RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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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-3131-15T3
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
W.H.G.,
Defendant-Appellant.
_____________________________________
Submitted November 1, 2017 – Decided June 29, 2018
Before Judges Manahan and Suter.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Union County, Indictment No. 06-
04-0337.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
for appellant (Monique D. Moyse, Designated
Counsel, on the brief).
Thomas K. Isenhour, Acting Prosecutor of Union
County, attorney for respondent (Stephen
William Bondi, Special Deputy Attorney
General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, on the
brief).
Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
PER CURIAM
Defendant W.H.G. appeals the January 22, 2016 denial of his
petition for post-conviction relief (PCR). We affirm.
I
In 2011, defendant was convicted by a jury of two counts of
first-degree aggravated sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(1);
two counts of second-degree sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(b);
and two counts of endangering the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A.
2C:24-4(a). At sentencing, the second-degree sexual assault
counts were merged with the first-degree aggravated sexual assault
counts. On the aggravated sexual assault counts, defendant was
sentenced to two eighteen-year terms of imprisonment, to be served
consecutively, with an eighty-five percent period of parole
ineligibility and five years of parole supervision, subject to the
No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. On the
endangering counts, defendant was sentenced to two ten-year terms
to be served concurrently.
We affirmed the conviction and sentence in an unpublished
opinion, but remanded for the determination of penalties under the
Sex Crime Violent Treatment Fund, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-10. State v.
W.H.G., No. A-4238-11 (App. Div. Oct. 10, 2014) (slip op. at 27),
certif. denied, 221 N.J. 285 (2015).
We derived the salient facts from our previous opinion.
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Defendant's wife (Greta)1 had two children from a previous
relationship. Lori was seven and her sister, Mary, was five when
Lori told a classmate at school, K.V., that defendant, her
stepfather, had sexually molested her. K.V. told her mother, who
then told the principal of the school, who notified the Division
of Youth and Family Services (Division) and the local police.
"Both girls initially denied that they were being sexually
molested by defendant or anyone else. Despite these verbal
assurances, [the Division worker] note[d] that the children seemed
guarded . . . [and] recommended in her report that the girls be
re-interviewed at a future date 'out of the home and outside the
presence of the stepfather.'" W.H.G., slip op. at 5-6. When the
girls were interviewed, "Lori told her that defendant sexually
abused her and her sister when they were at home alone with him
when their mother was at work." Id. at 6. Then Mary also
"described in graphic details of sexual activity that is ordinarily
beyond the scope of knowledge associated with an eight-year-old
girl." Id. at 7. At the prosecutor's office on December 1, 2015,
Lori at first denied any sexual activity, but when confronted with
1
We use the same fictitious names here for defendant's wife and
her two children that we used in our 2014 opinion to maintain
their privacy. See State v. W.H.G., No. A-4238-11 (App. Div.
Oct 10, 2014).
3 A-3131-15T3
a statement her sister had made, "finally admitted the full scope
of the molestation in graphically disturbing details." Id. at 10.
Mary's description was "far more graphic and direct." Ibid. As
we said in our 2014 opinion, "[t]his child of tender years provided
the detective who interviewed her devastatingly disturbing details
of the sexual assault committed against her by defendant." Ibid.
"On December 15, 2005, both girls recanted their statements
they had given to law enforcement authorities two weeks earlier
accusing defendant of having sexual relations with them." Id. at
14. Defendant went missing after December 1, 2005, until he was
apprehended in Arizona in November 2009.
At defendant's jury trial in 2011, the State called fourteen
witnesses, "including Lori and Mary, who were then sixteen and
fourteen years old respectively, their mother, Greta, a number of
law enforcement officers, [Division] caseworkers, other lay
persons with relevant knowledge of the event and two expert
witnesses in the field of child sexual abuse." Ibid. The girls
"reaffirmed at trial the recantations" they had given earlier.
Ibid. Lori was confronted with a journal she had kept at school
"in which she described the details of what defendant had allegedly
done to her when she was ten years old." Ibid. The State's
psychological expert, testified about her examinations of the
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girls. Another State psychological expert, testified about child
sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS), but on cross-
examination, defense counsel established that psychologists do not
"consider CSAAS as being determinative of whether abuse occurred."
Id. at 20. Defendant did not call any witnesses on his behalf.
Defendant was convicted as we have described.
Defendant filed a pro se petition for post judgment relief
in 2015 that was supplemented by his appointed counsel. Defendant
contended he was denied the effective assistance of counsel at his
trial and by counsel who handled his appeal. He alleged that he
was entitled to an evidentiary hearing because his trial counsel
failed to conduct an investigation prior to trial or to call
favorable witnesses. Defendant claimed he did not receive
discovery nor discuss trial strategy with his attorneys. His
attorneys did not conduct an effective cross-examination of the
State's witnesses at trial or call favorable witnesses. He claimed
they did not file any pre-trial motions. Defendant contended that
exculpatory evidence was not presented and that his wife was misled
by the police regarding the search of their home. He claimed his
attorneys lacked an interest in his case and "there was an
additional lack of serious understanding of the English language
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by the defendant." Defendant asserted that his appellate counsel
failed to raise any of these claims.
Defendant's PCR petition was denied in January 2016. In
rejecting his claims that counsel failed to investigate the case,
the court noted that defendant "has not submitted any
certifications or affidavits from other expert witnesses and has
not made any proffer with respect to the testimony." He did not
name "one favorable witness that trial counsel could have called,
what said witness would have testified to, nor how the testimony
would have altered the outcome of the trial."
The court rejected defendant's claims about lack of discovery
finding that he did not "detail[] which items he did not receive
and how receipt of the undisclosed items would have altered the
outcome of the trial." Without this, the court could not determine
how this would have affected the case. A pretrial memorandum had
stated that all pretrial discovery was completed.
As for defendant's claims about certain videotaped evidence,
the court found that they were made available to him "during . .
. [the] trial and the pretrial hearing." Relating to defendant's
claim that his attorneys should have filed suppression motions,
defendant did not point out what evidence supported his claim.
The court rejected defendant's claim that counsel failed to present
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exculpatory evidence because defendant did not describe what
evidence he was referencing. The court found that his trial
counsel's performance was not "objectively deficient" because he
did not "offer[] any specific evidence of deficiency." Also,
defendant did not show how he was prejudiced because "no evidence
[was] presented to this [c]ourt that the outcome would have changed
by counsel doing anything that [p]etitioner alleges that counsel
failed to do." The court rejected defendant's claims about his
appellate counsel for the same reasons.
In his appeal from the denial of his PCR petition, defendant
raises the following issues:
[W.H.G.] IS ENTITLED TO AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING
ON HIS CLAIM THAT HIS ATTORNEYS RENDERED
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL.
In his pro se brief, defendant also alleges that:
Legal Argument I
Appellant's Trial Counsel Rendered
Ineffective/Remedial Ineffective Assistance
Of Counsel For Gravely Failing To Investigate
And Gravely Failing To Adequately Consulting
[sic] With Appellant.
Legal Argument II
It Was Prejudicial Error To Deny Appellant His
Post-Conviction Relief Of An Evidentiary
Hearing, Pursuant to R. 3:22-10.
Legal Argument III
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The Prosecutorial Misconduct Deprived
Appellant's [sic] A Fair Jury Trial With The
Bolstering Of The Credibility For The State's
Witnesses.
Legal Argument IV
Appellant Submit That The Lower Court
Dismissed The Fundamental Value Of A
Witness/Witnesses Recantation From Initial
Complaint/Statements And This Deprived A Fair
Jury Trial.
We find no merit in any of these arguments.
II
The standard for determining whether counsel's performance
was ineffective for purposes of the Sixth Amendment was formulated
in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), and adopted by
our Supreme Court in State v. Fritz, l05 N.J. 42 (l987). In order
to prevail on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, defendant
must meet a two-prong test by establishing that: (l) counsel's
performance was deficient and he or she made errors that were so
egregious that counsel was not functioning effectively as
guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment to the United States
Constitution; and (2) the defect in performance prejudiced
defendant's rights to a fair trial such that there exists "a
reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694.
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"[W]hen a petitioner claims his trial attorney inadequately
investigated his case, he must assert the facts that an
investigation would have revealed, supported by affidavits or
certifications based upon the personal knowledge of the affiant
or the person making the certification." State v. Porter, 216
N.J. 343, 353 (2013) (alteration in original) (quoting State v.
Cummings, 321 N.J. Super. 154, 170 (App. Div. 1999)).
Here, although he claimed his attorneys failed to investigate
the case, find favorable witnesses, or present exculpatory
information, we agree with the PCR judge that these claims lacked
any specific information. Without that information, the court
could not determine what should have been investigated or how it
would have changed the outcome of the trial.
Defendant does not say what discovery he did not receive.
He does not say what pre-trial motions should have been filed that
were not. His allegations are supported only by self-serving
assertions and bare allegations. See Cummings, 321 N.J. Super.
at 170 ("[A] petitioner must do more than make bald assertions
that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.").
He claims his attorneys did not consult with him but, he is
not specific about what was not discussed, when this occurred, or
how this would have made a difference. In fact, the transcript
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from May 2011, indicates defendant's counsel spoke with him about
whether he still wanted to go to trial "and his position remain[ed]
the same, that he still wishe[d] to go to trial, [and did] not
want to entertain any sort of plea negotiations." Defendant was
"maintaining his innocence and that he wishe[d] to proceed to
trial."
Defendant contends he should have had an interpreter but
there was no indication that his counsel had difficulty speaking
with him as early as May 2011. He has submitted pro se pleadings
to the court without any showing that they were translated.
Defendant contends in his pro se brief that his trial counsel
should have moved for a mistrial because the State bolstered its
witnesses at trial. He cites to two passages from the State's
summation to support his claim. However, we addressed the nature
of the prosecutor's summation in the direct appeal where defendant
"claim[ed] certain parts of the prosecutor's summation were highly
improper and deprived him of his constitutional right to a fair
trial." W.G.H., slip op. at 2-3. Although we applied the plain
error standard in rejecting his claims, we also said that "we are
thoroughly convinced that defendant's argument lacks sufficient
merit to warrant further discussion in a written opinion." Id.
at 25 (citing to Rule 2:11-3(e)(2)). Defendant now alleges
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prosecutorial misconduct but failed to provide any factual
allegations or point to any areas of the trial transcript where
this misconduct occurred.
His claim on appeal that the "lower court dismissed the
fundamental value of a witness/witnesses recantations," depriving
him of a fair trial, lacks merit because he was convicted by a
jury, not the judge.
We agree with the PCR judge that defendant failed to show how
any of the issues he raised in his petition would have changed the
outcome of the trial and thus, he failed to meet the prejudice
prong of Stickland.
Defendant contends his appeals counsel should have raised all
the arguments he raises here, but because they lack merit, there
was no error by counsel in not raising them.
We are satisfied from our review of the record that defendant
failed to make a prima facie showing of ineffectiveness of trial
counsel within the Strickland/Fritz test. Accordingly, the PCR
court correctly concluded that an evidentiary hearing was not
warranted. See State v. Preciose, 129 N.J. 451, 462-63 (1992).
Any other appellate arguments raised by defendant are without
sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
Affirmed.
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