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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 th e
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-0560-19T4
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ROBERT T. DAKAKE,
Defendant-Respondent.
_________________________
Argued telephonically April 1, 2020 —
Decided April 30, 2020
Before Judges Whipple and Mawla.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Essex County, Indictment No 19-05-1216.
Frank J. Ducoat, Special Deputy Attorney
General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
for appellant (Theodore N. Stephens II, Acting Essex
County Prosecutor, attorney; Frank J. Ducoat, of
counsel and on the briefs).
Alissa D. Hascup argued the cause for respondent
(Alissa D. Hascup, attorney; Jeff Edward Thakker, of
counsel; Alissa D. Hascup, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
The State appeals from a September 26, 2019 order admitting defendant
into the Essex County pretrial intervention program (PTI). We affirm.
In 2019, defendant was arrested, charged, and indicted for third-degree
possession of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS), N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a),
and third-degree possession of CDS with intent to distribute, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-
5(b)(13), after Cedar Grove police were alerted to a shipment of illegal narcotics
destined for an Andrew Picarelli at a UPS store. Police confirmed the UPS
postal box was registered to Picarelli, who was employed at Gold's Gym in
Totowa. They opened the package and confirmed it contained illegal anabolic
steroids and testosterone in powder form, packaged in clear plastic bags and
packed within two black plastic bags marked creatine monohydrate. Police
photographed the narcotics before repackaging and placing them back into the
postal box.
The next day UPS notified Picarelli the package arrived and police
observed defendant enter the UPS store, open Picarelli's box, retrieve the
package receipt, and hand it to the store's owner who then gave defendant the
package. Police confronted defendant, ordered him to surrender the package,
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and he complied. When asked if he knew why police stopped him, defendant
volunteered it was because of illegal steroids in the package.
A search incident to defendant's arrest revealed $5100 in cash, which was
seized as suspected narcotics proceeds. Police Mirandized defendant, who
agreed to answer questions. He then admitted he placed the order for the steroids
and testosterone and was selling the substances for profit. He stated the cash
was from his disability income and savings, not the sale of steroids.
In May 2019, the Essex County Probation Department recommended
defendant's admission into PTI. However, the prosecutor rejected the
application in a June 2019 letter setting forth her reasoning. Nearly a month
later, defense counsel requested the State reconsider and appealed the denial to
the Law Division.
The facts presented to the judge revealed defendant was forty-six years
old with no prior criminal history. Defendant dropped out of high school in
eleventh grade to work for his father's business and then obtained a GED. He
maintained full-time employment as a unionized iron worker, working towards
becoming a journeyman's book. Defendant paid alimony and child support to
his wife and two children from a prior marriage.
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Defendant began using anabolic steroids in 2007. He was diagnosed with
multiple mental health disorders, including severe substance abuse disorder,
body dysmorphia, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, and generalized anxiety. In 2017, the steroid use caused him to suffer
an aortic aneurysm, which required an emergent cardiac procedure. In 2018,
defendant had shoulder surgery, was unable to return to work, and received
disability benefits. He then began purchasing powdered steroids online from an
overseas source, which he sold to another individual, who would pay him in the
form of money and injectable steroids for defendant's own use.
Defendant also revealed he commenced psychological therapy less than
two weeks after his arrest to address his mental health and addiction issues and
was making progress. The evidence, which included a report from his treating
therapist, explained he suffered emotional and physical abuse by his father
during his childhood and turned to bodybuilding as a means of gaining his
father's approval, and the bodybuilding led to the steroid abuse, body
dysmorphia, the need for surgeries, and subsequent cycle of addiction.
Pursuant to these facts, the prosecutor's PTI rejection letter concluded
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12(e) factors one, two, seven, fourteen, and seventeen
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outweighed factors three, nine, thirteen, and sixteen, which favored defendant's
admission to PTI.1 The prosecutor concluded as follows:
1. The N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12(e)factors are as follows:
(1) The nature of the offense;
(2) The facts of the case;
(3) The motivation and age of the defendant;
(4) The desire of the complainant or victim to forego
prosecution;
(5) The existence of personal problems and character
traits which may be related to the applicant's crime and
for which services are unavailable within the criminal
justice system, or which may be provided more
effectively through supervisory treatment and the
probability that the causes of criminal behavior can be
controlled by proper treatment;
(6) The likelihood that the applicant's crime is related
to a condition or situation that would be conducive to
change through his participation in supervisory
treatment;
(7) The needs and interests of the victim and society;
(8) The extent to which the applicant's crime constitutes
part of a continuing pattern of anti-social behavior;
(9) The applicant's record of criminal and penal
violations and the extent to which he may present a
substantial danger to others;
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Despite some limited positive factors, PTI is not the
appropriate remedy where the judgment of conviction
is for this serious drug offense.
(10) Whether or not the crime is of an assaultive or
violent nature, whether in the criminal act itself or in
the possible injurious consequences of such behavior;
(11) Consideration of whether or not prosecution would
exacerbate the social problem that led to the applicant’s
criminal act;
(12) The history of the use of physical violence toward
others;
(13) Any involvement of the applicant with organized
crime;
(14) Whether or not the crime is of such a nature that
the value of supervisory treatment would be
outweighed by the public need for prosecution;
(15) Whether or not the applicant's involvement with
other people in the crime charged or in other crime is
such that the interest of the State would be best served
by processing his case through traditional criminal
justice system procedures;
(16) Whether or not the applicant's participation in
pretrial intervention will adversely affect the
prosecution of codefendants; and
(17) Whether or not the harm done to society by
abandoning criminal prosecution would outweigh the
benefits to society from channeling an offender into a
supervisory treatment program.
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Be assured that the State has already considered
defendant's age, employment history, family
obligations, and absence of any prior criminal
history. . . . [D]efendant does possess some positive
qualities, including, primarily the absence of any prior
criminal record of any kind. Nonetheless, these
admirable qualities did not prevent him from diving
head first into illegal narcotics possession and
distribution.
On defendant's appeal to the Law Division, the prosecutor noted defendant
withheld information from the probation department in the initial PTI
application related to his physical maladies and addiction to steroids, and argued
his purpose was to deflect responsibility for his actions.
Judge Arthur J. Batista heard the appeal and issued a comprehensive
thirteen-page written decision overruling the denial of PTI. He concluded the
State's decision was clear error, did not consider the applicable factors, and
deviated from the purpose of PTI.
The judge found additional factors applied, namely, five, six, eight, and
twelve, which favored PTI. He concluded factor five applied because the
supervisory treatment offered by PTI, as opposed to a criminal prosecution,
would benefit defendant in addressing his addiction, mental health and physical
disorders, and employment issues. He found factor six applicable because
defendant made progress in treatment. He concluded factors eight and twelve
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were applicable because defendant had no criminal history and committed a non-
violent offense.
The judge also found the State clearly misapplied mitigating factor three
because it did not consider defendant's motives, which were to support a twenty-
year addiction to anabolic steroids, caused by mental and physical health issues,
which left him struggling to meet his financial obligations. The judge rejected
the State's rationale that defendant withheld his history of trauma and addiction
to "shirk responsibility." To the contrary, the judge explained
[d]efendant in this case supplied information to the
prosecutor that would allow them to consider what the
statute asks the prosecutor to consider when reviewing
a PTI application. To then use this information against
the [d]efendant to claim that he is not accepting
responsibility or trying to avoid blame for his action is
contrary to the purposes and functions of the PTI
program.
On this appeal, the State raises the following points:
POINT I
THE JUDGE BELOW SUBSTITUTED HIS
JUDGMENT FOR THE PROSECUTOR'S WHEN HE
ADMITTED DEFENDANT INTO THE PTI
PROGRAM OVER THE STATE'S OBJECTION.
A. PTI & Standard of Review.
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B. The Prosecutor's Thorough Consideration,
And Ultimate Rejection, Of Defendant's PTI
Application.
i. The first rejection letter.
ii. The second rejection letter.
C. The Law Division's Decision Admitting
Defendant Into PTI.
D. The Judge Overstepped His Bounds And
Substituted His Judgment For The Prosecutor's
When He Admitted Defendant Into The PTI
Program Over Her Objection.
The decision to admit a defendant to PTI is a "'quintessentially
prosecutorial function.'" State v. Roseman, 221 N.J. 611, 624 (2015) (quoting
State v. Wallace, 146 N.J. 576, 582 (1996)). Thus, the scope of judicial review
of a prosecutor's determination is severely limited. State v. Nwobu, 139 N.J.
236, 246 (1995); State v. Hermann, 80 N.J. 122, 127-28 (1979). Prosecutors
have wide latitude in deciding whom to divert into the PTI program and whom
to prosecute. Nwobu, 139 N.J. at 246. "Reviewing courts must accord the
prosecutor 'extreme deference.'" State v. Waters, 439 N.J. Super. 215, 225-26
(App. Div. 2015) (quoting Nwobu, 139 N.J. at 246). "We must apply the same
standard as the trial court. Therefore, we review the [trial court's ruling] of the
prosecutor's decision de novo." Id. at 226.
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A reviewing court may order a defendant into PTI over a prosecutor's
objection only if the defendant "'clearly and convincingly establish[es] that the
prosecutor's refusal to sanction admission into the program was based on a
patent and gross abuse of . . . discretion . . . .'" Wallace, 146 N.J. at 582 (second
alteration in original) (quoting State v. Leonardis, 73 N.J. 360, 382 (1977)). An
abuse of discretion is "manifest if defendant can show that a prosecutorial veto
(a) was not premised upon a consideration of all relevant factors, (b) was based
upon a consideration of irrelevant or inappropriate factors, or (c) amounted to a
clear error in judgment." Wallace, 146 N.J. at 583 (quoting State v. Bender, 80
N.J. 84, 93 (1979)). "In order for such an abuse of discretion to rise to the level
of 'patent and gross,' it must further be shown that the prosecutorial error
complained of will clearly subvert the goals underlying [PTI]." Bender, 80 N.J.
at 93.
Having reviewed the record and considered the State's arguments, we
affirm for the reasons expressed in Judge Batista's opinion. Defendant presented
circumstances, which clearly warranted admission to PTI on these third-degree
charges. The information defendant allegedly withheld only supported his
admission to PTI and the State's argument to the contrary is unpersuasive. We
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agree with the judge's conclusion the decision to prosecute in this case met the
"clear error in judgment" standard and ignored the purpose of PTI.
Affirmed.
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