SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2331-98T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
WARREN JENKINS,
Defendant-Appellant.
Submitted: December 18, 2001 Decided:
April 2, 2002
Before Judges Wefing, Lesemann and Landau.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Essex County, 95-08-
02755-I.
Peter A. Garcia, Acting Public Defender,
attorney for appellant (Sylvia Orenstein,
Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel
and on the brief).
John J. Farmer, Jr., Attorney General,
attorney for respondent (Jordana Jakubovic,
Deputy Attorney General, of counsel and on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WEFING, J.A.D.
Following a third extended trial, defendant was convicted of
aggravated manslaughter as a lesser included offense of murder,
N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4; felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(3); two counts
of carjacking, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-2; robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1; two
counts of conspiracy, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2; one count of aggravated
assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1b(4); two counts of possession of a
handgun for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4a; two counts of
unlawful possession of a handgun, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5b; and one count
of receiving stolen property, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-7. Two of the
convictions (felony murder and aggravated assault) were for Graves
Act offenses, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6c. At sentencing, the trial court
granted the State's motion for an extended term under N.J.S.A.
2C:44-3d. For felony murder, the trial court sentenced defendant
to life in prison, with a thirty-five year period of parole
ineligibility. The two carjacking convictions were first-degree
crimes; for those offenses the trial court sentenced defendant to
two concurrent thirty-year terms, with a fifteen-year period of
parole ineligibility but directed that sentence be served
consecutively to the sentence for felony murder. All other
sentences were made concurrent. Defendant's aggregate sentence is
thus life in prison, with a fifty-year period of parole
ineligibility. Defendant appeals his convictions and sentence. We
have reviewed the record on appeal in light of the contentions
advanced and are satisfied that defendant's convictions and
sentence should be affirmed.
I
Defendant, with an accomplice Thomas Cross, went on a crime
spree in Newark and the surrounding area in the spring and summer
of 1995. We have already affirmed his convictions and sentences
for incidents which occurred in April and June of that year. State
v. Jenkins,
321 N.J. Super. 124 (App. Div. 1999); State v. Jenkins,
A-818-98, decided July 18, 2000. This appeal follows defendant's
conviction for the shooting death of John Deventer on July 14, 1995
in Fairmount Cemetery in Newark.
John Deventer lived in Hanover, New Jersey. He had, several
months earlier, retired as the chief of the Hanover police
department. George and Elsie Wolf were friends and neighbors of
the Deventers. The Wolfs were in their eighties and unable to
drive any longer. Deventer would assist the Wolfs in a variety of
ways, including regularly driving them, together with a gardener,
to Fairmount Cemetery to see to the maintenance of a tract known as
the "Hoffman plot" for which the Wolfs were responsible.
Deventer went to the Wolfs' home on the morning of July 14.
He then drove the Wolfs and the gardener to the cemetery, using the
black Lincoln Town Car the Wolfs owned. When they arrived at the
cemetery, they dropped off the gardener and then drove to
Giordano's bakery. The Wolfs and Deventer were regular customers
at the bakery on their weekly trips to Newark and Mr. Wolf had
called ahead to place an order for particular breads and rolls.
When they arrived, Monica Giordano packed the order for him in the
bakery's regular white bags and Mr. Wolf placed it in a satchel he
had brought with him. He then put the satchel into the rear of the
car.
Deventer then drove back to the cemetery to pick up the
gardener. He parked the car, turned off the engine and, taking the
keys, walked over to the area where the gardener was working. Mr.
and Mrs. Wolf remained in the car, he in the front, she in the
rear.
A few minutes later, Mr. Wolf saw a thin black man wearing a
colorful shirt some 200 feet away; the man was pointing at the Town
Car and calling to someone else. A second black man appeared and
the two conversed briefly and then moved out of his field of
vision. Suddenly, the front passenger door of the car was opened;
Mr. Wolf felt something pressed against his head and the man with
the flowered shirt he had seen a few moments earlier was standing
there. He ordered Mr. Wolf out of the car, saying if he made any
noise he would "blow [his] brains out." The other man had opened
Mrs. Wolf's car door and the elderly couple was forced out of the
car and then told to wait.
The two assailants then approached Deventer and the gardener
who, by then, were returning to the car. The two demanded the keys
to the car and Deventer resisted. A struggle ensued and Deventer
shouted, "I am a cop." One of the attackers told the man with the
gun, "Shoot him" and the other immediately complied, shooting
Deventer in the abdomen. Deventer collapsed and the two assailants
stole the car keys, ran back to the Town Car and drove off. Mr.
Wolf sent his wife to summon help; Deventer died in his arms.
That same day, Rose Weinbaum took her elderly father to the
doctor in Maplewood, accompanied by her two-year-old daughter.
When they came out of the doctor's office, she helped her father
into the car and turned on the engine and the air-conditioning. As
she was placing her daughter in the car seat, a tall, thin black
man approached with a gun and ordered everyone out of the car. Her
father tried to resist and was knocked to the ground. The man then
drove off in Ms. Weinbaum's, car, a white Honda. Ms. Weinbaum
noticed that the thief seemed to be following a red car which had
pulled out of a nearby parking space. She jotted down the license
plate of that red car as the two vehicles sped away. It was later
determined that the red car had been stolen several days earlier at
gun point from the driveway of Michael Calabria in West Orange.
Following the report of the Weinbaum carjacking, police set up
surveillance to look for the car. It was spotted later that
afternoon in Newark. Police followed it and arrested the
occupants, a man and a woman. The man, later identified as Thomas
Cross, matched the description of the carjacker supplied by Michael
Calabria and Rose Weinbaum. Both Calabria and Weinbaum later
positively identified Cross from a photo array.
Police went to the address Cross had supplied, an apartment in
Newark belonging to one Edward Barden. Barden confirmed that Cross
had been staying with him. He said he had seen Cross driving a
white Honda. He gave police permission to search the apartment;
the search turned up a .38 caliber handgun Barden said belonged to
Cross. Barden also said that Cross's friend, defendant Warren
Jenkins, had been at the apartment earlier looking for Cross but
left when he heard Cross had been arrested. According to Barden,
Jenkins had been driving a red car.
Later that night, police discovered the Town Car belonging to
the Wolfs parked on Van Ness Place in Newark. No fingerprints
could be found in the car. The next day, July 15, Lafayette
Kollick, who lived on Van Ness Place, contacted the police after he
read in the newspapers of the Deventer killing. He told the police
that on the afternoon of the 14th, he had been sitting in a van in
front of his house when a black Town Car pulled up and parked
behind him. He noticed that the man who got out of the Town Car
had socks on his hands. A small red car pulled up behind the Town
Car and the man got into it and it drove away. Kollick later
identified defendant from a photo array as the man he saw exit from
the Town Car.
Also on the 15th, police stopped at the home of Gary Jenkins,
whom they understood to be defendant's cousin. They met Evelyn
Cruse, Gary's girlfriend. She told the police that defendant had
been there the day before, driving a small red car. She said
defendant had given her a quantity of bread and rolls, packed in
white bakery bags. They were later identified as the goods that
Mr. Wolf had purchased at Giordano's.
After leaving that residence, the police were driving to
another location to pursue the investigation when they spotted
Calabria's red car parked on the street. Deventer's rosary beads
and St. Jude medal were found in the car. Defendant was arrested
later that night, when police found him hiding in a basement at 413
Lyons Avenue in Newark.
As part of their investigation of the Deventer killing, police
spoke to all the employees of Fairmount Cemetery who were working
July 14. Edward Fisher told the police that he had been on his way
to lunch, near the site of the Hoffman plot, when he passed a
black man wearing shorts and carrying a shirt. He picked
defendant's picture from a photo array as the individual he had
seen.
Police received a report of a second shooting in the cemetery
which had occurred at about the same time as Deventer was killed,
although some distance away. In that incident, Mr. Ortiz and Mr.
Rodriguez said a black man wearing a brightly colored flowered
shirt shot at them. The bullet in that incident entered a car and
the size of the hole indicated a large caliber weapon. The bullet
that killed Deventer, on the other hand, was a small caliber.
Through later investigation, the police concluded the two incidents
were unrelated. They determined that the second shooting was done
by Willie Drewery who had dated Mr. Ortiz's daughter. Drewery and
Ortiz had had disputes over that relationship.
During their initial investigation, however, the police were
uncertain whether the two shootings were connected. Thus they
showed several witnesses photo arrays containing pictures of Cross,
Jenkins and Drewery. When Mr. Wolf was shown the arrays, he picked
out Drewery's picture as most resembling the man with the gun who
shot Deventer. The newspaper carried a report of the arrest of
defendant and Cross and included pictures as part of its story.
When Mr. Wolf saw the newspaper report, he identified Cross as one
of the assailants. Mr. Wolf testified, however, that he suffered
from macular degeneration and thus had poor vision. Neither Mrs.
Wolf nor the gardener were able to contribute anything on the issue
of identification.
Jenkins was tried three times for these crimes. The first two
trials resulted in hung juries; the third jury convicted defendant
on all counts, as noted at the outset of this opinion.
II
On appeal, Jenkins raises the following arguments:
POINT I
DEFENDANT'S RETRIAL ON COUNTS SEVEN(a), EIGHT, NINE
ELEVEN, TWELVE, FOURTEEN, SIXTEEN, SEVENTEEN AND EIGHTEEN
OF THE INDICTMENT VIOLATED HIS FEDERAL AND STATE DOUBLE
JEOPARDY RIGHTS, AND THE COURT BELOW ERRED IN REFUSING TO
DISMISS THOSE COUNTS. U.S. CONST., AMEND. V; N.J.
CONST., ART. I, ¶11.
POINT II
FUNDAMENTAL FAIRNESS REQUIRED THAT THE COUNTS ON WHICH
THE JURY IN THE FIRST TRIAL ANNOUNCED AN ACQUITTAL BE
DISMISSED.
POINT III
BECAUSE IDENTIFICATION WAS THE CRITICAL TRIAL ISSUE AND
THE PROCEDURES UTILIZED BY THE POLICE WERE IMPERMISSIBLY
SUGGESTIVE, THE ADMISSION OF THE EQUIVOCAL
IDENTIFICATIONS OF WITNESSES FISHER AND KOLLICK DEPRIVED
MR. JENKINS OF A FAIR TRIAL. (U.S. CONST., AMENDS. VI,
XIV; N.J. CONST., (1947), ART. I, ¶¶ 1, 9, 10).
P0INT IV
THE ADMISSION INTO EVIDENCE, OVER THE DEFENSE'S
OBJECTION, OF WITNESS BARDEN'S STATEMENT THAT HE HAD SEEN
THE DEFENDANT ON PRIOR OCCASIONS WITH A REVOLVER OF
UNKNOWN CALIBER, WAS PREJUDICIAL AND DEPRIVED DEFENDANT
OF A FAIR TRIAL.
POINT V
THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION BY DENYING
DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A CHANGE OF VENUE OR FOR AN
ADJOURNMENT TO ALLOW THE EFFECT OF INFLAMMATORY PUBLICITY
TO ABATE, THUS DEPRIVING HIM OF HIS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT
TO AN IMPARTIAL JURY. U.S. CONST., AMEND. VI, XIV; N.J.
CONST. (1947), ART. 1, ¶ 10.
POINT VI
THE PROSECUTOR'S COMMENTS DURING SUMMATION WERE IMPROPER
AND SO PREJUDICIAL AS TO DENY DEFENDANT A FAIR TRIAL AND
REQUIRE THE REVERSAL OF HIS CONVICTIONS. U.S. CONST.,
AMEND. XIV; N.J. CONST., (1947), ART. 1, ¶10.
A. COMMENTS BY THE PROSECUTOR IMPROPERLY SHIFTED
THE BURDEN OF PROOF AND IMPLICATED DEFENDANT'S
RIGHT TO REMAIN SILENT.
B. THE PROSECUTOR MISREPRESENTED THE DEFENSE'S
POSITION.
C. WITHOUT ANY SUPPORT IN THE RECORD, THE
PROSECUTOR STATED THAT ONE OF THE KEY
WITNESSES TESTIFIED AS HE DID OUT OF FEAR.
POINT VII
THE SENTENCE IMPOSED ON THE DEFENDANT WAS GROSSLY
EXCESSIVE AND THE RESULT OF IMPROPER CONSIDERATIONS.
A
Understanding defendant's first point requires that we set
forth in some detail the events surrounding defendant's prior
trials.
Defendant's first trial commenced on November 1, 1996, and
ended on November 27, 1996 after four days of jury deliberations.
The initial deliberations, which commenced on Friday, November 22,
were not untoward. The trial court answered the several questions
posed. Immediately after the lunch recess on Monday, November 25,
the jury told the trial court it was deadlocked on a number of
charges, including those of conspiracy, robbery, murder, felony
murder, and carjacking. The trial court asked the jurors to resume
deliberations, with a fresh mind and they did so. They deliberated
for the balance of that day and into Tuesday, November 26. Again,
the trial court responded without incident to their several
questions.
Midway through the afternoon session, the first significant
difficulty arose. One of the jurors, who was pregnant, sent out a
note to the trial court, expressing concern about the stress she
was experiencing. With the consent of counsel, the trial court
spoke to the juror who then returned to the jury room to discuss
ending deliberations for the day. The panel concurred and recessed
for the day.
The jurors returned for a fourth day on Wednesday, November
27. A little after 10 a.m. the panel sent the first of several
notes to the trial court which expressed doubts about the capacity
of one of the jurors to understand and participate in the
deliberations. The trial court asked for further explanation and
eventually spoke to that juror alone, on the record and in the
presence of counsel. The court encouraged the jurors to continue
their deliberations as the notes became more insistent that one
juror was not following the process; one note said that the juror
at issue was "not fair or impartial." At one point, the trial
court spoke to each of the jurors alone, on the record and in the
presence of counsel. All said they agreed with that description of
the particular juror.
Toward the end of the day, the juror identified as a problem
asked to speak to the trial court and indicated some uncertainty
about the terms "guilty" and "not guilty." As the trial court was
sending him back to the jury room, a note arrived that the jury had
reached a verdict. Defense counsel objected to the trial court
taking the verdict in that situation but the trial court determined
to do so.
When the panel returned to the court room, the foreman
announced a unanimous verdict; he said the panel found defendant
guilty of conspiracy, guilty of second-degree robbery of Deventer,
not guilty of carjacking the Town Car but guilty of its theft, not
guilty of murder or aggravated manslaughter but guilty of reckless
manslaughter, guilty of felony murder, not guilty of the weapons
charges, guilty of receiving stolen property, and not guilty of
carjacking the Weinbaum car. Upon polling the jury, however, it
was immediately apparent that the "problem" juror did not agree.
The trial court eventually determined it had no alternative but to
declare a mistrial.
The case was tried for a second time in July 1997, this time
for seven days. Again, however, the jury was unable to agree upon
a verdict and a mistrial was declared. Its declaration, however,
was not so fraught with problems as attended the first trial.
Some months after that second mistrial, defendant was tried
for a third time. This third trial resulted in the convictions and
sentence we noted earlier.
Defendant's first point on appeal is that he could not be
retried on those counts for which a verdict of not guilty was
announced after the jury told the trial court it had reached a
verdict on November 27, 1996. We disagree, for two reasons.
Both the United States Constitution and the New Jersey
Constitution protect a defendant against "a second prosecution for
the same offense after acquittal; a second prosecution for the same
offense after conviction; and multiple punishments for the same
offense." State v. Widmaier,
157 N.J. 475, 489-90 (1999). A jury
verdict is not final, however, "until the deliberations are over,
the result is announced in open court, and no dissent by a juror is
registered." State v. Rodriguez,
254 N.J. Super. 339, 348 (App.
Div. 1992) (quoting United States v. Rastelli,
870 F.2d 822, 834
(2d Cir. 1989), cert. denied sub nom., Agar v. United States,
493 U.S. 982,
110 S. Ct. 515,
107 L. Ed.2d 516 (1989)). The
announcement of a verdict by a foreman does not make it final.
State v. Rodriguez, supra, 254 N.J. Super. at 349. The jury
remains a deliberating jury until the trial court accepts the
verdict and discharges the panel. State v. Lefkowitz,
335 N.J.
Super. 352, 358 (App. Div. 2000). Under the circumstances which
developed in defendant's first trial, we are satisfied that the
jury never returned a final verdict on November 27, 1996 and that
there was no bar to defendant being tried again for these crimes.
Defendant's argument, moreover, overlooks the fact that he
proceeded to a second trial on all counts in 1997, with no
objection and no mention that jeopardy had in some manner attached.
We are satisfied that the State was in no way precluded from
retrying this defendant on all counts when the third proceeding
commenced in March 1998.
B
Defendant's second argument is that under the principle of
fundamental fairness, as enunciated in State v. Abbati,
99 N.J. 418
(1985), the State should have been precluded from proceeding with
a third trial. Again, we disagree.
The defendant in Abbati was charged with kidnapping and
aggravated sexual assault. He testified the encounter with the
alleged victim was entirely consensual while she testified to the
contrary. The matter was tried twice, and each time the jury was
unable to reach a verdict. Defendant moved to preclude a third
trial; the court granted his motion and dismissed the indictment.
The Appellate Division reversed. The Supreme Court reversed the
opinion of this court and remanded the matter to the trial court,
outlining those factors a court should consider before dismissing
an indictment in such a circumstance. These include the number and
outcome of prior proceedings; the length, complexity and similarity
of evidence in the prior proceedings; the likelihood of any
differences in any subsequent proceeding; the trial court's own
evaluation of the relative strength of the parties' positions; the
professional manner in which the matter has been handled by
counsel. Abbati, supra, 99 N.J. at 435.
This court has not hesitated, in the proper situation, to
exercise its inherent authority to hold that a retrial of a
defendant would be fundamentally unfair. State v. Simmons,
331 N.J. Super. 512 (2000). Defendant in that case was convicted in
1977 of murder and robbery. In 1995, the Court of Appeals for the
Third Circuit held, based on alleged Gilmore violations in jury
selection, that he was entitled to a new trial. Two trials were
conducted thereafter, more than twenty years after the slaying,
both of which resulted in deadlocked juries. We held that
defendant, who had already served twenty years in prison, was
entitled to a dismissal of the murder charge.
We cannot consider the instant matter at all similar. We
note, for instance, that as we have recounted earlier in this
opinion, the jury deliberations attendant to the first trial were
marked by developments which, at the very least, can fairly be
described as out-of-the-ordinary. The attorney who represented
defendant at all three trials had been admitted to practice more
than twenty years when the first trial was held and noted several
times that he had never experienced anything similar to what
occurred on the last day of deliberations. In addition, the State
had located additional witnesses it proposed to have testify at the
third trial to clarify for the jury the sequence of events on the
day in question. We are satisfied the trial court's conclusion
that defendant was not entitled to a dismissal of some of these
charges on the grounds of fundamental fairness was appropriate.
C
Defendant's third argument is that the trial court erred in
admitting into evidence testimony of the out-of-court
identifications of defendant that were made by Fisher and Kollick.
We note initially that a portion of defendant's argument on this
issue is based upon testimony delivered during the course of
defendant's third and final trial, rather than upon the testimony
proffered at the Wade hearing which was held prior to the
commencement of the first trial. United States v. Wade,
388 U.S. 218,
87 S. Ct. 1926,
18 L. Ed.2d 1149 (1967). It was the testimony
at that first hearing which was the basis of the trial court's
finding there was no unfairness in the procedure and no substantial
likelihood of misidentification. Further, defendant made no
challenge to this testimony at the third trial which resulted in
the convictions on appeal before us. We have reviewed the record
and are content to affirm on this question on the basis of the
trial court's written opinion of November 6, 1996.
D
During the course of the trial, Cross's roommate Edward Barden
testified that he had seen defendant in possession of a small black
revolver a few weeks before Deventer's killing. Defendant argues
that testimony was admitted in violation of Rule 404(b). We agree
with the trial court's conclusion that evidence that defendant had
access to such a weapon shortly before July 14, 1995 was relevant
to the question of defendant's identity and thus admissible. The
trial court gave a careful limiting instruction to the jury, both
at the time the evidence was first received and in its final
charge; there is no basis for reversal on this issue.
E
Deventer's killing generated a substantial amount of public
interest and publicity. Immediately prior to the commencement of
defendant's third trial, there were additional newspaper articles.
Defendant sought an adjournment of the trial on the basis of that
pretrial publicity. The trial court carefully covered the matter
during the jury selection and scrupulously interrogated the jury
during the course of the trial to ensure that the panel was not
tainted by publicity. The trial court did not, contrary to
defendant's assertions, abuse its discretion in denying that
motion. State v. Mance,
300 N.J. Super. 37, 53 (App. Div. 1997);
State v. King
215 N.J. Super. 504, 515 (App. Div. 1987); State v.
Lamb,
125 N.J. Super. 209, 213 (App. Div. 1973).
F
Defendant also maintains that the prosecutor committed
reversible error at several points in his summation. Specifically,
he contends that the prosecutor improperly commented on defendant's
failure to testify and implied that the defense had some burden of
proof, improperly denigrated the defense and implied that Fisher,
the cemetery worker, testified as he did out of fear. We have
carefully reviewed the summation in light of those assertions and
find no reversible error. The trial was long, complex and hard-
fought on both sides. The prosecutor put forth "a vigorous and
forceful presentation of the State's case." State v. Setzer,
268 N.J. Super. 553, 565 (App. Div. 1993), certif. denied,
135 N.J. 468
(1994). The trial court gave clear and explicit instructions to
the jury after the summations, addressing the issues of which
defendant now complains. We are satisfied that defendant was not
deprived of a fair trial.
G
Defendant seeks to amend the judgment of conviction, which
reflects a conviction for aggravated manslaughter. He relies upon
the written transcript of the return of the jury's verdict, which
reports the foreman advising the court that it found defendant not
guilty of aggravated manslaughter. This argument disregards the
fact that the verdict sheet clearly marked defendant guilty of
aggravated manslaughter and that the trial court, when it polled
the jury, indicated a verdict of guilty of aggravated manslaughter
and all jurors concurred. Further, when the foreman reported the
verdict, he did not proceed to reckless manslaughter from
aggravated manslaughter, as he would have done if the jury had
indeed found defendant not guilty of aggravated manslaughter. We
agree with the conclusion of the trial court, that the written
transcript is in error. Finally, the trial court at sentencing
merged the conviction for aggravated manslaughter into that for
felony murder and dismissed it.
H
Defendant's final argument is that his sentence is manifestly
excessive in that the trial court imposed both maximum and
consecutive sentences. We do not consider the argument to have
sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion for it
would have no precedential value. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
For all the reasons we have stated, defendant's convictions
and sentence are affirmed.