STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHARLES L. PURYEAR (12-07-0296, SUSSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2823-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    CHARLES L. PURYEAR, a/k/a
    CHARLES POURYEAR,
    CHARLES LAMONT PURYEAR,
    CHARLES PURYER and LAMAR
    BOYD,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _____________________________
    Submitted March 1, 2021 – Decided April 20, 2021
    Before Judges Sabatino and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Sussex County, Indictment No. 12-07-0296.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Abby P. Schwartz, Designated Counsel, on
    the brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Sarah C. Hunt, Deputy Attorney General,
    of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant appeals from the December 11, 2019 Law Division order
    denying his petition for post-conviction relief (PCR) without an evidentiary
    hearing. We affirm.
    Defendant and codefendant Marcus Brown were indicted and charged
    with numerous crimes in Essex and Sussex Counties.           The Essex County
    indictment included conspiracy, murder, 1 armed robbery, and weapons-related
    offenses. The Sussex County indictment, which is the subject of this appeal,
    included first-degree robbery, second-degree burglary, third-degree theft, third-
    and fourth-degree aggravated assault, and weapons-related offenses. The Essex
    County charges stemmed from a fatal shooting that occurred on November 2 5,
    2011, in Newark, when defendant fired nine shots at a group of people during
    the commission of a robbery, hitting and killing one person. The Sussex County
    charges stemmed from an armed robbery that occurred several days later, on
    December 4, 2011, in a motel in Wantage, after which both defendants were
    apprehended near the scene.
    1
    Defendant was charged with purposeful and knowing murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
    3(a)(1)(2), as well as felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3), while codefendant
    Brown was charged with felony murder only.
    A-2823-19
    2
    The following day, December 5, 2011, each defendant was separately
    questioned twice by law enforcement officers from different agencies.
    Defendants were interviewed by members of the New Jersey State Police about
    the Wantage robbery and by Essex County detectives about the Newark
    shooting. At the beginning of each interview, defendants were advised of their
    Miranda2 rights and signed Miranda waiver forms. All four interviews were
    recorded. Each defendant made incriminating statements during each interview
    and later moved to suppress the statements in the Essex County case. Because
    the State moved to use portions of the statements that did not relate to the Essex
    County charges under N.J.R.E. 404(b), the admissibility of all four statements
    was adjudicated in a joint Miranda hearing in Essex County.
    Following the hearing, on December 17, 2014, an Essex County judge
    suppressed defendant's statement concerning the Wantage robbery, but admitted
    the statement concerning the Newark shooting. As to codefendant Brown's
    statements, the judge suppressed the statement concerning the Newark shooting ,
    but admitted the statement concerning the Wantage robbery.             The judge
    determined that each defendant's Miranda rights had been violated in connection
    with the excluded statements, but not the admitted statements. By leave granted,
    2
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    A-2823-19
    3
    we reviewed the judge's Miranda rulings and, in a published opinion, affirmed
    the decisions. State v. Puryear, 
    441 N.J. Super. 280
     (App. Div. 2015).
    After we issued our decision, on July 14, 2015, the judge dismissed the
    Essex County indictment as to codefendant Brown on the State's motion. Brown
    had previously pled guilty to charges contained in the Sussex County indictment,
    specifically robbery and certain persons not to have weapons, and was sentenced
    in accordance with the plea agreement to an aggregate term of twelve years'
    imprisonment, subject to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-
    7.2.3
    Unlike codefendant Brown, the State continued to prosecute defendant on
    both indictments notwithstanding the suppression of his statement in the
    Wantage robbery. As a result, on March 8, 2016, defendant entered a negotiated
    guilty plea to charges contained in the Essex County indictment, specifically,
    aggravated manslaughter as a lesser included offense of murder, two counts of
    first-degree robbery, and second-degree unlawful possession of a handgun. On
    May 2, 2016, defendant was sentenced in accordance with the plea agreement to
    an aggregate term of twenty-five years' imprisonment, subject to NERA.
    3
    We affirmed the denial of Brown's PCR petition in an unpublished decision.
    See State v. Brown, No. 4134-16 (App. Div. June 25, 2018).
    A-2823-19
    4
    Thereafter, on April 13, 2017, defendant entered a negotiated guilty plea
    to first-degree robbery and second-degree certain persons not to have weapons
    as charged in the Sussex County indictment.           Under the terms of the plea
    agreement, on the first-degree charge, the State would move for an extended
    term pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.1(b)(2), mandating an "[e]xtended [t]erm for
    [r]epeat   [v]iolent   [o]ffenders"   of   "between    [twenty]   years   and      life
    imprisonment," N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7, on a first degree crime.          To support the
    motion, the State relied on defendant's 2006 conviction for a fourth-degree
    regulatory firearms offense, and 2006 conviction for third-degree aggravated
    assault, as well as the 2016 convictions arising from the Essex County
    indictment. The State agreed that regardless of the outcome of the motion, it
    would not seek an aggregate sentence in excess of thirty years' imprisonme nt to
    run concurrent, but not coterminous, with defendant's Essex County sentence.
    Subsequently, the judge granted the State's extended term motion and, on June
    16, 2017, sentenced defendant to thirty years' imprisonment, subject to NERA. 4
    4
    Pursuant to the plea agreement, because the State's extended term motion was
    granted, at sentencing, the State moved to dismiss the certain persons charge
    and recommended the imposition of a thirty-year sentence on the robbery
    charge.
    A-2823-19
    5
    On February 8, 2018, we affirmed defendant's thirty-year sentence on a
    Sentence Only Argument (SOA) calendar, finding "that the sentence [was] not
    manifestly excessive or unduly punitive and [did] not constitute an abuse of
    discretion." See R. 2:9-11. Thereafter, defendant filed a timely pro se petition
    for PCR, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC). In his supporting
    certification, defendant asserted, among other things, 5 that his attorney was
    ineffective by "fail[ing] to properly advise [him] concerning the plea and the
    ensuing exposure to an extended term of incarceration." Defendant also averred
    that "[t]he [S]tate used an illegal sentence to obtain the plea" and that his
    "[thirty-year] sentence . . . [was] disproportionate to [his] co-defendant['s
    twelve-year] sentence . . . and should be brought in line with . . . [that] sentence."
    In his counseled brief, defendant similarly argued his plea counsel "was
    ineffective for . . . fail[ing] to advise [him] as to the ramifications of the [Essex
    County] plea" and "the effect that would have on [his Sussex County] sentence,"
    and failing to advise him concerning his "ensuing exposure to an extended term."
    He reiterated that the State "used an illegal sentence to obtain his guilty plea,"
    5
    The other claims raised by defendant in his petition have been abandoned on
    appeal. See Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP v. N.J. Dep't of Law & Pub. Safety,
    
    421 N.J. Super. 489
    , 496 n.5 (App. Div. 2011) (explaining that claims not
    addressed in the merits brief are "consider[ed] . . . abandoned").
    A-2823-19
    6
    and that his sentence was disproportionate to his codefendant's. He also argued
    his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to pursue "all of the appropriate
    issues which should have been raised" on direct appeal.
    Following oral argument, the PCR judge entered an order on December
    11, 2019, denying defendant's petition. In an oral decision, the judge reviewed
    the factual background and procedural history of the case, applied the governing
    legal principles, and concluded defendant failed to establish a prima facie case
    of IAC. Specifically, the judge found defendant failed to show by a
    preponderance of the credible evidence that counsel's performance fell below
    the objective standard of reasonableness set forth in Strickland v. Washington,
    
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984), and adopted by our Supreme Court in State v. Fritz,
    
    105 N.J. 42
    , 49-53 (1987), and that the outcome would have been different
    without the purported deficient performance as required under the second prong
    of the Strickland/Fritz test. See State v. DiFrisco, 
    137 N.J. 434
    , 456-57 (1994)
    (applying the Strickland test "to challenges of guilty pleas based on [IAC]"
    (citing Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 58 (1985))); see also State v. Gaitan, 
    209 N.J. 339
    , 350 (2012) ("With respect to both prongs of the Strickland test, a
    defendant asserting [IAC] on PCR bears the burden of proving his or her right
    to relief by a preponderance of the evidence.").
    A-2823-19
    7
    Based on his review of the April 13, 2017 plea colloquy, the judge found
    that defendant's assertion that he was not properly advised of the ramifications
    of his guilty plea, including his exposure to an extended term, was belied by the
    record. Further, "there [were] no factual disputes" because defendant did not
    provide the court with "an affidavit or a certification or anything else to dispute
    what th[e] plea transcript reveal[ed]." Further, the judge determined "[t]here
    was nothing . . . that was illegal about the sentence . . . imposed." 6 Additionally,
    in rejecting the proportionality claim, the judge explained that defendant's
    conviction "in Essex [County] for aggravated manslaughter . . . was the
    distinguishing feature for justification of the [thirty]-year sentence." The judge
    pointed out that defendant's proportionality argument was unfounded because
    codefendant Brown's "charges in Essex [County] were dismissed," and thus
    "there was no conviction for a homicide on Brown's record" as was the case for
    defendant. Moreover, according to the judge, an evidentiary hearing was not
    warranted.
    On appeal, defendant raises the following               arguments for our
    consideration:
    POINT I
    6
    Indeed, PCR counsel conceded "there [was] no question that it was a legal
    sentence."
    A-2823-19
    8
    BY FAILING TO CONSOLIDATE THE CASES IN
    BOTH SUSSEX AND ESSEX COUNTIES AND IN
    FAILING TO PLEA BARGAIN IN ONE COUNTY,
    COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT WAS INEFFECTIVE
    IN THAT DEFENDANT RECEIVED A SENTENCE
    OF [TWENTY-FIVE] YEARS IN PRISON, SUBJECT
    TO [NERA] WITH A CONCURRENT EXTENDED
    TERM OF [THIRTY] YEARS IN PRISON ALSO
    SUBJECT TO [NERA], WHILE HIS CO-
    DEFENDANT RECEIVED [TWELVE] YEARS IN
    PRISON SUBJECT TO [NERA], IN VIOLATION OF
    HIS RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL AND DUE PROCESS.
    ....
    [A.] Counsel Was Ineffective In Failing To
    Move To Consolidate The Indictments.
    [B.] Counsel Was Ineffective As He
    Permitted Defendant To Enter A Guilty
    Plea And Receive A Prison Sentence That
    Was Vastly Disproportionate To That Of
    His Co-Defendant's.
    [C.] The Combination Of Lack Of
    Consolidation And The Disparity Of The
    Sentences Require A Remand.
    In order to establish the Strickland/Fritz test to set aside a guilty plea based
    on IAC, "a defendant must show that (i) counsel's assistance was not 'within the
    range of competence demanded of attorneys in criminal cases'; and (ii) 'that there
    is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's errors, [the defendant] would
    not have pled guilty and would have insisted on going to trial.'" State v. Nuñez-
    A-2823-19
    9
    Valdéz, 
    200 N.J. 129
    , 139 (2009) (alteration in original) (quoting DiFrisco, 
    137 N.J. at 457
    ). As to the prejudice prong, "a [defendant] must convince the court
    that a decision to reject the plea bargain" and "insist on going to trial" would
    have been "rational under the circumstances." State v. Maldon, 
    422 N.J. Super. 475
    , 486 (App. Div. 2011) (quoting Padilla v. Kentucky, 
    559 U.S. 356
    , 372
    (2010)). That determination should be "based on evidence, not speculation."
    
    Ibid.
    The mere raising of a PCR claim does not entitle the defendant to an
    evidentiary hearing. State v. Cummings, 
    321 N.J. Super. 154
    , 170 (App. Div.
    1999). Rather, "view[ing] the facts in the light most favorable to a defendant,"
    State v. Preciose, 
    129 N.J. 451
    , 463 (1992), PCR judges should grant evidentiary
    hearings in their discretion only if the defendant has presented a prima facie
    claim of IAC, material issues of disputed fact lie outside the record, and
    resolution of those issues necessitates a hearing. R. 3:22-10(b); State v. Porter,
    
    216 N.J. 343
    , 355 (2013); State v. Marshall, 
    148 N.J. 89
    , 158 (1997).
    Here, we are satisfied from our review of the record that defendant failed
    to make a prima facie showing of IAC within the Strickland/Fritz test to warrant
    PCR relief or an evidentiary hearing. See State v. Brewster, 
    429 N.J. Super. 387
    , 401 (App. Div. 2013) ("[W]e review under the abuse of discretion standard
    A-2823-19
    10
    the PCR court's determination to proceed without an evidentiary hearing.");
    State v. Reevey, 
    417 N.J. Super. 134
    , 146-47 (App. Div. 2010) ("[I]t is within
    our authority to conduct a de novo review of both the factual findings and legal
    conclusions of the PCR court" where, as here, no evidentiary hearing was
    conducted. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Defendant argues plea counsel was ineffective for failing to move to
    consolidate the Sussex and Essex County cases and for permitting him to plead
    guilty and receive a "sentence . . . disproportionate to that of his co-defendant."
    The State correctly points out that defendant raises the failure to consolidate
    claim for the first time on appeal.     "Generally, an appellate court will not
    consider issues, even constitutional ones, which were not raised below." State
    v. Galicia, 
    210 N.J. 364
    , 383 (2012). However, we are hard pressed to disregard
    defendant's failure to consolidate claim given our conclusion in State v.
    Rountree, 
    388 N.J. Super. 190
    , 212 (App. Div. 2006), "that when a defendant
    has indictments pending in more than one vicinage, defense counsel is obligated
    A-2823-19
    11
    to consider the factors set forth in Rule 3:25A-1,[7] and to move for consolidation
    at an early stage where appropriate."
    In Rountree, defendant shot a man in Essex County during an altercation,
    "leaving him a paraplegic" and, "[t]wo weeks later," robbed a woman at
    gunpoint in Camden County. 
    Id. at 196
    . We noted that despite "the distance
    between the crime locations and the difference in the crimes charged," "[t]he
    crimes . . . occurred only two weeks apart," "[d]efendant . . . had no prior record
    of indictable offenses," and "the result of non-consolidation . . . had potentially
    . . . drastic consequences . . . ." 
    Id. at 211
    . Thus, "[w]e agree[d] with defendant
    that his defense counsel in each county had an obligation to file the contemplated
    7
    Under the rule, a defendant "may move . . . for consolidation for purposes of
    entering a plea or for sentencing." R. 3:25A-1. In deciding the consolidation
    motion,
    the judge shall consider: (1) the nature, number, and
    comparative gravity of crimes committed in each of the
    respective counties; (2) the similarity or connection of
    the crimes committed including the time span within
    which the crimes were committed; (3) the county in
    which the last crime was committed; (4) the county in
    which the most serious crime was committed; (5) the
    defendant's sentencing status; (6) the rights of the
    victims and the impact on any victim's opportunity to
    be heard; and (7) any other relevant factor.
    [Ibid.]
    A-2823-19
    12
    motion for consolidation for purposes of attempting to negotiate a single plea
    agreement." 
    Id. at 212-13
    . See also State v. Pillot, 
    115 N.J. 558
    , 569 (1989)
    (explaining that if Rule 3:25A-1's predecessor had been invoked, 8 consolidation
    would have been "required" where the defendant, a first-time offender, faced
    sentencing in two neighboring counties as a result of a nine-week crime spree
    involving six armed robberies, three in each county).
    However, in Rountree, we determined that "counsels' failure to file such
    a motion establishes only the first prong of the [Strickland/Fritz] standard." 
    388 N.J. Super. at 213
    . Assuming that the consolidation motion "would have been
    granted in both counties," we held that the "[d]efendant did not present a prima
    facie case to satisfy the second Strickland prong: that consolidation likely would
    have made a difference." 
    Id. at 213
    . We made that determination because the
    "defendant rejected a plea offer that was as good as he reasonably could have
    expected if the cases had been consolidated for plea negotiations or sentencing"
    and "[t]here [was] no reason to conclude that he would have accepted the same
    offer if it had been made after an order of consolidation." 
    Ibid.
    8
    "At the time, Rule 3:25A-1 allowed the prosecutor but not the defendant to
    move for consolidation." Rountree, 
    388 N.J. Super. at 210
    .
    A-2823-19
    13
    Likewise, here, even if we conclude that counsel should have moved for
    consolidation and that consolidation would have been granted, defendant failed
    to demonstrate that consolidation "likely would have made a difference"
    because, like Rountree, the plea offer "was as good as he reasonably could have
    expected if the cases had been consolidated for plea negotiations or sentencing."
    
    Ibid.
     In support, we point out that the Sussex County prosecutor conferred a
    substantial benefit on defendant by recommending that the term run concurrent,
    though not coterminous, to the Essex County sentence. Moreover, even if a
    consolidation motion had been granted, defendant would still have been eligible
    for an extended term. See State v. Parks, 
    192 N.J. 483
    , 487 (2007) (noting that
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.1 "applies to a defendant convicted of an enumerated crime
    who has been convicted of two or more of those crimes that were committed on
    prior and separate occasions, regardless of the dates of the convictions" (quoting
    Assemb. Judiciary Comm. Statement to S.B. 1733 (2003))).
    Additionally, unlike Pillot, where each sentencing judge evaluated the
    defendant's similar record differently, here, the sentencing judge in each case
    found the same aggravating factors, factors three, six, and nine, and no
    mitigating factors. 
    115 N.J. at 562-63
    . See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3) ("[t]he risk
    that the defendant will commit another offense"); N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(6) ("[t]he
    A-2823-19
    14
    extent of the defendant’s prior criminal record and the seriousness of the
    offenses of which the defendant has been convicted"); and N.J.S.A. 2C:44-
    1(a)(9) ("[t]he need for deterring the defendant and others from violating the
    law"). When defendant was sentenced in the Sussex County case, the parties as
    well as the judge were keenly aware of the sentence defendant was serving in
    Essex County. Indeed, the judge acknowledged that the fact that the sentences
    were concurrent but not coterminous "serv[ed] the interest of justice" because
    the Wantage crimes "were separate crimes, on separate dates, involving separate
    formulations of planning and intent and execution," and separate victims. Thus,
    we are satisfied defendant failed to establish a prima facie case of IAC on his
    failure to consolidate claim.
    Turning to the sentencing disparity claim, to be sure, "[e]nsuring a
    reasonable degree of uniformity in sentencing is an essential feature of our
    system of justice." State v. Case, 
    220 N.J. 49
    , 63 (2014). We recognize that our
    Supreme Court has "consistently stressed uniformity as one of the major
    sentencing goals in the administration of criminal justice." State v. Roach, 
    146 N.J. 208
    , 231 (1996).     Indeed, "[o]ne of the Code's paramount goals is to
    eliminate arbitrary and idiosyncratic sentencing so that similarly situated
    defendants receive comparable sentences." Case, 220 N.J. at 63.
    A-2823-19
    15
    Thus, "[d]isparity may invalidate an otherwise sound and lawful
    sentence." Roach, 
    146 N.J. at 232
    . See State v. Hicks, 
    54 N.J. 390
    , 391-92
    (1969) (reducing defendant's sentence to that imposed on co-defendant whose
    participation in the homicide was greater than defendant's). However, not all
    disparate sentences are unfair or unjust, and "a sentence of one defendant not
    otherwise excessive is not erroneous merely because a co-defendant's sentence
    is lighter." 
    Id. at 391
    . "The question therefore is whether the disparity is
    justifiable or unjustifiable." Roach, 
    146 N.J. at 233
    .
    The Roach Court "recognize[d] that some disparity in sentencing is
    inevitable in the administration of criminal justice." 
    Id. at 234
    . However, "to
    avoid or reduce" unjustifiable disparity, the Court imposed an obligation on
    sentencing courts to "exercise a broader discretion to obviate excessive
    disparity." 
    Id. at 233
    . To that end,
    [t]he trial court must determine whether the co-
    defendant is identical or substantially similar to the
    defendant regarding all relevant sentencing criteria.
    The court should then inquire into the basis of the
    sentences imposed on the other defendant. It should
    further consider the length, terms, and conditions of the
    sentence imposed on the co-defendant. If the co-
    defendant is sufficiently similar, the court must give the
    sentence imposed on the co-defendant substantive
    weight when sentencing the defendant in order to avoid
    excessive disparity. Sentencing based on such added
    considerations will accommodate the basic discretion
    A-2823-19
    16
    of a sentencing court to impose a just sentence on the
    individual defendant in accordance with the sentencing
    guidelines while fulfilling the court's responsibility to
    achieve uniform sentencing when that is possible.
    [Id. at 233-34.]
    Based on our review of the record, we agree with the PCR judge that the
    sentencing disparity between defendant and codefendant Brown was justifiable.
    Simply put, while both defendants stood convicted of the same crimes in Sussex
    County, defendant and codefendant Brown were not similarly situated
    defendants. Defendant had an extensive criminal history consisting of juvenile
    adjudications for aggravated assault, receiving stolen property, and criminal
    trespass as well as an adult record. His adult record, which subjected him to a
    mandatory extended term as a persistent violent offender, included the
    aggravated manslaughter and other convictions from the Essex County
    indictment. As a result, after granting the State's motion for extended term
    sentencing, the judge found aggravating factors three, six, and nine, and no
    mitigating factors in imposing the sentence on defendant.
    On the other hand, as we noted in our unpublished opinion affirming the
    denial of codefendant Brown's PCR petition, the sentencing judge there "found
    A-2823-19
    17
    aggravating factors three and nine and mitigating factor three." 9 Brown, slip op.
    at 6. Significantly, because the Essex County indictment had been dismissed
    against codefendant Brown, unlike defendant, codefendant Brown did not have
    a prior homicide, robbery or weapons-related conviction when he appeared for
    sentencing, and he was not extended term eligible. Moreover, at the Sussex
    County sentencing hearing, defense counsel strenuously argued that defendant
    should be sentenced to a twenty-five-year NERA term to run concurrent with
    the Essex County sentence in part because codefendant Brown was sentenced to
    a twelve-year NERA term for the same charges. Defense counsel explained to
    the judge that although both defendants had been charged in the Essex County
    indictment, the suppression of codefendant Brown's statement resulted in the
    dismissal of the indictment against him. Thus, the sentencing judge was aware
    of all relevant sentencing criteria for both defendants, including the length of
    the codefendant's sentence and the rationale for the more lenient sentence , as
    outlined in Roach. 
    146 N.J. at 233-34
    .
    Affirmed.
    9
    See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(3) ("[t]he defendant acted under a strong
    provocation").
    A-2823-19
    18