NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1425-16T3
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
PATRICK HEALY, a/k/a PAT,
Defendant-Appellant.
_________________________
Submitted December 19, 2018 – Decided February 11, 2020
Before Judges Fuentes and Vernoia.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Gloucester County, Indictment No. 15-08-
0563.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Alicia J. Hubbard, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, of counsel and on the briefs).
Charles A. Fiore, Gloucester County Prosecutor,
attorney for respondent (Staci L. Scheetz, Senior
Assistant Prosecutor, and Monica Bullock, on the
brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FUENTES, P.J.A.D.
A Gloucester County Grand Jury indicted defendant Patrick Healy on one
count of fourth degree driving a motor vehicle while his driver's license was
suspended for two or more convictions of driving while intoxicated (DWI),1
N.J.S.A. 2C:40-26(b). Defendant was also charged with the disorderly persons
offense of possession of drug paraphernalia (a metallic pipe), with intent to use,
N.J.S.A. 2C:36-2, driving with an open container of alcohol, N.J.S.A. 39:4-51,
failing to maintain a traffic lane, N.J.S.A. 39:4-88, and driving with a suspended
license, N.J.S.A. 39:3-40.
The jury trial on the fourth degree criminal offense began on August 2,
2016 and ended on August 4, 2016. The jury found defendant guilty as charged.
More than two months after the jury trial, the judge conducted a bench trial on
the disorderly persons offense and the Title 39 charges, and found defendant
guilty of possession of drug paraphernalia, driving with a suspended license, and
failure to maintain a traffic lane. The judge acquitted him on the Title 39 charge
of driving with an open container of alcohol.
On October 14, 2016, the judge sentenced defendant on his fourth degree
conviction to a one-year term of probation conditioned upon serving 180 days
1
N.J.S.A. 39:4-50.
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without parole in the Gloucester County Correctional Facility as mandated by
N.J.S.A. 2C:40-26(c). He also suspended defendant's driver's license for six
months, as required by N.J.S.A. 39:3-40(d), and imposed the mandatory fines
and penalties.
In this appeal, defendant argues the trial judge committed reversible error
by: (1) admitting a recording of a 9-1-1 call in which the individual who reports
the one-car accident at issue here claimed a man, who was subsequently
identified as defendant, was "standing outside of [the car], but . . . looked like
. . . he might have been drunk or something;" and (2) allowing a police officer
who responded to the scene of the accident to testify that he recovered from
defendant's person a pipe commonly used to smoke marijuana. Defendant
argues this evidence should have been excluded as prejudicial and devoid of
probative value. According to defendant, these ostensible errors by the trial
judge violated his right to a fair trial.
After considering the record developed before the trial court and the
evidence presented to the jury, we reject defendant's arguments and affirm.
I
At around midnight on December 2, 2014, a 9-1-1 dispatcher who covers
Monroe Township received two emergency calls reporting a man standing
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3
outside of what appeared to be a one-car accident on Coles Mill Road. The first
caller was Thomas Orselli. He identified the specific location of the accident
and said there was "a car that’s sideways on the road." Orselli also reported the
presence of a person at the scene who "looked like he might have been drunk or
something." When the 9-1-1 dispatcher asked him if the vehicle had "hit
anything[,]" Orselli responded: "when I was going by[,] it looked like there was
some kind of a skunk out in the road." The prosecutor played to the jury the
recording of Orselli's 9-1-1 call in its entirety. 2
Monroe Township Police Officer Maxwell Janofsky reported to the scene
of the accident approximately ten minutes after the 9-1-1 calls were placed. His
marked patrol car is equipped with an "MVR" which, as Janofsky explained,
2
The State called Carl Vandergrift, the operations supervisor of the County and
Gloucester Emergency Response Center, to explain to the jury how the 9-1-1
emergency response system operates. Vandergrift also authenticated the DVD
audio recordings of the 9-1-1 calls the State played to the jury. The trial judge
permitted the prosecutor to provide the jurors with a "transcript of the 9 -1-1
recordings from the two passerby[s] that observed" the scene of the one -car
accident. Without objection from defense counsel, the trial judge gave the jury
the following instructions: "Ladies and Gentlemen, you’re going to be given a
transcript for the purposes of an aid. That’s just to help you in case you don’t
quite hear or to help you be able to understand what’s being said. The transcript
itself is not evidence. It’s just an aid."
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stands for "motor vehicle recorder." According to Janofsky, at the time of this
accident he "did not have a mic that was hooked up to the MVR."
Upon arrival at the scene, Janofsky "observed a vehicle parallel to the
street" on a two lane road and "mailbox debris and a[n electric] pole that was
damaged on the side of the road" in a residential neighborhood. The vehicle
sustained "heavy frontend damage." Janofsky saw defendant "seated in the
passenger seat at the time." Janofsky also saw damage to the driver-side of the
vehicle, presumably caused by the collision with the electric pole. Janofsky
testified that defendant had difficulty "putting coherent sentences together." He
also had "a large laceration on top of his head[,]" which according to Janofsky,
was "consistent with striking the windshield."
Janofsky's comment about the cause of defendant's head injury prompted
an immediate objection from defense counsel. At a sidebar conference, defense
counsel argued the witness did not establish a foundation to support his opinion
about what caused defendant's head injury. The prosecutor argued the witness'
testimony was supported by the car's "severe frontend damage" and the damage
to the windshield. The judge accepted the prosecutor's argument, overruled
defense counsel's objection, and denied her request to strike this part of
Janofsky's testimony.
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The prosecutor resumed her direct examination of Janofsky with the
following exchange:
Q. Okay. So when you indicated he may have hit the
windshield you don’t know if he possibly hit something
else inside the car or anything else?
A. Correct.
Q. Okay. Now, once you assess that scene, what did
you do with him?
A. At that point once I saw the laceration and he
couldn’t put his coherent sentence together we called
for an ambulance because medical treatment comes
first at that point.
Q. And did you ask for his identification?
A. I asked him for his credentials, his driver’s license,
registration, insurance card. He couldn’t provide any
of that. Without knowing who he was I patted him
down to find his ID. As I was patting him down I
located his ID and a metallic pipe commonly used for
smoking marijuana.
[(Emphasis added).]
Defense counsel objected; the trial judge promptly sustained the objection
and gave the following sua sponte curative instruction to the jury: "You’re to
strike that last part of the response, the commonly used for the smoking of
marijuana from your consideration." The record shows that through Janofsky's
testimony, the State established defendant was unable to produce his driver's
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license, automobile insurance identification card, or the vehicle registration
card.
Despite the judge's admonition to the jury concerning the smoking pipe,
the prosecutor continued to pursue this line of questioning with Janofsky:
Q. You indicated that it was a small pipe that you found
in his pocket?
A. Yes.
Q. And is it common just for -- is it paraphernalia?
A. Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Objection, Your Honor. Can
we have a sidebar, Judge?
At this second sidebar conference, defense counsel objected to Janofsky's
"conclusion" that the pipe was "paraphernalia" and "that the pipe is commonly
used to smoke marijuana." The judge noted that he had previously "struck" from
the record the notion that the pipe "is commonly used to smoke marijuana" and
reminded the prosecutor that he had previously ruled the State had to first "lay
a foundation" that Janofsky is "able to testify regarding paraphernalia." The
prosecutor argued that she established the witness' competency to testify in these
matters when she questioned him regarding "his training [and] experience" as
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an instructor for the "New Jersey LEAD, 3" DARE, and his involvement with the
"K-9 narcotic detection dog." The judge was not persuaded by the prosecutor's
response.
Defense counsel asked the judge for "a limiting instruction right now [for]
. . . the jury not to consider what was just said because there has been no
foundation that he is an expert to say such a thing." After discussing the issue
with the parties at length in this second sidebar conference, the judge sustained
defense counsel's objection but declined to give any additional instructions to
the jury.
The prosecutor resumed her direct examination of Janofsky by asking him:
"How many paraphernalias [sic] can you identify or have you been trained to
identify?" Although he could not give an exact number, Janofsky claimed that
based on his "multiple investigations" that resulted in "convictions [,]" he "can
name pretty much anything you put in front of [him] and what it could be used
for." In response to the prosecutor's question, Janofsky confirmed that the pipe
3
Earlier in his direct testimony, Janofsky explained that New Jersey LEAD is
a program "[t]o educate the younger generations about drug abuse and
awareness, to what -- how to stay away from it and other programs they can go
into rather than going down the path of CDS."
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can be used for "ingesting" illicit drugs. At this phase of the trial, the State had
not produced the actual pipe Janofsky allegedly found on defendant's person.
According to Janofsky, defendant told him the accident happened when
"he swerved to miss an animal." However, Janofsky testified that defendant told
him he was not driving the car at the time of the accident and claimed there were
three other "gentlemen" in the car. Janofsky testified that defendant identified
the driver of the car by three different names – "Michael . . . John[,] and . . .
Robert." An ambulance transported defendant to Cooper Trauma Hospital
where he was treated for a head injury. He was hospitalized for approximately
two weeks.
Defendant did not testify in his own defense. He called his younger
brother and two life-long friends as character witnesses. Defendant based his
trial strategy on the State's alleged inability to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that he was the driver of the car. Defense counsel framed the issue clearly in
her opening statement to the jury:
Now, the State has indicated it has two witnesses.
Neither of those witnesses is going to testify that they
actually saw my client operating a motor vehicle. The
State is not going to be presenting witnesses that say
they saw Mr. Healy in the driver’s seat operating a
motor vehicle. That’s not going to be the testimony.
The testimony is going to be that Mr. Healy exited his
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vehicle outside of the passenger side of the car. I’m
going to address that more thoroughly in my closing.
But I want all of you to remember and keep that in
mind. He’s actually in the passenger side of the car and
he is not seen operating a motor vehicle by any of the
State’s witnesses or any witnesses at this trial. So I
want you to consider that and I will readdress that in
my closing when I’m asking that all of you find Mr.
Healy not guilty. Thank you.
Defense counsel noted the State did not call as a witness the person who
made the first 9-1-1 call to report the accident. She emphasized that when
Janofsky arrived at the scene, he saw defendant seated in the passenger side of
the car. Counsel argued this was corroborated by the video taken by the patrol
car MVR.
We saw on the MVR that it was raining outside. It was
nighttime. It was dark out and what do you see on the
MVR? You see the officer pull up and Mr. Healy is not
seated in the driver seat. You do not see that. You see
that Mr. Healy exits through the passenger seat of the
car and not the driver seat.
And I asked the officer whether or not he put that in his
police report. And no, he didn’t think it was important
to put in his police report that the person who was
alleged to have been driving is found in the passenger
seat of the vehicle.
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Defense counsel also attacked the State's introduction of testimony about
a pipe found on defendant's person, which it characterized as paraphernalia
allegedly used to smoke illicit drugs.
Now, the State made a big deal about bringing up this
pipe. There's a pipe that’s found on Mr. Healy and you
heard testimony that anyone can buy this pipe. You can
just buy it in a store.
He wants you to believe that it's used for paraphernalia,
but there's no allegation of any illegal drugs found.
There’s no smell of marijuana as he had indicated. He
didn't find any marijuana and this is a pipe that can be
bought in a store by anyone. Any citizen off the street
can walk into the store and buy this pipe and perhaps
there is an innocent use for this pipe.
Finally, defense counsel noted that the second 9-1-1 caller, a woman who
did not give her name, "said she was in the house right by the accident." Counsel
argued the police should have made some attempt to locate her residence – "why
not just knock on a couple doors that are in that area right in front of the accident
scene?" Counsel concluded her closing argument by returning to the issue she
stressed in her opening statement:
The State has to prove this beyond a reasonable doubt
that Mr. Healy was driving and they have failed to do
that. If you have any doubt as to whether or not Mr.
Healy was driving, then you must find him not guilty
and that is what I'm requesting of all of you today.
Thank you.
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The jury found defendant guilty of fourth degree driving a motor vehicle
while his driver's license was suspended for two or more DWI convictions.
Against this backdrop, defendant raises the following argument.
POINT I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING
EVIDENCE OF A 9-1-1 CALLER'S OPINION THAT
MR. HEALY MAY HAVE BEEN INEBRIATED AND
THAT POLICE CLAIMED TO HAVE LOCATED
MARIJUANA PARAPHERNALILIA AND AN OPEN
CONTAINER AT THE SCENE OF THE ACCIDENT.
THAT EVIDENCE WAS NOT ONLY IRRELEVANT,
AND THEREFORE NOT PROBATIVE, BUT IT
UNFAIRLY PREJUDICED MR. HEALY. U.S.
CONST. AMENDS. V, VI, AND XIV; N.J. CONST.
ART. I, PAR. 9, 10. (Partially raised below).
Defendant's argument lacks sufficient merit to warrant extensive
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). Here, the State was required
to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that: (1) that defendant knowingly operated
a motor vehicle; and (2) he operated the vehicle while his driver's license was
suspended or revoked for a second or more DWI convictions. N.J.S.A. 2C:40-
26(b). Defendant does not dispute that the State met its burden of proof as to
all the elements of this offense.
"[T]he decision to admit or exclude evidence is one firmly entrusted to the
trial court's discretion." State v. Scott, 229 N.J. 469, 479 (2017) (quoting Estate
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of Hanges v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 202 N.J. 369, 383-84 (2010)). This
court will uphold evidentiary rulings made by a judge in the course of a trial
absent evidence showing an abuse of discretion or a clear error of judgment.
State v. Brown, 170 N.J. 138, 147 (2001). We discern no legal basis to conclude
the evidentiary rulings defendant challenges in this appeal impugned the
reliability of the jury's verdict or undermined the fairness of the trial. The judge
promptly and effectively responded to defense counsel's objections and, where
warranted, provided an appropriate curative instruction to the jury to counteract
any possible prejudice.
Affirmed.
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