SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-6292-94T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
SCOTT JOHNSON,
Defendant-Appellant.
___________________________________
Submitted November 17, 1997 - Decided March 9, 1998
Before Judges Havey, Newman and Collester.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Middlesex County.
Ivelisse Torres, Public Defender, attorney
for defendant-appellant (Charles H. Landesman,
Designated Counsel, on the brief).
Peter Verniero, Attorney General, attorney for
plaintiff-respondent (Bennett Barlyn, Deputy
Attorney General, of counsel and on
the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
COLLESTER, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned)
Defendant was convicted following a jury trial of murdering and sexually assaulting Gail Shollar as well as kidnapping her and her three-year-old daughter, A.S., in their vehicle from a supermarket parking lot on November 3, 1992. He received a sentence of life imprisonment with thirty years of parole ineligibility for murder and a consecutive term of 100 years with
fifty years of parole ineligibility for the other crimes. He
appeals both his conviction and sentence. We affirm.
Defendant makes the following legal arguments on appeal:
POINT I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT REFUSED TO
SUPPRESS INCULPATORY STATEMENTS MADE BY THE
DEFENDANT.
A. THE INVESTIGATIVE DETENTION ORDER WAS A
SHAM AND CREATED A COERCIVE ENVIRONMENT
THEREBY REQUIRING SUBSEQUENT INCULPATORY
STATEMENTS MADE BY THE DEFENDANT WHILE IN
CUSTODY TO BE SUPPRESSED.
B. DEFENDANT'S STATEMENTS TO JO ANN KEITH IN
WHICH HE CONFESSED TO STABBING GAIL
SHOLLAR SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED BY
THE TRIAL JUDGE BECAUSE SUCH STATEMENTS
WERE MADE IN VIOLATION OF DEFENDANT'S
MIRANDA RIGHTS.
C. STATEMENTS MADE BY THE DEFENDANT TO
SERGEANT PAUL OST AND TO OFFICER QUIGLEY
SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED.
POINT II
PREJUDICIAL ERROR WAS COMMITTED BY THE TRIAL
JUDGE WHEN HE PERMITTED MARK JANSEN TO TESTIFY
AS TO THE MEANING OF THE TERM "GET PAID" WHICH
WAS SAID TO JANSEN BY THE DEFENDANT IN A
CONVERSATION.
POINT III
THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRONEOUSLY CHARGED THE JURY
WITH RESPECT TO FIRST AND SECOND DEGREE
KIDNAPPING AS TO COUNT EIGHT. THE TRIAL
JUDGE'S CHARGE WITH RESPECT TO THE MEANING OF
"UNHARMED AND IN A SAFE PLACE" WAS ERRONEOUS.
POINT IV
PLAIN AND PREJUDICIAL ERROR WAS COMMITTED BY
THE TRIAL JUDGE WHEN HE DID NOT GIVE A JURY
INSTRUCTION ON INTOXICATION.
POINT V
THE TRIAL COURT'S CHARGE WITH RESPECT TO THE
DEFENSE OF DIMINISHED CAPACITY WAS ERRONEOUS
BECAUSE IT FAILED TO STATE THAT THE DEFENDANT
COULD BE ACQUITTED IF THE JURY FOUND THAT THIS
DEFENSE WAS PRESENT.
POINT VI
THE DEFENDANT'S OVERALL SENTENCE SHOULD BE
VACATED BECAUSE IT VIOLATES THE SENTENCING
GUIDELINES SET FORTH IN State v. Yarbough,
100 N.J. 627 (1985), cert. denied,
475 U.S. 1014,
106 S.Ct. 1193,
89 L.Ed.2d 308 (1986).
The State presented the following facts. On Tuesday evening,
November 3, 1992, the Shollar family, husband Robert, wife Gail,
and three children had dinner together at their Piscataway home.
At 7:30 p.m. Gail along with her three-year-old daughter, A.S.,
left in the family's 1992 Plymouth Voyager minivan to return a
videotape of "Beauty and the Beast" to a local video store and do
some grocery shopping at the Pathmark Supermarket in the Middlesex
County Mall. She never returned to her home again. Computer
records show that she rented another video, "All Dogs Go To
Heaven," at Quick Video at 7:54 p.m. and completed her shopping at
Pathmark at 9:06 p.m.
At about 5:00 p.m. that afternoon, defendant's former
girlfriend, Jo Ann Keith, met him in Plainfield and drove him back
to her home at 6 Halley Court in Piscataway. At 6:30 p.m.
defendant knocked on the door at 17 Water Street, the nearby
residence of Mark Jansen and his mother, Barbara. Mark did not
personally know defendant although he was familiar with him since
he had stolen cars with defendant's brother. Defendant was dressed
in dark clothing and appeared to Jansen to be high, wide-eyed and
jittery. He asked Jansen if he wanted to steal a car to get money
for drugs. Jansen refused, claiming a headache, and defendant told
him, "[Y]ou motherfuckers think I'm playing. I'm going to get
paid." Jansen construed the remark to mean that defendant was
going to get either money or sex. At the end of the five-minute
conversation, defendant mumbled something about a mall and walked
down Jansen's driveway toward the Middlesex County Mall.
Later that night between 10:00 and 10:10 p.m. Barbara Jansen,
Mark's mother, answered a knock on her door. A black man with a
goatee and dark clothing whom she did not know was standing under
her porch light and asked if her son was home. When she said no,
the man left.
Robert Shollar had worked the late shift the night before and
fell asleep at about 10:00 p.m. When he awoke at about 2:30 a.m.
and found that Gail and A.S. were not home, he called the
Piscataway Police Department.
At 6:20 a.m. on Wednesday, November 4, the Piscataway police
received a call from Michelle Carnavale, a teacher's assistant at
the First Class Day Care Center, saying that a cold and wet little
girl had been found on the grounds and that she was crying and
would not answer any questions. After the police called Robert
Shollar and told him that they had found a little girl matching
A.S.'s description, he went to the day are center and identified
A.S., who was scared and crying.
On the way to the Piscataway Police Department, A.S. told her
father that "a bad man got mommy." She described the man as a
black man, wearing black pants and a black shirt with an "X" on it.
She then said that the man had a knife and mommy was crying. At
the police station A.S. told Ellen Marie Price, a sergeant in the
Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office, that outside the supermarket,
a black man with a knife had grabbed her mother by the shirt and
got into the van. She said that her mother was crying and seemed
scared. Her mother drove with the black man who was still there
when she was let out of the van.
While A.S. and her father were at police headquarters,
Piscataway police responded to a call concerning a suspicious van
on Poplar Road at the corner of Water Street near Halley Court.
The driver's side window was partially open, and the keys were in
the ignition. Lying on the floor was Gail Shollar's driver's
license. Bloodstains were observed on the driver's door as well as
on the inside carpet and on a plastic bag and a roll of paper
towels. Groceries from Pathmark Supermarket were in the cargo
area.
John Haley of the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office
Identification Bureau found a latent print on the sliding door of
the passenger side of the van as well as a print on a paper towel
wrapper in the back of the van. He also retrieved a sanitary
napkin, clothes of Gail and A.S. and a Sports Park coin on the
floor near Gail's purse.
Members of the Piscataway Police Department and the Middlesex
County Sheriff's Department immediately commenced a search for Gail
Shollar in the vicinity of the recovered van and canvassed the
surrounding neighborhoods for possible witnesses. That morning the
police knocked on Barbara Jansen's door and asked her whether she
had observed anything the night before. She described the previous
night's visitor and told police of finding blood drippings on a
leaf and her outside steps earlier that morning when letting her
pets outside. The officer summoned a sketch artist from the
sheriff's department and prepared a composite sketch with Barbara
Jansen of the person she saw the previous night.
Police also spoke with Mark Jansen who said that he was
uncertain of the identify of the person who had come to his house
the prior night but that he would try to find out. In the course
of other interviews it was determined that defendant had previously
lived at 6 Halley Court with Jo Ann Keith but had moved to
Plainfield.
Also on November 4, Jo Ann Keith spoke with defendant and told
him that there were police in the area of her home because a stolen
van had been found. He replied, "It's probably more than that."
Keith saw a cut on defendant's right index finger and later went
with him to two stores for bandaids and first aid cream.
While trying to locate defendant, the police spoke with Kazim
Kirkland, the live-in boyfriend of defendant's sister, Tamika, who
lived with defendant at 1315 Astor Place in Plainfield. In a
statement he later recanted on cross-examination, Kirkland said he
woke up at 5:30 on November 4, to find defendant cleaning a large
cut on the index finger of his right hand. Kirkland told police
that defendant confided that he had killed a woman he intended to
rob after dropping her child off a few blocks from where the
killing took place. He also said that defendant told him he wiped
down the van and complained that the woman only had a $1.90. He
also gave Kirkland a Sports Park token in some change for a coin
washer/dryer.
Tamika Johnson overheard defendant talking to Kirkland on
November 4, and Kirkland saying, "For real, you did?" She said
that after the conversation, Kirkland told her that defendant told
him that he had killed the woman. She also said that defendant
later told her that "the lady was found in a ditch" and if the
police asked about his cut finger, she should tell them that he cut
it washing dishes.
On Friday, November 6, defendant told Jo Ann Keith that he was
going to Pennsylvania with a friend. She saw a newspaper sketch of
the suspected kidnapper and accused defendant of being responsible.
He denied it and told her that he cut his finger in the woods
behind a friend's house. Later he told her that Mark Jansen
committed the crime.
Piscataway Detective Michael Blair and Detective Charles Clark
from the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office questioned defendant
on Friday, November 6 on the street outside of his Plainfield
residence. Detective Blair called him by name. When defendant
walked to the detectives, Clark extended his right hand to shake
hands. Defendant put out his left hand, keeping his right under
his jacket pocket. In response to the detective's questions,
defendant maintained that he had not visited Piscataway recently
because of a problem he had with his girlfriend's daughter. During
the conversation, he took his right hand out of his pocket, and
both detectives saw a large bandage on his index finger. When
Detective Clark asked about it, Johnson said he had cut it while
washing dishes several days earlier. The detectives left after
defendant declined to accompany them to police headquarters.
The following morning, November 7, 1992, a rescue squad member
found the nude body of Gail Shollar partially submerged in several
inches of water in a drainage ditch located behind a lumber yard
near Jo Ann Keith's house on Halley Court. Numerous wounds were
observed on her chest, forearm, neck and face. She was pronounced
dead at 11:27 a.m.
The autopsy revealed that Gail Shollar had been stabbed over
forty times including a slash wound on her throat with an inch and
a half gape down to her spinal cord. The Middlesex County Medical
Examiner concluded that the cause of death was hemorrhagic shock
and severe trauma to the vital organs caused by multiple and
massive stab wounds with an estimated time of death of
approximately 10:00 p.m. on November 3, 1992. Further examination
by a vaginal smear revealed the presence of intact spermatozoa.See footnote 1
Early that Saturday afternoon Detectives Blair and Clark
interviewed Mark Jansen about his visitor on the night of November
3. At this time Jansen said that it was defendant and told of
Johnson's comment about "getting paid." The detectives also
learned that Barbara Jansen picked out a photograph of defendant as
the man she saw standing on her porch the night of the murder.
Armed with this information, Detectives Clark and Blair along
with Assistant Prosecutor Thomas Kapsak on the evening of November
7 sought and obtained an order from Superior Court Judge Robert P.
Figarotta for investigative detention of defendant to permit full
nude body photographs as well as samples of blood, nail scrapings,
nail clippings and fingerprints. On their return to Piscataway
Police Department at about 8:15 p.m., they were told that a
positive match had been made between a set of defendant's inked
palm prints on file and the prints found on the victim's van. They
then went searching for defendant and eventually found him at Jo
Ann Keith's residence at 6 Halley Court in Piscataway.
Johnson was taken without resistance to the police station at
about 9:30 p.m. The order for investigative detention was
explained to him, including the fact that the order permitted his
detainment for a period not to exceed six hours. No attempt was
made to question defendant at that time.
Meanwhile, Jo Ann Keith told police that defendant had one
beer and a hit of cocaine about an hour before they arrived that
night. She added that she believed the defendant was involved in
the murder.
A fresh set of palm prints was taken and positively matched
with the prints on the Shollar van. A formal complaint was then
prepared charging defendant with the murder and kidnapping of Gail
Shollar. The complaint was executed, and the arrest warrant was
signed by Judge Figarotta at 11:30 p.m. after Detective Blair made
a statement of probable cause under oath.
Shortly before 12:30 a.m. on November 8 Clark told defendant
he was under arrest and read him the Miranda warnings.See footnote 2 Defendant
signed the Miranda card. He denied involvement with the crime.
When he was shown the complaint, he said he did not believe it was
real and questioned the judge's signature. Clark left, leaving
Blair and Sergeant Lawrence Nagle of the prosecutor's office, in a
conference room with defendant.
After Nagle told defendant that Jo Ann Keith believed he was
involved in the murder, defendant said he wanted to talk to her.
Nagle brought in a telephone from an adjoining room. Defendant did
not ask to be alone. When Nagle got her on the phone, he told
Keith that defendant wanted to talk to her. She said she did not
want to talk to him but agreed after Nagle told her that defendant
did not understand why he had been arrested. Blair and Nagle
overheard defendant's end of the conversation with Keith. At
first, defendant denied involvement in the crime, and Keith handed
the phone to defendant's aunt. Sergeant Nagle then asked for Keith
to be put on the phone again, told her that defendant was "in need
of the Lord" and wanted to talk with her. Keith agreed to speak
with defendant again, and he then told her, "I stabbed her up. I
cut her throat. I had to because she saw me. She could identify
me." He then added, "I didn't hurt the little girl. I dropped her
off." After the telephone call, Nagle re-advised defendant of
his Miranda warnings and took a taped statement. During that
interview the defendant described in detail his abduction of Gail
Shollar and A.S. at the Pathmark on the night of November 3,
including the streets on which they travelled. He told the police
about dropping A.S. off at a school despite Gail's plea that the
child remain with her. While in the van with A.S., defendant
claimed that the child was crying and that he had told Gail Shollar
to make her stop but that A.S. continued to cry up to the time she
was let out of the van. At defendant's direction Gail Shollar then
drove the minivan to the location behind Jo Ann Keith's residence
near the Stelton Lumber Yard. Defendant said that he opened Gail's
pocketbook because she had asked him for a cigarette and that she
grabbed him, causing the knife he was carrying to open and cut his
right index finger.
Defendant admitted on the taped statement that he had
previously said that he had slashed Gail Shollar's throat and had
"stabbed her up." He said that at the Stelton Lumber Yard she
attempted to run away by opening the van door and that he chased
her with his knife as she ran toward the drainage ditch. When he
caught her, he told her to be quiet, but she continued to cry out.
He claimed that he remembered making stabbing motions with his hand
and that the next thing he knew he was lying on top of Gail
Shollar's body with the knife in his hand.
Johnson repeatedly denied having sexual intercourse with the
victim but was uncertain whether he took off her clothes outside
the van. He admitted that he was afraid Gail Shollar could
identify him. After leaving Gail Shollar's body in the ditch, he
told of driving the minivan back near Jo Ann Keith's residence on
Halley Court where he threw the knife into a wooded area and used
his coat and sleeve to wipe away his fingerprints on the steering
wheel and door handles.
The taped interview of defendant began at 1:32 a.m. and ended
at 2:05 a.m. on November 8. Defendant never requested an attorney.
At about 5:30 a.m. the same day Sergeant Paul Ost of the
Piscataway Police Department fingerprinted and photographed the
defendant. In the process he had a conversation with defendant.
Ost did not re-administer Miranda warnings but reminded Johnson of
them. According to Ost, the defendant said that he was in a great
deal of trouble and might get a lethal injection. Ost responded
that he was probably in a little bit less trouble since he had not
hurt the child. Defendant indicated that he had a child about that
age and he would not hurt kids like that. Ost asked whether
"things just got carried away." Defendant said he had been using
crack and it was very powerful. He said he just wanted to see if
he could get the car, and the next thing he knew, it was murder and
kidnapping. He added that the cut on his finger was due to contact
with the victim and that his girlfriend knew that he did something
on that night since she saw his cut finger.
Officer Quigley, was also in the room, and asked what happened
to the knife. Defendant told him that he had thrown it into the
brush behind Jo Ann Keith's house at 6 Halley Court. Quigley asked
him to make a map of the area, and defendant complied. Later that
morning Sergeant Clark went to 6 Halley Court and found a knife
shown to be the murder weapon in a neglected area near the house.
Further incriminating statements were made by defendant later
that day. When he arrived at the Middlesex County Jail at about
1:00 p.m., he was told by Corrections Officer Robert Hatton that
his shoelaces must be removed. Defendant responded, "What do you
need my shoelaces for? I'm not going to kill myself. You all are
going to kill me for what I did." Shortly thereafter on his way
out of the jail receiving unit, he said, "It's a revolution anyway.
You'll be getting a lot like me," and as he was being escorted to
the medical unit he yelled, "Kill white women so they can't
reproduce." While in the medical room defendant admitted to the
duty nurse that he had cut his finger during the crime.
Early the following morning defendant made other statements to
change his story. In the early hours of November 9 he told
Corrections Officer Michael Buczgniki that he did not know why he
was arrested, that he had never seen the van before, that the
fingerprints on the van were not his and that the police were
trying to set him up. Two days later he told Denise Mento-Bisogno,
a bail counselor with Middlesex County Corrections, that he was in
the minivan with "white boy Mark," who told him that he had just
stabbed someone and asked him to get rid of a knife. Defendant
said he cut his palm on the knife before he threw it away at Jo
Ann's house. He added that he and Mark then went to Plainfield to
buy drugs and that Mark hit a speed bump causing defendant to lunge
forward and touch the dashboard. He also claimed that he picked up
cigarettes, a driver's license and change and put them into a
pocketbook on the floor. When he noticed that his finger was
bleeding, he cleaned himself with a paper towel which he found in
a grocery bag in the back of the van. He then said that after they
purchased drugs Mark dropped him off at Jo Ann's house.
When he spoke again with Mento-Bisogno on November 20,
defendant again changed his story. This time he said that Mark had
pulled up in the van with a white woman and that the three of them
went to buy drugs. Later he left the couple at his girlfriend's
house to go buy something to drink. When he returned, he heard a
woman screaming and went into the woods to investigate. He found
Mark stabbing the woman. When he tried to intervene, Mark cut him
with the knife and then threw the woman into a ditch. During this
narrative defendant identified Mark by three last names: Gaston,
Baskin and Jansen. At no point did he mention a child was present.
In addition to the overwhelming factual testimony of
defendant's guilt, the State also introduced strong forensic
evidence. Michael Vick, a FBI special agent testified as an expert
in DNA analysis. He explained that there are four probes to match
for a positive identification when analyzing DNA and that the semen
stains found on the paper towels in the Shollar minivan and the
blood taken from the outside driver's door had a three-probe match
with defendant with one probe being uninterpretable. He calculated
that the likelihood of another person having a three-prong match
was one in 5,900. He also testified that a sample of an unknown
substance taken from the outside of the van and a sample from the
back seat of the van each had a two-prong match, which indicated a
1 in 232 chance that the DNA was from someone else. Finally, Vick
found that the vaginal swab contained a one point match with
defendant, meaning that there was a 1 in 6 chance that it was not
from defendant, but semen found on another paper towel in the
minivan had a two-prong match.
Robert Spalding, also a special agent for the FBI, was
qualified as an expert in forensic serology. He testified that
blood matching that of the defendant was recovered from the outside
door of the Shollar minivan van as well as on various items within
the minivan and on leaves outside the Jansen residence at 17 Water
Street in Piscataway. Moreover, a black, blue and orange jacket
belonging to defendant had both defendant's blood and the victim's
blood on it. The heel impressions on defendant's coat matched
defendant's Nike sneaker. Though there was also blood on the
knife, there was not enough for comparison.
The factual testimony for the defense was brief. Mark Baskin,
defendant's brother, testified that he knew Mark Jansen and had
purchased liquor with him on the weekend of November 3, 1992 when
Jansen showed him a butterfly knife that looked like the murder
weapon.
Victoria Baskin, defendant's aunt, testified as to defendant's
troubled childhood, recalling hospital visits for seizures and
severe physical abuse of defendant by his father.
Tamika Johnson, defendant's half-sister, testified that the
defendant acted "spaced out" when under the influence of drugs and
that he suffered physical abuse as a child. On cross-examination
she said that defendant had admitted to others that he committed
the murder.
The remaining defense witnesses raised the issue of
defendant's alleged diminished capacity. Frederick Rotgers, a
clinical psychologist and assistant research professor at the
Rutgers University Center for Alcohol Studies, met with defendant
on four occasions and performed neuropsychological, personality and
intelligence testing. Rotgers said that defendant first gave a
"delusional" account of the offense in which he admitted presence
at the scene but denied wrongdoing. After a later meeting at which
defendant gave another account more compatible with the police
reports, Rotgers concluded that defendant had "tremendous
difficulty" accepting that he committed the crimes.
Rotgers related a history of significant medical problems
early in defendant's life, including pneumonia and seizures. A
Bureau of Children's Services report related that he had been
abused, burned with cigarettes, and hung by his neck with a rope.
This abuse resulted in brain impairment according to Rotgers. He
further related defendant's self-described blackouts and hearing of
voices. He opined that defendant had "intermittent explosive
disorder," whereby he suddenly lost control or became aggressive
and was unable to recall what occurred. Additionally, Rotgers took
a history of substance abuse including the defendant's use of
marijuana dating back to age five and his subsequent use of crack
and heroin, and alcohol throughout his life. He indicated that
Mark Jansen's description of the defendant on the night of the
crimes as jittery, wide-eyed and appearing high was consistent with
a person on crack.
Rotgers diagnosed defendant with "delusional disorder of the
persecutory type, "intermittent explosive disorder," substance
abuse and "paranoid personality disorder with antisocial and
passive/aggressive traits." He said that defendant showed signs of
intoxication and early cocaine withdrawal and speculated that
therefore his primary reason for the car-jacking was to obtain
money for drugs. An "overwhelming rush" of situations then
occurred to which defendant had to respond but was unable to do so
appropriately because his low intelligence and neurological
problems were such that he could not rationally react to complex
situations even in the best of circumstances. His cognitive
judgment and behavior controls were severely impaired by a
combination of intellectual inadequacy, neurological dysfunction,
alcohol intoxication, residual cocaine intoxication and emotional
disturbances which resulted in a delusional disorder and possibly
major depression. Rotgers concluded that these factors "severely
diminished" defendant's ability to purposely and knowingly carry
out the murder and sexual assault of Gail Shollar, and his behavior
was no longer under his voluntary control after he released A.S..
In further support of defendant's diminished capacity theory,
Jonathan Willard-Mack, an expert in neuropsychology, testified that
after he met with defendant four times and reviewed childhood
hospital and school records, he determined that defendant suffered
from a brain dysfunction caused by physical and verbal abuse,
discord, stress and lack of nurturance and impaired perceptual
processing, which in turn inhibited his responses. He also found
that defendant suffered from dissociative disorder and organic
personality disorder. Based on this brain damage as well as
assumed intoxication, cocaine withdrawal and severe psychological
stress of the incident, defendant did not know what he was doing
when he murdered Gail Shollar in Dr. Willard-Mack's opinion.
In rebuttal to the defense testimony, the State called Dr.
Robert Sadoff, an expert in forensic psychiatry, who began his
testimony by relating the history obtained from defendant.
Regarding the criminal intent, Johnson told Dr. Sadoff initially
that he went to Mark Jansen's house where Jansen asked him if he
wanted to "get paid." He went on to say that Jansen committed the
crime and that he cut his finger trying to stop him. However, in
the second interview defendant changed his story and said that he
alone committed the murder and recalled all the events leading up
to it including the car-jacking and releasing the child but then
"blacked out," later finding himself on top of the victim with a
bloody knife in his hand.
Dr. Sadoff found no evidence of organic brain syndrome or
brain damage. He said that it was "highly unusual" for a person to
have a good memory for some parts of a story, then to black out as
to the remainder. He concluded that defendant knew what he was
doing at the time of the crimes, he knew that it was wrong and did
not have any mental illness which deprived him of the ability to
act knowingly and purposely throughout each step of the incident
including the sexual assault and murder.
On February 24, 1995 the jury found the defendant guilty of
all counts charged in the indictment. The matter proceeded to the
penalty phase on the charges of capital murder, and on March 3,
1995 the jury was discharged after reporting it was unable to reach
a unanimous verdict. Thereafter, on May 8, 1995 the defendant was
sentenced to an aggregate sentence of life imprisonment plus one
hundred years with a parole ineligibility term of eighty years. We
address each point of defendant's appeal in the order raised.
I. THE EFFECT OF THE INVESTIGATIVE DETENTION
ON SUBSEQUENT STATEMENTS BY DEFENDANT.
Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his
application to suppress statements made by him to law enforcement
officers on the night of November 7 and morning of November 8. He
contends that the investigative detention order obtained on
November 7 was a "sham" and created a "coercive environment" which
tainted his statements made to Jo Ann Keith in the presence of
Detectives Nagle and Blair as well as his subsequent formal taped
statement and his admissions to Sergeant Ost.
R. 3:5A permits the State to obtain an order compelling a
suspect in a criminal case to submit to identification procedures
to obtain nontestimonial evidence of physical characteristics under
circumstances set forth in State v. Hall,
93 N.J. 552, 562 (1983),
cert. denied,
464 U.S. 1008,
104 S.Ct. 526,
78 L.Ed.2d 709 (1983)
as follows:
[A] court's authorization of an investigatory
detention must, first, be based upon
sufficient evidence to demonstrate that a
particular crime has occurred, that the crime
is unsolved and that it is under active
investigation. Second, the police must
demonstrate a reasonable and well-grounded
basis to believe that the individual sought as
the subject of the investigative detention may
have committed the crime under investigation.
Additionally, it must be shown that the
results of the detention will significantly
advance the criminal investigation and will
serve to determine whether or not the subject
probably committed the crime. Further, it
must also appear that these investigative
results cannot otherwise practicably be
obtained.
Defendant underscores that while the stated purpose of the
investigative detention order was to take photographs, finger
prints, palm prints, fingernail scraping and clippings and blood
samples, the police already had his fingerprints and did not try to
obtain all of the exemplars or other matters permitted by the order
prior to the subsequent issuance of the criminal complaint. He
therefore contends that the order was not intended to advance the
criminal investigation but was a subterfuge to take him into
custody and hold him until an arrest warrant could be obtained,
conduct proscribed by R. 3:5A and State v. Rolle,
265 N.J. Super. 482 (App. Div.), certif. denied
134 N.J. 562 (1993). We hold that
there was no violation of R. 3:5A and that Rolle is factually
distinguishable.
In Rolle the order provided that defendant was to be detained
for a period not to exceed five hours for photographs and
fingerprinting. He was taken into custody, given Miranda warnings
and interrogated for about three hours. He was finally
fingerprinted and photographed after about five hours in custody,
and only after he had given a taped confession. We determined that
the State misconceived the function and scope of the rule
permitting investigative detention and suppressed the defendant's
inculpatory statement, asserting that
[I]nvestigative detention orders may be used
only to compel a defendant "to submit to non-testimonial identification procedures for the
purpose of obtaining evidence of his or her
physical characteristics..." Police
investigatory procedures undertaken pursuant
to the authority of an investigative detention
order which exceed this narrow scope are not
only illegally unwarranted but also abuse a
closely demarcated process designed for
limited salutary purposes. Evidence obtained
as a result of such conduct must be
suppressed.
Id. at 488.
The factual setting herein is in drastic contrast to Rolle.
At the hearing on the issue the State produced numerous witnesses,
all of whom were deemed by the motion judge to be "exceptionally
credible," a finding we determine was based upon sufficient
credible evidence present in the record. State v. Johnson,
42 N.J. 146, 162 (1964). Notably, the defense produced no witnesses.
Assistant Prosecutor Kapsak testified that in the early
evening of November 7 when he sought the investigatory order, he
was aware that the victim had been stabbed and that defendant had
been seen with a cut on his finger. Four days had passed since the
murder, and Kapsak was concerned that the cut would heal and that
potential evidence would be irretrievably lost. He also wanted
blood samples to compare against the numerous bloodstains in the
van and on the Jansen's doorstep. Moreover, while Investigator
O'Brien, the fingerprint expert, had a set of defendant's palm
prints taken at the time of a prior arrest, he wanted a better
match to compare against the palm print found on the Shollar van.
When Kapsak, Blair and Clark returned to headquarters after
obtaining the order at 7:30 p.m., they learned that Investigator
O'Brien had matched defendant's palm prints to the print lifted off
of the victim's van. Blair and Clark went to defendant's home
address in Plainfield to apprehend him on the investigatory
detention order. Unable to find him they spoke to his sister,
Tamika, and Kazim Kirkland, with Kirkland indicating that defendant
told him he had "offed" someone.
At about 9:40 p.m., after defendant was taken into custody,
Jo Ann Keith told Detective Nagle that she believed that defendant
was involved. At police headquarters palm and finger prints were
taken as well as photographs of defendant and his cut hand. At
10:15 p.m., O'Brien concluded that defendant's newly inked prints
matched those found on the Shollar van. Armed with this additional
information obtained since the execution of the investigatory
detention order, Kapsak decided at 10:30 p.m. to prepare a
complaint charging defendant with the murder and kidnapping of Gail
Shollar. At 11:00 p.m., Blair and Kapsak drove to the judge's
residence for the issuance of the complaint and arrest warrant,
which was obtained at 11:30 p.m. and served on defendant an hour
later. During the time from his apprehension on the investigative
detention order to his formal arrest defendant was not questioned.
Given the state of Kapsak's knowledge in the early evening of
November 7, there was sufficient evidence to support the motion
court's conclusion that investigative detention was warranted and
the order obtained in good faith. The rapid unfolding of events
including the palm print match as well as the statements of
Kirkland and Keith justified the change in position from
investigative detention to arrest which in turn superseded and
obviated the need for investigative detention since the
investigative items could be, and were in fact, properly obtained
after arrest. There is no evidence of overreaching or improper use
by the State of the permitted procedure of R. 3:5A, and the record
is barren of any form of coercion requiring the suppression of
statements subsequently made by defendant.
II. THE ADMISSIBILITY OF DEFENDANT'S
STATEMENTS.
Defendant was placed under arrest and advised of his Miranda rights at 12:29 a.m. on November 8, 1992. He denied his involvement in the Shollar murder. However, he asked to speak on the phone with Jo Ann Keith after Detective Nagle told him that Keith had said she thought he was involved in the crime. Nagle placed the call to Keith without ever discussing with her what she should say to defendant. Defendant spoke with Keith at about 1:10 a.m. with the two detectives in the room with him and able to hear his side of the conversation. Defendant did not ask for privacy, nor was he given the opportunity. The call lasted about thirty
minutes including the time during which Nagle convinced Keith to
continue talking to defendant.
After his incriminating statements in the phone conversation,
defendant was again given Miranda warnings prior to a formal sworn
and taped statement. At no point after his arrest did he invoke
his right of silence or right to counsel.
Defendant argues that the State did not meet its burden of
proving the voluntariness of his incriminating statements beyond a
reasonable doubt. State v. Kelly,
61 N.J. 283, 294 (1972). In
making this determination we consider the totality of the
circumstances including "...the suspect's age, education and
intelligence, advice concerning constitutional rights, length of
detention, whether the questioning was repeated or prolonged in
nature, and whether physical punishment and mental exhaustion were
involved." State v. Galloway,
133 N.J. 631, 654 (1993). The
determination of whether a confession is the product of "rational
intellect" and "free will" is necessarily fact-sensitive, involving
analysis of all factors bearing on the defendant's condition at the
time. State v. Burris,
145 N.J. 509, 534 (1996).
The evidence adduced at the admissibility hearing indicates
that defendant's education ended with the seventh grade and that at
some time prior to being taken into custody on the investigative
detention order he took a "hit" or two of cocaine from a matchstick
and consumed one or two beers. However, there was no testimony or
indication from defendant's lack of formal education or his modest
use of intoxicating substances that there was any negative impact
on his ability to understand and waive his Constitutional rights
and voluntarily confess to the crimes charged.
There is not a scintilla of evidence indicating improper
treatment or prolonged and improper questioning. Defendant was not
questioned at all for the approximate two and one half hours he was
in police custody pursuant to the investigative detention order.
The actual questioning began at about 12:30 a.m. and ended at
approximately 2:00 a.m., and the taped statement did not indicate
mistreatment or abusive police conduct. Defendant was not confined
to a cell but was unmanacled in a conference room. He was offered
and declined food and drink. Moreover, at age twenty-three he had
a prior criminal record and was familiar with police
investigations. Id. at 527; State v. Puchalski,
45 N.J. 97, 101
(1965).
Defendant argues that Sergeant Nagle deliberately used
defendant's thirty-nine year old former girlfriend, Jo Ann Keith,
during the interrogation in a coercive manner that impaired
defendant's exercise of free will and resulted in the confession to
her in the presence of the detectives. However, there is no proof
that the officers recruited Keith to their cause or instructed her
as to what to say to get defendant to confess to the crimes. On
the contrary, it was at defendant's request that the phone
conversation was initiated, and his incriminating statements were
made without prompting by either the detectives or Keith.
Furthermore, even if the officers used Keith to assist in their
investigation, that fact in and of itself would not render
defendant's confession involuntary. Given the natural reluctance
of a suspect to admit guilt, interrogating officers are given
leeway in their efforts to dispel that reluctance and obtain a
statement. Colorado v. Connelly,
479 U.S. 157, 164,
107 S.Ct. 515,
520,
93 L.Ed.2d 473, 482 (1986); Galloway, supra, 133 N.J. at 654-55; State v. Miller,
76 N.J. 392, 402 (1978); State v. Smith,
32 N.J. 501, 550 (1960), cert. denied,
364 U.S. 936,
81 S.Ct. 383,
5 L.Ed.2d 367 (1961).
There is no indication that the police conduct constituted
such substantial psychological pressure as to overbear the will of
defendant or in any way affected the voluntariness of his
statement. Galloway, supra, 133 N.J. at 656; Miller, supra, 76
N.J. at 405. To the contrary, there was substantial, credible
evidence adduced to support the determination of the motion judge
that the State proved beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was
advised of his Miranda warnings, that he made a knowing and
intelligent waiver and that he voluntarily and knowingly made his
incriminating statements both on the phone to Keith in the presence
of the detectives and in his later formal, taped statement to the
officers. State v. Hartley,
103 N.J. 252, 262-63 (1986); Kelly,
supra, 61 N.J. at 294; Johnson, supra, 42 N.J. at 162; State v.
Godfrey,
131 N.J. Super. 168, 174 (App. Div. 1974), aff'd,
67 N.J. 267 (1975). Therefore, there was no error in the admission of
these statements of defendant at his trial.
Similarly, there was no error in the admission of defendant's
incriminating statements made to Sergeant Ost and Officer Quigley
in the course of his being photographed on the morning of November
8. By this time defendant had twice received Miranda warnings, and
Ost further reminded defendant that he was under no obligation to
talk to him. Based on the testimony at the admissibility hearing
there was substantial, credible evidence to support the ruling
admitting these statements. Johnson, supra, 42 N.J. at 162;
Godfrey, supra, 131 N.J. Super. at 174.
III. MARK JANSEN'S TESTIMONY.
Mark Jansen testified at the trial that on the early evening
of November 3, 1992, defendant knocked on his door and inquired
whether Jansen would be interested in stealing a car with him.
when Jansen declined, defendant told him: "[Y]ou motherfuckers
think I'm playing. I'm going to get paid." The defense objected
when the prosecutor asked Jansen to explain his understanding of
the expression "get paid," and the court properly required the
prosecutor to give a foundation prior to admitting the testimony.
Jansen testified that although he had never previously heard
defendant use the phrase, he had heard it used by both white and
black contemporaries on the streets in Piscataway and by other
inmates when he was in jail as a common expression to mean getting
money or sex.
Defendant asserts error in the admission of the testimony
since Jansen could not testify as to defendant's meaning of the
phrase but only his own interpretation. A witness may not testify
to a matter unless there is a showing of personal knowledge.
N.J.R.E. 602; State v. LaBrutto,
114 N.J. 187, 197 (1989).
However, we are satisfied that the testimony was admissible as lay
witness opinion under N.J.R.E. 701:
If a witness is not testifying as an expert,
the witness' testimony in the form of opinions
or inferences may be admitted if it (a) is
rationally based on the perception of the
witness and (b) will assist in understanding
the witness' testimony or in determining a
fact in issue.
The trial court correctly found that Jansen's knowledge of the
term "get paid" was based on his having heard the term on the
streets of Piscataway and in prison and properly confined the
testimony to Jansen's understanding as opposed to speculation about
defendant's knowledge of the phrase. Moreover, since "get paid"
was a slang term unfamiliar to the average juror, Jansen's lay
opinion testimony was of assistance in determining the meaning and
context of his conversation with defendant and was obviously
relevant to the issue of defendant's motive and intention. See
United States v. Delpit,
94 F.3d 1134, 1145 (8th Cir. 1996)
("[t]here is no more reason to expect unassisted jurors to
understand cryptic slang than antitrust theory or asbestosis");
United States v. Lowe, 9 F.3d 43, 47 (8th Cir. 1993), cert. denied,
510 U.S. 1181,
144 S.Ct. 1229,
127 L.Ed.2d 573 (1994); United
States v. Garcia,
994 F.2d 1499, 1506-07 (10th Cir. 1993).
Furthermore, we take note of the fact that while testifying as
a rebuttal witness on the issue of diminished capacity, Dr. Sadoff
testified that in his initial interview defendant said that Jansen
had approached him on November 3, 1994 and asked defendant if he
wanted to "get paid." Defendant then explained to Dr. Sadoff that
"get paid" meant getting money by robbery. Therefore, the danger
of any improper inference from Jansen's testimony was rendered
nugatory.
Admission of Jansen's testimony did not constitute an abuse of
discretion by the trial court.
IV. THE COURT'S CHARGE AS TO THE KIDNAPPING
OF A.S..
The eighth count of the indictment charged the defendant with
first degree kidnapping of the child, A.S.. In the jury
instructions on this count the court said,
Kidnapping is a crime of the first degree
except that it is a crime of the second degree
if the kidnapper releases the victim unharmed
and in a safe place.
In order to find the defendant guilty of
kidnapping in the first degree, the State must
prove either of the following beyond a
reasonable doubt: That the defendant did not
release the victim you're considering unharmed
or that the defendant did not release the
victim you are considering in a safe place.
In other words, if the State has proven either
one of those to your satisfaction beyond a
reasonable doubt, then he's guilty of
kidnapping in the first degree.
If they have not proven either one of those to
your satisfaction, actually if they fail to
prove either one of them beyond a reasonable
doubt, then you have to find him guilty of
kidnapping in the second degree.
After the jurors began deliberations, they asked for a
definition of emotional harm and safe place. The judge charged as
follows:
All right, with regard to safe place, you have
asked for the definition of "safe place." In
my previous instruction I did not define that
term. There is no statutory definition of
safe place. The decision of whether the
person was released in a safe place is a
factual determination for the jury to make.
In making the decision, consider all of the
evidence in the case and decide whether under
the totality of the circumstances a reasonable
person would consider where the victim was
reason [sic] to be a safe place. In other
words, under the totality of the
circumstances, was this an objectively safe
place to release this particular victim,
[A.S.], when she was released.
You have heard testimony about where, when,
and under what circumstances [A.S.] was
released as well as her age. These are but
some of the circumstances you may consider.
You should consider all of the circumstances.
When the jury returned its verdict and responded to the
special interrogatories, ten of the jury members determined that
A.S. was harmed while two found she was not harmed. However, the
jury was unanimous in finding that A.S. was not released to a safe
place. Defendant was therefore convicted of first degree
kidnapping of A.S..
Defendant argues that the court's supplemental instruction did
not set forth an adequate definition of "safe place" and improperly
singled out A.S.'s age as a factor for consideration. We disagree.
The court correctly charged that to obtain a conviction for
first degree kidnapping the State bears the burden of proving
beyond a reasonable doubt that either the defendant did not release
the victim unharmed prior to his apprehension or that he did not
release the victim in a safe place prior to his apprehension.
State v. Federico,
103 N.J. 169, 176 (1986); State v. Smith,
279 N.J. Super. 131, 140-41 (App. Div. 1995). If the defendant is
found guilty of kidnapping and the State fails to prove one of
those two factors, then the defendant is guilty of second degree
kidnapping. N.J.S.A. 2C:13-1c.
The trial court's supplemental instruction noted the fact-sensitive nature of the jury function and stressed the necessity of
examining the totality of circumstances including where, when and
under what conditions A.S. was released and her age. The reference
to the victim's age as one factor for consideration was entirely
appropriate in the instant case since common sense indicates that
a place that might be "safe" for an adult may be precarious,
unhealthy or dangerous for a small child. See Thornburg v. State,
699 S.W.2d 918, 921 (Tex. Ct. App. 1985). Indeed, the jury could
and did properly find that separating an upset, crying three year
old child from her distraught mother and leaving her near the
bushes of a closed day care center after 9 p.m. on a rainy November
night hardly constitutes leaving her in a "safe place." Both the
initial and supplemental instructions of the issue were manifestly
proper. State v. Brown,
46 N.J. 96, 101 (1965).
V. THE DEFENSE OF INTOXICATION.
Defendant argues for the first time on appeal that the trial
judge erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on the
defense of voluntary intoxication as per N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8. Since
defendant did not request a charge on intoxication and did not
object to its omission from the jury instructions, he can prevail
only upon a demonstration of plain error, viz, error "clearly
capable of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2. State v.
Jordan,
147 N.J. 409, 422 (1997) (citing State v. Hock,
54 N.J. 526, 538 (1969), cert. denied,
399 U.S. 930,
90 S.Ct. 2254,
26 L.Ed.2d 797 (1970)). Our careful review of the trial record
satisfies us that defendant fails to demonstrate any error, plain
or otherwise.
Voluntary intoxication is not a valid defense unless it
negates an element of the offense. State v. Cameron,
104 N.J. 42,
51 (1986); State v. Bauman,
298 N.J. Super. 176, 194 (App. Div.)
certif. denied,
150 N.J. 25 (1997). The intoxication must be of an
"extremely high level," Cameron, supra, 104 N.J. at 54; State v.
Sette,
259 N.J. Super. 156, 170 (App. Div.), certif. denied
130 N.J. 597 (1992). A jury instruction is mandated only when the
facts "clearly indicate" a rational basis that the defendant
suffered from a "prostration of faculties" to render him incapable
of forming the requisite mental state to commit the crime. State
v. Mauricio,
117 N.J. 402, 418-19 (1990); Cameron, supra, 104 N.J.
at 54; State v. Choice,
98 N.J. 295, 299 (1985); State v. Powell,
84 N.J. 305, 318-19 (1980). Among the factors pertinent to this
issue are included the quantity of intoxicant consumed, the period
of time involved, the defendant's ability to recall significant
events and his conduct as perceived by others. Id. at 56.
Three witnesses gave direct evidence which could conceivably
relate to defendant's condition prior to the abduction and murder.
Jo Ann Keith testified that she had seen defendant in the past when
he was "stoned" or high on drugs but that he did not seem high on
the afternoon of November 3. Mark Jansen saw defendant at 6:30
that evening and said that defendant appeared high with wide open
eyes that never blinked, but Jansen had no prior personal knowledge
of the defendant before that evening. Lastly, Keith Darren Moore
testified that he met defendant on the street in the early evening
of November 3 and that he seemed "a little excitable" when he asked
Moore for a cigarette and a sip of wine. Even accepting this
testimony in its entirety does not constitute an adequate basis for
a jury charge on voluntary intoxication. See, e.g., Mauricio,
supra, 117 N.J. at 419-20; Bauman, supra, 298 N.J. Super. at 195-96.
Defendant's argument also relies on the testimony of Dr.
Rotgers who related defendant's statements to him that on the day
of the murder he began using drugs and drinking at about 3:00 p.m.,
and then smoked three vials of crack cocaine and drank six
miniature bottles of hard liquor after visiting his daughter.
Defendant further told Rotgers that after returning to Piscataway
with Jo Ann Keith, he bought and smoked two ten-dollar vials of
crack and later drank two or three swallows of fortified wine with
a friend at about 9:00 p.m..
Accepting these statements of defendant, Rotgers said that he
believed that he was "to some extent intoxicated on alcohol" when
he committed his crimes, even hypothesizing a blood alcohol content
of about 0.2%. However, Rotgers also testified that defendant was
not so intoxicated that he could not form a purposeful and knowing
intention to commit the abduction and other crimes. Therefore,
even the uncorroborated hearsay statements of defendant were
inadequate for an expert opinion consistent with the legal standard
for voluntary intoxication.
The absence of any meaningful expert opinion or reliable
observations of intoxication is in marked contrast to defendant's
detailed recollection of events prior, during and subsequent to his
crimes as detailed in his numerous statements. We conclude that
there was no factual or legal basis for a jury instruction of
voluntary intoxication and certainly no error capable of producing
an unjust result from the lack of such an instruction. See State
v. Micheliche,
220 N.J. Super. 532, 543 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
109 N.J. 140 (1987); State v. Ghaul,
132 N.J. Super. 438,
441 (App. Div. 1975).
VI. THE CHARGE ON DIMINISHED CAPACITY.
Defendant argues for the first time on appeal that the trial
court committed plain error in the jury instructions concerning the
defense of diminished capacity. Specifically, defendant alleges
that the court erred in failing to advise the jury (1) that if he
was found to have a mental disease or defect, he had to be
acquitted and (2) that if by virtue of a mental defect he did not
purposely or knowingly kill, then the jury should consider
aggravated manslaughter.
Diminished capacity as codified by N.J.S.A. 2C:4-2, is not an
affirmative defense that justifies or excuses conduct otherwise
criminal but rather serves to negate the mens rea element of the
crime charged. State v. Reyes,
140 N.J. 344, 354 (1995). It
permits the introduction of evidence which is relevant to the
question of whether the State has proven the required mental state
beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Breakiron,
108 N.J. 591, 612-13 (1987). The trial judge is obliged to instruct the jury to
consider relevant evidence tending to show that the defendant did
not have the requisite state of mind to commit the offense charged.
State v. Ramseur,
106 N.J. 123, 268 (1987).
Judge Hoffman charged the jury in pertinent part as follows:
Now, as to certain counts, evidence has been
produced alleging that defendant suffered from
a mental disease or defect. You may consider
that evidence in determining whether or not
the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt
the mental states required for those counts.
....More specifically, you may consider this
evidence of mental disease or defect on the
State's obligation to prove purposeful or
knowing conduct with respect to the murder
charge in Count 1 and whether defendant
purposely or knowingly caused death. You may
also consider such evidence with regard to the
State's obligation to prove purposeful conduct
regarding Count 9 of aggravated sexual
assault. And since aggravated sexual assault
is the predicate crime in Count 5, you may
also consider such evidence as to that count.
After reviewing the role of experts, the judge charged:
So to summarize, evidence that the defendant
suffered from a mental disease or defect has
been produced as to certain counts. You may
consider that evidence in determining whether
or not the State has proven beyond a
reasonable doubt the mental state required for
that particular charge. In other words, the
State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that the defendant acted with the required
mental states of purposely or knowingly as to
the murder and purposely as to the aggravated
sexual assault and sexual assault despite any
mental disease or defect.
The judge later reiterated:
Evidence alleging that the defendant suffered
from a mental disease or defect has been
produced. You may consider that evidence in
determining whether the State has proved
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
had the mental state of purposely or knowingly
with regard to the murder... with regard to
aggravated sexual assault and sexual assault.
We determine that Judge Hoffman fully and adequately
instructed the jury as to the concept of diminished capacity.
Similarly, defendant's contention that the court did not
advise the jury that it should consider aggravated manslaughter if
defendant was acquitted of murder on a diminished capacity basis is
equally without merit. Judge Hoffman properly charged the elements
of murder and told the jury that should they find defendant not
guilty of murder they were then to consider the lesser included
charge of aggravated manslaughter, and he went on to instruct all
the elements of manslaughter. Moreover, in reviewing the verdict
form with the jury the court took pains to explain that they were
to consider the aggravated manslaughter if and only if they found
the defendant not guilty of murder.
There was no error in the charge.
VII. DEFENDANT'S SENTENCE.
After the defendant's conviction for capital murder of Gail
Shollar, the jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict on the
imposition of the death penalty. Therefore, sentence was imposed
on defendant by Judge Hoffman for the mandatory term of life
imprisonment with a thirty-year period of parole ineligibility. In
addition, the judge sentenced defendant as follows: thirty years
with fifteen years parole ineligibility for the kidnapping of Gail Shollar to run consecutive to his sentence for murder; another consecutive sentence of thirty years with fifteen years parole ineligibility for the kidnapping of A.S.; twenty years consecutive with a ten-year parole ineligibility period for aggravated sexual assault of Gail Shollar; and an additional consecutive term of twenty years with ten years parole in