The criminal defendant was indicted for possession of a weapon as a class D felony on the charge that he had possessed an operable revolver and a quantity of ammunition and that such drug possession was not in his home or place of business. He was allowed to plead guilty to attempted possession of a weapon as a class E felony in satisfaction of the indictment. He was then sentenced to a six-month term and he was incarcerated until when he was released on bail with the consent of the District Attorney.
The principal question presented is whether the firearm here possessed was in the defendant’s place of business within the exception set forth in Penal Law. Subsidiary questions presented are whether the court’s stated policy at the time of sentence to impose a term of incarceration in such cases was improper in the light of his previous statement, at the time of accepting the guilty plea, that he would make no commitment as to sentence prior to reading the probation report; and whether the sentence imposed was excessive.
The facts are not in dispute. The defendant, an employee, was arrested while on his job in the United States Post Office attached to the John F. Kennedy Airport. Special Police Officer alleged that he had been informed that the defendant was carrying a gun. When the officer approached the defendant, he observed a bulge on his left side and removed there from in holster a .38 cal. revolver. The officer arrested the defendant and, upon a search of his person, discovered five rounds of live ammunition which could be used to discharge this firearm. The defendant had no permit for the gun.