State v. Edgar Torres (083676) (Monmouth County & Statewide) ( 2021 )


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  •                                        SYLLABUS
    This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the
    Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the
    Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
    State v. Edgar Torres (A-52-19) (083676)
    Argued November 10, 2020 -- Decided May 11, 2021
    LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    The Court considers the imposition of an aggregate seventy-year sentence, subject
    to an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier, on defendant Edgar Torres for his role in
    five robberies. In State v. Yarbough, the Court sought to assist courts with the exercise
    of discretion when sentencing a defendant for multiple offenses by identifying factors to
    consider when weighing whether to impose consecutive or concurrent sentences.
    
    100 N.J. 627
    , 635 (1985). In this matter, the Court again takes steps to promote the goals
    of uniformity, predictability, and proportionality in sentencing, while also awaiting
    further action by the New Jersey Criminal Sentencing and Disposition Commission,
    which may touch on some policy-laden sentencing arguments advanced in this appeal.
    After defendant was convicted of three counts of first-degree armed robbery for
    his role in three robberies, the court sentenced him to forty years’ imprisonment subject
    to an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier for the first of those convictions and to
    twenty years in prison for each of the other two convictions. The court ordered the
    twenty-year sentences to run concurrently to each other and to the forty-year sentence.
    After a separate trial, defendant was convicted of first-degree armed robbery and
    second-degree robbery for his role in two other robberies. Defendant was sentenced to
    twenty years’ imprisonment for the armed robbery conviction and to ten years’
    imprisonment for the second-degree robbery conviction, each subject to parole
    disqualifiers. The sentencing court imposed those terms consecutively, stating that the
    Yarbough factors counseled in favor of consecutive terms because each robbery was a
    separate offense. Without further elaboration, the court determined that defendant was to
    serve the aggregate thirty-year sentence consecutively to defendant’s forty-year sentence
    imposed for the three other robberies.
    As to the second sentence, the Appellate Division found that the sentencing court
    had failed to engage in a careful analysis of either the Yarbough factors or the real-time
    consequences of defendant’s sentence. It remanded for a new sentencing hearing.
    1
    On remand, the court concluded that Yarbough required that defendant’s sentences
    be imposed consecutively to each other and to the prior forty-year sentence. It sentenced
    defendant to the same aggregate seventy-year sentence subject to an eighty-five percent
    parole disqualifier. Thus, the court’s sentence denies defendant the opportunity for
    parole until he reaches one hundred and two years of age.
    Defendant again appealed his sentence, and the Appellate Division affirmed by
    summary order. The Court granted certification. 
    241 N.J. 91
     (2020).
    HELD: An explicit statement, explaining the overall fairness of a sentence imposed for
    multiple offenses in a single proceeding or in multiple sentencing proceedings, is
    essential to a proper Yarbough sentencing assessment and was lacking here. The lack of
    any overall assessment of the fairness of the decision to impose consecutive sentences
    compels reversal of defendant’s sentence and remand for a new resentencing, and the
    Court provides important guidance regarding that essential assessment.
    1. Prior to the enactment of the Code of Criminal Justice, sentencing decisions were
    guided by the view that punishment should fit the offender as well as the offense. To
    facilitate such defendant-oriented sentencing decisions, discretion to determine a sentence
    within the statutory range largely rested with the trial court. Dissatisfaction grew with
    this sentencing regime, whose critics suggested that it produced inconsistent and arbitrary
    results, and the Legislature began efforts to recodify the state’s criminal statutes,
    including those governing sentencing. Ultimately, however, the Code generally
    preserved the discretion of trial courts by providing that when an offender is sentenced to
    imprisonment for more than one offense, “such multiple sentences shall run concurrently
    or consecutively as the court determines at the time of sentence.” See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5.
    The Legislature nonetheless made it clear that a paramount goal in enacting the Code was
    to achieve greater uniformity in sentencing. The Legislature was also guided by the
    concept that punishment of crime should be based primarily on principles of deserved
    punishment in proportion to the offense and not rehabilitative potential. (pp. 16-20)
    2. To advance those legislative principles, Yarbough identified a series of factors for
    sentencing courts to consider as a guide when determining whether to make sentences run
    concurrently or consecutively. The Court reviews the Yarbough factors and notes they
    seemed to hit the mark with one exception: factor six, which established an outer limit to
    the accumulation of consecutive sentences, was expressly disapproved by the Legislature,
    which amended N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(a) in 1993 to clarify that “[t]here shall be no overall
    outer limit on the cumulation of consecutive sentences for multiple offenses.” Other than
    that rejection of the sixth factor originally identified in Yarbough, the Legislature has
    otherwise neither altered section 44-5 nor codified the remaining Yarbough factors. The
    precision of the legislative reaction clarifying section 44-5 to eliminate Yarbough’s sixth
    factor may reasonably be interpreted as tacit approval of the remaining five factors.
    (pp. 20-23)
    2
    3. Unlike some other states’ sentencing laws or guidelines, New Jersey’s Code does not
    contain a presumption in favor of either concurrent or consecutive sentences. The five
    extant Yarbough factors that guide courts in that determination have been categorized as
    follows. Factors two, four, and five do not relate directly to the facts of the offense and
    hence have little utility in the threshold assessment of consecutive or concurrent
    sentences. Factor one under Yarbough -- “there can be no free crimes in a system for
    which the punishment shall fit the crime,” 
    100 N.J. at
    644 -- has been described as tilting
    in the direction of consecutive sentences because the Code focuses on the crime, not the
    criminal. However, it is factor three that contains the evaluative core to a Yarbough
    analysis: it identifies five sub-factors that generally concentrate on such considerations
    as the nature and number of offenses for which the defendant is being sentenced, whether
    the offenses occurred at different times or places, and whether they involve numerous or
    separate victims. Beyond listing those informative factors, though, Yarbough does not
    direct an outcome, remaining true to the Code’s failure to create either a presumption of
    consecutive or concurrent sentences for multiple offenses. (pp. 24-25)
    4. That lack of a direction for a starting assumption, to the extent that it is problematic
    for promoting uniformity in sentencing, is compounded by the elimination of Yarbough’s
    original factor six. Insofar as the Yarbough factors were created to work together as a
    cohesive whole, that whole was conceived of as including an overall outer limit -- an
    ending assumption. Because that outer check no longer exists, the analysis of the
    remaining evaluative subfactors is unmoored to any starting or ending sentencing
    guidepost. Appellate review remains the final check on the discretion allotted to the
    sentencing court. Thus, Yarbough’s second factor requires a sentencing court to place on
    the record its statement of reasons for the decision to impose consecutive sentences,
    which statement should focus “on the fairness of the overall sentence, and the sentencing
    court should set forth in detail its reasons for concluding that a particular sentence is
    warranted.” State v. Miller, 
    108 N.J. 112
    , 122 (1987). (p. 26)
    5. Here, the court did not include an explicit assessment of the overall fairness of
    imposing the sentence consecutively to defendant’s previously imposed forty-year
    sentence. An explicit statement, explaining the overall fairness of a sentence imposed on
    a defendant for multiple offenses in a single proceeding or in multiple sentencing
    proceedings, is essential to a proper Yarbough sentencing assessment. It is the necessary
    second part to a Yarbough analysis, as Miller emphasized, and it remains the critical
    remnant of accountability imposed by Yarbough, since the legislative elimination of the
    outer limit imposed by factor six. (pp. 26-27)
    6. Yarbough did not supplant the principle that courts have discretion over whether to
    impose consecutive sentences in appropriate cases. The Yarbough criteria were adopted
    to channel that discretion, not to withdraw it; they are qualitative, not quantitative, and
    applying them involves more than merely counting the factors favoring each alternative
    outcome. That caveat applies also to the “no free crimes” factor identified in Yarbough.
    3
    Courts must remain mindful that the discretion to sentence for multiple offenses runs in
    two directions, allowing concurrent sentencing as well as consecutive sentencing for the
    multiple offenses for which one defendant is being sentenced. Uniformity and
    predictability should not come at the expense of fairness and proportionality. A
    sentencing court’s decision whether to impose consecutive sentences should retain focus
    on “the fairness of the overall sentence.” Miller, 
    108 N.J. at 122
    . (pp. 28-29)
    7. The imposition of consecutive sentences here must be reversed due to the lack of a
    fairness assessment. The Court requires an explicit explanation for the overall fairness of
    a sentence, in the interest of promoting proportionality for the individual who will serve
    the punishment. Furthermore, although courts primarily evaluate aggravating and
    mitigating factors when determining the length of individual sentences, sentencing is a
    holistic endeavor. A court performing the fairness assessment must be mindful that
    aggravating and mitigating factors and Yarbough factors, as well as the stated purposes of
    sentencing in N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b), in their totality, inform the sentence’s fairness. The
    sentencing court’s explanation of overall fairness provides a proper record for appellate
    review of the court’s exercise of discretion. Appellate courts employ the general shock-
    the-conscience standard for review of the exercise of sentencing discretion in the arena of
    consecutive-versus-concurrent sentencing. Although the standard is deferential, that
    review is critical: at present, no guidelines have been created by the Legislature or been
    recommended by the Legislature’s currently empaneled sentencing commission;
    appellate review of lengthy consecutive sentences is therefore the only check for
    pervading unfairness. The standard is not insurmountable, and appellate courts should
    bear that in mind when reviewing lengthy, aggregated consecutive sentences where the
    sentencing court has so few guideposts, and no outer limit, on which to rely. (pp. 30-33)
    8. The fairness of a sentence cannot be divorced from consideration of the person on
    whom it is imposed. Assessing a sentence’s overall fairness requires a real-time assessment
    of the aggregate sentence imposed, which perforce calls for consideration of a defendant’s
    age. Age alone cannot drive the outcome, and the fairness assessment does not call for
    speculation or divination about the defendant’s future behavior or life expectancy. But
    age is a fact that can and should be in the matrix of information assessed by a sentencing
    court, even in the deliberation over whether consecutive sentences are a fair and
    appropriate punishment -- proportional for the individual being sentenced. (pp. 34-35)
    9. The Court took this case because the overall length of this sentence gave serious
    concern. The Court remands for meaningful review and resentencing utilizing the
    principles contained in this opinion. (p. 36)
    REVERSED and REMANDED for a new sentencing proceeding.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-
    VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion.
    4
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-52 September Term 2019
    083676
    State of New Jersey,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    Edgar Torres,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Argued                       Decided
    November 10, 2020              May 11, 2021
    Scott M. Welfel, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
    Defender, attorney; Scott M. Welfel, of counsel and on
    the briefs).
    Carey J. Huff, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for
    respondent (Christopher J. Gramiccioni, Monmouth
    County Prosecutor, attorney; Carey J. Huff, of counsel
    and on the briefs).
    Alexander Shalom argued the cause for amicus curiae
    American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (American
    Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey Foundation,
    attorneys; Alexander Shalom and Jeanne LoCicero, on
    the brief).
    1
    Michael R. Noveck argued the cause for amici curiae
    Professors of Criminology (Gibbons, attorneys; Michael
    R. Noveck and Lawrence S. Lustberg, on the brief).
    Jennifer E. Kmieciak, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for amicus curiae Attorney General of New
    Jersey (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney;
    Jennifer E. Kmieciak, of counsel and on the brief).
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    A sentencing court’s decision between imposing consecutive or
    concurrent sentences on a defendant for multiple offenses has the potential to
    drastically alter aggregate sentence length. In State v. Yarbough, this Court
    first addressed the standards that sentencing courts should use when imposing
    concurrent or consecutive sentences for multiple offenses under the Code of
    Criminal Justice (Code).1 
    100 N.J. 627
     (1985). The Code had altered New
    Jersey’s previous approach to sentencing, and although the new scheme
    offered guideposts and directions to courts with respect to much of sentencing,
    it left the concurrent/consecutive decision within the discretion of the
    sentencing court. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(a) states only that “multiple sentences
    shall run concurrently or consecutively as the court determines at the time of
    1
    N.J.S.A. 2C:1-1 to :104-9.
    2
    sentence.” There are just a few narrow exceptions where statutory direction
    exists on this subject. See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(b)(3), -5(c), and -5(h).
    The Court in Yarbough sought to assist courts with the exercise of
    discretion when sentencing a defendant for multiple offenses by identifying
    factors to consider when weighing whether to impose consecutive or
    concurrent sentences, thereby furthering the Code’s paramount goal of
    promoting “greater uniformity” in sentencing. 
    100 N.J. at 635
    . However, the
    difficulty of fashioning a satisfactory approach to sentencing offenders
    convicted of multiple offenses was not lost on the Yarbough Court. The topic
    was recognized then as one challenging many jurisdictions. 
    Id. at 639-44
    .
    And it remains challenging, largely due to the complexity of the task.
    The Yarbough Court took pains to provide clarity in its guidance while
    admitting that its efforts left room for continued improvement. 
    Id. at 647
    (noting that “much remain[ed] to be done” to further the goal of predictable
    uniformity in sentencing -- “a goal that we shall continue to seek”). To the
    extent that some courts, as evidenced in the present appeal, have interpreted
    Yarbough as circumscribing their ability to craft a just sentence, refinement
    and improvement of the Yarbough factors analysis appears necessary.
    Through the years, our Court has sought again and again to underscore
    that concepts of uniformity, predictability, and proportionality in sentencing
    3
    birthed the Yarbough factors. See, e.g., State v. Liepe, 
    239 N.J. 359
    , 371-72
    (2019); State v. Carey, 
    168 N.J. 413
    , 427-28 (2001). In this matter, we again
    take steps to promote those goals, as we also await further action by the New
    Jersey Criminal Sentencing and Disposition Commission, which may touch on
    some policy-laden sentencing arguments advanced in this appeal.2
    I.
    A.
    Between late 2010 and early 2011, a spate of three bank robberies
    occurred in Monmouth County. Two of the robberies took place in Howell
    Township in December 2010 and January 2011, and a third occurred in Ocean
    Township on February 16, 2011. Each featured a sole man who approached a
    bank teller, presented a firearm, and demanded cash. Shortly after the third
    robbery, on February 25, 2011, defendant was arrested in connection with a
    police investigation into the robbery spree.
    2
    It bears noting that although many states leave the decision to run sentences
    consecutively or concurrently to the discretion of the court, the American Law
    Institute’s work on its updated Model Penal Code observes that several states’
    sentencing commissions have developed substantive guidelines or
    recommendations for courts to use, and Model Penal Code: Sentencing
    § 6B.08 (Am. Law Inst., Proposed Final Draft 2017), entitled “Multiple
    Sentences; Concurrent and Consecutive Terms,” includes recommended
    considerations for use by such sentencing commissions when developing
    guidelines for courts.
    4
    After receiving Miranda3 warnings and waiving his rights, defendant
    gave a videotaped statement in which he confessed to all three robberies.
    Thereafter, on March 11, 2011, defendant was interviewed by police again.
    After re-waiving his Miranda rights, defendant confessed to two earlier bank
    robberies in Monmouth County: one in Farmingdale in November 2006 and
    another in Freehold in October 2009.
    B.
    Defendant was charged in a single indictment with eleven counts related
    to the robberies. The counts are organized in relation to the robberies’ location
    and sequence in time.
    For the 2006 Farmingdale robbery, defendant was charged with second-
    degree conspiracy to commit armed robbery contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2 and
    2C:15-1 (Count One), first-degree armed robbery contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1
    (Count Two), and second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful
    purpose contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a) (Count Three).
    For the 2009 Freehold robbery, defendant was charged with first-degree
    armed robbery (Count Four) and second-degree possession of a weapon for an
    unlawful purpose (Count Five).
    3
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    5
    For the 2010 Howell robbery, defendant was charged with first-degree
    armed robbery (Count Six) and second-degree possession of a weapon for an
    unlawful purpose (Count Seven).
    For the 2011 Howell robbery, defendant was charged with first-degree
    armed robbery (Count Eight) and second-degree possession of a weapon for an
    unlawful purpose (Count Nine); and for the 2011 Ocean robbery, defendant
    was charged with first-degree armed robbery (Count Ten) and second-degree
    possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose (Count Eleven).
    Defendant moved to sever the indictment into five separate trials. The
    State responded by urging the court to instead hold two trials, which the court
    determined to do. The court ordered that defendant first be tried on the three
    2010 and 2011 robberies, after which he would face a second trial on the
    earlier 2006 and 2009 robberies.
    At the conclusion of the first trial on November 9, 2012, defendant was
    convicted on Counts Six through Eleven, which constituted all six counts
    arising from the 2010 and 2011 robberies. Defendant’s sentencing for those
    convictions took place on February 1, 2013.
    Preliminarily, the court concluded that defendant was eligible for an
    extended term as a persistent offender pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:44-3(a). The
    court also merged each of the three unlawful-possession-of-a-weapon
    6
    convictions into the three first-degree robbery convictions. The court then
    sentenced defendant on Count Six, first-degree armed robbery, to a term of
    forty years in prison, subject to an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier under
    the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. On the other two first-
    degree armed robbery counts (Counts Eight and Ten), the court sentenced
    defendant to twenty and twenty years, respectively, and ordered those
    sentences to run concurrently to each other and to Count Six. The court did
    not explain its reasons for imposing concurrent sentences with respect to the
    two 2011 robberies. At the time of this first sentencing proceeding, the court
    stressed that the second trial would be wholly separate:
    Also, I want it abundantly clear that at the defense
    request there was a severance of these counts from the
    other counts. The other case is a clear separate and
    distinct series of criminal acts and will be treated as
    such. There is a status conference in the other armed
    robbery which is still pending for February 25th. The
    defendant will be produced before the [c]ourt at that
    time to discuss a trial date on the remaining counts.
    And I repeat, having granted the defense motion for
    severance, those are separate and distinct counts.
    A second trial ensued concerning the 2006 and 2009 robberies, and on
    March 13, 2014, the jury reached its verdict, convicting defendant of first-
    degree armed robbery (Count Two), second-degree possession of a weapon for
    7
    an unlawful purpose (Count Three), and an amended lesser charge of second-
    degree robbery (Count Four).4
    On May 2, 2014, defendant appeared for sentencing on his convictions
    from the second trial. The sentencing court found applicable three aggravating
    factors -- N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3), (6), and (9) -- and found no mitigating
    factors. In pertinent part, defendant was sentenced to twenty years’
    imprisonment for the armed robbery conviction on Count Two and ten years’
    imprisonment on Count Four (second-degree robbery), each subject to NERA.
    The sentencing court imposed those terms consecutively, stating that the
    Yarbough factors counseled in favor of consecutive terms because each
    robbery was a separate offense:
    The Court is placing on the record two things: Number
    one, that the robberies of which this defendant was
    convicted both in the first trial and the second trial
    apply all the Yarbough standards. These are clearly
    separate offenses and he will be sentenced accordingly.
    Without further elaboration, the court determined that defendant was to
    serve the aggregate thirty-year sentence consecutively to defendant’s forty-
    year sentence imposed for the 2010 and 2011 robberies. As a result, defendant
    4
    The court dismissed Count One, first-degree conspiracy to commit armed
    robbery, and the jury acquitted defendant on Count Five, possession of a
    weapon for an unlawful purpose.
    8
    would not begin serving the thirty-year portion of his aggregate sentence until
    he was seventy-seven years old.
    Defendant appealed both of his convictions and sentences. Defendant’s
    first conviction, on the three later-in-time robberies, was affirmed on appeal,
    and this Court denied certification. State v. Torres, 
    231 N.J. 316
     (2017). That
    conviction is not part of this appeal.
    With respect to defendant’s appeal concerning the 2006 and 2009
    robberies, the Appellate Division, in a separate unpublished decision, upheld
    defendant’s convictions but agreed with defendant that the sentencing court
    had failed to engage in a careful analysis of either the Yarbough factors or the
    real-time consequences of defendant’s sentence. Accordingly, the court
    vacated defendant’s sentence and remanded for a new sentencing hearing.
    Defendant was resentenced on October 6, 2017. Because the original
    sentencing judge had retired during the pendency of the appeal, a different
    judge conducted the resentencing hearing on remand. The resentencing court
    found that aggravating factors three, six, and nine applied while finding no
    mitigating factors. The court determined that there was a risk that defendant
    would commit another offense, especially in light of his criminal record, and
    highlighted the importance of deterrence. The court held that those
    considerations justified the imposition of the original sentences of twenty
    9
    years for the armed robbery offense and ten years for the second-degree
    robbery.
    The court then turned to whether defendant’s sentences should be
    imposed consecutively or concurrently under Yarbough. The resentencing
    judge acknowledged that defendant’s extended criminal history was in large
    part driven by a decades-long addiction to drugs. However, the court
    explained that the ongoing nature of his drug addiction could not transform
    defendant’s robberies into a singular course of action for purposes of a
    Yarbough analysis. The court stressed that the 2006 and 2009 robberies were
    separated by a substantial period of time, featured separate sets of victims , and
    involved threats of violence.5
    These sentences that on Count 4, that is to run
    consecutive to Count 2, the reason they’re to run
    consecutively is that we’re bound by the provisions of,
    the sentencing provisions of [Yarbough]. It’s hard to
    conclude that there weren’t two separate dates. And to
    suggest this is one ongoing course of conduct, I’ve
    already addressed. I can’t so find. So these are two
    separate dates, separated by a substantial period of
    time.
    5
    These considerations track the criteria set forth in Yarbough: “(3)(a) the
    crimes and their objectives were predominantly independent of each other; (b)
    the crimes involved separate acts of violence or threats of violence; (c) the
    crimes were committed at different times or separate places . . . ; (d) any of the
    crimes involved multiple victims.” 
    100 N.J. at 644
    .
    10
    There are two sets of victims and [Yarbough] discussed
    the factors to be considered when determining whether
    a sentence should be concurrent or consecutive. And
    you pointed out yourself, Mr. Torres, again you’re an
    intelligent man, there should be no free crimes,
    considered separate crimes or separate acts of violence
    or threats of violence. And pointing a gun, wherever
    you point it, if you point it [at] the money, that’s a
    violent act.      A gun is capable of immediately
    terminating one’s life. To suggest that that’s not a
    violent act is simply not the case.
    Consider, the Court is required to consider pursuant to
    [Yarbough] whether the dates on which these acts
    occurred were separated or if they committed so closely
    in time and place as to constitute a single period of
    aberrant behavior and I think I’ve already addressed
    that.   Your addiction can’t be considered[,] the
    timeframe of your addiction can certainly not be
    considered as justifying finding that anything you did
    during that addiction constitutes one ongoing act of,
    one ongoing criminal act. Consider the number of
    victims, consider the number of convictions,
    considering specifically . . . the 3(d) and the 3(c)
    [Yarbough] guidelines, and this Court can conclude
    nothing other than that a consecutive sentence is not
    only justified but warranted in imposing sentence here.
    And again that is a terribly sad yet inescapable reality
    of what we’re dealing with here today.
    That’s not something which I exercise any control
    whatsoever. . . .        So the aggravating factors
    substantially outweigh the mitigating factors I have
    placed, I believe or I’ve articulated the [Yarbough]
    factors that I find require these sentences to run . . .
    consecutive to the sentence that you’re presently
    serving and accordingly, I have imposed that sentence.
    11
    The court concluded that Yarbough required that defendant’s sentences
    be imposed consecutively to each other and to the prior forty-year sentence. It
    sentenced defendant to the same aggregate seventy-year sentence subject to an
    eighty-five percent parole disqualifier under NERA. Thus, the court’s
    sentence denies defendant the opportunity for parole until he reaches one
    hundred and two years of age.
    Defendant again appealed his sentence, arguing that the resentencing
    court failed to consider the overall fairness of the sentence. In particular,
    defendant claimed it was error for the court not to consider that his forty-year
    sentence already ensured that he would be of advanced age and, as such,
    unlikely to re-offend upon release. On October 22, 2019, the Appellate
    Division affirmed defendant’s sentence by summary order, holding that
    defendant’s sentence was not manifestly excessive or unduly punitive and did
    not constitute an abuse of discretion.
    Defendant petitioned for this Court’s review and we granted
    certification. 
    241 N.J. 91
     (2020). We also granted amicus curiae status to
    several participants.
    II.
    Defendant maintains that he is entitled to a remand for resentencing
    because the trial court, in opting to impose his sentences consecutively to each
    12
    other and to his existing forty-year sentence, failed to weigh the fairness of his
    aggregate sentence in terms of its real-time consequences. Defendant argues
    that courts must evaluate a proposed sentence in the context of an offender’s
    age and that failure to do so undermines the goal of individualized sentencing.
    In particular, defendant asks this Court to require sentencing courts to evaluate
    the proportionality of a sentence that is likely to deny a defendant the
    opportunity for parole within his natural life span. Defendant argues that the
    trial court failed to consider the proportionality of a sentence that, by denying
    him an opportunity for parole until he would be more than one hundred years
    old, effectively guarantees he will never be released from prison.
    Defendant also argues that a court’s decision to impose consecutive or
    concurrent sentences under Yarbough should weigh the sentencing goals of
    deterrence and incapacitation. In support of this argument, defendant cites a
    series of studies and research papers suggesting that there is minimal deterrent
    benefit gained by extending an already lengthy sentence. Defendant further
    argues that such consideration should account for the age at which an offender
    would have the opportunity for parole. Defendant maintains that
    contemporary social science supports the view that an incarcerated individual
    will be unlikely to reoffend if released at an advanced age, and that weighing
    the fairness of a sentence requires consideration of that diminished likelihood
    13
    of re-offense. Defendant argues that the trial court’s sentencing decision failed
    to consider that he had already been sentenced to a forty-year term that denied
    him parole until age seventy-seven, an age at which individuals are statistically
    less likely to reoffend.
    The State maintains that the various considerations defendant proposes -
    - fairness, proportionality, deterrence, and recidivism -- are already required
    components of a court’s sentencing decision. The State notes that this Court
    clarified in State v. Rogers, 
    124 N.J. 113
     (1991), that aggravating and
    mitigating factors should be weighed prior to determining whether sentences
    should be imposed concurrently or consecutively. The State suggests that
    requiring reconsideration of those factors after weighing the Yarbough factors
    would reduce the latter to a threshold test.
    The State further argues that defendant’s proposed special considerations
    for offenders who may be elderly upon release from incarceration would
    transform individualized sentencing decisions into broad generalizations based
    on age. The State maintains that the resentencing court provided a statement
    of reasons for its sentence and that the sentence was supported by several
    applicable Yarbough factors. Finally, the State argues that a sentencing court
    cannot realistically evaluate a defendant’s potential for recidivism at a future
    14
    point in time -- in this case, defendant’s likelihood of reoffending after serving
    his existing forty-year sentence.
    Amicus curiae the Attorney General argues that fairness is already a
    required consideration in sentencing and that weighing the appropriateness of a
    sentence based on uncertain estimates of life expectancy would be impractical.
    The Attorney General suggests that relying on life expectancy would produce
    different sentences based on an individual’s gender, race, or socioeconomic
    status and would, on average, result in younger offenders receiving lengthier
    sentences. The Attorney General, like the State, questions the practicality of
    predicting recidivism risk at a future point in time.
    Amicus curiae the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey
    (ACLU) argues that the trial court’s finding of aggravating factors three (the
    risk that the defendant will commit another offense) and nine (the need for
    deterring the defendant and others from violating the law) was unmoored from
    the facts before it. The ACLU suggests that aggravating factor nine was
    unsupported by facts in the record and alleges that courts consistently find
    factor nine even in the absence of an articulable reason for specific or general
    deterrence. The ACLU argues that the court’s finding of aggravating factor
    three squarely conflicted with social science research suggesting that older
    offenders are less likely to reoffend.
    15
    Also before this Court as amicus curiae is a group of professors of
    criminology who argue that a Yarbough analysis must consider the fairness of
    the aggregate sentence imposed. The professors reinforce the scientific
    assertions of defendant and the ACLU, namely that older offenders are less
    likely to re-offend upon release and that there are diminishing returns from
    extending an already lengthy sentence.
    III.
    A.
    Prior to the enactment of the New Jersey Criminal Code, sentencing
    decisions were guided by the view that “punishment should fit the offender as
    well as the offense.” State v. Ivan, 
    33 N.J. 197
    , 200 (1960). The sentencing
    philosophy at the time “balanced the defendant’s capacity for rehabilitation
    with the other purposes of punishment” and “tended to view the crime itself as
    only one factor among many to consider at sentencing.” State v. Hodge, 
    95 N.J. 369
    , 378 (1984). To facilitate such defendant-oriented sentencing
    decisions, discretion to determine a sentence within the statutory range largely
    rested with the trial court. Ivan, 
    33 N.J. at 201
    . Judges were tasked with
    “establish[ing] a priority among the philosophical justifications for
    punishment.” State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 346 (1984); see also 
    id. at 345-56
    (reviewing the history of sentencing theory in New Jersey). The then-
    16
    prevailing emphasis on reformation and rehabilitation fostered the view that
    concurrent sentencing “increased the flexibility available to prison officials to
    determine prisoners’ release dates based on rehabilitation.” Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 637
    . However, dissatisfaction grew with this sentencing regime, whose
    critics suggested that it produced inconsistent and arbitrary results. See Roth,
    
    95 N.J. at 348-51
    .
    In 1968, the Legislature began efforts to recodify the state’s criminal
    statutes, including those governing sentencing. Those efforts led to the
    creation of the New Jersey Criminal Law Revision Commission (the
    Commission), which was directed to draft a code that would “modernize the
    criminal law to embody principles representing the best in modern statutory
    law and to revise and codify the law in a logical, clear and concise manner.”
    L. 1968, c. 281.
    In 1971, the Commission issued its final draft and report to the Governor
    and Legislature. 1 Final Report of the New Jersey Criminal Law Revision
    Commission (Final Report) (1971). In relevant part, the Final Report
    expressed that determinations regarding “the problem of consecutive
    sentences[] . . . should not be left entirely to shifting and contradictory
    disposition by judges.” 1 Final Report, at ix. However, the Final Report’s
    resolution of the multiple-offenses question generally preserved the discretion
    17
    of trial courts by providing that when an offender is sentenced to imprisonment
    for more than one offense, “such multiple sentences shall run concurrently or
    consecutively as the court determines at the time of sentence.” 1 Final Report
    § 2C:44-5, at 156-58. The Legislature codified that recommendation through
    its enactment of the Code. See L. 1978, c. 95; N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5.
    The Legislature nonetheless made it clear that a “paramount goal” in
    enacting the Code was to achieve greater uniformity in sentencing. Roth, 
    95 N.J. at 369
    . The Legislature was also guided by “the concept that punishment
    of crime [should] be based primarily on principles of deserved punishment in
    proportion to the offense and not rehabilitative potential.” Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 636-37
    . Under the Code, “the severity of the crime is now the single most
    important factor in the sentencing process.” Hodge, 
    95 N.J. at 378-79
    . The
    Code features a set of stated purposes and principles of construction, including
    the purposes of its sentencing provisions. Those are:
    (1) To prevent and condemn the commission of
    offenses;
    (2) To promote the correction and rehabilitation of
    offenders;
    (3) To insure the public safety by preventing the
    commission of offenses through the deterrent influence
    of sentences imposed and the confinement of offenders
    when required in the interest of public protection;
    18
    (4) To safeguard offenders against              excessive,
    disproportionate or arbitrary punishment;
    (5) To give fair warning of the nature of the sentences
    that may be imposed on conviction of an offense;
    (6) To differentiate among offenders with a view to a
    just individualization in their treatment;
    (7) To advance the use of generally accepted scientific
    methods and knowledge in sentencing offenders; and
    (8) To promote restitution to victims.
    [N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b).]
    The Code also provides that wherever it confers discretion upon trial
    courts, that discretion “shall be exercised in accordance with the criteria stated
    in the code and, insofar as such criteria are not decisive, to further the general
    purposes stated in [N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2.]” N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(c).
    Beyond those general principles, however, the Code did not and does not
    indicate what considerations courts should look to in deciding whether to
    impose sentences consecutively or concurrently. And although pre-Code
    decisional law recognized that courts were empowered to impose consecutive
    sentences for multiple crimes, see, e.g., State v. Maxey, 
    42 N.J. 62
    , 65-66
    (1964), no guidance existed on when it was appropriate to do so, Yarbough,
    
    100 N.J. at
    636 n.3. That absence of guidance was characterized in Yarbough
    as “undermin[ing] both the objective of fair allocation of punishment and the
    19
    principle of retribution.” 
    Id. at 638
     (quoting Harvey S. Perlman & Carol G.
    Stebbins, Implementing an Equitable Sentencing System: The Uniform Law
    Commissioners’ Model Sentencing and Corrections Act, 
    65 Va. L. Rev. 1175
    ,
    1221 (1979)).
    Yarbough represented this Court’s first attempt to formulate guidance
    for courts deciding whether sentences should be made consecutive or
    concurrent when imposed under the Code. Id. at 630.
    B.
    The Yarbough Court’s point of departure was the observation “that the
    Legislature premised the Code on ‘the concept that punishment of crime
    [should] be based primarily on principles of deserved punishment in
    proportion to the offense and not rehabilitative potential, and that in dispensing
    that punishment, our judicial system should attain a predictable degree of
    uniformity.’” Liepe, 239 N.J. at 372 (alteration in original) (quoting
    Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 636-37
    ).
    To advance those principles, Yarbough identified a series of factors for
    sentencing courts to consider as a guide when determining whether to make
    sentences run concurrently or consecutively. The Court canvassed the
    approaches suggested by scholars, or taken by other jurisdictions confronting
    this issue, Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 639-43
    , and determined, ultimately, to follow
    20
    the criteria set forth in the federal Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984,
    Pub. L. No. 98-473, 
    98 Stat. 2017
    , id. at 643-45. The Court adopted the
    following factors:
    (1) there can be no free crimes in a system for which
    the punishment shall fit the crime;
    (2) the reasons for imposing either a consecutive or
    concurrent sentence should be separately stated in the
    sentencing decision;
    (3) some reasons to be considered by the sentencing
    court should include facts relating to the crimes,
    including whether or not:
    (a) the crimes and their objectives           were
    predominantly independent of each other;
    (b) the crimes involved separate acts of violence
    or threats of violence;
    (c) the crimes were committed at different times
    or separate places, rather than being committed
    so closely in time and place as to indicate a single
    period of aberrant behavior;
    (d) any of the crimes involved multiple victims;
    (e) the convictions for which the sentences are to
    be imposed are numerous;
    (4) there should be no double counting of aggravating
    factors;
    (5) successive terms for the same offense should not
    ordinarily be equal to the punishment for the first
    offense; and
    21
    (6) there should be an overall outer limit on the
    cumulation of consecutive sentences for multiple
    offenses not to exceed the sum of the longest terms
    (including an extended term, if eligible) that could be
    imposed for the two most serious offenses.
    [Ibid.]
    Those criteria were chosen because the Yarbough Court determined that
    they provided the closest fit to an “ideal” that may not have been overtly
    expressed in the Code but came closest to the “broad outlines of a solution”
    that advanced the Code’s purposes. Id. at 639 (“That source for a model of
    sentencing upon which our Code was most closely based posits that it would
    be senseless ‘to give the criminal “free” crimes after a certain number,’ and
    suggests that the best solution would be ‘to devise a sophisticated system in
    which every additional crime in a series carried an increment of punishment
    but not the full increment of a consecutive sentence.” (quoting Twentieth
    Century Fund Task Force on Crim. Sent’g, Fair and Certain Punishment 27-28
    (1976))). The Yarbough Court found the Federal Sentencing Commission’s
    model to offer such a solution because the Commission was charged with
    enacting “guidelines [that] reflect the appropriateness of imposing an
    incremental penalty for each offense in a case in which a defendant is either
    convicted of multiple offenses committed in the same course of conduct or
    multiple offenses committed at different times,” and because the
    22
    Commission’s guidelines “reflect[ed] some of the common concerns expressed
    in the various models of sentencing reform . . . promulgated over the last two
    decades.” Id. at 642-43.
    The factors and principles identified in Yarbough seemed to hit the mark
    with one exception: factor six, which established an outer limit to the
    accumulation of consecutive sentences, was expressly disapproved by the
    Legislature. In 1993, the Legislature amended N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(a) to clarify
    that “[t]here shall be no overall outer limit on the cumulation of consecutive
    sentences for multiple offenses.” L. 1993, c. 233, § 1.
    Other than that rejection of the sixth factor originally identified in
    Yarbough, the Legislature has otherwise neither altered section 44-5 nor
    codified the remaining Yarbough factors. Where this Court’s construction of a
    statute is “supported by long acquiescence on the part of the legislature, or by
    continued use of the same language, or failure to amend the statute, [that] is
    evidence that such construction is in accordance with the legislative intent.”
    Barringer v. Miele, 
    6 N.J. 139
    , 144 (1951). Such an inference is particularly
    weighty in light of the Legislature’s explicit rejection of factor six . The
    precision of the legislative reaction clarifying section 44-5 to eliminate
    Yarbough’s sixth factor may reasonably be interpreted as tacit approval of the
    remaining five factors.
    23
    C.
    With respect to the substantive evaluations to be made concerning a
    court’s concurrent-versus-consecutive-sentence determination, it bears noting
    that, unlike some other states’ sentencing laws or promulgated sentencing
    guidelines, our Code does not contain a presumption in favor of either
    concurrent or consecutive sentences. 6 The five extant Yarbough factors that
    guide courts on whether to impose concurrent or consecutive sentences for
    multiple offenses have been categorized as follows.
    Factors two, four, and five do not relate directly to the facts of the
    offense and hence have little utility in the threshold assessment of whether to
    impose consecutive or concurrent sentences. See Carey, 
    168 N.J. at 423
    (calling these factors “procedural” in nature).
    6
    Many states have a presumption that sentences be imposed consecutively,
    see, e.g., 
    Va. Code Ann. § 19.2-308
    , while others presume concurrent
    sentencing, see 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 558.026
    (1); 
    Wash. Rev. Code § 9
    .94A.589(1).
    Other states have developed sentencing guidelines that soften the distinction
    between concurrent and consecutive sentencing by providing for partial
    sentences. For example, Utah’s Sentencing Commission recommends that
    sentences imposed concurrently or consecutively add 10% or 40% of the
    recommended sentence, respectively, to the full recommended length of the
    longest sentence. Utah Sent’g Comm’n, Adult Sentencing & Release
    Guidelines, at 17-18 (Mar. 1, 2020). Louisiana’s guidelines similarly provide
    that a sentence imposed consecutively should add no more than 50% of the
    minimum sentence length for that offense. La. Admin. Code tit. 22, pt. 9,
    § 215(C)(2).
    24
    Factor one under Yarbough has been described as “tilt[ing] in the
    direction of consecutive sentences because the Code focuses on the crime, not
    the criminal.” Ibid. However, it is factor three that contains the evaluative
    core to a Yarbough analysis: it identifies five sub-factors that “generally
    concentrate on such considerations as the nature and number of offenses for
    which the defendant is being sentenced, whether the offenses occurred at
    different times or places, and whether they involve numerous or separate
    victims.” State v. Baylass, 
    114 N.J. 169
    , 180 (1989). It is by weighing those
    considerations that a court determines whether this factor “renders the
    collective group of offenses distinctively worse than the group of offenses
    would be were that circumstance not present.” Carey, 
    168 N.J. at 428
     (quoting
    People v. Leung, 
    7 Cal. Rptr. 2d 290
    , 303 (Ct. App. 1992)).7 Beyond listing
    those informative factors, though, Yarbough does not direct an outcome,
    remaining true to the Code’s failure to create either a presumption of
    consecutive or concurrent sentences for multiple offenses, against which the
    factors are to be considered.
    7
    In making that statement, Carey relies on California’s experience, but it
    bears noting a difference in the California scheme applicable for sentencing an
    offender on multiple offenses. California employs a statutory scheme of
    sentencing enhancements which may be used when incrementally adding
    consecutive sentences to the first felony, and the scheme contains an outer
    limit. See Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 639
    .
    25
    That lack of a direction for a starting assumption, to the extent that it is
    problematic for promoting uniformity in sentencing, is compounded by the
    elimination of Yarbough’s original factor six. Insofar as the Yarbough factors
    were created to work together as a cohesive whole, that whole was conceived
    of as including an overall outer limit -- an ending assumption. Because that
    outer check no longer exists, the analysis of the remaining evaluative
    subfactors is unmoored to any starting or ending sentencing guidepost.
    Appellate review remains the final check on the discretion allotted to the
    sentencing court. Thus, Yarbough’s second factor requires a sentencing court
    to place on the record its statement of reasons for the decision to impose
    consecutive sentences, which statement, we have directed, should focus “on
    the fairness of the overall sentence, and the sentencing court should set forth in
    detail its reasons for concluding that a particular sentence is warranted.” State
    v. Miller, 
    108 N.J. 112
    , 122 (1987).
    IV.
    In this appeal, defendant argues that the resentencing court did not
    properly consider and explain the overall fairness of the sentence imposed
    when the court made defendant serve his aggregate thirty-year sentence for the
    2006 and 2009 robberies consecutive to the forty-year sentence he had already
    received for the 2010 and 2011 robberies. As defendant argues, although the
    26
    court presented its analysis of the facts of his crimes, it did not include an
    explicit assessment of the overall fairness of imposing the sentence
    consecutively to defendant’s previously imposed forty-year sentence.
    A.
    An explicit statement, explaining the overall fairness of a sentence
    imposed on a defendant for multiple offenses in a single proceeding or in
    multiple sentencing proceedings, is essential to a proper Yarbough sentencing
    assessment. It is the necessary second part to a Yarbough analysis, as Miller
    emphasized. 
    108 N.J. at 122
     (noting importance of Yarbough factor two --
    placing reasons for consecutive sentence on record). Acknowledging and
    explaining the fairness of the overall sentence imposed on the defendant
    advances critical sentencing policies of the Code, as amplified by Yarbough.
    It remains, in fact, the critical remnant of accountability imposed by Yarbough,
    since the legislative elimination of the outer limit imposed by factor six.
    Yarbough explicitly stated that the imposition of a sentence,
    notwithstanding that multiple offenses are involved, “concerns the disposition
    of a single, not a multiple, human being.” 
    100 N.J. at 646
     (quotation omitted).
    Miller reiterated that the required explanation of overall fairness promotes
    proportionality in sentencing when a court imposes sentence for multiple
    27
    offenses on the single person who is subjected to the accumulated punishment.
    
    108 N.J. at 121
    .
    Yarbough did not supplant the “long-standing common-law principle”
    that “sentencing courts have discretion to impose consecutive sentences in
    appropriate cases.” State in Interest of T.B., 
    134 N.J. 382
    , 385 (1993). The
    Yarbough criteria were adopted to channel that discretion, not to withdraw it.
    Evaluating the factors mechanically risks deviating from our guidance that
    “[t]he Yarbough factors are qualitative, not quantitative; applying them
    involves more than merely counting the factors favoring each alternative
    outcome.” State v. Cuff, 
    239 N.J. 321
    , 348 (2019). That caveat applies also to
    the “no free crimes” factor identified in Yarbough, and often seized upon by
    sentencing courts searching for greater direction in this area. Again, that
    initial factor was included in a set of considerations that originally included an
    outer limit; the Legislature’s elimination of Yarbough’s outer limit does not
    transform that first factor into a blanket mandate that consecutive sentences be
    imposed. Courts must remain mindful that the discretion to sentence for
    multiple offenses runs in two directions, allowing concurrent sentencing as
    well as consecutive sentencing for the multiple offenses for which one
    defendant is being sentenced.
    28
    This Court has made clear that while Yarbough guides a court’s
    sentencing decision, it does not control it. Although, as we have
    acknowledged, courts may impose, and have imposed, consecutive sentences
    where a defendant’s crime resulted in the death of multiple victims, see, e.g.,
    Carey, 
    168 N.J. at 428-30
    ; State v. Molina, 
    168 N.J. 436
    , 442-43 (2001),
    Yarbough neither mandates nor presumes such a result, Liepe, 239 N.J. at 377-
    78 (noting the absence of a presumption in favor of consecutive sentences even
    where the multiple-victims factor is met). Instead, a “sentencing court’s
    determination regarding consecutive and concurrent terms . . . turns on a
    careful evaluation of the specific case.” Ibid.
    In sum, while the Code is animated by the overarching goal of ensuring
    “a predictable degree of uniformity in sentencing,” Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. at 630
    ,
    uniformity and predictability should not come at the expense of fairness and
    proportionality. We reiterate the repeated instruction that a sentencing court’s
    decision whether to impose consecutive sentences should retain focus on “the
    fairness of the overall sentence.” Miller, 
    108 N.J. at 122
    ; see also State v.
    Abdullah, 
    184 N.J. 497
    , 515 (2005). Toward that end, the sentencing court’s
    explanation of its evaluation of the fairness of the overall sentence is “a
    necessary feature in any Yarbough analysis.” Cuff, 239 N.J. at 352.
    29
    B.
    In defendant’s resentencing proceeding, an explanation of the overall
    fairness of the consecutive sentence imposed on him was lacking. The court
    identified Yarbough factors as present, or not, and concluded that because the
    facts of defendant’s crimes presented circumstances that permitted
    consideration of consecutive sentences, the court had to impose a consecutive
    sentence. In that respect, any lament that the court had no choice was
    mistaken.
    The Yarbough analysis does not rely on ticking off the Yarbough
    factors. The mere identification of Yarbough factors as present when
    recounting the facts of defendant’s offenses is no substitute for the required
    fairness assessment. Here, the lack of any overall assessment of the fairness of
    the decision to impose defendant’s thirty-year aggregate sentence for the 2006
    and 2009 robberies consecutive to his existing forty-year sentence for the 2010
    and 2011 robberies compels us to reverse defendant’s sentence and remand for
    a new resentencing.
    C.
    A sentencing court’s imposition of consecutive sentences for multiple
    offenses must not only be procedurally correct, it must also be free from any
    scent of pervading unfairness. Yarbough eschewed an approach that called for
    30
    accumulation of punishments based on rote counting of maximum punishments
    for criminal transactions. 
    100 N.J. at 639
    . Instead, Yarbough embraced an
    approach that incorporated proportionality concerns. 
    Id. at 647
    . Due to the
    complexity of sentencing for multiple offenses in either the same or separate
    sentencing proceedings, no formulaic solution was generally accepted -- not
    then when Yarbough was decided, and not even now. 8 But, to assist courts in
    this area of discretionary sentencing, the Yarbough factors promote
    consistency by identifying certain facts to consider when evaluating the
    threshold question of whether to impose concurrent or consecutive sentences
    for multiple offenses. And we require an explicit explanation for the overall
    fairness of a sentence, in the interest of promoting proportionality for the
    individual who will serve the punishment.
    Particularly when imposing a lengthy consecutive sentence -- here,
    multiple maximum sentences on top of an already long sentence -- the
    explanation of the overall fairness of a sentence to be imposed serves to
    validate a court’s decision by contextualizing the individual sentences’ length,
    8
    The evaluation of multiple sentences for multiple offenses is a bedeviling
    topic presently challenging sentencing commissions across the nation, as noted
    by the American Law Institute. At present, there is reported to be no
    consensus in approach by sentencing commissions at the state level. See
    Model Penal Code: Sentencing § 6B.08, Reporters’ Note (Am. Law Inst.,
    Proposed Final Draft 2017).
    31
    deterrent value, and incapacitation purpose and need. Such explicit
    considerations and explanations are invaluable to support the choice to impose
    a consecutive sentence, which will often increase the real time a defendant
    spends in custody as much as a decision to impose a sentence at the top of the
    sentencing range for an individual offense among several being imposed.
    Furthermore, although the evaluation of aggravating and mitigating
    factors occurs when setting the sentence within the range applicable to each
    offense, see Rogers, 
    124 N.J. at 119
    , sentencing is a holistic endeavor. A court
    performing the Yarbough fairness assessment must be mindful that aggravating
    and mitigating factors and Yarbough factors, as well as the stated purposes of
    sentencing in N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b), in their totality, inform the sentence’s
    fairness. All are relevant to the overall fairness of the aggregate sentence
    imposed on the sole defendant before the court.
    The sentencing court’s explanation of overall fairness provides a proper
    record for appellate review of the sentencing court’s exercise of discretion.
    Appellate courts employ the general shock-the-conscience standard for review
    of the exercise of sentencing discretion in the arena of consecutive-versus-
    concurrent sentencing. See Roth, 
    95 N.J. at 364-65
    . But although the standard
    is deferential, that review is critical: at present, no guidelines have been
    created by the Legislature or been recommended by the Legislature’s currently
    32
    empaneled sentencing commission;9 appellate review of lengthy consecutive
    sentences is therefore the only check for pervading unfairness.
    To facilitate that vital review -- and to eliminate any possibility of
    lingering doubt -- we hold that an explanation for the overall fairness of a
    sentence by the sentencing court is required in this setting, as in other
    discretionary sentencing settings, to “foster[] consistency in . . . sentencing in
    that arbitrary or irrational sentencing can be curtailed and, if necessary,
    corrected through appellate review.” State v. Pierce, 
    188 N.J. 155
    , 166-67
    (2006). Failure to police the fairness of consecutive sentences not only
    undermines Yarbough’s goal of promoting predictability and uniformity in
    sentencing, but also risks deviating from the Legislature’s command that the
    Code be construed so as to “safeguard offenders against excessive,
    disproportionate or arbitrary punishment.” N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b)(4).10
    9
    We note that the New Jersey Sentencing Commission has completed some of
    its work, but more remains to be done. To the extent that some arguments
    advanced in this appeal are policy oriented, they are better addressed to the
    Legislature and the Sentencing Commission.
    10
    Appellate courts naturally have been reserved in finding the shock-the-
    conscience standard met, even in circumstances involving extremely lengthy
    aggregated consecutive sentences. However, the standard is not an
    insurmountable one, and appellate courts should bear that in mind when
    reviewing lengthy, aggregated consecutive sentences where the sentencing
    court has so few guideposts, and no outer limit, on which to rely.
    33
    V.
    Defendant and amici argue that age must be a consideration when a
    sentencing court decides whether to impose consecutive sentences. To be sure,
    the fairness of a sentence cannot be divorced from consideration of the p erson
    on whom it is imposed. Yarbough expressly noted that sentencing must take
    into account the single person being subjected to the sentence imposed and
    linked that reality to proportionality in sentencing. 
    100 N.J. at 646-47
    .
    A defendant’s age is doubtlessly among the information that courts
    should consider when calibrating a fair sentence. Assessing the overall
    fairness of a sentence requires a real-time assessment of the consequences of
    the aggregate sentences imposed, which perforce includes taking into account
    the age of the person being sentenced. But age alone cannot drive the
    outcome. An older defendant who commits a serious crime, for example,
    cannot rely on age to avoid an otherwise appropriate sentence.
    This fairness assessment does not call for speculation or divination about
    the defendant’s future behavior, however; the court sentences the defendant
    “as the defendant appears before the court on the occasion of sentencing.”
    Richardson v. Nickolopoulos, 
    110 N.J. 241
    , 252 (1988). Nor does it require
    courts to engage in a life-expectancy analysis, an area that raises various
    concerns that need not be explored here. Cf. State v. Zuber, 
    227 N.J. 422
    , 450
    34
    (2017). Contrary to the competing arguments of the parties and the amici, we
    do not regard defendant as insisting on such a life-expectancy analysis.11 But
    age is a fact that can and should be in the matrix of information assessed by a
    sentencing court, even in the deliberation over whether consecutive sentences
    are a fair and appropriate punishment -- proportional for the individual being
    sentenced. See, e.g., Liepe, 239 N.J. at 378-79. Overall fairness has long been
    a necessary consideration to the imposition of consecutive versus concurrent
    sentencing. This case highlights that the fairness assessment includes
    consideration of the person on whom the sentence is being imposed.
    Notably, we reject any contention that taking age into account in the
    overall-fairness assessment is altering in any way the focus of the stated
    purposes of the Code. Rather, the court is merely examining the broad
    parameters of the fairness of the overall sentence imposed through imposition
    of consecutive sentencing. Such reasoned sentencing is consistent with the
    discretion reposed in the sentencing court by the Code and allows the court to
    justify its sentence as fulfilling the Code’s general sentencing purposes.
    11
    We note that the Sentencing and Disposition Commission is slated to
    discuss matters related to age, recidivism, and timing of reviews for release.
    The arguments and social science research of the parties and amici might assist
    the Commission in its deliberation of recommended legislative changes.
    35
    We took this case because the overall length of this sentence gave us
    serious concern. We are unable to affirm the sentence imposed and we remand
    for meaningful review and resentencing utilizing the principles contained in
    this opinion.
    VI.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division affirming defendant’s sentence
    is reversed. The matter is remanded for a new resentencing proceeding.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON,
    FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE
    LaVECCHIA’s opinion.
    36