NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1010-17
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
ANDRE HIGGS,
Defendant-Appellant.
Argued May 6, 2020 – Decided May 14, 2021
Before Judges Fuentes, Haas, and Mayer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Essex County, Docket Nos. 15-11-2648 and
15-11-2650.
John J. McMahon, attorney for appellant (John J.
McMahon and Lois De Julio, of counsel and on the
briefs).
Theodore N. Stephens II, Acting Essex County
Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Matthew E.
Hanley, Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting
Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FUENTES, P.J.A.D.
On November 6, 2015, an Essex County grand jury returned Indictment
No. 15-11-2648 charging defendant Andre Higgs with murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
3(a)(1) and (2), (count one); third degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12 -
1(b)(9), (count two); second degree unlawful possession of a handgun, N.J.S.A.
2C:39-5(b)(1), (count three); second degree possession of a firearm for an
unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a), (count four); second degree endangering
the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a), (count five); third degree hindering
apprehension, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(1), (count six); and third degree possession
of a controlled dangerous substance, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a), (count seven). On
the same date, an Essex County grand jury1 returned Indictment No. 15-11-2650,
charging defendant with first degree unlawful possession of a weapon N.J.S.A.
2C:39-5(j), (count one); and possession of a weapon by a convicted felon,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(b), (count two).
1
Although it is not clear from the record whether this indictment was returned
by the same grand jury or by a second grand jury, this uncertainty is legally
inconsequential. As our Supreme Court recently reaffirmed, "the grand jury
does not conduct 'a mini-trial,' but 'an ex parte inquest' -- it is 'an accusatory and
not an adjudicative body.'" State v. Bell, 241 N.J. 552, 559 (2020) (quoting
State v. Hogan, 144 N.J. 216, 235 (1996)).
A-1010-17
2
Defendant was first tried before a petit jury on the charges reflected in
Indictment No. 15-11-2648, and was convicted of murder, third degree
aggravated assault, and the charges related to unlawful possession and use of a
handgun. The jury found him not guilty of second degree endangering the
welfare of a child. On June 23, 2017, defendant stood trial on the two charges
reflected in the second indictment. The jury found defendant guilty on both
counts. The trial judge conducted the sentencing hearing on September 7, 2017.
On the murder conviction, the judge sentenced defendant to a term of life
imprisonment, with an eighty-five percent period of parole ineligibility pursuant
to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.2 The judge imposed
a consecutive ten-year term with five years parole ineligibility on the conviction
for certain persons not permitted to have a weapon; and a twenty-year concurrent
term, with ten years parole ineligibility, on the conviction for unlawful
possession of a weapon by a previously convicted felon; and a concurrent term
of five years on the conviction for hindering apprehension. Finally, the court
merged the possession of a handgun for an unlawful purpose conviction with the
2
In order to calculate the minimum term of parole ineligibility under NERA, a
sentence of life imprisonment in this case is deemed to be seventy-five years.
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2(a)
A-1010-17
3
murder conviction, and dismissed the counts involving aggravated assault and
possession of a controlled dangerous substance.
In this appeal, defendant raises several arguments that allege the judge
mistakenly exercised his discretionary authority when he admitted certain
evidence at trial that should have been excluded as unduly prejudicial under
N.J.R.E. 404(b). Defendant also challenges the aggregate sentence imposed by
the judge as unduly excessive and shockingly punitive, and seeks a remand for
the court to impose a just sentence. Although defendant is represented by
counsel in this appeal, he has nevertheless submitted a pro se supplemental brief
that raises a number of arguments attacking the validity of the conviction.
After reviewing the voluminous record developed before the trial court,
and mindful of prevailing legal standards of appellate review, we reject
defendant's arguments and affirm. The following facts are derived from the
evidence presented at trial.
I.
On May 1, 2015, defendant drove to the residence of Latrena May, located
on Tremont Avenue in East Orange. May shared this apartment with her four-
year-old daughter, of whom defendant is the father. East Orange Police Officer
Kemon Raysan Lee was on routine patrol that night in a marked police vehicle.
A-1010-17
4
Lee testified that at approximately 10:15 p.m., he drove past May's residence
and heard a woman's voice scream "officer, officer" approximately four or six
times. He activated the police car's overhead lights, made a U-turn, and pulled
up in front of May's residence.
As Lee stepped out of the police car and onto the street, he saw May
"standing at the top of the stairs to [his] left." He also saw defendant standing
"really close to [May] with very little space in between them." According to
Lee, defendant and May were standing on the part of the residence that was six
steps above the sidewalk, where he was standing. As he approached the stairs,
Lee unholstered his service handgun with his right hand, and with his left hand
"ordered" May to come down to the sidewalk where he was standing. Defendant
fired three shots with his .45 caliber pistol, striking May at pointblank range.
Lee returned fire, discharging a total of nine rounds from his .40 caliber service
handgun. Defendant was shot a total of four times; all of his bullet wounds were
located on the upper side of his legs.
Lee testified that he did not see that defendant had a handgun when he
first arrived at the scene in response to May's calls. According to Lee, the first
time he realized defendant had a handgun was when defendant shot May. The
marked police car Lee drove on the day of the shooting was equipped with a
A-1010-17
5
dash video camera. The video recording from this camera was played to the jury
and was used by both defense counsel and the prosecutor to question Lee. Lee
provided the following account of his actions after defendant shot May:
At that time I . . . observed the defendant fall on the
floor inside the door with the gun in his right hand and
raised up.
....
I moved to the left to get a better shot at him.
Q. And what did you do with your gun?
A. I fired more shots.
Q. Okay. So to be clear, who is it that you saw still
holding the gun when you shot between . . .
A. The defendant.
Lee testified that defendant fell on the floor, just inside the door of May's
apartment. Defendant thereafter was able to go inside the apartment and close
the door.
The State called Joseph Jackson, who resided on the second floor of the
same property. Jackson testified that on the day of the shooting he was with a
woman named Reshanda Richmond, her son, and one of his friends. Jackson
provided the following account of what he witnessed:
A-1010-17
6
I was sitting on the couch watching the game and we
heard some shots and they sounded real [sic] close so I
went to the window and I saw the cops in the front of
the house and I was letting them know that there was a
family upstairs.
Q. Okay. Prior to hearing the shots, did you hear
anything that was happening on the first floor?
A. No.
At this point, the prosecutor provided Jackson with a transcript of a
statement he gave to law enforcement investigators on May 2, 2015, the day
after the shooting. After Jackson finished reading to himself certain sections of
the transcript, the prosecutor resumed his direct examination.
Q. What happened?
A. Well, just before the gunshots, there was a little bit
of yelling.
Q. Okay. This yelling, was it a man's voice or a female's
voice that was yelling?
A. It was more like a female voice. 3
Jackson testified that after he was "fully" awake, he heard a female voice
coming from the first-floor hallway yelling, "[n]o, stop." He heard gunshots
shortly thereafter, and saw a trail of blood from the entrance of the property to
3
Jackson testified that he dozed off watching the basketball game on television
and was awoken at approximately ten o'clock at night "by a little bit of yelling."
A-1010-17
7
the first-floor apartment. The two children who were in Jackson's apartment at
the time came running into the room. He told them "to get down" and went to
the front of the house to see what had occurred. Jackson testified he looked out
from his apartment window and "saw the cop[s] out there and they told me to
stay in the window after that because I told them there was a family upstairs."
According to Jackson, when he looked down the building's "outside stairs"
that led to the first floor, he saw May's body "at the bottom of the steps." Jackson
knew defendant as "the landlord of the building." Jackson testified that at some
point during this ordeal, he heard defendant "calling out to Ms. Richmond."
Jackson testified that "[c]lose to the end of the situation [May's four-year-old]
daughter came upstairs and knocked on the door." This prompted him to apprise
the police officers at the scene of the child's presence "so they won't be shooting
into the house."
Reshanda Richmond and her son lived in the same apartment with
Jackson. She testified that at approximately 10:15 p.m., she heard a
"commotion" and heard May yelling. When she walked over to the window, she
saw "the police come up and then that's when I heard Mr. Higgs say, '[t]hat's my
man,' and then the cops say, I'm not your man,' and I just backed off the window
altogether." On further examination, Richmond clarified that she was in her
A-1010-17
8
bedroom when she first heard the "commotion" and then heard May saying
"[c]all the police," more than once.
Over defense counsel's objection, Richmond testified that she saw
defendant and May "arguing." When asked to explain how she reached this
conclusion, Richmond responded: "Body language . . . [they were] [i]n front of
the door, by the rail." On cross-examination by defense counsel, Richmond
corroborated Officer Lee's account of what cause him to immediately turn his
patrol car around to respond to May's call.
Q. Okay. And can you estimate for us[,] I know it was
two years ago, but can you estimate for us
approximately how long it was seconds, or minutes,
whatever term you want to use, whatever measure of
time you want to use how long it was from the time that
you heard the words "police" till you saw the police car
outside the window?
A. It was like immediately as soon as I . . . opened the
window, the police was already out there.
Q. Okay. So you heard -- when she yelled, "Police.
Police," the police were almost there.
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. And before that you hadn't [sic] hear
anything, correct?
A. Correct.
A-1010-17
9
Juliet Kerr lived on the second floor of the building next to May's
apartment. She testified that at approximately 10:00 p.m. on October 1, 2015,
she heard "loud talking . . . like somebody was arguing" coming from in front
of the house. When she looked out her apartment's window, she saw a police
car parked right in front of May's apartment. Kerr explained that from this
particular window in her apartment, she can see the entire area of the front part
of May's building, including the steps and brown entrance door.
Kerr testified she saw a woman in the doorway of the building wearing
"[j]ust her underwear and a bra." There was an argument coming from inside
somewhere by the brown door. Kerr saw May say something to the police
officer as the officer walked toward May and defendant.
Q. Okay. And what happened as the cop was walking
towards them?
A. She was saying something to him, the cop.
....
The cop was kind of turning around slowly, you know,
and I was like . . . okay, the cop is there, everything is
fine.
....
Q. Okay. What happened next?
A-1010-17
10
A. As soon as he was -- she said something like -- she
said a name. I can't remember the name.
....
But she said, stop.
Q. Okay. The female in the underwear said stop?
A. The female in the underwear said stop.
Q. And what happened next?
....
A. I heard a loud bang (indiscernible), you know. And
I got scared because I thought when I heard, I know it
was a gunshot. But then I heard a bang. I saw smoke
coming where the person was standing. When I heard
the bang . . .
....
I saw the smoke. I heard boom. And I look, and I saw
the person on the ground.
The person laying on the ground bleeding profusely was May, whom
defendant had fatally shot three times with a .45 caliber handgun while standing
less than three feet away from her. Emergency medical personnel responded to
the scene. However, because the location where May's body fell remained an
active crime scene, the commanding officer concluded it was not safe to permit
A-1010-17
11
the medical team to attend to her wounds. Joseph Householder, one of the
paramedics who responded to the scene, testified as follows:
We initially made contact on scene and we ended up
staging for approximately, if I recall, like 45 minutes,
around there, until we were told that the scene was
secure.
At that point, we went to the female patient, who was
lying outside on the ground to assess her and found her
to be without any signs of life. At that point . . . we
performed a pronouncement time of death for her.
East Orange Police Captain Berkely Jest of arrived at the scene shortly
after the shooting and assumed command of the situation. Defendant was
wounded when Officer Lee returned fire after defendant shot May. However,
he was inside the building and remained armed with the same .45 caliber
handgun he used to kill May. With this in mind, Jest first attempted to deescalate
the situation by persuading defendant to surrender himself. After this approach
failed, Jest ordered the officers to execute a tactical entry into the property.
Upon entry, the officers found defendant lying in the hallway of the first floor,
bleeding from the bullet wounds in his lower extremities. Defendant was then
taken into custody and treated at the scene by the emergency medical staff.
Michael Recktenwald of the Essex County Prosecutor's Office's Internal
Affairs Bureau, was the lead investigator in this case and testified as a defense
A-1010-17
12
witness. Recktenwald determined that Officer Lee acted properly and in a
justifiable manner when he fired his weapon in response to defendant's illegal
use of deadly force. The New Jersey Attorney General agreed with the Essex
County Prosecutor's Office findings and conclusions. In his statement to the
investigators, Lee did not mention at what point in his interaction with defendant
he withdrew his service weapon from its holster. Recktenwald agreed with
defense counsel's characterization that Lee "seemed surprised" when he saw the
videorecording from his dash camera that showed he was holding his service
handgun in his hand when he exited the car.
Dr. Li Wang, the North Regional Medical Examiner, performed the
autopsy on May's body. By stipulation from defense counsel, the trial judge
admitted Dr. Wang as an expert witness in the field of forensic pathology. Dr.
Wang confirmed Officer Lee's observation that May's first wound was the result
of gunshot fired "within 18 to 24 inches" from her body. The trajectory of this
one bullet was sufficient to cause a fatal injury. Dr. Wang explained that the
projectile perforated the aorta, the largest artery in the human body, continued
through both lungs, exited at the right side of her chest, and reenter ed the right
upper arm, fracturing the right side of the humerus, the bone between the
shoulder and elbow.
A-1010-17
13
Dr. Wang opined that the second gunshot wound was also fatal because
the bullet went through May's liver, spleen, and abdominal wall. Based on hi s
forensic examination and experience, Dr. Wang opined the second bullet was
fired from a distance of "about 18 to 24 inch[es], but probably a little bit further
away compared to the first injury." The third gunshot wound perforated the left
side of her abdomen and lacerated the upper part of the left kidney. The bullet
crossed the midline of the body traveling below the skin surface.
Defendant testified in his own defense. He described himself as a self-
employed property manager and investor. When asked by his attorney to clarify
what he meant by "investments," defendant stated:
I purchase properties, I fix them, I sell them, I purchase
properties, I fix them and I keep selling them for
investment purposes.
Q. And where -- what general geographic vicinity are
these properties in?
A. Basically, Newark, East Orange. I had properties in
Jersey City at one point in time. Normally, they're
outside of the urban areas.
Defendant met May in 2007, when she was visiting an apartment her sister
rented in one of defendant's properties. Defendant first characterized his
relationship with May as "friendly." It thereafter evolved into a "dating
relationship" and eventually a "sexual relationship." He described May as an
A-1010-17
14
educated woman with a master's degree education. At the same time defendant
was cultivating this relationship with May, he was involved in a long-term
relationship with a woman named Oneida Tretola, with whom he had three
biological children. At the time this case went to trial in 2017, defendant
referred to Tretola as his "fiancée," with whom he had had a romantic
relationship for "approximately [twenty] years." Furthermore, as defense
counsel made clear:
Q. Now, while you -- you knew Latrena [May]
obviously up through 2015, correct?
A. Yes, I did.
Q. Now, this was during a time when you were still, as
you are today, still in a relationship with Oneida
[Tretola]. Is that true?
A. Yes, it's true.
Defendant testified that May and their daughter began living in the
apartment ten months before the shooting occurred on May 1, 2015, meaning
May moved in on or around August 1, 2014. The property is a two-family
dwelling; May occupied the first-floor apartment. Defense counsel eventually
questioned defendant about an incident that occurred on March 25, 2015, thirty -
seven days before the shooting. Defendant claimed that on the evening of March
25, 2015, "me and Latrena [May] was going back and forth about me basically
A-1010-17
15
being with her and me leaving Oneida [Tretola]. And I wasn't doing that."
Defendant claimed that May became "upset."
Q. And when she became upset, what did you do?
A. You know, after, you know, she did what she did, I
grabbed her by shoulders. I told her, I said, Latrena, you
need to stop, calm down, you always taking things a
little too far.
Q. Okay. Now, getting back to -- now, did you ever at
any time choke her on that day?
A. No, I didn't choke her. Not at all. I never choked
Latrena. Never.
Against this backdrop, defense counsel asked defendant to describe the
events that led to May's death on May 1, 2015. According to defendant, May
called him in the afternoon of May 1, 2015 and told him to bring money for their
daughter. She also wanted to discuss the status of their relationship. Defendant
testified he arrived at the Tremont Avenue apartment at approximately 10:00
p.m. May was sitting up in bed in her bedroom watching television. He gave
her $350 to cover some child expenses.
At this point, May asked defendant if he was staying. Defendant testified
he told her he was not staying. This prompted an angry response from May in
which she accused him of not caring for her or their child. Defendant claimed
that he made clear to May that he was never going to leave Oneida [Tretola].
A-1010-17
16
He also expected her to move out of the apartment at the end of the lease. 4
According to defendant, she became "very belligerent" and told him he was
"going to cause her to do something to me."
Q. Okay. And did you understand what that meant?
A. Well, I took it as [an] idle threat. I took it as she was
just upset. She was mad and voicing her opinion. But –
Q. And what happened after she made that statement?
A. She pulled her gun out from under her pillow.
Q. From under the pillow?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. And now, had you ever seen this gun before?
A. Yes, I had.
Q. On how many occasions?
A. Actually, that was actually my third time visually
seeing that gun. 5
4
The appellate record does not include a copy of the lease.
5
Defendant testified that the first time he saw this particular handgun was
"before she moved to Scotch Plains;" the second time was when May moved
into the apartment on Tremont Avenue "towards the middle or the end of July"
2014. He denied having a handgun in his possession on May 1, 2015.
A-1010-17
17
Defendant testified he told May he was leaving and walked out of the
bedroom. May followed him out from the bedroom wearing only "panties and
halter." In response to defense counsel's questions, 6 defendant testified that May
continued to follow him onto the front porch, which defendant described as
being "four-feet-three-inches wide . . . at the railings" and "roughly three and a
half feet" front-to-back. He testified that he "grabbed the weapon out of her
hand" as soon as she stepped out onto the porch, not out fear, but because he
deemed it "a bit extreme."
Q. Now, when you . . . say you snatched it out of her
hand. What happened after that?
A. Well, I started scolding her. I started telling her like,
is you crazy, I mean, you out here in your panties, first
of all, second of all, you got this gun in your hand,
you're risking your career. I used to tell her when she
want to fight with Oneida, like, you got too much to
lose, you know, you should think before you do things,
or stuff ain't that serious for you to be taking it over the
top like you take it over the top. I mean, I did
everything I was supposed to done [sic] for her.
Q. Now, what was your intention? What were you going
to do with that gun now that it was in your hand? What
was your intention?
6
Before reaching this part of his testimony, defense counsel preemptively
questioned defendant about his prior criminal convictions in accordance with
N.J.R.E. 609.
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A. . . . I never even intended to have the gun in my
hand, first of all. Right then and there, I was more or
less trying to tell her about herself. That was my first
thoughts.
Q. What's the next thing that happened while you were
on the porch?
A. Officer Lee had turned the corner. I know him now
as Officer Lee. But the police car came around the
corner. I didn't even notice the police car coming
around the corner.
Q. How was your attention brought to the police car?
A. Because as the police car was driving past us,
Latrena was like, police, police.
Q. And who was she saying that to?
A. She was alerting me that the police was right there.
Q. Okay. And did you see her signal in any way to the
police officer?
A. She never signaled that -- she never signaled that
cop. Never once.
Q Now, . . . when she told you . . . brought your
attention to the fact that there was a police car on the
block, did you look to see the police car?
A. It was probably my biggest mistake . . . I started
watching the cop.
[(Emphasis added).]
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According to defendant, May wanted to go back in the house as soon as
Officer Lee made a U-turn and activated the overhead lights of his patrol car.
As the police car stopped in front of the residence, defense counsel asked
defendant: "what are your thoughts as to what was going to happen?" Defendant
responded: "I was like, I got a gun in my hand, you got me in this situation . . .
them was [sic] my initial thoughts." Defendant also stated he was trying "to
block" May so the officer "wouldn't see how she was outside because I know
that would have made him stop."
Defendant provided the following account of his interactions with Officer
Lee while allegedly standing in front of May to conceal her state of undress:
Q. Okay. Now . . . at some point you see Officer Lee
exit his car, correct?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. And was he holding anything in his hand?
A. He was reaching for his gun the minute he was trying
to get out of the car. I mean, he was basically grabbing
his gun before he was out of the seat. Porch and the
car, it's like from the porch to the street, six steps, let's
say a foot each step. To the sidewalk, three foot.
Another two and a half foot right there with the curb --
I mean, with the grass part, the little curb. Six –
Q. Six, three, two . . . and a half feet?
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20
A. We only about 11 feet to the initial car from where
we was actually at. So the proximity is very close. We
. . . wasn't away from each other. We . . . was very
close . . . .
At defense counsel's request, defendant stepped down from the witness
stand to respond to questions related to what is depicted in the videorecording
taken by the patrol car's dash camera.
Q. Okay. Now, we just saw Officer Lee walk past the
front of his patrol car, correct?
A. Yes.
....
A. When -- well, the conversation was basically Officer
Lee replying to me as Officer Lee is hitting the steps. I
mean, the sidewalk. The sidewalk part.
Q. Okay. Before we get to that, did Officer Lee say
anything to Ms. May at any time once he exited his
patrol vehicle?
A. He never said nothing. Latrena and Officer Lee
never had two words with each other besides her yelling
to him, stop.
Defendant testified he made the first attempt to speak with Officer Lee.
When I saw him hopping out the car and reaching for
his weapon, I yelled to him, I said, my man, you ain't
going to believe this. By that time, Officer Lee was
around the front of his car.
....
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21
Well, patrol car is here. Patrol car is here. Officer Lee
exited the patrol car. He's coming around. The minute
he got out, I'm yelling to him, my man, you ain't going
to believe this. By then, Officer Lee's in front of his
car. He said, I'm not your M-ing F-ing man, come down
here.
[I] was trying to alert him that I had a weapon in my
hand.
[(Emphasis added).]
Defendant testified that Officer Lee did not respond positively to his
advances. The Officer just repeated his command to defendant to "come the F
down." However, instead of heeding Officer Lee's command, defendant "spun
around and I said, I got a gun." Defense counsel provided for the record the
following description of defendant's posture:
For the record, Mr. Higgs is standing up -- standing
with his arms out to his sides with his hands upraised,
his elbows about a foot below his shoulders with his
forearms and fingers pointing up, for the record.
Although he was holding the handgun when he faced Officer Lee,
defendant testified that he was pointing the weapon "straight up." Defendant
characterized this alleged gesture on his part as "[a] surrendering position."
According to defendant, Officer Lee responded by firing his service weapon
without any further verbal comment or command.
A-1010-17
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Q. What happened next?
A. When I heard the shot, I tried pushing Latrena [May]
out of the way. From there . . . everything just went
crazy. It went -- I went black.
Q. Okay . . . [w]hat did you experience, to the best of
your recollection?
A. Felt like I was being beat with a sledgehammer . . . .
Defendant testified that he was struck four times by shots fired by Officer
Lee. In response to his attorney's questions, defendant pointed to where he was
shot. Defense counsel verbally described for the record the locations indicated
by defendant: one bullet struck his mid-thigh in the front of his left leg; two
bullets struck the upper right side of his thigh; and one bullet struck the lower
right side of his thigh.7
Defendant testified that when Officer Lee began to shoot, he fell back on
his buttocks to the porch. He thereafter pushed or slid back with his hands,
maneuvering his body to get into the foyer of the building, still holding the gun
in his hand. Despite being in severe pain, defendant claimed he maneuvered
7
Defendant testified that the physicians who treated him at the hospital after
the shooting told him one of the bullets severed the femoral artery in his left leg.
"They said they didn't know how I survived because I supposed to bled [sic]
out." This prompted an objection from the prosecutor, which the trial judge
sustained.
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23
himself "back into the foyer . . . [as his] mind [was] just screaming with pain,"
and "tossed the gun over towards the supplies." Despite the uncontested medical
evidence showing May was shot three times at close range with the .45 caliber
handgun held by defendant throughout this event, defendant testified that he had
no recollection of ever firing the gun.
Defendant pushed himself on the floor until he reached his four-year-old
daughter's bedroom. The child was asleep. He testified that he woke her up;
told her to put on her shoes and go to the upstairs apartment where Reshanda
Richmond resided. Defendant testified that he yelled to Richmond to come and
get the child.
II.
Against this factual record, defendant raises the following arguments.
POINT I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND ABUSED ITS
DISCRETION IN ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE
AN ALLEGED PRIOR INCIDENT WHERE
DEFENDANT PUT HIS HANDS AROUND
DECEDENT'S NECK AND CHOKED HER.
POINT II
THE STATE COMPOUNDED THE ERROR IN
ADMITTING THE N.J.R.E. 404(b) TESTIMONY BY
ITS IMPROPER USE AND SPURIOUS
ARGUMENTS (Not Raised Below).
A-1010-17
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POINT III
DEFENDANT'S RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL WAS
COMPROMISED WHEN THE COURT PERMITTED
A LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER TO USURP THE
FUNCTION OF THE JURY BY OFFERING HIS
OPINION THAT VIDEO FOOTAGE DEPICTED
DEFENDANT WITH A GUN IN HIS WAISTBAND.
POINT IV
ADMISSION INTO EVIDENCE OF NUMEROUS
GRUESOME, IRRELEVANT AUTOPSY AND
CRIME SCENE EXHIBITS PREJUDICED THE JURY
AND DENIED DEFENDANT HIS RIGHT TO A FAIR
TRIAL.
POINT V
ALLOWING THE STATE TO IMPEACH
DEFENDANT WITH HIS REMOTE CONVICTIONS
CONSTITUTED AN ABUSE OF DISCRETION AND
DENIED HIM A FAIR TRIAL.
POINT VI
DEFENDANT'S RIGHT OF CONFRONTATION
WAS IMPROPERLY LIMITED WHEN THE TRIAL
COURT SHIELDED OFFICER LEE FROM BEING
CROSS-EXAMINED ON HIS PRIOR POLICE
SHOOTINGS AND SUBSEQUENT INTERNAL
AFFAIRS INVESTIGATIONS.
A. Defendant Was Denied Access To
Discoverable Material Relevant To Officer
Lee's Inherent Bias, Interest And Motive.
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B. Defendant Should Have Been
Permitted To Cross-Examine Officer Lee
About His Prior Shootings to Expose Any
Bias, Interest Or Motive As Well As To
Explain His Actions On May 1, 2015.
POINT VII
DEFENDANT IS ENTITLED TO A RESENTENCING
BECAUSE THE TRIAL JUDGE FAILED TO
FOLLOW HE REQUIREMENTS OF THE CODE OF
CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN IMOSING SENTENCE.
A. The Trial Judge Failed To Properly
Identify And Assign Weight To
Aggravating Factors.
B. The Trial Judge Failed To Find
Appropriate Mitigating Factors.
C. The Trial Judge Improperly Found
That The Sentence On Count 2 Of Ind. 15-
11-2650 Must Be Served Consecutively.
Appellant raises the following arguments in a pro se supplemental brief:
POINT I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED AND ABUSED ITS
DISCRETION IN ADMITTING INTO EVIDENCE
AN ALLEGED PRIOR INCIDENT WHERE
DEFENDANT PUT HIS HANDS AROUND
DECEDENT'S NECK AND CHOKED HER.
POINT II
TRIAL COURT ALLOWED THE STATE TO
INTRODUCE AN APPLICATION FOR CHILD
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SUPPORT IN REBUTTAL TO IMPEACH
DEFENDANT'S CREDIBILITY CONSTITUTED AN
ABUSE OF DISCRETION.
POINT III
TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION
ALLOWING THE STATE TO PLAY ALL OF A
POLICE DISPATCH RECORDING MARKED S-
79A OVER DEFENSE'S CONTINUED OBJECTION.
POINT IV
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN RULING THAT THE
WARRANTLESS SEARCH OF THE HALLWAY OF
164 TREMONT AVENUE WAS VALID.
POINT V
PROSECUTOR'S IMPROPER ARGUMENT
SUPPORTED BY DETECTIVE GREEN'S
INADMISSIBLE TESTIMONY THAT THE OBJECT
DEPICTED IN S-30 IS DEFENDANT WITH A GUN
CONSTITUTES REVERSIBLE ERROR.
POINT VI
PROSECUTOR'S UNCORRECTED
MISSTATEMENT OF LAW COMPARING AN
INVOLUNTARY ACT WITH AN ACCIDENT "AN
[ ]" AS STATED TO THE JURY CONSTITUTES
REVERSIBLE ERROR.
POINT VII
THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE ERRORS
RAISED IN DEFENSE COUNSEL'S ORIGINAL
BRIEF, AS WELL AS THE PREVIOUS POINTS IN
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THIS SUPPLEMENTAL BRIEF, WARRANTS
REVERSAL OF THE CONVICTION.
A
The evidence that established the cause of May's death is substantially
undisputed. The testimony of Dr. Wang, the Medical Examiner, established that
the first .45 caliber bullet that struck May's body perforated her liver, spleen,
and abdominal wall. This single bullet was therefore sufficient to cause the
massive fatal injuries that led to her death. Despite defendant's testimony
denying any responsibility, there is overwhelming evidence to support the jury's
verdict that he shot and killed May.
Defendant nevertheless argues in Point I that the trial court committed
reversible error and abused its discretion when it granted the State's motion to
present evidence under N.J.R.E. 404(b) of a prior incident of domestic violence
perpetrated by defendant against May. The State offered this evidence to rebut
defendant's claim that he shot May involuntarily. Defendant argues the court
erred because defendant did not raise a state of mind or an accidental shooting
defense.
We disagree with defendant's argument and affirm. Essex County
Prosecutor's Office Detective Kevin Green was the on-call homicide detective
on May 1, 2015. He arrived at the scene of the shooting at approximately 11:30
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p.m. and observed blood droppings that led up to the front door, and blood
spatter on the door itself. A trail of blood also led from the foyer to the first-
floor apartment. Once inside the apartment, Greene noticed "a lot of blood"
leading into what looked like a little girl's room.
At the suppression hearing, Green testified that the search of the apartment
took place one to two hours after the shooting. He did not consult with the on-
call prosecutor before searching the area without first securing a warrant. He
testified that he proceeded in this fashion because the property, including the
apartment, was a crime scene where a homicide had just occurred. Green
concluded the situation established "exigent" circumstances because the
handgun used in the shooting had not been located. He stated: "There's . . . [s]till
one kid upstairs along with two adults. There were people in the home with a
missing gun. That's very exigent."
Detective Michael Mossa testified that he and the other officers who took
part in the search conducted a walk-through of the crime scene to identify items
considered to be of evidentiary value. Mossa helped move a bag of rock salt
that was in the hallway, and discovered a .45 caliber semi-automatic handgun.
The weapon was not loaded. Green admitted that the handgun was not found in
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plain view. He added, however, that: "They entered the foyer. They were
looking at ballistic evidence in the foyer and . . . discovered the gun."
The judge denied defendant's motion to suppress the handgun. As a
threshold issue, the judge found no basis to conclude the warrantless search was
permissible under exigent circumstances:
[T]he . . . Crime Scene [Unit] . . . got there at about
11:30 at night, and at that time [defendant] had already
been removed from the residence and taken to the
hospital approximately a half hour before the officers
started to do their investigation. And so . . . the
exigency really is no longer there, because [defendant]
is no longer there.
The judge held, however, that defendant did not have a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the common area of a two-family dwelling. The judge
found that, as the owner of the building, while defendant had certain rights to
inspect common areas of the property, "he does not have any reasonable
expectation of privacy . . . in a particular tenant[']s apartment or in this case in
the common hallway."
The motion judge also relied on the doctrine of inevitable discovery in
denying the motion to suppress:
[The] Crime Scene [unit] . . . [is] obviously required to
. . . go through the crime scene methodically, retrieve
all the evidence that there may be, [and] photograph
everything they believe is to be [sic] relevant material
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to preserve it. And ultimately they would have and they
did . . . locate the . . . weapon.
So . . . it would have been found regardless. But since
you have no expectation of privacy, as I indicated, the
evidence . . . will not be suppressed.
When we review a trial court's decision to grant or deny a motion to
suppress, we are bound to defer to the trial court's factual findings that are
supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record. In Re J.A., 233 N.J.
432, 445 (2016). However, we review de novo the trial court's legal conclusions.
Ibid.
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I,
Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution require police officers to "obtain a warrant
before conducting a search, unless the search falls into a recognized exception
to the warrant requirement." State v. Sencion, 454 N.J. Super. 25, 32 (App. Div.
2018). However, our Supreme Court has expressed "a clear preference for
police officers to secure a warrant before entering and searching a home." State
v. Wright, 221 N.J. 456, 468 (2015) (quoting State v. Brown, 216 N.J. 508, 527
(2014)). Thus, where it is practical to do so, law enforcement agents are
generally required to secure a warrant before conducting a search because, in
most cases, warrantless searches of private dwellings are presumptively invalid.
State v. Lamb, 218 N.J. 300, 315 (2014).
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31
It is well-settled that a defendant challenging a warrantless search must
first establish that he or she has a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
searched location. State v. Hinton, 216 N.J. 211, 228 (2013). In a multi-
occupancy premises, "none of the occupants can have a reasonable expectation
of privacy in areas that are also used by other occupants." State v. Penalber, 386
N.J. Super. 1, 10 (App. Div. 2006) (quoting State v. Johnson, 171 N.J. 192, 209
(2002)). Defendant did not reside in this two-family property. The motion judge
correctly held that he did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
hallway of this property.
In the interest of clarity, we also hold the search was valid under the
emergency aid doctrine. The following material facts are not disputed. The
police officers searched the building nearly one-and-a-half hours after the
shooting. By that time, defendant had been removed from the scene. There
were thus no exigent circumstances. There is no broad "murder scene"
exception to the warrant requirement, Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385, 392-95
(1978); State v. O'Donnell, 203 N.J. 160, 162 (2010). However, an exception
exists when the police search the premises only for other crime victims or
criminals. Mincey, 437 U.S. at 393. Under these circumstances, the police may
seize any evidence in plain view. Ibid. Here, we must determine whether, after
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responding to an emergency call and lawfully entering a homicide scene, a later
re-entry by the police into a police-secured location, followed by the plain view
seizure of evidence, constitutes merely a continuation of the initial emergency
entry. O'Donnell, 203 N.J. at 162.
The emergency aid doctrine requires the law enforcement official to have
an objectively reasonable belief, even if later found to be erroneous, that an
emergency demands immediate assistance in order to protect or preserve human
life, or to prevent serious injury. The provision of assistance must be the prime
motivating factor of the law enforcement agent's decision to conduct a
warrantless entry; and any search must be limited to those places that have a
nexus to the emergency. Id. at 163. In addition, the reasonableness of
continuous police presence at the location initially accessed under the
emergency aid exception is determined by the facts presented. Ibid.
The officers were concerned for the safety of the four-year-old child. The
police did not know the child's whereabouts in the house. The firearm used in
the shooting had not been recovered. The police had a reasonable basis to
believe the handgun was somewhere in the house since that is where defendant
was apprehended. Under these facts, the emergency aid doctrine applies.
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Courts permit warrantless searches when police officers act "not in their
law enforcement or criminal investigatory role, but rather in a community
caretaking function." State v. Bogan, 200 N.J. 61, 73 (2009). That doctrine
recognizes that police officers provide a wide range of functions outside their
traditional law enforcement and criminal investigatory roles. State v. Edmonds,
211 N.J. 117, 141 (2012). These activities include protecting the vulnerable
from harm where an immediate search is required to preserve life or property.
Ibid.
In Bogan, the Court rejected the view that police can never engage in
community caretaking activities merely because they are also involved in the
detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence. 200 N.J. at 77. This is
particularly true where a police officer could prevent imminent harm to a child.
Ibid. "It is well-recognized that leaving children unattended may constitute a
significant threat to their safety and welfare." Id. at 76.
Here, the child's whereabouts were unknown. The weapon used in the
shooting had not been recovered and was believed to be in the house. These
facts created an unacceptable risk of danger to the child as well as to the
residents of the building in general. The fact that any of one of them may
inadvertently obtain access to this firearm is a significant factor that justifies
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law enforcement agents to enter private property in the performance of their
community caretaking function. State v. Navarro, 310 N.J. Super. 104, 109
(App. Div. 1998).
B
Defendant also argues the trial court abused its discretion by admitting
evidence of a prior incident in which he allegedly choked May. The State sought
to admit this evidence to rebut defendant's claim that he did not intend to shoot
May. Defendant alleges he did not raise the state of mind defense nor claimed
he may have accidentally shot May. In fact, defendant maintained at trial that
his finger may have pulled the trigger involuntarily, after he was shot by Officer
Lee.
This argument is not supported by the facts presented to the jury,
including defendant's own testimony. The trial judge properly exercised his
discretion to admit this evidence under N.J.R.E. 404(b) to support an absence of
mistake, negate accidental behavior, and show motive and intent. N.J.R.E.
404(b) provides:
[E]vidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not
admissible to prove the disposition of a person in order
to show that such person acted in conformity therewith.
Such evidence may be admitted for other purposes,
such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent,
preparation, plan, knowledge, identity or absence of
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mistake or accident when such matters are relevant to a
material issue in dispute.
This type of evidence is admissible if the State can satisfy the following
four requirements: (1) the evidence must be "relevant to a material issue" in the
case; (2) the evidence must be "similar in kind and reasonably close in time to
the offense charged;" (3) the evidence must be established under the clear and
convincing burden of proof; and (4) the probative value of the evidence is not
outweighed by its prejudicial effect. State v. Cofield, 127 N.J. 328, 338 (1992).
The trial judge conducted an N.J.R.E. 104(a) hearing to determine the
admissibility of N.J.R.E. 404(b) evidence. The State presented the testimony of
Eugene Spamn, a dispatcher for the East Orange Police Department. Spamn
testified that at 10:22 p.m. on March 25, 2015, he received a 9-1-1 call from an
individual residing in Apartment No. 1 at the property at issue here. Spamn
dispatched a police patrol car to that location.
East Orange Police Officer Steven Plumer reported to the scene and was
let into the first-floor apartment. May and her infant daughter were the only
persons in the apartment. May informed Officer Plumer that her baby's father
had assaulted her. May told Plumer that defendant started choking her on the
living room couch and "at some point ended up in the kitchen on the floor, he
was choking her again." Plumer described May as "almost in hysterics, very
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36
disheveled." Her face was puffy, her eyes were watery, and she had bruises on
her neck. Plumer also noted that the living room and the kitchen were
"disheveled."
May told Plumer that she wanted to document the incident because she
feared defendant was going to "come back and kill her." May claimed that
defendant had accused her of sleeping with other men. Defendant was issued a
summons and the police wrote a domestic violence report. Officer Plumer did
not make a written report of the incident nor take photographs to document
May's injury to her neck.
In a memorandum of opinion, the judge applied the Cofield factors and
found the incident was relevant to defendant's state of mind on the night of the
shooting. The judge wrote: "When a defendant concedes involvement in a
shooting but contests his state of mind at the time of the offense, state of mind
becomes a relevant issue." The judge found this evidence was relevant to prove
motive, specifically, defendant's jealousy over May's alleged relationship with
another man.
The judge also found the evidence satisfied the second Cofield factor
because the choking incident was sufficiently similar in kind and reasonably
close in time to the shooting incident five weeks later. "The similarities consist
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37
of (1) the same parties; (2) the same location; (3) time of evening; and (4) the
incidents being only five weeks apart." As to the third prong, the judge found
the State had proven the incident by clear and convincing evidence. The judge
noted the audio recording of the 9-1-1 call, the testimonies of the dispatcher and
Officer Plumer.
The judge did not find the 9-1-1 call violated the Fifth Amendment's
Confrontation Clause. The judge gave the call "considerable weight" and found
"the objective circumstances indicate that the victim's primary purpose . . . in
placing the call was to enable police assistance for an ongoing emergency." The
judge found Officer Plumer's testimony "very credible." Through this evidence,
the State established by clear and convincing evidence the admissibility of the
March 25, 2015 incident.
As to the fourth prong, the judge found the evidence's probative value was
not outweighed by its prejudicial effect. "[B]ecause Defendant raised his state
of mind as an issue, the State is permitted broad latitude to introduce motive or
intent evidence . . . ." The judge found there was a lack of probative evidence
related to defendant's state of mind during the shooting that weighed strongly in
favor of admitting evidence of the March 25, 2015 incident.
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38
Defendant testified at trial about the March 25, 2015 incident. He
characterized the incident as an argument he had with May about her demands
for him to leave Tretola. He claimed May was the aggressor when she grabbed
and bit him. He admitted he grabbed her but denied choking her. This prompted
the State to call Officer Plumer as a rebuttal witness.
The admission or exclusion of evidence at trial rests in the trial court's
sound discretion and will be reversed only for an abuse of that discretion. State
v. J.M., 225 N.J. 146, 157 (2016). Defendant claims his actions were
involuntary; he pulled the trigger of the .45 caliber handgun only after Officer
Lee shot him. The State has the right to challenge defendant's state of mind
defense under N.J.S.A. 2C:2-1(a). See State v. M.L., 253 N.J. Super. 13, 22
(App. Div. 1991).
In State v. Nance, 148 N.J. 376, 380 (1997), the defendant admitted to the
shooting that led to the death of the victim, a male friend of a woman with whom
the defendant had had a relationship. The defendant claimed that it was
accidental. To rebut this defense and satisfy its burden of proof that the killing
was intentional, the State sought to introduce evidence of bad acts the defendant
had committed against the woman out of jealousy. Id. at 382. These bad acts
included an incident where the defendant tore up roses that had been delivered
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39
to the woman and a confrontation between the defendant and one of the woman's
brothers. Id. at 382-84.
The Supreme Court held that the woman's testimony on these incidents
established that the defendant's jealousy was relevant to the issues of motive,
intent and lack of accident. Id. at 388-89.
The State charged defendant with knowing or
purposeful murder; therefore, the State had to negate
the claim of an accident or self-defense to establish that
crime. There was no other evidence available through
which the State could establish motive because, while
defendant conceded his involvement in the shooting, he
claimed that it was accidental . . . . Thus, defendant's
state of mind was a relevant issue, and the motive of
jealousy was a proper basis upon which the jury could
conclude that defendant did or did not intend to shoot
the victim.
[Id. at 388.]
As in Nance, defendant here conceded his involvement in the shooting,
but claimed he did so without the purposeful or knowing mental state required
to be guilty of murder under N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1) and (2). Consistent with
Nance, the State here has no other evidence available to rebut that defense. The
March 2015 incident served to negate defendant's claim of accident.
Defendant points to State v. Sanders, where the defendant, charged in the
death of his infant daughter, claimed that he hit the child while "play-boxing"
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40
with her. 320 N.J. Super. 574, 577 (App. Div. 1999). The State sought to
introduce evidence that the defendant had been violent towards the child's
mother on several occasions. Id. at 578-79. This court reversed the trial court
and held that the evidence was inadmissible under N.J.R.E. 404(b). Id. at 580-
84. We concluded the evidence was not relevant to prove that the defendant
knowingly and purposely killed his daughter. Id. at 581. "There is simply no
logical connection between the evidence that defendant assaulted his paramour
and the fact in issue." Ibid. (internal quotations omitted). Rather, the evidence
was an effort to show that the defendant had the requisite intent because he had
an "assaultive disposition." Id. at 582, 584.
The analysis we adopted in Sanders is not applicable to the present matter.
The evidence the State introduced here involved the victim of the charged crime.
Thus, unlike in Sanders, the evidence in this case is relevant to the question of
motive and intent and rebuts the claims mistake or accident. Stated differently,
this evidence was not introduced to show that defendant had a predisposition to
violence.
C
Defendant also argues that the prosecutor's summation compounded the
purported prejudice caused by the trial court's decision to admit N.J.R.E. 404 (b)
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41
evidence. We disagree. The prosecutor made the following comments during
his summation:
The [c]ourt gave an instruction about a prior incident
between Latrena May and [defendant] on March 25th,
2015. For state-of-mind purposes, you're allowed to
consider a prior incident between [defendant and May],
where he came to her house, he choked her, and he
threw her to the ground. That intent, to assault her and
commit harm on her, you can consider when
determining did [defendant] purposely or intentionally
cause harm on Latrena May.
At this point, the prosecutor played the audio recording of the 9-1-1 call
May made to the East Orange Police Department on March 25, 2015. The
prosecutor then resumed his summation:
There's your intent, ladies and gentlemen. They argue
this was an accident and this is an "oops." What is it,
fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on
me? This happened twice. Actually, three shots. I
would say something happened to her three times.
The point I'm trying to make here, ladies and
gentlemen, is you can't hide behind, it was an accident,
it was involuntary, when five weeks earlier you went to
her house, the same location which, by the way, you
heard this was at 10:22 p.m. on March 25th, 2015. May
1st was 10:15 p.m. Interesting, right?
[(Emphasis added).]
Defense counsel did not object to any part of the prosecutor's summation.
We therefore must review this issue under the plain error standard codified in
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42
Rule 2:10-2, which states that "[a]ny error or omission shall be disregarded by
the appellate court unless it is of such a nature as to have been clearly capable
of producing an unjust result . . . ." This Rule also authorizes this court, in the
interests of justice, to "notice plain error not brought to the attention of the trial
or appellate court." (Emphasis added).
The court gave the jury the following instructions to guide them in how
they should consider this evidence:
Now, evidence has been introduced at trial that Andre
Higgs went to Latrena May's residence on March 25th,
2015 and allegedly put his hands around her neck and
choked her. Normally, such evidence is not permitted
under our Rules of Evidence. Our rules specifically
exclude evidence that a defendant has committed other
crimes, wrongs or acts when it is offered only to show
that he has a disposition or tendency to do wrong and,
therefore, must be guilty of the charged offenses.
However, our rules do permit evidence of other crimes,
wrongs or acts when the evidence is used for certain
specific narrow purposes. And in this case, the fact that
[defendant] allegedly put his hands around Latrena
May's neck and choked her is being offered by the State
for the sole purpose of refuting . . . defendant's defense
theory that [he] involuntarily shot Latrena May three
times after or while [he] was shot by Police Officer Lee.
Whether this evidence rebuts . . . that [defendant]
involuntarily shot Latrena May is for you to decide.
You may decide that the evidence does not refute or
rebut that [defendant] involuntarily shot Latrena May
and is not helpful to you at all. In that case, you must
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disregard the evidence. On the other hand, you may
decide that the evidence does refute or rebut the defense
theory that [defendant] involuntarily shot Latrena May
and use it for that specific purpose.
However, I remind you that you may not use this
evidence to decide that [defendant] has a tendency to
commit crimes or that he is a bad person. That is, you
may not decide that just because the defendant had
committed other crimes, wrongs or acts he must be
guilty of the present crimes. I have admitted the
evidence only to help you decide the specific question
of whether [defendant] involuntarily shot Latrena May.
[(Emphasis added).]
The trial judge's instructions provided the jurors proper guidance on how
to evaluate this evidence. This evidence directly rebuts defendant's claim that
any shooting attributable to him was purely accidental. Defendant testified that
he was always candid with May concerning the nature of their relationship.
Despite having fathered a child with May, defendant claimed he told her that he
would never end his relationship with Oneida Tretola. However, defendant
testified that the argument which resulted in May's death was rooted in her
unwillingness to continue to accept this second-class arrangement. The jurors
were required to consider this evidence and determine what drove May to leave
her four-year-old daughter asleep in her bed, and step outside the front porch of
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44
her home with defendant, without shoes and wearing only panties and a
brassiere.
Defendant argues the prosecutor's summation remarks exceeded the
permissible bounds of fair commentary on the evidence and the judge's jury
instructions on N.J.R.E. 404(b) evidence were inadequate to counteract this
prejudice. Mindful of the standard of review in Rule 2:10-2, we discern no legal
basis to conclude the prosecutor's summation were clearly capable of producing
an unjust result and consequently denied defendant of his right to a fair trial.
The remaining arguments in the brief written by defendant's appellate
counsel and the arguments defendant raised in his pro se supplemental brief are
clearly without merit and do not warrant further discussion in a written opinion.
R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
Affirmed.
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