grueso that the money in the house belonged to Tabla, another drug dealer. Defendant later told Lasso he let Gonzalez store money in the house in return for Gonzalez guarding the drugs. In another conversation, Grueso threatened defendant and told him he had 48 hours to get the drugs to New York. Defendant later spoke with Lasso and Lasso’s brother about his observations of the stash house the night before. At the end of the day in another call, Lasso told defendant to “load up” a car and get the drugs to New York as soon as possible.

Defendant was arrested on September 24, 1994, in front of his house in Daly City, California. When defendant was *321searched, among the items recovered were a business card for El Caney, Lasso’s Queens restaurant; an El Caney Record Store business card; a W & G Auto Repair business card and three telephone books containing Chicanero’s name and beeper number and Lasso’s name and telephone number. A search of defendant’s home found W & G Auto Repair business cards, a VISA credit card in Lasso’s name and an El Caney Record Store American Express corporate credit card in Lasso’s name. A search of W & G Auto Repair on October 3, 1994 found three cars with traps to conceal narcotics identical to hidden compartments in the blue Volvo seized on May 19th.

Defendant was convicted of conspiracy in the second degree and three counts of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree. Defendant’s sentence included 121/2 to 25 years for conspiracy, to run concurrently with terms of 20 years to life on two possession counts, and a consecutive term of 15 years to life on the third possession count.

A Judge of this Court granted the defendant leave to appeal. On appeal, defendant challenges New York’s exercise of territorial jurisdiction on the possession counts and argues that his counsel was ineffective. He contends that the convictions for criminal possession of a controlled substance should be reversed and the indictment as to those counts dismissed.

Discussion

The Federal and State Constitutions

In this case we address whether a New York criminal court lacked territorial jurisdiction, allegedly conferred under Criminal Procedure Law § 20.20, to prosecute defendant for three counts of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree where the drugs and the defendant were located in California.

To begin with, the conviction of defendant for constructive possession here violates article III, § 2 of the Federal Constitution which reads in part:

“The Trial of all Crimes, except in Cases of Impeachment, shall be by Jury; and such Trial shall be held in the State where the said Crimes shall have been committed-, but when not committed within any State, the Trial shall be at such Place or Places as the Congress may by Law have directed” (§ 2 [3] [emphasis supplied]).

*322The conviction also violates the Sixth Amendment to the Federal Constitution which reads in part: “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law ...” (emphasis supplied).

In New York, the right to a jury trial guaranteed by article I, § 2 of the State Constitution encompasses the right to be tried in the county where the crime occurred (People v Ribowsky, 77 NY2d 284, 291-292 [1991]; People v Moore, 46 NY2d 1, 6-7 [1978]; Matter of Murphy v Extraordinary Special & Trial Term of Supreme Ct., 294 NY 440, 458 [1945]; Mack v People, 82 NY 235 [1880]). To uphold this conviction is to violate that principle.

It should be clear what the dissent is saying with respect to territorial jurisdiction and preservation. Because territorial jurisdiction goes to the authority of the court to try a defendant for the particular crimes in issue, no preservation is necessary (People v Patterson, 39 NY2d 288, 295 [1976] [“A defendant in a criminal case cannot waive, or even consent to, error that would affect the organization of the court or the mode of proceedings proscribed by law”], citing Cancemi v People, 18 NY 128, 138 [1858]).

Jurisdiction Pursuant to Criminal Procedure Law § 20.20 (1) (a) In the case at bar, the People claim the State has territorial jurisdiction pursuant to CPL 20.20 (1) (a) in that an element of the possession crime, that is knowledge, occurred in New York. On the jurisdictional issue, the trial court stated:

“I’ve been with this case for six weeks. The issues have been raised. It is not a secret anymore. We had a conversation, all counsel were present, we agreed if jurisdiction was raised it was not venue, which is geographical, it was territorial and the only counts it applied to were two, three and four. . . .
“The People’s allegations here are that—they’re relying on 20.20 1-A and, of course, [20.60 (1)], that the element of the crime occurred in New York, that is Freddy Lasso, Alvaro Carvajal and Louis Grueso constructively possessed the narcotics seized in California. That’s as simple as I can get.”

In addition, the People contend that the defendant either waived or abandoned any argument as to jurisdiction. The defendant’s argument here is that there was no jurisdiction in New York of the offense of criminal possession of a controlled substance.

*323Criminal Procedure Law § 20.20 (1) (a) states:

Ҥ 20.20 Geographical jurisdiction of offenses; jurisdiction of state
“Except as otherwise provided in this section and section 20.30, a person may be convicted in the criminal courts of this state of an offense defined by the laws of this state, committed either by his own conduct or by the conduct of another for which he is legally accountable pursuant to section 20.00 of the penal law, when:
“1. Conduct occurred within this state sufficient to establish:
“(a) An element of such offense . . . .”

The elements of criminal possession of a controlled substance are the knowing and unlawful possession of four or more ounces of a controlled substance within the State of New York. Neither the defendant nor the drugs were present in New York at the time of defendant’s apprehension. As a result of the lack of obvious jurisdiction, New York has encroached upon California’s jurisdiction.

“The general rule in New York is that, for the State to have criminal jurisdiction, either the alleged conduct or some consequence of it must have occurred within the State” (see People v McLaughlin, 80 NY2d 466, 471 [1992] [citations omitted]).

“Jurisdiction in this sense is a question of the sovereign’s power to prosecute and punish an accused for conduct which is allegedly criminal. Because the State only has power to enact and enforce criminal laws within its territorial borders, there can be no criminal offense unless it has territorial jurisdiction” (see id. [citations omitted]).

Ordinarily, jurisdiction is not an issue, but when it is, New York State must establish that it had territorial jurisdiction beyond a reasonable doubt (People v McLaughlin, 80 NY2d at 469, 471-472).

The Appellate Division ruled and the People contend here that defendant waived the issue of jurisdiction. Jurisdiction, however, can never be properly waived. “[Territorial jurisdiction . . . goes to the very essence of the State’s power to prosecute and . . . may never be waived ...” (id. at 471). Either a court has the authority to hear a case or it does not.

*324The Appellate Division concluded that the “evidence amply supports the People’s claim that an element of the crime occurred in this state” (14 AD3d 165, 170 [2004]). The Appellate Division then goes into a discussion of constructive possession without saying what the element is. “Jurisdiction concerns the power of the State to bring the criminal proceeding, not the factual elements of the crime which must be proven for a conviction” (People v McLaughlin, 80 NY2d at 472).

The majority states, “Here, the question is whether there was evidence of defendant’s conduct in New York sufficient to establish his conspiracy to commit first degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.” (Majority op at 313.) The majority concludes that there was conduct in New York that gave New York jurisdiction over the possession crimes.

Territorial jurisdiction over conspiracy was established. That issue is not disputed in this case. Territorial jurisdiction was not established over criminal possession of a controlled substance when the substance never reached New York or the hands of the defendant in New York or a person or area in New York that defendant exercised dominion or control over. Unlike People v Stokes, where the conviction for felony murder was upheld even though the underlying offense was committed in another state, in this case, we have two separate crimes, conspiracy and criminal possession of a controlled substance, in which New York must establish territorial jurisdiction (see 88 NY2d 618, 623-625 [1996]).

People v Kassebaum and the Current Possession Counts

While the majority declines to discuss the applicability of CPL 20.20 (1) (a) to this case and concludes that People v Kassebaum (95 NY2d 611 [2001]) does not apply because it discusses “CPL 20.20 (1) (a)—a different subsection than that discussed here” (majority op at 317), that section and jurisdiction of the possession offenses was applied by the trial court and is a major contention of the People on this appeal. The fact that the majority does not discuss CPL 20.20 (1) (a) in no way removes it from this case.

To uphold a conviction for criminal possession of a controlled substance based upon constructive possession of drugs found in California where the defendant was also located in California would be an extension of this Court’s decision in People v Kassebaum (95 NY2d 611 [2001]). In that case, defendant, whose role was to test the purity of the heroin sought to be brought to New *325York, met with the leader of the conspiracy in Brooklyn, New York. Subsequently, defendant was arrested in Massachusetts and convicted in New York for conspiracy in the second degree and attempted criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree based upon the conduct of an accomplice (the leader of the conspiracy) in New York in collecting money for the sale of drugs, making travel arrangements for defendant and directing the activities of defendant in Massachusetts. This Court noted in Kassebaum that the “issue under CPL 20.20 (1) (a) is whether the People established that defendant and his accomplices engaged in conduct within New York sufficient to establish an element of attempted criminal possession of a controlled substance as required by the statute.” We stated:

“Defendant’s reliance on Cullen [People v Cullen, 50 NY2d 168 (1980)] is misplaced because none of the individuals held criminally accountable in Cullen were present in the prosecuting jurisdiction when the offense was consummated. In addition, Cullen stands for the proposition that a defendant does not manifest the knowledge element necessary for criminal possession of a controlled substance until he or she takes possession of the narcotic. This holding does not necessarily apply to an attempt offense which requires proof of a different mens rea—the intent to accomplish a criminal objective. Here, proof was offered that defendants engaged in substantial conduct in New York that manifested an intent to obtain heroin and return with it to New York. Standing alone, this conduct did not rise to a level sufficient to support criminal prosecution for attempted possession of a controlled substance because defendants’ conduct did not constitute an attempt until the meeting in the Boston hotel room when defendants’ conduct came ‘dangerously near’ criminal possession of heroin (see, People v Acosta, supra, 80 NY2d 665). Nonetheless, the conduct committed in New York evidenced defendant’s intent sufficiently to establish the jurisdictional predicate underlying the prosecution under the CPL 20.20 (1) (a) element requirement.” (Id. at 620-621 [emphasis supplied].)

Thus, Kassebaum permitted the prosecution and conviction in this state of an attempt to commit the crime of criminal posses*326sion of a controlled substance, not the completed crime of criminal possession.

Defendant’s argument is that while a prosecution and conviction for the attempted possession of a controlled substance was held proper in Kassebaum, no actual or constructive possession occurred in that case in New York and, in that respect, a conviction of defendant in New York for the completed crime of possession would be an extension of Kassebaum. The Appellate Division agreed with this argument with respect to the crime of actual rather than constructive possession. The Appellate Division stated:

“While in People v Kassebaum (95 NY2d 611 [2001], cert denied 532 US 1069 [2001]), the Court of Appeals upheld the conviction of the defendant for attempted possession of narcotics that were located in Massachusetts, there is an important distinction between attempted possession and possession. The attempt crime includes as an element that the defendant £engag[ed] in conduct which tends to effect the commission of such crime’ (Penal Law § 110.00); therefore, because the defendant in Kassebaum had engaged in conduct in New York that manifested an intent to obtain heroin and return with it to New York, the People successfully established that an element of the crime had occurred in this state (95 NY2d at 621).” (14 AD3d at 170.)

To uphold the conviction of the defendant for criminal possession of a controlled substance in New York, the Appellate Division did not rely on Kassebaum but rather relied on the doctrine of constructive possession.

Jurisdiction Pursuant to Criminal Procedure Law § 20.20 (1) (c) and Constructive Possession

The People and the majority assert that territorial jurisdiction was obtained pursuant to CPL 20.20 (1) (c).1 That section provides that

“a person may be convicted in the criminal courts of this state of an offense defined by the laws of this state . . . when: *327“1. Conduct occurred within this state sufficient to establish . . .
“(c) A conspiracy or criminal solicitation to commit such offense, or otherwise to establish the complicity of at least one of the persons liable therefor; provided that the jurisdiction accorded by this paragraph extends only to conviction of those persons whose conspiratorial or other conduct of complicity occurred within this state . . .

The position of the majority is that since there was evidence of a conspiracy to transport drugs to New York and since defendant made phone calls from New York to other conspirators in California, Supreme Court acquired jurisdiction to prosecute the crimes of conspiracy and criminal possession of a controlled substance. Nothing in the language of CPL 20.20 (1) (c) supports this interpretation. Moreover, the fact that the crime of criminal possession of a controlled substance was never completed here (the drugs and the defendant were in California at the time that the drugs were seized) necessarily prevents New York from exercising jurisdiction over the crime of criminal possession of a controlled substance pursuant to CPL 20.20 (1) (c). Here, Supreme Court tried defendant for criminal possession of a controlled substance, a crime that was never committed in New York. No previous case has held, as the majority does, that a criminal court can exercise jurisdiction over a crime that never actually occurred in New York.

Relying on a constructive possession theory, the People argued that defendant committed three counts of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree. Any discussion of constructive possession in a criminal law context necessarily starts with the New York Penal Law.

Under Penal Law § 10.00 (8), “ ‘[p]ossess’ means to have physical possession or otherwise to exercise dominion or control over tangible property.” With respect to the phrase “dominion or control,” this Court stated in People v Manini (79 NY2d 561 [1992]) that:

“In New York, the rule has long been that to support a charge that a defendant was in constructive possession of tangible property, the People must show that the defendant exercised ‘dominion or control’ over the property by a sufficient level of control over the area in which the contraband is *328found or over the person from whom the contraband is seized” (Manini, 79 NY2d at 573 [citations omitted and additional emphasis added]).

It is clear that no New York trial court could acquire jurisdiction over the three counts of criminal possession because no such crime occurred in New York. In order for criminal possession of a controlled substance, based on a theory of constructive possession, to occur, defendant had to exercise dominion or control over (1) an area, located in New York, where controlled substances, weighing four ounces or more, were found, or (2) a person, located in New York and actually in possession of controlled substances weighing four ounces or more, from whom the controlled substances were seized (see Penal Law § 220.21 [1]; Manini, 79 NY2d at 573-574). Defendant never exercised that sort of dominion or control. The controlled substances at issue were seized in California, not New York, from persons who were in California. Moreover, at the time of the seizure, defendant was in California. Put another way, the crime of criminal possession of a controlled substance never occurred in the State of New York. As such, no such offense occurred. Therefore, no jurisdiction over the crime can be exercised.2

People v Fuente (79 NY2d 561 [1992]) is a leading case on the theory of constructive possession as it pertains to drug possession offenses. In that case, this Court found that Fuente was in constructive possession of drugs. There, cocaine was seized from a van occupied by two of Fuente’s codefendants. The cocaine was seized in New York. Telephone conversations had been intercepted in which it was established that the cocaine was being transported at the direction of Fuente and was for Fuente’s customers. Moreover, Fuente was in a car following closely behind the van from which the cocaine was seized and was stopped by the police a short distance from where the van was stopped.

Similarly, the companion case to People v Fuente, People v Manini (79 NY2d 561 [1992]), does not support the People’s case and should be decisive in rejecting the People’s claim. Manini was a California resident who sold drugs to persons in New York. In June of 1988, a man named Paige obtained nine ounces of cocaine from Manini in California “on credit” (id. at 565). *329Paige flew to New York with four ounces of cocaine and was arrested with another person as they left the Rochester, New York airport. Manini was indicted for the criminal possession of cocaine carried by Paige in New York. “The People acknowledge [d] in Manini that constructive possession is usually established by showing that a defendant exercised dominion and control over the place where contraband was seized or over the person who actually possessed the property” (79 NY2d at 572-573). The People’s argument, however, was that Manini retained a “continuing possessory interest” and thus constructively possessed the property (id. at 573). This Court rejected that argument. Thus, Manini, a California resident, could not constructively possess, from California, drugs possessed by another in New York. Neither People v Manini nor People v Fuente supports the position of the People or of the majority here.

Relying on CPL 20.60 (1), the People, the lower courts and the majority argue that defendant, through his telephone statements regarding the conspiracy, was present in New York (i.e., he engaged in New York conduct) while exerting dominion and control over the drugs and engaging in the other activities in furtherance of defendant’s possession of the controlled substances.3 The majority and lower courts further argue that, as a result of these activities, Supreme Court acquired jurisdiction over the drug possession counts.

Any reliance on CPL 20.60 (1), however, is inappropriate. Under CPL 20.60 (1), a defendant who, by making oral or written statements, reaches into a jurisdiction to commit a crime or an element of a crime, is “present” in that jurisdiction due to the fact that the oral or written statements are deemed to be conduct within that jurisdiction. However, CPL 20.60 (1) applies only to crimes that do not require defendant to be physically present within New York in order to commit the crime.4 Here, the criminal possession counts require knowing and unlawful possession of controlled substances in New York.

*330The People’s contention is that the controlled substances were constructively possessed in New York. The case went to the jury with an instruction that the controlled substances were constructively possessed in New York. Thus the trial court charged the jury, “That on or about May 19th, 1994, in the County of Queens, City of New York and State of California [sic], the defendants” constructively possessed cocaine.5

In summary, the controlled substances at issue were seized from persons and a house located in California, not recovered from an area or person located in New York. These drugs were never possessed in New York by defendant. Nor were they possessed within an area or by a person under defendant’s dominion and control. Accordingly, the crime of criminal possession of a controlled substance never occurred within the territorial borders of New York. Thus, the trial court could not acquire jurisdiction over the crime.

By affirming the Appellate Division’s holding that Supreme Court acquired territorial jurisdiction over the three criminal possession counts, the majority: (1) incorrectly credits the People’s theory that defendant, under a constructive possession theory, committed the crime of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree; and (2) incorrectly concludes that a New York criminal trial court can acquire jurisdiction over a criminal offense that was not actually committed in New York. The majority holds that “jurisdiction over an offense exists based on a conspiracy occurring in New York to commit that offense.” (Majority op at 313.) This holding can only be correct if the possession offense which is the object of the conspiracy has been committed in New York and the defendant possessed drugs in New York. The majority’s holding sets a dangerous precedent because it will allow a trial court to try a defendant for a completed crime where only an attempted crime or no crime has been committed.

Based on the foregoing, defendant’s conviction on the drug possession counts should be vacated and the indictment on those counts dismissed.

*331Judges Cipabick, Rosenblatt, Gbaffeo, Read and R.S. Smith concur with Chief Judge Kaye; Judge G.B. Smith dissents in a separate opinion.

Order affirmed.

. The majority states, “[B]ecause we conclude that jurisdiction is predicated on a conspiracy in New York to possess cocaine, we need not consider whether jurisdiction might also be established under . . . any other theory.” (Majority op at 316.)

. On these facts, California could acquire jurisdiction over and prosecute defendant for drug possession. A drug possession crime was actually committed there.

. CPL 20.60 (1) provides that “[a]n oral or written statement made by a person in one jurisdiction to a person in another jurisdiction by means of telecommunication, mail or any other method of communication is deemed to be made in each such jurisdiction.”

. To determine whether CPL 20.60 (1) applies, the court necessarily has to take the elements of the crime charged into account. Some examples of crimes where CPL 20.60 (1) has been held to apply are: (1) promoting gambling (see, e.g., People v Giordano, 87 NY2d 441 [1995]); (2) criminal sale of controlled substances (see, e.g., People v Muniz, 215 AD2d 881 [3d Dept 1995]); and (3) conspiracy (see, e.g., the case at bar).

. The majority states, “Constructive possession occurring within New York’s physical boundaries is simply not required to assert jurisdiction under CPL 20.20 (1) (c).” (Majority op at 314 n 6.) In this case, since the jury was charged that it had to find constructive possession in New York, in Queens County, if it did not so find, this conviction must be reversed.