SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court.  It has 
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the 
reader.  It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court.  Please 
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not 
have been summarized).
 State v. Naseem Abdul Muhammad    (A-88-2003)
Argued October 12, 2004  Decided March 15, 2005
 ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.
In this appeal, Naseem Abdul Muhammad challenges a prosecutors repeated references at trial 
to Muhammads silence at or near the time of arrest as a violation 
of the privilege against self-incrimination.
A Passaic County grand jury indicted Muhammad for first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual 
assault, and third-degree aggravated criminal sexual contact.  The charges alleged that Muhammad kidnapped 
and raped M.M.  The strange events that led to the charges were detailed 
during the eight-day trial in April 2002.
M.M. testified that at approximately 11:30 p.m. on December 22, 1999, she was 
walking home from her cousins house in Paterson through an area known for 
prostitution.  Muhammad drove up in a Nissan Maxima, pulled in front of M.M. 
and stopped.  Muhammad, dressed in street clothes, stepped out of the vehicle, displayed 
a badge, and announced he was a Paterson Police Office and was arresting 
M.M. for prostitution.  M.M. denied she was a prostitute, explaining she lived around 
the corner and was on her way home.  Unswayed, Muhammad ordered her into 
the back seat of his car.
In the drivers seat, Muhammad drank from a 22-ounce bottle of Budweiser and 
repeated that M.M. was under arrest for prostitution.  He drove to a dark, 
dead-end street and told M.M., if you do me right Ill let you 
go.  Muhammad then climbed over the front seat into the back of the 
car.  Ignoring M.M.s request to be taken to a police station, Muhammad put 
a condom on his penis, pulled M.M. by her hair, and forced her 
to perform oral sex.  Afterwards, Muhammad ordered M.M. to take her clothes off. 
 When she refused, Muhammad pulled M.M.s pants down, turned her over, and engaged 
in vaginal intercourse with her against her will.  Muhammad removed the condom, wrapped 
it in a paper towel, and threw it on the floor of the 
car.  As Muhammad exited from the rear door to return to the drivers 
seat, M.M. picked up the paper towel containing the condom and placed it 
in her pocket.
Back behind the wheel, Muhammad told M.M. to get in the front passengers 
seat.  She refused, fearing that if she exited the car, Muhammad would take 
off and leave her behind.  As Muhammad drove through Paterson, M.M. pointed randomly 
to a house and told Muhammad she lived there.  When Muhammad offered to 
let her out, M.M. said she wanted to be taken to jail because 
Muhammad said she was soliciting prostitution.  M.M. refused Muhammads offer of four dollars 
for her time, and continued to insist that he take her to a 
jail.
Eventually, Muhammad and M.M. arrived at Paterson police headquarters.  They entered the building 
together, and Muhammad told the sergeant that he had brought M.M. in because 
she was harassing his brother and sister.  M.M. interrupted and accused Muhammad of 
lying, adding that he had identified himself as a police officer and had 
raped her.  M.M. produced the condom, which she offered as proof.
According to the desk sergeant, Muhammad identified himself as a Passaic police officer. 
 Muhammad stated that he was in Paterson visiting his brother and sister, who 
had been harassed by M.M., a neighborhood resident.  Muhammad further said that he 
ordered M.M. into his car for the purpose of scaring her into leaving 
his brother and sister alone.  However, M.M. became upset and insisted he take 
her to headquarters.
M.M. gave the desk sergeant a completely different story, claiming that Muhammad had 
abducted and raped her.  When M.M. produced the paper towel containing the condom, 
Muhammad became nervous.  He stated that he was married and just wanted to 
go home.  The desk sergeant advised Muhammad that he could not leave and 
that there was going to have to be an investigation.   After an investigating 
officer took M.M.s statement, Muhammad was placed under arrest.
The condom and paper towel were submitted to a laboratory for DNA testing. 
 The State and Muhammad stipulated that the material found in those items included 
a mixture of DNA consistent with Muhammad and M.M.
The jury learned during M.M.s testimony that she had convictions for child abuse, 
distribution of drugs, and shoplifting; that she had been arrested for creating a 
public disturbance and stabbing her brother; and that she had several aliases.  The 
jury also learned that M.M. weighed over 210 pounds on the night of 
the incident and that there were no rips or tears in the pants 
she wore that evening.  Using those facts, defense counsel attempted to cast doubt 
on M.M.s account of the assault in the back seat of the Maxima, 
suggesting that, based on her size, the sexual assault could not have occurred 
as she had testified.  M.M. testified that she had never been a prostitute, 
and she claimed that as a result of the assault, she suffered psychological 
trauma and nightmares and took illegal drugs as a way out.
Muhammad did not testify.
Defense counsel, in his opening and closing remarks, suggested that M.M. was a 
prostitute with whom Muhammad had a consensual sexual encounter.  The prosecutor, through questioning 
of witnesses and in his opening and closing remarks, repeatedly referenced Muhammads failure 
to make any mention at police headquarters of a consensual encounter with M.M. 
or that she was a prostitute.  Defense counsel objected to these remarks and 
the testimony of the police officers on this issue.  For the most part, 
the trial court overruled the objections.  The trial court also refused to grant 
Muhammads motion for a mistrial or to give a curative or limiting instruction.
The jury acquitted Muhammad of first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual assault, third-degree aggravated 
criminal sexual contact, and the lesser-included offense of second-degree sexual assault.  The jury 
convicted Muhammad of the lesser-included offense of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact, and deadlocked 
on the lesser-included charge of second-degree kidnapping.  On the States motion, the trial 
court dismissed the second-degree kidnapping charge.  On the criminal sexual contact conviction, the 
court sentenced Muhammad to an eighteen-month prison term.
The Appellate Division reversed the conviction, holding that the prosecutors repeated use of 
Muhammads silence at or near the time of his arrest as evidence of 
guilt violated Muhammads state privilege against self-incrimination.  
366 N.J. Super. 185 (App. Div. 
2004).  It concluded that the States repeated references to Muhammads failure to disclose 
his consent defense impermissibly penalized Muhammad for legitimately exercising his constitutional and common 
law right to remain silent in the face of the accusation.
The Appellate Division also held that the trial court erred when it charged 
the jury on the lesser-included offense of criminal sexual contact.  According to the 
panel, the evidence of forced penetration supported only the aggravated sexual assault charge 
and not the sexual contact charge, which requires proof of intentional touching.
The Supreme Court granted the States petition for certification.
 HELD:  The prosecutors repeated use of Muhammads silence was a violation of his 
state law privilege against self-incrimination that was clearly capable of producing an unjust 
result.  The courts charge on the lesser-included offense of sexual contact was not 
erroneous because neither party objected and the record provides rational support for the 
conviction.
1. The prosecutors arguments to the jury and the answers elicited from the 
States witnesses were direct references to Muhammads silence.  The prosecutor was entitled to 
let the jury know that Muhammads claim to the police that he picked 
M.M. up for harassment stood in stark contrast to his attorneys trial argument 
of a consensual sexual encounter.  However, the prosecutor went far beyond pointing out 
that inconsistency; instead, he called for the jury to reject the consent defense 
because Muhammad remained silent when he had the opportunity to present it to 
the police.  The prosecutor intimated that an innocent man would not have stopped 
speaking to the police officers, but would have revealed to them the defense 
offered as truth at trial. (pp. 13-15)
2. New Jerseys privilege against self-incrimination, although not enshrined in the State Constitution, 
is deeply rooted in this States common law and codified in both statute 
and an evidence rule.  And, the state-law privilege is broader than its federal 
counterpart.  Federal law generally permits the use of pre-arrest silence to impeach a 
defendant.  Under New Jersey law, a prosecutor may not use a defendants silence 
when it arises at or near the time of arrest, during official interrogation, 
or while in police custody.  This Court previously has held that a defendant 
is under no obligation to volunteer to the authorities at the first opportunity 
the exculpatory story he later tells at his trial and cannot be penalized 
directly or indirectly if he does not.  
State v. Deatore, 
70 N.J. 100 
(1976). (pp. 15-23)
3. When M.M. accused Muhammad of raping her and produced a used condom 
as proof, the desk sergeant told Muhammad he could not leave and effectively 
placed him in custody.  With his freedom curtailed, Muhammad fell silent.  At trial, 
the prosecutor repeatedly elicited testimony and made comments on Muhammads silence both at 
or near the time of his arrest and when he was in police 
custody.  Those references were patent violations of this Courts holding in 
Deatore.  Because 
the Court concludes that the prosecutors violation of Muhammads state law privilege against 
self-incrimination was clearly capable of producing an unjust result, the Court is constrained 
to reverse the conviction. (pp. 23-25)
4. The next question is whether the trial court committed plain error in 
charging criminal sexual contact to the jury.  Sexual contact is defined as an 
intentional touching by the victim or actor of the victims or actors intimate 
parts for the purpose of degrading or humiliating the victim or sexually arousing 
or gratifying the actor.  Such touching could be a necessary prelude to the 
act of penetration or could occur without penetration at all.  At the end 
of the States case, Muhammad did not file a motion for a judgment 
of acquittal on any charge for a lack of evidence.  He did not 
object to the trial court instructing the jury on the lesser-included offense of 
criminal sexual contact.  One may reasonably surmise that no such objection was raised 
at trial because Muhammad was content to give the jury the option of 
finding him guilty of a less serious offense.  Now, Muhammad submits that based 
on M.M.s testimony, the evidence supported only one theory  sexual assault  and that 
the jurys only choice should have been between a conviction of that crime 
and acquittal.  (pp. 25-29)
5. When a court charges a lesser-included offense and neither party objects, as 
in this case, a conviction on the lesser charge is upheld so long 
as the evidence in the record provides rational support for the conviction.  The 
jurors in this case were entitled to believe all, none, or part of 
the account offered by M.M.  The verdict might reflect the fact that the 
jury credited only part of M.M.s testimony, and concluded that Muhammad touched M.M. 
or himself in her presence, but did not penetrate her.  Muhammad also argues 
that the sexual contact conviction was an unlawful compromise verdict because any contact 
was necessarily incidental to sexual penetration, and the jury acquitted Muhammad on the 
charge of sexual assault.  The Court does not accept Muhammads premise that the 
verdicts were necessarily inconsistent, but even if it did, it would reject his 
claim.  Consistency in the verdict is not necessary.  In reviewing a jury finding, 
courts determine whether the evidence in the record was sufficient to support a 
conviction on any count on which the jury found the defendant guilty.  Courts 
do not speculate whether verdicts resulted from lenity, mistake, or compromise.  Accordingly, there 
is no bar to a retrial on the charge of criminal sexual contact. 
(pp. 29-32)
    The Court 
 AFFIRMS the Appellate Divisions holding that the prosecutor improperly elicited testimony 
and commented on Muhammads silence; and 
 REVERSES the holding that insufficient evidence was 
submitted to support a charge of criminal sexual contact.  The matter is 
 REMANDED 
for a new trial on the charge of criminal sexual contact consistent with 
this opinion.
    
 JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO has filed a separate, 
 CONCURRING opinion, to note that the prosecutors 
comments were improper only to the extent that they referenced Muhammads post-custody silence, 
and that references to Muhammads statements and/or silence prior to that time did 
not implicate the right against self-incrimination.
    
 CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, and WALLACE join in JUSTICE 
ALBINs opinion.   JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO has filed a separate, concurring opinion.
 
 
 
 
 SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
88 September Term 2003
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
        v.
NASEEM ABDUL MUHAMMAD,
    Defendant-Respondent.
Argued October 12, 2004  Decided March 15, 2005
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at 
366 N.J. Super. 185 (2004).
Leslie-Ann M. Justus, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for appellant (Peter C. 
Harvey, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney; Ms. Justus and Terry S. Bogorad, 
Senior Assistant Passaic County Prosecutor, on the briefs).
Gregory R. Mueller, Designated Counsel, argued the cause for respondent (Yvonne Smith Segars, 
Public Defender, attorney).
JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    A suspect has a right to remain silent while in police custody or 
under official interrogation, in accordance with his state law privilege against self-incrimination.  In 
this case, we reaffirm that a suspects silence while in custody, under interrogation, 
or at or near the time of his arrest cannot be used against 
him in a criminal trial.  We agree with the Appellate Division that the 
prosecutors improper use of defendants pre-arrest silence as evidence of guilt requires the 
reversal of his conviction of criminal sexual contact.  We disagree, however, with the 
appellate panels conclusion that the trial court did not have a rational basis 
to instruct the jury on the charged offense of aggravated criminal sexual contact 
and the lesser-included offense of sexual contact.  Because defendants conviction was supported by 
sufficient evidence in the record, we also reject defendants argument that any seeming 
inconsistency between the verdict acquitting him of the sexual assault charges and convicting 
him of sexual contact warranted a dismissal.  We, therefore, vacate the panels entry 
of a judgment of acquittal on the sexual contact charge.  In light of 
the prosecutors improper use of defendants pre-arrest silence, we remand for a new 
trial.     
I. 
A Passaic County grand jury indicted defendant Naseem Abdul Muhammad for first-degree kidnapping, 
N.J.S.A. 2C:13-1(b)(1); first-degree aggravated sexual assault, 
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(6); and third-degree aggravated criminal sexual 
contact, 
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3(a).  The charges alleged that defendant abducted and raped M.M.  The 
strange events that led to those charges were detailed at defendants eight-day jury 
trial in April 2002.  
M.M. testified that at approximately 11:30 p.m. on December 22, 1999, she was 
walking home from her cousins house in Paterson through an area known for 
prostitution.  As she approached the corner of Ellison Place and East 22nd Street, 
a slowly driven Nissan Maxima pulled up in front of her and stopped. 
 Defendant, dressed in street clothes, stepped out of the vehicle, displayed a silver 
badge and identification card, and announced, Im a Paterson Police Officer, youre under 
arrest for soliciting prostitution.
See footnote 1  M.M. denied that she was a prostitute, explaining that 
she lived around the corner and was on her way home.  Unswayed, defendant 
told her that she was going down for soliciting and ordered her to 
get into the back seat of his car.    
In the drivers seat, defendant drank from a 22-ounce bottle of Budweiser and 
repeated that M.M. was under arrest for prostitution.  He drove to a dark, 
dead-end street, where he parked the car and told M.M., if you do 
me right Ill let you go.  After M.M. expressed uncertainty about the meaning 
of that offer, defendant said the words again and then climbed over the 
front seat into the back passenger area.  Ignoring M.M.s request to be taken 
to the police station, defendant put a condom on his penis, pulled M.M. 
by her hair, and forced her to perform oral sex.  Afterwards, defendant ordered 
M.M. to take her clothes off.  When she refused, defendant pulled her pants 
down, turned her over onto her stomach, and engaged in vaginal intercourse with 
her against her will for fifteen to twenty minutes until he ejaculated.  Defendant 
then removed the condom, wrapped it in a paper towel, threw it on 
the floor of the car, and got dressed.  As he exited from the 
rear door to return to the drivers seat, M.M. picked up the paper 
towel containing the condom and placed it in her pocket. 
Back behind the wheel, defendant told M.M. to put on her clothes and 
get in the front passengers seat.  She refused, fearing that if she exited 
the car, defendant would take off and leave her behind.  Instead, she asked 
to be taken to the local jail.  As defendant drove through Paterson, M.M. 
pointed randomly to a house and told defendant that she lived there.   However, 
when defendant offered to let her out, she said, I want you to 
take me to jail because you said Im soliciting prostitution.  M.M. later declined 
defendants offer of four dollars for [her] time, and continued to insist that 
he take her to jail.  As defendant drove, M.M. refused defendants offer to 
take his cell phone and resisted several more requests that she move to 
the front seat, afraid that if she stepped from the vehicle he would 
leave her standing in the street.
Eventually, defendant and M.M. arrived at Paterson police headquarters.  They entered the building 
together and proceeded to the desk sergeant.  Defendant spoke first, telling the sergeant 
that he had brought M.M. in because she had been harassing his brother 
and sister.  M.M. interrupted and accused defendant of lying, adding that defendant had 
identified himself as a police officer and had raped her.  Then, from her 
pocket, she produced the condom, which she offered as proof.
The testimony of the desk sergeant, Alexander DeLuccia, shed further light on what 
occurred at headquarters.  Sergeant DeLuccia testified that at approximately 1:15 a.m., M.M. and 
defendant appeared at his desk.  Defendant identified himself as a Passaic police officer, 
displayed his identification card and badge, and told the sergeant that he had 
a problem with M.M.  With tears streaming down her face, M.M. interjected, [h]e 
forced me to have sex with him.  In response, defendant gave his reasons 
for bringing M.M. to police headquarters.  He explained that earlier that evening, he 
had gone to East 27th Street in Paterson to visit his adult brother 
and sister, both of whom were narcotics addicts.  The brother told defendant that 
both he and their sister had been harassed by M.M., a neighborhood resident. 
 When defendant caught sight of M.M. leaving her apartment, he ordered her into 
his car for the purpose of scar[ing] her into leaving his brother and 
sister alone.  However, M.M. became upset with his shouting and insisted that he 
take her to [h]eadquarters.  
M.M. gave Sergeant DeLuccia an account at complete odds with defendants story.  She 
described how defendant abducted and raped her, and showed him a paper towel 
curled up in her hand, which she identified as the rubber that he 
used on me.  At that point, defendant became nervous, stating he was married 
and wanted to go home.  The sergeant advised defendant that he could not 
leave and that there was going to have to be an investigation.  A 
police officer standing close by overheard that conversation and immediately positioned himself near 
defendant, and at the sergeants direction, escorted defendant to the patrol captains office 
lounge.  
The follow-up investigation was conducted by Officer Louis DeLucca, who testified that in 
the early morning hours of December 23, he was dispatched to headquarters concerning 
an alleged sexual assault.  He first interviewed M.M. and took from her, as 
evidence, the condom and paper towel in which it was wrapped.  Officer DeLucca 
spoke briefly with defendant and placed him under arrest.  
M.M. was taken to the hospital where she was given medication to prevent 
possible infection.  The condom and paper towel were submitted to a laboratory for 
DNA testing.  Both the State and defendant stipulated that material found on those 
items included a mixture of DNA consistent with defendant and M.M.  The stipulation 
also provided that defendant was the major contributor of the DNA and that 
there was a 1 in 1.3 sextillion chance that the [d]efendant [was] not 
the source of the seminal material found on the paper towel.  
The jury learned during M.M.s testimony that she had convictions for child abuse, 
distribution of drugs, and shoplifting; that she had been arrested for creating a 
public disturbance and stabbing her brother; and that she had several aliases.  The 
jury also learned that M.M. weighed over 210 pounds on the night of 
the incident and that there were no rips or tears in the pants 
she wore that evening.  Using those facts, defense counsel attempted to cast doubt 
on M.M.s account of the assault in the back seat of the Maxima, 
suggesting that, based on her size, the sexual assault could not have occurred 
as she had testified.  M.M. stated that she had never been a prostitute. 
 She explained that as a result of the sexual assault, she suffered psychological 
trauma and nightmares, sought counseling for two years, and took illegal drugs as 
a way out.
    Defendant did not testify.
Defendants counsel, in his opening and closing remarks, suggested that M.M. was a 
prostitute with whom defendant had a consensual sexual encounter.  In turn, the prosecutor, 
through questioning of witnesses and in his opening and closing remarks, repeatedly referenced 
defendants failure to make any mention at police headquarters of a consensual encounter 
with M.M. or that she was a prostitute.
First, in his opening statement, the prosecutor remarked:
When [defendant is] at the police department he explains how it is that 
he and [M.M.] came together that night, and he doesnt say that she 
was a prostitute . . . .  He did not say he picked 
her up to have sex with her.  He did not say that she 
was a prostitute. 
The court overruled defendants objection to those comments and denied his motion for 
a mistrial.  
Then, in his examination of Sergeant DeLuccia, the prosecutor focused in on defendants 
silence at the police station:
Q: In addition to telling you that he picked up [M.M.] in order 
to scare her because she had been bothering his brother or sister, did 
[defendant] say anything to you about having sex with [M.M.]?
A: No.  Nothing.
Q: Did the subject of her being a prostitute ever come up?
A: No sir.
  
[(Emphasis added).] 
The prosecutor followed up by asking:
Q: From the moment that you first saw [defendant] to the time that 
you went off duty that morning, did the subject ever come up concerning 
prostitution . . . ? 
The court sustained a defense objection because the breadth of the question possibly 
encompassed the time after defendants formal arrest and, therefore, touch[ed] on [d]efendants exercise 
of his Fifth Amendment privilege.  The prosecutor then rephrased the question:
Q: Sergeant, from the moment that you first laid eyes on [defendant and 
M.M.], from the time that you saw them coming in that clear door, 
to the time that [M.M.] was taken to the front of the Police 
Department and [defendant] was escorted to another room and you lost sight of 
the two, from point A to point B as Ive just outlined it, 
did [defendant] ever say to you anything with regard to prostitution or allege 
that [M.M.] was a prostitute?
A: No sir.
Q: Did the subject of prostitution ever come up during that period of 
time?
A: No sir.
[(Emphasis added).] 
On direct examination of Officer DeLucca, the prosecutor continued to develop the theme 
of defendants silence about prostitution: 
Q: Now, at some point after you, in the company of the Captain, 
meet with [defendant], after you get his name, after he produces a police 
badge ¾ Passaic police badge, after he produces the Passaic housing officer ID card, 
and after he identifies himself as a Passaic police officer, he was actually 
formally placed under arrest, correct? 
A: Correct.
Q: Before that happened, from the time you first met him to the 
time that he was placed under arrest, did the subject of prostitution ever 
come up between you, the Captain or the Defendant?
A: No.
[(Emphasis added).]
Over the objections of defense counsel, the prosecutor in summation continued to drive 
home defendants failure to provide the Paterson police with his trial defense.  
On December 22, 1999, minutes after this incident occurs, the defendant goes into 
the Paterson Police Department with [M.M.] and he stakes out his position.  In 
effect he says here I stand, this is my position, and he never 
said, in staking out his position, that [M.M.] was a prostitute.
    . . . .
[Defendant] said he found [M.M.] around 27th Street and he said not that 
he picked her up as a prostitute, not that he had sex with 
her.  He didnt say that.  What he said was he picked her up 
and ordered her in the car.  He ordered her into the car.  Why? 
 So he could scare her.  Not so that he could have sex with 
her, not so that he could hire her as a prostitute . . 
. .
  
He didnt say she was a prostitute.  He didnt say [] he hired 
a prostitute.  He didnt say he hired a prostitute.  He didnt say he 
had sex with her during an act of, an act of prostitution.  He 
didnt say any of that.
. . . .
And dont you think that if [defendant] were engaged in prostitution, that would 
be the time to say it?  But he didnt.  You know why?  Because 
he wasnt.
  
        [(Emphasis added).]
The court refused to grant defendants motion for a mistrial at the completion 
of the prosecutors closing or to give a curative or limiting instruction.
The jury acquitted defendant of first-degree kidnapping, first-degree aggravated sexual assault, third-degree aggravated 
criminal sexual contact, and the lesser-included offense of second-degree sexual assault.  The jury 
convicted defendant of the lesser-included offense of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3(b), 
and deadlocked on the lesser-included charge of second-degree kidnapping, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-1(c).  On the 
States motion, the trial court dismissed the second-degree kidnapping charge.  On the criminal 
sexual contact conviction, the court sentenced defendant to an eighteen-month State Prison term 
and imposed appropriate fees and penalties.
The Appellate Division, relying on State v. Deatore, 
70 N.J. 100 (1976), and 
State v. Brown, 
118 N.J. 595 (1990), reversed the conviction, holding that the 
prosecutors repeated use of defendants silence at or near the time of his 
arrest, as evidence of guilt, violated defendants state privilege against self-incrimination.  State v. 
Muhammed, 
366 N.J. Super. 185, 197-99, 201-02 (App. Div. 2004).
See footnote 2  The panel found 
that while in custody at headquarters, defendant was not required to provide the 
police with the defense that he presented a trial.  
Id. at 200-202.  The 
panel noted that the States repeated references to defendants failure to disclose his 
consent defense impermissibly penalized defendant for legitimately exercising his constitutional and common law 
right to remain silent in the face of an accusation.  Id. at 201, 
202.  The panel concluded that the trial judge committed reversible error in permitting 
the prosecutor to repeatedly comment on defendants failure to disclose the version of 
events suggested for the first time at trial.  Id. at 205.
The Appellate Division also held that the trial court erred when it charged 
the jury on the lesser-included offense of criminal sexual contact.  Id. at 208. 
 According to the panel, the evidence of forced vaginal and oral penetration supported 
only the aggravated sexual assault charge and not the sexual contact charge, which 
was premised on a theory of intentional touching.  Id. at 207-208.  The panel, 
therefore, found that the proofs did not justify a conviction of sexual contact 
and remanded for the entry of a judgment of acquittal on that charge. 
 Ibid.  We granted the States petition for certification.  State v. Muhammed, 
180 N.J. 151 (2004).
II.
We first address whether the prosecutor impermissibly used defendants silence at Paterson police 
headquarters as evidence of his guilt in violation of his state law right 
against self-incrimination.  The State claims that the prosecutor was commenting not on defendants 
silence, but on his statement to the desk sergeant, which was inconsistent with 
his defense at trial.  Alternatively, the State argues that any possible reference to 
defendants pre-arrest silence did not violate defendants state or federal right against self-incrimination. 
 We disagree.
A.
The prosecutors arguments to the jury and the answers he elicited from the 
police witnesses were direct references to defendants silence.  Making reference at trial to 
what a defendant did not say to the police is commenting on his 
silence.  
See State v. Lyle, 
73 N.J. 403, 406 n.1, 407 n.4, 408 
n.5, 410 (1977) (per curiam); 
Deatore, 
supra, 70 
N.J. at 107, 115-16.  The 
prosecutor reminded the jury that defendant did not give the police the consent 
defense that his counsel raised at trial and faulted defendant for remaining silent 
at headquarters.  In his opening, the prosecutor harped on the fact that at 
the police station, defendant did not say he picked [M.M.] up to have 
sex with her.  He did not say that she was a prostitute.  In 
his closing, the prosecutor made the same point, arguing that defendant only told 
the police that he had picked M.M. up to scare her and that 
[h]e didnt say he had sex with her during an act of, an 
act of prostitution.  Those characterizations came from answers elicited by the prosecutor during 
his examination of two police witnesses. 
We cannot accept the States depiction of the prosecutors remarks as merely highlighting 
the inconsistency between defendants statement at police headquarters and the defense advanced by 
his attorney.  In assailing defendants consent defense, the prosecutors leitmotif was defendants silence 
at police headquarters.  The prosecutor was entitled to let the jury know that 
defendants claim to the police that he picked M.M. up for harassment stood 
in stark contrast to his attorneys trial argument of a consensual sexual encounter. 
 However, the prosecutor went far beyond pointing out that significant inconsistency; instead the 
prosecutor called for the jury to reject the consent defense because defendant remained 
silent when he had the opportunity to present it to the police.
See footnote 3  Here, 
the prosecutors thrust was that both before and after M.M. accused him of 
rape, defendant did not give to the police the exculpatory account that his 
counsel provided to the jury.  In other words, the prosecutor impaled defendant on 
his silence, intimating that an innocent man would not have stopped speaking to 
the police officers, but would have revealed to them the defense offered as 
truth at trial.  We conclude that the prosecutor elicited testimony and commented on 
defendants silence at police headquarters to impugn his defense at trial.
B.
Next, we must decide whether the prosecutors use of defendants silence violated his 
state law right against self-incrimination.  New Jerseys privilege against self-incrimination, although not enshrined 
in the State Constitution, is deeply rooted in this States common law and 
codified in both statute and an evidence rule.  
N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-19 and 
N.J.R.E. 503 
both provide in identical language that every natural person has a right to 
refuse to disclose in an action or to a police officer or other 
official any matter that will incriminate him or expose him to a penalty 
or a forfeiture of his estate . . . . 
[T]he right of . . . a suspect to remain silent when in 
police custody or under interrogation has always been a fundamental aspect of the 
privilege in this state.  
Deatore, 
supra, 70 
N.J. at 114.  When in custody, 
a suspect is privileged to say nothing at all to the police and 
is under no duty to give a statement . . . .  
State 
v. Ripa, 
45 N.J. 199, 204 (1965) (per curiam).  
The reason for a 
suspects silence in a police dominated setting cannot easily be discerned.  Because we 
cannot know whether a suspect is acquiescing to the truth of an accusation 
or merely asserting his privilege, such silence is equivocal.  
Id. at 203.  We 
have recognized that a likely explanation for a suspects silence while under official 
interrogation or in custody may be that he is exercising his right to 
remain silent.  
Id. at 203.  Therefore, we do not permit a jury to 
infer guilt from that silence.  
Id. at 203-04.  
In addition, a suspect who initially responds to police questioning may later assert 
his right to remain silent without fear that his silence will be used 
to incriminate him at trial.  A suspect who begins to speak to the 
police while in custody, during interrogation, or at or near the time of 
his arrest does not waive his right against self-incrimination when he falls silent 
¾
 the words he could have spoken cannot be used against him.  
See, e.g., 
Lyle, 
supra, 73 
N.J. at 405, 406, 410 (holding that defendant who remains 
silent after giving account of crime to police may not be impeached at 
trial with that silence); 
Ripa, 
supra, 45 
N.J. at 204 (holding that no 
negative inference could be drawn against defendant based on his exercise of right 
to remain silent after providing information to police).  In other words, by speaking 
with the police, a suspect does not waive his right to invoke the 
privilege and remain silent at some later point.  
Our state-law privilege against self-incrimination offers broader protection than its federal counterpart under 
the Fifth Amendment.
See footnote 4
  
See 
State v. Strong, 
110 N.J. 583, 595 (1988); 
see 
also Deatore, 
supra, 70 
N.J. at 112-16.  If a defendant remains silent after 
being arrested and given 
Miranda
See footnote 5
 warnings, both state and federal law prohibit a 
prosecutor from using that silence against him.  
Doyle v. Ohio, 
426 U.S. 610, 
619, 
96 S. Ct. 2240, 2245, 
49 L. Ed.2d 91, 98 (1976) 
(holding that the use for impeachment purposes of [defendants] silence, at the time 
of arrest and after receiving 
Miranda warnings, violated the Due Process Clause of 
the Fourteenth Amendment (footnote omitted)).  
On the other hand, federal law generally permits 
the use of pre-arrest silence to impeach a defendant.  
Jenkins v. Anderson, 
447 U.S. 231, 238-39, 
100 S. Ct. 2124, 2129, 
65 L. Ed.2d 86, 
94-95 (1980) (holding that Self-Incrimination Clause of Fifth Amendment and Due Process Clause 
of Fourteenth Amendment are not violated by use of defendants pre-arrest and pre-
Miranda 
warning silence to impeach his credibility); 
see also Fletcher v. Weir, 
455 U.S. 603, 607, 
102 S. Ct. 1309, 1312, 
71 L. Ed.2d 490, 494 
(1982) (per curiam) (holding that due process was not violated by prosecutors comments 
on defendants silence following his arrest but before he received 
Miranda warnings because 
of the absence of the sort of affirmative assurances embodied in the Miranda 
warnings).    
In contrast, u
nder New Jersey law, the admissibility of a defendants pre-arrest silence 
is not determined based on whether the silence arose before or after the 
police administered 
Miranda warnings.  Our state law privilege does not allow a prosecutor 
to use at trial a defendants silence when that silence arises at or 
near the time of arrest, during official interrogation, or while in police custody. 
 
See Deatore, 
supra, 70 
N.J. at 108-09; 
see also Brown, 
supra, 118 
N.J. 
at 610.  Barring the use of silence at or near the time of 
arrest avoids the often murky inquiry into pinpointing the precise moment a suspect 
is placed in custody or under arrest.    
In 
Deatore, 
supra, we concluded that the State could not impeach a defendant 
with his silence while under interrogation by the police at or near the 
time of his arrest.  70 
N.J. at 108-09.  The defendant in that case 
was on trial for armed robbery and presented an alibi defense.  
Id. at 
103.  He testified that he was in a womans company in a motel 
room at the time of the crime.  
Id. at 103-04.  On cross-examination, the 
prosecutor asked whether he had given that account to the police when he 
was arrested and later when he learned of the specific charge against him. 
 
Id. at 107.  The defendant replied that he only remembered asking for a 
receipt for money taken from him by the police.  
Ibid.  In response to 
the prosecutors question whether he had refused to make a statement to the 
police, the defendant stated, [n]obody asked me.  
Ibid.  The State offered no rebuttal 
testimony to the defendants response, and the prosecutor did not mention the defendants 
silence for the balance of the trial, including summation.  
Id. at 107-08.  Defendant 
was convicted of the crime.  
Id. at 103.  
In affirming the Appellate Divisions reversal of defendants conviction, this Court concluded that 
the prosecutors questioning violated the defendants state law privilege against self-incrimination.  
Id. at 
115-16.  We held that a defendant is under no obligation to volunteer to 
the authorities at the first opportunity the exculpatory story he later tells at 
his trial and cannot be penalized directly or indirectly if he does not. 
 
Id. at 115.  Because the privilege gives a person the right to refuse 
to disclose to a police officer any matter that will incriminate him, we 
rejected the States reasoning that an innocent person would have volunteered the exculpatory 
statement at the earliest possible moment to avoid a trial and possible conviction. 
 
Id. at 108-09; 
see also N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-19; 
N.J.R.E. 503.
We applied our holding in 
Deatore, 
supra, a year later in 
Lyle, 
supra, 
a case involving the improper use of a suspects silence that presents parallels 
to the case before us now.  73 
N.J. at 405.  In 
Lyle, 
supra, 
the defendant shot and killed a man allegedly involved in a romantic dalliance 
with his wife.  
Ibid.  When Detective Friday arrived at the murder scene, the 
store where the defendant worked, the defendant stepped forward and said Yes, Im 
Henry.  I shot him.  
Id. at 406.  The defendant was then arrested, given 
Miranda warnings, and said nothing more to Detective Friday at the crime scene. 
 
Ibid.  At trial, the defendant claimed that he acted in self-defense and only 
killed the decedent after the decedent had attacked him with a screwdriver.  
Id. 
at 405-06.  
The prosecutor repeatedly questioned both the defendant and Detective Friday about the defendants 
failure to give that account at the time he admitted the killing.  
Id. 
at 406 n.1, 407 n.4, 408 n.5.  Additionally, in summation, the prosecutor argued 
here is a man who has told you that he killed in self 
defense, that [the decedent] came at him with a screwdriver, and yet the 
policeman who was there within moments . . . of the killing, . 
. . he doesnt mention anything at all about the screwdriver to him. 
 
Id. at 409.  That the defendant gave only a partial account to the 
police at or near the time of his arrest did not open the 
door to prosecutorial questioning about what the defendant did not tell to the 
police.  
See id. at 405, 410.  Relying on 
Deatore, 
supra, we reversed the 
defendants conviction because it was manifestly improper to use defendants silence to attack 
his self-defense theory as a fabrication.  
Id. at 410.
See footnote 6     
In 
Brown, 
supra, we reaffirmed the principle of 
Deatore, 
supra, and clearly stated 
that a suspect has the right to remain silent when in police custody 
or under interrogation and that his silence at or near the time of 
his arrest may not be introduced to impeach his credibility.  118 
N.J. at 
610.  In 
Brown, 
supra, we held that a defendants pre-arrest silence could be 
used for impeachment purposes if that silence significantly preceded his arrest and did 
not arise in a custodial or interrogation setting.  
Id. at 610, 613.  In 
that case, defendant Emm and co-defendant Brown tailgated and passed each other on 
a highway until Browns car struck an innocent motorist traveling in the opposite 
lane of traffic.  
Id. at 600.  Emm then drove to a volunteer fire 
company of which he was a member and returned to the accident scene 
to assist the victims.  
Id. at 602.  Although Emm was in the presence 
of police and first-aid workers at the scene, he said not a word 
about his involvement in the tragic events.  
Id. at 602-03.  Two days later, 
Emm came forward to the police to explain his part in the collision. 
 
Id. at 603.  At trial, Emm testified that he was innocent of any 
wrongdoing and a victim of Browns reckless antics on the roadway.  
Id. at 
601.  The prosecutor and Browns counsel impeached Emm with his silence at the 
accident scene.  
Id. at 610.  
This Court held that in the absence of governmental compulsion, Emms pre-arrest silence 
was admissible for impeachment purposes because the jury was entitled to infer that 
a reasonable person situated as the defendant . . . would naturally have 
come forward and mentioned his . . . involvement to the police at 
the accident scene.  
Id. at 613.  The Court concluded that in circumstances not 
involving official interrogation or a custodial setting, silence significantly preceding arrest is admissible 
if it generates an inference of consciousness of guilt that bears on the 
credibility of the defendant when measured against the defendants apparent exculpatory testimony.  
Id. 
at 613, 615.  Based on the facts in 
Brown, 
supra, this Court found 
that it was up to the jury to assess the probative value of 
the defendants silence ¾ whether [it] entailed a consciousness of guilt, a desire not 
to become involved, a feeling that it was simply unnecessary, or a belief 
that he had already fulfilled whatever duty he had . . . .
See footnote 7 
 
Id. at 615.  
The present case falls squarely within the ambit of 
Deatore, 
supra, and 
Lyle, 
supra.  Defendant brought M.M. to Paterson police headquarters and told the desk sergeant 
that she had been harassing his family.  When M.M. accused defendant of raping 
her and produced a used condom as proof, Sergeant Deluccia told defendant he 
could not leave, and effectively placed him in custody.  With his freedom curtailed, 
defendant fell silent.  A short while later, an officer escorted defendant to the 
captains lounge where he remained until his arrest, all the while keeping his 
silence.  As in 
Lyle, 
supra, before invoking silence at the scene, defendant gave 
to the police a different account from the one he relied on at 
trial.
The prosecutor here repeatedly elicited testimony and made comments on defendants silence both 
at or near the time of his arrest and when he was in 
police custody.  In questioning both Sergeant DeLuccia and Officer DeLucca, the prosecutor pointedly 
elicited testimony that defendant remained silent while detained at headquarters.  The prosecutors references 
to defendants failure to tell the police officers about a consensual sexual relationship 
with M.M. were so broad that they encompassed the entire period defendant was 
in custody at headquarters.  For example, the prosecutors opening statement referred to defendants 
silence while at the police department, a time that included when he had 
been placed under arrest.  
Those references in which the prosecutor drew inferences of guilt from defendants silence 
were patent violations of 
Deatore, 
supra, and 
Lyle, 
supra.  Defendant was not obliged 
to give the police the exculpatory story his attorney presented at trial, and 
the State was not permitted to use his silence to convict him.
See footnote 8  
See 
Deatore, 
supra, 70 
N.J. at 114; 
see also Ripa, 
supra, 45 
N.J. at 
204.  Because we conclude that the prosecutors violation of defendants state law privilege 
against self-incrimination was clearly capable of producing an unjust result,  
R. 2:10-2; 
see 
also State v. Macon, 
57 N.J. 325, 337 (1971), we are constrained to 
reverse defendants conviction.    
        
  
   
III.
Next, we consider whether the trial court committed plain error in charging criminal 
sexual contact to the jury.  The Appellate Division noted that fourth-degree criminal sexual 
contact [was] squarely included in the offense of aggravated criminal sexual contact, which 
was charged in the indictment.  
Muhammed, 
supra, 366 
N.J. Super. at 207.   The 
appellate panel determined, however, that neither crime [was] rationally based in, much less 
clearly indicated by, the evidence adduced at trial and vacated the conviction of 
sexual contact.  
Id. at 207, 208.  Finding that the State did not meet 
its burden of proof on that charge, the panel, in effect, entered a 
judgment of acquittal, thus barring a retrial.  
Id. at 208.  
Defendant submits that we should affirm the panels opinion.  In addition, he claims 
that the jurys inconsistent verdicts ¾ acquittal on the sexual assault charge and guilt 
on the sexual contact charge ¾ required the overturning of the conviction.  Because we 
conclude that the trial court had a rational basis to charge the lesser-included 
offense of sexual contact, and because even a purportedly inconsistent verdict does not 
bar a conviction that is supported by the record, we reverse.  
The indictment returned by the Passaic County grand jury charged defendant with first-degree 
kidnapping, second-degree aggravated sexual assault, and third-degree aggravated sexual contact.  The State was 
permitted to charge defendant in the alternative or with the greater and lesser 
degree of the same cognate offenses.  
See N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8(a) (When the same conduct 
of a defendant may establish the commission of more than one offense, the 
defendant may be prosecuted for each such offense.).  A single criminal transaction may 
violate more than one statute and be charged in several counts of an 
indictment.  
State v. La Fera, 
35 N.J. 75, 91 (1961) (holding that [e]ven 
inconsistent or repugnant charges arising out of the same affair may be joined, 
provided there is sufficient evidence to support charge (citations omitted)).  
Accordingly, a grand jury may include in an indictment charges that allege alternative 
theories of guilt.  To illustrate, indictments in drug cases often include both the 
greater and lesser charge, i.e., possession of a controlled dangerous substance with the 
intent to distribute and mere possession of that substance.  
See, e.g., 
State v. 
Smith, 
155 N.J. 83, 90 (1998) (Grand Jury indicted defendant, charging him with 
third degree possession of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS) (count one), third degree 
possession of a CDS with intent to distribute (count two), and third degree 
possession of a CDS with intent to distribute within 1000 feet of a 
school (count three).).  The State need not proceed by charging on an all-or-nothing 
basis, but may instead take account of the realities of the criminal justice 
system.  
The States burden of proof in returning an indictment is to present the 
grand jury with a 
prima facie case, whereas its burden at trial is 
to present the petit jury with proof beyond a reasonable doubt.  Those differing 
standards make it likely that not all charges returned by a grand jury 
will be proven at trial.  Returning to the example of the drug case, 
the petit jury may determine that there is reasonable doubt that a defendant 
possessed a controlled substance with the intent to distribute, but have no such 
doubt that he possessed the illicit substance.  The salient point is that the 
grand jury is empowered to bring criminal charges on greater and lesser-included offenses 
based on probable cause for ultimate determination by a trial jury.
Here, the grand jury charged defendant with aggravated sexual assault, which requires proof 
of (1) penetration (2) by physical force or coercion and (3) severe personal 
injury . . . sustained by the victim.  
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(6).  The lesser-included crime 
of sexual assault, 
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(c)(1), contains the first two elements but not the 
third of severe personal injury.  The grand jury also charged defendant with aggravated 
criminal sexual contact, which requires proof of (1) sexual contact (2) by physical 
force or coercion and (3) severe personal injury sustained by the victim.  
N.J.S.A. 
2C:14-3(a).  The lesser-included offense of criminal sexual contact contains the first two elements 
but not the third of severe personal injury.  
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3(b).
Sexual contact is defined as an intentional touching by the victim or actor, 
either directly or through clothing, of the victims or actors intimate parts for 
the purpose of degrading or humiliating the victim or sexually arousing or sexually 
gratifying the actor.  
N.J.S.A. 2C:14-1(d).  This form of intentional touching could be a 
necessary prelude to the act of penetration or could occur without penetration at 
all.  Additionally, sexual contact occurs under the statute even if the defendant only 
touches himself, i.e., masturbates, in view of the victim.  
Ibid.    
    The grand jury obviously found evidence of sexual penetration and evidence of sexual 
contact.  Defendant did not file a motion to dismiss count three of the 
indictment charging aggravated sexual contact based on insufficiency of evidence.  At the end 
of the States case, defendant did not file a motion for a judgment 
of acquittal on the ground of lack of evidence.  Defendant never objected to 
the trial court instructing the jury on the lesser-included offense of criminal sexual 
contact, although he did object to the court charging several other lesser-included offenses, 
including lewdness.  One may reasonably surmise that defendant raised no such objection at 
trial because he was content to give the jury the option of finding 
him guilty of a less serious offense, and because he saw no basis 
to challenge the sufficiency of the evidence on the sexual contact charge.  
Now, defendant submits that based on M.M.s testimony, the evidence supported only one 
theory ¾ sexual assault ¾ and that the jurys only choice should have been between 
a conviction of that crime and acquittal.  He argues that the State never 
proceeded on a theory of mere intentional contact.  That argument, however, is refuted 
by the fact that the indictment itself contained the charge of aggravated criminal 
sexual contact.  Moreover, no one questions that sexual contact is an appropriate lesser-included 
offense of aggravated sexual contact.  
[T]he integrity of . . . the fact-finding process is not subordinate to 
the singular interests of any party.  
State v. Garron, 
177 N.J. 147, 180 
(2003), 
cert. denied, 
540 U.S. 1160, 
124 S. Ct. 1169, 
157 L. Ed. 2d 1204 (2004).  We have instructed our trial courts that their primary obligation 
is to see that justice is done, and that a jury is instructed 
properly on the law and on all clearly indicated lesser-included offenses, even if 
at odds with the strategic considerations of counsel.  
Ibid.  As we said in 
Garron, 
supra, [n]o defendant should be convicted of a greater crime or acquitted 
merely because the jury was precluded from considering a lesser offense . . 
. .  
Ibid.  When a court charges a lesser-included offense and neither party 
objects, as in this case, we will uphold a conviction of the lesser 
charge so long as the evidence in the record provides rational support for 
the conviction.
      We have long recognized that [a] jury is not bound to believe 
the testimony of any witness, in whole or in part.  
State v. Bentley 
Bootery, Inc., 
128 N.J.L. 555, 561 (Sup. Ct. 1942), 
affd o.b., 
129 N.J.L. 386, 387 (E. & A. 1943) (per curiam).  Jurors may reject what in 
their conscientious judgment ought to be rejected and accept that which they believe 
to be credible.  
Ibid.  The model jury charge specifically instructs jurors that they 
must determine the weight to be given to the testimony of each witness 
and that they may accept all . . . , a portion . 
. . , or none of that witnesss testimony.  
Model Jury Charge (Criminal), 
Credibility of Witnesses (2003).  The jurors in this case were entitled to believe 
all, none, or part of the account offered by M.M.  She testified that 
defendant raped her, an act that by its nature involves physical contact between 
the assailant and the victim.  The verdicts might reflect the fact that the 
jury credited part and rejected part of M.M.s testimony, and concluded that defendant 
touched M.M. or himself in her presence, but did not penetrate her.  We 
disagree with the finding of the Appellate Division that insufficient evidence was presented 
to sustain a conviction for criminal sexual contact.  
Defendant also claims that the conviction for sexual contact was an unlawful compromise 
verdict because any contact between defendant and M.M. was necessarily incidental to sexual 
penetration and because the jury acquitted defendant of first-degree aggravated sexual assault and 
second-degree sexual assault.  We do not accept defendants premise that the verdicts were 
necessarily inconsistent, but even if we did, we would reject his claim for 
relief.  Consistency in the verdict is not necessary.  Each count in an indictment 
is regarded as if it was a separate indictment.  
State v. Banko, 
182 N.J. 44, 53 (2004) (quoting 
Dunn v. United States, 
284 U.S. 390, 393, 
52 S. Ct. 189, 190, 
76 L. Ed. 356, 358-59 (1932)).  Our jurisprudence 
does not allow us to conjecture regarding the nature of the deliberations in 
the jury room.  
State v. Grey, 
147 N.J. 4, 11 (1996).  In reviewing 
a jury finding, we do not attempt to reconcile the counts on which 
the jury returned a verdict of guilty and not guilty.  
See State v. 
Federico, 
103 N.J. 169, 176-77 (1986).  Instead, we determine whether the evidence in 
the record was sufficient to support a conviction on any count on which 
the jury found the defendant guilty.  
Banko, 
supra, 182 
N.J. at 54-55 (citations 
omitted); 
see also State v. Petties, 
139 N.J. 310, 319 (1995); 
State v. 
Kamienski, 
254 N.J. Super. 75, 95 (App. Div.), 
certif. denied, 
130 N.J. 18 
(1992).  We do not speculate whether verdicts resulted from jury lenity, mistake, or 
compromise, 
Grey, 
supra, 147 
N.J. at 11, and we will not do so 
here.  Accordingly, there is no bar to a retrial on the charge of 
criminal sexual contact.
IV.
    In conclusion, we affirm the Appellate Divisions holding that the prosecutor improperly elicited 
testimony and commented on defendants silence, thus denying him a fair trial.  We 
reverse the Appellate Divisions holding that insufficient evidence was submitted to the jury 
to support a charge on criminal sexual contact.  We remand for a new 
trial on the charge of criminal sexual contact consistent with this opinion. 
    CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES LONG, LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, and WALLACE join in JUSTICE 
ALBINs opnion.  JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO filed a separate concurring opinion.
 
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
88 September Term 2003
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
        v.
NASEEM ABDUL MUHAMMAD,
    Defendant-Respondent.
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO concurring in the result.
    To the extent the majority holds that a suspects silence while in custody, 
under interrogation, or at or near the time of his arrest cannot be 
used against him in a criminal trial, ante, ___ N.J. ___, I concur. 
 However, I cannot concur with the majoritys application of that holding because, in 
my view, the majority falls prey to the same overbroad analysis that ultimately 
dooms the prosecutors efforts in this case.
    The prosecution, through both testimony and argument, referenced the statements and conduct of 
defendant Naseem Abdul Muhammad during his stay at the Paterson Police Headquarters and 
repeatedly questioned whether defendant made any reference then to the defense he later 
advanced at trial.  Significantly, defendants statements at police headquarters fell within two discrete 
categories:  those statements defendant made to the desk sergeant, Sergeant DeLuccia, when defendant 
entered police headquarters and accused the victim, M.M., of harassing defendants brother and 
sister, and those statements - or, more accurately, defendants silence -- after he 
was restrained in the captains office and was interrogated by Officer DeLucca.  The 
majority condemns both statements as impermissible comments on defendants silence at or near 
the time of his arrest.  There is, however, a fundamental difference between defendants 
statement to Sergeant DeLuccia and defendants post-custody silence in response to Officer DeLuccas 
questions.  That difference is glossed over by the majority; yet it is a 
distinction that bears both acknowledgment and recognition in this context.  Therefore, although I 
ultimately concur in the result reached by the majority, I write separately to 
highlight that difference.
I.
    The relevant facts of this case are succinctly stated by the majority and 
need not be repeated here.  However, it is instructive to note that, after 
defendant arrived voluntarily at the Paterson police headquarters in the company of M.M. 
and accused M.M. of harassing defendants brother and sister, M.M. broke down and, 
crying, accused defendant of sexual assault and produced physical evidence corroborating her version 
of events.  Defendant, who to that point had been quite talkative, told Sergeant 
DeLuccia that defendant was married and just wanted to go home.  Confronted as 
he was with two disparate versions, Sergeant DeLuccia told defendant that he was 
not free to leave and instructed another police officer to place defendant in 
the captains office.  While in the captains office, defendant did not answer any 
questions posed to him by Officer DeLucca.  Some time later, defendant was formally 
arrested and charged with a series of sexual offenses.
    At trial, defendant was confronted with positive proof that he had engaged in 
an act of sexual intercourse with M.M.  As his defense, defendant admitted that 
he had engaged in sexual intercourse with M.M., but claimed it was consensual, 
a claim defendant never made while at police headquarters.
See footnote 9  To rebut this defense, 
the prosecution elicited testimony from both Sergeant DeLuccia and Officer DeLucca to the 
effect that defendant made no such claim while at police headquarters.  The prosecution 
attacked this defense as nothin