Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Some of Justice Joseph A. McBride's reversals

 


Below is a table of some of Justice Joseph A. McBride's (Chenango County Supreme Court, New York) reversals when he was a District Attorney and in his current capacity as Supreme Court Justice.

This is "competency" of a judge who is allowed by law to take away your property, your liberty and the custody of your children.

By the way, New York State law does not provide for any safeguards for competence of judges when they are elected to the bench - no exam for the position of a judge, as they have in other countries.

You simply need (1) a heartbeat;  (2) a law license (which will never be revoked for a prosecutor, no matter what he does - a separate Commission for Prosecutorial Conduct, a fairly toothless entity, was created in New York specifically because appellate divisions refused to discipline prosecutors;  and (3) your own vote when you run unopposed.

The catastrophic results below is the consequence of such laws.

Where McBride was a prosecutor, the decisions reversed were of the presiding judge, not of McBride himself - but the judge is siding with McBride's prosecutorial misconduct, which is what led to reversals.

Where reversals are of McBride as a judge - McBride's own mistakes are self-evident.

The summaries of the cases below are short - you can read the entire cases for yourself by clicking on the links.



Year

Role

Case

Specific Appellate Finding (What Was Done Incorrectly)

Result / Gravity

2006

Prosecutor

People v. Wlasiuk, 32 A.D.3d 674

Introduced extensive prior bad act (Molineux) evidence without proper analysis; admitted hearsay (victim’s writings) without foundation; allowed expert to act as conduit for third-party report; engaged in summation conduct including expressing personal views, calling testimony “lies,” and maligning defense counsel

Severe – conviction reversed; new trial

2006

Prosecutor

People v. Van Deusen, 7 N.Y.3d 744

Failed to ensure defendant was advised of mandatory postrelease supervision before plea; plea deemed not knowing and voluntary

Severe – conviction reversed (Court of Appeals)

2006

Prosecutor

People v. Dalton, 2006 NY Slip Op 01410

Charged criminal solicitation where it was legally incidental to the underlying offense; drafted counts covering multiple acts over long periods, making them duplicitous

Severe – multiple counts dismissed

2007

Prosecutor

People v. Bruning, 2007 NY Slip Op 09444

Allowed sentencing beyond agreed plea range after defendant expressed intent to appeal; plea terms not honored or properly conditioned

Severe – sentence reversed; remitted

2008

Prosecutor

People v. Littebrant, 2008 NY Slip Op 08208

Secured conviction under statutory theory (physical helplessness) not supported by evidence (victim not unable to communicate unwillingness)

Severe- count dismissed

2011

Prosecutor

People v. Elwood, 2011 NY Slip Op 00289

Obtained conviction on a charge fully subsumed within another offense (same weapon element used for both counts)

Severe– count dismissed

2017

Prosecutor

People v. Rose, 2017 NY Slip Op 08217

Argued legality of police escalation based on proximity and behavior alone; court found facts insufficient to meet De Bour thresholds for inquiry and pursuit

Severe – suppression affirmed

2022

Judge

107 S. Albany St. v. Scott, 211 A.D.3d 1380

Dismissed claim based on absence of guaranty despite claim being for breach of fiduciary duty; accepted unpreserved standing argument

Severe – reversed; remitted


2024

Judge

Cancilla v. O’Rourke, 232 A.D.3d 1175

Failed to apply proper summary judgment standards; permitted reliance on improper procedural mechanisms to resolve disputed issues

Severe – reversed in part

2024

Judge

Katleski v. Cazenovia Golf Club, 225 A.D.3d 1030

Denied summary judgment despite dispositive legal doctrine (assumption of risk) resolving claim as a matter of law

Severe – reversed; complaint dismissed

2024

Judge

Mormile v. Marshall, 233 A.D.3d 1270

Failed to follow mandatory jury selection rules (peremptory challenge sequence); structured verdict sheet so jury did not reach required legal questions

Severe – reversal; new trial

2024

Judge

Szypula v. Szypula, 42 N.Y.3d 620

Classified property based on origin rather than statutory rule; failed to apply commingling doctrine under Domestic Relations Law

Severe – reversed (Court of Appeals)



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