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. Edmond Williams (A-20-01)
Argued February 26, 2002 -- Decided June 19, 2002
LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The issue in this appeal is whether the mandatory joinder rule should have
barred a second prosecution against defendant, Edmond Williams.
On June 10, 1998, as part of an undercover investigation in Atlantic City
by the Cape May County Prosecutors Office, Investigator D.W. Fashaw purchased twenty dollars
worth of cocaine from defendant. After the transaction, defendant rode away on a
bicycle. Fashaw returned to the location of the surveillance team, comprised of nine
officers from the Atlantic City Narcotics Section, and described the transaction, at the
same time identifying a photograph of defendant. Subsequently, members of the surveillance team
proceeded to pursue defendant. Following a chase and a struggle, defendant was arrested.
A search of defendant revealed a glassine bag with what was later identified
as cocaine and the marked twenty-dollar bill used by Fashaw in the earlier
drug purchase.
These events produced two indictments. In the first indictment, defendant was charged with
possession of cocaine and resisting arrest. On September 11, 1998, defendant pled to
one count and was sentenced on December 4, 1998, to 180 days of
incarceration and two years of probation. A second indictment was returned on November
25, 1998, by an Atlantic County Grand Jury, charging defendant with drug possession
and distribution of cocaine in connection with Fashaws purchase. Defendant moved to dismiss
the second indictment claiming that it should have been joined with the first.
The trial court denied defendants motion to dismiss, concluding that defendant failed to
satisfy the mandatory joinder requirement that the offenses in both indictments arise from
the same episode; that the joinder rule was inapplicable because the indictment did
not result in a trial; and that defendant suffered no prejudice from two
indictments. Ultimately, defendant pled guilty pursuant to a plea agreement, was sentenced to
a five-year term of incarceration, and awarded thirty-seven days of gap-time credit for
time served. Defendant appealed based on the denial of his motion to dismiss
the second indictment and the calculation of gap-time credit.
The Appellate Division affirmed on both issues. On the joinder issue, the panel
agreed that the two indictments were not part of the same episode. Also,
the panel reasoned that defendant was not prejudiced because he reasonably could have
expected to be indicted separately for the initial drug sale.
The Supreme Court granted defendants petition for certification.
HELD: Defendant has satisfied all of the requirements of the mandatory joinder rule,
including the requirement that the indictments arise out of the same episode. The
judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
1. In State v. Gregory,
66 N.J. 510 (1975), the Court adopted the
mandatory joinder rule barring separate trials for multiple offenses that are known to
the prosecuting attorney, when the offenses are based essentially on the same conduct
or arise from the same criminal episode. In response to Gregory, Rule 3:15-1(b)
and N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8(b) were enacted. Four factors must be satisfied in order for
multiple offenses to be joined in one prosecution: (1) the multiple offenses are
criminal; (2) the offenses are based on the same conduct or arose out
of the same episode; (3) the appropriate prosecuting officer knew of the offenses
at the time the first trial commenced; and (4) the offenses were within
the jurisdiction and venue of a single court. State v. Yoskowitz,
116 N.J. 679
(1989). (Pp. 7-9)
2. The only Yoskowitz factors that are in dispute in this matter are
whether the offenses involved the same episode and whether the appropriate prosecuting officer
knew of the offenses at the start of the first trial. (P. 9)
3. The facts in Gregory are substantially like those presented here and support
viewing defendants second indictment as part of the same criminal episode that was
involved in his first indictment. In addition, under the flexible approach discussed in
some cases since Gregory, heightened significance is accorded to the time and place
of the offense, and whether one offense is part of a larger scheme.
Under that approach, defendants offenses were close in time and location and were
part of defendants overall criminal actions relating to his sale of cocaine that
day. Holding that defendants offenses were part of the same episode accords with
considerations of fairness and defendants reasonable expectations. (Pp. 9-15)
4 The prosecutor-knowledge prong of the Yoskowitz test also is satisfied. It is
the responsibility of each county prosecutor to direct and supervise the investigations and
prosecutions conducted by his or her office in such a way as to
avoid interference with a defendants right to be free of the harassment and
oppression of a second trial on offenses relating to the same episode. Even
if the trial prosecutor responsible for the prosecution of defendants first indictment did
not know about the undercover sale, we hold that such knowledge should be
imputed to her. (Pp. 15-17)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED
to the Law Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, VERNIERO, and ZAZZALI, join in
Justice LaVECCHIAs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
20 September Term 2001
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
EDMOND WILLIAMS,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued February 26, 2002 Decided June 19, 2002
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Linda Mehling, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Peter A.
Garcia, Acting Public Defender, attorney).
Jeanne Screen, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Peter C. Harvey,
Acting Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
LaVECCHIA, J.
This appeal involves the application of our mandatory joinder rule to two prosecutions
brought against defendant, Edmond Williams. Defendant sold cocaine to an undercover officer in
Atlantic City. Minutes later, as officers approached him, defendant threw away bags of
cocaine while attempting to flee. He was indicted for possession of cocaine and
resisting arrest. Approximately four months after the indictment issued and two months after
defendant pled guilty to those charges, the Atlantic County Prosecutor filed a second
indictment against defendant charging him with four drug distribution-related violations based on defendant's
initial sale of drugs to the undercover officer. The question presented is whether
the mandatory joinder rule should have barred that second prosecution.
I.
On June 10, 1998, Investigator D.W. Fashaw of the Cape May County Prosecutors
office convened nine officers from the Narcotics Section of the Atlantic City Police
Department near the 1100 block of Adriatic Avenue of Atlantic City for a
surveillance operation. Fashaw, working undercover, was to attempt a drug purchase and the
other members of the team were to act as back-up surveillance officer[s]. Between
6:00 and 6:30 p.m. on that day, Fashaw parked his car in a
pre-arranged area near the Shore Terrace, or Six Bedrooms, housing complex. Within a
few minutes, Fashaw engaged defendant in conversation about the purchase of cocaine. At
defendant's request, Fashaw followed him to a spot close to the housing complex
playground where defendant produced a bag of cocaine. After Fashaw handed defendant a
twenty-dollar bill in exchange for the cocaine, defendant rode away on a bicycle
he had with him.
Fashaw returned immediately to the location of the surveillance team, turned over the
cocaine, and described the details of the transaction to Detective Clayton, another member
of the team. Fashaw also identified a photograph of defendant as the person
involved in the purchase that had occurred moments earlier. Meanwhile, at about the
time the drug sale was taking place, Detective DePaul, a member of the
surveillance team, determined that defendant had to be stopped for identification. Consequently, Sergeant
Abrams and Detective Hall of the surveillance team attempted to stop defendant as
he bicycled away from the housing complex. When defendant saw the officers approaching,
he began to flee.
As defendant rode away, DePaul observed him reach into the right front pocket
of his jacket, remove an object, and throw it to the ground. DePaul
informed Abrams and Hall of what he had observed and continued the chase
along with Officer Dickson, another member of the surveillance team. Meanwhile, Abrams retrieved
the thrown item, which turned out to be a zip-lock glassine bag holding
four smaller zip-lock bags containing cocaine.
DePaul, Hall, and Dickson continued pursuing defendant. At one point, defendant slowed to
a stop when he was cut-off by a police car driven by DePaul.
However, when Hall told defendant that he was under arrest, defendant began to
flee again. The chase continued until defendant eventually lost control of the bicycle
and fell to the ground in the parking lot of the Six Bedrooms
complex. Dickson chased defendant down and attempted to place him in handcuffs. A
violent struggle ensued, but eventually Dickson, DePaul, and the other officers were able
to subdue and arrest defendant. A search incident to the arrest recovered twenty-six
dollars, including the marked twenty-dollar bill used by Fashaw in the drug purchase.
On July 14, 1998, an Atlantic County indictment was filed (first indictment), charging
defendant with third-degree possession of cocaine, contrary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1) (count one) and
fourth-degree resisting arrest, contrary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2a(1) (count two). Defendant filed a motion
to suppress the evidence obtained from his arrest; however, he later withdrew that
motion and, on September 11, 1998, entered a plea of guilty to count
one. On December 4, 1998, in accordance with the plea agreement the trial
court sentenced defendant to 180 days of incarceration and two years of probation.
In the meantime, on November 25, 1998 a second indictment was returned by
an Atlantic County Grand Jury, charging defendant with third-degree possession of cocaine, contrary
to
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1) (count one); third-degree possession of cocaine with intent to distribute,
contrary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1) and 2C:35-5b(3) (count two); third-degree distribution of cocaine, contrary
to
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5a(1) and 2C:35-5b(3) (count three); and second-degree distribution of cocaine within
500 feet of a public housing facility, park or building, contrary to
N.J.S.A.
2C:35-7.1 (count four). Defendant moved to dismiss the second indictment claiming that it
should have been joined with the first. During the hearing on that motion,
the State represented to the court that the prosecutors office knew nothing about
the undercover case when it obtained the first indictment against defendant.
The court denied the motion, reasoning that defendant did not satisfy the mandatory
joinder requirement that the offenses in both indictments arise from the same episode.
The court also noted that the joinder rule "speaks in terms of a
trial and the first indictment did not result in a trial," and concluded
that there was no prejudice to defendant in having two separate indictments. Defendant
entered a plea of guilty to count four of the second indictment. In
accordance with his plea agreement, defendant was sentenced to a five-year term of
incarceration. He also was awarded thirty-seven days of gap-time credit for time served.
Defendant appealed based on the denial of his motion to dismiss the second
indictment and the calculation of gap-time credit.
The Appellate Division affirmed on both issues. On the joinder issue, the panel
held that joinder was unnecessary because the charges in the two indictments were
not part of the same episode. The court reasoned that the elements of
proof and the relevant witnesses for each of the offenses were separate, that
is, the first episode (second indictment) related solely to the drug transaction with
the undercover officer, whereas the second episode (first indictment) began when the officers
pursued defendant as he attempted escape. Furthermore, the panel held that fundamental fairness
did not require joinder of the indictments because defendant reasonably could have expected
to be indicted separately for the initial drug sale. The court stated:
There is no indication that the State contemplated an additional prosecution based on
the undercover transaction and deliberately withheld its intention. The only reason that the
distribution charge was not presented to the first grand jury was that the
surveillance operation was ongoing and had to be brought to a conclusion. Defendants
sale to an undercover officer was not the only subject of the surveillance
operation.
On the issue of gap time, the panel held that defendant was entitled
to gap time only for the thirty-seven days he served in custody on
the first sentence.
We granted defendant's petition for certification,
170 N.J. 85 (2001), and now hold
that it was error not to dismiss the second indictment. That ruling makes
it unnecessary for us to address the calculation of gap-time credit.
II.
In
State v. Gregory, this Court adopted the compulsory joinder rule barring separate
trials for multiple offenses that are known to the prosecuting attorney, when the
offenses are based essentially on the same conduct or arise from the same
criminal episode.
66 N.J. 510, 522 (1975). Finding support in the common law
for the just result it sought to attain, the Court explained that the
common law was properly concerned with the protection of the defendant from governmental
harassment and oppression by multiple prosecution for the same wrongful conduct.
Id. at
513, 518. The Court relied on the broad administrative and procedural powers vested
in it by the State Constitution.
Id. at 518. The time for adoption
of a compulsory joinder rule was well due, because the rule will not
only tend to satisfy . . . considerations of fairness and reasonable expectations
. . . but will also promote . . . considerations of justice,
economy and convenience . . .
Id. at 513, 521-22 (citations omitted). Although
the precise wording of the rule was referred to the Criminal Practice Committee,
the
Gregory Court adopted for immediate implementation the wording of sections 1.07(2) and
1.07(3) of the Model Panel Code pursuant to which episode was defined as
an occurrence or connected series of occurrences and developments which may be viewed
as distinctive and apart although part of a larger or more comprehensive series.
Id. at 520, 522 (citations omitted).
In response to
Gregory,
Rule 3:15-1(b) and
N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8b were enacted. The pertinent
substantive language of the statute and the court rule governing mandatory joinder are
identical. Both provide:
[A] defendant shall not be subject to separate trials for multiple criminal offenses
based on the same conduct or arising from the same episode, if such
offenses are known to the appropriate prosecuting officer at the time of the
commencement of the first trial and are within the jurisdiction and venue of
a single court.
[R. 3:15-1(b); N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8b.]
In
State v. Yoskowitz,
116 N.J. 679, 701 (1989), this Court provided additional
guidance by summarizing the four factors that a defendant must satisfy in order
for multiple offenses to be joined in one prosecution:
(1) the multiple offenses are criminal; (2) the offenses are based on the
same conduct or arose out of the same episode; (3) the appropriate prosecuting
officer knew of the offenses at the time the first trial commenced; and
(4) the offenses were within the jurisdiction and venue of a single court.
If the offenses are not joined, the omitted offense may not be further
prosecuted. Gregory, supra, 66 N.J. at 522-23; Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment
3 on R. 3:15-1(b) (2002).
III.
There is no dispute that requirements (1) and (4) of the
Yoskowitz test
are satisfied in this matter. All of the charges involved in both indictments
are clearly crimes based on the express language of the statutes proscribing such
conduct. See
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10a(1), 2C:29-2a(1), 2C:35-5a(1), 2C:35-5b(3), and 2C:35-7.1. Thus, requirement (1) is
met. Requirement (4) also is not subject to any serious question because all
of the offenses included in the two indictments occurred in Atlantic City and
are within the jurisdiction and venue of a single court. Only the remaining
two
Yoskowitz factors require analysis: whether the offenses involve the same episode and
whether the appropriate prosecuting officer knew of the offenses at the start of
the first trial.
Yoskowitz,
supra, 116
N.J. at 701.
A.
The determinative question in this case -- as in many cases involving mandatory
joinder -- is the second prong of the
Yoskowitz test: whether defendants criminal
activity constituted offenses that were based on the same conduct or arose from
the same criminal episode.
State v. Pillot,
115 N.J. 558, 567 (1989);
State
v. Catanoso,
269 N.J. Super. 246, 273 (App. Div. 1993).
Although neither the statute, nor the rule governing mandatory joinder, expressly define the
phrase same episode, case law supports the conclusion that the offenses in this
case arose out of the same episode. Indeed, our leading case on mandatory
joinder,
State v. Gregory, involved facts that were strikingly similar to this case.
In
Gregory an undercover police officer went to the defendants apartment and purchased
from him an envelope containing a small quantity of heroin.
Gregory,
supra, 66
N.J. at 511. The officer saw the defendant go into the bathroom and
remove the envelope from a large stack of similar envelopes in the medicine
cabinet.
Ibid. After the purchase was completed, the officer left the apartment and
immediately notified other officers, who returned with him to the apartment and seized
the remaining envelopes from the cabinet.
Ibid.
Several months later, the defendant was indicted, tried, and convicted for the drug
sale only.
Id. at 512. Between the time of the verdict and sentencing
on the drug sale conviction, a second indictment charged the defendant with both
possession and possession with intent to distribute heroin, which were the charges that
related to the seizure of the stack of envelopes from the medicine cabinet
immediately after the sale. The defendant was convicted and sentenced on those charges
as well.
Ibid.
This Court reversed the defendant's second conviction, stating that, [f]airness dictated that if
the State contemplated any additional prosecution based on the . . . possession
and sale it would join it with the original prosecution rather then withhold
mention of it until after trial.
Id. at 518. The Court observed that
[w]hile the sale of the small quantity and the continuing possession of the
larger quantity may under our case law be viewed here as separate offenses,
surely the occurrences in their entirety . . . involved the same conduct
or criminal episode for purposes of procedural joinder."
Id. at 522.
Here, as in
Gregory, an undercover officer purchased drugs from defendant and then
left the scene; the officer immediately notified other officers of the drug sale;
shortly thereafter, following a successful police pursuit, the police seized drugs from defendant
and placed him under arrest; the drugs sold to an undercover officer were
a portion of the drugs seized from defendant just after the sale; defendant
was subjected to two separate indictments; and finally the second indictment was returned
after a verdict was rendered in the first indictment. The Appellate Division noted
two distinctions between
Gregory and the present case: the undercover officer in
Gregory
saw the larger quantity of heroin possessed by the defendant, whereas the undercover
officer in this case did not; and in
Gregory the undercover officer returned
with other officers in order to seize the additional heroin, but in this
case the undercover officer was not present at defendants arrest.
In fact, the undercover officer in this case did participate, indirectly, in defendants
arrest because it was the drug sale that prompted the surveillance officers to
stop defendant. Immediately after the undercover purchase, the undercover officer met with surveillance
officers, turned over the cocaine he had purchased, and identified defendant's photo, enabling
the officers to arrest him. Those differences aside, however, the decision in
Gregory
did not hinge on the undercover officer's presence during the arrest. Nothing in
that opinion suggests that the presence of the undercover officer at the defendants
arrest, or the fact that he saw additional drugs during the undercover purchase,
played any significant role in this Courts resolution of that case. The facts
in
Gregory are substantially like those presented here and support viewing defendant's second
indictment as part of the same criminal episode that was involved in his
first indictment.
Other cases decided since
Gregory have discussed use of a flexible approach to
determine whether multiple offenses are factually distinct, or are part of the same
episode. See
Pillot,
supra, 115
N.J. at 567 (citing
State v. Best,
70 N.J. 56, 62-63 (1976);
State v. Whipple,
156 N.J. Super. 46, 52 (App.
Div. 1978));
see also State v. Currie,
41 N.J. 531, 539 (1964) (recognizing
"the futility of efforts extended towards the formulation of a single legal test
to operate absolutely and inflexibly throughout the field of double jeopardy"). Cases applying
a "flexible" approach have analyzed many factors, including the nature of the offenses,
the time and place of each offense, whether the evidence supporting one charge
is necessary and/or sufficient to sustain a conviction under another charge, whether one
offense is an integral part of the larger scheme, the intent of the
accused, and the consequences of the criminal standards transgressed.
Best,
supra, 70
N.J.
at 63 (citing
State v. Davis,
68 N.J. 69, 81 (1975)).
Under the flexible approach, heightened significance is accorded to the time and place
of the offense, and whether one offense is part of a larger scheme.
See, e.g.,
Pillot,
supra, 115
N.J. at 567;
Catanoso,
supra, 269
N.J. Super.
at 273. Multiple offenses have been found to be part of the same
episode, even when the defendants actions occurred over several months and at different
locations, when the events were connected as part of a larger scheme.
State
v. James,
194 N.J. Super. 362, 364-365 (App. Div. 1984) (acknowledging that offenses
arose from same episode where defendant fraudulently sold advertising space to different merchants
over period of months). When the time between offenses and the location of
the offenses becomes too attenuated to constitute one overall scheme, however, courts will
find that the events are not part of the same episode.
See, e.g.,
Catanoso,
supra, 269
N.J. Super. at 273-74 (finding no joinder when defendant over
period of years committed separate acts of conspiracy or bribery against different victims
in different locations);
State v. Colbert,
245 N.J. Super. 53, 59 (App. Div.
1990) (finding offenses involving illegal handling of hazardous waste over several years was
not same episode for joinder purposes).
On this record the time between the occurrence of the offenses and the
location of the offenses is virtually inconsequential, easily rendering them part of the
same episode. The offenses were committed within six minutes of each other and
both occurred within steps of the housing complex. Additionally, a reasonable assessment of
defendants actions indicates that defendants criminal objective or "overall scheme" was to sell
drugs, a scheme he accomplished with the undercover officer, and to avoid arrest
for that sale and for possession of the remaining drugs on him when
he fled from the approaching police immediately after the sale. His purpose and
actions were all part of the same criminal event and should not be
subjected to fine sequential parsing that results in an unreasonable second prosecution of
defendant.
In sum, the same episode requirement of the mandatory joinder rule is met.
The case is factually and legally analogous to
Gregory and consistent with precedent
applying the concept of same episode. Defendants offenses were close in time and
location and were part of defendants overall criminal actions relating to his sale
of cocaine that day. Holding that defendants offenses were part of the same
episode accords with considerations of fairness and defendants reasonable expectations. See
State v.
Berry,
41 N.J. 547, 551 (1964);
Currie,
supra, 41
N.J. at 539 (1964).
B.
The prosecutor-knowledge prong of the
Yoskowitz test also is satisfied. To meet that
prong, the appropriate prosecuting officer must know of all the offenses prior to
the commencement of the first trial.
R. 3:15-1(b);
N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8b. In this case
there was a plea to the first indictment rather than a trial, but
that is not meaningful for purposes of the mandatory joinder rule. See
State
v. Antieri,
180 N.J. Super. 267, 271 (Law Div. 1981),
affd,
186 N.J.
Super. 20 (App. Div),
certif. denied,
91 N.J. 546 (1982) (explaining that commencement,
as opposed to completion of trial on first indictment, is sufficient to invoke
mandatory joinder rule).
Although the State argued to the courts below that the trial prosecutor was
not aware of the sale of drugs when she obtained the first indictment
charging defendant with possession of the cocaine he discarded, that argument has been
abandoned. At oral argument, the Attorney General, who superseded the County Prosecutor in
this appeal pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 52:17B-107, properly conceded that knowledge of the undercover
case is to be imputed to the trial prosecutor, as a member of
the County Prosecutor's Office. See
State v. Nelson,
155 N.J. 487, 499-500 (1998)
(imputing knowledge of
Brady
See footnote 1 material received by a county prosecutor's office to trial
prosecutor);
State v. Russo,
333 N.J. Super. 119, 135 (App. Div. 2000) (citations
omitted). As stated in the context of communicating
Brady evidence, "[a] prosecutor's office
cannot avoid the consequences of its knowledge . . . by disclaiming its
obligation to inform its lawyers of all relevant matters in [a] case."
Nelson,
supra, 155
N.J. at 518 (Handler, J., concurring) (citations omitted).
In conclusion, it is the responsibility of each county prosecutor to direct and
supervise the investigations and prosecutions conducted by his or her office in such
a way as to avoid interference with a defendant's right to be free
of the "harassment" and "oppression" of a second trial on offenses relating to
the same episode. See
Gregory,
supra, 66
N.J. at 518. Even if the
trial prosecutor responsible for the prosecution of defendant's first indictment did not know
about the undercover sale, we hold that such knowledge should be imputed to
her.
Finally, we note that the States proffered reason for delaying the second prosecution
that it did not want to jeopardize the secrecy of the on-going narcotics
surveillance operation is substantially outweighed by the need to protect defendants rights.
IV.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed. The case is remanded to
the Law Division for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, VERNIERO, and ZAZZALI join in
JUSTICE LaVECCHIAs opinion.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-20 SEPTEMBER TERM 2001
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
EDMOND WILLIAMS,
Defendant-Appellant.
DECIDED June 19, 2002
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice LaVecchia
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
REVERSE AND REMAND
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE STEIN
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
TOTALS
7
Footnote: 1
Brady v. Maryland,
373 U.S. 83, 87,
83 S. Ct. 1194, 1197,
10 L. Ed.2d 215, 218 (1963).