NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-5427-99T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JAMAL MUHAMMAD,
Defendant-Appellant.
Submitted November 7, 2002 - Decided April 8,
2003
Before Judges Wefing, Lisa and Fuentes.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Atlantic County, 98-10-2525-I.
Yvonne Smith Segars, Public Defender, attorney
for appellant (M. Virginia Barta, Assistant
Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on the
brief).
Peter C. Harvey, Acting Attorney General,
attorney for respondent (Michael J. Williams,
Deputy Attorney General, of counsel and on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LISA, J.A.D.
Defendant, Jamal Muhammad, was convicted of third-degree
unlawful possession of a hand gun, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5b (count one),
second-degree possession of a hand gun for an unlawful purpose,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4a (count two), first-degree armed robbery, N.J.S.A.
2C:15-1 (count three), first-degree felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
3(a)(3) (count four), first-degree knowing or purposeful murder,
N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(1),(2) (count five), and second-degree conspiracy
to commit armed robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2 (count
six). The judge merged felony murder with murder, for which he
imposed a sentence of life imprisonment with a thirty-year parole
disqualifier. The judge merged count two with counts three and
six. He imposed the following sentences, all concurrent to the
murder sentence: count one, five years; count three, twenty years
with a ten-year Graves Act parole disqualifier, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6c;
and count six, ten years. Appropriate mandatory monetary sanctions
were imposed.
On appeal, defendant makes the following arguments through
counsel:
POINT I
BY ALLOWING THE PROSECUTOR TO PLAY PORTIONS OF
THE VIDEOTAPED TRIAL DURING SUMMATION, THE
COURT PERMITTED THE STATE'S WITNESSES TO
TESTIFY TWICE AND DEPRIVED THE DEFENDANT OF A
FAIR TRIAL.
POINT II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING THE TAPE OF
STEPHON DUGGAN'S PRIOR CONSISTENT STATEMENT
BECAUSE THE TEMPORAL-PROXIMITY REQUIREMENT OF
N.J.R.E. 803a(2) WAS NOT MET.
POINT III
THE TRIAL COURT'S FAILURE TO CHARGE "MERE
PRESENCE" DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL.
(Not Raised Below).
POINT IV
BECAUSE EVIDENCE OF THE KENNETH HOWARD ROBBERY
WAS INFLAMMATORY AND UNNECESSARY TO THE
STATE'S CASE, ITS ADMISSION VIOLATED N.J.R.E.
404(b) AND 403 AND, ALONG WITH THE COURT'S
ERRONEOUS AND INADEQUATE LIMITING INSTRUCTION,
DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR
TRIAL. (Partially Raised below).
POINT V
THE TRIAL COURT'S FAILURE TO EXCUSE JUROR NO.
8 AND TO VOIR DIRE THE REMAINING JURORS AFTER
JUROR NO. 8 INDICATED THAT HE HAD DISCUSSED
WITH THEM HIS FEARS ABOUT BEING A DELIBERATING
JUROR RESULTED IN JURY TAINT WHICH DEPRIVED
DEFENDANT OF DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR TRIAL.
(Not Raised Below).
POINT IV
THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE ERRORS AT
DEFENDANT'S TRIAL DEPRIVED HIM OF THE RIGHT TO
DUE PROCESS OF LAW AND A FAIR TRIAL. U.S.
CONST. AMENDS. V, VI, XIV; N.J. CONST. (1947)
ART. I, PARS.
1 AND 10.
In a supplemental pro se brief, defendant makes the following
additional arguments:
POINT I
THE LACK OF A PROPER IDENTIFICATION CHARGE IN
THIS CASE AMOUNTED TO A FUNDAMENTAL DENIAL OF
JUSTICE WHICH REQUIRES A REVERSAL AND A NEW
TRIAL GRANTED.
POINT II
THE LACK OF EVIDENCE PRODUCED BY THE STATE
CONNECTING DEFENDANT TO THE KILLING OF VAUGHN
ROLLINS SHOULD HAVE RESULTED IN A JUDGMENT OF
ACQUITTAL AT THE END OF THE STATE'S CASE.
POINT III
THE JOINT TRIAL OF CO-DEFENDANT WHOSE DEFENSES
WERE INCONSISTENT SO PREJUDICED THE DEFENDANT
AS TO DENY HIM HIS FEDERAL AND STATE
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS TO A FAIR TRIAL.
POINT IV
THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE TRIAL COURT'S
ERROR VIOLATED THE COMMON LAW OF NEW JERSEY
AND THE DUE PROCESS CLAUSE OF THE UNITED
STATES CONSTITUTION. (Not Raised Below)
We reject these arguments and affirm. Points III, V and VI of
counsel's brief, and all of the points in defendant's pro se brief,
lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion.
R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We will discuss the remaining points.
I
On October 22, 1996, Vaughn Rollins was shot and killed. For
several weeks before that, defendant and his co-defendant, Na'eem
Santiago, were attempting to obtain a gun. They approached Stephon
Duggan, an individual known to defendant, for this purpose.
Defendant told Duggan he needed a gun because "he was having
problems." This apparently referred to money problems, and
defendant and Santiago told Duggan they intended to use the gun to
rob people. Duggan asked several people about Santiago and on
October 20, 1996, met with defendant and Santiago again and agreed
to give them a gun. He handed a loaded nickel-plated .38 caliber
semi-automatic handgun to defendant, who then turned it over to
Santiago, who placed it in his waistband. Defendant and Santiago
discussed potential robbery victims. Included among them was
Vaughn Rollins, but Duggan told them not to rob him because he was
his cousin.
This meeting took place on the street in Atlantic City. While
the three men were still together, a young man, Kenneth Howard,
rode past on a bicycle. Defendant and Santiago proceeded to rob
him. They wore ski masks. Santiago pressed the gun to Howard's
ribs and cut him in the neck and leg with a butcher knife. They
ordered Howard to remove his clothing (except his underwear, socks
and shirt) and crawl under a parked truck. The two then rode off,
one peddling, the other on the handlebars, on Howard's bicycle with
Howard's clothes. Having witnessed this event, Duggan claims he
had second thoughts about giving the gun to defendant and Santiago
and claims he made several requests that it be returned.
On October 22, 1996, defendant and Santiago spent much of the
day in the Venice Park section of Atlantic City. Between 7:00 and
8:00 p.m., Rollins drove up, accompanied by Anthony Jones.
Defendant and Santiago were sitting together on a porch. There
were between fifteen and thirty young people congregating on
porches and in the street in that immediate vicinity. Jones got
out of the car and went into an apartment building to visit his
girlfriend. He told Rollins he would be out in ten to fifteen
minutes. Rollins sat in the car and was counting money.
A man later identified as Santiago approached Rollins as he
sat in the car. Santiago pulled on a ski mask, brandished a
handgun, and demanded Rollins give him the money. Rollins did not
comply. Santiago fired one shot, which struck and killed Rollins.
Immediately after the shot rang out, Santiago left the scene,
leaving the view of witnesses on the street by going around the
corner. Defendant proceeded around the same corner, then returned
to the porch and retrieved his jacket, after which he left the
area, going around that same corner in the same direction as
Santiago.
Informed of the shooting, Duggan went to the hospital where
Rollins lay dying. He informed Rollins' father that night that he
had supplied the gun to defendant and Santiago that killed his son.
Duggan contacted Santiago, who acknowledged killing Rollins, but
claimed it was an accident. Later that night, Santiago went to
Aaron McCoy's apartment seeking advice. He told McCoy he had
killed Rollins. McCoy called a cab for Santiago, and "told him to
go over the bridge, throw the gun in the water and just get lost."
Three days later, after attending Rollins' funeral, Shanita
Alvarez and Sequoya Walker went to Philadelphia, where they
happened to encounter Santiago at the bus station. Santiago asked
them not to tell anyone they saw him and that he was leaving for
"like Arizona somewhere" because the police "were trying to put a
body on him," referring to Rollins. Santiago remained a fugitive
until he was arrested for the murder of Rollins in Jacksonville,
Florida on May 1, 1998. Several days later, defendant turned
himself in to the New Jersey authorities.
Defendant and Santiago were indicted and tried together.
Santiago was convicted of the same counts as defendant. Santiago
has been sentenced and has appealed. His appeal proceeded
separately, and in an unpublished opinion, we affirmed his
conviction (A-4881-99T5). The Supreme Court denied his petition
for certification.
State v. Santiago,
170 N.J. 210 (2001).
Neither defendant testified at trial. It is clear from the proofs
that Santiago was the shooter.
II
The trial was conducted in a courtroom equipped with videotape
as the means of officially recording the proceedings. See
Condella
v. Cumberland Farms, Inc.,
298 N.J. Super. 531, 533 (Law Div.
1996), for a description of this equipment. During summation, the
prosecutor was permitted, over defense objection, to play portions
of the trial testimony of five State witnesses. The objection
interposed at trial was that this technique might place undue
emphasis on the portions played and might interfere with the
ability of the jurors to rely on their own recollection of the
witnesses' entire testimony. Defendant claims it was error to
allow the video playbacks at all. Defendant further argues, for
the first time on appeal, that it was error not to have conducted
a
N.J.R.E. 104(a) type hearing before allowing the playbacks and
not to have given a cautionary instruction.
On the latter points, because no objection was made at trial,
we are guided by the plain error standard, and we will disregard
the alleged error unless it is "clearly capable of producing an
unjust result."
R. 2:10-2. "Under that standard, defendant has
the burden of proving that the error was clear and obvious and that
it affected his substantial rights."
State v. Morton,
155 N.J. 383, 421 (1998),
cert. denied,
532 U.S. 931,
121 S. Ct. 1380, 149
L. Ed.2d 306 (2001). The error claimed must be so egregious that
it "raise[s] a reasonable doubt as to whether the error led the
jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached."
State v.
Macon,
57 N.J. 325, 336 (1971).
We hold it was not error to allow the playbacks, and, in the
context of this case, failure to first conduct a hearing and to
later give a cautionary instruction do not constitute plain error.
Jury selection and motions occurred on February 14, 2000. The
trial was conducted before the jury on February 15, 16, 17, 22, 23
and 24, when deliberations began. On February 25 the jury reached
its verdict. The State called twenty-three witnesses; defendant
called three and Santiago called one. Immediately prior to her
summation, the prosecutor announced that she intended to play
excerpts of the testimony of some witnesses during her summation.
Defense counsel objected, but did not request a hearing to permit
them and the court to view the selected portions. The judge
rejected the defense argument that the technique might improperly
overemphasize the selected portions of the witnesses' testimony or
interfere with the jurors' ability to recall and rely on the
witnesses' entire testimony. The judge reasoned that just as
counsel would be permitted to read portions of testimony from a
trial transcript, so too could they use the court-supplied video,
which officially records the proceedings and accurately captures
the testimony, for the same purpose.
In the course of her summation, the prosecutor played portions
of the testimony of five witnesses. A total of nine segments were
played. Most of them ran for about two to three minutes. Their
combined time was about twenty-five minutes. The prosecutor
occasionally interrupted her remarks to the jury by playing these
segments. Three segments of Duggan's testimony were played.
Duggan was a key witness with respect to defendant. Santiago's
role as the shooter was supported by substantial evidence,
including eyewitness testimony identifying him as the shooter, his
admission to McCoy and Duggan that he killed Rollins, and his
flight to avoid prosecution. Defendant's role in the killing was
more attenuated. At the time of the shooting, defendant was
sitting on the porch of a nearby apartment building, along with
many other people who were out in the neighborhood that evening.
He had been with Santiago in the neighborhood throughout the day
and left the scene after the shooting with Santiago. These
circumstances alone surely would not support a conviction for
Santiago's conduct.
The evidence linking defendant to the crime is derived
substantially from Duggan's account of his conversations with and
observations of defendant and Santiago on and before October 20,
1996, in furnishing them with a gun which they said they would use
to rob people, including Rollins as a prospective target, and
watching them actually use the gun to rob Howard. Howard
identified Santiago, but could not identify the other masked
perpetrator who robbed him. Duggan's testimony, therefore, was
crucial in implicating defendant.
The prosecution acknowledged the indispensability of Duggan's
account of furnishing the gun and observing the Howard robbery in
its case against defendant. The judge conducted a
N.J.R.E. 104(a)
hearing to consider the State's proffer of the Howard robbery as
"other crimes" evidence,
N.J.R.E. 404(b), or, alternatively, as
direct evidence of the conspiracy to commit robbery charge. With
respect to defendant, the prosecutor argued: "We place him on the
scene, but we do not have him moving from his spot on the porch to
participate directly in the robbery that occurred." She contended
the probative value of this evidence "is enhanced by the absence of
any other evidence that the State can offer" to demonstrate that
defendant had the motive or intent to participate with Santiago in
committing an armed robbery. She concluded the high probative
value thus outweighed any prejudicial effect because "it is the
only evidence we have, particularly against one of the two
defendants."
We illustrate the prosecutor's technique by recounting, in its
entirety, the video playbacks of portions of Duggan's testimony.See footnote 11
The prosecutor discussed that Duggan's credibility was subject to
question because of his prior criminal record, but that his
testimony should be believed because it was supported by other
evidence. Such other evidence included Duggan's version of the
Howard robbery, which was consistent with that given by Howard.
The prosecutor said "Let's listen to what [Duggan] said about the
robbery of Kenneth Howard." She then played this video excerpt of
Duggan's testimony:
Q. Okay. After Jamal got the gun, gave
it to Na'eem, Na'eem put it in his waistband,
what did -- what did you do?
A. I walked them outside.
Q. What happened when you walked them
outside?
A. We walked and talked. Came to the
street and a guy rode up on a bike and said
that was his friend.
Q. Who said that was his friend?
A. I'm not sure who said it.
Q. Was it either Jamal or Na'eem?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. Go ahead.
A. Na'eem walked over to him and I seen
a butcher knife. They walked around the
corner.
Q. They being --
A. The guy and Na'eem.
Q. And Jamal?
A. Jamal stood there and talked to me
for a minute, and then I just walked off.
Q. You said you saw the butcher knife.
What butcher knife?
A. I don't know what butcher knife. I
just seen a butcher knife.
Q. Well, who had the butcher knife?
A. Na'eem.
Q. Had you seen it before that day -- on
that day?
A. I remember seeing a butcher knife.
Q. That day.
A. I don't -- I'm not sure if it was
that day or a day before or a day after.
Q. And who had it when you saw it?
A. Na'eem.
Q. You walked away and then what
happened?
A. I walked around the corner, waited a
few minutes, and I walked up to -- like
through the parking lot, and I seen the boy on
the ground getting underneath -- either he was
getting underneath the truck or he was
underneath the truck trying to get from
underneath of there or --
Q. Describe the boy, as you refer to
him, the first time you saw him. What was he
wearing?
A. White jacket. That's all I can
remember is a white jacket.
Q. Was he fully clothed?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. He had something on his feet?
A. Yes.
Q. Pants?
A. Yes.
Q. A jacket?
A. Yes.
Q. Describe this young man when you saw
him getting under the truck or under the
truck.
A. He didn't have any cloths on.
Q. Did you see the clothes?
A. Yes.
Q. Where did you see them?
A. I believe Na'eem was holding them in
his hand.
Q. Okay. What happened to the bike?
A. Jamal was holding it.
Q. Did you get to -- did you see that --
and -- and what happened with the bike and the
clothes? Did they give them back to the boy?
Right there and then I'm talking about.
A. No.
Q. Did they take them away with them?
A. Yes.
The prosecutor then told the jury she would soon play Howard's
testimony about the same event, demonstrating how Howard's version
"dovetails perfectly" with Duggan's. This would establish that
"[t]hese two are the people that Kenneth Howard was talking about
when he says that he was robbed on the street." After her
discussion of Duggan's testimony and the playing of Duggan's three
excerpts, the prosecutor played Howard's version of the robbery, as
given in his trial testimony.
The prosecutor discussed the efforts Duggan made to get the
gun back after learning of the shooting. After several
unsuccessful efforts to reach Santiago, he finally spoke to him on
the phone. The prosecutor said, "This is what he has to say about
that." She then played this video testimony:
Q. Did you try to get in touch with
Jamal?
A. Yes.
Q. How?
A. I paged him.
Q. And what happened?
A. Took him a while to call me back. He
called me back eventually.
Q. Eventually that night or eventually
the next day or eventually when?
A. That night.
Q. Okay. And what happened?
A. I told him I needed that thing back.
He was like yeah. I was like yeah, I need it
back. He was like okay.
Q. Did you eventually attempt to get in
touch with Na'eem? By the way, did he tell
you that Na'eem had it at that point?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you attempt to get it -- did you
attempt to get in touch with Na'eem?
A. Yes.
Q. How did you do that?
A. I had paged him.
Q. Did you hear from him?
A. Yes, eventually.
Q. When is eventually?
A. I'm not sure if it's that day or
early the next morning.
Q. And what was that conversation?
A. I asked him for it back and he said
that -- hold on. I asked him for it back and
he said -- he said yeah. I said yeah, I need
that. I had told him that my cousin had got
shot and he said yeah. He said that's what I
need to talk to you about. I said yeah. He
was like, you know, it was a accident. It was
a accident.
Later in her summation, the prosecutor commented about an
inconsistency between Duggan's trial testimony and his prior
statement to the police. In the prior statement, he said he and
defendant were cousins, but at trial he said they were not. On
redirect examination he was asked to explain this discrepancy.
After noting in her summation that the defense pointed to Duggan's
"lie" in attacking his credibility, the prosecutor said, "This is
what [Duggan] said about the family relationship when he was
allowed to clarify it." She then played this video:
Q. Do -- did you -- Stephon, you wanted
to clarify something about this cousins issue
with regard to you and Jamal and Jamal and
Vaughn. What is it that you wanted to
clarify?
A. That when I said we're cousins, I
meant that we're like cousins, like I know him
for a long time. His family knew my family.
So we're considered to be family in that
sense. That's all.
Defendant argues that allowing the prosecutor to present the
jury with a "repeat performance" of witness testimony during
summation is tantamount to allowing the State to call the witness
a second time, giving undue emphasis to the testimony shown and, in
effect, enabling the State to bolster its case by simple
repetition. In essence, defendant argues that we should adopt a
per se rule barring the use of this technique by the State in a
criminal case. We decline to do so. Although we recognize a
significant potential for abuse, we conclude that whether or not to
permit the technique, by either a prosecutor or defendant, should
be determined on a case-by-case basis in the sound discretion of
the trial judge.
Counsel are traditionally allowed "broad latitude" in
summation. Colucci v. Oppenheim,
326 N.J. Super. 166, 177 (App.
Div. 1999), certif. denied,
163 N.J. 395 (2000); Diakampoulos v.
Monmouth Med. Center,
312 N.J. Super. 20, 32 (App. Div. 1998). In
criminal trials, prosecutors are given considerable leeway, and the
challenged conduct must be viewed in light of the entire trial.
State v. Frost,
158 N.J. 76, 82 (1999); State v. Feaster,
156 N.J. 1, 64 (1998), cert. denied sub nom., Kenney v. New Jersey,
532 U.S. 932,
121 S. Ct. 1380,
149 L. Ed.2d 306 (2001).
In their summations counsel may display in the course of
making their arguments items of physical evidence that have been
admitted. They may use charts and diagrams as aids. Audio and
videotaped statements of defendants and other witnesses are
frequently played during the trial for the jury and, when admitted
into evidence, may be played during summation. All of these
procedures are subject, of course, to the trial judge's
supervision.
In Condella, Judge Winkelstein, then sitting in the Law
Division, found it permissible, in the trial court's discretion and
subject to certain safeguards, to allow a civil litigant to utilize
the video play-back technique. Condella v. Cumberland Farms, Inc.,
supra, 298 N.J. Super. at 538. Relying on State v. Michaels,
264 N.J. Super. 579 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
134 N.J. 476 (1993),
and authorities from other jurisdictions, he concluded trial judges
should be permitted to exercise discretion to monitor what may or
may not be shown, balancing the benefits of showing the video
against any possible prejudice to the other party. Id. at 534-35.
Care must be taken that the video excerpts shown during
summation are not so lengthy as to constitute a second trial
emphasizing only one litigant's side of the case and that the
edited portions do not distort or misstate the evidence. Id. at
536. A N.J.R.E. 104(a) type hearing should be held in advance to
assure avoidance of these potential pitfalls. Ibid. If the party
proposing to use the technique is not first to sum up and does not
wish to disclose in advance which excerpts are intended to be
shown, the trial judge may deny or limit the application if
necessary to avoid undue delay between the parties' closings, which
might be prejudicial to the party who summed up previously. Id. at
537-38.
We agree with the conclusion reached in Condella, and discern
no reason why the practice should be barred in criminal trials. We
elaborate, however, on the potential pitfalls and safeguards
discussed in Condella which should guide the trial judge's
discretion, with particular reference to criminal trials. The use
of videotape courtrooms is increasing. We are informed by the
Administrative Office of the Courts that of the 101 criminal
courtrooms in the State as of this writing, 25 are equipped with
video equipment. Thus the issue before us is one which may arise
with some frequency.
An attorney who intends to use this technique should so inform
the court and all other counsel at the earliest possible time,
certainly before any party sums up. If not sooner, the intent
should be disclosed at the charge conference. A N.J.R.E. 104(a)
type hearing should be conducted in all cases, unless the proponent
has identified the excerpts to be played and opposing counsel, with
knowledge of those excerpts, expressly waives a hearing with the
court's approval. If the proponent is not the first scheduled
party to sum up and does not wish to disclose the proffered
excerpts, the proponent should advise the aggregate length of the
excerpts to assist the court in minimizing delay between
summations.
A trial may not be reduced to a battle of highlight films. It
cannot be suggested to jurors, in opening statements or otherwise,
that they will be provided in summations with highlights of the
witnesses' testimony. This would, of course, conflict with the
obligation that jurors pay careful attention to all of the evidence
as it is presented. As stated in Condella, the excerpts may not be
unduly long so as to overemphasize one side of the case. A party
may not substantially present its case a second time via videotape
replay. Use of the excerpts may only constitute an aid incidental
to the argument of counsel. It may not be an end in itself.
Video playbacks of witness testimony during deliberations at
the jury's request are commonplace. This is the only feasible
method of repeating such testimony with the videotape technology.
The ongoing use of this practice is a circumstance that contributes
to our conclusion that a total ban of the practice during summation
would be ill-advised.
However, the use by a party in summation of videotape playback
of trial testimony does not stand on the same footing as a jury's
request during deliberations for a playback. A jury request
results from the jury's determination that the replay of the
testimony of a particular witness is important to its deliberative
process. In those situations, unless the jury limits its request
to a particular portion of a witness' testimony, the entire
testimony is played back, including all direct and cross
examination. State v. Wilson,
165 N.J. 657, 660-61 (2000). In
either case the jury sees what it has requested. That is not the
case where a party chooses limited excerpts as part of its
argument. Thus careful supervision is required. There is no carte
blanche during summation just because the jury might request, and
receive, extended playbacks. In criminal trials, where much of the
evidence is usually produced by the State, special care must be
taken to assure that the State does not use this technique as a
means of "piling on" by undue repetition of its live testimony.
As stated in Condella, editing may not be permitted to result
in distortion. Skillful editing has the capacity to encapsulate
the strong points of a party's case, with the corresponding
capacity to give the jury a myopic view of the facts. It is the
jury's function to determine the facts based on its careful and
considered evaluation of all of the evidence. It is the jury's
function to ascribe relative weight to the testimony of the various
witnesses and the other evidence adduced at trial. Attorneys may
argue which evidence they urge the jury to find more weighty. The
limited use of video replays may serve as an incidental aid to such
arguments. But the misuse or over-use of this technique might tend
to usurp the jury's function and improperly divert the jury from
its role.
Trial judges have broad discretion in setting the permissible
boundaries of summations. They may permit some or all of the
proposed video playbacks, or they may reject their use entirely.
The determination is guided in each case by balancing the benefit
to the proponent against the possible prejudice to the opposing
party. Rejection may also be based on undue consumption of time,
inability to avoid delay between summations, potential to confuse
or mislead the jury, or any other appropriate consideration.
Special caution should be exercised to avoid playback of testimony
of an inflammatory nature.
The judge should give a cautionary instruction, preferably at
the time the video is played during summation and again in the
final charge. The judge should inform the jury that attorneys are
permitted to show the video to assist in displaying what they
consider significant testimony, but it is the jury's function and
obligation to determine the facts based on its recollection of all
of the evidence, including both direct and cross-examination of all
witnesses, and jurors should not place any extra emphasis on
portions of testimony played back.
In this trial, no such charge was requested and none was given
sua sponte. In his introductory comments to the jury at the
beginning of the trial, the judge instructed that the jurors "will
be the fact-finders. So you'll find your facts from the evidence
which is presented during the course of the trial." He told the
jury "it's important that you pay careful attention as the evidence
is presented." In his final charge, the judge reiterated that the
jurors "are the judges of the facts. You've heard all of the
testimony. You'll be able to consider all the other evidence.
From the evidence presented, you'll decide what the proven facts
are." He instructed that their recollection of the testimony is
controlling, notwithstanding "the comments of counsel during the
trial of this case, during the closing arguments or otherwise." He
continued: "While I'm sure no attorney in this case endeavored to
misstate anything that was testified to, if for any reason your
recollection differs from theirs, yours again is the controlling
recollection and rely on that which you recall."
In charging on credibility, the judge instructed the jurors to
"weigh the testimony of each witness and then determine the weight
to give to it, and through that process, you can accept all of it,
a portion of it, or none of it." After summarizing what the
evidence in the trial consists of, the judge stated, "Whatever it
is that is in evidence you've either heard from the testimony or
have been presented in physical form is what you should use to
decide the case."
Before playing any of the video excerpts, the prosecutor
stated in her summation that "all of my comments from here on are
my recollection of what happened in this trial. My recollection is
not the controlling recollection. It's yours. So if you disagree
with things that I have said, that I will say because you -- you
remember something differently, then that -- that's the important
recollection, yours, not mine." She then stated she would disagree
with some of the matters stated by defense counsel and "[i]t's for
you to determine what actually happened in this trial."
During deliberations the jury requested the playback of the
testimony of five witnesses, including three (Howard, McCoy and
Brian Townsel) for which excerpts were played during the
prosecutor's summation. The testimony of each of these witnesses
was played back in its entirety. This ameliorated any potential
prejudice from the partial playbacks of these witnesses during the
prosecutor's summation and from the lack of a limiting instruction.
We have viewed the video excerpts and considered them in the
context of the prosecutor's overall summation and in the context of
the entire trial. Considering the length of the trial and the
number of the witnesses, they were not unduly lengthy and did not
overemphasize the State's case. They were not taken out of context
and did not misstate or distort the testimony of the witnesses
presented. They were used as an aid to the prosecutor in
presenting her arguments, not as a running narrative that might
tend to unfairly limit or obfuscate the trial issues. We find no
abuse of discretion in allowing the playback of these limited
excerpts.
In the circumstances of this case we do not find plain error
in the failure to conduct a hearing to view the excerpts before
they were played or in the failure to give a cautionary
instruction. Had a hearing been held, the result would have been
the same, namely that the prosecutor would have been permitted to
play the proffered excerpts. The judge's overall instructions
adequately instructed the jury to consider all of the evidence as
it is presented and the entire testimony of the witnesses in
finding the facts in the case. We are satisfied the lack of a
cautionary instruction in this case was not clearly capable of
producing an unjust result. The lack of a cautionary instruction
does not raise a reasonable doubt that the jury reached a result it
might otherwise not have reached. Therefore, defendant's
substantial rights were not affected. State v. Morton, supra, 155
N.J. at 421; State v. Macon, supra, 57 N.J. at 336.
III
We next address the admission in evidence of a sworn, tape
recorded statement given by Duggan to the police on October 7,
1997. In it he detailed his knowledge of the events surrounding
the murder. It included his rendition of his furnishing the gun to
defendant and Santiago and his witnessing the Howard robbery. The
statement was substantially consistent with Duggan's trial
testimony. He gave the October 7, 1997 statement after entering
into an agreement with the Atlantic County Prosecutor's Office that
he would provide truthful trial testimony. Duggan had a
substantial criminal record, and he was serving a State prison
sentence when he entered into the agreement. The prosecutor agreed
not to file any charges against Duggan arising out of his
furnishing the gun. The prosecutor further agreed that after
Duggan's trial testimony, he would join in an application to have
Duggan's sentence reduced. Because by the time of trial Duggan had
been paroled, he could not attain an earlier release from custody,
but he did hope to have his parole supervision time reduced.
Duggan testified at trial for the State. As previously
discussed, his testimony was critical with respect to defendant.
Both defense counsel cross-examined him extensively regarding his
October 7, 1997 statement and his agreement with the prosecutor.
Counsel strongly attacked Duggan's credibility, suggesting his
testimony should not be trusted because it was fabricated to
enable him to avoid charges and get out of jail. Duggan was
questioned about inconsistencies between the October 7, 1997
statement and his trial testimony (
e.g., whether defendant was his
cousin or family friend and whether or not he had given defendant
any money).
After Duggan's testimony, the prosecutor called the
investigator who took Duggan's October 7, 1997 statement. The
investigator testified about the statement and, over defense
objection, it was played for the jury.See footnote 22 It was ultimately admitted
into evidence. The statement was admitted as a prior consistent
statement, pursuant to
N.J.R.E. 803(a), which provides:
The following statements are not excluded by
the hearsay rule:
(a) Prior statements of witnesses. A
statement previously made by a person who is a
witness at a trial or hearing, provided it
would have been admissible if made by the
declarant while testifying and the statement:
. . . .
(2) is consistent with the witness'
testimony and is offered to rebut an express
or implied charge against the witness of
recent fabrication or improper influence or
motive.
The State does not assert a charge of recent fabrication. It
asserts a charge of improper influence or motive. It contends the
defense clearly charged that Duggan's testimony was contrived to
get his deal with the prosecutor. One of the defense attorneys
referred in his opening to an anticipated State's witness,
obviously Duggan, who allegedly passed the gun to the two
defendants, "[b]ut yet, he's charged with nothing. He was
basically told . . . that he'd get help with one pending charge,
and he wouldn't be charged in this crime . . . . [He is] walking
free as long as he gives testimony here." From the outset of the
trial, the defense attacked Duggan's credibility, suggesting he had
a motive to lie (to get his deal) and his testimony was improperly
influenced by the police (telling him what to say).
Defendant argues that implicit in
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2) is a
temporal proximity requirement. On this theory, unless the prior
statement was made before the occurrence of the asserted improper
influence or motive, it lacks relevance to refute the charge. A
majority of the United States Supreme Court adopted this rationale
in interpreting
Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(B), the federal
counterpart to
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2).
Tome v. United States,
513 U.S. 150,
115 S. Ct. 696,
130 L. Ed.2d 574 (1995). Four justices
favored a flexible case-by-case approach, in which the prior
consistent statement's admissibility should turn on its relevance
to rebut the charge of recent fabrication or improper influence or
motive, whether the statement was made before or after occurrence
of the motive or influence to lie arose. The dissenters recognized
that "[i]n most cases, this approach will not yield a different
result from a strict adherence to the premotive rule for, in most
cases, postmotive statements will not be significantly probative."
Id. at 175, 115
S. Ct. at 710, 145
L. Ed.
2d at 594 (Breyer, J.,
dissenting).
Ibid.
Our Supreme Court has declined to adopt as a rigid
admissibility requirement that the prior statement was made prior
to the motive or influence to lie.
State v. Chew,
150 N.J. 30, 81
(1977),
cert. denied sub nom.,
Chew v. New Jersey,
528 U.S. 1052,
120 S. Ct. 593,
145 L. Ed.2d 493 (1999). In
Chew, a capital
murder case, defendant challenged the trial court's admission into
evidence of statements of two witnesses who inculpated him in the
murder. In their initial contacts with the police, these witnesses
had provided defendant with an alibi. Then, nine days later, they
gave inculpatory statements. Their trial testimony was
substantially consistent with the later statements. Their
credibility was heavily attacked at trial.
The Court noted that the predecessor to
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2),
Evid. R. 20, was interpreted "
not to contain a temporal requirement
'that a party seeking admission of a prior consistent statement
show that the prior statement was made before any alleged motive to
falsify existed on the part of the declarant.'"
State v. Chew,
supra, 150
N.J. at 79, quoting
State v. Johnson,
235 N.J. Super. 547, 556 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
118 N.J. 214 (1989). After
noting the majority rationale in
Tome for a contrary
interpretation, the Court stated, "However, in this case, many
things were happening as the different stories unfolded. There
were shades of difference between the witnesses' motivations at
different times."
Id. at 80. The Court further noted that "cross-
examination tested whether the witnesses were further motivated by
their plea agreements and whether the police had fed them with the
details of their stories."
Ibid. The Court concluded that in
these circumstances "[t]he prior consistent statements had
significant 'probative force bearing on credibility beyond merely
showing repetition.'"
Id. at 81 (quoting
United States v. Pierre,
781 F.2d 329, 333 (2d Cir. 1986)).
The Court in
Chew found it unnecessary for its resolution of
that case to determine whether
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2) contains the
implicit temporal requirement of its counterpart federal rule.
State v. Chew,
supra, 150
N.J. at 81. The Court requested that the
"Committee on the Rules of Evidence review the current formulation
of the Rule to determine whether any change need be made."
Ibid.
Five years and nine months have passed since
Chew was decided, and
no change has been made. The rule continues, by its explicit
language, to contain no temporal requirement.
We are mindful of the Court's comment in a case decided after
Chew that the scope of
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2) "encompasses prior
consistent statements made by the witness before the alleged
'improper influence or motive' to demonstrate that the witness did
not change his or her story."
Neno v. Clinton,
167 N.J. 573, 580
(2001). However, in that case, there was no allegation of improper
influence or motive on the witness' part,
id. at 581, and the Court
never mentioned
Chew or
Tome. In these circumstances, we do not
view the comment to establish a temporal requirement.
There has been no clear determination, either by Rule
amendment or case law, since
Chew to impose a mandatory temporal
requirement on
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2). For the reasons that follow, we
view the circumstances of this case to be similar to those in
Chew.
Our Evidence Rules generally promote admissibility of all relevant
evidence,
N.J.R.E. 402, and "evince a more expansive approach to
the admission of evidence."
A.S. Goldstein Co. v. Bloomfield
Plaza,
272 N.J. Super. 59, 66 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
137 N.J. 309 (1994). Trial judges are entrusted with broad discretion in
making evidence rulings. We conclude that the purpose of
N.J.R.E.
803(a)(2) is best advanced by not requiring a strict temporal
requirement, but instead allowing trial judges to evaluate
relevance under all of the circumstances in which the prior
statement is proffered. In reaching this conclusion we recognize
that whether the statement was made before the asserted motive or
influence to fabricate is a substantial factor in determining
relevance. It is not, however, absolutely controlling. Where
there are no factors other than the alleged improper influence or
motive influencing the prior statement or its making, a post-motive
statement should ordinarily be excluded. Applying these principles
in this case, we find no abuse of discretion in admitting Duggan's
prior statement.
Duggan told the victim's father on the night of the murder
that he had furnished the gun to defendant and Santiago. Testimony
was elicited that Duggan spoke to investigators on two prior
occasions over a three-month period before his October 7, 1997
statement, and that the information he then provided was consistent
with that in his taped statement. Duggan was cross-examined
forcefully about whether or not he included information in his
earlier interviews contrary to his later taped statement. All of
this was geared to demonstrating that he told the prosecutors what
they wanted to hear in the taped statement, also implying the
prosecutors fed him information. Of course, prior to October 7,
1997, there was no agreement between Duggan and the prosecutor.
Further, at the time of trial, the consideration flowing to Duggan
from the agreement had changed. He was already out on parole,
although he still hoped to have the parole period reduced.
As in
Chew, much was happening at the various times Duggan
made statements and testified, and his motivations likely differed
at different times. The defense used the taped statement to
impeach Duggan by pointing out inconsistencies with his prior
statements and his trial testimony. The statement was not
irrelevant to rebut the charge that Duggan's testimony was the
product of an improper influence or motive to lie. As in
Chew, it
related to differing motives to fabricate and was used for
rehabilitative purposes.
State v. Chew,
supra, 150
N.J. at 81. We
are satisfied the statement had significant probative force
pertaining to Duggan's credibility beyond mere repetition,
see
ibid., and was properly admitted under
N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2).
IV
Defendant contends the trial judge improperly admitted
evidence of the Howard robbery under
N.J.R.E. 404(b) and, for the
first time on appeal, contends the limiting instruction in
conjunction with that evidence was erroneous. We reject both
contentions. With respect to the instruction, we note that defense
counsel drafted it, and the court charged it without objection.
Admissibility of evidence of other-crimes or wrongs is guided
by a four-prong test:
1. The evidence of the other crime must
be admissible as relevant to material issue;
2. It must be similar in kind and
reasonably close in time to the offense
charged;
3. The evidence of the other crime must
be clear and convincing; and
4. The probative value of the evidence
must not be outweighed by its apparent
prejudice.
[
State v. Cofield,
127 N.J. 328, 338 (1992)]
Defendant's attack on the admission of this evidence focuses
on the first and fourth prong. He argues that, although the Howard
robbery had "some relevance" to the crimes charged, it was not
necessary to the State's proofs, and its limited probative value is
outweighed by its prejudicial effect. We do not agree. The
probative value was very high. The evidence tends to establish
that defendant and Santiago did indeed obtain the gun for the
purpose of committing armed robberies, including that of one of
their proposed victims, Rollins. No money was taken from Rollins;
thus this evidence was very important in the State's proof of
robbery and felony murder of Rollins, which were committed as part
of the conspiracy to commit armed robberies.
The limiting instruction was given twice, once during the
trial and in the final charge. It informed the jury that this
evidence was "introduced only for a specific purpose, a narrow
purpose, and that limited purpose is to assist the prosecution in
establishing that the defendants had engaged in a conspiracy to
commit robbery and what, if anything, was done in furtherance of
that conspiracy." The jury was also informed the evidence could
not be used for any other purpose, including the propensity to
commit crimes.
We find no abuse of discretion in the judge's determination
that this evidence was highly probative,
see State v. Covell,
157 N.J. 554, 569 (1999) (absence of other evidence to prove some point
enhances probative value), and its probative value is not
outweighed by any prejudicial effect.
State v. Marrero,
148 N.J. 469, 483 (1997). The limiting instruction was appropriate. As
noted, it was drafted by the defense.
The trial judge alternatively admitted evidence of the Howard
robbery as substantive evidence of the crimes charged, apart from
N.J.R.E. 404(b). Because the charges included conspiracy to commit
armed robbery, evidence relating directly to the commission of that
crime is not other-crimes evidence.
State v. L.P.,
338 N.J. Super. 227, 235 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
170 N.J. 205 (2001);
State v.
Byard,
328 N.J. Super. 106, 113-14 (2000);
State v. Torres,
313 N.J. Super. 129, 160-61 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
156 N.J. 425
(1998);
State v. Cherry,
289 N.J. Super. 503, 522 (App. Div. 1995).
The Howard robbery, at least to the extent of the charge of
conspiracy to commit armed robbery, was part of the criminal event,
or part of the
res gestae of the crime. The evidence was properly
admitted on this basis as well.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1The other playbacks were one excerpt of Howard, describing
the robbery of him; one excerpt of McCoy, relating that Santiago
came to him and stated he killed Rollins and that McCoy told him
to throw the gun in the water; two excerpts of Joel Townsel,
concerning his photo array identification of Santiago and the
circumstances of his interaction with a defense investigator and
Santiago's brother; and two excerpts of Brian Townsel, describing
what the shooter was wearing and giving his eyewitness account of
the shooting incident.
Footnote: 2 2The statement was redacted to remove extraneous material by
agreement of all counsel.