SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-600-92T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
RICHARD BARONE,
Defendant-Appellant.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued October 25, 1995 - Decided March 4, 1996
Before Judges Stern, Wallace and Newman.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Atlantic County.
J. Michael Blake, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, argued the cause for appellant
(Susan L. Reisner, Public Defender, attorney;
Mr. Blake, of counsel and on the brief and
reply brief).
Janet Flanagan, Deputy Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondent (Deborah T.
Poritz, Attorney General, attorney; Ms.
Flanagan, of counsel and on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
STERN, J.A.D.
The primary issue raised on this appeal is whether defendant can be prosecuted in New Jersey for state criminal violations revealed to a federal prosecutor in exchange for an agreement by that prosecutor that defendant would not be prosecuted by "the government" for the crimes he disclosed. We
must also consider the impact of inconsistent federal and state
court fact-finding concerning the crimes he revealed and whether
the agreement was breached. We hold that the defendant's State
indictment for theft offenses must be dismissed in these
circumstances involving the absence of any formal state charges
prior to his cooperation in the federal prosecution and a federal
judge's findings that those offenses were revealed to the federal
prosecutor and that federal law enforcement officers breached the
agreement in a manner which contributed to his state indictment.
Accordingly, we reverse defendant's convictions for theft but
affirm his unrelated convictions for simple assault and false
imprisonment.
offenses of which he was convicted. P.C. was a principal in the
thefts of which defendant was convicted and cooperated with State
prosecutors in the trial of the State case.
Defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of four years
each in the custody of the Commissioner of Corrections on the
theft convictions. The conspiracy conviction was merged therein,
and defendant received suspended sentences on the remaining
convictions. Defendant was ordered to pay restitution in the
amount of $47,313 for the thefts, and a $30 V.C.C.B. penalty for
each conviction.
After the counts on which the jury could not reach a verdict
were dismissed, defendant appealed from the convictions entered
against him. On this appeal, he argues:
POINT I DUE PROCESS AND FUNDAMENTAL FAIRNESS
REQUIRE THE DISMISSAL OF THE INDICTMENT
BECAUSE THE DEFENDANT PLED GUILTY IN
FEDERAL COURT PURSUANT TO A PLEA AGREEMENT
WHICH REQUIRED HIM TO DISCLOSE ALL HIS
KNOWLEDGE CONCERNING ANY CRIMES IN RETURN
FOR WHICH HE WAS PROMISED THAT NO ADDI-
TIONAL CHARGES WOULD BE BROUGHT AGAINST
HIM FOR THE CRIMES HE DISCLOSED.
A. The New Jersey Court's Conclusion That
Defendant Did Not Disclose His Involvement
In The Casino Thefts To Federal Agents Prior
To The Trial of Joseph Merlino Is Not
Supported By Any Evidence And Is Clearly
Mistaken And Plainly Unwarranted.
B. Due Process and Fundamental Fairness Mandate
Recognition by Our State Courts That The
Defendant Received Transactional Immunity By
The Plea Agreement He Entered Into With The
Federal Government.
C. If The Non-Prosecution Agreement Is Viewed As
Granting Defendant Use And Derivative Use
Immunity, The Indictment Must Be Dismissed
Because The State Has Failed to Show Clearly
And Convincingly That Its Prosecution Of
Defendant Was Totally Independent Of
Defendant's Compelled Admissions.
POINT II THE DEFENDANT WAS DENIED A FAIR TRIAL BY THE
ADMISSION OF EXTENSIVE EVIDENCE OF CRIMES NOT
INCLUDED IN THE INDICTMENT, HEARSAY EVIDENCE
AND BROAD EXPERT EVIDENCE REGARDING BATTERED
WOMAN'S SYNDROME WITHOUT ADEQUATE OR SUFFI-
CIENT LIMITING INSTRUCTIONS. (U.S. CONST.
AMEND. XIV; N.J. CONST. (1947), ART. I, PAR.
7; N.J. CONST. (1947), ART. I, PAR. 10).
A. Battered Woman's Syndrome
B. Other Crimes Evidence
POINT III THE COURT ERRED IN IMPOSING A FOUR YEAR
SENTENCE AND IN IMPOSING RESTITUTION IN THE
AMOUNT OF $47,313.00 WITHOUT HOLDING A HEARING
AS TO THE DEFENDANT'S ABILITY TO PAY.
The first point is directed to the convictions on counts
one, two and twelve related to the theft of money in 1985 and
1986 from a Trump casino and the Golden Nugget Casino in Atlantic
City. The remaining convictions relate to defendant's
relationship with P.C.
As noted at the outset, we find merit to defendant's claim
that the theft charges (and the related conspiracy) should have
been dismissed on his pretrial motion. Accordingly, we reverse
the judgment as to those convictions. We find no basis for
disturbing the other convictions or sentences imposed thereon.
Our disposition which vacates the custodial sentences and
restitution order moots the sentencing issues. It also
dissipates any illegality attributable to the non-custodial
sentence imposed on the remaining convictions in light of the
custodial sentence simultaneously imposed on the theft
convictions. See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5f(1).
In light of our disposition, we need not detail the proofs
at trial. There is not the slightest suggestion of evidentiary
insufficiency to support each conviction. In essence, defendant
was convicted of offenses related to the mistreatment, abuse and
beating of his girlfriend, P.C., with whom he conspired to steal
money from the cashier's cage of the casinos where she worked.
When defendant's confederate went to the cage to obtain change,
P.C. would place $100 bills "in a one dollar bill wrapper using
single dollar bill[s] on each side to mask for the camera."
Defendant was found to have stolen approximately $22,495 on
November 17, 1985 from the Trump Plaza Casino and approximately
$24,818 from the Golden Nugget Casino on June 15, 1986.
resulting in the convictions. Even though the charges involving
P.C. as a victim were developed when she sought to cooperate with
the State after her financial records were subpoenaed in 1990,
defendant does not contend that the simple assault and criminal
restraint prosecutions were barred by his agreement with the
federal prosecutor. We affirm those convictions.
fully debriefed concerning his knowledge of, and participation
in, the theft of currency from an armored truck on September 23,
1987 and other crimes about which he has knowledge."
The plea agreement also provided that if defendant
cooperated with the government and cooperated in the preparation
and presentation of the Merlino trial, the government would
advise the sentencing judge of "the good faith cooperation
provided by the defendant" and "provide the defendant with the
opportunity to apply for admission to the federal witness
protection program." The agreement further provided:
It is agreed that the government will bring
no additional charges against the defendant
for criminal conduct related to activity
which he has disclosed during proffer
sessions with federal agents prior to the
entry of his guilty pleas.
In order for the government to evaluate whether the
agreement was worth pursuing, a proffer session was held on
November 2, 1989. At that time defendant and his federal
attorney met with Robert Goldman, an Assistant United States
Attorney, and FBI agents Donald Rochon and Robert Bazin.
According to his federal attorney, defendant discussed the
charges embodied in the federal indictment and all "other crimes
about which [defendant] had knowledge." Defendant and his
federal attorney insist that he discussed the two thefts from the
Atlantic City casinos during the proffer session.
Defendant testified against Merlino at his federal trial on
January 10, 1990. It is uncontested that on cross-examination,
defendant implicated himself in the casino thefts, apparently in
the context of an attack on defendant's credibility by virtue of
his plea agreement. A transcript of neither the federal trial
nor the federal post-conviction proceedings has been presented to
us. On April 18, 1990 defendant was sentenced to a custodial
sentence of "one year and one day" for the conspiracy and to
three years probation for the theft.
Defendant was indicted by the State of New Jersey for the
two casino thefts and other offenses in November 1990. The grand
jury transcripts reveal that the matter was presented earlier
that month. As a result of the State indictment, defendant's
enrollment in the federal witness protection program was barred.
Because defendant sought entry into the program and claimed that
the bar stemmed from a breach of the agreement with federal law
enforcement officers, who provided information to New Jersey
authorities, defendant sought relief from the federal trial judge
before whom he pled and was sentenced. Accordingly, an
evidentiary hearing was conducted by United States District Judge
Norma Shapiro "into whether the government breached its plea
agreement with the defendant, Richard Barone, and, if so, to what
remedy the defendant is entitled at this time." United States v.
Barone,
781 F. Supp. 1072, 1073-74 (E.D. Pa. 1991).
After conducting "an in camera review of the file of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation" and taking the testimony of "the
investigative agents," id. at 1074, Judge Shapiro found that
defendant had disclosed his involvement in the casino thefts
during the proffer session. Id. at 1075. She also found that
the FBI agents in Philadelphia who were privy to defendant's
disclosures "kept their fellow agents in southern New Jersey
informed of the case developments." Ibid. She found that
through his contacts at the FBI office, retired FBI agent Jack
Tuttle, the Director of Surveillance for Bally's Grand Casino,
learned of information defendant had revealed, and relayed the
information to Investigator Carl Gravel of the Casino Prosecution
Section of the Division of Criminal Justice. Id. at 1075-1076.
She further found that in December 1989, FBI Agent Rochon
contacted defendant, who was then living in protective custody,
and advised defendant that the New Jersey authorities wished to
speak with him about the casino thefts, but that Rochon had
"prevented them" from speaking to defendant "at that time." Id.
at 1075.
Judge Shapiro also found that "the otherwise unexplained
reactivation of the New Jersey investigation of the casino thefts
followed shortly after the time of Mr. Barone's debriefings by
the FBI, and preceded his public testimony" and that nothing
which occurred in court or which was publicly reported at that
time "referred to Mr. Barone's involvement in the casino thefts."
Id. at 1076. The judge also referred to defendant's federal
pre-sentence report which noted that defendant had admitted to a
"scamming" incident with P.C. which had taken place at the Golden
Nugget Casino, and that the federal "prosecutor advised that the
Federal Bureau of Investigation has notified the victims of these
crimes and the defendant's admission of guilt." Id. at 1076.
The judge further noted that this fact was never contested by the
federal prosecutor who reviewed the presentence report at
sentencing. Id.
Judge Shapiro concluded that the FBI agents violated the
plea agreement which provided that the government would bring no
additional charges against defendant for matters disclosed during
his proffer session. Id. at 1077. She found that
38. After the 1989 proffer and before any
public disclosure of Mr. Barone's admitted
involvement in casino thefts in early 1990,
New Jersey authorities inexplicably resumed
an investigation into casino thefts occurring
in 1985 and 1986. At that time, Mr. Barone's
only admissions had been made privately to
federal officials in connection with his plea
agreement.
39. Defendant has shown by a preponderance
of the evidence that agents of the FBI,
intentionally or recklessly, indirectly
violated the provisions of Mr. Barone's plea
agreement that the government would bring no
additional charges against him for matters
disclosed during his proffer sessions, and
that he would be allowed to apply for the
federal witness protection program.
[Ibid.]
Based upon her findings, Judge Shapiro made conclusions,
which included:
2. Mr. Barone did not breach the plea
agreement. Accordingly, under Fed. R.Crim.P.
11(e)(6) and Fed.R.Evid. 410, nothing he said
during any proffer session prior to entering
his plea is admissible against him in any
court. Likewise, disclosure of such
statements to state authorities indirectly
violated his rights under these Federal
rules.
[781 F. Supp. at 1078.]
The judge also concluded that defendant "is entitled to be
readmitted to the Witness Protection Program as soon as he
becomes eligible." Ibid. In her discussion of the issue, she
said:
Since the Government cannot be permitted
to accomplish indirectly what it is bound not
to do directly, taking action likely to cause
the State of New Jersey to bring charges
against Mr. Barone the federal government
would be barred from bringing, is a violation
of the plea agreement, especially where the
consequence of state charges is the loss of
Mr. Barone's valuable placement in a witness
protection program.
Where the motivation of one person to
become a witness against another is the fruit
or product of the latter's immunized
testimony, evidence derived from the
testimony of the former is barred. United
States v. Kurzer,
534 F.2d 511 (2d Cir.
1976), cited in United States v. Quatermain,
613 F.2d 38, 39-41 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,
446 U.S. 954,
100 S. Ct. 2923,
64 L. Ed.2d 812 (1980)]. Where the testimony of a
witness derives from a violation of an
agreement under which the defendant gave his
cooperation and made statements incriminating
to himself and others, that witness's
testimony should be suppressed under
[Santobello v. New York,
404 U.S. 257,
92 S.
Ct. 495,
30 L. Ed.2d 427 (1971)] as a remedy
for the due process violation.
[Id. at 1078-79.]
It is clear that the federal judge found that State law
enforcement authorities used the information disclosed by
defendant pursuant to the agreement.
Nevertheless, although stating that she had the power to
enjoin "a state criminal prosecution in some cases," see, e.g.,
Younger v. Harris,
401 U.S. 37, 54,
91 S. Ct. 746,
27 L. Ed 2d
669, 681 (1971) (permitting federal injunction only in unusual
circumstances), Judge Shapiro declined to do so. 781 F. Supp. at
1079. The federal judge concluded:
Mr. Barone's rights under his plea
agreement have been violated. Were this
court not restrained by principles of comity
and discretion, it would enjoin the New
Jersey criminal prosecution against Mr.
Barone, a remedy which the New Jersey court
may certainly deem appropriate and within its
power. Considering itself bound by such
restraints, this court will direct the United
States Attorney's Office and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation to give no further
assistance to the authorities of the State of
New Jersey in their prosecution of Richard
Barone, and direct the Department of Justice,
including the United States Marshals Service,
to make their best efforts to provide some
form of witness protection at an appropriate
time.
[Id.]
It was on this basis that defendant moved to dismiss the State indictment. The State trial judge took testimony to determine how and when New Jersey authorities obtained the information concerning defendant's involvement in the casino thefts. Following the hearing, the State judge stated that he had "trouble" with Judge Shapiro's factual finding that defendant had made the statements concerning the casino thefts during the proffer session. The State judge referred to Judge Shapiro's factual finding that although Rochon took notes at the proffer session, the notes did not refer to the casino thefts. The State judge also found that there was no evidence, except for defendant's federal attorney's certification, that expressly revealed that the reference to the casino thefts was made at the
proffer session. The State judge placed "very little reliance"
on the attorney's certification because he was defendant's former
attorney and "all he can remember is that large sums of money
from the casinos was [sic] discussed." The judge found it was
"more reasonable to believe" that defendant told no one about the
casino thefts until he was cross-examined in the Merlino trial.
The judge determined that defendant was not entitled to relief
under the plea agreement because it covered only those crimes
discussed at the proffer session, and the casino thefts had not
been discussed at that time.
Based on the testimony taken at the hearing before him, the
State judge concluded that:
It is clear from the testimony ... that New
Jersey had no knowledge concerning any
statements made by the defendant Barone at
any proffer session and the knowledge gained
by the New Jersey authorities came from
either the [independent] detailed
investigation made by [State] Investigator
Carl Gravel or the investigation that showed
that the defendant Barone made the admissions
while under cross-examination at the federal
trial of the Merlino and Barone defendant,
and therefore, I cannot agree that any
statements made by the defendant Barone were
protected by any Fifth Amendment privilege or
any other principles of law that have been
set forth to me ....
The judge therefore denied the motion to dismiss the
indictment.
immunity, due process and fundamental fairness compel such a
finding. He also contends that the State judge's conclusion that
defendant did not disclose his involvement in the casino thefts
during the proffer session was not supported by the evidence and
violated the principles of comity, and that, in any event, even
if the agreement is viewed as granting only use immunity, the
indictment should be dismissed because the State failed to show
that its prosecution was totally independent of defendant's
compelled admissions.
Preliminarily, the State claims that defendant should be
estopped from arguing that the agreement constitutes a grant of
immunity because defendant did not appeal Judge Shapiro's finding
that the agreement was a promise not to prosecute, as opposed to
a grant of immunity, and defendant agreed to be bound by Judge
Shapiro's decision. We disagree. Even though Judge Shapiro
found that defendant was not granted immunity, she granted
defendant limited relief, and the chances of success in obtaining
an injunction against the State prosecution had defendant
appealed were minimal. See Younger v. Harris, supra. Moreover,
the State's present contention serves to give greater breath to
the scope of the federal hearing than the State advanced below as
its justification for not seeking to participate. In any event,
an estoppel cannot flow from the wording of the judge's opinion
or defendant's failure to appeal the resulting judgment in his
favor. Furthermore, we do not hold that defendant received
transactional immunity or immunity from prosecution in New
Jersey. As will be developed, we hold only that, in these
circumstances, the State cannot challenge the federal judge's
finding that the indictment for the casino thefts returned
against him was derived from a breach of the federal agreement.
Those charges must, therefore, be dismissed on that basis.
immunity flows from the compelling of testimony even over a valid
claim of privilege (much less an agreement) have been rejected.
Kastigar, supra; Zicarelli, supra. See also State v. Strong,
110 N.J. 583, 591-96 (1988); State v. Kenny,
68 N.J. 17, 23-24
(1975).
However, there is a difference between the grant of any type
immunity, which usually flows from statute and is usually granted
by a judge (normally following the assertion of the Fifth
Amendment) incident to a direction to testify, see State v.
Strong, supra; In re Tuso,
73 N.J. 575 (1977); In re Addonizio,
53 N.J. 107 (1968), and a formal or informal agreement with a
prosecutor (frequently resulting in the failure to warn or the
witness' non-assertion of the privilege):
Formal immunity is dramatically
distinguished from informal agreements that
"partake of," "sound in," or somehow resemble
formal immunity. Formal immunity is not
necessarily the subject of a bargain and is
frequently forced upon a reluctant witness
against the witness's will. A witness is
summoned to testify at a trial or before a
grand jury. The witness claims the privilege
against compelled testimonial self-incrimination. The State, upon explicit
statutory authorization, may then officially
and upon the record confer a grant of the
appropriate form of immunity upon the
recalcitrant witness, whether that witness
wishes it or not. The witness is then
compelled to testify under threat of
contempt, for there is no longer any danger
that the compelled testimony could operate to
incriminate.
Formal immunity, moreover, is never
given in exchange for (1) cooperation, (2)
information, or (3) even non-privileged
testimony. The very notion of immunity has
no existence outside the context of the
constitutional privilege against compelled
self-incrimination. . . . Although a quid
pro quo of forbearing to prosecute in
exchange for anything other than privileged
testimony may resemble transactional
immunity, it is not immunity.
[Butler v. State, supra, 55 Md. App. at __,
462 A.
2d at 1236.]
Here, defendant did not invoke his privilege against self-incrimination during a criminal or other proceeding. He was not
directed by a judge or compelled to testify over a valid claim of
privilege, or otherwise. He voluntarily bargained for an
agreement with the federal government. The government did not
force him to testify against his will, and no statutory immunity
was invoked. Thus, the State is correct that this is not a case
where formal immunity had been granted.
However, here the agreement was embodied in writing, the
government made its agreement pursuant to Federal Rule 11(e), and
the federal courts have approved the use of "informal" immunity
agreements. United States v. Harvey,
869 F.2d 1439, 1444 (11th
Cir. 1989); United States v. Skalsky,
857 F.2d 172, 175 (3d Cir.
1988). The informal agreements can provide for either
transactional or testimonial ("use plus fruits") immunity, United
States v. Harvey, supra, 869 F.
2d at 1449, although under the
latter, the witness may still be prosecuted for crimes about
which he testifies if the government can prove that its evidence
was derived from a source wholly independent of the compelled
testimony. United States v. Quatermain,
613 F.2d 38, 40-43 (3d
Cir.), cert. denied,
446 U.S. 954,
100 S. Ct. 2923,
64 L. Ed.2d 812 (1980). The agreement may be made in the context of a plea
agreement, and "[a]lthough a plea agreement occurs in a criminal
context, it remains contractual in nature and is to be analyzed
under contract-law standards." United States v. Moscahlaidis,
868 F.2d 1357, 1361 (3d Cir. 1989). Moreover, "[d]ue process
requires the government to adhere to the terms of any plea
bargain or immunity agreement it makes." United States v.
Harvey, supra, 869 F.
2d at 1443. See also State v. Riley,
242 N.J. Super. 113, 119-20 (App.Div. 1990).
In Rowe v. Griffin,
676 F.2d 524 (11th Cir. 1982), the
federal Court of Appeals upheld the injunction of a state
prosecution following a promise by state and federal law
enforcement officers not to prosecute a paid informer who
provided evidence in the prosecution of members of the Klu Klux
Klan. The Court held that to achieve immunity from prosecution
defendant must show "that (1) an agreement was made; (2) the
defendant has performed on his side; and (3) the subsequent
prosecution is directly related to offenses in which the
defendant, pursuant to the agreement, either assisted with the
investigation or testified for the government." Id. at 527-28.
The state prosecution was enjoined, however, only because the
State Attorney General had been a party to the agreement. 676
F.
2d at 526. Following Griffin, it has been made clear, however,
that "[u]nder settled precedent, one federal prosecutor cannot
bind his or her counterpart in another district unless he or she
has been given authority," United States v. Roberson,
872 F.2d 597, 611 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
493 U.S. 861,
110 S. Ct. 175,
107 L. Ed.2d 131 (1989), and that "[i]f federal prosecutors
cannot bind other federal prosecutors with their unauthorized
acts, a state prosecutor a fortiori should not be able to do so."
Ibid. The Roberson court also noted that "[i]f state agreements
that immunize criminal defendants from state charges could bind
federal prosecutors, state prosecutors would be able to usurp
federal prosecutorial discretion." Ibid. Cf. United States v.
Harvey,
791 F.2d 294, 302-03 (4th Cir. 1986).
Given the scope of the Fifth Amendment protection against
the use of compelled testimony and its fruits, as developed in
Kastigar and Zicarelli, there is no reason to give greater
protection to the breach of a promise not to prosecute. Formal
transactional immunity may be given pursuant to a statute or
judicial proceeding. See State v. Kenny, supra. See also United
States v. Camp,
72 F.3d 759 (9th Cir. 1995) (self-incrimination
not compelled under State transactional immunity agreement, and
information given could be considered at federal sentencing);
United States v. Eliason,
3 F.3d 1149, 1154-55 (7th Cir. 1993)
("argument that information voluntarily provided during state
plea negotiations results in immunity from federal prosecution is
without merit"); United States v. Biaggi,
675 F. Supp. 790, 804
(S.D.N.Y. 1987) ("no considerations of federalism or of New York
law ... require [federal court] to honor a grant of letter [non-statutory] immunity by a state prosecutor"); United States v.
Addonizio,
313 F. Supp. 486, 494 (D.N.J. 1970), aff'd,
451 F.2d 49 (3d Cir. 1971), cert. denied,
405 U.S. 1048,
92 S. Ct. 1309,
31 L. Ed.2d 591 (1972) (defendant's State grand jury testimony
compelled over assertion of Fifth Amendment turned over to
federal prosecutors did not prevent federal prosecution); Butler
v. State, supra, 462 A.
2d at 1236.
Defendant's arguments that the State is bound by the federal
promise of non-prosecution are unpersuasive. Defendant relies on
two cases, State v. Kenny, supra,
68 N.J. 17, and In re Ippolito,
75 N.J. 435 (1978), for the proposition that "[o]ur state courts
recognize that a grant of transactional immunity by the Federal
Government does immunize defendants in state court." However,
Kenny involved testimony developed in federal court pursuant to a
federal statutory grant of transactional immunity, and Ippolito
merely implemented the fundamental principle that a witness could
not be compelled to answer incriminating questions unless
previously afforded immunity. See also In re Tuso, supra.
Footnote 3 of Ippolito, 76 N.J. at 438, relied upon by defendant,
does state that "[t]he immunity would extend to federal
prosecution or prosecution in any other State as well." However,
the footnote relates to constitutionally adequate "use plus
fruits" - not transactional - immunity. Here, no formal
statutory transactional immunity was granted. We, thus, reject
defendant's contention that he cannot be prosecuted by the State
of New Jersey for the theft offenses.
of the post-conviction proceedings before Judge Shapiro, and that
she attended the first day's proceedings. The Deputy Attorney
General explained:
With respect to the [ ] first hearing,
my investigator, the primary investigator in
this case, was on vacation. That was made
clear to Judge Shapiro. It was also made
clear to Judge Shapiro that should she wish
him -- should she wish to question him, he
would be made available to her because he
would be coming back into the State within
the next couple of days. I never received
any further inclination or any indication
from Judge Shapiro that she wished to hear
from him.
So, that is where we stand with respect
to the State's position being put forth in
that hearing.
The State prosecutor further explained that she was not in
attendance for the second day of testimony, but that was because
the State never sought to become involved. According to the
Deputy Attorney General:
The State did not defer with respect to
these hearings that were held before Judge
Shapiro. It did not defer in the sense that
it was requested by the U.S. Attorney to
defer. The reason being that the purpose of
that hearing, the sole purpose of that
hearing, was to determine if the federal
government violated a federal plea agreement
with Mr. Barone who was then a federal
witness.
As such, Mr. Goldman explained to me
that he did not wish the State to participate
in any manner, because he did not want that
hearing to be expanded. Given that that was
my understanding of what that hearing was to
be, the State indeed did sit back and just
watch.
When asked by Mr. Goldman if I should submit or if he could submit the affidavit of
Mr. Gravel, I agreed that that affidavit
could indeed be submitted. However, it was
made clear to Judge Shapiro at the time that
Mr. Gravel, while on vacation for the first
hearing, would be available shortly
thereafter, and should any further testimony
be needed, he would be available as would any
other member of the State be made available.
I was never requested thereafter to
produce Mr. Gravel. I was never requested
thereafter to produce the then Chief of the
section, John J. Smith, who made the decision
to reactivate this case.
As such, there is nothing on the record
before Judge Shapiro as to the motivation of
the State of New Jersey, or as to the reasons
why the State of New Jersey did what the
State of New Jersey did.
With respect to the hearing that was
held by Judge Shapiro, in that respect, I
think it was a very narrow hearing. It was
for one purpose and one purpose only. Judge
Shapiro made her findings with respect to the
fact that Mr. Barone, first of all, and most
important, was not granted immunity. He was
simply allowed to have a plea agreement with
an agreement not to prosecute.
Undoubtedly, for good law enforcement purposes, the State
prosecutor elected to cooperate with the United States Attorney
and not to seek to intervene or participate in the proceedings
she knew were directed to the source of the State's evidence and
the impact of the federal agreement on the State prosecution.
Having made that election, and having deferred to the United
States Attorney, we conclude that the State could not seek to
question the subsequent federal court fact-finding in State
court.
We recognize that Judge Shapiro's order did not enjoin the
State prosecution or purport to dismiss the State charges, but in
our view her determination warranted some action by the State law
enforcement authorities in light of their knowledge of the
proceedings pending before her. This record reflects no endeavor
by the State to intervene, to formally participate or to seek
reconsideration of the federal judge's decision once rendered.
In essence, while the Federal District Court in the exercise
of comity declined to enjoin the State prosecution, we believe
that, in the best interests of federal-state judicial relations,
the State prosecutor in these circumstances should have
endeavored to intervene or challenge in federal court the federal
fact-findings which compel dismissal of the State prosecution,
rather than sitting back and seeking to relitigate the issue in
State court. While the State judge heard witnesses presented by
the State, there is no question that defendant could not obtain
access to, or present to the State court, the confidential FBI
records made available to the federal judge in camera. In any
event, the State prosecutor elected not to seek the opportunity
to further participate in the federal proceedings, although
presenting to the federal judge an affidavit of the lead State
investigator who claimed in State court that the State indictment
was based on wholly independent evidence. The federal judge
reviewed that affidavit and other evidence not available or
presented to the State judge. The State prosecutor could not
elect to sit back, defer to the United States Attorney and
thereafter challenge the federal ruling in State court only after
its adverse impact became apparent.
as a matter of "federalism" or because we must defer to the
federal courts (other than the Supreme Court). Younger v.
Harris, supra, 401 U.S. at 43-45, 27 L. Ed.
2d at 675-76; State v.
Coleman,
46 N.J. 16, 34-38 (1965), cert. denied,
383 U.S. 950,
86 S. Ct. 1210,
16 L. Ed.2d 212 (1966). See also State v. Moore,
122 N.J. 420, 431 (1991). Nevertheless, we hold that, as a
matter of comity, the State judge should not have conducted an
independent hearing on the same factual questions in these
circumstances.
The convictions on counts nine, seventeen and nineteen are
affirmed. The convictions on counts one, two and twelve are
reversed.
Footnote: 1It is not suggested that a State statute granting transactional immunity would have impact beyond that of a testimonial grant of immunity across State lines. Only a federal transactional grant can bind the States. State v. Kenny, 68 N.J. 17 (1975). Federal law no longer provides statutory grants of transactional immunity. See 18 U.S.C. 6001-6005. See also Kastigar, supra, 406 U.S. at 452, 32 L. Ed. 2d at 221; United States v. Harvey, 869 F.2d 1439, 1444 (11th Cir. 1989). New
Jersey provides statutory "use and derivative use" immunity under N.J.S.A. 2A:81-17.3. See State v. Strong, supra. See also N.J.S.A. 2A:81-71.2(a) regarding public officials. Footnote: 2In her opinion, Judge Shapiro found that "Investigator Gravel's affidavit is too vague in certain relevant respects to have inherent credibility; he did not appear to testify at the recent hearings." 781 F. Supp. at 1076.