NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4829-18
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
FREDERICK OWLE, a/k/a
FREDERICK OWLE JR.,
FREDRICK OWLE, and
CHIEF,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________
Argued May 11, 2022 – Decided June 20, 2022
Before Judges Hoffman, Whipple, and Susswein.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Burlington County, Indictment No. 17-07-
0728.
Stefan Van Jura, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora,
Public Defender, attorney; Stefan Van Jura, of counsel
and on the brief).
Alexis R. Agre, Special Deputy Attorney
General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
for respondent (LaChia L. Bradshaw, Acting
Burlington County Prosecutor, attorney; Alexis R.
Agre, of counsel and on the brief).
Appellant filed a supplemental pro se brief.
PER CURIAM
Defendant appeals from his jury trial convictions for two armed robberies
and related weapons offenses. He contends for the first time on appeal that (1)
his rights under the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause were violated by
the admission of hearsay testimony explaining how police initially identified
him as a suspect, and (2) the trial court erred by failing to properly instruct the
jury concerning out-of-court eyewitness identifications. Defendant further
argues in a pro se supplemental brief that the prosecutor committed misconduct
during both the charging process and at trial, and that the mandatory sentence
of life imprisonment without parole imposed pursuant to the "Three Strikes
Law," N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.1, is illegal.
The prosecution hinged on proving the identity of the robber, which was
contested at trial. The defense argued that police prematurely focused on
defendant to the exclusion of the true culprit. The critical issue raised on appeal
requires us to determine whether the State improperly introduced and
commented upon inadmissible testimony concerning the initial stage of the
A-4829-18
2
police investigation. After carefully reviewing the record in view of the
governing precedents, we conclude that inadmissible hearsay testimony elicited
from two police witnesses concerning how defendant was first identified as a
suspect created an impermissible inference that police possessed incriminating
evidence that was not introduced at trial. The harm resulting from those repeated
Confrontation Clause violations was compounded by the prosecutor's reference
to the inadmissible hearsay in his opening argument when he told the jury that
"other people," referring to non-testifying sources, told police "it's possibly this
individual named Freddie Owle."
The prosecution, it bears noting, introduced substantial admissible
evidence of defendant's guilt. The State's case was not so overwhelming,
however, as to overcome the potential impact of the Confrontation Clause
violations on the final verdict. We are thus unable "to declare a belief that [the
constitutional error] was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt." See State v.
Weaver, 219 N.J. 131, 154 (2014) (quoting Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18,
24 (1965)). We are therefore constrained to reverse defendant's convictions and
remand the case for a new trial.
A-4829-18
3
I.
We discern from the record the following facts that are pertinent to the
issues raised on appeal. On April 14, 2017, the Wawa convenience store
(Wawa) on Route 130 in Florence Township was robbed. At approximately
11:30 p.m., Wawa employee Tracy Craft was working at the cash register when
a "middle-aged white male approached" her and asked for a pack of Newport
cigarettes. He wore a "gray jacket with a blue or black hat" and gloves. Ms.
Craft turned around, as the cigarettes were located behind her, grabbed them and
gave them to the man. The man then "leaned over the counter with the knife in
his hand and said, 'and everything in the register.'" Ms. Craft said, "excuse me?"
and the man said again, "everything in the register." Craft immediately "got on
[her] radio and started calling to the other associates who had radios to help, we
were being robbed."
Celenia Rivera, the Wawa "college graduate leader," was working in the
office when she heard Craft's radio call. Ms. Rivera ran out of the office and
saw Craft pointing at the perpetrator, who was walking toward the exit. Rivera
followed the man into the vestibule. Defendant, who was already outside the
vestibule, turned around and lunged toward Rivera with the knife. Rivera got
A-4829-18
4
scared and closed the vestibule door. She locked the door and instructed all
customers to stay inside while she called the police.
Sergeant Nicholas Czepiel of the Florence Township Police Department
responded to the Wawa at approximately 11:44 p.m. and spoke to Craft and
Rivera. Rivera described the robber as a "white guy with a beard" who was
"possibly Hispanic" wearing a "black wool cap, a gray zip-up hooded sweatshirt
with [a] black zipper and black drawstrings to it, black T-shirt, black pants and
white sneakers. And male with facial hair." Rivera also told police that the
robber had "the bluest eyes I've ever seen."
Customers arriving at the Wawa informed Sergeant Czepiel that another
robbery had just taken place at a nearby Valero gas station (Valero). He
immediately went to Valero and spoke with the two attendants.
Surendra Vasisht, one of the Valero attendants, testified that at
approximately 11:50 p.m., a man came into the gas station "cabin" where
Vasisht and the other attendant were doing paperwork. The man brandished a
"shiny" metal rod with a "black handle" that was approximately "two to three
feet" long. He wore a "grayish hoodie," black or "dark-colored" pants, white
sneakers and gloves, and his face was covered, so only his eyes could be seen.
A-4829-18
5
Vasisht estimated that the man was forty years old and between five feet seven
and five feet nine inches tall.
The robber told the two attendants to "put everything on the table" or "I'll
kill you" or "I'll beat you." According to Vasisht, the robber also threatened to
shoot them, but Vasisht did not see a gun. The men put approximately $530 in
cash on the table. The robber grabbed the cash and fled on foot toward Route
130 South. Vasisht immediately called the police and Sergeant Czepiel arrived
at Valero "within five minutes."
Both robberies were captured on security video from the Wawa and
Valero. The surveillance video recordings were played for the jury at trial.
Detective Christopher Powell of the Florence Township Police Department, who
viewed the security videos on the night of the robberies, testified at trial that
"the same subject [was] responsible for both robberies," because the man in the
videos was "wearing the same exact clothing in both." Valero video depicted
the suspect leaving the gas station on foot and turning left near the fence line.
Powell testified that the video shows that "several moments" after the robber
walked down the fence line, a vehicle entered the frame, travelled up the long
driveway of the neighboring Burlington Coat Factory offices, and made a left
turn southbound on Route 130.
A-4829-18
6
Because the robber had fled Valero on foot, Sergeant Czepiel called for a
canine tracker. Bordentown Township Police Officer Richard Brettell
responded with his bloodhound, Liberty. Officer Brettell testified that Liberty
followed a scent trail south on Route 130 from Valero to the parking lot of the
Budget Inn, at which point the dog lost the trail.
Shortly after the robberies, Sergeant Czepiel obtained the name of a
possible suspect, not defendant, who stayed at the Budget Inn. Czepiel and two
other officers went to the Budget Inn and spoke with the possible suspect,
Matthew Haines, and his wife. 1 Mr. Haines appeared to have just "awoken from
a deep sleep" and was wearing only a "T-shirt and his underwear." Czepiel
testified that he discounted Mr. Haines as a suspect because he did not fit the
description in that he "did not have any facial hair" and he had a "very pale" not
"tan" skin tone. Also, Mr. Haines walked "hunched over" and appeared to have
a back injury.
Czepiel described the robber to the Haines. Czepiel testified at trial that
Mrs. Haines "then made a statement that she has an idea of who she believed the
1
The record is not clear whether she was Matthew Haines' wife or girlfriend.
Nor does the record reflect her name, although her role in the investigation is
critical to the Confrontation Clause issue before us. We refer to her as "Mrs.
Haines." She did not testify at trial.
A-4829-18
7
suspect was." She specified a man nicknamed "Chief" and told police his real
name was "Fred Owle" and that he also resided at the Budget Inn. After
obtaining defendant's room number from the front desk, the officers went to
defendant's room and encountered his girlfriend, Angela Petroski. Defendant
was not there, and Petroski told the officers that he was in another specific room.
Sergeant Czepiel and other officers went to that room. Fred Deloise
answered the door. Czepiel discounted Deloise as a suspect as he was "very
pale," had no facial hair and was heavier than the robber seen in the surveillance
video. Deloise initially denied that defendant was in the room, but eventually
admitted that he was and allowed the officers to enter. Defendant was wearing
a "black T-shirt, shorts and white sneakers" and was holding a pack of Newport
cigarettes.
While canvassing the parking lot of the Budget Inn, Detective Powell
observed a 2004 green Ford Taurus registered to Petroski. Powell and Czepiel
observed through the car window a two-foot-long metal pipe and a black wool
cap with an Eagles emblem. The car was impounded, towed, and searched
pursuant to a warrant. Police recovered the pipe and cap. Nothing else of
evidential value was found in the car.
A-4829-18
8
Vasisht testified at trial that the pipe used by the robber to threaten him
and his co-worker was "like" the metal pipe found in the Taurus, which he
recognized by "the black handle." There is no indication in the record that
Vasisht was ever asked to make an out-of-court identification of the robber.
Furthermore, when Vasisht was asked at trial whether he could recognize the
individual who came into the gas station that night, he testified that he could
not.
The State did not present testimony from the other Valero attendant,
Sankar Singh. Nor does the record reflect that Singh participated in a photo -
array or other out-of-court identification procedure.
Ms. Craft testified that she went to the police station on the night of the
robbery to provide a formal statement. Although she gave a description of the
robber, the record does not indicate that she was ever asked to identify the culprit
in an out-of-court identification procedure. At trial, she acknowledged that she
could not remember any distinguishing characteristics of the robber because she
"blacked out" from fear. She nonetheless identified defendant at trial as the
person who robbed the Wawa.
Ms. Rivera went to the Florence Township Police Station at approximately
6:00 or 7:00 a.m. on April 15, 2017, after her night shift at the Wawa ended.
A-4829-18
9
Lieutenant I. Albert Jacoby had prepared a photo array that included
photographs of defendant and five other men. 2 Lieutenant Jacoby testified at
trial that Sergeant Czepiel and Detective Powell had "briefed [him] on the case,"
"indicated they [had] developed a suspect [defendant,]" and requested assistance
with a photo array. Lieutenant Jacoby testified that he chose photos for the array
"resembl[ing] the suspect in characteristics that were [developed] both by the
description given by the witnesses and by any other investigative means that we
have had." Florence Township Detective Nicole Bonilla, who had no other
involvement in the case, showed the photos in the array to Rivera sequentially.
Rivera positively identified the photograph of defendant as depicting the man
who robbed the Wawa. She also identified defendant at trial.
Three days after the robbery, Detective Powell canvassed the area around
Valero where the video depicted the suspect running. He found a black ski mask
in the woods near the gas station. The State presented expert testimony from a
New Jersey State Police forensic scientist that established to a reasonable degree
of scientific certainty that defendant's DNA was found on the ski mask.
2
So far as the record before us indicates, there was no Wade hearing in this
case, nor was there a request by defendant for such a hearing. See United States
v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218 (1967).
A-4829-18
10
On July 6, 2017, a Burlington County grand jury indicted defendant for
three counts of first-degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1(a)(2) (counts one through
three); third-degree possession of a weapon (knife) for an unlawful purpose,
N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(d) (count four); third-degree possession of a weapon (metal
pipe) for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(d) (count five); fourth-degree
unlawful possession of a weapon (knife), N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(d) (count six); and
fourth-degree unlawful possession of a weapon (metal pipe), N.J.S.A. 2C:39-
5(d) (count seven).
Prior to trial, the court granted the State's application to dismiss count
three. In January 2019, defendant was tried before a jury on the remaining
counts over the course of five non-consecutive days. At trial, both Craft and
Rivera identified defendant as the man who had committed the Wawa robbery.
Rivera also testified regarding how she identified defendant from the photo array
that was administered on the morning after the robbery. We deem it significant
to highlight that defendant does not have blue eyes, as Rivera had initially told
police. Rather, he has brown eyes. The State presented no witnesses who could
identify defendant as the person who committed the Valero robbery.
During its deliberations, the jury asked to see the video surveillance
recordings from both robberies. The jury also asked to hear a playback of
A-4829-18
11
Sergeant Czepiel's testimony. The jury ultimately convicted defendant of all
remaining charges.
The sentencing hearing was conducted on April 17, 2019. On count one,
first-degree robbery at the Wawa, defendant was sentenced pursuant to N.J.S.A.
2C:43-7.1 to a mandatory term of life imprisonment without parole. The court
merged defendant's convictions on count four, possession of a weapon (knife)
for an unlawful purpose, and count six, unlawful possession of a weapon (knife),
with his conviction on count one. The court further merged defendant's
convictions on count five, possession of a weapon (metal pipe) for an unlawful
purpose, and count six, unlawful possession of a weapon (metal pipe), with his
conviction on count two, first-degree robbery of the Valero gas station. On this
second robbery conviction, the judge imposed a concurrent prison term of
seventeen years subject to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-
7.2.
This appeal followed.
Defendant raises the following contentions for our consideration in the
brief submitted on his behalf by counsel:
POINT I
DEFENDANT WAS DENIED HIS RIGHTS TO
CONFRONTATION AND A FAIR TRIAL BY
A-4829-18
12
TESTIMONY AND ARGUMENT CREATING AN
INESCAPABLE INFERENCE THAT THE POLICE
POSSESSED EXTRA-RECORD EVIDENCE OF
DEFENDANT'S GUILT. U.S. CONST. amends. V, VI,
and XIV; N.J. CONST. art. I, ¶ 1, 9, and 10. (Not
Raised Below)
POINT II
DEFENDANT WAS DENIED DUE PROCESS AND
A FAIR TRIAL BY A FAULTY IDENTIFICATION
JURY CHARGE THAT FAILED TO PROVIDE THE
JURY WITH ANY GUIDANCE ON HOW TO
ASSESS THE PHOTOGRAPHIC IDENTIFICATION
PROCEDURE, WHICH WAS THE LYNCHPIN IN
THE STATE'S CASE. U.S. CONST. amends. V and
XIV; N.J. CONST. art. I, ¶ 1, ,9, and 10. (Not Raised
Below).
Defendant additionally raises the following contentions in his pro se
supplemental brief:
POINT I
CONTRARY TO THE PROSECUTOR'S
STATEMENT THAT "IT'S NOT A CONSPIRACY TO
TRY TO GAIN WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS," THIS
CASE PRESENTS THAT DEFENDANT'S DUE
RIGHTS PROCESS RIGHTS AND OTHER
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS [WERE] VIOLATED
ON THE BASIS OF BAD FAITH, [CONNIVANCE]
ON THE PART OF THE GOVERNMENT, BY
PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT, [WHOSE]
CHARGING PROCESS AND DECISIONS
RETURNED [AN] INVALID INDICTMENT THAT
WAS NOT RETURNED IN OPEN COURT BEFORE
THE "ASSIGNMENT JUDGE," R. 3:6-9(b), WAS
A-4829-18
13
NOT FILED AT THE TRIAL COURT, NOR
ENDORSED AS A "TRUE BILL" BY THE
FOREPERSON OF EITHER THE STATE OR
[BURLINGTON] COUNTY GRAND JURY,
MEANING APPELLANT IS IN CUSTODY DUE TO
THE PROSECUTOR[']S VIOLATION [OF] BOTH
ARTICLE I, ¶ 8 OF THE NEW JERSEY
CONSTITUTION AND AMENDMENT V OF THE
UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION. AS A
RESULT[,] BURLINGTON COUNTY
PROSECUTED THE CAUSE WITHOUT THE TRIAL
COURT HAVING JURISDICTION ON THIS CASE.
THE PROSECUTOR'S [SUMMATION] DIRECTS TO
[CELENIA] RIVERA WHO ON CROSS[-
EXAMINATION] RECANTED HER PRIOR
TESTIMONY BECAUSE DEFENDANT DID NOT
HAVE BLUE EYES BUT RATHER BROWN EYES,
AS HE IS A "NATIVE AMERICAN[,]" A CLEAR
MISTAKEN IDENTIFICATION CASE. ALL OF
THIS WAS SO EGREGIOUS THAT IT CLEARLY
AND UNMISTAKENLY DEPRIVED . . .
DEFENDANT A FAIR TRIAL REQUIRING [HIS]
CONVICTION BE VACATED AND REVERSED.
(Not Raised Below).
POINT II
THE SENTENCE AS A WHOLE IMPOSED "CRUEL
AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT [HAS BEEN]
INFLICTED," [sic] U.S. CONST. amend. VIII; N.J.
CONST. art. I, ¶ 12, [THE JUDGE][,] DID NOT
"STATE THE FACTUAL AND LEGAL BASIS
SUPPORTING HIS IMPOSITION OF SENTENCE,"
N.J.S.A. 2C:43-2[8], CAUSING AN ILLEGAL
SENTENCE OF "LIFE[,]" . . . "85%" AS
ARBITRARILY IMPOSED, MITIGATING
FACTORS NOW [OUTWEIGH] THE
AGGRAVATING FACTORS TO DROP BY ONE
A-4829-18
14
DEGREE THE ROBBERY CRIMES, REQUIRES
APPELLATE REVIEW TO MODIFY THE
CONVICTION PURSUANT TO N.J.S.A. 2C:44-7,
THE CONVICTION MUST BE REVERSED,
OVERTURNED AND VACATED[.] (Partially raised
below).
II.
We first address defendant's contention, raised for the first time on appeal
as plain error,3 that his convictions should be reversed because of testimony of
Sergeant Czepiel and Lieutenant Jacoby, as well as the prosecutor's opening
statement. Defendant asserts that the testimony and opening statement
impermissibly created the inference that police were aware of incriminating
evidence provided by non-testifying witnesses, thereby violating his rights
under the Confrontation Clause of the federal and state constitutions. We begin
our analysis by surveying the Confrontation Clause precedents that dictate the
outcome of this appeal.
3
We reject the State's contention that defendant is procedurally barred from
asserting the Confrontation Clause claim on appeal because he did not raise it to
the trial court and did not make a timely objection to the testimony on hearsay
grounds. See R. 2:10-2; see also Hemphill, 142 S. Ct. 694 (Alito, J., concurring)
(recognizing that a defendant may validly waive Sixth Amendment right to
confront witnesses). We elect to review defendant's constitutional argument on
the merits applying the plain error standard of review.
A-4829-18
15
As the United States Supreme Court recently reaffirmed, "[o]ne of the
bedrock constitutional protections afforded to criminal defendants is the
Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment . . . ." Hemphill v. New York,
142 S. Ct. 681, 690 (2022). The Sixth Amendment provides that "[i]n all
criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with
the witnesses against him . . . ." U.S. Const. amend. VI. The New Jersey
Constitution's analogue to the Sixth Amendment, Article I, paragraph 10,
"provide[s] equivalent protection." State v. Roach, 219 N.J. 58, 74 (2014). "Our
confrontation jurisprudence 'traditionally has relied on federal case law to
ensure that the two provisions provide equivalent protection.'" State v. Sims,
250 N.J. 189, 223 (2022).
The United States Supreme Court has held that "the framers of the
Constitution intended the Confrontation Clause to bar the admission of
'testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial unless [the
declarant is] unavailable to testify, and the defendant had . . . a prior opportunity
for cross-examination.'" Ibid. (alteration in original) (quoting Crawford v.
Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 53–54 (2004)). Importantly, "[t]he Confrontation
Clause applies to 'witnesses against the accused,' or those who 'bear testimony,'
which is a 'solemn declaration or affirmation made for the purpose of
A-4829-18
16
establishing or proving some fact.'" State v. Carrion, 249 N.J. 253, 268 (2021)
(citing Crawford, 541 U.S. at 51). A "central concern of the Confrontation
Clause is to ensure the reliability of the evidence against a criminal defendant
by subjecting it to rigorous testing in the context of an adversary proceeding
before the trier of fact." Maryland v. Craig, 497 U.S. 836, 845 (1990).
The right to confront witnesses is "an essential attribute of the right to a
fair trial" as it "secures for a defendant the 'fair opportunity to defend against
the State's accusations . . . .'" State v. Medina, 242 N.J. 397, 412 (2020) (first
quoting State v. Branch, 182 N.J. 338, 348 (2005); and then quoting State v.
Garron, 177 N.J. 147, 169 (2003)). "[B]oth the Confrontation Clause and the
hearsay rule are violated when, at trial, a police officer conveys, directly or by
inference, information from a non-testifying declarant to incriminate the
defendant in the crime charged." Branch, 182 N.J. at 350 (citing State v.
Bankston, 63 N.J. 263, 268–69 (1973)).
Our Supreme Court's frequently cited decision in Bankston lays the
foundation for our analysis. In that case, police officers entered a tavern and
found drugs near where the defendant was sitting. Bankston, 63 N.J. at 265.
The defendant was subsequently arrested. Id. at 265–66. At trial, one of the
A-4829-18
17
detectives testified that the defendant fit an informant's description of a person
with drugs in the tavern. Id. at 266. The Court noted that
[i]t is well settled that the hearsay rule is not violated
when a police officer explains the reason he [or she]
approached a suspect or went to the scene of the crime
by stating that he [or she] did so "upon information
received." Such testimony has been held to be
admissible to show that the officer was not acting in an
arbitrary manner or to explain his [or her] subsequent
conduct. However, when the officer becomes more
specific by repeating what some other person told him
[or her] concerning a crime by the accused the
testimony violates the hearsay rule.
[Id. at 268 (citations omitted).]
The Court determined that the detective's testimony was inadmissible
hearsay. "Although . . . the [detective] never specifically repeated what the
inform[ant] had [said], the inescapable inference from [the] testimony was that
the inform[ant] had given information that defendant would have narcotics in
his possession." Id. at 271. As a result, "the jury was led to believe that an
unidentified inform[ant], who was not present in court and not subjected to
cross-examination, had told the officers that defendant was committing a crime.
The testimony was clearly hearsay." Ibid.
The Court in State v. Irving provided further guidance not only on when
hearsay testimony constitutes a Confrontation Clause violation but also on when
A-4829-18
18
any such violation constitutes reversible error. 114 N.J. 427, 446–47 (1989). In
that case, three armed men robbed a luncheonette in Newark. Id. at 431. The
proprietor was shot and wounded in the course of the robbery. Ibid. A detective
testified that he focused on Irving as the subject of the investigation and placed
his picture in the array after going to the neighborhood and asking for leads.
Ibid. The Court concluded that the inescapable inference from that trial
testimony, although never specifically stated, was that an informant had told the
detective that the defendant committed the crime. Id. at 446. The Court
acknowledged that in Bankston, the officer had testified more specifically on
the information provided by the informant. The Irving Court reasoned, however,
that the creation of the inference, not the specificity of the statements made, was
the critical factor in determining whether the hearsay rule was violated. Id. at
447.
The Court ultimately distinguished Bankston because the defense counsel
in Bankston had made a timely objection to each testimonial impropriety, thus
preserving the issue for appeal. Ibid. By contrast, in Irving, the defense counsel
did not object to the detective's hearsay testimony, even though the same
testimony had been given at the Wade hearing prior to trial. Ibid.
A-4829-18
19
The Court noted that because the issue was to be resolved under the plain
error standard of review, it must consider whether there is reasonable doubt that
the jury would have ruled other than as it did. Ibid. The Court cited and relied
upon our then-recent decision in State v. Douglas, 204 N.J. Super. 265 (App.
Div. 1985), where the defense attorney failed to make a timely objection to the
prosecutor's remarks in summation regarding an officer's testimony explaining
why the defendant's picture had been placed in a photo array. Irving, 114 N.J.
at 446–47. The court in Douglas surveyed the relevant precedents and
determined that in those earlier cases, hearsay testimony was deemed to be
prejudicial because the State's cases were "very weak . . . ." 204 N.J. Super. at
275. The Douglas panel concluded that because the State's proofs in the matter
before it were "fortified by direct positive evidence"—for example, direct
identification of the defendant—the hearsay testimony was not prejudicial under
the plain error rule. Ibid.
Applying that principle to the totality of the proofs in the record, the
Supreme Court in Irving concluded that a reasonable doubt was not raised on
whether the hearsay led the jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached.
114 N.J. at 448. In reaching that fact-sensitive conclusion, the Court succinctly
summarized the independent proofs of guilt:
A-4829-18
20
In this case, two eyewitnesses identified the defendant
both in court and out of court. Defendant's time slips
indicated that the only day he arrived late to work
during a four week period was on the date of the
robbery. The only day he missed work during this
period was the day before the robbery, the same day
that his accomplice, co-defendant Livingston, was seen
parked on the street a distance away from Frisco's
Luncheonette. Under those circumstances we do not
find that a reasonable doubt is raised on whether the
hearsay led the jury to a result it otherwise might not
have reached.
[Ibid.]
We take note that the Court placed at the top of the list of independent proofs
that two eyewitnesses had identified the defendant both in court and out of
court.4 Ibid.
The Supreme Court's Confrontation Clause decision in Branch, decided in
2005, provides further instruction in determining whether that Sixth Amendment
4
Since Irving and Douglas were decided, the Supreme Court in State v.
Henderson recognized that reform of our eyewitness identification jurisprudence
was necessary because "[s]tudy after study revealed a troubling lack of
reliability in eyewitness identifications" and because the previous standard for
assessing eyewitness identification evidence "overstate[d] the jury's inherent
ability to evaluate evidence offered by eyewitnesses who honestly believe their
testimony is accurate." 208 N.J. 208, 218 (2011). Accordingly, in interpreting
the plain error analysis described in Irving, we are mindful of the admonition in
Henderson concerning the assumption that eyewitness identifications are
inherently reliable.
A-4829-18
21
right has been violated and in measuring the prejudicial impact of any such
violation. The Court reviewed several New Jersey Confrontation Clause cases
and discerned that the "common thread that runs through" those precedents was
that "a police officer may not imply to the jury that he [or she] possesses superior
knowledge, outside the record, that incriminates the defendant." Branch, 182
N.J. at 351.
In Branch, the Court reversed a defendant's robbery and burglary
convictions, holding that defendant's right to confrontation had been violated by
the investigating police officer's testimony that he had "included defendant's
picture in a photographic array because he had developed defendant as a suspect
'based on information received'" from an unspecified source. Id. at 342. That
testimony was deemed to be inadmissible hearsay. Ibid.
The Court found that because there "was no trial testimony or evidence"
other than the victim's identification of defendant from the photo array "that
could have led [police] to focus on defendant as a suspect . . . the jury was left
to speculate that the detective had superior knowledge through hearsay
information implicating defendant in the crime." Id. at 347–48. That was
particularly problematic
[b]ecause the nameless person who provided the
'information' to [the detective] was not called as a
A-4829-18
22
witness, the jury never learned the basis of that person's
knowledge regarding defendant's guilt, whether he was
a credible source, or whether he had a peculiar interest
in the case. Defendant never had an opportunity to
confront that anonymous witness and test his credibility
in the crucible of cross-examination.
[Id. at 348.]
The Court concluded, "when the logical implication to be drawn from the
testimony leads the jury to believe that a non-testifying witness has given the
police evidence of the accused's guilt, the testimony should be disallowed as
hearsay." Id. at 349 (quoting Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271). The Court added that
although a police officer "may testify that he went to the scene of a crime based
'upon information received,'" id. at 351 (citing Bankston, 63 N.J. at 268), the
Court expressly rejected the use of such "seemingly neutral language" to explain
why a defendant's photo was added to a photo array. Id. at 352 (rejecting dicta
approving such language in Irving, 114 N.J. at 447). The Court thus announced
a clear rule, explaining, "[w]hy the officer placed the defendant's photograph in
the array is of no relevance to the identification process and is highly
prejudicial." Ibid. "What counts[,]" the Court added, "is whether the officer
fairly arranged and displayed the photographic array and whether the witness
made a reliable identification." Ibid. Going forward, the Court permitted police
to use the phrase "based on information received" outside of the photo array
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23
context, "but only if necessary to rebut a suggestion that they acted arbitrarily,
and only if the use of that phrase does not create an inference that the defendant
has been implicated in a crime by some unknown person." Ibid.
The Court then turned to whether the admission of such testimony rose to
the level of plain error requiring the reversal of Branch's convictions. In
concluding that the constitutional error in that instance was not harmless, the
Court noted that the "State's evidence was far from overwhelming" as "[n]o
physical evidence linked defendant to the scene of the crime" and the
descriptions of the perpetrator by the witnesses "differed markedly from
defendant's appearance." Id. at 353. The Court acknowledged that this "was a
close case" and that "the detective's damaging hearsay testimony . . . may have
tipped the scales." Id. at 354. The Court therefore reversed Branch's convictions
and remanded for a new trial. Ibid.
Recently, our Supreme Court was presented with a similar issue in
Medina. The defendant was convicted of offenses related to a non-fatal slashing
that occurred outside of a bar. Medina, 242 N.J. at 401. The identity of the
perpetrator was contested at trial. Ibid. The victim positively identified Medina
from a photo array, and later also made an in-court identification. Id. at 403–
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24
05. The jury viewed surveillance video of the attack, as well as a video of a
previous bar fight involving Medina in which he was clearly seen. Ibid.
The fact-sensitive issue in Medina was whether a detective at trial violated
the defendant's Confrontation Clause rights by telling the jury that his photo was
included in the photo array "based on . . . the evidence . . . collected . . . [.]" Id.
at 405–06. The detective also testified that he had spoken to various witnesses
at the bar, including the victim, another man named Rafferty, and "one female
who didn't want to get involved." Id. at 405–07. The anonymous woman had
identified Medina as the assailant but refused to give a formal statement. Id. at
402.
The Court stressed that the detective "never repeated to the jury what the
anonymous woman told officers" and, in fact, "did not imply that the woman
gave police any information at all." Id. at 416. The Court also reiterated its
emphasis in Bankston that "we were unconcerned 'with mere possible inferences'
to be drawn." Id. at 417 (quoting Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271). On those facts, the
Court concluded that "the references to the anonymous woman did not create an
'inescapable inference' that she implicated defendant in the attack to the police."
Id. at 417 (quoting Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271).
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25
The Court "reiterate[d] that the best practice is to avoid explaining that a
defendant's picture was placed in a photo array because he or she was a suspect
'based on information received'" or "based on the evidence collected" as "such
language can potentially sweep in inadmissible hearsay by producing the
'inescapable inference' that the officer obtained incriminating information about
the defendant beyond the scope of the record." Id. at 420–21 (quoting Branch,
182 N.J. at 352). However, the Court found that no such inference was generated
in that case because the detective used the phrase "evidence collected" only
"after (1) he explained that Rafferty and [the victim] gave formal statements, (2)
the jury watched the surveillance footage . . . , and (3) he read [the victim's]
description of the attacker." Id. at 420.
Furthermore, the detective testified "that he had personally watched the
surveillance footage before assembling the photo array" and that the victim told
him of the earlier fight before the victim identified defendant. Ibid. The Court
stressed that,
most importantly, [the detective] repeatedly told the
jury that no one other than Rafferty and [the victim]
came forward to give a statement. Viewed in that light,
"the logical implication" of [the detective's] testimony
was that "the evidence that [he] collected" referred to
evidence other than hearsay: the surveillance footage
and [the victim's] and Rafferty’s formal statements and
descriptions of the attacker.
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26
[Ibid. (quoting Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271).]
The Court further explained,
[The officer] did not imply that the woman gave police
any information at all. He referenced the anonymous
woman twice: once on direct examination and again on
redirect examination. In the first instance, he agreed
with the prosecutor that she "didn't want to get
involved," and in the second, he agreed that she "didn't
want to give a statement." [The officer] also explained
that he obtained formal statements only from [the
victim and his friend Rafferty] because "there was
nobody else that wanted to come forward . . . to give a
statement, any witnesses or anything like that."
....
[Further] [t]he record substantiates the Attorney
General's contention that the jury likely considered the
anonymous woman to be a "dead-end witness." The
State not only was careful not to repeat what she told
police, but also went to great lengths to suggest that she
was not forthcoming. Additionally, the references to
the anonymous woman would have seemed less
significant than the other relevant evidence in the
record. Both [the victim and his friend] gave
descriptions of the attacker that matched defendant's
picture; the surveillance video captured the incident;
and [the victim] unwaveringly identified defendant
both at trial and in the array. In sum, we find that the
references to the anonymous woman did not create an
"inescapable inference" that she implicated defendant
in the attack to the police.
[Id. at 416–17.]
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27
The Court determined that in those circumstances, the detective's testimony did
not violate the Confrontation Clause.
III.
We next apply the legal principles gleaned from the foregoing precedents
to the facts in the case before us. The prosecutor in his opening statement set
the table for the testimony concerning how police initially identified defendant
as a suspect in the robbery. The prosecutor explained to the jury,
[s]o the police go and speak with this Mr. Haines
individual and you're going to hear the officers testify.
Immediately they knew it wasn't him. Maybe a little
similar facial features but he had just woken up, was
there with his girlfriend or wife. He was shorter. They
knew right away after talking to this guy this is not him
[the robber]. But through the investigation talking to
other people, they learn that it's possibly this individual
named Freddie Owle.
[(emphasis added).]
Sergeant Czepiel subsequently testified regarding his interaction with Mr.
and Mrs. Haines, neither of whom testified at trial. Sergeant Czepiel told the
jury that he immediately discounted Mr. Haines as a suspect because he did not
match the description given by the witnesses. Czepiel testified that he then
provided the suspect's description to Mr. and Mrs. Haines. Czepiel told the jury
that Mrs. Haines "made a statement that she has an idea of who she believed the
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28
suspect was." The sergeant then told the jury that Mrs. Haines named defendant
and provided police the number of the room at the Budget Inn at which defendant
resided.
The State at trial presented yet additional testimony explaining why
defendant's photo was placed in the array. Lieutenant Jacoby told the jury that
he included defendant's photo in the array based on Sergeant Czepiel's and
Detective Powell's representation that "they developed" defendant as a suspect.
Lieutenant Jacoby testified that he chose photos for the array "resembl[ing] the
suspect in characteristics that were [developed] both by the description given by
the witnesses and by any other investigative means" available. (emphasis added)
On further questioning by the prosecutor, Jacoby repeated that "during the
investigation" Sergant Czepiel and Detective Powell had "developed a name."
Defendant did not object to any of this testimony, nor to the prosecutor's
opening remarks regarding what police had learned about the suspect from
"other people." Therefore, as in Branch and Irving, we apply the plain error
standard of review. R. 2:10-2; see also State v. Singh, 245 N.J. 1, 13 (2021).
A.
We first consider whether defendant's Confrontation Clause rights were
violated. Lieutenant Jacoby's testimony that defendant's picture was included
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29
in the photo array based on "other investigative means" and on Sergeant Czepiel
and Lieutenant Powell having "developed a suspect" violated the clear rule that
police witnesses should not explain to a jury why a defendant's photo was
included in an array, even by using "seemingly neutral language . . . ." Branch,
182 N.J. at 352. We are concerned that the trial judge, assistant prosecutor, and
defense counsel all seem to have been unaware that such testimony is irrelevant
at trial and can be highly prejudicial. 5 See id. at 352.
But Lieutenant Jacoby's testimony, while clearly improper, is not the
principal cause for concern in this case. We are especially troubled by Sergeant
Czepiel's more explicit trial testimony that Mrs. Haines "made a statement that
she has an idea of who she believed the suspect was," namely, defendant. That
remark falls squarely under the prohibition against hearsay testimony.
The State argues on appeal that the logical inference to be drawn from that
hearsay statement is that Mrs. Haines mentioned defendant by name because he
met the description of the robber that had been provided to her by Detective
5
As we have noted, in this case, there was no Wade hearing. See supra note 2.
Had there been such a hearing, we believe it would have been prudent for the
trial court to remind the parties that testimony elicited at a Wade hearing
regarding the investigation leading to the preparation of a photo-array is
generally not relevant at trial and should not be repeated before the jury.
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30
Czepiel and not because she was aware of defendant's complicity in the
robberies or any other criminal acts. 6 But that is not the only logical inference
that could be drawn from Czepiel's testimony as to why Mrs. Haines had "an
idea" why defendant was the person police were looking for. 7 We note that at a
sidebar discussion, it was revealed that Mrs. Haines implicated defendant
6
We note that there is nothing in the record to indicate that Sergeant Czepiel
showed Mrs. Haines a photograph of the perpetrator taken from surveillance
video of either robbery.
7
We decline to interpret the phrase "inescapable inference," see Bankston, 63
N.J. at 271; Medina, 242 N.J. at 416–17, to mean that no other inference could
be drawn from the hearsay testimony. Cf. Branch, 182 N.J. at 347–49 (emphases
added) (noting "The jury was left to speculate that the detective had superior
knowledge through hearsay information implicating defendant in the crime" and
"when the logical implication to be drawn from the testimony leads the jury to
believe that a non-testifying witness has given the police evidence of the
accused's guilt, the testimony should be disallowed as hearsay"); Favre v.
Henderson, 464 F.2d 359, 364 (5th Cir. 1972) (emphasis added) (right to
confrontation violated where "testimony was admitted which led to the clear and
logical inference that out-of-court declarants believed and said that [the
defendant] was guilty of the crime charged."); Hutchins v. Wainwright, 715 F.2d
512, 516 (11th Cir. 1983) (emphasis added) (right to confrontation violated
where, "[a]lthough the officers' testimony may not have quoted the exact words
of the informant, the nature and substance of the statements suggesting there
was an eyewitness and what he knew was readily inferred"); People v. Vadell,
505 N.Y.S.2d 635 (App. Div. 1986) (emphasis added) (noting that the right to
confrontation was violated where "[t]he clear implication of this question and
answer . . . was that defendant had told his wife that he had participated in the
homicide").
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31
because she was aware that he had previously "committed multiple robberies." 8
In other words, she did provide police incriminating information about
defendant that was beyond the record.
We recognize that the jury was unaware of that information, which would
have been highly prejudicial independent of the hearsay problem. Even so, the
true reason why Mrs. Haines directed police to defendant by name makes clear
that there were other possible explanations for why she did so besides the fact
that defendant met the general description of the robber that Czepiel had given
her.
We add that the jury was told that Czepiel went to Haines' room in the
first place because Matthew Haines was a "possible suspect." When Czepiel
immediately discounted the possibility that Mr. Haines was the robber, the
officers did not just leave. Rather, Czepiel solicited aid from the Haines in
finding the culprit, who might have had confederates. That circumstance
bolsters the impermissible inference that the Haines were aware of information
about the robberies or the robber that was not disclosed to the jury.
8
When the Wawa and Valero robberies occurred, defendant was on parole from
a fifteen-year prison sentence imposed on his six previous first-degree robbery
convictions. He was released from prison only three months before the Wawa
and Valero robberies.
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32
We believe the facts of this case are more analogous to the facts in Branch
than Medina. Certainly, the hearsay testimony regarding Mrs. Haines' role was
far more direct and detailed than the testimony in Medina concerning the role
played by the anonymous woman who refused to give a formal statement to
police. The Court in Medina stressed that there was no implication that the
anonymous woman gave police any incriminating information. 242 N.J. at 416.
In contrast, there is a plausible implication that Mrs. Haines provided
incriminating information to Czepiel—as in fact she did. Considering the
totality of the circumstances, and viewed through the lens of the prosecutor's
opening statement that "through the investigation talking to other people, [the
police] learn that it's possibly this individual named Freddie Owle," we conclude
that the jury "was left to speculate that the detective had superior knowledge
through hearsay information implicating defendant in the crime." See Branch,
182 N.J. at 347–48; Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271.
We are thus satisfied that even though Sergeant Czepiel did not
specifically repeat any incriminating information learned from a non-testifying
source (e.g., that Mrs. Haines was aware of defendant's criminal record), the
officers' testimony created an inescapable inference that a non-testifying source
implicated defendant in contravention of defendant's Confrontation Clause
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33
rights. See Medina, 242 N.J. at 415–16. Indeed, Mrs. Haines—a non-testifying
source—explicitly implicated defendant by identifying him as a suspect in the
robberies. Compared to other cases where the Supreme Court found a
constitutional violation based upon far more neutral testimony, see e.g. Branch,
182 N.J. at 352 (referring to "seemingly neutral language"), we think the
Confrontation Clause violation in this case is particularly obvious and
egregious. Cf. State v. Watson, __ N.J. Super. __, __ (App. Div. 2022) (slip op.
at 58) (finding that "while the [officer's] testimony [about consulting with
another law enforcement agency] technically crossed the line under
Confrontation Clause analysis, it was by no means an obvious and blatant
violation of defendant's right to confront the witnesses against him"). We add
that any harm associated with the violation in this case was compounded by the
prosecutor's reference to inadmissible hearsay in his opening argument which
referenced non-testifying sources. Cf. Id. at __ (slip op. at ) (concluding that
"the prosecutor's summation neither exploited nor reinforced the testimony that
violated the Sixth Amendment[,]" and therefore did not compound the prejudice
flowing from the Confrontation Clause violation).
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34
B.
The conclusion that defendant's Sixth Amendment rights were violated ,
by the admission of hearsay testimony, does not end our inquiry. We must next
consider whether the violations rise to the level of plain error. In Weaver, the
Court explained that "[w]hen evidence is admitted that contravenes not only the
hearsay rule but also a constitutional right, an appellate court must determine
whether the error impacted the verdict." 219 N.J. at 154 (citing Chapman, 386
U.S. at 24). "The standard has been phrased as requiring a reviewing court 'to
declare a belief that [the error] was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.'" Ibid.
(alteration in original).
The State contends that to the extent any error occurred in the admission
of Czepiel's testimony, it should be deemed to have been "invited" because
defense counsel not only failed to object, but cross-examined Czepiel regarding
what Mrs. Haines had told him. We disagree that the invited error doctrine
applies in these circumstances
Under that doctrine, "trial errors that 'were induced, encouraged or
acquiesced in or consented to by defense counsel ordinarily are not a basis for
reversal on appeal . . . .'" State v. A.R., 213 N.J. 542, 561 (2013) (quoting State
v. Corsaro, 107 N.J. 339, 345 (1987)). The doctrine applies "when a defendant
A-4829-18
35
in some way has led the court into error" and "acknowledges the common-sense
notion that a 'disappointed litigant' cannot argue on appeal that a prior ruling
was erroneous 'when that party urged the lower court to adopt the proposition
now alleged to be error.'" Ibid. (first quoting State v. Jenkins, 178 N.J. 347, 359
(2004); and then N.J. Div. of Youth & Fam. Servs. v. M.C. III, 201 N.J. 328,
340 (2010)). In Corsaro, the Court succinctly characterized invited error as error
that defense counsel has "induced." 107 N.J. at 346. In Jenkins, the Court
further explained that the doctrine of invited error as applied in criminal cases
"is designed to prevent defendants from manipulating the system." 178 N.J. at
359.
In this instance, it was the State, not defendant, that "led the court into
error" by presenting inadmissible evidence to the jury and by setting the table
for that evidence in the prosecutor's opening arguments. 9 Defense counsel's
strategic decision to cross-examine Sergeant Czepiel regarding the erroneously
admitted evidence may have risked re-enforcing the significance of that hearsay
testimony for the jury, but that circumstance did not "manipulate the system" or
otherwise invoke the harmless error doctrine.
9
We note the trial court properly instructed the jury that the opening and closing
arguments of counsel are not evidence and should not be considered as such.
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36
We thus turn to whether the hearsay evidence was so prejudicial as to
constitute plain error. We stress at the outset of our analysis that there were two
distinct Confrontation Clause violations in this case: (1) Lieutenant Jacoby's
testimony explaining why defendant's picture was included in a photo array, in
clear violation of Branch, 182 N.J. at 352, and (2) the incriminating hearsay
statement attributed to Mrs. Haines, which is an even more direct and serious
violation of defendant's Confrontation Clause rights. The latter violation,
moreover, was amplified by the prosecutor's opening arguments to the jury.
We are mindful of the well-established principle that a failure to object
permits an inference that any error in admitting the testimony was not
prejudicial. See State v. Nelson, 173 N.J. 417, 471 (2002); see also Hemphill,
142 S. Ct. at 694 (Alito, J., concurring) (quoting Melendez-Diaz v.
Massachusetts, 557 U.S. 305, 314 n.3 (2009)) (noting a defendant can impliedly
waive his Sixth Amendment right by "'fail[ing] to object to the offending
evidence' in accordance with the procedural standards fixed by state law."). As
the Supreme Court explained in Irving, failure to make a timely objection
indicates that defense counsel did not believe the remarks were prejudicial
within the atmosphere of the trial. 114 N.J. at 444; see also State v. Frost, 158
N.J. 76, 84 (1999) (stating "[t]he failure to object suggests that defense counsel
A-4829-18
37
did not believe the remarks were prejudicial at the time they were made").
Failure to object also deprives the court the opportunity to take curative actions.
Irving, 114 N.J. at 444. Accordingly, defendant's failure in this case to object
either to the prosecutor's opening argument or to the testimony of the police
officers regarding information from non-testifying sources that led them to
defendant militates against a finding of reversible error.
We also are mindful of the plain error analysis undertaken by the Supreme
Court in Branch and Medina, which focused on the strength of the State's case.
The State argues that, even if error occurred, it did not rise to the level of plain
error as there was ample evidence to connect defendant to the crimes
independently of the officer's testimony regarding how they initially identified
defendant as a suspect. See Douglas, 204 N.J. Super at 275 (noting the State's
case was "fortified by direct positive evidence").
To ensure we fully and fairly consider the State's argument, we reproduce
verbatim the synopsis of the incriminating evidence from the State's response
brief:
As in Medina, the jury here heard ample evidence to
connect defendant to the crimes independently of the
officers' testimony that defendant was included in the
photo array after speaking to Mr. Haines and to
defendant. Defendant was identified by Ms. Rivera
after she had time to view his face and the surveillance
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38
footage from the Wawa. Additionally, defendant's
DNA was found in a mask that was found days after the
robberies near the property line of the Valero gas
station. A metal rod and a dark colored cap were found
in defendant's girlfriend's car. Ms. Rivera and Ms.
Craft identified defendant in court.
Our own review of the trial record demonstrates that while the State's proofs
were by no means "very weak," see Douglas, 204 N.J. Super. at 275, as in
Branch, the trial evidence was "far from overwhelming." 182 N.J. at 353; see
Watson, __ N.J. Super. at __ (slip op. at 62, 64) (acknowledging "that the State's
evidence was not overwhelming[,]" but nonetheless determining the
Confrontation Clause violation was harmless). As often is true in criminal cases
that go to trial, this contest falls somewhere between the polar extremes of "very
weak" and "overwhelming" evidence of guilt.
In Branch, there was "[n]o physical evidence link[ing] defendant to the
scene of the crime." 182 N.J. at 353. We therefore summarize the physical
evidence presented in the matter before us. The ski mask containing defendant's
DNA is relevant and incriminating. However, it was not found at the crime
scene. Rather, the ski mask was found in the woods near the Valero gas station,
which is also near where defendant resided. Thus, the ski mask, while certainly
incriminating evidence, could not be definitively tied to the crime because it
A-4829-18
39
could have been dropped near Valero at another time unrelated to the flight from
robbery.
We deem it to be significant that a metal pipe similar to the weapon used
in the Valero robbery was found in defendant's girlfriend's car. We note that
Vasisht testified that the pipe used by the robber was "like" the one found later
in the Ford Taurus. We also note, however, the State provided no corroborating
testimony regarding either the weapon or the perpetrator from the other gas
station attendant, Sankar Singh.
In his closing statement, the prosecutor argued that the Wawa surveillance
video showed an emblem on the back of the hat worn by the robber that was
consistent with the Eagles emblem on the hat recovered from Petroski's vehicle.
The prosecutor replayed the video for the jury, rhetorically asking, "[w]hat's that
on the back of his hat? You've got to look at the evidence closely, people." But
so far as the record before us reflects, the State did not introduce an enhanced
or enlarged screenshot from the video confirming that the hat worn by the robber
bore the same distinctive emblem as on the hat recovered from the vehicle. The
remarks and arguments of counsel are not evidence. See State v. Berry, 471 N.J.
Super. 76, 103 (App. Div. 2022) (citing State v. Timmendequas, 161 N.J. 515.
578 (1999)).
A-4829-18
40
We add to our review of the physical evidence that although the State does
not mention the Newport cigarettes in the legal argument section of its response
brief, we find it relevant that at the time of his arrest, defendant was holding a
pack of the same brand of cigarettes as had been demanded by the robber at the
Wawa. We note, however, that the State presented no evidence that the cigarette
pack defendant was holding was nearly full, indicating that it had been obtained
recently during the Wawa robbery. Nor does the record show that the State
examined the serial number on the pack defendant was holding that might have
shown that it had been part of the Wawa inventory.
Aside from the corroborative physical evidence, the State's case hinged
on the eyewitness identifications made by the two Wawa employees. On appeal
as at trial, the State relies heavily on their testimony. As we have noted, in view
of Henderson and its progeny, we must be careful not to overstate the value of
eyewitness testimony, 208 N.J. at 218, especially when there are differences in
the initial description given of the perpetrator and defendant's actual appearance.
See supra Section II; cf. Branch, 128 N.J. at 353 (noting the descriptions of the
perpetrator by the witnesses "differed markedly from defendant's appearance").
In the present case, Ms. Rivera positively identified defendant in both a
photo array identification procedure administered the morning after the robbery
A-4829-18
41
and an in-court identification procedure at the trial nearly two years later. We
note, however, that her initial description, provided just minutes after the
robbery, highlighted one of the perpetrator's distinguishing charac teristics. Ms.
Rivera explained to Sergeant Czepiel that the robber had "the bluest eyes I've
ever seen." But it is undisputed that defendant does not have blue eyes. In his
closing argument, the prosecutor sought to bolster Rivera's ability to identify the
perpetrator by replaying for the jury the Wawa surveillance video, highlighting
a moment in the recording where it appeared that Rivera made eye contact with
the robber. The prosecutor argued to the jury, "[t]hat's eye contact." From our
perspective in determining whether the State's evidence was overwhelming, the
video proof that Rivera made eye contact with the robber underscores the
significance of the discrepancy between the description of the robber she first
gave to police and defendant's actual appearance. See Branch, 128 N.J. at 353;
cf. Watson, __ N.J. Super at __ (slip op. at 64) (noting the State's case was
fortified by an unequivocal positive identification of the perpetrator shown in
the surveillance video by the defendant's former girlfriend).
We also take note of what was not presented at trial by the State. Although
Ms. Craft made a positive in-court identification, there is no indication in the
record that she ever made an out-of-court identification or even was asked to do
A-4829-18
42
so. Craft candidly acknowledged at trial that she could not remember any
distinguishing characteristics of the robber because she was too scared to
remember details. Cf. Henderson, 208 N.J. at 261–62 (recognizing that high
levels of stress undermine the reliability of eyewitness identification and that
eyewitness memory of such high-stress events "may be subject to substantial
error."). That circumstance undermines the reliability of the identification she
made in court when she was shown the surveillance video of the robbery and
when she observed defendant live in the courtroom. See Watson, __ N.J. Super.
at __ (slip op. at 108–54) (discussing the inherent suggestiveness of an in-court
identification procedure and addressing the defendant's contentions regarding
the reliability of "first time" in-court identifications).
Furthermore, although the testifying gas station attendant, Mr. Vasisht,
stated that the pipe found in the Taurus registered to Petroski was "like" the
weapon used in the robbery based on its handle, he was unable to identify
defendant. The other eyewitness to the Valero robbery, Sankar Singh, never
testified, never gave a statement, never participated in an out-of-court
identification procedure, and never was shown the pipe retrieved from Petroski's
vehicle.
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43
Importantly, the surveillance videos of the two robberies do not show the
perpetrator so clearly as to permit the jury to make an independent identification.
Cf. Watson, __ N.J. Super. at __ (slip op. at 102) (noting the defendant's
girlfriend was able to positively and unequivocally identify defendant as the
robber from the bank surveillance video and a screenshot from the video, leading
the court to conclude that "the jurors could see for themselves the perpetrator
shown in the surveillance video").
We conclude our review of the incriminating trial proofs by emphasizing
that the issue before us in this appeal is not whether the State presented sufficient
evidence to convict. 10 Rather, our fact-sensitive inquiry in applying plain error
analysis focuses on whether the inadmissible hearsay evidence "may have tipped
the scales." Branch, 182 N.J. at 354.
We emphasize that the seriousness of the constitutional violation—or in
this case, the combined effect of two distinct Sixth Amendment violations —is
10
We are not addressing an appeal from the denial of a motion for a judgment
of acquittal notwithstanding a guilty verdict. Cf. State v. Lodzinski, 249 N.J.
116, 144 (2021) (emphasis added) (citing State v. Williams, 218 N.J. 576, 594
(2014)) (a court reviewing denial of a motion for a judgment of acquittal
notwithstanding a guilty verdict pursuant to Rule 3:18-2 "must view the entirety
of the direct and circumstantial evidence presented by the State and the
defendant and give the State the benefit of all the favorable evidence and all the
favorable inferences drawn from that evidence, and then determine whether a
reasonable jury could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.").
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44
an important consideration in determining the appropriate remedy. We also
reiterate and stress that the State shoulders the burden to convince us beyond a
reasonable doubt that the jury verdict would have been the same in the absence
of the Confrontation Clause violations. Ibid.; Irving, 114 N.J. at 447. The
beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard is a formidable threshold to mount. In view
of that demanding standard, we cannot declare our belief that the repeated
Confrontation Clause errors did not have the capacity to cause an unjust result.
Branch, 182 N.J. at 354 (citing R. 2:10-2); cf. Watson, __ N.J. Super. at __ (slip
op. at 64) (concluding that because the officer's "fleeting hearsay testimony—
essentially a three-word answer to the prosecutor's problematic question—[had
not] 'tipped the scales' as in Branch . . .[,]" the Confrontation Clause violation
was harmless constitutional error). We are thus constrained to vacate
defendant's convictions and remand for a new trial.
IV.
Because we remand for a new trial, we need not address most of
defendant's remaining contentions regarding asserted trial errors and the
sentence imposed, including defendant's argument, raised for the first time on
appeal, that the trial court committed plain error by not instructing the jury
A-4829-18
45
concerning out-of-court identification procedures sua sponte. 11 We presume that
defendant on remand will request the trial court to instruct the jury regarding the
photo-array identification procedure administered to Ms. Rivera. 12
We need only briefly address the arguments raised in defendant's pro se
supplemental brief, as those contentions lack sufficient merit to warrant
extensive discussion. See R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We add the following comments.
Defendant contends that the indictment was defective as it was not
"returned in open court before the 'assignment judge' . . . nor endorsed as a 'true
bill'" and the "indictment shows no date nor time of 'when' it was filed" in
Superior Court. Defendant provides no support in the record, however, for any
of his claims regarding error in the grand jury process.
Although defendant's pro se brief is unclear, he also appears to assert that
he is immune from prosecution because he is Native American and the "grand
11
We note that the trial judge did instruct the jury on in-court identifications.
See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "In-Court Identification Only" (rev. July
19, 2012). Additionally, we note that defendant does not contend that police
violated the procedures for administering a photo-array identification procedure
as prescribed in Henderson, or that an out-of-court identification procedure was
impermissibly suggestive. See supra note 2.
12
We note that since the trial, the Model Jury Charge has been revised. See
Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Identification: In-Court and Out-of-Court
Identifications" (rev. May 18, 2020).
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jury is an English institution." He provides no legal support for the proposition
that he may not be tried in the New Jersey criminal courts because of his Native
American heritage.
Defendant further argues in his pro se supplemental brief that the
prosecutor's charging decision was made in bad faith. Defendant provides no
specificity, however, as to how the prosecutor allegedly engaged in bad faith in
seeking an indictment against defendant for the robberies of the Wawa and
Valero. The law is well-settled that "so long as the prosecutor has probable
cause to believe that the accused committed an offense defined by statute, the
decision whether or not to prosecute, and what charge to file or bring before a
grand jury, generally rests entirely in his [or her] discretion." State v. Medina,
349 N.J. Super. 108, 127–28 (App. Div. 2002) (quoting Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
434 U.S. 357, 364 (1978)). Further, "the decision to prosecute is particularly
ill-suited to judicial review." Ibid. (quoting Wayte v. United States, 470 U.S.
598, 607 (1985)). We do not hesitate to conclude that in this instance, there was
ample probable cause to support the charges associated with the Wawa and
Valero robberies.
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We
do not retain jurisdiction.
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