RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0790-17T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
M.S.,
Defendant-Respondent.
Argued September 13, 2018 – Decided December 3, 2018
Before Judges Alvarez, Nugent, and Reisner.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Essex County, Indictment No. 17-04-1020.
Kayla Elizabeth Rowe, Special Deputy Attorney
General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
for appellant (Theodore N. Stevens II, Acting Essex
County Prosecutor, attorney; Kayla Elizabeth Rowe, of
counsel and on the briefs).
Tamar Y. Lerer, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
argued the cause for respondent (Joseph E. Krakora,
Public Defender, attorney; Tamar Y. Lerer, of counsel
and on the brief).
PER CURIAM
The State was granted leave to appeal an interlocutory order compelling
it to produce in discovery an unredacted version of the cell phone text messaging
history of O.R., defendant M.S.'s alleged victim, from September 10, 2015, to
September 28, 2015, along with a log of O.R.'s calls from September 15, 2015,
to September 28, 2015. We now affirm the trial court's January 12, 2018
decision, except we modify the order with regard to the dissemination of
information.
We summarize the facts alleged in the parties' briefs, since no sworn
testimony has yet been taken. O.R. and defendant were friends, and on
September 15, 2015, were talking while lying on defendant's bed. O.R. had
smoked marijuana earlier that evening, was tired, and fell asleep. She awakened
sometime later to find defendant, naked, on top of her. He had pulled down her
leggings, and she felt moisture between her legs. O.R. told defendant to get off,
and, at her request, he drove her home. That morning, O.R. went to a nearby
hospital where a rape kit was completed. Police were notified, and a complaint
was filed against defendant.
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As is customary for the Essex County Prosecutor's office, on September
28, 2015, investigators requested that O.R. turn over her cell phone. The
following day, the department compiled a 242-page extraction report.
Defendant was charged by way of superseding indictment with two counts
of first-degree aggravated sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(7), and two
counts of second-degree sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(c)(1). After motion
practice and corresponding emergent applications for leave to appeal, the trial
judge eventually ruled that defendant's need for the unredacted extraction report
outweighed O.R.'s privacy rights and ordered that the document be produced.
The extraction report included a call log from September 15, 2015,
through September 28, 2015, consisting of 500 incoming and outgoing calls in
reverse chronological order. 1 The State redacted all of the names and telephone
numbers, except for thirteen calls to "Bae" 2 and one call from "Bae" in the two
1
We avoid details regarding the unredacted extraction report to avoid prejudice
to the State's position in the event of a further appeal. However, to put the
controversy in context, we describe the extent to which the State redacted the
report, leading to defendant's discovery motion.
2
The State's explanation of the abbreviations, provided to the court under seal,
advises that "Bae is an acronym for 'before anyone else,' usually referring to a
person's significant other."
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3
days following the alleged incident, and all calls to and from defendant, who
was listed as "Om" in O.R.'s phone. Following the call log is a list of the 156
contacts programmed in O.R.'s phone, all of which were redacted except for
defendant, "Bae," and "Rodriguez Det P."
The report also contained ninety-two MMS messages, 3 in reverse
chronological order, with the contact information and content redacted from
each message. An additional 1333 SMS messages4 were listed in reverse
chronological order. The contact information, SMSC field, 5 and content were
redacted from the majority of the messages except for the messages exchanged
by O.R. and defendant. Some messages from September 14 were not redacted
and most, but not all, of the messages sent and received on September 15 and
September 16 were not redacted.
The State redacted one audio file and all of the images and video files.
The next section, listing the names and phone numbers with which O.R.
3
"MMS" stands for "multimedia messaging service" and includes picture and
video messages.
4
"SMS" stands for "short message service" and includes text messages.
5
"SMSC" stands for "short messaging service center," which is part of the
wireless network that handles text messages, including routing, forwarding, and
storing them on the way to their recipients.
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communicated, was entirely redacted except for defendant's name and number,
as well as that of "Bae." In this section, and the final section entitled "Analytics
Phones," the State inconsistently redacted information, leaving some contacts in
one section of the report while removing them from another section. Some of
the contacts appeared to be of persons with whom O.R. might have
communicated about her interactions with defendant.
I.
Our premise that the contents of O.R.'s cell phone, including text
messages and the call log, are entitled to the same privacy protection as letters,
or personal calls, or a diary, is drawn from well-established precedents,
beginning with Riley v. California, 134 S. Ct. 2473 (2014). In Riley, police
conducted an unauthorized examination of Riley's cell phone, including a
wholesale search for evidence of gang activities. Id. at 2481. The Court
reversed the denial of Riley's motion to suppress the evidence, employing classic
Fourth Amendment doctrine—that a search requires a warrant except where "it
falls within a specific exception." Id. at 2482. The Court reasoned that the
search incident to arrest doctrine should not be applied to the contents of modern
cell phones, "now such a pervasive and insistent part of daily life that the
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proverbial visitor from Mars might conclude they were an important feature of
human anatomy." Id. at 2484.
The Court observed that cell phones contain a treasure trove of personal
information regarding the most intimate details of the owner's life. Ibid. As the
Court also observed, quoting a 1926 opinion authored by Learned Hand, it is a
"totally different thing to search a man's pockets and use against him what they
contain, from ransacking his house for everything which may incriminate him."
Id. at 2490-91 (quoting United States v. Kirschenblatt, 16 F.2d 202, 203 (2d Cir.
1926)). A search of a cell phone would not only reveal "many sensitive records
previously found in the home[,]" but also "a broad array of private information
never found in a home in any form." Id. at 2491.
Drawing from Riley, if the contents of a suspect's cell phone are entitled
to Fourth Amendment protection, a victim should be accorded corresponding
privacy protection. A victim has the same interest in keeping the highly personal
information found in a cell phone out of sight of the public in general and th ose
she has accused of committing a crime against her in particular. The State
contends that providing defendant with the unredacted extraction report would
be like allowing defendant to ransack the victim's house for everything it may
contain that could be used by defendant in building a defense. The nature of the
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charge—a sexual assault—only heightens the tension between defendant's right
to open file discovery and his Sixth Amendment right to counsel, and O.R.'s
right to privacy. See State v. Scoles, 214 N.J. 236, 253-54 (2013). Typically,
because of the nature of the crime, sexual assault cases are treated with
heightened sensitivity, such as the use of initials to protect the complainant's
identity.
Additionally, the Victim's Rights Amendment to the New Jersey
Constitution is implicated and establishes a baseline. Victims in our system
"shall be treated with fairness, compassion and respect by the criminal justice
system." N.J. Const. art. 1, § 22. By statute and the Crime Victim's Bill of
Rights, victims are entitled "[t]o be treated with dignity and compassion by the
criminal justice system[,]" and "[t]o be free from intimidation[.]" N.J.S.A.
52:4B-36.
Those rights require particular attention in sexual assault cases where
there is a heightened "need to protect victims and witnesses from emotional
trauma, embarrassment, and intimidation." State v. Gilchrist, 381 N.J. Super.
138, 147 (App. Div. 2005). But victims' rights do not "diminish those rights
possessed by the accused facing a criminal prosecution." State ex rel. A.B., 219
N.J. 542, 558 (2014).
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To harmonize those rights when a discovery request does not neatly fall
into the automatic discovery rule requires balancing the right to a fair trial
against a victim's right to privacy. Id. at 547. A defendant must demonstrate
that the discovery is "justified" and meets an evidentiary burden on a sliding
scale "in direct proportion to the nature and extent of the intrusion." Id. at 556-
57.
That O.R. voluntarily turned her phone over to the prosecutor's office does
not affect the calculus. We do not know if she was advised that others besides
law enforcement would have access to the information it contained, or if she was
even told the nature of the information that would be drawn from it. Thus, we
approach the issues the State raises on appeal from the perspective that O.R. has
a right to privacy that must be balanced against defendant's right to discovery.
II.
That balance must be made against the backdrop that appellate courts
"accord substantial deference to a trial court's issuance of a discovery order and
will not interfere with such an order absent an abuse of discretion." State v.
Hernandez, 225 N.J. 451, 461 (2016). We do not defer, however, if the
discovery order is based on a mistaken understanding of the applicable law,
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including the trial court's interpretation of a court rule. Ibid. As always, we
review issues of law de novo. See ibid.
New Jersey courts "do not countenance trial by surprise." A.B., 219 N.J.
at 555. "Because of the meaningful role that the disclosure of evidence to a
defendant has in promoting the search for truth, pretrial discovery in criminal
trials has long received favorable treatment in this state." Scoles, 214 N.J. at
251. A trial in which a criminal defendant "does not have 'access to the raw
materials integral to the building of an effective defense' is fundamentally
unfair." A.B., 219 N.J. at 556 (quoting Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68, 77
(1985)). Thus, to "advance the goal of providing fair and just criminal trials[,]"
New Jersey has adopted an "open-file approach to pretrial discovery in criminal
matters. Hernandez, 225 N.J. at 461-62 (quoting Scoles, 214 N.J. at 252);
R. 3:13-3.
Rule 3:13-3(b) requires the State to provide "exculpatory material" to the
accused including, but not limited to:
books, papers, documents, or copies thereof, or tangible
objects, buildings or places which are within the
possession, custody or control of the prosecutor,
including, but not limited to, writings, drawings,
graphs, charts, photographs, video and sound
recordings, images, electronically stored information,
and any other data or data compilations stored in any
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medium from which information can be obtained and
translated, if necessary, into reasonably usable form[.]
[R. 3:13-3(b)(1)(E).]
In addition, "courts are empowered to order discovery beyond that
mandated by our court rules when doing so will further the truth-seeking
function or ensure the fairness of a trial." Hernandez, 225 N.J. at 463 (quoting
A.B., 219 N.J. at 560).
"Relevance is the touchstone of discovery." Id. at 468. Thus, "discovery
in a criminal case 'is appropriate if it will lead to relevant' information." Id. at
462 (quoting State v. Ballard, 331 N.J. Super. 529, 538 (App. Div. 2000)).
Evidence is relevant if it has "a tendency in reason to prove or disprove any fact
of consequence to the determination of the action." N.J.R.E. 401. "[I]f evidence
is relevant and necessary to a fair determination of the issues, the admission of
the evidence is constitutionally compelled." State v. Garron, 177 N.J. 147, 171
(2003).
While criminal discovery in New Jersey is expansive, nothing "sanction[s]
rummaging through irrelevant evidence." Hernandez, 225 N.J. at 463. A
defendant may not "transform the discovery process into an unfocused,
haphazard search for evidence." State v. D.R.H., 127 N.J. 249, 256 (1992).
Courts must be cognizant of "the chilling and inhibiting effect that discovery
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can have on material witnesses who are subjected to intimidation, harassment,
or embarrassment." Ibid.
The showing a defendant must make increases with the nature of the
intrusion resulting from the discovery. In this case, a heightened showing must
be made in order to justify the intrusion into O.R.'s right to privacy. This
showing is not as great as, for example, when a defendant seeks to have a child
medically examined who is a sex abuse victim. See A.B. 219 N.J. at 557. But
a defendant must show at least a substantial need. In other words, defendant
must establish that the intrusion is warranted because the information will lead
to relevant evidence on a material issue.
Here, after our in camera review of the unredacted extraction report, we
are convinced it may well lead to relevant information. O.R. said the sexual
assault occurred during the late night hours of September 15 or early morning
hours of September 16, 2015, after she fell asleep. Defendant claims that they
had a consensual encounter, and further alleges that O.R. fabricated the sexual
assault claim because she feared "Bae" would find out they had relations. It is
almost self-evident that texts O.R. sent and calls she made within the immediate
hours before and after the assault may be relevant, and that defendant may wish
to interview those persons with whom she made contact.
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The State is obligated in discovery to provide "'material evidence
affecting [the] credibility' of a State's witness whose testimony may be
determinative of guilt or innocence." Hernandez, 225 N.J. at 462 (alteration in
original) (quoting State v. Carter, 69 N.J. 420, 433 (1976)). O.R. is the key
State's witness whose testimony, if believed, will determine the verdict. The
State redacted numerous texts, some of which could offer defendant lines of
investigation into O.R.'s credibility. We offer no examples of the unredacted
materials for the reason stated at the beginning of this decision, but enumerate
the rules and statutes that similarly situated defendants frequently raise:
N.J.R.E. 404(a)(2), which provides that "[e]vidence of a pertinent trait of
character of the victim offered by an accused" is admissible to show that the
victim acted in conformity therewith; N.J.R.E. 608(a), which provides that
opinion and reputation evidence is admissible to attack the character of a witness
for untruthfulness; and the Rape Shield Law, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-7. Even if the cell
phone information or the results of any further investigation based upon it may
ultimately be inadmissible, full and open discovery requires the production of
the unredacted report.
The State relies heavily upon State v. J.A.C., 210 N.J. 281 (2012), in
support of its position that the redacted information suffices. In that case,
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however, the dispute related to the admission of evidence barred by the Rape
Shield Law, not its production in discovery. See id. at 287. In this case, the
State is seeking to keep defendant from having access to the redacted
information altogether. The redacted material, however, is relevant and is
therefore at least discoverable. The admissibility of any evidence, also left to
the trial court, is an entirely different matter. Our decision does not touch upon
that exercise of discretion. See id. at 295-96.
III.
The State contends that the issue is not whether O.R. has a right to privacy
in need of protection— there can be no dispute that she does—but whether the
sacrifice of her privacy will advance "the truth-seeking function or ensure the
fairness of a trial." A.B., 219 N.J. at 560. The trial court balanced O.R.'s right
to privacy against defendant's right to confrontation as guaranteed under the
Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, concluding that the harm to O.R. of allowing
defendant access to the unredacted extraction report was outweighed by the
benefit of full discovery.
We understand, as defense counsel said during oral argument, that because
of defendant's lack of specific information regarding the contents of the
unredacted extraction report it is difficult to address materiality. However, it is
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not unreasonable at all, and certainly not speculation, to argue that the
unredacted cell phone extraction report could contain information that will help
or hurt defendant's case. It provides information which, even if not useful for
some actual trial purpose, will enable defendant to realistically assess the
strengths and weaknesses of the State's case, and of any plea offers that may be
made. Simply stated, it is reasonably likely that the redacted material has
probative value to a material issue. See id. at 557.
The State further contends that Gilchrist bars disclosure of the unredacted
report. In that case, however, the trial judge ordered a photograph taken of the
victim so that the defendant could determine whether he was acquainted with
her because her relationship to him might provide a motive for the accusation.
381 N.J. Super. at 140-41. Since the perpetrator in that case had threatened to
kill the victim if she went to the police, she was understandably apprehensive.
The victim feared that defendant's access to her photograph would make it
possible for him to make good on the threat. Id. at 142. We reversed. Id. at
148.
In this case, there is no comparable justification for barring defendant 's
access to the unredacted extraction report. O.R. has not expressed any fear of
retribution, and after the incident, defendant drove her home at her request. The
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record is devoid of any indication that defendant has at any time attempted to
intimidate O.R. Gilchrist is inapposite.
The State's reliance on United States v. Swartz, 945 F. Supp. 2d 216, 221-
22 (D. Mass. 2013), is similarly misplaced. In that case, the defendant's estate
sought disclosure of unredacted discovery materials to Congress and the public.
Id. at 217. That is not an issue in this case. No wholesale or public disclosure
is being ordered.
Knowing the risks attendant to compelling the State to produce the report,
however, it shall be disclosed to defense counsel, counsel's investigators, and
defendant only. The discovery order must prohibit dissemination of the
information except as necessary for investigation. Defendant shall not be given
a hard copy of the unredacted report. He can review it with his counsel, but
there is no need for him to have a physical record of phone numbers O.R. call ed
or texts she sent. He is barred from discussing the contents of the report with
anyone other than his attorney or attorney's staff. Other than those permitted
discussions, defendant is also barred from disclosing or disseminating the
report's contents in any fashion, including emails or internet postings.
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IV.
The State also asserts that the disclosure of the unredacted extraction
report will infringe upon the privacy rights of third parties who were not
involved in the incident and could not have anticipated disclosure of their
communications with O.R. Our Court has been sensitive regarding the privacy
rights of third parties when discovery, including their information, must be
produced. State v. Stein, 225 N.J. 582, 597 (2016). But Stein did not consider
whether being contacted by a defense investigator infringes upon a third party's
right to privacy. The issue was whether the State had to turn over police station
videotapes of defendant that depicted others whose presence was irrelevant to
the proceedings. Id. at 597.
In this case, there is no other practical means for the defense to investigate
anything regarding O.R.'s communications with third parties related to the
sexual assault without the State at least disclosing their identities. Weighing
the privacy interest of third parties against the defendant's right to investigate in
preparation for trial, defendant's trial preparation interest is paramount. This is
no different than if, for example, O.R. had named persons with whom she
discussed the incident. Those persons also lose their anonymity.
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Thus, we conclude that our strong open-file discovery precedents justify
the trial court's resolution of this issue and the decision is therefore entitled to
deference. See Hernandez, 225 N.J. at 461.
We reiterate that copies of the unredacted extraction report shall be
supplied only to defense counsel and counsel's staff. No copy shall be provided
to defendant, who is also barred from discussing its contents with anyone other
than counsel or counsel's investigator. This limitation applies only to material
not admitted as evidence at trial, as obviously the public nature of the proceeding
makes the limitation unnecessary as to trial information.
Affirmed in part, modified in part, and remanded. We do not retain
jurisdiction.
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