STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. STEVEN A. BROWN (16-10-0792, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE, AND 99-06-1217, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) (CONSOLIDATED)
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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 NOS. A-1402-17T3
A-4316-17T3
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
STEVEN A. BROWN, a/k/a
MIKE KNIGHT,
Defendant-Appellant.
___________________________
Submitted December 19, 2019 – Decided February 24, 2020
Before Judges Alvarez and Nugent.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Passaic County, Indictment No. 16-10-0792
in A-1402-17, and Bergen County, Accusation No. 99-
06-1217 in A-4316-17.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant in A-1402-17 (Frank M. Gennaro, Designated
Counsel, on the brief).
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant in A-4316-17 (Monique D. Moyse,
Designated Counsel, on the brief).
Camelia M. Valdes, Passaic County Prosecutor,
attorney for respondent in A-1402-17 (Ali Y. Ozbek,
Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney for
respondent in A-4316-17 (William P. Miller, Assistant
Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
PER CURIAM
Charged in an October 2016, forty-five-count indictment with committing
numerous sexual offenses against three minors during the course of three years,
defendant pleaded guilty to four counts of second-degree sexual assault, one
count of first-degree permitting a child to engage in pornography, and one count
of third-degree violating a special sentence of community supervision for life
("CSL") (collectively, his "current crimes"). The trial court sentenced defendant
to an aggregate twenty-five-year prison term with fifteen years of parole
ineligibility. Defendant filed this appeal, No. A-1402-17 ("first appeal"), on
November 22, 2017. He presents the following arguments:
POINT I: THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY
DENIED DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS
PHYSICAL EVIDENCE.
POINT II: THE TRIAL COURT DENIED
DEFENDANT HIS CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO
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COUNSEL BY PERMITTING DEFENDANT TO
REPRESENT HIMSELF WITHOUT ENGAGING IN
THE INQUIRY REQUIRED TO ESTABLISH THAT
DEFENDANT HAD KNOWINGLY AND
INTELLIGENTLY WAIVED HIS RIGHT TO
COUNSEL (Not Raised Below).
POINT III: THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY
DENIED DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SEVER
COUNTS OF THE INDICTMENT.
POINT IV: THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY
DENIED DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A BILL OF
PARTICULARS.
POINT V: DEFENDANT WAS ARRESTED ON A
CONSTITUTIONALLY DEFECTIVE COMPLAINT
WARRANT.
POINT VI: THE TRIAL COURT'S SUMMARY
DENIAL OF DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO
WITHDRAW HIS GUILTY PLEAS DENIED
DEFENDANT HIS RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS OF
LAW, AND DEFENSE COUNSEL'S STATEMENT
AT THE MOTION HEARING CONSTITUTED
INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL.
POINT VII: DEFENDANT'S SENTENCE IS
EXCESSIVE, AND THE CONSECUTIVE
SENTENCES WERE IMPOSED WITHOUT ANY
STATEMENT OF REASONS BY THE TRIAL
COURT.
In addition to the current crimes, defendant pleaded guilty in 1999 to an
accusation charging him with sexually assaulting a minor, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-
2(c)(4) ("earlier crime"). The court sentenced him to a three-year prison term
A-1402-17T3
3
and later amended the judgment of conviction ("JOC") to include community
supervision for life ("CSL").1 In October 2016, less than three weeks after he
was indicted for his current crimes, defendant filed a petition for post-conviction
relief ("PCR") from the 1999 JOC, challenging, among other things, the
amendment that added CSL. The trial court denied the petition. On May 28,
2018—six months after he filed his first appeal—defendant filed appeal No. A-
4316-17 ("second appeal") from the denial of his PCR petition. He argues:
POINT ONE
MR. BROWN IS ENTITLED TO AN EVIDENTIARY
HEARING ON HIS CLAIM THAT HIS ATTORNEY
RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
COUNSEL BY MISINFORMING HIM OF THE CSL
CONSEQUENCE THAT HE WOULD NOT BE ABLE
TO FREELY MOVE OUT OF STATE, BUT
INSTEAD NEEDED PRIOR APPROVAL FROM A
PAROLE OFFICER.
POINT TWO
THE IMPOSITION OF COMMUNITY
SUPERVISION FOR LIFE MUST BE ELIMINATED
FROM MR. BROWN'S SENTENCE AND ANY
CONVICTIONS FOR VIOLATING CONDITIONS
OF COMMUNITY SUPERVISION FOR LIFE MUST
BE REVERSED.
1
A 2003 amendment to N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4 replaced all references to
"community supervision for life" with "parole supervision for life" (PSL). L.
2003, c. 267, § 2 (eff. Jan. 14, 2004).
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POINT THREE
THIS MATTER MUST BE REMANDED FOR
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF
LAW ON MR. BROWN'S PRO SE CLAIMS.
POINT FOUR
THE PCR COURT ERRONEOUSLY RULED THAT
MR. BROWN'S PETITION WAS TIME BARRED
BECAUSE ANY DELAY IN FILING THE PETITION
WAS DUE TO DEFENDANT'S EXCUSABLE
NEGLECT AND THERE IS A REASONABLE
PROBABILITY THAT IF THE DEFENDANT'S
FACTUAL ASSERTIONS WERE FOUND TO BE
TRUE, ENFORCEMENT OF THE TIME BAR
WOULD RESULT IN A FUNDAMENTAL
INJUSTICE.
Because defendant's arguments on his second appeal overlap his
arguments on the first appeal, we consolidate the appeals for purposes of this
opinion. Finding no merit in any of defendant's arguments, we affirm.
I.
A.
In October 2016, a Passaic County grand jury charged defendant in a
superseding forty-five count indictment with sixteen counts of second-degree
sexual assault, eleven counts of second-degree endangering the welfare of a
child, six counts of third-degree endangering the welfare of a child, two counts
of fourth-degree endangering the welfare of a child, seven counts of fourth-
degree criminal sexual contact, two counts of fourth-degree violations of
A-1402-17T3
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community supervision for life, and one count of third-degree tampering with a
witness. The indictment alleged defendant perpetrated the sexual assault,
endangering, and sexual contact offenses against three minors.
In addition to some motions not relevant to this appeal, defendant filed
four motions relevant to this appeal. They were motions to suppress evidence,
for a bill of particulars, for severance, and to withdraw his plea. The court
granted the severance motion in part and denied the others.
Following disposition of the motions, defendant and the State struck a plea
bargain. Defendant pleaded guilty to six counts of the indictment: counts two,
twenty-four, and thirty-five for the second-degree sexual assault of each victim;
count eighteen for another second-degree sexual assault of one of the victims;
count forty, second-degree endangering, incorrectly designated a first-degree
offense on the original JOC; and count forty-three, fourth-degree violation of
CSL, incorrectly designated as a third-degree offense on the original JOC. He
conditioned his plea on the right to appeal all the motions the court had denied.
For the sexual assault of each victim alleged in counts two, twenty-four
and thirty-five, the court sentenced defendant to two consecutive prison terms
of ten years with five years of parole ineligibility, and a third consecutive term
of five years with five years of parole ineligibility. For the second-degree sexual
A-1402-17T3
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assault charged in count eighteen, the court sentenced defendant to a concurrent
prison term of ten years subject to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43 -
7.2 (NERA). For second-degree endangering by permitting a child to engage in
pornography, charged in count forty but incorrectly designated as a first-degree
offense on the original JOC, the court sentenced defendant to a concurrent ten-
year prison term. Last, for violating CSL, charged in count forty-three, the court
sentenced defendant to a concurrent prison term of eighteen months.
The court also sentenced defendant to PSL, ordered him to comply with
the registration requirements of Megan's Law, N.J.S.A. 2C:7-2, and imposed
required fines, penalties, and assessments.
The trial court amended the JOC four times to remedy omissions and
errors in the first indictment. Defendant challenges none of the amendments on
this appeal.
Less than three weeks after the 2016 indictment for his current crimes was
filed, defendant filed his PCR petition, alleging ineffective assistance from the
attorney who represented him in 1999. The trial court denied the PCR petition,
and defendant filed his second appeal.
A-1402-17T3
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B.
The following facts appear in the records of the accusation, defendant's
plea, defendant's sentence, and defendant's release from prison with respect to
the earlier crime; and the record of defendant's suppression motion with respe ct
to the current crimes. When he committed his current crimes, defendant was on
CSL for his earlier crime. The current crimes came to light when parole officers
supervising his CSL entered and searched his residence without a warrant. We
thus begin with the earlier crime.
In 1999, defendant pleaded guilty to the earlier crime, sexually assaulting
a child between the ages of thirteen and sixteen. During the plea hearing,
defendant testified he had reviewed the plea forms with his attorney and
voluntarily signed them. The plea forms included supplemental questions for
certain sexual offenses, one of which asked if he understood "that if you are
pleading guilty to . . . sexual assault . . . the Court, in addition to any other
sentence, will impose a special sentence of [CSL]?" Defendant circled "yes."
Defendant testified he understood the terms of his plea agreement,
including Megan's Law's registration and reporting requirements, N.J.S.A. 2C:7-
2. Defendant answered "yes" when the court asked if he understood that
"because of the nature of the charge . . . [the court] would have to impose a
A-1402-17T3
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special sentence of [CSL.]" The court further informed defendant that if he
violated a condition of CSL he could be charged with a fourth-degree crime.
The court explained to defendant that he would be required to submit to a
physical and psychological examination at the Adult Diagnostic and Treatment
Center at Avenel (ADTC) "to determine if your conduct . . . in committing the
offense is characterized by a pattern repetitive and compulsive behavior." After
explaining the consequences of such a finding, the court informed defendant that
"you'll be able to challenge those findings . . . in a hearing and that at the hearing
you'll have the right to have your attorney question the witnesses against you
and present evidence of your own on your own[.]" Defendant said he
understood. The court also explained the consequences of defendant being
sentenced to "Avenel."
The court sentenced defendant to a three-year prison term. During the
sentencing proceeding, the court did not mention the registration requirements
of Megan's Law or CSL. Although no one expressly stated defendant's ADTC
evaluation did not find his conduct had been characterized by a pattern of
repetitive and compulsive behavior, when she addressed the court, defense
counsel said she had reviewed the ADTC report and noted defendant was "not a
candidate for sentencing under the sex offender's act[.]" Defense counsel
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repeated numerous times that the "Adult Diagnostic Center [has] concluded that
[defendant] is eligible for probation, [and] will be a good probationary candidate
with counseling." The court made no finding that defendant's conduct had been
characterized by a pattern of repetitive and compulsive behavior.
The court sentenced defendant on October 29, 1999. On the same date,
the court filed the JOC. There is no reference to Megan's Law or its
requirements on the JOC, nor is there any reference to CSL. When the court
prepared the JOC, it did not check the box next to the pre-printed line, "You are
hereby sentenced to community supervision for life." The court also left blank
the box next to the pre-printed line, "The court finds that your conduct was
characterized by a pattern of repetitive and compulsive behavior." The JOC
states defendant was sentenced as follows: "The defendant is sentenced to
[three] years N.J.S.P. with a condition of no contact with the victim."
The JOC was amended twice. On December 10, 1999, two months after
it was prepared and filed, the JOC was amended to include defendant's
mandatory compliance with Megan's Law's requirements. This amendment is
not challenged on these appeals. On August 30, 2000, ten months after it was
prepared and filed, the JOC was amended again. On the second amended JOC,
the box next to the pre-printed line, "You are hereby sentenced to community
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supervision for life," is checked. Additionally, the second amended JOC states:
"The defendant is sentenced to [three] years N.J.S.P. with a condition of no
contact with the victim. Pursuant to [N.J.S.A.] 2C:43-6.4, the defendant is
sentenced to community supervision for life."
Defendant claims, and the State does not dispute, that he was in jail when
the JOC was amended, received no notice of the court's intention to amend the
JOC, and received no notice the JOC had been amended.
Defendant was released in May 2001. Before being released, he signed a
document containing the conditions for CSL. The pertinent provisions are:
A. I understand that pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6.4
my sentence includes a special sentence of community
supervision for life. I understand that during the
service of the special sentence of community
supervision for life I shall be under the supervision of
the Division of Parole of the Department of Corrections
and shall be subject to the following general conditions
as established by the State Parole Board:
....
18. I am to permit the assigned parole officer to
visit me at any time at home or elsewhere and
permit confiscation of any contraband observed
in plain view by the parole officer.
....
B. I understand that if the victim(s) of an offense
committed by me is a minor, I shall, in addition to the
A-1402-17T3
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conditions specified in A above, be subject to the
following conditions:
....
3. I am to refrain from residing with any minor
without the prior approval of the assigned parole
officer.
....
E. I understand that if the sentencing court had
determined that my conduct was characterized by a
pattern of repetitive and compulsive behavior . . . I
shall, in addition to the conditions specified in A, B, C
and D above, be subject to the following conditions:
....
2. I am to submit to a search conducted by the
assigned parole officer, without a warrant, of my
person, place of residency, vehicle or other
personal property at any time the assigned parole
officer has a reasonable or articulable basis to
believe that the search will produce contraband
or evidence that a condition [of] supervision has
been violated, is being violated or is about to be
violated and permit the confiscation of any
contraband.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS:
....
2. I am to refrain from possession or use of a
computer with Internet access without the prior
approval of the District Parole Supervisor. If use of a
computer with Internet access is approved by the
A-1402-17T3
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District Parole Supervisor, I am prohibited from
accessing any sexually oriented material. I am to
maintain a daily log of all addresses accessed through a
computer other than for authorized employment, and
make this log available to my assigned parole officer.
If use of a computer with Internet access is permitted
by the District Parole Supervisor, I agree to install on a
computer, at my expense, one or more hardware or
software systems [that] monitor computer use, if such
hardware or software system is determined to be
necessary by the District Parole Supervisor.
On April 30, 2012, parole officer Melissa Cantinieri visited defendant.
She had received information from a confidential source that young-looking
males had repeatedly entered defendant's residence. During her visit, Officer
Cantinieri observed mail addressed to another person. Defendant was wearing
a fencing tee shirt from a high school with the same person's name on the back.
The officer also observed duffel bags with the words "Camp [Veritas]" on them,
which she knew was a camp for minors. Additionally, she observed a vehicle,
which defendant had not reported to any parole officer. Defendant claimed the
person to whom the mail was addressed was not a minor and was not living
there. Rather, the person was an old friend who needed to use the address.
The officer's further investigation revealed defendant owned the residence
and the vehicle. In addition, the person who received mail at defendant's address
turned out to be a student at the high school identified on the fencing tee shirt
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defendant was wearing. The student listed defendant's house as his residence.
The student's mother worked at Camp Veritas. The circumstances now known
to Officer Cantinieri led her to believe defendant had committed numerous
violations of his CSL conditions.
On May 2, 2012, defendant reported to the parole office. During the
meeting, defendant's cellular phone rang and officers discovered his phone had
internet capability. Upon learning defendant had access to the internet, the
parole officers notified their supervisor, who authorized them to search
defendant's house. Officer Cantinieri told defendant they were going to search
his home, and in response, defendant told them the high school student was at
his residence.
When the officers arrived at defendant's house, the high school student
answered the door and admitted them. He said he did not live there and nothing
in the house belonged to him. The officers searched the home and seized
evidence, including computers, flash drives, and an HP Mini Notebook. These
items were found to contain, among an abundance of other evidence, evidence
defendant had accessed pornographic web sites, conversed with a victim over
the internet, and engaged in sex with two victims.
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Two victims gave statements to police. Defendant met one online. Both
admitted having sexual relations with defendant. Defendant ultimately pleaded
guilty to sexually assaulting these and a third victim.
II.
A.
We begin with the issues raised by defendant on his first appeal. In his
first argument point, he contends the trial court erred by denying his suppression
motion. The trial court denied the motion on two grounds: the parole officers
conducted a lawful warrantless search of defendant's home based on their
reasonable suspicion he had violated the terms and conditions of his parole; and
the evidence they seized fell within the warrant requirement's plain view
exception.
On appeal, defendant argues the trial court erred because his 1999
sentence was unlawful, and because parole officers did not have a reasonable
suspicion he had violated the conditions of his parole. Concerning his first
argument, which is not a model of clarity, he appears to attack only the finding
in the twice-amended 1999 JOC that his conduct was characterized by repetitive
and compulsive behavior, not the imposition of CSL. But the record does not
A-1402-17T3
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support defendant's claim that the trial court found repetitive and compulsive
behavior.
During argument on his suppression motion, defense counsel explained:
Judge, my client knows that he's on [CSL] from an
adjudication of a plea in Bergen County for second
degree sexual assault . . . . (emphasis added). He
received a five three, then, was on parole. And was
assigned a [CSL] long upon release from custody.
The position my client has maintained and what
we are talking about . . . is that when my client signed
this form he was not found, according to [JOCs] by . . .
the [j]udge that imposed the sentence, to be repetitive
and compulsive. And if he was found that on the CSL
PSL forms that the[y] generate to give to the defendants
when they're released it, specifically, has to be
enumerated so that it will give the parole authorities an
ability to do a search of his residence without a warrant.
....
So the . . . input of the motion since I've been
involved is that if my client was not found to be
repetitive or compulsive then, therefore, the Parole
Board, the parole officers for the CSL have to, then, do
normal cause of events.
On appeal, defendant again attacks the trial court's alleged finding
concerning repetitive and compulsive behavior. He cites the following section
of the form he signed when released from prison in 2001:
E. I understand that if the sentencing court had
determined that my conduct was characterized by a
A-1402-17T3
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pattern of repetitive and compulsive behavior . . . I
shall, in addition to the conditions specified in A, B, C
and D above, be subject to the following conditions:
....
2. I am to submit to a search conducted by the
assigned parole officer, without a warrant, of my
person, place of residency, vehicle or other
personal property at any time the assigned parole
officer has a reasonable or articulable basis to
believe that the search will produce contraband
or evidence that a condition [of] supervision has
been violated, is being violated or is about to be
violated and permit the confiscation of any
contraband.
He argues that in May 2001, when he signed the form with the conditions
of CSL, he "had no reason to believe that the provisions of paragraph E 2
. . . were applicable to him because the [JOC] he had seen did not include a
finding that he was repetitive and compulsive." Made in his absence, this
finding violated his constitutional right to be present at sentencing.
Consequently, because he was not present for the amended sentence, "he submits
that the sentence imposed in the August 30, 2000 [amended] judgment was
illegal."
For several reasons, we are unpersuaded by defendant's first argument.
First, it does not appear from the record that in August 2000, when the trial court
amended for the second time the JOC for defendant's earlier crime, the court
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either found defendant's conduct marked by a pattern of repetitive and
compulsive behavior or indicated such a finding on the second amended JOC.
Such a finding presumably would have been based on a report from the ADTC.
Defense counsel's remarks at sentencing, with which the court apparently agreed
based on the sentence, make clear no such finding was made during defendant's
evaluations at the ADTC. In the absence of a medical report or opinion to
support such a finding, the trial court could not make it.
Next, as we have indicated, the copy of the second amended JOC
concerning the earlier crime, submitted with defendant's PCR appeal, contains
no indication the trial court made a finding that defendant's conduct had been
characterized by repetitive and compulsive behavior. Another copy of the same
amended JOC, submitted with defendant's direct appeal, is partly illegible. This
is the document defendant cites in support of his assertion the trial court made
such a finding. That assertion is not fairly supported by the partially illegible
copy of the relevant JOC defendant has submitted with his appeal.
Consequently, we cannot conclude there is a valid basis for defendant's
argument.
More important, the parole officers' search of defendant's home was both
reasonable and lawful, regardless of whether the trial court found his earlier
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crime was characterized by repetitive and compulsive behavior. Even without
such a finding, the parole officers were authorized to search his home if they
had a reasonable suspicion defendant violated the terms of his CSL. The
Administrative Code authorizes such a search when parole officers have "a
reasonable articulable suspicion to believe that evidence of a violation of a
condition of parole would be found in the residence or contraband which
includes any item that the parolee cannot possess under the conditions of parole
is located in the residence." N.J.A.C. 10A:72-6.32; State v. Maples, 346 N.J.
Super. 408, 413-16 (App. Div. 2002).
"'[R]easonable suspicion' requires specific and articulable facts sufficient
to justify a belief that the conditions of parole have been violated." Maples, 346
N.J. Super. at 414. Here, the parole officers had reasonable suspicion, if not
probable cause. They found in defendant's residence mail addressed to a person
they learned was a high school student. Their investigation disclosed the high
school student listed defendant's residence as his address. When they told
defendant they intended to search his home, he said the high school student was
there. The parole officers had specific and articulable facts defendant was
residing with a minor without prior approval of his parole officer, a violation of
2
Formerly N.J.A.C. 10A:26-6.3(a).
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his CSL conditions. Moreover, the officers had seen firsthand defendant had a
phone with Internet access.
Defendant does not dispute the trial court's finding the parole officers
seized evidence in plain view once inside his home. Rather, he contends, "[b]ut
for the illegal sentence of CSL, . . . [d]efendant would not have been subject to
parole supervision in 2012, thus the officers were not legally in position when
they made their observations, and the plain view exception is inapplicable."
Having rejected defendant's argument that his sentence was illegal, we reject
this argument as well.
For completeness, and because defendant's brief is in part ambiguous, we
address the trial court's amendment of the JOC to add CSL, assuming the trial
court did only that and made no finding that defendant's conduct had been
marked by repetitive and compulsive behavior. The amendment was not
unlawful.
Defendant's 1999 sentence for his earlier crime was illegal because it did
not include CSL. State v. Schubert, 212 N.J. 295, 309 (2012). "A motion may
be filed and an order may be entered at any time . . . correcting a sentence not
authorized by law . . . ." R. 3:21-10(b). Of course, "the 'at any time' phrase 'was
not designed to authorize an enlargement of the punishment after the sentence
A-1402-17T3
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imposed had been satisfied and the defendant discharged.'" Id. at 309 (quoting
State v. Laird, 25 N.J. 298, 307 (1957)). Here, however, the JOC was amended
not only before defendant had completed his sentence, but before he was
released from custody. Under those circumstances, the amendment was proper.
That is not to say a defendant need not be given notice of the court's intent
to amend the JOC. Here, however, defendant was informed at his plea hearing,
when he reviewed the plea forms and when the court explained the consequences
of his plea, that he would be subject to CSL. When released from prison,
defendant knew he had been sentenced to CSL because he signed the written
forms which informed him of CSL conditions, enumerated under the heading,
"COMMUNITY SUPERVISION FOR LIFE." Thus, defendant knew in 2001,
if not before, that he had been sentenced to community supervision for life, but
did not challenge the correction for nearly fifteen years, until after he was
indicated for the current offenses. Perhaps most significantly, even had
defendant appeared in court in response to a notice the court intended to amend
the JOC to add CSL, his appearance would not have changed the outcome, as
the imposition of CSL was mandatory.
In summary, we reject defendant's argument that his suppression motion
should have been granted. His argument is premised on what appears to be a
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faulty assumption, namely, the trial court violated his right to due process by
finding the earlier 1999 sex offense had been characterized by repetitive and
compulsive behavior without providing him an opportunity to be heard
concerning such a finding. The record does not support that such a finding was
made. Notwithstanding whether such a finding had been made, the JOC was
properly amended to add CSL. Parole officers lawfully entered defendant's
house and searched it based on a reasonable, articulable suspicion defendant had
violated multiple conditions of CSL.
B.
Except for the following comments, defendant's second through fourth
arguments—defendant was improperly permitted to represent himself, the trial
court improperly denied defendant's motions to sever and for a bill of
particulars, and he was arrested on a constitutionally defective warrant—are
without sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
Defendant never represented himself. On October 7, 2016, defendant and
his counsel appeared in court for his arraignment on the superseding indictment.
Defendant informed the court he had "put in a motion that I sent to you for
ineffective assistance of counsel at pretrial." Defendant asked for an evidentiary
hearing. He claimed his attorney had threatened him during a visit at the county
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jail. After admonishing defendant about his delaying tactics, the court scheduled
several motions defendant had filed pro se for disposition on October 31.
The court denied defendant's motion for "ineffective assistance of
counsel," which defendant has not challenged on appeal. The court did,
however, permit defendant to argue his pro se motions. During the time
defendant did so, his counsel was present and often supplemented defendant's
arguments. The motions included one for severance and one for a bill of
particulars.
The trial court determined that when defendant argued his pro se motions,
his attorney was also present, and the situation was "hybrid representation."
Determinations for hybrid representation are "left to the sound discretion of the
trial judge which shall not be disturbed on appeal." State v. McCleary, 149 N.J.
Super. 77, 80 (App. Div. 1977).
Moreover, defendant suffered no prejudice in consequence of arguing his
motions partially by himself, partially with counsel. His pro se motions border
on frivolity. For example, he argued the bill of particulars was needed to specify
a more precise time frame for his alleged offenses so he could properly prepare
a defense. However, charges of sexual abuse against minors need not be as
exacting when specifying the dates of abuse. State v. Salter, 425 N.J. Super.
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504, 514 (App. Div. 2012); State v. Davis, 6 N.J. Super. 162, 163-64 (App. Div.
1950). In addition, in this case, defendant's acts were in large part preserved on
video and electronic storage devices that defendant possessed, and some of the
crimes took place in his household. The video evidence of these acts was time-
stamped.
Similarly, there is no merit to defendant's argument that he was unduly
prejudiced by the trial court's denial of his motion to sever the crimes against
the three victims. Rule 3:7-6 permits joinder of offenses in an indictment if the
offenses are of the same or similar character, based on the same act or
transaction, or two or more acts or transactions are connected together or are
part of a common plan or scheme. As the trial court determined, a common
thread ran through defendant's conduct in accessing the internet in violation of
his CSL, using a fictitious name, and luring the victims to his residence where
he engaged in sexual acts with them. The court did not abuse its discretion in
denying defendant's severance motion.
Even if the court did abuse its discretion, which we do not find, defendant
is not entitled to relief. The evidence of defendant's guilt is overwhelming. It
includes video evidence, which establishes beyond any doubt defendant engaged
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in the sexual crimes for which he was accused. The error was harmless. See
State v. Tillery, 238 N.J. 293, 319-21 (2019).
Defendant's claim he was arrested on a constitutionally defective
complaint-warrant because it contained no finding of probable cause is also
without merit. N.J.S.A. 30:4-123.62(a)(1) authorizes a representative
designated by the chairman of the State Parole Board to issue an arrest warrant
for the parolee if his parole officer has probable cause to believe he violated a
condition of parole. Here, defendant violated conditions of parole, including
accessing the internet and living with a minor. The complaint-warrant recited
these facts. Probable cause existed to arrest defendant. More importantly,
defendant does not allege what evidence, if any, was seized after the complaint-
warrant was issued or as a result of it.
C.
Defendant challenges the denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea.
He has two contentions. First, he contends he did not knowingly and voluntarily
plead guilty, a fact the trial court overlooked by failing to analyze his plea under
the criteria set forth in State v. Slater, 198 N.J. 145, 157-58 (2009). Second, he
argues his counsel ineffectively represented him by making statements to the
court that undermined his motion.
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Before being sentenced, defendant filed a pro se motion to withdraw his
plea. He claimed the plea was made involuntarily and without understanding of
the nature of the charges; defense counsel failed to advise on the substance of
the charge; defense counsel misinformed the defendant as to material facts of
the plea; defendant was forced to plea on certain counts; defendant was on
medication while entering his plea; it would be a manifest injustice to sustain
the plea; and, ultimately, defendant is innocent of the charges.
Defense counsel told the court that he knew nothing about this motion.
He explained, "If you recall his plea[,] I purposely had my client initial every
response . . . Mr. Brown knew fully what he was doing."
The prosecution added:
[Mr. Brown has] been in jail, Judge, since 2013. This
has been a long, long process. On the very eve of trial
he was the one that begged for a guilty plea in front of
Judge Caposela. It's all on the record. So[,] I want to
remind him of that.
....
[H]e would be looking to go to trial. . . . [S]o he's
looking to go back to the point in time where we were
ready to pick a jury, Your Honor was ready to pick a
jury with us. . . . [Defense counsel] and I were ready to
pick a jury and he's the one that begged for a plea. So[,]
I'm not sure if he fully understands the process that he's
asking to go back to that point."
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The court denied defendant's motion, explaining:
[T]his case is rife, rife with delays and adjournment
requests by the defendant. He has been consistently
attempting to either go to trial and, then, when you get
ready for trial he changes his mind. He wants his
attorney, doesn't want his attorney, et cetera . . . .
Unfortunately for this defendant I have a vivid
recollection of this plea which I took great pains to
make sure that it went through in an orderly fashion and
voluntarily and without any force or coercion.
There is no doubt in my mind that this defendant knew
exactly . . . what he was pleading to.
....
I'm not going to permit this defendant to take his plea
back.
Defendant's argument that his plea was involuntary is contradicted by the
extensive colloquy that occurred when plaintiff entered the plea. During the
plea colloquy, defendant acknowledged that he was pleading guilty because he
was guilty of the charges to which he was pleading. He provided an adequate
factual basis for each charge, and he does not contend that the factual basis was
inadequate. Defendant also acknowledged he had sufficient time to review the
case with his attorney, his attorney answered all his questions, and he was
satisfied with the attorney's representation of him.
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Defendant told the court he had gone through school to college. He not
only reviewed the plea form with his attorney, but read each question himself,
understood it, provided the answers to each question, and then initialed his
answer.
In response to a question by the court, defendant denied he was under the
influence of drugs or alcohol. He did say he was taking prescription medication,
which he characterized as high blood pressure pills. His attorney added that
"[t]here's a tranquilizer or something like that." Defendant confirmed to the
court that the medication was not affecting his ability to comprehend the plea
and the questions.
Moreover, defendant did not satisfy the criteria set forth in State v. Slater,
198 N.J. 145 (2009), as relevant to such a motion:
When evaluating a defendant's motion to withdraw a
plea, a trial court must consider four factors: "(1)
whether the defendant has asserted a colorable claim of
innocence; (2) the nature and strength of
defendant's reasons for withdrawal; (3) the existence of
a plea bargain; and (4) whether the withdrawal would
result in unfair prejudice to the State or unfair
advantage to the accused."
[Id. at 157-58 (citing United States v. Jones, 336 F.3d
245, 252 (3d Cir. 2002)).]
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Defendant had no colorable claim of innocence. The trial court's
determination that defendant's reason for withdrawing the plea was to further
delay the case is fully supported by the evidence.
D.
Last, defendant claims his sentence is excessive. When a trial court has
followed the sentencing guidelines, and its findings of aggravating and
mitigating factors are supported by the record, we will only reverse if the
sentence "shock[s] the judicial conscience" in light of the particular facts of the
case. State v. Roth, 95 N.J. 334, 364-65 (1984). Here, the trial court followed
the sentencing guidelines and its findings of aggravating and mitigating factors
are supported by the record. Moreover, defendant is a serial pedophile whose
conduct was not deterred by his serving a special sentence of community
supervision for life for his previous sexual assault of a minor. The sentence does
not shock the conscience. Defendant's arguments to the contrary are without
sufficient merit to warrant further discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
III.
We next address defendant's appeal from the order denying his PCR petition.
Generally, a first PCR petition must be filed no more than five years after the date
of entry of the JOC being challenged. R. 3:22-12(a)(1). There are several
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exceptions. For example, an exception is made in those instances when the delay is
due to a defendant's excusable neglect and "there is a reasonable probability that if
the defendant's factual assertions [are] found to be true enforcement of the time bar
[will] result in a fundamental injustice. R. 3:22-12(a)(1)(A). Other exceptions occur
when a defendant asserts a newly recognized constitutional right that is retroactive
or establishes that the factual predicate for the petition could not have been
discovered earlier through the exercise of reasonable diligence. R. 3:22-12(a)(2)(B).
Here, defendant argues the time bar does not apply to him because his late
filing was due to excusable neglect. Specifically, he alleges he established excusable
neglect because he did not realize the effects of the ineffectiveness of his plea
counsel until 2015 when he, defendant, was accused of violating CSL. He argues
that it was only then "he learned of the amendment to his JOC to include CSL. He
emphasizes he was not present when the amendment occurred.
We reject this argument for the same reasons we rejected it in the context of
defendant's argument on direct appeal, that is, the trial court erroneously denied his
motion to suppress the evidence seized from his residence by parole officers.
Moreover, his argument on this appeal contradicts that of his previous appeal,
wherein he acknowledged that he became aware in 2001 when released from prison
that he had been sentenced to a special sentence of CSL.
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Moreover, in this appeal, defendant does not specify how his counsel was
ineffective. Counsel's conclusory allegations do not establish a prima facie case of
ineffective assistance entitling him to a hearing. State v. Cummings, 321 N.J. Super.
154, 170 (App. Div. 1999).
Having determined that defendant's PCR petition is time barred, we need not
address his remaining arguments.
We affirm defendant's conviction and sentence as well as the order denying
his PCR petition.
Affirmed.
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