State v. Aakash A. Dalal (075325) , 221 N.J. 601 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. 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 Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    State v. Aakash A. Dalal (A-50-14) (075325)
    Argued April 28, 2015 -- Decided June 17, 2015
    RABNER, C.J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers defendant’s motion to recuse the Bergen County judiciary from
    presiding over his criminal indictments: The State asserts that defendant threatened to kill or harm two judges in the
    Bergen Vicinage, and, on that basis, defendant claimed that reasonable questions could be raised about the
    appearance of impartiality if a Bergen County judge presided over the indictments.
    Two indictments are pending against defendant Aakash Dalal. The first charges defendant with a series of
    offenses directed against four synagogues and a Jewish community center. Many of the charges first appeared in six
    criminal complaints filed in February and March 2012. The presiding judge of the criminal division at the time
    initially set bail at $2.5 million. The following month, another judge denied defendant’s request to reduce his bail.
    While defendant was in custody, an informant reported that defendant allegedly made threats against public
    officials and buildings. Law enforcement obtained a search warrant for defendant’s jail cell, where officials found
    handwritten documents, including a chart of “ENEMIES” that listed the criminal presiding judge as a “high profile”
    enemy and the assistant prosecutor on defendant’s case as a “tactical” enemy. The words “DEAD COPS, DEAD
    COPS” appear on another page, which also features a chart of “ENEMIES,” naming the presiding judge and the
    judge who ruled on defendant’s bail at the top of the diagram. The assistant prosecutor and others are listed as well.
    As a result, defendant was charged with conspiracy to murder the assistant prosecutor, conspiracy to possess a
    firearm, and terroristic threats. On August 7, 2013, a Bergen County grand jury indicted defendant on those charges.
    Defendant moved to dismiss both indictments and sought to recuse the presiding judge. After the State
    observed that the evidence provided “a significant reason” for the court to recuse itself, the presiding judge
    transferred the proceedings to a third judge (the “trial court”). The trial court subsequently denied defendant’s
    motions to recuse the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office and for a change of venue based on pretrial publicity.
    On December 6, 2013, defendant filed a motion to recuse the Bergen County judiciary from presiding over
    any matters relating to him. He argued that, with two judges allegedly “named as potential murder victims” of
    defendant, reasonable questions about the appearance of impartiality required recusal. The trial court denied the
    motion, finding that, “a reasonabl[e] person would not conclude that defendant would be denied a fair and unbiased
    hearing” in Bergen County. The court explained that “[i]t would be improper to allow a defendant to force
    disqualification of this Court, much less the entire Bergen County Judiciary when making threatening comments
    towards judges. It would be the crudest form of judge shopping.”
    The Appellate Division granted defendant’s motion for leave to appeal and reversed. State v. Dalal, 
    438 N.J. Super. 156
     (App. Div. 2014). Although the panel was “confident the trial judge could actually preside fairly
    and impartially,” it concluded that “the appearance of fairness in the future proceedings will be impaired so long as a
    Bergen judge presides over the matter.” The panel remanded the matter to the assignment judge to either transfer
    the matter to another vicinage or arrange to have a judge from another vicinage preside over the case. The
    assignment judge transferred the matter to an adjacent county -- the Passaic Vicinage.
    The Court granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal. 
    221 N.J. 216
     (2015). In considering the appeal
    now before it, the Court notes two relevant developments since the motion was first addressed: Neither the
    presiding judge nor the judge who ruled on defendant’s bail now serve in the Bergen Vicinage. Effective May 1,
    2015, the presiding judge was assigned to the Passaic Vicinage, Civil Division for reasons unrelated to this matter.
    The other judge retired in August 2014.
    1
    HELD: Not all threats or efforts to intimidate a judge will require recusal. However, given the serious nature of the
    threat, the absence of any proof of manipulation, the potential introduction of the evidence in one of the trials, and
    the relationships among judges within the Bergen Vicinage, a reasonable, fully informed observer could have doubts
    about a Bergen County judge’s impartiality. In light of recent developments, the matter is remanded to the Bergen
    County assignment judge for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    1. The standard to assess defendant’s request for recusal is set forth in DeNike v. Cupo, 
    196 N.J. 502
    , 517 (2008):
    “Would a reasonable, fully informed person have doubts about the judge’s impartiality?” In cases like the one
    presented here, there is an additional concern: that defendants not be allowed to manipulate the judicial system and
    engage in forum shopping. On this issue, the Court looks to the Tenth Circuit’s decision in United States v.
    Greenspan, 
    26 F.3d 1001
     (10th Cir. 1994), for guidance. In Greenspan, federal agents investigated allegations that
    the defendant plotted to kill the trial judge or members of the judge’s family. The Tenth Circuit concluded that a
    reasonable person might have questioned the judge’s impartiality, and held that recusal was required. However, the
    Court emphasized that not all threats against a judge will require that judge’s recusal. The panel explained, “[h]ad
    there been any reason to believe that threats were made only in an attempt to obtain a different judge, to delay the
    proceedings, to harass, or for other vexatious or frivolous purpose, recusal would not have been warranted.” Other
    courts have focused on similar concerns. (pp. 6-9)
    2. This Court agrees that when there is any evidence that a defendant has conveyed a threat to prompt the recusal of
    a judge or somehow manipulate the proceedings, recusal is not required. To assess a defendant’s objective, a judge
    may consider direct evidence and also draw reasonable inferences from the record. When judges apply the DeNike
    standard in a case that involves a threat against a member of the Judiciary, they may consider the following factors,
    among others: the nature and context of the threat; whether there is any evidence that the threat was designed, in
    whole or part, to manipulate the system and/or force a recusal; whether the threat was meant to be communicated to
    the judge or was delivered in connection with a court proceeding relating to the defendant’s case; whether evidence
    of the threat will be presented or referred to at trial; and whether the judge presiding over the case is the object of the
    threat. In the unusual circumstances of this matter, the Court also considers whether any judge who has been
    threatened is still serving in the vicinage. The timing of a threat matters as well. For example, an outburst in the
    middle of a trial, with the presentation of evidence to a jury underway, might reasonably be seen as an attempt to
    thwart the orderly administration of justice and would not necessarily call for recusal. (pp. 9-10)
    3. In this matter, the State concedes that there is no evidence that defendant’s alleged threat was intended to
    manipulate the proceedings. And there is no reason based on the record to think that defendant planned to reveal the
    alleged threats to either judge. Under the circumstances, if either judge listed in the documents presided over the
    case, the Judiciary’s impartiality could reasonably be called into question. Notably, defendant’s recusal motion is
    directed at the Bergen County judiciary. The social and professional relationships shared among judges within a
    vicinage can raise legitimate questions about the appearance of impartiality when a colleague presides over a case
    involving a serious threat against a fellow judge who serves in the same vicinage. That said, the circumstances of
    the two judges named in the alleged threats have changed. One has been reassigned to another vicinage -- the
    vicinage to which the assignment judge transferred the case -- and the other has retired. In light of recent
    developments, the matter is remanded to the Bergen County assignment judge for further consideration. (pp. 10-11)
    4. Given the serious nature of the threat, the absence of any proof of manipulation, the potential introduction of the
    evidence in one of the trials, and the relationships among judges within the Bergen Vicinage, the Court finds that a
    reasonable, fully informed observer could have doubts about a Bergen County judge’s impartiality. The Court
    therefore remands this matter to the assignment judge to determine whether (1) to ask the Chief Justice to bring in a
    judge from another vicinage, or (2) to transfer the case to another vicinage. (pp. 11-12)
    The matter is REMANDED to the assignment judge in Bergen County for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion. The Court asks that the matter be resolved expeditiously. Jurisdiction is not retained.
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and JUDGE
    CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER’s opinion.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-50 September Term 2014
    075325
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    AAKASH A. DALAL,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    Argued April 28, 2015 – Decided June 17, 2015
    On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate
    Division, whose opinion is reported at 
    438 N.J. Super. 156
     (App. Div. 2014).
    Annmarie Cozzi, Senior Assistant Prosecutor,
    argued the cause for appellant (John L.
    Molinelli, Bergen County Prosecutor,
    attorney; Ms. Cozzi and Anthony C. Talarico,
    Assistant Prosecutor, on the brief).
    Brian J. Neary argued the cause for
    respondent.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This appeal relates to defendant’s motion to recuse the
    Bergen County judiciary from presiding over two indictments
    against him.   The State asserts that defendant threatened to
    kill or harm two Superior Court judges in the Bergen Vicinage.
    In light of that, defendant claimed that reasonable questions
    could be raised about the appearance of impartiality if a Bergen
    County judge presided over the indictments.
    1
    The trial court denied defendant’s motion.    The Appellate
    Division reversed.   Because of recent developments, we remand to
    the assignment judge for further proceedings consistent with the
    principles discussed below.
    I.
    Two indictments are pending against defendant Aakash Dalal.
    The first indictment charges defendant and co-defendant Anthony
    Graziano with a series of offenses directed against four
    synagogues and a Jewish community center.   The twenty-nine count
    indictment, returned on March 1, 2013, includes allegations of
    criminal mischief, conspiracy, arson, attempted arson, bias
    intimidation, and weapons offenses.
    Many of the charges first appeared in six criminal
    complaints filed in February and March 2012.   The presiding
    judge of the criminal division at the time initially set bail at
    $2.5 million.   The following month, another judge denied
    defendant’s request to reduce his bail.
    While defendant was in custody on the complaints, an
    informant contacted federal authorities about threats defendant
    allegedly made against public officials and buildings.   The
    investigation that followed led law enforcement to get a search
    warrant and search defendant’s jail cell on or about June 27,
    2012.
    2
    During the search, Bergen County and federal officials
    found certain handwritten documents.     One piece of paper depicts
    a chart of “ENEMIES” and lists multiple names.     The criminal
    presiding judge is listed as a “high profile” enemy.     An
    assistant prosecutor on the case is also listed and is
    identified as a “tactical” enemy.
    The words “DEAD COPS, DEAD COPS” appear on another sheet of
    paper, which also features a chart of “ENEMIES.”     That chart
    names the presiding judge and the judge who ruled on defendant’s
    bail at the top of the diagram.     The assistant prosecutor and
    others are listed as well.   Dozens of variations of the
    signature “Aakash Dalal” also appear on the page.
    On June 27, 2012, the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office
    filed another complaint that charged defendant with conspiracy
    to murder the assistant prosecutor, conspiracy to possess a
    firearm, and terroristic threats.     A Bergen County grand jury
    indicted defendant for the same charges on August 7, 2013 (the
    “second indictment”).   That indictment does not charge defendant
    with any threats against the judges.     In its presentation to the
    grand jury, the State offered the documents described above.       A
    witness also summarized information relayed by the informant,
    which included statements defendant allegedly made about wanting
    to kill the assistant prosecutor and targeting the presiding
    judge and the judge who ruled on defendant’s bail.
    3
    Defendant moved to dismiss both indictments and sought to
    recuse the presiding judge.   In a letter to the presiding judge
    dated October 28, 2013, the State noted that it “intends to
    introduce . . . evidence that defendant has listed Your Honor as
    a target” in connection with the second indictment.     The State
    observed that the evidence provided “a significant reason” for
    the court to recuse itself; the presiding judge then transferred
    the proceedings to a third judge (the “trial court”).     The State
    also represented to the Appellate Division that it intends to
    seek to introduce the papers found in defendant’s cell but that
    “it has no intention whatsoever of calling” as witnesses the
    presiding judge or the judge who ruled on defendant’s bail.
    On November 1, 2013, the trial court denied defendant’s
    motions to recuse the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office and for
    a change of venue based on pretrial publicity.
    Central to this appeal, defendant filed a motion on
    December 6, 2013 to recuse the Bergen County judiciary from
    presiding over any matters relating to him.   Defendant argued
    that, with two judges allegedly “named as potential murder
    victims” of defendant, reasonable questions about the appearance
    of impartiality required recusal.
    The trial court denied the motion.    The court explained
    that “[i]t would be improper to allow a defendant to force
    disqualification of this Court, much less the entire Bergen
    4
    County Judiciary when making threatening comments towards
    judges.     It would be the crudest form of judge shopping.”       The
    court concluded that, “based on these facts, a reasonabl[e]
    person would not conclude that defendant would be denied a fair
    and unbiased hearing” in Bergen County.
    The Appellate Division granted defendant’s motion for leave
    to appeal and reversed.       State v. Dalal, 
    438 N.J. Super. 156
    (App. Div. 2014).     Although the panel was “confident the trial
    judge could actually preside fairly and impartially,” 
    id. at 162
    , it concluded that “the appearance of fairness in the future
    proceedings will be impaired so long as a Bergen judge presides
    over the matter.”     
    Ibid.
    The panel remanded the matter to the assignment judge to
    enter an order “either transferring the matter to another
    vicinage or arranging to have a judge from another vicinage
    preside over the case.”       
    Id. at 163
    .   The assignment judge
    transferred the matter to an adjacent county -- the Passaic
    Vicinage.
    We granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal.        
    221 N.J. 216
     (2015).
    II.
    The State argues that the judgment of the Appellate
    Division is not supported by a “convincing legal basis” and will
    tacitly condone forum shopping.      The State also objects that the
    5
    assignment judge transferred the matter without any input from
    the parties and victims.
    Defendant counters that an “obvious” “appearance of
    impropriety . . . compels the recusal of the Bergen County
    judiciary.”    He contends that the impartiality of the Bergen
    County judiciary might reasonably be questioned because two of
    defendant’s alleged “targets” are “colleagues and potential
    friends of all members of the Bergen County bench.”
    We also note two relevant developments since the motion was
    first addressed.    Neither the presiding judge nor the judge who
    ruled on defendant’s bail now serve in the Bergen Vicinage.
    Effective May 1, 2015, the presiding judge was assigned to the
    Passaic Vicinage, Civil Division, at the judge’s request, for
    reasons unrelated to this matter.      The other judge retired in
    August 2014.
    III.
    Canon 3(C)(1) of the Code of Judicial Conduct provides that
    “[a] judge should disqualify himself or herself in a proceeding
    in which the judge’s impartiality might reasonably be
    questioned.”    Likewise, Rule 1:12-1(g) directs that judges shall
    not sit in any matter “when there is any . . . reason which
    might preclude a fair and unbiased hearing and judgment, or
    which might reasonably lead counsel or the parties to believe
    so.”    The rules, thus, “address actual conflicts and bias as
    6
    well as the appearance of impropriety.”       State v. McCabe, 
    201 N.J. 34
    , 43 (2010).     We are concerned only with the latter here.
    The proper standard to assess defendant’s request for
    recusal is set forth in DeNike v. Cupo, 
    196 N.J. 502
    , 517
    (2008):   “Would a reasonable, fully informed person have doubts
    about the judge’s impartiality?”       As the analysis section in the
    opinion reveals, the standard calls for an individualized
    consideration of the facts in a given case.       See also In re
    Advisory Letter No. 7-11 of the Supreme Court Advisory Comm.,
    
    213 N.J. 63
     (2013); McCabe, 
    supra,
     
    201 N.J. 34
    .       DeNike does not
    set forth any bright-line rules.
    In cases like this one, there is an additional concern:
    that defendants not be allowed to manipulate the judicial system
    and engage in forum shopping.    The Tenth Circuit’s decision in
    United States v. Greenspan, 
    26 F.3d 1001
     (10th Cir. 1994),
    offers helpful guidance on this issue.       The defendant in
    Greenspan pled guilty to drug charges and awaited sentencing.
    
    Id. at 1004
    .    Around the same time, federal agents investigated
    allegations that the defendant plotted to kill the trial judge
    or members of his family.    
    Id. at 1005
    .     The judge -- aware of
    the allegations -- expedited the sentencing date so that
    defendant could be monitored more closely in a federal
    penitentiary.   
    Ibid.
    7
    The Tenth Circuit concluded that a reasonable person might
    have questioned the judge’s impartiality, and recusal was
    therefore required.   
    Id. at 1005-06
    .   But the Court emphasized
    that not all threats against a judge will require that judge’s
    recusal.   
    Id. at 1006
    .
    In the case before it, the Tenth Circuit found there was
    “nothing in the record to suggest the threat was a ruse by the
    defendant in an effort to obtain a different judge” and no basis
    to “infer[] that the threat was some kind of ploy.”    
    Ibid.
        The
    panel also stressed that “the defendant did not communicate the
    death threat to the judge, nor is there any suggestion that the
    defendant ever intended the judge to learn of the threat before
    it was actually carried out.”   
    Ibid.
       Those facts, as well,
    failed “to suggest that the defendant was using the threat as a
    device to force a recusal.”   
    Ibid.
       Similarly, the Court noted
    that the “threat was not delivered in court or in connection
    with an official judicial proceeding involving this defendant.”
    
    Ibid.
       The panel added, “[h]ad there been any reason to believe
    that threats were made only in an attempt to obtain a different
    judge, to delay the proceedings, to harass, or for other
    vexatious or frivolous purpose, recusal would not have been
    warranted.”   
    Ibid.
    Other courts have focused on similar concerns.     See, e.g.,
    United States v. Beale, 
    574 F.3d 512
    , 520 (8th Cir. 2009)
    8
    (finding clear expression of intent to manipulate judicial
    system); In re Basciano, 
    542 F.3d 950
    , 954, 957-58 (2d Cir.
    2008) (noting “significant possibility that the defendant’s
    purpose in at least appearing to plot against the judge was to
    change judges”), cert. denied, 
    555 U.S. 1177
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 1401
    ,
    
    173 L. Ed. 2d 596
     (2009); United States v. Holland, 
    519 F.3d 909
    , 916 (9th Cir. 2008) (finding judge “reasonably construed
    [defendant’s] threatening phone message as an attempt to
    manipulate the court system”); see also SEC v. Bilzerian, 
    729 F. Supp. 2d 19
    , 25-26 (D.D.C. 2010) (citing Greenspan and inferring
    that defendant made alleged threat to delay proceedings).
    Like those courts, we believe that when there is any
    evidence that a defendant has conveyed a threat to prompt the
    recusal of a judge or somehow manipulate the proceedings,
    recusal is not required.   To assess a defendant’s objective, a
    judge may consider direct evidence and also draw reasonable
    inferences from the record.
    When judges apply the DeNike standard in a case that
    involves a threat against a member of the Judiciary, they may
    consider the following factors, among others:   the nature and
    context of the threat; whether there is any evidence that the
    threat was designed, in whole or part, to manipulate the system
    and/or force a recusal; whether the threat was meant to be
    communicated to the judge or was delivered in connection with a
    9
    court proceeding relating to the defendant’s case; whether
    evidence of the threat will be presented or referred to at
    trial; and whether the judge presiding over the case is the
    object of the threat.   In the unusual circumstances of this
    matter, we also consider whether any judge who has been
    threatened is still serving in the vicinage.
    The timing of a threat matters as well.      For example, a
    defendant’s outburst in the middle of a trial, with the
    presentation of evidence to a jury underway, might reasonably be
    seen as an attempt to thwart the orderly administration of
    justice and would not necessarily call for recusal.    We would be
    reluctant to find that a judge abused his or her discretion in
    declining to transfer such a case.     See McCabe, 
    supra,
     
    201 N.J. at 45
    .   In short, not all threats or efforts to intimidate a
    judge will require recusal.
    IV.
    In this matter, the State concedes that there is no
    evidence that defendant’s alleged threat was intended to
    manipulate the proceedings.   At the pretrial stage, we make no
    final judgments about defendant’s conduct.     Taken at face value,
    though, the threats appear serious.     And there is no reason
    based on the record to think that defendant planned to reveal
    the alleged threats to either judge.    They were discovered in
    his jail cell pursuant to a search warrant.
    10
    Under the circumstances, if either judge listed in the
    documents presided over the case, the Judiciary’s impartiality
    could reasonably be called into question.    Defendant’s recusal
    motion, of course, is directed at the Bergen County judiciary.
    We recognize that all judges in a vicinage meet together
    periodically and socialize as a group on occasion.    Judges
    within a particular division also work more closely with one
    another on a substantive level.    All of those relationships can
    raise legitimate questions about the appearance of impartiality
    when a colleague presides over a case involving a serious threat
    against a fellow judge who serves in the same vicinage.
    That said, the circumstances of the two judges named in the
    alleged threats have changed.     One has been reassigned to
    another vicinage -- the vicinage to which the assignment judge
    transferred the case.   The other has retired.
    In light of those developments, we believe it is necessary
    to remand the case to the current assignment judge for further
    consideration.   Ordinarily, an assignment judge would have
    several options:   to reassign the matter to a different judge
    within the vicinage; to ask that another judge from outside the
    vicinage be brought in to preside; or to transfer the case to
    another vicinage entirely.   The first two approaches, of course,
    would eliminate a defendant’s incentive to threaten a judge in
    order to try to force a change in venue.
    11
    Given the serious nature of the threat, the absence of any
    proof of manipulation, the potential introduction of the
    evidence in one of the trials, and the relationships among
    judges within the Bergen Vicinage, we believe that a reasonable,
    fully informed observer could have doubts about a Bergen County
    judge’s impartiality.   We therefore remand the matter to the
    assignment judge to determine, after hearing from the parties,
    whether (1) to ask the Chief Justice to bring in a judge from
    another vicinage, see N.J. Const. art. VI, § 7, ¶ 2, or (2) to
    transfer the case to another vicinage.   We recognize that
    victims may seek to be heard as well.
    We respectfully ask that the matter be resolved
    expeditiously.
    V.
    The matter is remanded to the assignment judge in Bergen
    County for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Jurisdiction is not retained.
    JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA,
    SOLOMON, and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in CHIEF
    JUSTICE RABNER’s opinion.
    12
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-50                                  SEPTEMBER TERM 2014
    ON APPEAL FROM               Appellate Division, Superior Court
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    AAKASH A. DALAL,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    DECIDED                June 17, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                        PRESIDING
    OPINION BY            Chief Justice Rabner
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    CHECKLIST                              REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                      X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                         X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                             X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                         X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                    X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                           X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                          X
    TOTALS                                    7