STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DARRICK HUDSON (08-02-0310, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2019 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1526-17T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DARRICK HUDSON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Submitted March 26, 2019 – Decided July 9, 2019
    Before Judges Yannotti and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Atlantic County, Indictment No. 08-02-0310.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Monique D. Moyse, Designated Counsel, on
    the brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Claudia Joy Demitro, Deputy Attorney
    General, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Darrick Hudson appeals from the denial of his petition for post-
    conviction relief (PCR) after an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.
    I.
    Following the partial denial of his motion to suppress inculpatory
    statements made to police, defendant pled guilty to first-degree aggravated
    manslaughter, N.J.S.A. 2C:11–4(a); first-degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15–1; and
    third-degree hindering apprehension, N.J.S.A. 2C:29–3(b)(1).            The court
    sentenced defendant in accordance with the plea agreement to twenty-five years
    in prison on the manslaughter charge, and concurrent ten- and three-year terms
    on the robbery and hindering apprehension charges. We affirmed defendant's
    conviction and sentence in an unpublished opinion. State v. Hudson, No. A-
    2631-12 (App. Div. Mar. 1, 2016). The facts regarding the underlying offenses,
    and the issues raised on direct appeal, are set forth in our opinion and are briefly
    recounted here to provide context for our opinion.
    II.
    On the evening of March 9, 2007, defendant was a passenger, along with
    Tyler Hart, Basir Biggins, and Nasir Salaam, in a vehicle driven by Gina
    McCrossen when the group decided to rob a nearby gas station in Atlantic City.
    According to defendant, once they arrived at the gas station, he, along with
    A-1526-17T4
    2
    Biggins and Salaam, exited the vehicle, and defendant and Biggins entered the
    store. The clerk inside the store was shot several times and died, and Salaam
    shot and injured a gas station attendant outside the store.
    Defendants fled the scene, and on March 10, 2007, defendant was arrested
    and brought to the Atlantic County Prosecutor's Office (ACPO).           After
    defendant and his mother signed a form waiving his Miranda1 rights, his mother
    voluntarily left the interrogation room and defendant began to admit his
    involvement in the incident. At approximately 2:45 p.m., his mother returned
    to the interrogation room and stated she was going to hire an attorney. The
    detectives conducting the interrogation left the room nine minutes later.
    Defendant and his mother were alone in the interrogation room until 3:24 p.m.,
    when a lieutenant entered and discussed the juvenile charging process and the
    possibility that defendant would be charged with a crime. The lieutenant and
    defendant's mother then left the room, but the lieutenant returned shortly
    thereafter with defendant's mentor. With his mentor present, defendant admitted
    to his presence at the robbery and killing.
    Soon after the March 10, 2007 statement was made, defendant's mother
    hired defendant's first trial counsel to represent him. At the PCR hearing,
    1
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    A-1526-17T4
    3
    defendant's initial trial counsel testified that over the course of his career, he
    represented hundreds of criminal defendants, tried approximately fifteen felony
    cases, and was familiar with the ACPO. He also testified that when he first met
    with defendant's mother and mentor regarding the case, they informed him that
    defendant was present at the robbery and killing, had a minimal role, and never
    handled a weapon. Defendant's family also informed counsel that defendant
    made a statement on March 10, 2007.          According to defendant's counsel,
    defendant's family adamantly expressed "that they wanted [defendant] to do the
    right thing" and that "the right thing was for him to continue to cooperate."
    Defendant's counsel first met with defendant at his waiver hearing in
    juvenile court, where they briefly discussed juvenile court procedures and "the
    meeting with the family regarding [defendant's] desire to cooperate . . . ."
    Thereafter, counsel contacted the ACPO because a detective indicated that they
    had "some follow-up questions that they wanted to ask" and counsel "wanted to
    make sure . . . that if [defendant] were to continue to be cooperative, that he
    would be given credit for that cooperation."
    On March 19, 2007, defendant and his counsel met at the ACPO, where
    they privately discussed the events leading to the March 9, 2007 robbery and
    A-1526-17T4
    4
    killing. Defendant decided not to make a second statement that day, as his
    mother and mentor were not present and defendant felt uncomfortable.
    On March 20, 2007, defendant and his counsel returned to the ACPO with
    defendant's mother and mentor so that defendant could provide a second
    statement. Defendant and counsel met privately for a brief time. Thereafter,
    defendant provided a second statement with counsel and his mentor in the room,
    and again waived his Miranda rights. Defendant's March 20, 2007 statement
    repeated much of what he stated on March 10, 2017, but added that Salaam was
    involved in the incident.
    Defendant's counsel stated that he explained to defendant's mother and
    mentor on that day that "if [defendant] were to provide truthful information and
    continue to cooperate, that [his] goal was for [defendant] to be treated as a
    cooperator and that [he] expect[ed] . . . the [ACPO] would . . . reward[] that with
    respect to an eventual plea agreement." Counsel stated that his goal was for
    defendant to be charged with an offense "in the low first-degree range," and
    hoped for a sentence under fifteen years.
    Thereafter, counsel had discussions with the ACPO regarding a plea
    agreement, but was advised that their investigation was still ongoing and they
    were waiting for DNA evidence to verify defendant's statement. The case
    A-1526-17T4
    5
    entered a brief period of quiescence after one of the co-defendant's attorneys
    transitioned from private defense practice to the ACPO. Due to this conflict,
    the case was transferred to the Attorney General's office.
    After the transfer, defendant's initial counsel began discussions with the
    Deputy Attorney General (DAG) assigned to the case. The DAG, based on DNA
    evidence of the victim's blood on Salaam, believed that defendant and Salaam
    misrepresented who was inside the store and killed the victim. Plea negotiations
    then deteriorated and the DAG informed defendant's counsel that "he would not
    consider cooperation . . . [or] credits . . . unless he got what he believed was
    truthful testimony" from defendant. Defendant, however, maintained that his
    original statements were truthful.
    The Attorney General's first plea offer was for thirty years, which
    defendant's counsel thought was very high. Upset with the term of that offer,
    defendant's family fired his first attorney, who filed a motion to be relieved as
    counsel, and was discharged. Defendant was then represented by a public
    defender for a year, then by a third trial counsel.
    Defendant's third trial counsel sought to suppress defendant's March 10,
    2007 and March 20, 2007 statements. After an evidentiary hearing, the court
    issued an order and opinion on July 29, 2011, which suppressed that portion of
    A-1526-17T4
    6
    defendant's March 10, 2007 statements after 2:45 p.m. The court concluded that
    defendant's statements on March 10, 2007, before 2:45 p.m., and on March 20,
    2007, were admissible because defendant made knowing, intelligent, and
    voluntary waivers. The court specifically noted that defendant's initial attorney
    and his mentor were present for the March 20, 2007 statement.
    Thereafter, defendant underwent a psychological evaluation, and
    submitted a November 30, 2011 psychological report in support of a motion for
    reconsideration of the July 29, 2011 order.       After considering the parties'
    submissions, the court entered a June 5, 2012 order denying defendant's motion
    as to the March 20, 2007 statement because it "was made in the presence of his
    attorney, [and mentor] and with the benefit of legal counsel." With respect to
    the March 10, 2007 statement, however, the court granted defendant's motion
    and ordered the statement suppressed in its entirety because "[d]efendant did not
    have the benefit of counsel on that date" and in light of "[d]efendant's limited
    IQ and reading comprehension abilities . . . [his] waiver of rights" was not
    knowing, intelligent, and voluntary. Defendant pled guilty shortly thereafter.
    On May 2, 2016, defendant filed a pro se PCR petition, alleging
    "[i]neffective assistance of counsel" and a "[v]iolation of [his] right to counsel
    and right to silence." On January 17, 2017, defendant's PCR counsel filed a
    A-1526-17T4
    7
    supporting brief, a transcript of defendant's March 20, 2007 statement,
    certifications of defendant's mother and mentor, the November 30, 2011
    psychological report, and an amended verified petition for PCR. PCR counsel
    filed an additional letter brief on or about January 31, 2017.
    Salaam also filed a PCR petition raising similar issues, specifically that
    his counsel's advice to make a statement to law enforcement officers without
    first obtaining a plea offer, and without ascertaining all of the relevant facts,
    constituted ineffective assistance of counsel. State v. Salaam, No. A-3989-14
    (App. Div. Jan. 31, 2017) (slip op. at 7). We reversed the denial of Salaam's
    PCR petition and remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing "for credibility
    determinations as to what was explained to [Salaam] regarding what he would
    receive in return for giving a statement" to police. Id. at 13. Because defendant's
    and Salaam's petitions raised similar issues, the court conducted a single
    evidentiary hearing addressing both cases on June 22, 2017 and June 29, 2017.
    The court heard testimony from ten witnesses, including defendant, his mother,
    his mentor, and his first and third trial counsel.
    After hearing extensive oral arguments, the court issued an October 16,
    2017 order, denying defendant's PCR petition. In an accompanying written
    opinion, the court found that defendant's initial trial counsel was a "highly
    A-1526-17T4
    8
    experienced criminal defense attorney," and characterized his "testimony [as]
    reliable, complete and entirely credible" and "demeanor on the stand [as] candid
    and frank." The court stated that counsel "testified that his decisions and other
    actions in this case were based on his experience with the ACPO in other cases"
    and that "his past experiences informed his decision-making in this case." The
    court also found defendant's third attorney was "reliable and credible," and made
    similar findings with respect to Jill Horenberger, the ACPO's former Chief
    Assistant Prosecutor.
    The court made specific, adverse credibility findings regarding
    defendant's mother and mentor.       The court characterized both witnesses'
    testimony to be "incredible." The court found defendant's mother to have a "very
    strong motive" or "bias" to assist defendant, and "gave testimony which was
    inconsistent with her earlier testimony at a suppression hearing and
    acknowledged that her memory would have been better in 2011."
    As to defendant's mentor, the court observed that his testimony "lack[ed]
    consistency" and his demeanor "was guarded." The court made similar adverse
    credibility findings regarding defendant, noting that he was evasive, his
    testimony "appeared rehearsed," and his version of events, including that his
    counsel promised a ten-year plea offer, "lacked credibility."
    A-1526-17T4
    9
    With respect to counsel's decision to permit defendant to provide the
    March 20, 2007 statement, the PCR court made the following factual findings:
    [defendant's trial counsel] advised that [defendant]
    should give another statement to ensure that he would
    be given credit for the first statement and to separate
    him from the more culpable co-defendants.
    [Defendant's counsel's] strategy was geared to avoid
    felony murder charges against his client.              [He]
    reasoned, based on his prior experience working with
    the ACPO, that getting his client's truthful and accurate
    version of events before the prosecution completed the
    investigation would be beneficial to his client and
    would position him for a favorable resolution.
    [Defendant's trial counsel] did not have discussions
    with the ACPO about a specific plea deal, but he wanted
    to put his client in the best position in order to have him
    be offered a fair sentence at a later date. This approach,
    in [his] view, was the best way to position his client
    under the circumstances.
    The court also noted that defendant's counsel's "testimony about his strategy was
    corroborated by the testimony of . . . Salaam's trial counsel."
    The court also found that defendant's first counsel "told [defendant's]
    family that if he provided truthful testimony he felt comfortable that he would
    be treated differently than more culpable co-defendants." The court rejected
    defendant's claim that his counsel promised him a specific plea deal. Rather,
    the court concluded based on the testimony of defendant's first trial counsel and
    Horenberger that "[defendant's counsel] spoke with [defendant] and his family
    A-1526-17T4
    10
    about potential plea deals in hypothetical terms, but did not tell the family that
    [defendant] would definitively get a certain amount of years if he gave the
    second statement to police."
    Thus, the court concluded that defendant's first counsel "presented
    [defendant] for a statement after consulting with his client and his family and
    reviewing the available facts and circumstances."          The court found that
    defendant "failed to meet his burden to show that either [his first or third counsel
    were] deficient in their respective performance . . . ."        Finally, the court
    determined that defendant's March 20, 2007 statement enabled counsel to
    negotiate a plea for aggravated manslaughter as opposed to felony murder, with
    "much lower penal exposure." The court therefore concluded that counsel’s
    "strategy choices appeared to have some success" and defendant "was not
    prejudiced by his statement." This appeal followed.
    III.
    Defendant raises the following issues on appeal, which we have
    renumbered for ease of reference:
    POINT I
    DARRICK HUDSON IS ENTITLED TO RELIEF ON
    HIS CLAIM THAT HIS ATTORNEY RENDERED
    INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL BY
    PRODUCING HIM TO THE STATE TO GIVE AN
    A-1526-17T4
    11
    INCRIMINATING STATEMENT, THUS ASSISTING
    THE STATE IN SECURING HIS CONVICTION.
    POINT II
    DARRICK IS ENTITLED TO RELIEF UNDER
    UNITED STATES v. CRONIC, 
    466 U.S. 648
     (1984),
    BECAUSE COUNSEL FAILED TO SUBJECT THE
    STATE'S CASE TO MEANINGFUL ADVERSARIAL
    TESTING.
    POINT III
    DARRICK HUDSON IS ENTITLED TO RELIEF
    UNDER STRICKLAND v. WASHINGTON, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984) AND STATE v. FRITZ, 
    105 N.J. 42
     (1987).
    POINT IV
    COUNSEL'S PERFORMANCE WAS DEFICIENT.
    POINT V
    DARRICK SUFFERED PREJUDICE AS A RESULT
    OF COUNSEL'S DEFICIENT PERFORMANCE.
    POINT VI
    THE   PCR   COURT'S   FINDINGS   ARE
    UNSUPPORTABLE AND MUST BE REVERSED.
    We conclude these arguments all lack merit, substantially for the reasons
    stated in Judge Bernard E. DeLury, Jr.'s cogent written opinion accompanying
    his October 16, 2017 order. We amplify the judge's analysis as to the two
    primary arguments that defendant makes against his first trial attorney: (1) that
    A-1526-17T4
    12
    his counsel's performance was constitutionally ineffective under Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984) and State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
     (1987); and (2)
    that his attorney failed to subject the State's proofs to the "crucible of meaningful
    adversarial testing," contrary to United States v. Cronic, 
    466 U.S. 648
     (1984).
    IV.
    Because defendant's PCR petition is predicated on his claim that trial
    counsel was ineffective, he must satisfy the two-part test pronounced in
    Strickland by demonstrating that "counsel's performance was deficient," that is,
    "that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the
    'counsel' guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment." Strickland, 466
    U.S. at 687; see also Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at 58
    . The first prong requires a showing
    that   "counsel's   representation    fell   below   an   objective    standard     of
    reasonableness." Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 688
    . It is the defendant's burden to
    prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that counsel's decisions about trial
    strategy were not within the broad spectrum of competent legal representation.
    Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at 52
    .
    Under the second prong, a defendant must demonstrate that his counsel's
    errors prejudiced the defense to the extent that the defendant was deprived of a
    fair and reliable trial outcome. Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    . To prove this
    A-1526-17T4
    13
    element, a defendant must demonstrate "a reasonable probability that, but for
    counsel's unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different." 
    Id. at 694
    .
    Here, defendant fails to satisfy either prong of the Strickland/Fritz test.
    Defendant maintains his first counsel's performance was constitutionally
    deficient, for four reasons. First, he claims that counsel was ineffective by
    failing to make a reasonable investigation into the facts before deciding to have
    him confess.    Second, defendant contends his counsel was constitutionally
    deficient by "fail[ing] to file a motion to suppress [defendant's] first confession,
    or even consider its constitutionality, before securing [defendant's] second
    confession." Third, defendant maintains his initial trial counsel's performance
    was ineffective because counsel "failed to ensure that there was any
    consideration for his client's confession." Fourth, defendant claims his counsel
    "misadvised [him] about confessing, leading him to believe that he would
    receive a low term of imprisonment in exchange for his confession, as he was
    the least culpable defendant." We are not persuaded by these arguments.
    The testimony at the PCR hearing revealed that before having defendant
    cooperate, counsel reviewed the State's discovery, spoke with defendant and his
    family about the State's evidence, and provided defendant with strategic advice
    A-1526-17T4
    14
    that he should cooperate in order to secure a favorable plea deal. The PCR court
    found that defendant's counsel based this strategic decision on his prior
    experience with the ACPO in other cases. According to the PCR court, given
    the "overwhelming evidence against" defendant, "this approach, in [counsel's]
    view, was the best way to position his client under the circumstances," and was
    a "sound strategic choice . . . ."
    Although defendant argues that the fact that the March 10, 2007 statement
    was ultimately suppressed is evidence of his initial counsel's deficient
    performance, "courts are required to make 'every effort . . . to eliminate the
    distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel's
    challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel's perspective at
    the time.'" See State v. Fisher, 
    156 N.J. 494
    , 500 (1998) (quoting Strickland,
    
    466 U.S. at 689
    ). As Judge DeLury found, "[e]ven in the early stages" of the
    investigation, "the proofs against the [defendant] were overwhelming as the co -
    defendants had all incriminated the [defendant] as being a participant" in the
    robbery and homicide. Judge DeLury also found counsel was "[a]n experienced
    criminal defense attorney in Atlantic County" who "knew this was a case where
    the evidence was overwhelming and the best strategy was to have his client
    cooperate with law enforcement in an effort to position himself for a favorable
    A-1526-17T4
    15
    plea agreement." These findings are supported by counsel's testimony at the
    PCR hearing, which Judge DeLury found was credible.
    Thus, prior to advising defendant about making another statement, his
    initial trial counsel knew that prosecuting authorities had substantial evidence
    independent of defendant's March 10, 2007 statements to establish defendant's
    participation in the robbery and homicide.       As we explained in deciding
    defendant's direct appeal, "Biggins was prepared to testify against defendant had
    he gone to trial, and both Hart and McCrosson had identified defendant and his
    co-defendants as participants before defendant confessed." Hudson, slip op. at
    26.   We agree with Judge DeLury's conclusion that "it would not have been
    sound trial strategy to argue that the [defendant] was not at the scene of the
    murder nor that he was uninvolved." In light of the substantial independent
    evidence implicating defendant in the robbery and homicide, counsel's decision
    to act on his "fear" that defendant "wasn't going to be credited" for his initial
    statement by advising him to provide another truthful statement before the
    investigation concluded was not constitutionally deficient assistance of counsel.
    We also reject defendant's claim that counsel's decision for defendant to
    make the March 20, 2007 statement without a plea agreement constituted
    ineffective assistance of counsel. As the PCR court stated, that decision was a
    A-1526-17T4
    16
    reasonable "strategic decision" based on counsel's prior experience and the
    policy of the ACPO not to make early plea promises prior to a completed
    investigation.   The PCR court credited defendant's initial trial counsel's
    testimony that he previously negotiated with law enforcement officials, without
    a proffer letter or plea agreement, and obtained favorable results for his clients.
    Horenberger corroborated the reasonableness of counsel's strategy when she
    stated that "cooperation would assist in receiving a favorable plea offer at a later
    time" and that "many experienced attorneys brought their clients in to give
    statements without a plea offer."
    In addition, the PCR court specifically rejected defendant's claim that his
    initial trial counsel proposed a specific plea deal. Rather, the court found that
    counsel discussed plea deals in hypothetical terms, and the record developed at
    the PCR hearing supports that determination.
    Finally, even assuming counsel's approach was constitutionally deficient
    performance, we agree with Judge DeLury that defendant failed to establish that
    he was prejudiced under the Strickland/Fritz test. In this regard, the PCR court
    concluded that counsel's "strategy choices appeared to have some success" as
    the March 20, 2007 statement permitted defendant's third counsel to negotiate a
    A-1526-17T4
    17
    plea agreement down from the felony-murder charge to aggravated
    manslaughter, which carried "much lower penal exposure."
    V.
    Defendant also argues that "producing [defendant] to the [S]tate to give
    an incriminating statement, thus not only failing to subject the prosecutor's case
    to meaningful adversarial testing, but also actually assisting the [S]tate in
    securing a conviction against [defendant], amounted to ineffective assistance of
    counsel," and that the presumption of prejudice discussed in Cronic applies here.
    According to defendant, "[t]hat counsel did not even consider the suppression
    of a confession from his sixteen year old, intellectually disabled client with no
    [criminal] record is unconscionable." Therefore, defendant contends, "[c]ounsel
    wholly abandoned his adversarial role and failed to challenge the [S]tate's case,
    depriving [defendant] of his right to counsel."
    In Cronic, the Supreme Court held that when counsel's errors are of such
    a magnitude that "no amount of showing of want of prejudice would cure it," it
    is unnecessary for a defendant to demonstrate prejudice.         466 U.S. at 659
    (quoting Davis v. Alaska, 
    415 U.S. 308
    , 318 (1974)). Cronic has only been
    applied in the most extreme of cases, such as where trial counsel was completely
    absent during jury deliberations and the return of the verdict, and where the trial
    A-1526-17T4
    18
    court openly questioned trial counsel's competence and provoked trial counsel
    into acts inconsistent with his duty of client loyalty. See Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at
    62–
    63; see also Siverson v. O'Leary, 
    764 F.2d 1208
     (7th Cir. 1985); Wilson v.
    Mintzes, 
    761 F.2d 275
     (6th Cir. 1985). "Failure to file a suppression motion,
    however, is not one of those circumstances." State v. Goodwin, 
    173 N.J. 583
    ,
    597 (2002) (quoting Fisher, 
    156 N.J. at 501
    ).
    The alleged deficiencies in counsel's decision to advise defendant about
    providing a second inculpatory statement fall far short of those described in
    Cronic and its progeny. As we explained in defendant's direct appeal, "[g]iven
    the fact that a co-defendant already decided to cooperate and testify against
    defendant," advising defendant to "provid[e] a second statement to police in an
    effort to facilitate a plea deal. . . . was not an unreasonable strategy." See
    Hudson, slip op. at 19-20. Therefore, no prejudice can be presumed from trial
    counsel's decision to advise defendant to make the March 20, 2007 statement.
    Judge DeLury correctly decided that defendant was not entitled to post-
    conviction relief on this basis.
    In addition, as previously discussed, counsel's representation did not
    reflect a "complete failure" such that the State's case was not tested against "t he
    crucible of meaningful adversarial testing" warranting the Cronic presumption.
    A-1526-17T4
    19
    See Cronic, 
    466 U.S. at 656, 659
    . Just as advice that a client should plead guilty
    can constitute advice that "falls within the range of reasonable competence under
    the circumstances," see 
    id.
     at 656 n.19, Judge DeLury correctly concluded that
    advising defendant to provide a second statement was reasonable in light of the
    overwhelming evidence implicating defendant in the robbery and killing. We
    therefore conclude that there was no "breakdown in the adversarial process that
    would justify a presumption that [defendant's] conviction was insufficiently
    reliable to satisfy the Constitution." See Cronic, 
    466 U.S. at 662
    .
    To the extent we have not specifically addressed any of defendant's
    remaining contentions, it is because we find they have insufficient merit to
    warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Affirmed.
    A-1526-17T4
    20