NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4380-17T2
IN THE MATTER OF THE
APPEAL OF THE DENIAL
OF F.E.'S APPLICATION FOR
A FIREARMS PURCHASER
IDENTIFICATION CARD.
Submitted October 10, 2019 – Decided November 13, 2019
Before Judges Koblitz and Gooden Brown.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Bergen County.
Evan F. Nappen, attorney for appellant F.E. (Louis P.
Nappen, on the brief).
Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney for
respondent State of New Jersey (Tom Dominic
Osadnik, Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the
brief).
PER CURIAM
F.E.1 appeals from the trial court's April 24, 2018 order, issued after a
plenary hearing, which affirmed the police chief's denial of a firearms purchaser
identification card (FPIC) and two handgun purchase permits (HPP). F.E.
wanted to purchase both long-guns and pistols. Both F.E. and Lieutenant Keith
Sanzari, the officer who conducted the background investigation, testified at the
hearing, after which the trial court made detailed findings. We affirm.
F.E. served as a Navy Corpsman Platoon Medic from 1996 to 2000 before
his honorable discharge. As an infantry medic, F.E. was required to carry a
Baretta 92F handgun and "be proficient in all weapon systems that [his] Marines
would have to use."
F.E. has been employed by Hackensack University Medical Center as a
critical care paramedic on the Specialty Care Transport Unit for more than ten
years. In 2016, F.E. applied to become a police officer with the Oakland Police
Department. Though he was not hired, he still wants to become a police officer.
F.E. believed he was not hired because he was forty-two years old. While his
employment application was pending, F.E. met with a detective who suggested
he have his criminal record expunged.
1
We use initials as requested by applicant without opposition. See N.J.A.C.
13:54-1.15.
A-4380-17T2
2
F.E. had two prior criminal incidents. When he was eighteen years old,
F.E. was arrested after he stole a purse and wrote a check to himself for
approximately $100. He was working as a lifeguard and smoking marijuana
with his friends. F.E. pled guilty to disorderly person's offenses.
In October 2001, when he was twenty-four years old, F.E. was arrested
following a high-speed police pursuit. When F.E. was pulled over, he had a
knife in his hands. F.E. did not comply with repeated demands to drop the knife.
He admitted to being drunk and had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .07
percent. He pled guilty to third-degree eluding the police, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2(b).
His petition to expunge his criminal history was granted in the spring of 2016 ,
shortly before he applied for the gun permits.
With the consent of the State, F.E. submitted the report of an expert
psychologist who was not available to testify. The expert stated in the report:
"For the last [sixteen years], [F.E.] has led a law abiding, stable lifestyle. I see
no indications that [F.E.] has an antisocial personality, a propensity for violent,
aggressive, threatening, or suicidal behavior, substance abuse problems,
interpersonal problems, or psychological problems." The expert concluded that
F.E. "poses a very low risk to the community and himself with a firearm. There
A-4380-17T2
3
are no indicators present that raise concern about him owning and safely using
firearms."
F.E. raises three issues on appeal. He maintains the court erred by
focusing on his past conduct rather than his present fitness to own a firearm. He
also argues the chief of police and investigating officer erred by using his
expunged criminal record as a basis to deny his FPIC and HPP application.
Finally, F.E. argues for the first time on appeal that the public health, safety and
welfare gun permit disqualifier is unconstitutionally vague and violates due
process.
I. Legal analysis.
We defer to a trial court's factual findings when they are "supported by
adequate, substantial and credible evidence." Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v.
Investors Ins. Co. of America, 65 N.J. 474, 484 (1974). "Deference is especially
appropriate 'when the evidence is largely testimonial and involves questions of
credibility.'" Cesare v. Cesare, 154 N.J. 394, 412 (1998) (quoting In re Return
of Weapons to J.W.D., 149 N.J. 108, 117 (1997)). This is because the trial court
has the opportunity to see and observe witnesses, and hear them testify. Ibid.
Only when "they are so wholly insupportable as to result in a denial of justice,"
should we disturb the factual findings of a trial court. Rova Farms, 65 N.J. at
A-4380-17T2
4
483–84 (quoting Greenfield v. Dusseault, 60 N.J. Super. 436, 444 (App. Div.
1960)). We review a trial court's legal or statutory interpretation de novo. State
v. Grate, 220 N.J. 317, 329 (2015).
In order to purchase a handgun or firearm2 in New Jersey, a person must
first acquire an HPP or FPIC. N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(a)(1) and (b)(1). A "person of
good character and good repute in the community in which he [or she] lives, and
who is not subject to any of the [enumerated] disabilities set forth [in the law],"
may obtain these permits. N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c). "[W]here the issuance would
not be in the interest of the public health, safety or welfare," however, a person
is not eligible to secure an HPP or FPIC. N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(5).
II. The expunged record.
When F.E. applied for the gun permits in Oakland, he did not report his
criminal history because his record had been expunged. The Oakland Police
Chief informed him his application was denied because the details of a 2001
arrest disqualified him from obtaining either an HPP or an FPIC. F.E. appealed
to the trial court.
2
A "firearm" is defined as "an antique cannon or a rifle or shotgun, other than
an antique rifle or shotgun." N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(b)(1).
A-4380-17T2
5
The court granted the State's motion to unseal the expunged records "for
the limited purpose of discussing it during the appeal of the denial" of the permit
application. The prosecutor also said "the lieutenant who was doing the
background investigation had independent knowledge of [F.E.'s] prior criminal
arrest and conviction."
F.E.'s counsel acknowledged that a police officer may have "institutional
memory" concerning a person's expunged record and "can consider their own
memory . . . of those events in deciding whether or not they want to decide
whether or not this is going to be a public health, safety or welfare kind of
denial."
III. The court's findings.
The court considered the testimony of F.E. and Sanzari, as well as the
following exhibits: the firearms evaluation, the psychologist's curriculum vitae,
the FPIC and HPP application, the Automated Complaint System (ACS)
printout, the police report, and the chief's denial letter.
The court credited F.E.'s testimony concerning his work history, military
service, and volunteer work. But after reviewing F.E.'s testimony and the
underlying facts of his 2001 conviction, the court was concerned that F.E.
minimized his behavior despite having pled guilty to eluding the police. The
A-4380-17T2
6
court also noted that F.E. "[d]enied that he had the knife in his hand at the time."
While F.E.'s BAC was below the .08 percent statutory threshold for a DWI, the
court was concerned that he chose to drink and then drive "at a high rate of
speed, and pled and admitted — and it's not the fact of the conviction again, but
admitted that he had eluded police." The court stated that when F.E. pled guilty
to eluding the police, as elements of the crime he admitted that he was aware
that law enforcement was trying to stop him and he disregarded the signal to
stop.
The court also considered F.E.'s 1994 conviction, noting that "again, it's
not the fact of the conviction, but he was arrested and charged and admitted theft
and forgery . . . [h]e's an adult at this time." The court stated:
So we have theft, forgery, marijuana use involved, and
we have eluding, some . . . evidence that there may have
been a . . . violent struggle between law enforcement
and [F.E.] as they extricated him from his vehicle, . . .
and evidence that he may have been in possession of a
knife at the time, and alcohol involved. All right. So
we have two separate incidents of criminal behavior, a
disregard for the rules of society where the use of
alcohol or drugs is involved.
The court recalled that the police report, admitted into evidence without
objection, detailed statements made by F.E. during his arrest: "I was drinking
and I was stupid. I have a lot of pent up aggression."
A-4380-17T2
7
The court considered Sanzari's testimony and determined it was "very
credible," pointing to Sanzari's years of experience and concluding that he
"conducted his investigation and exercised his due diligence." Having
previously been aware that F.E. was denied employment with the Oakland Police
Department and "coming across this indication that there was a complaint" in
ACS, Sanzari properly investigated F.E.'s criminal history.
The court expressed its concern that F.E.'s psychologist minimized F.E.'s
criminal history throughout the report. In particular, the court found it
"extremely troubling and concerning" that F.E. reported to the psychologist that
he was trained in the military to "work while inebriated," so "while he may have
been legally drunk at the time" of the eluding incident, "he felt quite functional."
The court was troubled by the psychologist's assessment that F.E. has a
nonviolent history given "some evidence" in the police report that there was a
"violent confrontation" between F.E. and the police when the police were
removing him from his car during the 2001 arrest. The court also found it
"striking" that the psychologist's report indicated F.E. had no history of
substance abuse in light of his first arrest involving marijuana and his second
arrest involving alcohol.
A-4380-17T2
8
The court expressed concern about F.E.'s reasons, expressed to the
psychologist and in court, for wanting a firearm, stating that F.E. "offered that
. . . if he is allowed to purchase a gun, it will validate to himself that he has
become a better person." The court stated: "[W]hen I consider [F.E.'s] own
testimony that I find to minimize these past incidents, when I consider [F.E.'s]
reasons for wanting a firearm, how he feels it would validate him as a changed,
mature person, that raises very serious questions and concerns with this [c]ourt."
The court pointed out that, while it must review the denial of F.E.'s
application de novo, it also defers to the chief's "investigative experience and to
any expertise he or [she] appears to have developed in administering [N.J.S.A.
2C:58-3(c)(5)]," which disqualifies an individual from firearm ownership if it is
"not be in the interest of the public's health, safety or welfare." In assessing
whether a disqualification was appropriate, the court concluded that the chief
and the court could consider "the facts and circumstances underlying criminal
charges that were dismissed" when "deciding whether a person is entitl ed to
purchase a firearm." Quoting Ulinsky v. Avignone, 148 N.J. Super. 250, 255
(App. Div. 1977), the court found that "while the records of an expunged arrest
may be said to be nonexistent in the eyes of the law, '[t]he events which they
concern and evidence do[,] nonetheless[,] have existence.'"
A-4380-17T2
9
The court determined that the State proved "by more than a preponderance
of the evidence" that F.E.'s ownership of a firearm posed a risk to the public
health, safety and welfare.
IV. Use of past conduct.
F.E. argues that the court improperly denied his FPIC and HPP application
by considering his past conduct instead of his present qualification to possess
firearms. We have determined that "the statutory design [of N.J.S.A. 2C:58-
3(c)] is to prevent firearms from coming into the hands of persons likely to pose
a danger to the public." State v. Cunningham, 186 N.J. Super. 502, 511 (App.
Div. 1982). Our Supreme Court has determined that the public health, safety
and welfare disqualifier is "intended to relate to cases of individual unfitness,
where, though not dealt with in the specific statutory enumerations, the issuance
of the permit or identification card would nonetheless be contrary to the public
interest." In re F.M., 225 N.J. at 507 (quoting In re Osworth, 365 N.J. Super 72,
79 (App. Div. 2003)). In Cunningham, we examined the meaning of "public
health, safety or welfare" in N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(5) and determined that a
previous instance of an intentional wrongdoing, or handling a weapon
negligently or recklessly, could be sufficient grounds to deny a permit
application. 186 N.J. Super. at 507; see also In re Sbitani, 216 N.J. Super. 75,
A-4380-17T2
10
78 (App. Div. 1987) (finding that the Legislature "expressly anticipated that a
disorderly persons offense may be a bar to issuance of a purchaser identification
card" because "N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(e) provides that an application for a card shall
'set forth . . . whether [the applicant] has ever been convicted of a . . . disorderly
persons offense . . . .'") (alteration in original).
The court's fact-sensitive analysis is entitled to our deference. In re
J.W.D., 149 N.J. at 116 ("Ordinarily, an appellate court should accept a trial
court's findings of fact that are supported by substantial credible evidence.").
Deference is "especially appropriate" here because the court's factual findings
were based largely on F.E.'s own testimony. Id. at 117. The court's decision is
supported by substantial credible evidence.
V. Alleged police violations.
F.E. argues that the chief and Sanzari improperly considered his expunged
records when considering his FPIC and HPP application. The expungement
statute provides:
Inspection of the files and records, or release of the
information contained therein, which are the subject of
an order of expungement, or sealing under prior law,
may be permitted by the Superior Court upon motion
for good cause shown and compelling need based on
specific facts. The motion or any order granted
pursuant thereto shall specify the person or persons to
whom the records and information are to be shown and
A-4380-17T2
11
the purpose for which they are to be utilized. Leave to
inspect shall be granted by the court only in those
instances where the subject matter of the records of
arrest or conviction is the object of litigation or judicial
proceedings. . . .
[N.J.S.A. 2C:52-19 (emphasis added).]
The statute setting forth the effect of expungement states:
Unless otherwise provided by law, if an order of
expungement is granted, the arrest, conviction and any
proceedings related thereto shall be deemed not to have
occurred, and the petitioner may answer any questions
relating to their occurrence accordingly, except as
follows:
....
Information divulged on expunged records shall be
revealed by a petitioner seeking employment within the
judicial branch or with a law enforcement or
corrections agency and such information shall continue
to provide a disability as otherwise provided by law.
[N.J.S.A. 2C:52-27(c) (emphasis added).]
"The dismissal of criminal charges does not prevent a court from
considering the underlying facts in deciding whether a person is entitled to
purchase a firearm or recover one previously taken by the police." In re
Osworth, 365 N.J. Super. at 78 (concluding that "dismissal of the charges
following successful participation in a pretrial intervention program" may be
considered); see also In re J.W.D., 149 N.J. at 110 (finding that the applicant
A-4380-17T2
12
"pose[d] a threat to public health, safety, or welfare . . . notwithstanding [a] prior
dismissal of [a] domestic violence complaint"); State v. Freysinger, 311 N.J.
Super. 509, 514–17 (App. Div. 1998) (finding a legislative intent that
confiscated firearms not be returned to defendants after the dismissal o f a
domestic violence complaint if they are a threat to the public health, safety or
welfare). If a dismissal does not prevent the consideration of the underlying
facts, then certainly a finding of guilt followed by expungement does not prevent
such consideration.
The "subject matter" of F.E.'s prior arrest and conviction was clearly
relevant to the denial of his FPIC and HPP application. F.E.'s decision to drink
and drive, the cavalier nature with which he discussed being able to work while
intoxicated, his apparent violent encounter with the police, and the seeming
unwillingness to acknowledge his conduct during the 2001 arrest all bear on his
fitness to own a firearm.
Moreover, Sanzari first learned of F.E.'s criminal record when F.E.
applied for employment with the Oakland Police Department. F.E. did not
object to Sanzari's testimony. After seeing an eluding arrest in ACS, it was
within Sanzari's duties, as the officer evaluating whether F.E. should own a
firearm, to look into the nature and circumstances of that incident further.
A-4380-17T2
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VI. Constitutional arguments.
The United States Constitution guarantees individuals the right to keep
and bear arms. U.S. Const. amend. II. Our Supreme Court has determined that
under "the law governing forfeiture of weapons and identification cards, the
right to bear arms under the Second Amendment to the United States
Constitution is subject to reasonable limitations." In re Forfeiture of Pers.
Weapons and Firearms Identification Card belonging to F.M., 225 N.J. 487, 506
(2016). Such limitations can include having a predicate conviction that bars
firearm ownership, see N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7, or a specifically enumerated
disqualification under N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3.
F.E. argues that the public health, safety or welfare disqualification is
unconstitutionally vague, does not pass a rational basis analysis, and violates
Due Process. As the State points out, F.E. did not raise this constitutional
argument in the trial court, other than to mention that he had a "right guaranteed
by the Second Amendment" to a gun. Therefore, under Nieder v. Royal Indem.
Ins. Co., 62 N.J. 229, 234 (1973), we do not consider this argument. We note,
however, that we have previously determined that N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(5) is not
unconstitutional. In re Winston, 438 N.J. Super. 1, 10 (App. Div. 2014). F.E.'s
A-4380-17T2
14
remaining arguments are without sufficient merit to require further discussion.
R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
A-4380-17T2
15