PER CURIAM.
Following a jury trial, defendant Edward Peoples was convicted of first-degree murder,
On appeal, defendant raises the following contentions in his appellate brief:
Defendant raises the following contentions in his pro se supplemental letter brief:
We decline to address Point II of defendant's pro se supplemental brief because it involves allegations and evidence that lie outside the trial record, and the trial itself does not provide an adequately developed record upon which to evaluate the issue.
The charges against defendant stem from the shooting death of Rahman Jenkins (Jenkins) in the parking lot of the Baxter Terrace apartment complex in Newark (the apartment complex). Duane Tims (Tims) testified at trial that he and Jenkins were long-time friends who once sold drugs together. On January 20, 2006 at approximately 8:00 p.m., he and Jenkins drove in Tims's van to the apartment complex, and went to the apartment of Marvin Shahid McLeod (McLeod). They were there a few minutes when a man, who was "jittery" and very nervous, came into the apartment and said something to the three men that caused them to leave immediately.
Tims, Jenkins, and McLeod crossed the parking lot and headed for Tims's van. Tims was in the lead, while Jenkins and McLeod walked a few feet behind him. Neither Tims nor Jenkins was armed. Tims reached and entered the van first, started it, and then heard a gunshot from behind the van, followed by several more gunshots. He opened the passenger door to facilitate Jenkins's entry, but Jenkins did not appear. He then opened the driver's door, looked toward the rear of the van, and saw Jenkins laying face down in the parking lot, with two men standing over him. One of the men was tall and slim, and the other was shorter and chubby. The shorter, chubbier man was pointing and shooting his gun at Jenkins. The man then turned, pointed and fired the gun at Tims, but missed. Tims quickly drove from the parking lot. He recognized the shorter, chubbier man who shot at him as "Phat Boy," whom he had known for about ten years. At trial, he identified defendant as "Phat Boy."
Tims decided to return to the parking lot. On the way back, he stopped and reported the shooting to two New Jersey Institute of Technology police officers, who immediately went to the apartment complex. Tims did not otherwise speak to the police about the shooting until March 15, 2006, when he was contacted as part of the official murder investigation.
McLeod testified at trial that as he was following Jenkins through the parking lot, two men ran up to them, he heard shots, saw Jenkins fall, and then turned and ran back to his apartment. Contrary to Tims's description of the shooters, McLeod said they were both slender in build, though one was taller than the other. He also testified that he did not see defendant in the parking lot the night of the shooting.
Codefendant Joseph Richardson (Richardson)
Richardson also testified that he and defendant left Richardson's girlfriend's apartment and went to defendant's mother's apartment, where they armed themselves with handguns; Richardson had a nine millimeter handgun, while defendant had an "automatic" handgun. Richardson saw defendant's girlfriend, Anyea Williams (Williams), in the apartment, but she did not speak to them.
Richardson and defendant left the apartment, walked to the parking lot, and approached Jenkins, who was walking ahead of them toward a van that had its engine running. Defendant called Jenkins, and Jenkins turned and said, "What's up?" The two men stood "a couple of steps" apart and talked for about a minute, with Richardson standing behind and very close to defendant. At that point, shots were exchanged. Richardson saw defendant shooting a black, semi-automatic handgun, and saw Jenkins fall to the ground. The gunfire continued, and Richardson began running backwards, shooting his handgun about nine times in the direction of Jenkins and the van. Initially, he did not know where the other gunshots were coming from, but concluded that they were from defendant's handgun. He did not see Jenkins with a weapon, and did not see any gunfire coming from the van. Both he and defendant then fled the scene. Based on a conversation he had with defendant prior to his arrest, he believed that defendant was threatening to kill him if he testified against defendant.
Williams was arrested on a drug charge on the evening of the shooting, and was released from jail three weeks later. She and defendant began having relationship problems, and she eventually filed a domestic violence complaint against him. She also gave the police a statement on February 28, 2006, inculpating defendant in Jenkins's murder. On July 17, 2006, she received a probationary sentence following her conviction on the drug charge in exchange for her agreement to testify against defendant. On September 25, 2007, Williams gave a videotaped statement describing threats she received about testifying against defendant. She had also received letters from defendant warning her against testifying against him.
Williams testified at trial that, between 8:00 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. on January 20, 2006, she was at defendant's mother's apartment when defendant and Richardson entered. Richardson had a handgun in his waistband, and defendant went into the bedroom and retrieved a handgun that was kept there. The two men then left the apartment together and went to the parking lot. A short time later, she heard gunshots. Defendant returned to the apartment and told her that he shot Jenkins after an argument "[o]ver a drug spot." Defendant then left the apartment. At that point, an unknown person entered the apartment and told Williams to leave because the police were coming.
Marquis Grimsley (Grimsley) gave the police a statement on January 31, 2006, that he saw defendant standing over Jenkins and shooting him. He also gave a videotaped statement on September 20, 2007, that defendant made threats against him and his family if he testified against defendant.
Grimsley had also received three letters from defendant prior to trial, two of which he discarded, but forwarded the third to another person. The third letter made its way to a detective. In that letter, defendant thanked Grimsley for saying he would not testify against defendant. Defendant also asked Grimsley to complete a typewritten affidavit that accompanied the letter, which said that Grimsley had been untruthful in his January 31, 2006 statement, and that he had not seen defendant or anyone else shoot at Jenkins.
Contrary to his statements to the police, Grimsley testified at trial that at the time of the shooting, he was visiting his girlfriend's apartment when he looked out the kitchen window, heard gunshots, and then ducked below the window line, not observing the shooting. When he looked out the window again, he saw defendant running from the scene, but could not remember seeing anything in defendant's hands. He also testified that defendant made no threats against him about testifying at trial.
Gregory Smith (Smith) had been arrested on May 7, 2007, on aggravated assault and weapons charges, and was housed in jail with defendant. He later entered into a plea agreement to testify against defendant in exchange for a probationary sentence. Smith testified at trial that on May 11, 2007, defendant told Smith that he had shot Jenkins, but that he wanted Smith to testify that Smith was present at the shooting and saw a "skinny guy" shoot Jenkins. Defendant also offered Smith $10,000.
Smith also testified that defendant gave him written instructions and a diagram of the parking lot so that Smith could tailor his testimony to the crime scene. The instructions directed Smith to say that he was visiting a friend at the apartment complex at 8:30 p.m., and that as he exited the building, he saw Richardson and his brother arguing with Jenkins and Tims, saw Richardson, Richardson's brother and Tims pull out hanguns, and saw Richardson shoot Jenkins, probably with a.45 caliber handgun, while standing over Jenkins. The diagram specified where the shooting took place in the parking lot and the positions of the various actors. Smith gave the instructions and diagram to the prosecutor.
The medical examiner testified that Jenkins had been shot ten times at close range: there were five shots to the head, one to the neck, one to the chest, and three to the arms. A firearms expert examined the cartridge casings found at the crime scene, concluding that five were nine millimeter cartridges that had been discharged from the same weapon. The expert examined eleven other casings, concluded that they were from.45 caliber cartridges, and determined that four had been discharged from one weapon, while seven had been discharged from a different weapon. Based on the cartridges, the expert concluded that three different firearms were used during the shooting.
Defendant did not testify at trial. Instead, he called McLeod and Lavar Gardner (Gardner). Gardner testified that she looked out a window after hearing the gunshots and saw a man lying on the ground in the parking lot, while a "skinny, very thin" man stood over him and shot him a number of times. She also saw a van driving away, with people in the van exchanging gunfire with people in the parking lot.
We first address defendant's contention in Point I of his pro se supplemental brief regarding alleged juror taint. Defendant argues that his convictions should be reversed and the matter remanded for a new trial because the trial judge failed to fully investigate and determine whether a juror had been exposed to improper influence by Jenkins's father.
Following a lunch recess on the second day of trial, defense counsel approached the judge at sidebar and said:
The judge did not immediately address the issue, but later stated that he would do so after the afternoon recess. Defense counsel then suggested that the prosecutor could speak with Jenkins's family, and tell them to "stay away from the jurors eating lunch." The prosecutor demurred, saying that he was not convinced that Jenkins's father actually spoke to a juror and that he would ask the father if he did so. Nothing more occurred at that time.
The next morning, the judge said he was going to address the issue of "Juror Number 11 because of a suggestion that she had been speaking to" Jenkins's father. Defense counsel immediately responded as follows:
Without advising Jenkins's father of what defense counsel had reported, the judge asked the father whether he had had any interaction with anybody who might be a juror. The father denied knowing what the jurors, including Juror Number 11, looked like, and denied having any interaction with anybody that he had any suspicion was on the jury. Defense counsel advised the judge that he accepted the father's representations. The matter concluded without the judge questioning Juror Number 11, who later participated in the deliberations that led to defendant's convictions.
The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, paragraph 10 of the New Jersey Constitution guarantee criminal defendants the right to trial by an impartial jury.
"[I]f during the course of the trial it becomes apparent that a juror may have been exposed to extraneous information, the trial court must act swiftly to overcome any potential bias and to expose factors impinging on the juror's impartiality."
Where it becomes apparent at trial that a juror may have been exposed to extraneous information or outside influences, the trial "court is obliged to interrogate the juror, in the presence of counsel, to determine if there is a taint; if so, the inquiry must expand to determine whether any other jurors have been tainted thereby."
Contrary to the requirement set out in
We continue our review to resolve the remaining issues raised on appeal for guidance.
Defendant contends in Point I of his appellate brief that the judge erred in admitting Williams's September 25, 2007 videotaped statement and Grimsley's January 31, 2006 statement as prior inconsistent statements pursuant to
Williams gave the police a statement on February 28, 2006, that defendant came to his mother's apartment, retrieved a gun, left the apartment, and went to the parking lot. She then heard gunshots. Defendant returned to the apartment and told her that he shot Jenkins. In her September 25, 2007 videotaped statement, she confirmed that the February 28, 2006 statement was true, and also stated that, through telephone calls and correspondence, defendant and his friend threatened to kill her, her family, and anyone she loved because of her February 28, 2006 statement. She also said she had received letters from defendant threatening to "make sure something happens[s to her]" if she testified against him. She said she was afraid and gave the videotaped statement for her safety. At trial, she testified that no one had threatened her or warned her not to testify against defendant.
The judge held a
In his January 31, 2006 statement, Grimsley said that he looked out the window and saw defendant standing over Jenkins, shoot at him once, look up, and look around. Grimsley then backed away from the window. Grimsley had also given a videotaped statement on September 20, 2007, in which he confirmed his January 31, 2006 statement was true and that he saw defendant shoot Jenkins. He also said that defendant sent him three letters that made him feel threatened and fear for his family. In one letter, defendant asked him to rescind his January 31, 2006 statement and sign an affidavit saying that he had lied and had not seen defendant shoot Jenkins.
At trial, Grimsley testified that he was at a kitchen window on the night of the shooting when he heard shots and then ducked down below the window. He did not see the shooting. Although he saw defendant running from the scene, he did not see anything in defendant's hands. When confronted with his January 31, 2006 statement, Grimsley said he could not remember most of what it contained, and he was specifically unable to recall saying that he saw defendant standing over Jenkins and shooting him.
The judge held a
We review a trial court's evidentiary determinations under an abuse-of-discretion standard.
In addition, in determining whether to admit prior statements, the trial court necessarily makes credibility determinations and related factual findings.
Applying these standards, we discern no reason to disturb the judge's rulings. The judge carefully examined all of the evidence produced at both
In Point II of his appellate brief, defendant contends that the judge erred in admitting most of Grimsley's September 25, 2007 videotaped statement into evidence because defendant did not open the door to admit the statement; he was prejudiced by Grimsley's reference to gangs in the statement; and proof of Grimsley's state of mind towards him was not relevant to the material issues the jury had to decide. We reject these contentions.
During Grimsley's direct examination, the judge admitted portions of both his January 31, 2006 statement and videotaped statement into evidence as prior inconsistent statements. During cross-examination, Grimsley denied other portions of both statements. After testifying on cross-examination that whatever he testified to or would testify to in court was the truth, Grimsley further repudiated his two prior statements, and said that his courtroom testimony was the truth notwithstanding those statements.
The State then moved to admit the entire videotaped statement into evidence. Before the judge ruled on the application, Grimsley testified on re-direct examination that defendant did not threaten him, and that he could not remember part of his videotaped statement.
The judge admitted the videotaped statement into evidence, stating that:
The judge subsequently ruled that the entire videotaped statement would be admitted as bearing on Grimsley's state of mind toward defendant, and on his "testifying in court as that bears on the credibility of his trial testimony." The judge rejected defendant's objections as to relevancy and prejudice, stating that the videotaped statement's probative value was not outweighed by the potential for any undue prejudice, consumption of time, or the risk of misleading the jury or confusing the issues.
The videotaped statement was played to the jury with one non-important deletion. In the statement, Grimsley said there were "Bloods and Crips" gang members in the jail and that he was wary of crossing them in any way. Grimsley did not say or suggest that defendant was a gang member. When the videotape ended, the judge instructed the jury that there was no evidence that defendant was a member of the Bloods or the Crips or any other street gang.
Where the "opening the door" doctrine is concerned, the admission or exclusion of evidence involves the weighing process set out in
"The `opening the door' doctrine is essentially a rule of expanded relevancy and authorizes admitting evidence which otherwise would have been irrelevant or inadmissible in order to respond to... admissible evidence that generates an issue."
Here, defendant opened the door on Grimsley's cross-examination by eliciting testimony that what Grimsley said in the videotaped statement was false and what he said at trial was true, including his denials that defendant had threatened him. This was admissible evidence, and the judge properly determined that the State could counter it with those parts of the videotaped statement not already admitted into evidence, which established Grimsley's recognition of defendant's threats and the fear they engendered. Thus, the admission of the videotaped statement under the "opening the door" doctrine permitted the State to respond to defendant's attack on it and to place Grimsley's trial testimony in the proper context of the threats defendant had made, showing the jury why Grimsley was testifying at trial the way he did. In that manner, admission of the statement comports with the rationale for admitting such evidence set out in
In addition, defendant suffered no prejudice by Grimsley's reference to gangs. Grimsley did not say or imply that defendant was a gang member, or that defendant had engaged gang members to threaten him. Moreover, the judge explicitly instructed the jury that there was no evidence linking defendant to a gang. Defendant's contention that he was prejudiced is, thus, pure speculation. In no way was the probative value of the video statement to show why Grimsley testified at trial as he did outweighed by that purported prejudice.
Further, Grimsley's state of mind toward defendant was highly relevant. "`Relevant evidence' means evidence having a tendency in reason to prove or disprove any fact of consequence to the determination of the action."
Insofar as Grimsley's testimony was concerned, the "fact of consequence" concerned what he observed from the kitchen window on the night of the shooting. His videotaped statement was relevant to explain why his testimony at trial about what he saw was inconsistent with his January 31, 2006 statement. The videotaped statement set out Grimsley's awareness and fear of defendant's threats and served to prove that his trial testimony was colored and affected by those threats. To the extent that the videotaped statement showed Grimsley's "state of mind" in testifying as he did at trial, the video statement was relevant.
In sum, defense counsel's questioning of Grimsley opened the door to admit his videotaped statement. Because the information conveyed in that statement was necessary to place Grimsley's trial testimony concerning what he saw on the night of the shooting in proper context and because the judge addressed and minimized any prejudice arising out of the statement, the admission of the videotaped statement did not constitute an abuse of discretion or manifest denial of justice.
Defendant contends in Point III of his appellate brief that the judge erred in precluding Brandon Stokes from testifying that Richardson had told Stokes in a jailhouse conversation that defendant had nothing to do with Jenkins's killing, and that Richardson and his brother had killed Jenkins. Defendant argues that Stokes's testimony is admissible pursuant to
Appellant contends in Point IV of his appellate brief that the judge erred in precluding him from presenting evidence of third-party guilt by showing that one of the handguns used in Jenkins's shooting was also used in a later homicide, while defendant was incarcerated.
For the first time on appeal, defendant contends in Point V of his appellate brief that the judge erred in failing to instruct the jury on his right not to testify, and issuing a prejudicial instruction concerning circumstantial evidence.
We have considered these contentions in light of the record and applicable legal principles and conclude they are without sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion.
At trial, Richardson never denied making any statements to Stokes, and thus, there was no inconsistency in his testimony.
There is no evidence whatsoever of third-party guilt in this case.
The judge gave the instruction on defendant's right not to testify that defendant had requested, which mirrored
Defendant's argument concerning the instruction on circumstantial evidence fares no better. It matters not whether the judge used blueberry pie, apple pie or some other example to illustrate circumstantial evidence. The judge gave an instruction that properly instructed the jury of the elements of circumstantial evidence. The instruction was thus not capable of producing an unjust result.
Defendant challenges his sentence in Point VI of his appellate brief. He contends that the judge erred in failing to find and apply certain mitigating factors and articulate his reasons for imposing a base sentence in excess of the mandatory minimum base term. This contention lacks merit.
We review a judge's sentencing decision under an abuse-of-discretion standard.
Defendant argues that the judge should have found and applied mitigating factor three, "[t]he defendant acted under a strong provocation,"
The record supports the judge's finding and application of aggravating factors three, "[t]he risk that the defendant will commit another offense,"
Remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, and affirmed in all other respects. We do not retain jurisdiction.