IN THE MATTER OF THE APPEAL OF THE DENIAL OF D.P.'S APPLICATION FOR A FIREARMS PURCHASER IDENTIFICATION CARD AND A HANDGUN PURCHASE PERMIT (GM-2018-61, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0545-19
IN THE MATTER OF THE
APPEAL OF THE DENIAL OF
D.P.'S APPLICATION FOR A
FIREARMS PURCHASER
IDENTIFICATION CARD AND
A HANDGUN PURCHASE
PERMIT.
___________________________
Argued April 12, 2021 – Decided May 3, 2021
Before Judges Fasciale and Mayer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Bergen County, Docket No. GM-2018-61.
Stephen F. Pellino argued the cause for appellant
(Basile Birchwale & Pellino, LLP, attorneys; Stephen
F. Pellino, on the briefs).
William P. Miller argued the cause for respondent
(Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney;
William P. Miller, Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and
on the brief).
PER CURIAM
D.P.1 appeals from a September 6, 2019 order upholding a municipal
police chief's denial of his application for a New Jersey Firearms Purchaser
Identification Card (FPIC) and a handgun purchase permit (HPP). We affirm
for the cogent reasons placed on the record by Judge Christopher R. Kazlau on
September 6, 2019.
The facts are taken from the hearing testimony before Judge Kazlau on
three non-consecutive dates.
In April 2017, D.P. filed an application for an FPIC and HPP with the
Saddle River Police Department. The Saddle River police chief denied the
application in an August 21, 2018 letter based on D.P.'s history of mental health
issues.
D.P. appealed the police chief's denial of his application. In an October
16, 2018 letter to the court, the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office advised it
had no objection to the application.
By way of background, D.P.'s father was absent from his life and his
mother had substance abuse issues. As a result, D.P. lived with his great-
grandmother from birth until his great-grandmother's death in 2009. After the
1
We use appellant's initials as this matter is sealed in accordance with Rule
1:38-11(b)(2).
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death of his great-grandmother, D.P. lived with his mother until he reached
eighteen-years of age.
D.P. retained two experts to evaluate him and render written reports in
support of the FPIC and HPP application.2 According to D.P.'s experts, as a
child, D.P. had anger issues, acted out, and skipped school.
At age nine, D.P. refused to attend school and threatened his great-
grandmother with a butter knife. Consequently, D.P.'s great-grandmother
contacted the Bergen County Regional Medical Center's mobile crisis unit. D.P.
was taken to the hospital and placed under observation for two hours. Upon his
release from the hospital, the attending doctors recommended D.P. receive
outpatient mental health therapy based on a diagnosis of depressive disorder not
otherwise specified and impulse control disorder not otherwise specified. D.P.
attended outpatient mental health therapy at Bergen County Regional Medical
Center from age nine through age thirteen.
In 2017, when he was twenty-one years old, D.P. filed an application for
an FPIC and HPP. The application contained two questions related to mental
health treatment. Question twenty-four of the application asked, "Have you ever
2
One expert was a licensed psychologist, and the other expert was licensed
psychiatrist. In addition to testifying, both experts submitted written reports in
support of D.P.'s application.
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been confined or committed to a mental institution or hospital for treatment or
observation of a mental or psychiatric condition on a temporary, interim , or
permanent basis?" Question twenty-six asked, "Have you ever been attended,
treated or observed by any doctor or psychiatrist or at any hospital or mental
institution on an inpatient or outpatient basis for any mental or psychiatric
condition?" D.P. answered "No" to both questions.
D.P. submitted the completed application to the Saddle River Police
Department. As part of its routine investigation of all FPIC and HPP
applications, the Saddle River Police Department obtained information
regarding D.P.'s mental health treatment with Bergen County Regional Medical
Center. Based on the hospital records, the investigating officer suggested D.P.
obtain a certificate from a medical doctor certifying that he no longer suffered
from any mental health condition. However, D.P. failed to obtain an evaluation
from a psychiatrist or medical doctor providing a psychological evaluation only.
As a result, the investigating officer recommended denying D.P.'s application.
The Saddle River police chief accepted the recommendation and denied the
application.
In appealing the denial of his application to the Superior Court, D.P.
presented the testimony and written reports of his two experts. The expert
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psychiatrist concluded the treatment D.P. received between the ages of nine and
thirteen was not directed at treating a mental disorder. Rather, the treatment
addressed D.P.'s anger and anxiety at that time. The psychiatric expert testified
D.P. displayed no evidence of an active mental disorder and his risk for violence
was very low.
D.P. also testified before Judge Kazlau in support of his application.
Explaining why he answered "No" to questions twenty-four and twenty-six on
the application, D.P. stated his issues were behavioral and not mental.
Therefore, D.P. believed the questions were inapplicable to him. D.P. denied
responding to the questions in the negative based on any concern that such a
response might adversely affect his application. D.P. further testified he knew
his Bergen County Regional Medical Center records would be discovered by the
investigating officer as part of the application review process.
In denying D.P.'s FPIC and HPP application, Judge Kazlau did not focus
on D.P.'s past or present mental health condition. Rather, Judge Kazlau
explained his concern was D.P.'s failure to disclose his mental health treatment
as part of the application. In completing the application, D.P. denied any
treatment for a mental health condition despite receiving outpatient psychiatric
treatment from age nine to age thirteen or fourteen, a diagnosis of "depressive
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disorder," and prescription medications, including Prozac and other anti-
depressant medications.
The judge concluded, "[B]ased upon the totality of the evidence[,] you
didn't disclose it because perhaps you didn't think anybody would find out or
you thought that because it was a long time ago and you were a child that maybe
it wouldn't be relevant or that it shouldn't be relevant." At the time of his
application, D.P. was twenty-one years old. Judge Kazlau found incredible
D.P.'s testimony that he could not recall an extensive course of mental health
treatment ten years earlier. The judge held "not only was this an extended course
of [mental health] treatment overseen by a psychiatrist[,] we had other issues
going on. Truancy, juvenile court matters, stealing a bike."
In denying D.P.'s application, Judge Kazlau stated,
[I]t gives me great concern that you would not disclose
the treatment. . . . Your non-disclosure, your failure to
disclose, and I find that it was knowing, undermined
your application. . . . That gives me a concern as to
whether or not you . . . really have matured and whether
or not you would abide by the law and safely own and
possess a firearm.
The questions are very clear on the application for the
firearms purchaser identification card. You're a very
bright young man. You're attending college. You've
been doing many positive things. . . . You understood
the questions. . . . I listened back to your testimony and
I think you were trying to justify or trying to argue in a
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way that those questions . . . really didn't apply to you.
I completely disagree.
Based on these factual findings, Judge Kazlau held because of D.P.'s "knowing
falsification of [the] FPIC application, and that's [N.J.S.A.] 2C:58-3(c)(3) as
well as [N.J.S.A.] 2C:58-3(c)(5), it would not be in the interest of the public
health, safety and welfare that [his] appeal will be denied."
On appeal, D.P. raises the following arguments:
POINT I
THE POLICE CHIEF DID NOT SUSTAIN HIS
BURDEN TO PROVE GOOD CAUSE FOR THE
DENIAL OF [D.P.]'S FPIC APPLICATION AND
REQUEST FOR HANDGUN PURCHASE PERMIT.
POINT II
THE TRIAL JUDGE'S DECISION TO DENY [D.P.'S]
APPEAL BECAUSE OF KNOWING
FALSIFICATION OF HIS APPLICATION WAS NOT
SUPPORTED BY SUBSTANTIAL CREDIBLE
EVIDENCE.
We reject D.P.'s arguments and affirm for the reasons stated by Judge
Kazlau. We add the following brief comments.
A denial of an application for an FPIC by a police chief is subject to a de
novo review in the Law Division. In re Osworth, 365 N.J. Super. 72, 77 (App.
Div. 2003) (citing Weston v. State, 60 N.J. 36, 45 (1972)). The State "has the
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burden of proving the existence of good cause for the denial by a preponderance
of the evidence." Osworth, 365 N.J. Super. at 77 (citing Weston, 60 N.J. at 48).
Our review of "a trial court's legal conclusions regarding firearms licenses [is]
de novo." In re N.J. Firearms Purchaser Identification Card by Z.K., 440 N.J.
Super. 394, 397 (App. Div. 2015) (citing In re Sportsman's Rendezvous Retail
Firearms Dealer's License, 374 N.J. Super. 565, 575 (App. Div. 2005)).
"[A] judicial declaration that a defendant poses a threat to the public
health, safety or welfare involves, by necessity, a fact-sensitive analysis." State
v. Cordoma, 372 N.J. Super. 524, 535 (App. Div. 2004). In reviewing such
determinations, we accept the trial court's fact findings so long as they are
supported by substantial credible evidence. In re Return of Weapons to J.W.D.,
149 N.J. 108, 116-17 (1997). However, our review of the trial court's legal
determinations is de novo. Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of
Manalapan, 140 N.J. 366, 378 (1995).
An application for an FPIC and HPP is governed by N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3.
The statute provides:
No handgun purchase permit or firearms purchaser
identification card shall be issued:
....
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(3) . . . to any person who has ever been confined for a
mental disorder, . . . unless any of the foregoing persons
produces a certificate of a medical doctor or
psychiatrist licensed in New Jersey, or other
satisfactory proof, that he [or she] is no longer suffering
from that particular disability in a manner that would
interfere with or handicap him [or her] in the handling
of firearms; to any person who knowingly falsifies any
information on the application form for a handgun
purchase permit or firearms purchaser identification
card;
....
(5) To any person where the issuance would not be in
the interest of the public health, safety or welfare . . . .
[N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(3) and (5).]
Here, Judge Kazlau denied D.P.'s FPIC and HPP application, "despite the
positive things that [D.P.'s] done," because "the fact remains that [D.P.] failed
to disclose an extended period of mental health treatment that spanned a number
of years from the time" he was age nine through age thirteen or fourteen. It was
D.P.'s failure to disclose the required mental health information on his
application that led to the judge's decision to uphold denial of the application
based on public health, safety, and welfare concerns.
Based on our review of the record, Judge Kazlau followed the procedures
for reviewing the police chief's denial of D.P.'s FPIC and HPP application, and
his determination comported with statutory and decisional law. There is ample
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credible evidence in the record supporting the judge's decision based on D.P.'s
knowing lack of candor in completing his application requiring denial of the
application under N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(3). In addition, D.P.'s failure to reveal
the truth regarding his mental health treatment supported the judge's conclusion
that "issuance [of the FPIC and HPP] would not be in the interest of the public
health, safety or welfare." N.J.S.A. 2C:58-3(c)(5); see also Osworth, 365 N.J.
Super. at 79 (holding in cases of individual unfitness, not specifically
enumerated in the statute, the issuance of a permit or identification card should
be denied as contrary to the public interest).
Affirmed.
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