NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1946-19
IN THE MATTER OF ERIC
BEAGIN, CITY OF PATERSON,
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
____________________________
Argued April 26, 2022 – Decided June 28, 2022
Before Judges DeAlmeida and Berdote Byrne.
On appeal from the New Jersey Civil Service
Commission, Docket No. 2016-1336.
Charles J. Sciarra argued the cause for appellant Eric
Beagin (Sciarra & Catrambone, LLC, attorneys;
Charles J. Sciarra and Deborah Masker Edwards, of
counsel and on the briefs).
Kenneth B. Goodman argued the cause for respondent
City of Paterson, Fire Department (O'Toole Scrivo,
LLC, attorneys; Kenneth B. Goodman, on the brief).
Matthew J. Platkin, Acting Attorney General, attorney
for respondent New Jersey Civil Service Commission
(Pamela N. Ullman, Deputy Attorney General, on the
statement in lieu of brief).
PER CURIAM
Eric Beagin appeals from a final administrative action of the Civil Service
Commission (CSC) affirming his removal from employment as a Paterson
firefighter and failing to adopt the Administrative Law Judge's (ALJ)
recommendation to reverse the removal. Because we find the Paterson Fire
Department failed to prove the drug testing equipment was properly calibrated
and standard operating procedures were followed when Beagin's drug test was
performed, we conclude the CSC's decisions are not supported by sufficient,
credible evidence in the record and are arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable.
We therefore reverse, vacate the final administrative action, and order
reinstatement of Beagin to his position as a Paterson firefighter.
I.
On July 17, 2015, Beagin underwent a random urine drug screen in
connection with his employment as a firefighter with the Paterson Fire
Department (PFD). The urine sample was sent to the New Jersey State
Toxicology Laboratory (State Lab) which reported Beagin's urine screen was
positive for oxycodone, a substance not produced by any medication listed on
his medication sheet. Beagin was served a preliminary notice of disciplinary
action, immediately suspending him from his employment with the PFD
pursuant to N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.5(a)(1) and seeking the termination of his
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2
employment, charging him with conduct unbecoming a public employee and
other sufficient cause pursuant to N.J.A.C. 4A:2-2.3(a), and violating the
statutory standard of behavior required of firefighters pursuant to N.J.S.A.
40A:14-17 and Karins v. City of Atlantic City, 152 N.J. 532 (1998). By final
notice of disciplinary action dated September 18, 2015, Beagin was removed
from his position effective that day.
Beagin filed an appeal with the CSC, and the contested matter was referred
to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) for a hearing. On March 11 and 15,
2019, a hearing was held before ALJ Celentano. 1 The ALJ issued an initial
decision recommending Beagin be reinstated to the position of firefighter and
an order requiring the City of Paterson to pay Beagin his base salary beginning
March 12, 2019.
PFD filed exceptions with the CSC. On December 4, 2019, the CSC
advised Beagin it did not adopt the recommendations of the ALJ, instead
upholding his removal from the PFD. The CSC also advised its "written
determination in this matter should be issued in the near future." The CSC
1
The multi-year delay in holding the hearing is explained in the ALJ's opinion
and is not a subject of this appeal.
A-1946-19
3
issued its final administrative action on December 19, 2019. This appeal
followed.
II.
On July 17, 2015, the State Lab reported Beagin's random urine screen
positive for oxycodone at 114 ng/mL, 14 nanograms over the State Lab's defined
cutoff of 100 ng/mL. At the OAL hearing, Beagin contested only the validity
of the drug test results, stipulating if the test results were upheld as valid, his
termination should be upheld given his employment in a public safety position.
The parties further stipulated if the testing was deemed unreliable, the
termination would be reversed. Because the only contested issue was the
reliability and trustworthiness of the drug testing performed by the State Lab,
the ALJ heard testimony from only two expert witnesses, with the parties
stipulating to the witnesses' expertise and their ability to testify wi th regard to
drug testing procedures.
First, the ALJ heard from Dr. Robert Havier, who for the past eight years
had held the position of Acting Director of the State Lab and had worked at the
lab for forty years. Dr. Havier testified all urine samples received by the lab are
initially screened by an immunoassay test, which determines whether the sample
is positive for any of the drugs being tested. If the immunoassay test shows a
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4
positive result,2 the same sample is further tested using gas chromatography,
mass spectrometry, (GC/MS), to confirm the identity and the concentration of
the drug(s) detected. The GC/MS testing produces a numerical score, indicating
the amount of any drug present in the sample. Beagin's sample was tested by
GC/MS for six different drugs, all in the opiate class.
Dr. Havier testified before testing each donor sample, five or six
calibrators are used to calibrate the instrument such that test results may be
validated. He explained clean urine samples are prepared by the lab or
purchased by the lab from third-party providers. The samples are mixed with a
concentration, a known value for each of the specific drugs being tested. For
every test, the analyst first establishes a linear relationship between the
instrument response and each of the calibrators. The analyst then tests the
donor's sample and receives a response from the instrument. The results of the
donor's sample are plotted against the straight line established by the calibrators
to allow the analyst "to translate the instrument response to a concentration
based on that linear relationship with the calibrators."
2
Dr. Havier testified the immunoassay uses "antibodies [which] are not 100%
specific for a particular drug. If they detect a chemical similar in structure to a
drug it would identify it as that drug" which is why confirmatory testing is
necessary to prove an accurate result.
A-1946-19
5
Dr. Havier further testified the analyst has the discretion of eliminating as
many as two out of the five or six calibrators if they do not fit neatly alo ng the
line because the lab wants "to establish the best straight-line relationship." For
a test to be considered valid, the analyst is required to have a minimum of three
calibrators to establish the linear relationship. Dr. Havier also testified to an
industry standard, 3 utilized by the State Lab for the forty years he has been there,
which permits the calibrators to deviate up to twenty percent from the expected
value without invalidating the calibrator used. If any calibrator deviates more
than twenty percent, the calibrator's results are excluded and different calibrators
must be used to establish the linear relationship.
Dr. Havier did not personally test Beagin's sample, although he signed off
on the written test results. Beagin's sample was received by the State Lab on
July 17, 2015 and the initial immunoassay screening, which produced a positive
result, was performed on July 21, 2015. Thereafter, GC/MS testing of the same
sample on the following day confirmed the presence of oxycodone at 114 ng/mL.
Dr. Havier testified the analyst used five calibrators to calibrate the
GC/MS instrument. Three of the calibrators produced results that were close to
3
Dr. Havier did not produce an expert report prior to his testimony. The PFD
produced raw testing data, which Dr. Havier relied upon in his testimony.
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6
one another, so those were used to develop the linear relationship against which
Beagin's sample was tested. The other two calibrators were eliminated. The
first calibrator tested did not produce reliable results for any of six opiates tested,
against an expected concentration of 400 ng/mL, and was discarded. The second
calibrator produced results of 199.8 ng/mL for oxycodone 4 against an expected
concentration of 200 ng/mL and was used to establish the linear relationship.
The third calibrator did not produce reliable results for the six opiates, at an
expected concentration of 100 ng/mL, and was discarded. The fourth calibrator
produced a result of 50.7 ng/mL against an expected concentration of 50 ng/mL
and was utilized in the linear relationship. The final calibrator produced a result
of 24.3 ng/mL of oxycodone for an expected concentration of 25 ng/mL and was
also used to establish the linear relationship.
The four concentrations used were tested immediately after the
calibrators. The results all exceeded their expected concentration values. The
first concentration, expected to result in 125 ng/mL, returned a result of 130
ng/mL of oxycodone, although it produced more accurate results for the other
drugs in the opiate class. Dr. Havier testified the same sample was "reinjected"
4
These calibrators produced different results for the other five compounds in
the opiate class. We address only the results for oxycodone because that is the
only issue before the court.
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7
into the machine to determine if it would provide a closer result, and the result
was 115.3 ng/mL of oxycodone against an expected value of 100 ng/mL. Both
of these results consistently demonstrate the concentration used was 5 ng/mL
higher than its expected result. The second concentration, expected to produce
a value of 100 ng/mL, returned a result of 116.4 ng/mL, the third returned 75.7
ng/mL instead of 75 and the fourth returned no concentration, as expected.
Dr. Havier testified the high concentration results used did not invalidate
Beagin's test results and Beagin's test results were positive for oxycodone above
the acceptable level of 100 ng/mL.5 Dr. Havier explained the twenty percent
variation permitted pursuant to industry standards applies only to calibrators
used to calibrate the instrument. The same twenty percent variation is not
applied to a donor's urine sample. Therefore, Dr. Havier explained it would be
incorrect to deduct fifteen or sixteen points from Beagin's test results (the
deviation from the 100 ng/mL positive benchmark), such that his result would
be reported as negative for oxycodone, as Beagin's counsel suggested.
Dr. Havier was also questioned with respect to a urine sample tested prior
to Beagin's sample, which had a result of 12,119 ng/mL for oxycodone,
5
No testimony was elicited as to why the cutoff for oxycodone is established at
100 ng/mL other than "the lab sets the cutoff."
A-1946-19
8
suggesting there was carryover or possible cross-contamination from that test
that affected Beagin's results. Dr. Havier stated a negative/blank urine sample
is run through the machine between tests of each individual's urine sample.
Therefore, there was no carryover from the previous test.
Dr. Lyle Hayes testified on behalf of Beagin. He is a New York State
certified forensic toxicologist who, for the last fifteen years, has been the
director of drug testing laboratories certified by the State of New York and the
College of American Pathologists. Dr. Hayes presented several reasons Beagin's
test results were unreliable. First, Dr. Hayes testified all of the calibrators used
by the laboratory on the day of Beagin's testing gave results above their expected
concentration amounts for oxycodone and Beagin's result of 114.5 ng/mL was
lower than the results produced by any of the concentrations for that specific
drug. Dr. Hayes testified this indicated "[t]hat there's a bias or an inaccuracy in
the calibration" of the GC/MS instrument and the testing instrument was "biased
high." He noted the concentration of oxycodone in Beagin's urine was less than
those of the calibrator and controls at the critical cutoff of 100 ng/mL.
Secondly, Dr. Hayes expressed concern the State Lab was not certified at
the time of Beagin's testing in 2015, having become certified by the College of
American Pathologists later in 2016. He noted when undergoing the
A-1946-19
9
certification process, the College of American Pathologists noted an analyst
pipetted a sample from one specimen and passed the tip of the pipet over open
tubes of another specimen, with a drip from the pipet observed. This raised
concern regarding potential cross-contamination, an issue significant to him
because the urine sample tested immediately prior to Beagin's sample had an
inordinately high result.
Dr. Hayes concluded Beagin's "results should have been reported as
negative because the calibration was biased by more than the amount of his . . .
positive result." In his report, he concluded:
In summary, there was a lack of accuracy in calibration
and the bias at the cutoff . . . in which known controls
and calibrators of 100 ng/mL gave values of 115-123
ng/ml while Mr. Beagin's specimen was 114 ng/mL.
These facts indicate that Mr. Beagin's level as reported
is less than the levels measured in calibrators and
controls prepared to have the exact 100 ng/mL cutoff.
His specimen should be deemed negative for
oxycodone.
III.
Beagin argues the CSC's final administrative action should be reversed as
arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable: (1) because it was filed beyond the
forty-five day time period set forth at N.J.S.A. 40A:14-204 and (2) because it is
not supported by substantial credible evidence in the record. He also argues,
A-1946-19
10
due to the unreliability of the drug test results, the charges asserted in the FNDA
should be dismissed.
The ALJ issued a decision and recommendation to reverse the PFD's
termination of Beagin's employment. After carefully reviewing all of the expert
testimony, the ALJ found PFD had failed to sustain its burden of proof,
specifically questioning the accuracy of Beagin's urine test result compared to
the higher test results for the calibrators:
Significant confusion exists from both the documents
submitted into evidence and the testimony of Dr.
Havier, his assertions as to the acceptable variation or
deviation application to the GC/MS test, and the notion
of an accepted degree of error for control samples. No
explanation was offered as to why the 20 percent error
margin is applicable to the samples in the GC/MS
procedure but not to appellant's specimen. If the 20
percent error margin were applied to appellant's
specimen, that would bring his result below the cutoff
of 100.
The ALJ specifically reopened the record and invited Dr. Havier to return to
testify on the issues of the twenty percent industry standard and its alleged
inapplicability to individual donor test results. PFD did not produce him or any
other evidence after the record was reopened.
Concluding the PFD had not met its burden of proof to support Beagin's
termination, the ALJ stated:
A-1946-19
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With no justification for the acceptability of a 20
percent variation only for control samples with a known
concentration, there is no reason and no support for not
applying the same error margin to appellant's specimen.
The burden of proof rests with respondent in this case,
and the lack of any support in the record for what is
being advanced as the support for a finding of a
controlled-dangerous-substance violation, resulting in
termination, cannot stand.
Thus, I CONCLUDE that respondent has not proven by
a preponderance of the credible evidence that
appellant's specimen was beyond the margin of error for
testing of oxycodone, and further CONCLUDE that his
removal is unsupported and cannot stand.
The CSC rejected the ALJ's recommendation and ordered Beagin's
removal be upheld. The CSC did not disagree with any findings of fact made
by the ALJ. Instead, it disagreed with the ALJ's reliance upon certain facts over
others. The CSC explained:
[T]he summary of the witness testimony presented . . .
in this decision is based on the Commission's own
review of the testimony presented at the hearing. While
this summary may have a somewhat different focus, it
is substantially consistent with the ALJ's recitation of
the testimony in the initial decision.
The CSC rejected the ALJ's concern regarding the accuracy of Beagin's
test results, noting Dr. Hayes did not refute Dr. Havier's testimony that the State
Lab had followed industry standards when testing Beagin's urine sample.
A-1946-19
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Secondly, the CSC found no support for Dr. Hayes's suggestion there may have
been cross-contamination from the urine sample tested immediately before
Beagin's sample because Dr. Havier testified a blank sample had been run
between the two tests.
Beagin's claim the CSC's decision should be rejected as untimely is
without merit. The CSC had forty-five days from receipt of the ALJ's initial
decision to issue its final administrative action. N.J.S.A. 40A:14-204; N.J.S.A.
52:14B-10(c). It also had the authority to extend that deadline by up to forty-
five days upon a showing of good cause and with approval of the OAL. N.J.S.A.
52:14B-10(c); N.J.A.C. 1:1-18.8(e). And, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A:14-204, it
had the discretion to extend the forty-five day decision deadline by fifteen days
given Beagin's employment as a firefighter. See In re Restrepo, Dep't of Corr.,
449 N.J. Super. 409, 418-19 (App. Div. 2017) (holding that N.J.S.A. 40A:14-
204 controls over N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10(c)).
The ALJ issued the initial decision on October 24, 2019. Forty-one days
later, on December 4, 2019, the CSC issued an order pursuant to N.J.S.A.
52:14B-10(c) and N.J.A.C. 1:1-18.8, extending for good cause the time for it to
issue a final decision by fifteen days, to December 23, 2019. That order was
approved by the OAL. The CSC issued its final administrative action within
A-1946-19
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that fifteen-day extension, on December 19, 2019. Therefore, the CSC's final
administrative action was timely whether the extension is considered valid
pursuant to the good cause standard of N.J.S.A. 52:14B-10(c) and N.J.A.C. 1:1-
18.8(e), or the discretionary standard of N.J.S.A. 40A:14-204 and Restrepo, 449
N.J. Super. at 418-24.
We agree with Beagin's claim the CSC's decision is unsupported by
substantial, credible evidence in the record. Our role in reviewing a final
administrative agency decision is limited. In re Taylor, 158 N.J. 644, 656
(1999); Clowes v. Terminix Int'l Inc., 109 N.J. 575, 587 (1988). We must defer
to a final agency decision unless it is arbitrary, capricious, or unsupported by
substantial, credible evidence in the record. Taylor, 158 N.J. at 657. We must,
therefore, determine whether the agency's findings could have reasonably "'been
reached on sufficient credible evidence present in the record' considering 'the
proofs as a whole,' with due regard to the opportunity of the one who heard the
witnesses to judge of their credibility.'" Id. at 656 (quoting Close v. Kordulak
Bros., 44 N.J. 589, 599 (1965)). If we find sufficient, credible evidence in the
record to support the agency's conclusions, then we must affirm even if we
would have reached a different result. Clowes, 109 N.J. at 588; Goodman v.
London Metals Exch., Inc., 86 N.J. 19, 28 (1981).
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If, however, our review of the record satisfies us the agency's finding is
clearly mistaken or erroneous, the decision is not entitled to judicial deference
and must be set aside. L.M. v. State Div. of Med. Assistance & Health Servs.,
140 N.J. 480, 490 (1995). We may not simply rubber-stamp an agency's
decision. Taylor, 158 N.J. at 657.
The CSC's decision is erroneous because it 1) misunderstood Dr. Havier's
testimony regarding application of the twenty percent standard, never addressing
the issue of whether the testing equipment was calibrated to be biased high, and
2) shifted the burden to Beagin to prove how the industry standard is applied.
First, the CSC misunderstood Dr. Havier's testimony regarding the twenty
percent variation. It cited to testimony not in the record, stating the twenty
percent variation is applied to the discarded calibrators and not those used to
establish the linear relationship. It found "[Dr.] Havier emphasized that the
analysis of the calibrations was accurate since the analysis returned three
accurate results and the other two values were within a 20 percent variation for
those samples with known concentrations." In reviewing the PFD's exceptions
the CSC again noted "[Dr.] Havier testified that at least three of the five
calibrators must establish a linear relationship (i.e., almost identical readings to
those of the known concentrations) and that the reading from the other
A-1946-19
15
calibrators not used must be within 20 percent of the cutoff for the equipment
so as not to invalidate the equipment as inaccurate." (emphasis added).
The record establishes the calibrators for expected concentrations of 200,
50, and 25 ng/mL respectively all produced a straight line. Therefore, we can
accurately conclude Beagin's sample was positive for oxycodone above 50 but
below 200 ng/mL. However, the cutoff for oxycodone is 100 ng/mL. Dr. Havier
admitted no calibrator of 100 ng/mL produced a result that could be plotted in
the straight line produced by the 200, 50 and 25 ng/mL calibrators. Instead, the
100 ng/mL concentration utilized to calibrate the machine, and not discarded,
produced an initial result of 116.4 ng/mL, then 115.3 when reinjected. Beagin's
test result of 114.5 ng/mL, although above the 100 ng/mL cutoff, plotted below
the concentrations for oxycodone. Despite cross-examination on this issue, Dr.
Havier offered no testimony as to why Beagin's lower result was not deemed
negative given the higher results of the calibrators utilized to plot the linear
relationship.
Q: So your machine was picking up more oxycodone on your
test of samples right, which should have a specific number.
Your machine was picking up more on the test samples than
it actually picked up over the line for my client, correct?
A: Correct.
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He gave no testimony as to the standard operating procedure to be followed
where a donor sample tests above the cutoff but below the concentration result
for that drug. Instead, Dr. Havier relied on an industry standard permitting a
twenty percent deviation in the concentration result used to calibrate the
machine but not to measure the donor sample. The CSC found support for an
industry standard where there was none in the record. It is the PFD's burden to
prove an industry standard exists. 6 Dr. Havier's testimony that the twenty
percent deviation has been utilized by the State Lab for forty years is not proof
of an industry standard. The sum of his testimony on this issue was as follows:
Q. Okay. First of all this 20 percent, is that what you
allow?
A. That's what the standards use.
....
Q. When you say the "industry standard," what knowledge
do you have with the industry standard? Is it written
somewhere your knowledge [sic] of other labs? When you
say the "industry standard?"
6
We recognize the witness was well known to the attorneys conducting his
direct testimony and cross-examination from other, prior matters and the State
Lab's resources place Dr. Havier's time at a premium. However, the witness'
bare bones direct testimony failed to establish a foundation, and Beagin's
counsel's references, without specifics, to testimony Dr. Havier supplied in other
matters, failed to address the issues raised by Beagin in his appeal. Dr. Havier's
rebuttal testimony, which did not address Dr. Hayes' opinion the machine was
calibrated to bias high, was equally lacking.
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A. The cutoffs and in fact even the procedures are well
established. They're based usually on the federal
government's urine testing program for the military. Again
all the drug testing programs and law enforcement drug
testing programs are based on that. The acceptability of
variance.
PFD failed to present any evidence regarding the genesis or source of an
industry standard, any specifics as to why 100 ng/mL is the cutoff for
oxycodone, or why twenty percent is the acceptable deviation. He vaguely
referred to "procedures" and drug testing "programs" based "usually" on the
standard. He did not cite to standard operating procedures for the State Lab.
Although the parties stipulated to the expertise of the two experts, nothing in the
record demonstrates they stipulated to standard protocols or procedures for
testing. N.J.R.E. 703 requires an expert's opinion be based upon facts or data.
An expert's bare conclusions, unsupported by factual evidence or other data, are
inadmissible as a mere net opinion. State v. Townsend, 186 N.J. 473, 494-95
(2006); See also C.W. v. Cooper Health Sys., 388 N.J. Super. 42, 64-65 (App.
Div. 2006) (finding impermissible net opinion where expert failed to explain
why his announced standard of care was the "accepted practice").
More importantly, even assuming industry standards allow a twenty
percent deviation only to the calibrators, Dr. Havier provided no testimony
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regarding the issue in this case: what is the appropriate testing protocol for a
situation where the individual's sample renders a result above the cutoff for a
particular drug but below all of the concentrations used in the calibrators to plot
the linear relationship that establishes proper calibration of the equipment.
PFD's failure to address this critical issue establishes it failed to meet its burden
of proof the testing equipment was correctly calibrated when it tested Beagin's
sample and his results are valid.
The CSC also incorrectly shifted the burden of proof to Beagin to
demonstrate the twenty percent deviation should not apply, either to the
calibration results or his test results. Because Dr. Havier did not produce an
expert report prior to his testimony, Beagin's expert had no knowledge Dr.
Havier would be relying on an industry standard during his testimony of the test
results. It faulted Beagin's expert report for not addressing a standard Dr. Havier
introduced for the first time at trial. The CSC stated:
Havier testified that the cutoffs and procedures that the
Lab used in calibrating the equipment in this matter
were industry standards that are well established based
on the federal government's urine testing program for
the military. A review of testimony does not indicate
that at any point did the appellant's attorney ask Hayes
if the industry standards that Havier describes were, in
fact, the industry standards. At no point during Hayes'
testimony did Hayes offer that the standards that Havier
describes were not the industry standards. A review of
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Hayes' report that was submitted into evidence does not
question the standards that Havier describes. . . . As
such, the Commission finds that Havier's testimony
regarding the industry standards was credible and
persuasive.
It was not Beagin's burden to demonstrate the industry standard does not exist
or was misapplied to his drug test. PFD had full notice the only issue on appeal
was the validity of Beagin's drug test results and bore the burden to proving
Beagin's tests were performed in adherence to applicable standards. The CSC's
shifting of this burden to Beagin was arbitrary and capricious.
Finally, Dr. Havier testified there should be numerous processes to
determine if the testing equipment is operating properly. He admitted if a
sample for oxycodone tested over 1000 ng/mL or more than 10,0000 ng/mL or
both, that result would be peculiar and out of the ordinary. In fact, he initially
testified he had never seen a result over 10,000 for oxycodone. Upon being
shown the State Lab's documents, he confirmed the donor sample tested
immediately before Beagin's sample tested positive for oxycodone at 12,119
ng/mL. A second test performed on this donor sample was too large to even
read.
Initially, Dr. Havier testified all of the calibration tests and individual
donor tests performed on that machine that day were recorded in chronological
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20
order on the Summary of Test Results sheet (Summary) signed by the analyst
who performed the tests on July 23 and certified by him on July 27. That
summary shows the donor sample was tested immediately prior to Beagin's two
tests, with no blank urine test performed in between. The first test for the donor
sample was diluted to 1:20 and produced a result of 12,119.1 ng/mL of
oxycodone. The second, undiluted test produced a result "TOO LARGE" to
record. There is no evidence of a blank test having been performed on the
Summary. When cross-examined, Dr. Havier corrected his earlier testimony and
stated the Summary did not, in fact, list all of the testing performed on the
machine that day in chronological order and referred to another, unsigned
document for the appropriate chronology of tests performed that day. That
document contains the notation "blank urine," without providing the result of
that blank test, after the donor sample was tested twice and before Beagin's two
tests were performed.
The first test of Beagin's sample, diluted 7 to a concentration of 1:10
produced no finding for oxycodone. The second, undiluted sample produced the
114.5 result for oxycodone at issue. Dr. Hayes testified "that's a red flag in
7
Once again, there was no testimony elicited by either counsel as to why diluted
tests are run, why they are run before undiluted tests are run, or why the first
donor sample was diluted to 1:20 but Beagin's sample was diluted to 1:10.
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21
forensics. If you have a very high specimen then you have to be careful to not
have carryover because it can contaminate the instrument." Dr. Hayes testified
PFD did not provide the raw data for the two donor tests run before Beagin's
tests and did not provide the gas chromatography for the blank urine sample run
in between, which would have confirmed or disproved cross-contamination. On
the basis of this lack of documentation, the CSC's finding that cross -
contamination from the donor sample tested before Beagin's sample was not
present because a blank sample had been run between the tests is not adequately
supported by the credible evidence in the record.
Because we find the CSC erred in concluding PFD met its burden of
proving Beagin's drug test results were reliable and the testing equipment was
properly calibrated using industry standards and accepted testing protocols, we
reverse. Although we would ordinarily vacate the CSC's decision and remand
for additional factfinding and further consideration, see, e.g., George v. City of
Newark, 384 N.J. Super. 232, 245 (App. Div. 2006), because the parties
stipulated if the testing was found to be unreliable the termination would be
reversed, we vacate the final administrative action and order reinstatement of
Beagin to his position as a Paterson firefighter.
Reversed. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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