SYLLABUS
This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the
Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the
Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
State v. Tywaun S. Hedgespeth (A-22-20) (084892)
Argued October 13, 2021 -- Decided December 27, 2021
LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The Court addresses two alleged evidentiary errors. One relates to the issue
resolved today in the companion appeal of State v. Carrion, ___ N.J. ___ (2021):
whether admission of an affidavit from the New Jersey State Police, affirming that a
defendant does not appear in the State’s firearm permit database, violates the
Confrontation Clause when the affiant does not testify at trial. The other issue is whether
the trial court committed harmful error when it permitted the State to impeach defendant
with a prior conviction under N.J.R.E. 609, even though that conviction occurred more
than ten years before the trial.
While surveilling a street corner in Newark, two detectives observed several men
loitering in the area. A detective testified that one of the individuals, later identified as
defendant Tywaun S. Hedgespeth, adjusted his clothes, at which point officers saw what
looked like the butt of a gun. Backup units were told to apprehend the men and to be
cautious with defendant. A detective apprehended defendant, ordered him to show his
hands, took him to the ground, and then alerted fellow officers that he found a weapon.
Another detective recovered the weapon. A third detective read defendant his rights.
Defendant was searched by the arresting officers who discovered crack cocaine on his
person. No fingerprints were found on the gun.
In August 2017, defendant went to trial on a drug possession charge and an
unlawful possession of a weapon charge. To address an element of the unlawful
possession charge -- the lack of a firearm permit -- the State produced a witness who
testified she oversaw a search of the Essex County gun records performed by her
secretary, which returned no firearm permit for defendant.
At the close of the State’s case, defense counsel advised the court that, to help
defendant reach a decision on whether to testify, he required a ruling as to the
admissibility of defendant’s prior convictions, both of which involved drug offenses.
Defense counsel contested their admissibility, citing remoteness under N.J.R.E. 609 and
noting that the offenses dated back to 2001 and 2005. The trial court permitted the State
to introduce the convictions for impeachment purposes, reasoning that the probationary
1
term for the 2005 conviction extended to within ten years of the trial and the 2001
conviction represented a continuing course of conduct. Defendant declined to testify.
Following defendant’s decision not to testify, and over his objection, the State
introduced testimony from Detective John Cosgrove of the Essex County Prosecutor’s
Office. Cosgrove was permitted to testify to the contents of an affidavit, sworn to by
Detective Sergeant Brett Bloom of the Firearms Investigation Unit of the New Jersey
State Police, which stated that defendant does not have a firearm permit on record with
the State. Notably, the search was not conducted by Detective Cosgrove, and neither
Bloom nor anyone else with responsibility for the State’s database or search testified.
The jury found defendant guilty on both counts, and he pleaded guilty to a certain-
persons offense the same day. The Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s convictions.
464 N.J. Super. 421, 427 (App. Div. 2020). The Court granted certification, 244 N.J. 362
(2020), on the two issues identified by defendant: (1) whether the trial court committed
harmful error in permitting impeachment of defendant by his prior convictions; and (2)
whether the trial court erred in admitting an affidavit by a non-testifying officer.
HELD: A violation occurred when the State was allowed to enter into evidence
information set forth in the affidavit of a non-testifying officer concerning the no-permit
results from a search of the State firearm registry, and that violation was not cured by
testimony concerning the search of an Essex County firearm database. Further, the trial
court’s incorrect N.J.R.E. 609 ruling constituted harmful error requiring reversal of the
conviction. However, the Court declines to adopt the position that an evidentiary ruling
that results in a defendant’s decision not to testify can never be harmless.
1. The Court’s decision in Carrion controls in this matter. When used in a criminal
prosecution, an affidavit setting forth the results of a search of the State’s firearm permit
registry -- as evidence that a defendant lacks a firearm permit -- is testimonial for
purposes of the Confrontation Clause. As such, if the right to confrontation is raised by
the defendant, the person who conducted the search and created the affidavit must be
produced unless a suitable substitute witness, such as one who witnessed or re-conducted
the same search, is presented. See Carrion, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 17-20). (pp. 10-11)
2. Here, the affiant, Bloom, was not produced. Cosgrove was not a suitable replacement
witness and could not fulfill the cross-examination requirement that the Confrontation
Clause protects. The objections lodged by defense counsel were sufficient to preserve the
issue, and the witness who requested the search of the County database could not address
or eliminate the possibility that defendant had sought a permit in another county. Only
the search of the State’s database -- admitted in violation of the Confrontation Clause --
could eliminate that possibility; thus, the evidence from the county search cannot render
that violation harmless. (pp. 11-12)
2
3. As for the error concerning the allowed impeachment based on defendant’s prior
convictions, the State agreed during oral argument that the prior convictions should not
have been permitted to be introduced for impeachment purposes under N.J.R.E. 609. The
focus in this appeal is whether that error can be harmless. (p. 13)
4. In Luce v. United States, the United States Supreme Court decided, under federal
appellate procedure, that a defendant who does not testify is not entitled to appellate
review of a ruling denying a motion to forbid the use of a prior conviction for
impeachment. 469 U.S. 38, 39-40 (1984). The Court reasoned that allowing review in
such circumstances “would result in the windfall of automatic reversal” because an
“appellate court could not logically term ‘harmless’ an error that presumptively kept the
defendant from testifying.” Id. at 42. In State v. Whitehead, in interpreting N.J.R.E. 609,
the Court rejected the reasoning in Luce. 104 N.J. 353, 357-59 (1986). The Whitehead
Court did not share the concern of the United States Supreme Court that those difficulties
would result in automatic reversals. Ibid. Thus, according to Whitehead, it is not
imperative that a defendant testify as a prerequisite to making an in limine N.J.R.E. 609
ruling reviewable on appeal. In reaching that decision -- and thus rejecting Luce’s
“windfall” concern -- the Court implicitly recognized that there can be situations,
although likely unusual, in which an erroneous N.J.R.E. 609 ruling may be harmless even
if that ruling resulted in the defendant’s deciding not to testify. See ibid. (pp. 13-18)
5. The clear import of Whitehead is that this Court believed that there can be situations
in which a defendant’s decision not to testify after an erroneous N.J.R.E. 609 ruling will
not constitute harmful error. The Court continues to hold to the correctness of that view,
although it again recognizes that cases in which such error is found to be harmless may
be few in number. The doctrine of harmless error is specifically well equipped for
dealing with the type of error defendant has alleged. If the Court were to hold that the
situation amounts to structural error, it would effectively re-classify any erroneous
evidentiary ruling that has the effect of pushing a defendant to strategically choose not to
testify as structural error. Such a rule would lead to untenable results. In limine N.J.R.E.
609 rulings shall continue to be reviewed under the harmless-error standard. (pp. 18-20)
6. The trial court’s N.J.R.E. 609 ruling in this case was harmful. The Court explains
why the jury’s failure to hear defendant’s testimony could have produced an unjust result
in this case, stressing that defendant was unable to effectively counter the State’s theory
of the case and that the State’s only evidence linking defendant to the gun was officer
testimony. (pp. 20-21)
REVERSED and REMANDED for new proceedings.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON,
FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE
LaVECCHIA’s opinion.
3
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-22 September Term 2020
084892
State of New Jersey,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
Tywaun S. Hedgespeth, a/k/a
Tywaune Hedgespeth,
Tywuan Hedgespeth,
Tywaun Hedgspeth, and
Tavon James,
Defendant-Appellant.
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
464 N.J. Super. 421 (App. Div. 2020).
Argued Decided
October 13, 2021 December 27, 2021
Whitney F. Flanagan, First Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E.
Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Whitney F.
Flanagan, of counsel and on the briefs).
Lucille M. Rosano, Special Deputy Attorney
General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for
respondent (Theodore N. Stephens, II, Acting Essex
County Prosecutor, attorney; Lucille M. Rosano, of
counsel and on the briefs).
1
Matthew E. Frisch argued the cause for amicus curiae
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New Jersey
(Pashman Stein Walder Hayden, attorneys; Matthew E.
Frisch, of counsel and on the brief).
Valeria Dominguez, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
cause for amicus curiae Attorney General of New Jersey
(Andrew J. Bruck, Acting Attorney General, attorney;
Valeria Dominguez, of counsel and on the brief).
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, we address two alleged evidentiary errors in the Appellate
Division’s affirmance of defendant’s convictions. See State v. Hedgespeth,
464 N.J. Super. 421 (App. Div. 2020). One relates to the confrontation issue
resolved today in the companion appeal of State v. Carrion, ___ N.J. ___
(2021): whether admission of an affidavit from the New Jersey State Police,
affirming that a defendant does not appear in the State’s firearm permi t
database, violates the Confrontation Clauses of both the State and Federal
Constitutions when the affiant does not testify at trial.
We conclude that a violation occurred when the State was allowed to
enter into evidence information set forth in the affidavit of a non-testifying
officer concerning the no-permit results from a search of the State firearm
registry. We reject the alternative argument that testimony concerning the
search of an Essex County firearm database renders harmless the error with
2
respect to the State database. The search of a county database is not the same
as a search of the State database; thus, its admission into evidence does not
cure the erroneous admission of the results of the State database search.
The other issue concerns whether the trial court committed harmful error
when it permitted the State to impeach defendant with a prior conviction under
N.J.R.E. 609, even though that conviction occurred more than ten years before
the trial. The trial court reasoned that the conviction was not too remote
because the sentence’s probationary term extended within the ten-year window
for remoteness. Although the State does not dispute defendant’s claim of error
in the trial court’s remoteness analysis, it argues that the evidentiary ruling
was not harmful under the circumstances despite the fact that defendant
declined to testify after the court’s ruling. We disagree.
We conclude that the trial court’s incorrect N.J.R.E. 609 ruling
constituted harmful error requiring reversal of the conviction. In so holding,
however, we decline to adopt defendant’s position that an evidentiary ruling
that results in a defendant’s decision not to testify can never be harmless.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
I.
In 2017, defendant Tywaun S. Hedgespeth was convicted by a jury of
unlawful possession of a controlled dangerous substance (CDS), contrary to
3
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(1), and unlawful possession of a weapon without a
permit, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1). Briefly, as recounted at trial, the
facts leading to his charges stem from surveillance conducted by the Essex
County Sheriff’s department.
While surveilling a street corner in Newark, two detectives observed
several men loitering in the area. One of the individuals, later identified as
defendant, was described as a “black man, medium brown skin, wearing a
black do-rag, a black puffy ski-type vest, a black hooded sweatshirt, black
workpants, and . . . black boots.” Detective Ozzie Ryals testified to watching
defendant walk back and forth a few times before he appeared to urinate on the
side of a building, and then, when finished, “as he was fixing himself and
adjusting his clothes, [the Detectives] observed what [they] thought to be the
butt of a gun.”
As the detectives were in communication with other members of their
unit “via radio and cellphone,” Ryals reported the gun to the backup team via
radio, but at trial he could not recall what channel he used and acknowledged it
may have been via cell phone. The backup units, already in position, were told
to go in and apprehend all the men and to be cautious with defendant. 1
1
During trial, tapes of the recorded channel indicate that as Detective Ryals
ordered other units to “grab all of ‘em,” his partner, Detective Rickards, added
“[a]nd they had a weapon over here.”
4
The backup team went to the scene. Detective Jimmy Bradley
apprehended defendant, ordered defendant to show his hands, took defendant
to the ground, and then alerted fellow officers that he found a weapon.
Detective Angel Colon recovered the weapon. A third detective read
defendant his rights. Neither of the surveilling detectives went to the scene
where defendant was apprehended and the gun was allegedly found.
Defendant was searched by the arresting officers who discovered what
was later determined to be crack cocaine on his person. Later, the gun and
magazine were tested, but no fingerprints were found on either.
Defendant was indicted for various CDS and weapons charges.2 In
August 2017, he went to trial on the possession of CDS charge and the
unlawful possession of a weapon charge.
The officers testified, as summarized, about the circumstances of the
surveillance of the corner, followed by the apprehension of defendant by the
2
Essex County Indictment Number 2016-07-2215 charged defendant with
possession of CDS, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a); possession of CDS with
intent to distribute, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(1) and -5(b)(3); possession
of CDS with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of a school, contrary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5 and -7(a); possession of CDS with intent to distribute within
500 feet of a public building, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7.1(a); possession of
a firearm in the course of possessing CDS with intent to distribute, contrary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4.1(a); and possession of a firearm without a permit, contrary
to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b). A separate indictment added a certain-persons charge.
See N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(b).
5
backup unit officers. To address an element of the unlawful possession charge
-- the lack of a firearm permit -- the State produced Deborah Despotovich,
Criminal Division Manager of the Superior Court of New Jersey. According to
her testimony, she oversaw a search of the Essex County gun records
performed by her secretary, which returned no firearm permit for defendant.
At the close of the State’s case, defense counsel advised the court that,
to help defendant reach a decision on whether to testify, he required a ruling as
to the admissibility of defendant’s prior convictions, both of which involved
CDS offenses. Defense counsel contested their admissibility, citing
remoteness under N.J.R.E. 6093 and noting that the offenses dated back to
2001 and 2005. For the 2001 conviction, defendant received a three-year
custodial term. For the 2005 conviction, defendant was sentenced to a four-
year probationary term with no custodial term.
3
Under N.J.R.E. 609, a witness’s credibility may be impeached by
introducing a prior conviction of that witness. When the witness being
impeached is a criminal defendant, the prosecution is limited in the manner it
may introduce that conviction. See N.J.R.E. 609(a)(2)(B). Use of a prior
conviction is even further limited “[i]f, on the date the trial begins, more than
ten years have passed since the witness’s conviction for a crime or release
from confinement for it, whichever is later.” N.J.R.E. 609(b)(1). When a
conviction is ten years remote, as was asserted by the defense at trial, it “is
admissible only if the court determines that its probative value outweighs its
prejudicial effect, with the proponent of the evidence having the burden of
proof.” Ibid.
6
The trial court permitted the State to introduce the convictions for
impeachment purposes, reasoning that the probationary term for the 2005
conviction extended to within ten years of the trial and the 2001 conviction
represented a continuing course of conduct. The trial court required that the
convictions be “sanitized” to exclude the details of the offense and permitted
the State to refer to the date of conviction and sentence imposed. Defendant
thereupon declined to testify and added that he believed his counsel’s cross-
examination of the State’s witnesses was ineffective. In making his
representations to the court in colloquy when declining to testify, de fendant
disputed the facts as recounted by the officers who testified at trial.
Following defendant’s decision not to testify, and over his objection, the
State reopened its case to introduce testimony from Detective John Cosgrove
of the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office. Detective Cosgrove was permitted to
testify to the contents of an affidavit, sworn to by Detective Sergeant Brett
Bloom of the Firearms Investigation Unit of the New Jersey State Police,
which stated that defendant does not have a firearm permit on record with the
State (the “no-permit affidavit”). Notably, the State firearm registry search
was not conducted by Detective Cosgrove,4 and neither Bloom nor anyone else
4
The record reveals that Derrick Westry, an investigative aide in Cosgrove’s
office, made the request. Mr. Westry did not testify.
7
with responsibility for the State database or the specific search for defendant’s
name testified at trial. The defense asserted that the State was “asking to
admit this without any witness or foundation.” And, at the conclusion of the
defense’s cross-examination of Detective Cosgrove, counsel renewed his
objection to the admission of the affidavit based on lack of foundation and lack
of personal knowledge by the only witness testifying about the affidavit:
Cosgrove.
On August 10, 2017, the jury found defendant guilty on both counts.
The same day, defendant pleaded guilty to a certain-persons offense. The trial
court imposed an aggregate sentence of eight years’ imprisonment with a five-
year period of parole ineligibility.
On appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s convictions.
Hedgespeth, 464 N.J. Super. at 427. Although defendant raised five issues
before the Appellate Division, only two are before this Court on certification:
(1) whether the trial court committed harmful error in permitting impeachment
of defendant by his prior convictions; and (2) whether the trial court erred in
admitting an affidavit by a non-testifying officer.
8
The Appellate Division determined that the use of defendant’s prior
convictions for impeachment constituted error, id. at 437,5 a determination the
State does not presently challenge. However, the Appellate Division held that
-- because “the State’s evidence was so strong that had defendant testified,
there was no real possibility that the jury would have reached a different
result,” and because the trial court issued a limiting instruction -- the erroneous
ruling was harmless and did not require reversal. Id. at 438.
The Appellate Division also rejected defendant’s argument that
admission of the no-permit affidavit without Bloom’s testimony violated the
5
The Appellate Division reasoned that application of N.J.R.E. 609’s
presumption against admissibility depended on whether defendant’s four-year
probation imposed for his 2005 conviction was a term of “confinement.” Id. at
429-31. Relying on the plain language of N.J.R.E. 609(b)(1), interpretation of
analogous provisions by federal and state courts, and previous “interpretation
of confinement in both related and unrelated contexts,” the appellate court
concluded “that probation does not qualify as confinement under N.J.R.E.
609(b)(1)” and that the presumption against admissibility applied. Id. at 432-
36. We also note that several federal courts have consistently interpreted F ed.
R. Evid. 609’s analogous language in the same way the Appellate Division did.
See, e.g., United States v. Stoltz, 683 F.3d 934, 939 (8th Cir. 2012); United
States v. Rogers, 542 F.3d 197, 201 (7th Cir. 2008); United States v. Daniel,
957 F.2d 162, 168 n.4 (5th Cir. 1992).
Based on its interpretation of the Rule’s requirements, the Appellate
Division found that an abuse of discretion had occurred, explaining that the
trial court’s ruling was erroneously based on “N.J.R.E. 609(a)’s less stringent
standard [and not on] the N.J.R.E. 609(b)(2) factors.” Id. at 437. Accordingly,
the appellate court held that “the judge’s evidentiary ruling constituted a
mistaken exercise of discretion.” Ibid.
9
Rules of Evidence and the Confrontation Clause. Id. at 438-45. It concluded
that the affidavit was “admissible under the hearsay rules,” pursuant to
N.J.R.E. 803(c)(7) and N.J.R.E. 902(a) and (k). Id. at 440. And, as to the
confrontation issue, the court held that Bloom’s “‘no-permit’ affidavit is not
testimonial.” Id. at 443-45. “Because the affidavit is not testimonial,” the
court reasoned, “its admission without Bloom’s testimony did not violate the
Confrontation Clause.” Id. at 445.
We granted certification on the two issues identified by defendant. 244
N.J. 362 (2020).
II.
We address first the confrontation issue and state simply that our holding
in Carrion controls in this matter.
In Carrion, we held that, when used in a criminal prosecution, an
affidavit setting forth the results of a search of the State’s firearm permit
registry -- as evidence that a defendant lacks a firearm permit -- is testimonial
for purposes of the Confrontation Clause. ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 18-20).
As such, if the right to confrontation is raised by the defendant, the person who
conducted the search and created the affidavit must be produced unless a
suitable substitute witness, who personally witnessed or re-conducted the same
10
search, is presented. See id. at ___ (slip op. at 17-18); State v. Bass, 224 N.J.
285, 316-19 (2016).
Here, the affiant, Bloom, was not produced and Cosgrove was not a
suitable replacement witness. Cosgrove had no knowledge about the State
database’s entries or the manner in which the search for defendant among
firearm registrants was conducted. Simply put, he could not fulfill the cross-
examination requirement that the Confrontation Clause protects.
The State contends that defendant did cross-examine the witness
produced; however, that argument misses the point. The Confrontation Clause
entitles the defendant to cross-examine not just any witness, but the correct
witness, i.e., the witness who made a “testimonial” statement. See Bass, 224
N.J. at 316-19. Detective Cosgrove did not perform the search. He only
repeated Bloom’s conclusions. He could only say the search was done. The
mere fact that defense counsel cross-examined Cosgrove, a plainly insufficient
witness, does not fulfill the promise of the Confrontation Clause.
To the extent that the arguments on this issue mirror the arguments
presented in Carrion, we rely on our analysis in that matter to resolve the issue
here. We add only the following. The objections lodged by defense counsel
were sufficient to preserve the issue, as we have recognized in the past. See
State v. Wilson, 227 N.J. 534, 543-44 (2017) (holding that defendant’s
11
objection to a map’s admission on grounds of form and content -- hearsay and
the adequacy of a witness to provide the foundation for the map’s admission --
reasonably constituted a sufficient Confrontation Clause challenge). Thus, we
reject the State’s argument that there was not a proper objection by defendant.
The State further asserts, in the alternative, that any confrontation error
was harmless because it produced the testimony of a witness who requested the
search of an Essex County database. This argument is unpersuasive because
that witness could not address or eliminate the possibility that defendant had
sought a permit in another county. Only the search of the State’s
comprehensive database, which was admitted in violation of the Confrontation
Clause, could eliminate that possibility; thus, the evidence from the search of
the Essex County database cannot be said to render that violation harmless .6
For the reasons more fully explained in Carrion, we are constrained to
find that defendant’s right to confrontation was violated.
6
Indeed, the witness produced with respect to the Essex County database also
could say only that a search of the Essex County database was conducted but
could not provide more detail about the search.
12
III.
A.
As for the error concerning the allowed impeachment based on
defendant’s prior convictions, we note that the State agreed during oral
argument that the prior convictions should not have been permitted to be
introduced for impeachment purposes under N.J.R.E. 609. 7 The focus in the
appeal before us is tailored to whether that error can be harmless.
1.
According to defendant, an erroneous ruling that pushes a criminal
defendant not to testify can never be harmless. Defendant contends that
harmless-error rehabilitation is not possible when fundamental rights, like a
defendant’s right to testify on his or her own behalf, are denied. As support,
he cites language from Luce v. United States, 469 U.S. 38, 42 (1984), and this
Court’s decision in State v. Whitehead, 104 N.J. 353, 359 (1986), that he
argues acknowledge the difficulty of conducting a harmless error analysis in
situations like his. Defendant further asserts that his own testimony would
7
As noted, the Appellate Division found that it was error for the trial court to
admit the prior convictions under N.J.R.E. 609 but concluded that the error
was ultimately harmless. Hedgespeth, 464 N.J. Super. at 437-38. The State
did not file a cross-petition seeking reversal of the Appellate Division’s
interpretation of N.J.R.E. 609, nor does it challenge that holding in its briefs
filed in opposition to defendant’s appeal.
13
have been significant to his defense and that the evidence against him was not
so overwhelming that the jury would have still returned a guilty verdict.
Amicus curiae, the Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New
Jersey (ACDL), agrees with defendant, contending that the right to testify on
one’s own behalf is integral to the right to present a defense. Interference with
that right, amicus argues, is “structural error.” In the ACDL’s view, a per se
rule requiring a new trial in these situations would respect the great weight
juries place on a defendant’s testimony.
2.
The State supports the Appellate Division’s conclusion that the error that
occurred here was harmless, stressing that, since our decision in Whitehead,
courts of this state have consistently applied a harmless-error analysis in like
situations. The State further contends that its evidence at trial would not have
been defeated by defendant’s testimony. Rather, the State asserts that the two
officers’ consistent descriptions of defendant at the scene and the recovery of a
gun at defendant’s precise location was strong evidence. The State also relies
on the instruction by the trial court, directing the jury not to consider
defendant’s failure to testify.
The Attorney General supports the Appellate Division’s determination.
The Attorney General argues that the Whitehead decision adopted the
14
harmless-error analysis, notwithstanding the difficulty in conducting such an
analysis, and cites decisions that have applied a harmless-error review in
similar circumstances.8
B.
We begin with defendant’s and the ACDL’s argument that an
evidentiary ruling resulting in a criminal defendant’s decision to not testify can
never be harmless.
In Chapman v. California, the United States Supreme Court fashioned a
“harmless-constitutional-error rule” but also recognized “that there are some
constitutional rights so basic to a fair trial that their infraction can never be
treated as harmless error.” 386 U.S. 18, 23 (1967). Such rights, according to
the Chapman Court, included the right against coerced confession, the right to
counsel, and the right to an impartial judge. Id. at 23 n.8.
The Supreme Court later labeled such constitutional errors as “structural
defect.” Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 309-10 (1991). In Fulminante,
the Court articulated that violations of the right to counsel or to an impartial
judge constitute “structural defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism,
8
State v. Frost, 158 N.J. 76 (1999); State v. R.J.M., 453 N.J. Super. 261 (App.
Div. 2018); State v. Singleton, 308 N.J. Super. 407 (App. Div. 1998).
15
which defy analysis by ‘harmless-error’ standards.” Id. at 309. The Court
explained that
[t]he entire conduct of the trial from beginning to end
is obviously affected by the absence of counsel for a
criminal defendant, just as it is by the presence on the
bench of a judge who is not impartial. Since our
decision in Chapman, other cases have added to the
category of constitutional errors which are not subject
to harmless error the following: unlawful exclusion of
members of the defendant’s race from a grand jury; the
right to self-representation at trial; and the right to
public trial.
[Id. at 309-10 (citations omitted).]
Defendant and the ACDL ask us to classify as structural error any trial
court ruling, like the one in this appeal, that may cause a defendant not to
testify when he otherwise wishes to. They rely in part on Luce, 469 U.S. at
41-43.
There, the United States Supreme Court decided, under federal appellate
procedure, that a non-testifying defendant is not entitled to appellate review of
a trial court’s Fed. R. Evid. 609 “ruling denying [a] motion to forbid the use of
a prior conviction to impeach [the defendant’s] credibility.” Id. at 39-40. In
making that decision, the Court reasoned in part -- and in language heavily
relied upon by defendant and the ACDL -- that allowing review in such
circumstances “would result in the windfall of automatic reversal” because an
“appellate court could not logically term ‘harmless’ an error that
16
presumptively kept the defendant from testifying.” Id. at 42. Thus, the
Supreme Court held that a defendant must testify to preserve the possibility of
claiming improper impeachment and that a non-testifying defendant, like
defendant here, would not even be entitled to a substantive appellate review of
the trial court’s evidentiary ruling itself.
In Whitehead, where we interpreted our own N.J.R.E. 609, we rejected
the reasoning in Luce. 104 N.J. at 357-59. Instead, we determined that an in
limine N.J.R.E. 609 ruling could be reviewed on appeal notwithstanding the
defendant’s decision not to testify at trial. Id. at 359. We found a
“[d]efendant’s testimony is unnecessary” either “for a trial court to make the
discretionary determination on the admissibility of prior convictions” or “for
an appellate court to review the trial court’s exercise of discretion” with
respect to such rulings. Ibid.
The Whitehead Court acknowledged “the difficulty of characterizing as
harmless a trial court’s error in ruling that the defendant’s prior convictions
may be used for impeachment purposes,” but it did not share the concern of the
United States Supreme Court that those difficulties would result in automatic
reversals. Ibid. Rather, this Court found that worry to be “misplaced, at least
insofar as its effect on the administration of justice in this state is concerned.”
Id. at 359-60.
17
Thus, according to Whitehead, it is not imperative that a defendant
testify as a prerequisite to making an in limine N.J.R.E. 609 ruling reviewable
on appeal. In reaching that decision -- and thus rejecting Luce’s “windfall”
concern -- this Court implicitly recognized that there can be situations,
although likely unusual, in which an erroneous N.J.R.E. 609 ruling may be
deemed harmless even if that ruling resulted in the defendant’s deciding not to
testify. See ibid.
C.
We find the defense’s reliance on Luce and Whitehead misplaced.
Defendant and the ACDL have crafted an argument that has effectively turned
the analysis in Luce, and this Court’s rejection of that analysis in Whitehead,
on its head. If this Court were to accept defendant’s and the ACDL’s
arguments, we would not be following Whitehead, as they urge us to; rather,
we would, in effect, be undermining the reasoning of that very opinion.
The clear import of Whitehead is that this Court believed that there can
be situations in which a defendant’s decision not to testify after an erroneous
N.J.R.E. 609 ruling will not constitute harmful error. The other side of that
coin is that this Court did not believe that type of evidentiary error rose to the
level of structural error. We continue to hold to the correctness of that view
18
although we again recognize that cases in which such error is found to be
harmless may be few in number.
We add that the doctrine of harmless error is specifically well equipped
for dealing with the type of error defendant has alleged. The error committed
by the trial court was an evidentiary ruling. The court did not deny defendant
the right to testify. 9 Rather, the court improperly determined that specific past-
convictions evidence could be admitted, and, in light of that determination,
defendant chose not to testify.
Defendant’s choice not to testify was likely a ramification of the
erroneous evidentiary ruling. But such ramifications are precisely what the
harmless-error analysis is designed to consider: it asks whether an alleged trial
error made a difference in the case, such as by prompting particular strategic
responses by the parties. If we were to hold that the situation amounts to
structural error, it would effectively re-classify any erroneous evidentiary
ruling that has the effect of pushing a defendant to strategically choose not to
testify as structural error. Such a rule would lead to untenable results.
9
The Supreme Court has made clear that denials of the right to testify are
constitutionally impermissible. See Rock v. Arkansas, 483 U.S. 44 (1987)
(vacating as an improper, blanket denial of the right to testify -- among other
constitutional infirmities -- a state’s per se rule that a defendant could not
testify after having undergone hypnosis therapy to remember the events of a
case).
19
Accordingly, we hold that in limine N.J.R.E. 609 rulings shall continue to be
reviewed under the harmless-error standard.
Last, we conclude that the trial court’s N.J.R.E. 609 ruling in this case
was harmful. To determine whether admission of evidence constitutes
harmless error, the relevant inquiry is whether the purported error “is of such a
nature as to have been clearly capable of producing an unjust result.” State v.
Kuchera, 198 N.J. 482, 501 (2009) (quoting State v. Castagna, 187 N.J. 293,
312 (2006)); see also State v. Ingram, 196 N.J. 23, 49 (2008) (“[T]he harmless-
error standard . . . requires that there be some degree of possibility that the
error led to an unjust result.” (quoting State v. R.B., 183 N.J. 308, 330
(2005))).
Here, the jury’s failure to hear defendant’s testimony could have
produced an unjust result. The key testimony against defendant was that of
two police officers who testified that they saw the gun in defendant’s waist
band and that a gun was later recovered by other officers near where defendant
and others were apprehended. The State introduced the gun itself into
evidence; however, there was no fingerprint or DNA evidence on the gun.
Had the trial court not erroneously admitted the prior convictions,
defendant argues he could have more forcefully challenged the detectives’
credibility as to whether they saw the gun on his waistband. By not testifying,
20
defendant was only able to cast doubt on the officers’ accounts through cross-
examination; he was unable to effectively offer a counter theory of the case.
Moreover, the jury was not able to consider Hedgespeth’s demeanor and
credibility in delivering his theory of the case. See State v. Scott, 229 N.J.
469, 484-85 (2017).
No doubt, the strongest evidence against defendant is that the State
produced the gun in evidence. But, without indisputable evidence linking
defendant to the gun -- except through officer testimony -- the admission of the
gun did not necessarily cement the State’s case against defendant. The mere
fact that the State may characterize a potential defense theory seeking to
explain away the gun as “implausible” is not reason to hold that the trial
court’s error was harmless. Ibid. Determining implausibility “is in the sole
province of the jury. Judges should not intrude as the thirteenth juror.” Id. at
485.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Appellate Division is
reversed, and the matter is remanded for new proceedings.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON,
FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE
LaVECCHIA’s opinion.
21