NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0514-17T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
JOSE RODRIGUEZ, a/k/a JOSE
ESTEBAN RODRIGUEZ GUZMAN,
Defendant-Appellant.
_______________________________
Submitted January 8, 2019 - Decided January 25, 2019
Before Judges Accurso and Vernoia.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Hudson County, Indictment No. 96-08-1429.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Lee March Grayson, Designated Counsel, on
the brief).
Esther Suarez, Hudson County Prosecutor, attorney for
respondent (Erin M. Campbell, Assistant Prosecutor,
on the brief).
PER CURIAM
This post-conviction relief (PCR) matter returns to us following our
remand for a limited evidentiary hearing to address defendant Jose Rodriguez's
criminal record and his reasons for waiting seventeen years to file a first PCR
petition following his 1996 guilty plea to a third-degree, 1000-foot offense,
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7. Now having the benefit of the record of that evidentiary
hearing, we affirm the denial of his PCR petition.
Defendant is a citizen of Guatemala. He has been a permanent resident of
the United States since the age of fourteen. In 1996 when he was twenty years
old, he was arrested in Jersey City and indicted on charges of aggravated assault,
possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, unlawful possession of a
weapon, a box-cutter, possession of a controlled dangerous substance with intent
to distribute and intent to distribute six grams of marijuana within 1000 feet of
a school.1 He had no prior criminal record. He pleaded guilty to the third-
degree, 1000-foot offense pursuant to a negotiated agreement and was sentenced
to two years' probation.
1
The marijuana was found in twenty-two heat-sealed plastic bags contained in
a pouch hidden in the car defendant was driving.
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2
In April 2013, defendant was detained by Immigration and Customs
Enforcement officials on the basis of that criminal conviction and at least one
other, a 2007 conviction for unlawful possession of a nine millimeter Glock
handgun. Immigration authorities thereafter instituted removal proceedings
against him. After several missteps, detailed in our prior order of November 28,
2016, defendant succeeded in having those proceedings delayed while he
pursued a PCR application.
Defendant filed a pro se PCR petition in April 2014. Although counsel
refers to a certification by defendant purportedly attached to a brief he filed in
May 2014 in support of a motion to withdraw his plea, the certification is no t
included in the appendix. 2 There is, however, a certification from defendant
dated October 23, 2014 in which he claims his "trial counsel did not discuss with
[him] anything regarding the pre-trial intervention program" prior to his plea,
and that he "would have wanted [counsel] to pursue that application." In the
2
This omission is despite direction in our prior order that the failure to submit
defendant's PCR petition "is to be corrected in any further filings in this court."
Defendant states in his PCR petition that he "was misrepresented and plead[ed]
guilty without fully understanding the consequences," and further states he
"[has] attached more details." Nothing is attached to the petition included in the
appendix. Defendant's pro se brief in support of his motion to withdraw his plea
also references an attached certification, which also is not included in the
appendix.
A-0514-17T4
3
same certification, defendant claims he "did discuss the immigration
consequences of [his] plea with [his] attorney," and represents the lawyer told
him "that [he would] not have any problems with that since [he was] receiving
probation."
The PCR court heard argument on the petition and issued a written opinion
finding it time-barred and without merit under the two-prong test formulated by
the United States Supreme Court in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668
(1984), and adopted by our Supreme Court in State v. Fritz, 105 N.J. 42, 58
(1987). Noting defendant answered "yes" to former Question 17 on the plea
form confirming he understood his guilty plea might result in his deportation,
the court also noted defendant was arrested ten times following the entry of his
plea and convicted of two indictable offenses, "unlawful possession of a
handgun in 2004 and endangering the welfare of a child in 2005." The court
found defendant was "subject to deportation on separate convictions unrelated
to this case, and has other subsequent interactions with attorneys and the
criminal justice system" leaving it "wholly unconvinced that the Petitioner was
unaware of his potential for deportation until now."
The court further noted the federal "Notice to Appear" for removal
proceedings that defendant claims he received at the time of his arrest by federal
A-0514-17T4
4
authorities in 2013 was dated September 30, 2011. The court concluded
defendant put forth no "meaningful argument" to refute that he "waited almost
3 years to file this PCR after affirmative notice of his deportation hearing, and
. . . has two other convictions upon which he can be deported," including a "1st
degree conviction for endangering the welfare of a child." Because the court
found that even viewing the facts most favorably to defendant he could not
establish a prima facie claim for relief, it deemed an evidentiary hearing
unnecessary.
Defendant appealed, arguing the trial court made critical factual errors
about the record in the absence of an evidentiary hearing. Specifically, he
claimed he was never convicted of first-degree child endangerment and was not
served with the 2011 notice to appear until his arrest by immigration authorities
in 2013, both of which he argued weighed heavily in the PCR court's assessment
of the proofs. Although noting defendant never raised the alleged factual errors
to the PCR court and only raised them to us by way of a motion to supplement
the record, as well as "the formidable challenge presented for prevailing on a
PCR petition filed seventeen years after entry of the plea," we concluded those
alleged factual issues required a remand for an evidentiary hearing, the scope of
which we left to the PCR court.
A-0514-17T4
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The court conducted an evidentiary hearing to address defendant's
criminal record and his seventeen-year-delay in filing his petition. It clarified
defendant's criminal record, with the parties agreeing defendant had two
indictable convictions following his 1996 plea: second-degree unlawful
possession of a handgun in 2004 and third-degree endangerment of a child in
2005. Defendant testified he was not aware of the federal notice to appear for
removal proceedings dated September 30, 2011, until his arrest by federal
authorities on April 18, 2013. He further testified the lawyer his family retained
to file a PCR petition for him failed to do so, necessitating defendant's pro se
filing in April 2014.
Following the evidentiary hearing, Judge Venable issued a written
decision denying defendant's petition. She found the case indistinguishable
from State v. Brewster, 429 N.J. Super. 387, 397-98 (App. Div. 2013), in which
we held a defendant pleading guilty to a 1000-foot offense in 1998, whose
counsel predicted the defendant would not have an immigration issue, in
conjunction with the warning contained in Question 17 of the plea form that the
defendant may be deported, had not presented prima facie proof of ineffective
assistance of counsel. In addition to finding Brewster's petition factually
insufficient, we further concluded his failure to file it until his arrest by federal
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6
immigration authorities nearly twelve years after his conviction did not
constitute excusable neglect, noting Brewster "had both the opportunity and the
incentive to learn whether he might be deported before the time of his arrest by
federal immigration authorities in April 2010" but failed to act. Id. at 401.
Judge Venable likewise found defendant's ten arrests and two indictable
convictions following his 1996 plea provided him ample opportunity and
incentive to determine whether he was at risk of deportation, even accepting as
true, as he testified, that he was not served with the September 30, 2011 notice
to appear until his arrest in 2013. She thus found defendant's petition time-
barred without excusable neglect for the late filing.
Turning to the merits, the judge rejected defendant's claim that his
attorney was deficient for failing to apply for pre-trial intervention. The judge
noted defendant provided no proof the prosecutor would have recommended him
for PTI, rendering his claim no better than a bare assertion insufficient to
establish a prima facie case of ineffectiveness. See State v. Cummings, 321 N.J.
Super. 154, 171 (App. Div. 1999). Moreover, she noted defendant was charged
with the second-degree offense of aggravated assault making him presumptively
ineligible for PTI. See N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12(b); R. 3:28-4(b)(1); State v. Roseman,
221 N.J. 611, 622 (2015).
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The judge further found, as in Brewster, that counsel's advice to defendant
as to the immigration consequences of the plea did not fall below established
norms and that defendant's "knowledge of the risk of deportation did not affect
the truth-finding function of the court when it accepted his plea." Brewster, 429
N.J. Super. at 398, 401. The judge noted the plea transcript clearly indicated
defendant was guilty of the 1000-foot offense and nothing in the record
suggested he was prejudiced by his counsel's advice, and thus that defendant
could not show manifest injustice under R. 3:22-12(a)(1)(A).
Defendant moved for reconsideration, arguing the court erred in limiting
the scope of the hearing so as to exclude the advice defense counsel gave him
regarding the immigration consequences of his plea and in concluding he could
not show prejudice because his other two convictions would render him
deportable in any event. Judge Venable denied the motion, explaining she
referred to defendant's other convictions
not to establish that regardless of the outcome of this
PCR, he would still have a deportable offense, but
rather to note that his record reflected several
subsequent interactions with attorneys and the criminal
justice system after the conviction that is the subject of
this PCR motion that would have provided him the
opportunity to become aware of his risk of potential
deportation.
Defendant appeals, raising the following issues:
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POINT I
THE PCR COURT'S DECISION DENYING
PETITIONER'S INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
COUNSEL CLAIM AS TIME-BARRED WITHOUT
CONDUCTING A FULL EVIDENTIARY HEARING
THAT EXAMINED THE PERFORMANCE OF PLEA
COUNSEL AND THE ISSUE OF HIS INCORRECT
LEGAL ADVICE REGARDING THE
IMMIGRATION CONSEQUENCES OF PLEADING
TO THE THIRD-DEGREE CDS OFFENSE HAS
RESULTED IN FUNDAMENTAL INJUSTICE,
WHICH REQUIRES REMAND TO THE PCR COURT
BEFORE A DIFFERENT JUDGE FOR A NEW
HEARING.
POINT II
THE PCR COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE
DEFENDANT'S PETITION FOR POST-
CONVICTION RELIEF WITHOUT AFFORDING
HIM A FULL EVIDENTIARY HEARING THAT
INCLUDED TESTIMONY FROM PLEA COUNSEL
TO FULLY ADDRESS THE ISSUE OF HIS
ATTORNEY PROVIDING HIM WITH INCORRECT
LEGAL ADVICE REGARDING THE
IMMIGRATION CONSEQUENCES OF PLEADING
GUILTY TO THE THIRD-DEGREE CDS OFFENSE.
POINT III
THE PCR COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE
DEFENDANT'S PETITION FOR POST-
CONVICTION RELIEF WITHOUT AFFORDING
A-0514-17T4
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HIM A FULL EVIDENTIARY HEARING THAT
INCLUDED TESTIMONY FROM PLEA COUNSEL
TO FULLY ADDRESS THE ISSUE OF HIS
ATTORNEY PROVIDING HIM WITH INCORRECT
LEGAL ADVICE REGARDING HIS ELIGIBILITY
FOR DIVERSION THROUGH THE PRETRIAL
INTERVENTION PROGRAM .
We reject those arguments as without sufficient merit to warrant extended
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
Defendant's arguments about the limited scope of the evidentiary hearing
on remand are misplaced because the judge assumed the truth of defendant's
assertion that his counsel told him he would "not have any problems" with his
immigration status because he was receiving a probationary sentence. The judge
found, as we did in Brewster, that the advice in conjunction with his affirmative
response to Question 17 on the plea form that defendant "may be deported by
virtue of [his] plea" did not constitute material misadvice at the time of the plea
in 1996.3 See Brewster, 429 N.J. Super. at 397-98.
3
In his pro se brief filed in 2014, defendant claimed he asked his counsel about
Question 17 and was assured it "was perfunctory, and [did] not mean he would
have immigration problems." Defendant argued in that brief that his counsel
had a duty to advise [him], beforehand, that he would
in fact be deported if he entered a guilty plea. Counsel
offered no such advice prior to pleadings (sic). Counsel
at one point admitted that he was "not an immigration
A-0514-17T4
10
More important, however, is Judge Venable's finding, as a result of the
evidentiary hearing afforded defendant, that his ten subsequent arrests and two
convictions provided him extensive contact with the criminal justice system and
ample opportunity to become aware of the immigration consequences of his
1996 plea before his 2013 arrest by immigration authorities. We agree with
lawyer," yet he managed to convey incorrect
immigration advice in this matter (citing paragraph 16
of defendant's certification not included in the record).
In Brewster, we disagreed "with defendant's contention that competent
representation required advice from his attorney that he 'would' be deported as
a result of his conviction" in 1998. 429 N.J. Super. at 397. We noted that
[i]n fact, it might have been incorrect at that time for
defense counsel to have advised defendant he would
surely, or likely, be deported and thus potentially have
caused defendant to forego a favorable plea offer and
to accept the likelihood of a longer term in state prison
by conviction at trial. A longer prison sentence would
not have saved defendant from deportation.
[Ibid.]
Defendant notes much the same in his 2014 pro se filing, writing that his
counsel's "misleading advice may have had some basis in the lack of strict
enforcement of the immigration laws" in 1996 at the time of defendant's guilty
plea. He explained that New Jersey "attorneys were not typically too concerned
with deportation consequences" when defendants pleaded guilty "since most of
their clients who were convicted for mandatory deportable offenses at the time
would avoid detection by DHS/ICE (Department of Human Services/
Immigration and Customs Enforcement) due to very weak cooperation bet ween
the State Criminal System and the DHS. Such is not the case today."
A-0514-17T4
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Judge Venable that nothing in the record demonstrates excusable neglect for
defendant's failure to file a timely PCR petition and nothing justifies waiting
twelve years beyond the five-year period for doing so. See Brewster, 429 N.J.
Super. at 400 ("Defendant cannot assert excusable neglect simply because he
received inaccurate deportation advice from his defense counsel.").
Because we agree defendant's petition was factually insufficient to
warrant the relief he seeks, and he is barred from pursuing his claims because
he did not file a timely PCR petition, we affirm the denial of defendant's petition
substantially for the reasons expressed by Judge Venable in her written opinions
of March 21, 2017 and August 17, 2017.
Affirmed.
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