State v. Vonte Skinner (071764) , 218 N.J. 496 ( 2014 )


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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. Vonte Skinner (A-57/58-12) (071764)
    Argued November 6, 2013 -- Decided August 4, 2014
    LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether graphically violent rap lyrics, written by a defendant before the
    events that led to his indictment for attempted murder and related charges, may be admitted at his trial as evidence
    of motive and intent, pursuant to N.J.R.E. 404(b).
    On November 8, 2005, Lamont Peterson was shot seven times in his back, torso, and head. En route to the
    hospital, Peterson told police that defendant, Vonte Skinner, had shot him. Although Peterson initially stated that
    the “code of the street” precluded him from cooperating further, he eventually told police that he and defendant sold
    drugs for Brandon Rothwell, and that defendant was the group’s “muscle.” Peterson stated that defendant had shot
    him because Peterson owed Rothwell money. When questioned, defendant admitted to being present at the scene,
    but denied involvement in the shooting, claiming that he fled when he heard the gunshots and left his vehicle behind.
    The police searched the car and discovered three notebooks filled with profane and violent rap lyrics authored by
    defendant. Many of the lyrics are written in the first person under the moniker “Real Threat,” and defendant has the
    word “Threat” tattooed on his arm. Although it is not clear when each verse of the lyrics was written, the State
    concedes that many were composed before the circumstances underlying the instant offense took place.
    Defendant was charged with first-degree attempted murder and related charges, and, before trial, he
    requested a preliminary hearing to contest the admissibility of his rap lyrics. The court concluded that the lyrics
    were relevant because they tended to prove the State’s theory of the case and found them admissible under N.J.R.E.
    404(b) because they provided insight into defendant’s alleged motive and intent. Accordingly, the court ordered that
    redacted portions of defendant’s lyrics would be admitted into evidence.
    Defendant’s first trial resulted in a mistrial after the jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict. Prior to
    his retrial, defendant renewed his objection to the admissibility of the rap lyrics, and the court again found them
    admissible. At defendant’s second trial, a detective testifying for the State read to the jury extensive passages from
    defendant’s lyrics, depicting violence, bloodshed, death, and dismemberment unconnected to the specific facts of the
    attempted-murder charge against defendant.
    At trial, defendant advanced a third-party-guilt theory, contending that Peterson was shot by another man,
    Joseph Ward, with whom Peterson had an ongoing dispute. Peterson testified that the “code of the street” required
    Ward to retaliate against him for the dispute, but insisted that defendant, and not Ward, was his assailant. During
    closing arguments, the prosecutor compared the “street code” to a “subculture of violence,” and intimated that “this
    sub-culture of violence . . . at some point is going [to] overtake the regular culture.” The jury convicted defendant of
    attempted murder, aggravated assault, and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and the trial court imposed an
    aggregate thirty-year sentence with an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier.
    An Appellate Division panel, with one judge dissenting, reversed defendant’s conviction based upon the
    admission of his rap lyrics into evidence. In reaching its conclusion, the majority analyzed the admittedly violent
    lyrics under N.J.R.E. 404(b), and determined that their prejudicial impact vastly outweighed any potential probative
    value. The majority also believed that the State had access to other, less prejudicial, evidence concerning
    defendant’s motive and intent, and that “[t]he only logical relevance [of defendant’s lyrics] was to give additional
    weight to Peterson’s testimony.” The dissent argued, among other things, that the introduction of defendant’s rap
    lyrics made the inference of defendant’s motive and intent more logical.
    1
    The State filed an appeal as of right, pursuant to Rule 2:2-1(a)(2). Defendant also filed a petition for
    certification, which the Court granted limited to his claim that the prosecutor exceeded the bounds of permissible
    advocacy in his closing argument. 
    214 N.J. 174
     (2013). The Court granted amicus curiae status to the Attorney
    General and the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey.
    HELD: The Appellate Division correctly reversed defendant’s conviction because the violent, profane, and disturbing
    rap lyrics authored by defendant constitute highly prejudicial evidence that bore little or no probative value as to any
    motive or intent behind the attempted murder offense with which he was charged.
    1. Only once before has the Court assessed the admission of song lyrics as evidence adduced against a criminal
    defendant. In State v. Koskovich, 
    168 N.J. 448
    , 484-87 (2001), the Court affirmed the admission of violent lyrics
    authored by a defendant as proof of a “thrill kill” motive under N.J.R.E. 404(b). N.J.R.E. 404(b) provides generally
    that evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts may not be admitted to show that a person acted in conformity
    therewith, but may be admitted for other purposes when such matters are relevant to a material issue in dispute.
    Here, as in Koskovich, the trial court and the Appellate Division utilized N.J.R.E. 404(b) to assess the admissibility
    of the defendant’s lyrics. In doing so, the courts followed the four-factor test from State v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
    ,
    338 (1992). (pp. 19-27)
    2. This Court, in its analysis, initially considered argument as to whether artistic expressions about crimes or bad
    acts should be evaluated under N.J.R.E. 404(b). To be sure, writing rap lyrics – even disturbingly graphic lyrics,
    like defendant’s – is not a crime. Nor is it a bad act or a wrong to write about unpalatable subjects. However, the
    purpose of Rule 404(b) is to safeguard against propensity evidence that may poison the jury against a defendant,
    such as violent, degrading rap lyrics of the type authored by defendant. Our courts have recognized that expressive
    actions, which are not overtly criminal but can be perceived as wrong or bad, can persuade a jury of a defendant’s
    guilt, regardless of the State’s evidence. Thus, the purpose of N.J.R.E. 404(b) is advanced by its application in this
    setting. Moreover, the admissibility of the lyrics was addressed under a Rule 404(b) framework by both the trial
    court and Appellate Division, and the State consented to that analysis. There was also no argument by the State that
    the rap lyrics constituted direct evidence of the offense involved in this matter. Instead, the lyrics were advanced for
    the purposes of proving motive and intent. A Rule 404(b) analysis therefore was appropriate. (pp. 27-31)
    3. Under the Rule 404(b) framework, the other crime, wrong, or bad-act evidence must bear on a material issue in
    dispute. Although defendant’s motive was genuinely in dispute in this case, the State offered other evidence on that
    issue. The effect of the lyrics was simply to bolster the State’s motive theory, testified to by a State’s witness.
    However, this Court repeatedly has discouraged the use of other-crime evidence to bolster the credibility of a
    testifying witness. In addition, defendant’s lyrics only bear on the issue of motive if one believes that those lyrics,
    many of which were written long before Peterson’s shooting, specifically relate to defendant’s motive on the
    evening Peterson was shot. Moreover, it has not been established by clear and convincing evidence, as required
    under prong three of Cofield, that defendant engaged in any of the events portrayed in his rap lyrics. Thus they can
    only be regarded as fictional accounts. Finally, the prejudicial effect of defendant’s graphically violent rap lyrics
    overwhelms any probative value that they may have. (pp. 31-34)
    4. In assessing the probative value of defendant’s fictional lyrics, the Court notes that probative evidence may not
    be found in an individual’s artistic endeavors absent a strong nexus between specific details of the artistic
    composition and the circumstances of the offense for which the evidence is being adduced. The Court explains that
    the difficulty in identifying probative value in fictional or other forms of artistic self-expressive endeavors is that
    one cannot presume that, simply because an author has chosen to write about certain topics, he or she has acted in
    accordance with those views. One would not presume that Bob Marley, who wrote the well-known song “I Shot the
    Sheriff,” actually shot a sheriff, or that Edgar Allan Poe buried a man beneath his floorboards, as depicted in his
    short story “The Tell-Tale Heart,” simply because of their respective artistic endeavors on those subjects. The Court
    reasons that defendant’s lyrics should receive no different treatment. This approach is in accord with other
    jurisdictions that have considered similar questions. The Court concludes that the violent, profane, and disturbing
    rap lyrics authored by defendant constitute highly prejudicial evidence against him that bore little or no probative
    value as to any motive or intent behind the attempted murder offense with which he was charged. The admission of
    defendant’s inflammatory rap verses, a genre that certain members of society view as art and others view as
    distasteful and descriptive of a mean-spirited culture, risked poisoning the jury against defendant. (pp. 2-3; 34-39)
    2
    5. In sum, rap lyrics, or like fictional material, may not be used as evidence of motive and intent except when such
    material has a direct connection to the specifics of the offense for which it is offered in evidence and the evidence’s
    probative value is not outweighed by its apparent prejudice. In the weighing process, courts should consider the
    existence of other evidence that can be used to make the same point. When admissible, such evidence should be
    carefully redacted to ensure that irrelevant, inflammatory content is not needlessly presented to the jury. (pp. 39-40)
    6. Because the Court’s holding will require a retrial, the Court does not reach the merits of defendant’s claim of
    prosecutorial excess in summation. Nevertheless, the Court cautions that a prosecutor’s summation should not
    employ language designed to stoke a jury’s fear for the future of its community or make an inflammatory argument
    akin to a “call to arms.” (pp. 40-41)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON, and FERNANDEZ-VINA; and
    JUDGE RODRÍGUEZ (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion. JUDGE CUFF
    (temporarily assigned) did not participate.
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-57/58 September Term 2012
    071764
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    and Cross-Respondent,
    v.
    VONTE L. SKINNER,
    Defendant-Respondent
    and Cross-Appellant.
    Argued April 9, 2014 – Decided August 4, 2014
    On appeal from and certification to the
    Superior Court, Appellate Division.
    Jennifer B. Paszkiewicz, Assistant
    Prosecutor, argued the cause for appellant
    and cross-respondent (Robert D. Bernardi,
    Burlington County Prosecutor, attorney).
    Jason A. Coe, Deputy Public Defender, argued
    the cause for respondent and cross-appellant
    (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    attorney; Karen E. Truncale, Assistant
    Deputy Public Defender, on the briefs).
    Joseph A. Glyn, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for amicus curiae Attorney
    General of New Jersey (John J. Hoffman,
    Acting Attorney General, attorney).
    Ezra D. Rosenberg argued the cause for
    amicus curiae American Civil Liberties Union
    of New Jersey Foundation (Edward L. Barocas
    and Dechert, attorneys; Mr. Rosenberg, Mr.
    Barocas, Jeanne LoCicero, and Alexander R.
    Shalom, of counsel; Mr. Rosenberg, Mr.
    Barocas, Ms. LoCicero, Mr. Shalom, Michelle
    1
    Hart Yeary, and Cara J. Schmidt, a member of
    the New York bar, on the brief).
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    In the criminal trial of defendant, Vonte Skinner, on
    attempted murder and related charges, a State’s witness was
    permitted to read to the jury, at great length, violent and
    profane rap lyrics that had been written by defendant before the
    events at issue.     There was no assertion at trial that the
    violence-laden verses were in any way revealing of some specific
    factual connection that strongly tied defendant to the
    underlying incident.    Nevertheless, the State maintained that
    the lyrics helped to demonstrate defendant’s “motive and intent”
    in connection with the offense because the rap lyrics addressed
    a street culture of violence and retribution that fit with the
    State’s view of defendant’s role in the attempted murder.
    The Appellate Division reversed defendant’s conviction
    based on the admission of the rap lyrics into evidence in
    defendant’s trial.     In reaching its conclusion, the panel used
    an N.J.R.E. 404(b) analysis and determined that the prejudicial
    impact of defendant’s rap lyrics vastly outweighed any potential
    probative value.
    We affirm.     We hold that the violent, profane, and
    disturbing rap lyrics authored by defendant constituted highly
    prejudicial evidence against him that bore little or no
    2
    probative value as to any motive or intent behind the attempted
    murder offense with which he was charged.       The admission of
    defendant’s inflammatory rap verses, a genre that certain
    members of society view as art and others view as distasteful
    and descriptive of a mean-spirited culture, risked poisoning the
    jury against defendant.   Fictional forms of inflammatory self-
    expression, such as poems, musical compositions, and other like
    writings about bad acts, wrongful acts, or crimes, are not
    properly evidential unless the writing reveals a strong nexus
    between the specific details of the artistic composition and the
    circumstances of the underlying offense for which a person is
    charged, and the probative value of that evidence outweighs its
    apparent prejudicial impact.    In the weighing process, trial
    courts should consider the existence of other evidence that can
    be used to make the same point.       When admissible, such evidence
    should be carefully redacted to ensure that irrelevant and
    inflammatory content is not needlessly presented to the jury.
    I.
    A.
    On November 8, 2005, at approximately 10:30 p.m., Adam
    Donofrio, a patrolman in Willingboro Township, was dispatched to
    103 Rittenhouse Drive to investigate a report of shots fired and
    a possible injured person.     On his arrival, Donofrio observed an
    individual, later identified as Lamont Peterson, lying partially
    3
    underneath an SUV.    Peterson told Donofrio that he was unable to
    move his legs and was unsure if he was injured.   When Donofrio
    removed Peterson’s clothing to check for injuries, he observed
    seven bullet holes in Peterson’s body:   three in Peterson’s
    back, one in Peterson’s left arm, one in his chest, one in his
    upper abdomen, and two in his head.   Donofrio took steps to stem
    the bleeding and called for emergency medical personnel.     An
    ambulance soon arrived, and Peterson was transported to a
    helicopter pad and flown to Cooper Medical Center.    En route to
    the hospital, Peterson told another officer that defendant,
    Vonte Skinner,1 had shot him.
    Following the shooting, Peterson initially was reluctant to
    speak further with the police.    He claimed that the “code of the
    street” was not to “snitch,” and he felt he needed to get
    revenge on his own.    However, Peterson eventually agreed to
    cooperate.   He provided the police with a statement explaining
    that both he and defendant sold drugs for a man named Brandon
    Rothwell.    According to Peterson, defendant joined Rothwell’s
    group two months before the shooting and defendant’s job was to
    be the group’s “muscle,” handling problems with customers and
    other drug dealers.    Peterson stated that his relationship with
    Rothwell became strained once defendant was admitted to the
    1
    Peterson actually stated that “Devonte” was the shooter.
    “Devonte” is an alias used by defendant.
    4
    group because Peterson’s share of the profits was reduced due to
    the addition of a new member.     Unhappy with the loss in his
    revenue, Peterson withheld some money that he was supposed to
    turn over to Rothwell.     According to Peterson, after he stopped
    paying his full share of drug proceeds, Rothwell demanded that
    Peterson return a TEC-9 firearm that had been provided to him as
    a group member.    Peterson did not return the weapon.
    Peterson testified that, on the night of the shooting, he
    engaged in multiple phone conversations with defendant, who
    purportedly wanted to set up a drug sale.     Peterson agreed to
    make the sale and to meet, at defendant’s suggestion, at
    Rittenhouse Park in Willingboro at about 10:00 p.m.      As the
    meeting time grew closer, Peterson received several more calls
    from defendant, who seemed anxious to know Peterson’s estimated
    time of arrival.    Peterson claimed that, on arriving at
    Rittenhouse Park, he saw defendant and Rothwell in bushes
    located on the side of the street.     Defendant allegedly
    brandished a firearm and began to shoot at Peterson as Peterson
    was exiting his SUV.     Peterson stated that he did not recall
    trying to run or other details about the encounter, except that
    he believed that he was dying.     Peterson later told the police
    5
    that defendant had shot him and that Rothwell had ordered
    defendant to do so because Peterson owed Rothwell money.2
    Defendant was questioned by police on November 17, 2005, in
    connection with the attack on Peterson.   Defendant initially
    denied being near the scene of the crime, but he eventually
    acknowledged arranging a drug deal with Peterson on the night of
    the shooting.   According to defendant, he was at 103 Rittenhouse
    Drive, speaking with Peterson, when shots suddenly rang out.
    When he heard the shots, defendant fled on foot.   Defendant also
    stated that Rothwell was not present at the meeting with
    Peterson.
    Defendant told the police that he had driven a grey Chevy
    Malibu to Rittenhouse Park and that he abandoned the car after
    hearing gunshots and running from the scene.   The police
    obtained a warrant to search defendant’s car3 and discovered in
    it three notebooks filled with rap lyrics authored by defendant.
    By and large, the rap lyrics contained in defendant’s notebooks
    are profane and violent.   Many of the lyrics are written in the
    2
    Rothwell was initially charged as a codefendant, but the
    charges against him were dropped because Peterson refused to
    testify against Rothwell, reportedly because Rothwell is the
    father of Peterson’s cousin’s child.
    3
    In fact, the car was registered to the mother of defendant’s
    girlfriend.
    6
    first person under the moniker “Real Threat,” and defendant has
    the word “Threat” tattooed on his left arm.
    Defendant reportedly has composed rap lyrics as a form of
    self-expression since he was a child.   In fact, the record
    reveals evidence that some of defendant’s work had been produced
    in connection with a rap music label.   Although it is not clear
    when each individual verse of the lyrics found in defendant’s
    notebooks was written, the State concedes that many of the
    lyrics found in defendant’s car and read to the jury were
    composed long before the circumstances underlying the instant
    offense took place.
    B.
    A Burlington County grand jury filed an indictment against
    defendant on November 16, 2006, charging him with first-degree
    attempted murder, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:5-1(a)(3) and N.J.S.A.
    2C:11-3(a)(1); second-degree conspiracy to commit murder,
    contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2(a)(1); third-degree unlawful
    possession of a weapon without a permit, contrary to N.J.S.A.
    2C:39-5(b); second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful
    purpose, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a); second-degree
    aggravated assault, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1); third-
    degree aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, contrary to
    N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(2); and second-degree possession of a
    firearm by a convicted person, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(b).
    7
    Before trial, defendant objected to the introduction of his
    rap lyrics into evidence.    He requested a preliminary hearing
    pursuant to N.J.R.E. 104 to contest their admissibility, which
    the court granted.    The court concluded that the lyrics were
    relevant because they tended to prove the State’s theory of the
    case and that they were admissible under N.J.R.E. 404(b) because
    the lyrics provided insight into defendant’s alleged motive and
    intent.   Accordingly, the court ordered that redacted portions
    of defendant’s rap lyric writings would be admitted into
    evidence.
    Defendant’s first trial resulted in a mistrial after the
    jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict.    Prior to
    defendant’s retrial, he renewed his objection to the
    admissibility of his rap lyrics; however, the trial court
    adhered to its previous determination finding the lyrics
    admissible.
    At the second trial, a detective testifying for the State
    read extensively from defendant’s lyrics to the jury.       The trial
    transcript of that uninterrupted reading stretches thirteen
    pages.    The material was replete with expletives and included
    graphic depictions of violence, bloodshed, death, maiming, and
    dismemberment.   The following excerpts of the pages and pages of
    verses read to the jury exemplify the general nature of the
    lyrics admitted against defendant:
    8
    I’m the n***a to drive-by and tear your
    block   up,  leave   you,   your   homey  and
    neighbors shot up, chest, shots will have
    you spittin’ blood clots up.     Go ahead and
    play hard. I’ll have you in front of heaven
    prayin’ to God, body parts displaying the
    scars, puncture wounds and bones blown apart,
    showin’ your heart full of black marks,
    thinkin’ you already been through hell, well,
    here’s the best part.    You tried to lay me
    down with you and your dogs until the guns
    barked. Your last sight you saw was the gun
    spark, nothin’ but pure dark, like Bacardi.
    Dead drunk in the bar, face lent over the
    wheel of your car, brains in your lap, tryin’
    to comprehend what the f**k just tore you
    apart, made your brains pop out your skull.
    . . . .
    On the block, I can box you down or straight
    razor ox you down, run in your crib with the
    four pound and pop your crown.     Checkmate,
    put your face in the ground. I’ll drop your
    queen and pawn, f**k -– f**k wastin’ around.
    They don’t call me Threat for nothin’.
    . . . .
    You pricks goin’ to listen to Threat
    tonight. ‘Cause feel when I pump this P-89
    into your head like lice.    Slugs will pass
    ya’ D, like Montana and Rice, that’s five
    hammers, 16 shots to damage your life, leave
    you f*****s all bloody . . . .
    . . . .
    In block wars I am a vet. In the hood, I’m
    a threat. It’s written on my arm and signed
    in blood on my Tech. I’m in love with you,
    death.
    Although the case had nothing to do with women or violence that
    involved women, the material that the State read to the jury
    9
    also included depictions of rape and other violent and demeaning
    treatment of women:
    After you die, I’ll go to your Mom’s house
    and f**k her until tomorrow and make ya’
    little brother watch with his face full of
    sorrow.
    . . . .
    So get them answers right. Where’s the case
    and stash of white.   I got ya wife tied to
    the bed and at her throat is a knife.
    Those verses, along with several more pages not reproduced here,
    plainly depict various crimes and other bad acts, but those
    crimes and acts were unconnected to the specific facts of the
    attempted-murder charge against defendant.   The State did not
    attempt to clarify or explain the lyrics in any way, despite
    their heavy use of slang and otherwise esoteric language.
    In his defense, defendant advanced a third-party-guilt
    theory.   He contended that Peterson was shot by another man,
    Joseph Ward, with whom Peterson had an ongoing dispute.     Ward
    reportedly had robbed Peterson’s cousin shortly before the
    events giving rise to this appeal.   In response to that robbery,
    someone related to Peterson fired a gun at Ward’s car.    Peterson
    testified that the “code of the street” therefore required Ward
    to retaliate against him.   Police found Ward in the area of
    Rittenhouse Park on the night Peterson was shot.   Furthermore,
    Alexandria Ross, Peterson’s cousin and the mother of Rothwell’s
    10
    child, testified that Peterson had told her that Ward, and not
    defendant, had shot him; however, Ross’s in–court testimony
    contradicted her previous statements to police, in which she
    stated that Peterson was shot by defendant.      At trial, Peterson
    acknowledged his dispute with Ward but insisted that defendant,
    and not Ward, was his assailant.
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor compared the
    “street code” of silence to a “subculture of violence.”
    Specifically, the prosecutor stated that he was “weary because
    you deal with this sub-culture of violence and because you
    wonder if this sub-culture at some point is going [to] overtake
    the regular culture.    No snitching and . . . don’t talk to the
    police.”    The prosecutor also attempted to evoke sympathy for
    Peterson by depicting him as a fatherless child and stating,
    “[t]hese guys are just kids with guns.      That’s all they are.
    Kids without fathers with guns.”      Finally, the prosecutor
    likened the testimony of Alexandria Ross to “a call [for]
    anarchy.”    He warned the jury that,
    [i]f you accept Alexandria Ross’s testimony,
    that is a white flag to anarchy. . . . And
    if you want to surrender to anarchy and
    listen to Alexandria Ross . . . then you’re
    free to [do] that.    And you can take that
    same hand -- by doing it, you take that same
    hand and grab it and walk [defendant] to
    you, walk him to the light of redemption.
    Walk him to the light of the vindicator. If
    you feel like that’s what you have to do,
    11
    then do that.     But think about what you are
    doing.
    The evidence says you should not do that.
    Common sense says you should not do that.
    Lamont Peterson says you should not do that.
    Think about what you are doing.
    Defendant did not object to the prosecutor’s summation.
    The jury convicted defendant of attempted murder,
    aggravated assault, and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon,
    and acquitted defendant of all other charges.   After merging the
    assault and attempted murder convictions, the trial court
    imposed an aggregate thirty-year sentence with an eighty-five
    percent parole disqualifier, pursuant to the No Early Release
    Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.
    The Appellate Division reversed defendant’s conviction in
    an unpublished decision.   The panel concluded, with one judge
    dissenting, that the admission of defendant’s rap lyrics into
    evidence was reversible error and necessitated a new trial.      The
    majority primarily expressed concern over the prejudicial impact
    of defendant’s admittedly violent lyrics in an attempted murder
    trial and, as a result, analyzed the admission of defendant’s
    lyrics under the N.J.R.E. 404(b) framework established in State
    v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
    , 338 (1992).   In doing so, the majority
    distinguished this Court’s holding in State v. Koskovich, 
    168 N.J. 448
    , 484-87 (2001), which admitted into evidence in a
    capital case lyrics authored by a defendant as proof of a
    12
    “thrill kill” motive under N.J.R.E. 404(b).   The majority found
    that, unlike in Koskovich, here there was no genuine dispute
    over defendant’s alleged motive or intent.
    A majority of the panel also believed that the State had
    access to other, less prejudicial, evidence concerning
    defendant’s motive and intent.   In particular, the panel found
    that defendant’s motive was amply demonstrated through
    Peterson’s testimony that Peterson had been skimming profits
    from Rothwell’s business and that defendant was acting as
    Rothwell’s “muscle.”   Similarly, the panel concluded that
    evidence of defendant’s rap lyrics was unnecessary to
    demonstrate intent to kill because the brutal nature of the
    shooting and Peterson’s seven bullet wounds adequately bespoke
    such intent.   Consequently, the panel concluded that “[t]he only
    logical relevance [of defendant’s lyrics] was to give additional
    weight to Peterson’s testimony.”
    Finally, addressing defendant’s challenge to the State’s
    closing argument, the majority simply noted that the
    prosecutor’s summation exceeded the bounds of permissible
    advocacy; however, it did not rest the reversal of defendant’s
    conviction on prosecutorial impropriety.
    The dissent maintained that the trial court correctly
    analyzed the four Cofield prongs and properly applied them to
    this case.   The dissent argued that the introduction of
    13
    defendant’s rap lyrics made the inference of defendant’s motive
    and intent more logical.     For that reason, the dissent believed
    that the lyrics did more than merely bolster Peterson’s
    testimony:     “they also explain[ed] why defendant, theoretically
    part of Rothwell’s sales team and a cohort of the victim, would
    have targeted him.”     Accordingly, the dissent maintained that
    the probative value of defendant’s rap lyrics easily outweighed
    their prejudicial effect.
    The dissent acknowledged that the trial court’s redaction
    of the lyrics was likely insufficient and that the jury had
    heard several verses entirely immaterial to the issues in the
    case.     However, it concluded that the impact of the extraneous
    verses was harmless given their similarity to other relevant
    lyrics heard by the jury.     Finally, the dissent emphasized that
    the trial court adequately instructed the jury on the
    permissible use of the lyrics.
    Because a member of the Appellate Division panel dissented,
    the State filed for an appeal as of right, pursuant to Rule
    2:2-1(a)(2).    In addition, defendant filed a petition for
    certification with this Court seeking review on several other
    issues.    We granted defendant’s petition limited to his claim
    that the prosecutor exceeded the bounds of permissible advocacy
    in his closing argument.     State v. Skinner, 
    214 N.J. 174
     (2013).
    14
    We also granted amicus curiae status to the Attorney General and
    the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey.
    II.
    A.
    Defendant maintains that the Appellate Division correctly
    disallowed the admission of his rap lyrics into evidence under
    N.J.R.E. 404(b) because any probative value of such evidence is
    outweighed by its potential for prejudice.   Defendant emphasizes
    that N.J.R.E. 404(b) is a rule of exclusion rather than
    inclusion and notes that, although redacted by the trial court,
    the lyrics read to the jury were disturbing, violent, and
    primarily written in the first person.   He contends that their
    admission was highly prejudicial and served no purpose other
    than to inflame the passions of the jury.    Moreover, defendant
    maintains that depictions of criminal behavior in rap lyrics are
    largely exaggerated and often convey nothing more than artistic
    bravado.   Without being properly guided through expert
    testimony, defendant claims that rap lyrics are likely to be
    misinterpreted and misused by a jury.
    Defendant also contends that the prosecutor’s closing
    arguments exceeded the bounds of permissible advocacy and
    inappropriately urged the jury to “send a message” by convicting
    defendant.   Defendant characterizes the prosecutor’s remarks as
    an impermissible “call to arms” and claims that, by invoking the
    15
    specter of a culture war, the prosecutor unfairly prejudiced the
    jury against him.
    B.
    The State contends that the Appellate Division incorrectly
    concluded that defendant’s rap lyrics were inadmissible because
    of their capacity to prejudice the jury.   Specifically, the
    State maintains that the Cofield test for the admission of
    evidence under Rule 404(b) was properly satisfied.    The State
    also notes that in Koskovich this Court similarly admitted an
    individual’s lyrical musings as evidence of motive in a murder
    trial.
    According to the State, the lyrics proffered at defendant’s
    trial are relevant because they shed light on defendant’s motive
    and intent.   To that end, the State emphasizes that evidence of
    motive and intent “require[s] a very strong showing of prejudice
    to justify exclusion.”   State v. Covell, 
    157 N.J. 554
    , 570
    (1999).   The State asserts that no such prejudice exists here.
    The State also insists that defendant’s lyrics were not
    admitted to establish that he was a “bad person.”    Rather, it
    argues that the lyrics elucidate important aspects of disputed
    matters involving the alleged crime.   Noting that defendant’s
    trial strategy was to suggest that defendant had no motive to
    kill a fellow “team member,” and that Ward, rather than
    defendant, had shot Peterson, the State argues that defendant’s
    16
    motive and intent to kill Peterson were directly in dispute.
    Because defendant’s purported motive was contested at trial, the
    State maintains that the lyrics penned by defendant do more than
    corroborate Peterson’s testimony; they illuminate defendant’s
    motive and willingness to resort to violence.   The State further
    notes that the jury explicitly was instructed to consider
    defendant’s lyrics only for the limited purpose of establishing
    motive or intent, and not as substantive evidence of guilt in
    this particular matter.
    Finally, the State disputes that the prosecutor’s closing
    statement exceeded the bounds of permissible advocacy.     The
    State emphasizes that defense counsel never objected to the
    prosecutor’s closing, indicating that the remarks were not
    perceived as prejudicial at the time.   Furthermore, the State
    relies on the principle that prosecutors are accorded
    considerable latitude in forcefully summing up their case, so
    long as the remarks are reasonably related to the scope of the
    evidence presented.
    C.
    The Attorney General, appearing as amicus curiae in support
    of the State, argues that defendant’s rap lyrics are not
    “crimes, wrongs, or acts” within the scope of N.J.R.E. 404(b)
    and therefore should be analyzed solely for relevance under
    N.J.R.E. 401.   The Attorney General further maintains that the
    17
    determination of whether evidence is a “crime, wrong, or act”
    under N.J.R.E. 404(b) must be made independent of the evidence’s
    likely prejudicial effect.   In other words, he contends that the
    mere fact that evidence is prejudicial to a defendant does not
    mean that the evidence is necessarily a bad “act” for the
    purposes of N.J.R.E. 404(b).   Here, the Attorney General asserts
    that defendant’s authorship of profane lyrics does not
    constitute a crime and that the lyrics therefore should be
    assessed solely on the basis of relevance.
    The Attorney General further notes that “gangsta rap,” of
    the type authored by defendant, is a multi-million dollar
    industry, often sponsored by major corporations.     The Attorney
    General notes that rap music is a prevalent form of
    entertainment throughout the country, despite its frequent
    references to, and glorification of, violent criminal behavior.
    Given the prevalence of rap music in today’s society, the
    Attorney General asserts that lyrics such as those of defendant
    would be unlikely to inflame the passions of a jury or
    irreparably prejudice defendant.     Additionally, the Attorney
    General contends that the jury was well instructed on the
    limited permissible uses of defendant’s lyrics and claims that
    there is no reason to believe that the jury used those lyrics in
    an inappropriate manner.
    D.
    18
    The New Jersey Chapter of the American Civil Liberties
    Union (ACLU) appears in this case as amicus curiae on behalf of
    defendant.   The ACLU asserts that defendant’s rap lyrics are a
    form of artistic expression and thus are entitled to heightened
    protection under the First Amendment of the United States
    Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 6 of the New Jersey
    Constitution.   The ACLU emphasizes that defendant’s lyrics are
    not akin to a diary and therefore contain limited probative
    value.   Moreover, because rap lyrics are often a vehicle for
    social and political commentary, the ALCU argues that admitting
    defendant’s lyrics would run the risk of chilling otherwise
    valuable speech.   Accordingly, the ACLU urges the establishment
    of a strict guideline against the admissibility of expressive
    works in a criminal trial, in light of the First Amendment
    protections ordinarily afforded to such works.   It urges that
    their admissibility should be limited to situations clearly
    indicating that the author engaged in the crimes about which he
    or she has written.   In the ACLU’s view, to hold otherwise would
    unduly discourage, or even punish, lawful expression.
    III.
    A.
    Only once before has this Court had to assess the admission
    of song lyrics as part of the trial evidence adduced against a
    defendant.   In Koskovich, 
    supra,
     this Court considered the
    19
    admission of what appeared to be killing-themed song lyrics
    found in a notebook that the defendant kept in his bedroom at
    the time of the offense.    
    168 N.J. at 484-85
    .      The admission of
    the violent song lyrics was argued, on appeal, to be error under
    an N.J.R.E. 404(b) analysis.      
    Id. at 482
    .   In affirming the
    trial court’s evidentiary ruling, we agreed that the lyrics
    found in defendant’s notebook were probative of the State’s
    theory of the case.     
    Ibid.
       Specifically, we noted that the
    lyrics were able to shed light on the defendant’s motive and
    intent for an otherwise inscrutable crime, and we evaluated the
    evidence’s prejudicial effect in light of the overwhelming
    evidence of defendant’s guilt.      
    Id. at 485-87
    .
    However, an examination of the factual circumstances
    surrounding our decision in Koskovich reveals marked differences
    from the case here.     In Koskovich, the defendant and his friend
    had called a pizzeria and placed an order for delivery to an
    abandoned home.   
    Id. at 466
    .    When two pizza delivery men
    arrived, the defendant repeatedly fired his gun at their car,
    killing both of them.     
    Id. at 467
    .   There was no obvious motive
    for the shootings, and the State’s theory of the case was that
    defendant merely wanted to “experience the thrill of killing.”
    
    Id. at 470
    .
    In searching the defendant’s bedroom, the police
    discovered, among other things, a notebook containing what
    20
    appeared to be song lyrics about killing.      
    Id. at 472
    .    Other
    items associated with guns and killing also were found in the
    same room.    
    Ibid.
       The lyrics read to the jury were short:
    “‘About killing, people, you can kill by [illegible].        On by
    guns, one night you break in, somebody home.      And you take their
    money and kill by drive [illegible] down the road and shout, and
    shouting.    By the big heads.   The Best.’”   
    Ibid.
     (alterations in
    original).    The other items associated with guns and killing
    found in the bedroom also were introduced into evidence, along
    with rather overwhelming evidence of the defendant’s guilt.           
    Id. at 480
    .
    The defendant was convicted and received a death sentence.4
    On appeal before this Court, the defendant raised a multitude of
    issues, including a challenge under N.J.R.E. 404(b) to the
    admission of the lyrics.    
    Id. at 482
    .   That rule, entitled
    “Other crimes, wrongs or acts,” provides as follows:
    Except as otherwise provided by Rule 608(b),
    evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is
    not admissible to prove the disposition of a
    person in order to show that such person
    acted   in   conformity   therewith.      Such
    evidence may be admitted for other purposes,
    such   as   proof  of   motive,   opportunity,
    intent,    preparation,    plan,    knowledge,
    identity or absence of mistake or accident
    4
    Defendant’s death sentence was set aside by this Court and the
    matter was remanded for a new penalty phase trial. 
    Id.
     at 541-
    42. New Jersey’s death penalty statute has since been repealed.
    L. 2007, c. 204.
    21
    when such matters are relevant to a material
    issue in dispute.
    [N.J.R.E. 404(b).]
    In Koskovich, 
    supra,
     we noted, preliminarily, that “[t]he
    State makes a legitimate argument that the items at issue do not
    represent ‘other wrongs’ as contemplated by N.J.R.E. 404(b), and
    thus no analysis is required under that rule.”    
    168 N.J. at 482
    .
    The trial court in that case had analyzed the evidence based on
    the defendant’s objection that the song lyrics lacked any
    probative value.   
    Id. at 480
    .   Nevertheless, we reviewed the
    evidence based on the asserted Rule 404(b) error raised on
    appeal.   
    Id. at 482
     (explaining our perception of “some basis to
    consider the implication of [Rule] 404(b)”).     The lyrics’
    admissibility was assessed under that framework, applying the
    Cofield factors.   
    Id. at 483-87
    .
    Ultimately, we agreed with the trial court that the song
    lyrics evinced a “sort of obsession with killing people,” 
    id. at 480-81
    , and, as a result, we determined that the trial court did
    not err in admitting the writings on the contested issue of the
    defendant’s intent, 
    id. at 484-85
    .    We also determined that the
    lyrics shed light on the defendant’s motive -- a desire to
    experience the thrill of killing -- in an otherwise
    indecipherable crime.   
    Id. at 481
    .   Importantly, we noted a
    “logical connection” between the writing of the killing-themed
    22
    song lyrics that the defendant kept in his bedroom and the
    specific facts underlying the killing that occurred in
    Koskovich.   
    Id. at 485
    .    Moreover, given the strong and
    overwhelming evidence of the defendant’s guilt, the prejudicial
    impact of the lyrics was deemed not so inflammatory as to
    singlehandedly prejudice the jury against defendant.     
    Id. at 487
    .   Accordingly, we upheld the trial court’s admission of the
    lyrics to prove motive and intent, having determined that the
    lyrics satisfied the stringent test for admission under N.J.R.E.
    404(b).   
    Ibid.
       Even assuming that there was “some slight error”
    in the admission of the disputed lyrics, we found no reversible
    error in Koskovich because there remained “overwhelming evidence
    of [the] defendant’s guilt.”     
    Ibid.
    B.
    Following Koskovich’s lead, the trial court and the
    Appellate Division in this matter utilized N.J.R.E. 404(b)’s
    framework to assess the admissibility of the rap lyrics written
    by defendant.     Although Koskovich did not purport to establish a
    universal requirement that lyrics or similar expressive works by
    a defendant involving themes of criminality must be analyzed
    under N.J.R.E. 404(b), the courts’ decisions to use the N.J.R.E.
    404(b) framework in this matter is consistent with the safeguard
    that the rule provides.
    23
    It has oft been recognized that “[t]he underlying danger of
    admitting other-crime [or bad-act] evidence is that the jury may
    convict the defendant because he is ‘a “bad” person in
    general.’”   Cofield, supra, 
    127 N.J. at 336
     (quoting State v.
    Gibbons, 
    105 N.J. 67
    , 77 (1987)).     For that reason, any evidence
    that is in the nature of prior bad acts, wrongs, or, worse,
    crimes by a defendant is examined cautiously because it “‘has a
    unique tendency’” to prejudice a jury.     State v. Reddish, 
    181 N.J. 553
    , 608 (2004) (quoting State v. Stevens, 
    115 N.J. 289
    ,
    302 (1989)); see also State v. Hernandez, 
    170 N.J. 106
    , 123
    (2001) (“Studies confirm that the introduction of a defendant’s
    prior bad acts ‘can easily tip the balance against the
    defendant.’” (quoting State v. Terrazas, 
    944 P.2d 1194
    , 1198
    (Ariz. 1997))).   Put simply, a defendant must be convicted on
    the basis of his acts in connection with the offense for which
    he is charged.    A defendant may not be convicted simply because
    the jury believes that he is a bad person.     Because N.J.R.E.
    404(b) guards against the wholly unacceptable prospect that a
    jury might become prejudiced against a defendant based on
    earlier reprehensible conduct, the rule “is often described as
    [one] of exclusion.”    State v. Rose, 
    206 N.J. 141
    , 179-80
    (2011).
    In Cofield, 
    supra,
     a four-part test was established “to
    avoid the over-use of extrinsic evidence of other crimes or
    24
    wrongs” pursuant to a Rule 404(b) exception.   
    127 N.J. at 338
    .
    The framework announced in Cofield requires that:
    1. The evidence of the other crime must be
    admissible as relevant to a material issue;
    2. It must be similar in kind and reasonably
    close in time to the offense charged;
    3. The evidence of the other crime must be
    clear and convincing; and
    4. The probative value of the evidence must
    not be outweighed by its apparent prejudice.
    [Ibid.    (quoting   Abraham   P.   Ordover,
    Balancing the Presumptions of Guilt and
    Innocence: Rules 404(b), 608(b), and 609(a),
    
    38 Emory L.J. 135
    , 160 (1989)).]
    Those standards have been explicated through their application.
    In respect of the first Cofield prong, “the evidence of the
    prior bad act, crime, or wrong must be relevant to a material
    issue that is genuinely disputed.”    Covell, 
    supra,
     
    157 N.J. at 564-65
    .   The analysis can include all “evidentiary circumstances
    that ‘tend to shed light’ on a defendant’s motive and intent or
    which ‘tend fairly to explain his actions,’ even though they may
    have occurred before the commission of the offense.”     
    Id. at 565
    (quoting State v. Rodgers, 
    19 N.J. 218
    , 228 (1955)).     However,
    the evidence must relate to a material issue that is in dispute,
    and the State’s need for the evidence is a consideration when
    weighing relevance under prong one.   A court must “‘consider
    whether the matter was projected by the defense as arguable
    25
    before trial, raised by the defense at trial, or was one that
    the defense refused to concede.’”     Rose, 
    supra,
     
    206 N.J. at 160
    (quoting State v. P.S., 
    202 N.J. 232
    , 256 (2010)).
    The second prong, which requires that the other-crime
    evidence be similar in kind and reasonably close in time to the
    alleged crime, is implicated only in circumstances factually
    similar to Cofield.    See, e.g., State v. Gillispie, 
    208 N.J. 59
    ,
    88-89 (2011) (noting that second Cofield prong need not receive
    universal application); State v. Williams, 
    190 N.J. 114
    , 131
    (2007) (finding that second Cofield prong is “limited to cases
    that replicate the circumstances in Cofield”).    Its application
    is not relevant in the instant analysis.     Cf. State v. Barden,
    
    195 N.J. 375
    , 389 (2008) (declining to apply second Cofield
    prong where it “serve[d] no beneficial purpose” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    The third Cofield prong “requires that the judge serve as
    gatekeeper to the admission of other-crime evidence” and ensure
    that proof of the prior bad act is demonstrated by clear and
    convincing evidence.   Hernandez, 
    supra,
     
    170 N.J. at 123
    ; accord
    Gillispie, 
    supra,
     
    208 N.J. at 89
    .
    Finally, the fourth Cofield prong requires that “[t]he
    probative value of the evidence must not be outweighed by its
    apparent prejudice.”   Cofield, 
    supra,
     
    127 N.J. at 338
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted).    As noted in Covell, 
    supra,
     “[s]ome
    26
    types of evidence require a very strong showing of prejudice to
    justify exclusion.   One example is evidence of motive or
    intent.”   
    157 N.J. at 570
    ; cf. State v. Mulero, 
    51 N.J. 224
    ,
    228-29 (1968).   Nevertheless, in weighing the potential
    prejudice of a defendant’s prior bad act, crime, or wrong,
    consideration must be given to whether other, less prejudicial,
    evidence is available to the State.   See Stevens, 
    supra,
     
    115 N.J. at 303
    ; see also Gillispie, 
    supra,
     
    208 N.J. at 90-91
     (“In
    the weighing process, the court should also consider the
    availability of other evidence that can be used to prove the
    same point.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Finally, if the State adequately “demonstrate[s] the
    necessity of the other-crime evidence to prove a genuine fact in
    issue and the court has carefully balanced the probative value
    of the evidence against the possible undue prejudice it may
    create, the court must instruct the jury on the limited use of
    the evidence.”   Cofield, 
    127 N.J. at 340-41
    .
    That framework for a Rule 404(b) analysis guides this
    review of defendant’s challenge to the admissibility of his rap
    lyrics in his criminal trial.
    IV.
    While the direct parties to this appeal -- the State and
    defendant -- acquiesce to analyzing this case under the rubric
    of Rule 404(b), there is a debatable question whether artistic
    27
    expression about crimes or bad acts should be evaluated under
    N.J.R.E. 404(b) at all.    In other words, can the act of writing
    about a crime or bad act be a bad act itself?
    The Attorney General as amicus argues that defendant’s rap
    lyrics are not “crimes, wrongs, or acts” under N.J.R.E. 404(b)
    and therefore should be analyzed solely for relevance under
    N.J.R.E. 401.   Its position enjoys some support.   See, e.g.,
    Joynes v. State, 
    797 A.2d 673
    , 677 (Del. 2002) (concluding that
    authorship of rap lyrics is not “bad act” within meaning of Rule
    404(b) and therefore should be governed by relevance standard).
    To be sure, writing rap lyrics -- even disturbingly graphic
    lyrics, like defendant’s -- is not a crime.    Nor is it a bad act
    or a wrong to engage in the act of writing about unpalatable
    subjects, including inflammatory subjects such as depicting
    events or lifestyles that may be condemned as anti-social, mean-
    spirited, or amoral.   However, the very “‘purpose of Rule 404(b)
    is simply to keep from the jury evidence that the defendant is
    prone to commit crimes or is otherwise a bad person, implying
    that the jury needn’t worry overmuch about the strength of the
    government’s evidence.’”   Rose, supra, 
    206 N.J. at 180
     (quoting
    United States v. Green, 
    617 F.3d 233
    , 249 (3d Cir.) (internal
    quotation marks omitted), cert. denied, __ U.S. __, 
    131 S. Ct. 363
    , 
    187 L. Ed. 2d 334
     (2010)); see also State v. Moore, 
    113 N.J. 239
    , 275 (1988) (“The danger that [N.J.R.E. 404(b)] seek[s]
    28
    to prevent is that a defendant will be prejudiced by evidence of
    other acts such that a jury will convict because he or she is a
    bad person disposed to commit crime.”).
    Rule 404(b) serves as a safeguard against propensity
    evidence that may poison the jury against a defendant.     Violent,
    degrading rap lyrics, of the type authored by defendant, have
    the capacity to accomplish just that.     Not all members of
    society recognize the artistic or expressive value in graphic
    writing about violence and a culture of hate and revenge.      Thus,
    the purpose of N.J.R.E. 404(b) is advanced by its application in
    a setting such as this.5
    Furthermore, our analysis in Koskovich, 
    supra,
     recognized
    the value of using the Rule 404(b) approach even where the
    evidence sought to be admitted is “not overtly criminal in
    nature.”   
    168 N.J. at 483
    .   Specifically, we noted that the
    lyrical evidence admitted in Koskovich “was somewhat analogous
    and similar in nature to the evidence admitted in State v.
    5
    Of course, rap lyric evidence that provides direct proof
    against a defendant –- such as an admission or details that are
    not generally known and dovetail with the facts of the case -–
    should be analyzed for relevance under N.J.R.E. 401 and
    evaluated under N.J.R.E. 403’s standard for prejudice, and not
    the standard for prejudice under a Cofield analysis. Cf. Rose,
    
    206 N.J. at 180
     (recognizing intrinsic nature of evidence that
    “directly proves” charged offense as excluded from Rule 404(b)’s
    analytic framework). A jury need not be shielded from a
    defendant’s confession simply because it is conveyed in a rap or
    other artistic setting.
    29
    Covell . . . and State v. Crumb.”    Id. at 485.   In State v.
    Crumb, the Appellate Division acknowledged that lawful,
    constitutionally protected acts “nonetheless may be interpreted
    by a jury to constitute other wrong acts.”    
    307 N.J. Super. 204
    ,
    231 (App. Div. 1997), certif. denied, 
    153 N.J. 215
     (1998).       And
    in Covell, 
    supra,
     we explained that “[a]lthough being sexually
    attracted to young girls in and of itself is not a crime, a jury
    may interpret [a] defendant’s expression of those feelings to be
    a wrong or bad act.”   
    157 N.J. at 568
    .   Those citations
    demonstrate our previous recognition that certain expressive
    actions, which are not overtly criminal but can be perceived as
    wrong or bad, can persuade a jury of a defendant’s guilt,
    regardless of the evidence proffered by the State.     Cf.
    Koskovich, 
    168 N.J. at 484
    .
    Finally, this appeal comes before us on the basis of a Rule
    404(b) objection by defendant to the use of his rap lyrics
    against him.   The trial court and Appellate Division used a Rule
    404(b) framework in weighing the prejudicial effect of the
    disputed evidence against its probative value.     That approach
    was consistent with prior law and the underlying purpose of Rule
    404(b).   Furthermore, there was no argument by the State that
    the rap lyrics constituted direct evidence of the offense
    involved in this matter.   The lyrics were advanced for the
    purposes of proving motive and intent under Rule 404(b).
    30
    Accordingly, we will engage in a like analysis as our starting
    point.   In doing so, we note that other jurisdictions also have
    approached the admissibility of a defendant’s prejudicial
    lyrical compositions using a Rule 404(b) framework.     See, e.g.,
    State v. Hannah, 
    23 A.3d 192
    , 196-201 (Md. 2011); State v.
    Cheeseboro, 
    552 S.E.2d 300
    , 312-13 (S.C. 2001).
    V.
    A.
    To assess the admissibility of defendant’s rap lyrics under
    N.J.R.E. 404(b), we turn to each of the Cofield prongs.6
    The first Cofield prong requires that the other crime,
    wrong, or bad-act evidence pertain to a material issue in
    dispute.    Covell, 
    supra,
     
    157 N.J. at 564-65
    .   At trial, the
    State suggested that defendant’s lyrics provided valuable
    insight into defendant’s alleged motive and intent to kill
    Peterson.   We agree with the State that, in this case,
    defendant’s motive was genuinely in dispute; however, the State
    had evidence other than defendant’s rap lyrics that it advanced
    on that score.   Indeed, Peterson’s testimony explicitly laid out
    for the jury the role that defendant played as the “muscle” in a
    6
    The second prong, which requires that the other-crime evidence
    be similar in kind and reasonably close in time to the alleged
    crime, is implicated in circumstances factually similar to
    Cofield. That prong is not implicated in these circumstances.
    Therefore, we do not address it in our analysis.
    31
    three-person drug operation, in which Peterson had begun to skim
    money from Rothwell.   Peterson also testified that he had argued
    with Rothwell and had refused to return the nine-millimeter
    weapon that he had received as a member of Rothwell’s drug team.
    In fact, we note that, in the State’s opening, the prosecution
    asserted that defendant’s “motive was to enforce the street laws
    against [Peterson], and his intent was to kill him.”
    The effect of defendant’s rap lyrics was simply to bolster
    the State’s motive theory, which was already supported by
    Peterson’s testimony that defendant was the enforcer for
    Rothwell, who was being cheated by Peterson.   As the Appellate
    Division succinctly stated, “[t]o the extent the lyrics
    depicting defendant as an enforcer and hit-man had any relevance
    beyond demonstrating his criminal propensity and depravity, it
    was to add weight to Peterson’s testimony that defendant played
    that role for Rothwell.”   This Court has repeatedly discouraged
    the use of other-crime evidence merely to bolster the
    credibility of a testifying witness.   See, e.g., State v. Darby,
    174 N.J. at 520-21 (2002) (stating Cofield standard is rendered
    meaningless if “other-crime evidence is admissible merely to
    support the credibility of a witness”); P.S., supra, 
    202 N.J. at 256
     (noting “other-crimes evidence should not be admitted solely
    to bolster the credibility of a witness against a defendant”).
    32
    As for intent, defendant did not advance any evidence
    calling into question that Peterson’s shooter had intended to
    kill him.    The sheer number of times and places that Peterson
    was struck with bullets -- seven shots in total to his torso,
    head, and neck -- certainly provided the State with strong
    evidence of an intent to kill.    Intent was therefore not in
    dispute.    Defendant merely asserted that he was not the shooter,
    and the State did not advance the rap lyrics evidence for the
    purpose of identity.    Thus, while the identity of the shooter
    was in issue, the shooter’s intent was not.
    Furthermore, defendant’s rap lyrics only bear on the
    material and disputed issue of motive if one believes that those
    lyrics, many of which were written long before the time of
    Peterson’s shooting, specifically relate to defendant’s motive
    on the evening Peterson was shot and almost killed.     The third
    Cofield prong requires that proof of the prior-crime evidence be
    demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence.    See Hernandez,
    
    supra,
     
    170 N.J. at 123
    .    Yet, there was no evidence that the
    crimes and bad acts about which defendant wrote in rap form were
    crimes or bad acts that he in fact had committed.     Indeed, there
    is an utter absence of clear and convincing evidence, as
    required under prong three of Cofield, that defendant engaged
    previously in any of the events portrayed in his rap lyrics.
    33
    The lyrics can only be regarded as fictional accounts.    The
    State has produced no evidence otherwise.
    Most importantly, the fourth Cofield prong requires that
    the probative value of the lyrics not be outweighed by their
    prejudicial effect.   We before quoted at length several verses
    of defendant’s rap lyrics, chosen because they exemplified the
    lyrics’ glorification of violence and death, and defendant’s
    apparent disregard for human suffering.     More pointedly, the
    Appellate Division appropriately singled out a portion that
    particularly might have prejudiced the jury against defendant
    because of its apparent similarity to the type of shooting
    inflicted on Peterson:
    To illustrate the risk of extreme prejudice,
    we refer to a portion of [a] lyric . . .
    “Got Beef, I can spit from a distance for
    instance; a [person] wouldn’t listen so I
    hit him with the Smithern; hauled off 15
    rounds, seven missed him; Two to the mask
    and six to the ribs, lifted and flipped
    him.”    This lyric describes a shooting
    resembling Peterson’s in that it involved
    multiple gun shots delivered to the head,
    “the mask,” and chest, “the ribs,” and the
    shooting was motivated by the victim’s
    failure to listen. The jurors were left to
    speculate that defendant had done such
    things even though there was no evidence to
    suggest that his writing was anything other
    than fiction.
    In this case, defendant’s graphically violent rap lyrics
    could be fairly viewed as demonstrative of a propensity toward
    committing, or at the very least glorifying, violence and death.
    34
    That prejudicial effect overwhelms any probative value that
    these lyrics may have.   In fact, we detect little to no
    probative value to the lyrics whatsoever.   The difficulty in
    identifying probative value in fictional or other forms of
    artistic self-expressive endeavors is that one cannot presume
    that, simply because an author has chosen to write about certain
    topics, he or she has acted in accordance with those views.      One
    would not presume that Bob Marley, who wrote the well-known song
    “I Shot the Sheriff,” actually shot a sheriff, or that Edgar
    Allan Poe buried a man beneath his floorboards, as depicted in
    his short story “The Tell-Tale Heart,” simply because of their
    respective artistic endeavors on those subjects.   Defendant’s
    lyrics should receive no different treatment.   In sum, we reject
    the proposition that probative evidence about a charged offense
    can be found in an individual’s artistic endeavors absent a
    strong nexus between specific details of the artistic
    composition and the circumstances of the offense for which the
    evidence is being adduced.
    B.
    Our approach is in accord with other jurisdictions that
    have considered similar questions.   For example, in Greene v.
    Commonwealth, 
    197 S.W.3d 76
    , 86-87 (Ky. 2006), cert. denied, 
    549 U.S. 1184
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 1157
    , 
    166 L. Ed. 2d 1001
     (2007), the
    Supreme Court of Kentucky admitted into evidence the defendant’s
    35
    homemade video, in which he rapped for nearly seven minutes
    about murdering his wife.    The defendant claimed that the
    evidence should have been excluded under Kentucky’s analogue to
    Rule 404(b), but the Supreme Court of Kentucky disagreed.            Id.
    at 87.    The court held that the defendant’s video was admissible
    because the defendant was rapping about the very crime for which
    he was being charged.     Ibid.   Accordingly, the Kentucky Supreme
    Court held that Kentucky’s Rule 404(b)’s prohibition against
    evidence of other crimes was not implicated.         Ibid.
    Similarly, in Bryant v. State, 
    802 N.E.2d 486
    , 498 (Ind.
    Ct. App.), transfer denied, 
    822 N.E.2d 968
     (Ind. 2004), the
    State of Indiana sought to introduce a defendant’s rap lyrics as
    proof of intent in his murder trial.        The defendant was charged
    with the murder of his stepmother, who was found in the trunk of
    the defendant’s car.     Id. at 492.      The lyrics penned by the
    defendant -- “[c]uz the 5-0 won’t even know who you are when
    they pull yo ugly ass out the trunk of my car” -- were admitted
    as proof of motive because of their substantial similarity with
    the alleged crime.     Id. at 498.     The court noted that the lyrics
    were particularly relevant because the defendant claimed that
    someone else had done the killing.         Id. at 499.
    Unlike here, the lyrics admitted in Greene and Bryant
    exhibited an unmistakable factual connection to the charged
    crimes.   Had defendant in this case rapped for seven minutes
    36
    about murdering a man named “Peterson,” or described in his rap
    lyrics the exact manner in which Peterson was to be killed, his
    writings would obviously hold more probative value.   But absent
    such a strong nexus to defendant’s charged crime, his fictional
    expressive writings are not properly evidential.
    Our sister jurisdictions rarely have admitted a defendant’s
    rap lyric compositions into evidence without a demonstration of
    a strong nexus between the subject matter of the lyrics and the
    underlying crime.   See, e.g., Hannah, supra, 23 A.3d at 196-201
    (excluding defendant’s rap lyrics); Cheeseboro, supra, 552
    S.E.2d at 312-13 (same); State v. Hanson, 
    731 P.2d 1140
    , 1144-45
    (Wash. Ct. App.) (reversing conviction where prosecution
    improperly questioned defendant about violent but fictional
    writings), review denied, 
    108 Wash. 2d 1003
     (1987).
    In Hannah, supra, the Maryland Court of Appeals concluded
    that rap lyrics, authored by the defendant and offered into
    evidence by the State, “served no purpose other than the purpose
    of showing the [defendant] has a propensity for violence.”    23
    A.3d at 202.   The Maryland court distinguished the defendant’s
    fictional rap lyrics from the type of “artistic” material
    involved in cases like Bryant and Greene, stating that, unlike
    in those cases, “there is no evidence that [the defendant’s]
    lyrics are autobiographical statements of historical fact.”    Id.
    at 197.   Accordingly, the court concluded that the prejudicial
    37
    impact to the defendant from the introduction of his rap
    writings was overwhelming; the conviction was therefore reversed
    and the matter was remanded for a new trial.          Id. at 202.
    In Cheeseboro, supra, the Supreme Court of South Carolina
    found that the minimal probative value of the defendant’s lyrics
    was outweighed by their unfair prejudicial impact because the
    jury could perceive them as evidence of the defendant’s violent
    character.    552 S.E.2d at 313.    The court further noted that
    “these lyrics contain only general references glorifying
    violence,” rather than evidence of specific criminal acts.
    Ibid.   As a result, the court held that the lyrics should have
    been excluded.   Ibid.
    In Hanson, supra, a Washington appellate court rejected
    “the proposition that an author’s character can be determined by
    the type of book he writes.”       Id. at 1145.    The court reversed
    the defendant’s conviction based on the prosecution’s improper
    questioning of the defendant about his violent, fictional
    writings.    Id. at 1144-45.   However, in a footnote, the court
    noted that “[t]here may be instances when a defendant’s
    fictional writings would be admissible. . . .          In this case, the
    State never indicated how the defendant’s writings were
    logically relevant under [Rule] 404(b).”          Id. at 1144 n.7.
    In sum, it is clear that other jurisdictions rarely admit
    artistic works against a criminal defendant where those works
    38
    are insufficiently tethered to the charged crime.     The upshot to
    this approach is that, without a strong connection to the
    attempted murder offense with which defendant was charged, the
    admission of defendant’s rap lyrics risked unduly prejudicing
    the jury without much, if any, probative value.
    C.
    N.J.R.E. 404(b) analyses are fact-sensitive.      Their
    outcomes depend on the evidence proffered and the facts and
    nature of the case against the defendant.     The recitation of
    cases from other jurisdictions reflects the difficulty of
    pronouncing a hard and fast rule to govern the admission of rap
    lyrics.     That said, extreme caution must be exercised when
    expressive work is involved, particularly when such expression
    involves social commentary, exaggeration, and fictional
    accounts.
    In this instance, we are persuaded that the Appellate
    Division correctly reversed defendant’s conviction.
    We hold that the violent, profane, and disturbing rap lyrics
    that defendant wrote constituted highly prejudicial evidence
    against him that bore little or no probative value on any motive
    or intent behind the attempted murder offense with which he was
    charged.    Less prejudicial evidence was available to the State
    on both motive and intent.     The admission of defendant’s rap
    writings bore a high likelihood of poisoning the jury against
    39
    defendant, notwithstanding the trial court’s limiting
    instruction.
    The use of the inflammatory contents of a person’s form of
    artistic self-expression as proof of the writer’s character,
    motive, or intent must be approached with caution.     Self-
    expressive fictional, poetic, lyrical, and like writings about
    bad acts, wrongful acts, or crimes generally should not be
    deemed evidential unless the writing bears probative value to
    the underlying offense for which a person is charged and the
    probative value of that evidence outweighs its prejudicial
    impact.   In the weighing process, the trial court should
    consider the existence of other evidence that can be used to
    make the same point.     If admitted, courts are cautioned to
    redact such evidence with care.     In conclusion, we hold that rap
    lyrics, or like fictional material, may not be used as evidence
    of motive and intent except when such material has a direct
    connection to the specifics of the offense for which it is
    offered in evidence and the evidence’s probative value is not
    outweighed by its apparent prejudice.
    VI.
    Because our holding based on the introduction of
    defendant’s rap lyrics will require his retrial, we add only
    this in respect of defendant’s claim of prosecutorial excess in
    summation.     On retrial, the State is cautioned that a
    40
    prosecutor’s summation should not employ language designed to
    stoke a jury’s fear for the future of its community or make an
    inflammatory argument akin to a “call to arms.”   State v.
    Marshall, 
    123 N.J. 1
    , 161 (1991) (disapproving inflammatory and
    highly emotional appeals in State closing argument), cert.
    denied, 
    507 U.S. 929
    , 
    113 S. Ct. 1306
    , 
    122 L. Ed. 2d 694
     (1993);
    State v. Knight, 
    63 N.J. 187
    , 193 (1973) (disapproving summation
    that urges jury to respond to “serious” societal unrest); State
    v. Goode, 
    278 N.J. Super. 85
    , 89-90 (App. Div. 1994) (addressing
    improper “call to arms” that urged jurors to “make a difference
    in [their] community”).
    VII.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON, and
    FERNANDEZ-VINA; and JUDGE RODRÍGUEZ (temporarily assigned) join
    in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion. JUDGE CUFF (temporarily
    assigned) did not participate.
    41
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.   A-57/58                            SEPTEMBER TERM 2012
    ON APPEAL FROM         Appellate Division, Superior Court
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff -Appellant
    and Cross-Respondent,
    v.
    VONTE L. SKINNER,
    Defendant-Respondent
    and Cross-Appellant.
    DECIDED         August 4, 2014
    Chief Justice Rabner                               PRESIDING
    OPINION BY       Justice LaVecchia
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINION BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    CHECKLIST                          AFFIRM
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                    X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                       X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                           X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                       X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                  X
    JUDGE RODRÍGUEZ (t/a)                   X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)              ----------------------       ----------------------
    6
    1