PER CURIAM.
This is the State's interlocutory appeal from the grant of defendant Gerald Brown's in limine motion requiring the State to produce an expert to explain internet service provider and cell phone records it intends to introduce at defendant's trial to establish that defendant uploaded a video of his former girlfriend in a state of undress. We reverse and remand for a
Defendant has been indicted on two counts of third-degree invasion of privacy,
The first such message was in the form of a tweet stating, "remember the COP that took u 2 the HOOKAH bar n da summer? He said good looking out 4 da happy ending HOOKer!!!" Within minutes, the victim received another tweet from the same user, "stop looking 4 all these dudes 2 be ur daddy.... they just wanna nut all n dat fat azz ... DatS ALL!!" Several minutes later, that user tweeted to someone else, "[t]his TRICK [D.W.] is a MAJOR WHORE n the tri state area...." Over the next several minutes, D.W. received several more tweets from the same user that insinuated that she was a prostitute.
At 9:06 a.m., D.W. received a tweet from the user, which was also sent to four other Twitter subscribers. The tweet provided an embedded link to a video hosted by TwitVid.com, a service that provides a means for Twitter users to share videos. The tweet also contained the symbol "<—" pointing to D.W.'s username, implying that the video was with reference to her. Upon viewing the video, D.W. recognized herself and her bathroom and the male voice off camera as belonging to defendant. D.W. was not aware that defendant had videotaped her and did not know such a video existed until seeing it on Twitter.
After obtaining defendant's cell phone number from the victim, Detective Bolan of the Cyber Crimes Unit in the Essex County Prosecutor's Office obtained a communications data warrant (CDW) for Twitter account information relating to the user. Twitter responded that the account was created on January 26, 2011, at 7:10 p.m. from a certain IP address.
Bolan sent a subpoena to Blackberry requesting subscriber information for IP address 74.82.68.16 on January 27, 2011, for an identified one hour and forty-minute period. Blackberry responded by requesting the user's International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) or International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) numbers.
Using the IMSI number provided by T-Mobile, Blackberry responded to the subpoena by advising that on January 27, 2011, a Blackberry device at the IP address 74.82.68.16 provided by Twitter, downloaded the TwitVid application (app) from Blackberry App World. Blackberry also responded by identifying an email address associated with the account. Using the information received from Blackberry, Detective Bolan served a subpoena on Microsoft, operator of the msn.com domain, requesting subscriber information on that email address. The response from Microsoft revealed that the account belonged to a "Gerald Brown."
The issue before the Law Division was whether the State needed an expert to explain that document trail to the jury. Defendant asserted that the information collected in response to the CDW and subpoenas pertained to internet-working protocols and applications that were extremely technical and outside the ken of the average juror, thus requiring an expert to explain the links. The State maintained that expert opinion was unnecessary as it did not intend to have Bolan provide an opinion conclusively linking defendant to the Twitter account or the video. Instead, Bolan would testify to the steps she took in conducting her investigation and the business records obtained in response to the CDW and subpoenas. The State maintained that Bolan would do no more than provide the circumstantial links from which the jury could draw a conclusion.
The Law Division did not conduct a
After poring over these records, and aided by both parties' written submissions, this Court has experienced significant difficulty and confusion in attempting to discern exactly how the records link the Defendant to the particular video in question. The Court finds that the concepts required to establish this inferential link are "so esoteric that jurors of common judgment and experience cannot form a valid judgment" about whether or not Defendant uploaded this video.
We conclude that we lack the record to definitively resolve this issue. Accordingly, we remand for a
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.