NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5078-99T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MAURICE VALENTINE,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________________
Submitted: October 17, 2001 - Decided:
December 13, 2001
Before Judges A. A. Rodríguez, Lefelt and
Lisa.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Essex County, 356-1-99,
357-1-99.
Peter A. Garcia, Acting Public Defender,
attorney for appellant (Sylvia Orenstein,
Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel
and on the brief).
Donald C. Campolo, Acting Essex County
Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Kenneth
P. Ply, Special Deputy Attorney General, of
counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by:
RODRÍGUEZ, A. A., J.A.D.
In this appeal we hold that State v. Cromedy, 158 N.J.
112 (1999), which requires a special cross-racial identification
jury instruction in appropriate cases, does not require the giving
of a "cross-ethnic" identification jury instruction.
I
Following a jury trial, defendant, Maurice Valentine, was
convicted of first degree robbery of Edwin Negron on August 13,
1998,
N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1; two counts of third degree possession of a
firearm,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5c; two counts of third degree possession
of a sawed-off shotgun,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-3b; and second degree
possession of a weapon with the intent to use it unlawfully,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4a. After the jurors announced the verdict, they
were asked to consider the additional charge of second degree
possession of a weapon by a convicted felon,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7b.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty on that charge.
After appropriate mergers of some of the convictions, the
judge imposed concurrent terms aggregating twenty years with a
period of parole ineligibility of at least ten years pursuant to
the Graves Act,
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6c to -6d, and eighty-five percent
of the base term pursuant to the No Early Release Act (NERA),
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. We affirm.
II
The evidence presented by the state can be summarized as
follows. On August 13, 1998, Negron, age twenty-five, went to a
housing project at Prince Street in Newark to purchase illicit
drugs. At the time, he was a heroin abuser. He entered the
building's lobby carrying a radio. He noticed a man standing
inside. Negron was going to ask the man, "if he had anything,"
when another man, whom he later identified as defendant, approached
from behind. Defendant pushed Negron against the wall and pulled
a sawed-off shotgun from a blue bag that he was carrying. He
pointed it at Negron and said that if Negron did not give him his
money, he would be shot. According to Negron, after defendant
demanded the money, he "became paralyzed." He did not provide the
money quickly. Defendant struck him with the shotgun. Negron
thought that somebody came around behind him and grabbed his hands.
He noticed other men standing around, although he did not get a
good look at any of them. The men were laughing as if it was a
joke. As Negron turned his head around, he was struck a second
time with the shotgun, this time in the back of his head. He began
to bleed and became disoriented. He took the money out of his
pocket and gave it to defendant along with the radio.
Negron ran out of the building to the security booth. He was
still bleeding from the cut on the back of his head. Near the
security booth, he spoke to Jeanette Martin. She told Negron that
she had seen everything. He and Martin reported the incident to
the security guard. The security guard called the police to handle
the situation. However, Negron did not wait for the police to
arrive. He was scared to remain on the premises because defendant
had threatened to kill him. Negron went to his grandmother's house
nearby to tend to his cut. He reported the incident to the
security guard at his grandmother's building at Martin Luther King
Boulevard.
Responding police officers met Negron at his grandmother's
building. He was taken to the robbery unit at the police station.
He informed the police that his assailant was a dark-skinned male,
about 5'8", 170 to 190 pounds, between twenty-five and thirty-five
years old, with dark gold-rimmed glasses and a striped shirt. He
also informed the police that the man had a sawed-off shot gun
which he carried in a blue bag. Negron looked through photograph
books at headquarters. He was not able to find a photograph of his
assailant.
Negron admits lying to the police regarding the location where
the attack took place because his purpose for being there was
illegal. He told the police that he had gone to a store to
purchase cigarettes and had been assaulted at the intersection of
Spruce and Somerset streets. When Negron and the police officers
went to that intersection in an attempt to locate the assailant,
this attempt was unsuccessful.
The next evening, Negron was asked to return to the police
station. The police had arrested the defendant while he was in
possession of a sawed-off shotgun. The defendant fit Negron's
description. Negron was shown another photo array with six
photographs of dark-skinned males wearing glasses with gold rims.
Negron selected defendant's photograph and signed the back. Negron
then changed his statement to indicate the correct location of the
attack. He explained his reasons for lying to the police on the
previous statement.
At trial, Negron identified defendant as the assailant. He
noted that defendant was not then wearing gold-rimmed glasses at
trial. Negron also identified the shotgun seized from defendant as
the instrument with which he was twice hit over the head. A pair
of gold-rimmed eyeglasses, worn by defendant at the time of his
arrest, were introduced in evidence.
Jeanette Martin testified for the state. According to her, on
the date of the incident, she resided at the housing projects where
the attack took place. As she was going to the lobby to retrieve
her mail, the elevator door opened. She saw a group of young men
standing by the door. Then she saw defendant hit Negron on the
head with a sawed-off shotgun. She observed defendant taking
Negron's money. Martin described defendant as "dark-skinned, short
hair, [with] gold framed glasses on and thick lips."
Negron ran outside. Martin followed him to the security
booth. The security guard attempted to call an ambulance. Negron
stated that he did not want to stay. Negron subsequently left the
area. Several days later, Martin was asked to come to the police
station. She was shown photo books. However, she did not make an
identification.
At trial, Martin contradicted some of her earlier statements
to the police. These contradictions were brought out through the
testimony of a Newark police officer who witnessed her statement.
She also told the jury that one week before trial she had selected
defendant's photograph from a photo array at the Prosecutor's
Office. This statement was contradicted by the testimony of a
Prosecutor's investigator, who testified for defendant.
Newark Police Officer José Sosa, testified that on the date of
the incident he reported to Negron's grandmother's house. He took
Negron to the scene. When Negron could not identify a suspect,
Sosa took him to the police station.
Newark Police Officer Marion Reynolds, testified that on the
day after the assault, he and his partner, David Figarora, were
assigned to the public housing section. While patrolling the
Prince Street projects, the officers observed a person who fit the
description they had been given. The suspect, later identified as
defendant, was standing with a group of men. The uniformed
officers exited the unmarked patrol car and began to approach
defendant. Defendant, upon spotting the officers, fled the scene.
The officers chased him. Defendant entered a building and ran up
to the eighth floor. Reynolds saw the suspect clutching at his
left leg. Officer Figarora ordered defendant to raise his hands.
Defendant complied. Figarora frisked defendant and retrieved a
sawed-off shot gun. Defendant was arrested. At the time of
arrest, defendant was wearing gold-rimmed eyeglasses. Newark
Police Detective Louis Alarcon qualified as an expert in ballistics
and firearms. He testified that the weapon seized from defendant
was operable. He also testified that the barrel of such weapon was
normally twenty-eight inches. However, this particular weapon's
barrel had been shortened to twelve inches. He opined that a
person might shorten the barrel of a gun for "maneuverability" and
"concealability."
Defendant did not testify. He presented the testimony of a
Newark police officer and an Essex County Prosecutor's
investigator. These witnesses contradicted Martin's trial
testimony by testifying about her prior inconsistent statements.
III
On appeal, defendant contends that the judge erred by refusing
to give the jury a special instruction on cross-racial
identification pursuant to
State v. Cromedy,
158 N.J. 112 (1999).
This request by defendant was made with respect to Negron's
identification. The prosecutor did not urge that Martin was making
a cross-racial identification, therefore we assume that she and
defendant are of the same race. The judge's refusal was premised
on his conclusions that: (1) the identification testimony was
corroborated by other evidence and (2) defendant had not
demonstrated that Negron's identification was across racial lines.
We agree with the judge. From our thorough review of the record,
we conclude that the testimony of Martin, the seizure of a sawed-
off shotgun from defendant the day after the incident in the same
housing project, defendant's flight upon seeing the police
officers, and the presence of the gold-rimmed eyeglasses,
constitute other evidence giving Negron's identification
independent reliability. Under these circumstances, the cross-
racial identification special instruction need not be given.
Id.
at 132. Moreover, like the trial judge, we are not satisfied that
defendant has shown that he and Negron are of different races.
The Supreme Court has held that the trial court's failure to
give a requested instruction regarding cross-racial identification
may constitute reversible error.
Id. at 115. In
Cromedy, the
court held that such instruction should be given when
"identification is a critical issue in the case and an eyewitness's
cross-racial identification is not corroborated by other evidence
giving it independent reliability."
Id. at 132. In those
circumstances, the jury should be given a cautionary instruction
that it should pay close attention to the possible influence of
race on the accuracy of the identification.
Id. at 133.
Here, defendant's basis for seeking the charge was that
defendant is an African-American and Negron is Hispanic. However,
Hispanic is not a race. It is a cultural term, an ethnic
identification. The
American Heritage College Dictionary gives the
following definition:
His-pan-ic adj. 1. Of or relating to Spain or
Spanish-speaking Latin America. 2. Of or
relating to a Spanish-speaking people or
culture. -
n. 1. A Spanish-speaking person. 2.
A U.S. citizen or resident of Latin-America of
Spanish descent. [Lat. Hispanicus - Hispania,
Spain.]
Usage Note: There are a number of words
denoting persons who trace their origins to a
Spanish country or culture. Hispanic
encompasses all Spanish-speaking peoples in
both hemispheres and emphasizes the common
denominator of language between communities
that sometimes have little else in common. It
is widely used in both official and unofficial
contexts and is entirely acceptable.
[
American College Dictionary, 3rd edition,
Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston & New York,
(1993)].
Thus, Hispanics are of different races,
i.e. African-American,
Caucasian, Native-American, or Asian. All of these races are
represented among Hispanics living in the urban centers of this
state. A Hispanic person can also be of multi-racial descent.
Here, the trial judge and prosecutor concluded that Negron was
of "Spanish and African background." Therefore, the judge found
that there was no cross-racial identification. Defendant did not
dispute this conclusion. We have no warrant to dispute that
conclusion by the trial judge.
Defendant suggests that a "cross-ethnic" jury instruction
would have been appropriate here. However,
Cromedy does not
support such an instruction. The
Cromedy opinion clearly states
that "a cross-racial identification occurs when an eyewitness is
asked to identify a person of another race."
Id. at 120. The
opinion goes on to detail empirical studies concerning the effect
of "own-race effect" or "own-race bias."
Id. at 121. The
corollary of own-race effect "is that eyewitnesses experience a
'cross-racial impairment' when identifying members of another
race."
Ibid. Thus, the
Cromedy opinion focused on race, not
ethnicity or cultural identification. The reason is obvious,
members of the same race may have different ethnic self-
identifications. Put a different way, a person of African descent
raised in the United States will have many cultural differences
with a person of African descent raised in the Dominican Republic.
However, there will be no difference in racial characteristics.
Yet, one would be in the ethnic category "Hispanic" and the other
one will not.
Defendant's brief asserts that "Hispanics, like African-
Americans, constitute a legally cognizable group." Defendant then
cites various authorities for the principle that in jury selection
scenarios, Hispanics cannot be the target of peremptory challenges.
See State v. Gilmore,
103 N.J. 508, 535-36 (1986). This is true.
However, it does not mean that Hispanics and African-Americans
constitute mutually exclusive groups,
i.e. either one or the other.
There are many Hispanics of African descent.
Moreover, the rationale of
Gilmore and similar cases is to
protect minority groups from
conscious discrimination during jury
selections.
Cromedy deals with the
unconscious and
uncontrolled
"decreased accuracy in the recognition of other-race faces."
Cromedy,
supra, 158
N.J. at 131 (quoting Sheri Lynn Johnson
Cross-
Racial Identification Errors in Criminal Cases,
69 Cornell L. Rev.
934, 942 (1984)).
IV
[The Court's discussion of unrelated issues is redacted for
publication purposes.]
Affirmed.