MICHAEL STANTON VS. NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS (NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2018 )


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  •                             NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 NOS. A-2912-15T4
    A-1126-16T1
    A-3618-16T3
    MICHAEL STANTON,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
    CORRECTIONS,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    __________________________________
    Submitted September 13, 2018 – Decided September 21, 2018
    Before Judges Reisner and Mawla.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Corrections.
    Michael Stanton, appellant pro se.
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Melissa Dutton Schaffer, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Suzanne Davies, Deputy
    Attorney General, on the brief in A-2912-15 and A-
    1126-16; Tasha Bradt, Deputy Attorney General, on the
    brief in A-3618-16).
    PER CURIAM
    Michael Stanton is presently serving a thirty-five year sentence in New
    Jersey State Prison for various offenses. In A-2912-15, Stanton appeals from a
    February 5, 2016 adjudication by the New Jersey Department of Corrections
    (DOC), finding him guilty of prohibited act *.004, fighting with another person.
    See N.J.A.C. 10A:4-4.1. In A-1126-16, he challenges an October 4, 2016
    adjudication finding him guilty of prohibited act .705, commencing or operating
    a business or group for profit, or commencing or operating a non-profit
    enterprise without approval of the prison administrator. In A-3618-16, Stanton
    appeals from a December 8, 2016 decision adjudicating him guilty of prohibited
    acts *.10/*.803, attempting to participate, or participating, in activities related
    to a security threat group.     We have consolidated these three appeals for
    purposes of this opinion. We affirm the adjudications in A-2912-15 and A-
    1126-16, and reverse and remand A-3618-16 to the DOC for a re-hearing. The
    relevant facts underlying each appeal are set forth below.
    A-2912-15
    On January 31, 2016, a senior correction officer observed Stanton fighting
    with two other inmates. The officer's report stated he sounded an alert and used
    pepper spray "in the direction of . . . Stanton" to break up the fight. When
    A-2912-15T4
    2
    Stanton was handcuffed he informed the officer the two other inmates had stolen
    his television. Prison officials discovered Stanton's television in the o ther
    inmates' cell. Stanton and the other inmates were charged with committing
    prohibited act *.004, fighting with another person. The other inmates were also
    charged with prohibited act .210 for the unauthorized possession of Stanton's
    television.
    At the subsequent hearing, Stanton argued he was defending himself. The
    hearing officer concluded no evidence of self-defense was provided, and instead
    found "[a] Code 33 was called and [pepper] spray deployed." Stanton was found
    guilty of the fighting charge, and sanctioned with loss of recreation privileges,
    loss of commutation time, and administrative segregation.
    A-1126-16
    On August 6, 2016, the DOC recorded a telephone call between Stanton
    and his girlfriend wherein he asked "whether she had received any emails or
    phone calls" and "what mail she is getting ready." His girlfriend replied, "some
    books." He also asked her if a "guy" had contacted her about the money for the
    books and "if she included a self-addressed, stamped envelope" with the
    correspondence. Stanton also stated "out of everyone writing, [he was] the only
    one with books for sale." In response to his girlfriend stating she was "making
    A-2912-15T4
    3
    sure all of the pages are there," Stanton said "they'll tell you that . . . whoever
    get[s] it."
    On the same date, the DOC confiscated a large box addressed to Stanton,
    which contained "magazines featuring women in scantily-clad clothing" and
    invoices from a wholesale periodical distributor. Stanton's girlfriend had made
    deposits totaling $750 into his prison account between June 21 and August 18,
    2016. Invoices addressed to Stanton from the magazine distributor bearing
    names such as: "Dime Piece"; "Body"; "Thick"; "XXL"; "IAdore"; "Spicy
    Latinas"; "BlackMen"; "Seductive"; and "Shygirl" were dated July 29 and
    August 19, 2016. The invoices were contemporaneous with the deposits to
    Stanton's prison account.
    The DOC investigation also revealed Stanton had received "a large manila
    envelope" containing letters from "inmates at other correctional facilities
    throughout the country" asking him to accept their writing samples for
    publication. One of the inmate letters referred to Stanton as "Author/CEO" of
    "Starchild Enterprise." Stanton also received a letter from PRC Book Printing
    addressed to "Starchild Publishing" in response to his request for a price quote.
    As a result, the DOC investigation found Stanton intended to distribute
    the magazines to other inmates in exchange for "pecuniary benefit," and had
    A-2912-15T4
    4
    discussed both the magazines and "the business" during the call with his
    girlfriend.   The investigation also found the girlfriend's statement she was
    "making sure all of the pages are there" concerned the magazines. As a result,
    the investigation concluded Stanton participated in two business ventures f or
    profit, namely, one involving the sale of adult magazines to inmates, and the
    other involving the national solicitation of writing samples from inmates for
    publication in Stanton's capacity as "CEO" of Starchild Publishing.
    Accordingly, he was adjudicated guilty of operating a business.
    A-3618-16
    On January 25, 2015, a DOC investigator intercepted outgoing mail
    authored by Stanton to his girlfriend. According to the investigator, the mail
    was intercepted because it contained disapproved content. As a result, Stanton
    was charged with *.803/*.010, attempting to participate, or participating, in
    activities related to a security threat group.
    The hearing officer found the Special Investigations Division (SID)
    received authorization to open the mail, as required by DOC regulations, but did
    not explain why the authorization was given. Prior to this appeal, we granted
    the Attorney General's motion to remand, for the DOC to explain the basis for
    A-2912-15T4
    5
    the authorization to open Stanton's mail. On appeal, Stanton argues the DOC
    refused to explain why SID believed the mail contained disapproved content.
    I.
    N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.15(a) requires "a disciplinary hearing officer's
    adjudication that an inmate committed a prohibited act . . . be based on
    substantial evidence in the record." Figueroa v. Dep't of Corr., 
    414 N.J. Super. 186
    , 191 (App. Div. 2010). "'Substantial evidence' means 'such evidence as a
    reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.'" 
    Id. at 192
    (quoting In re Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 
    35 N.J. 358
    , 376 (1961)). The DOC
    cannot base disciplinary determinations on "a subjective hunch, conjecture or
    surmise of the factfinder." Id. at 191. Moreover, determinations cannot be based
    upon "bare net opinion." Williams v. Dep't of Corr., 
    330 N.J. Super. 197
    , 203-
    04 (App. Div. 2000).
    "In light of the executive function of administrative agencies, judicial
    capacity to review administrative actions is severely limited." George Harms
    Constr. Co., Inc. v. N.J. Tpk. Auth., 
    137 N.J. 8
    , 27 (1994).         The "final
    determination of an administrative agency . . . is entitled to substantial
    deference." In re Eastwick Coll. LPN-RN Bridge Program, 
    225 N.J. 533
    , 541
    (2016).
    A-2912-15T4
    6
    An appellate court will not reverse an agency's final
    decision unless the decision is "arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable," the determination "violate[s] express or
    implied legislative policies," the agency's action
    offends the United States Constitution or the State
    Constitution, or "the findings on which [the decision]
    was based were not supported by substantial, credible
    evidence in the record."
    [Ibid. (quoting Univ. Cottage Club of Princeton N.J.
    Corp. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    191 N.J. 38
    , 48
    (2007)).]
    However, we must complete "more than a perfunctory review" of agency
    matters, and we will not "merely rubberstamp an agency's decision." Figueroa,
    
    414 N.J. Super. at 191
     (internal citations and quotations omitted).
    II.
    On appeal in A-2912-15, Stanton reiterates his claim of self-defense. In
    A-1126-16, Stanton argues he wanted to see the document authorizing the DOC
    to search his mail.   Stanton also argues the disciplinary decision was not
    supported by substantial credible evidence. In A-3618-16, Stanton does not
    challenge the DOC's determination that the contents of his letter contained
    material related to a security threat group. Instead, he claims the DOC took too
    long to provide discovery in connection with the remand hearing, and did not
    establish the grounds to open his mail under N.J.A.C. 10A:18-2.7(d). We
    address these arguments in turn.
    A-2912-15T4
    7
    A.
    As we noted, in A-2912-15, Stanton was sanctioned for committing
    prohibited act *.044, fighting with another person. On appeal, he contends the
    two other inmates attacked him and stole his television. Indeed, the televis ion
    was found in their cell, and the DOC confirmed it belonged to Stanton. The
    contemporaneous report of the incident states Stanton told officers the other
    inmates stole his television and it "escalated" into a "physical altercation." At
    the hearing, Stanton claimed he was defending himself. He did not call any
    witnesses or ask to confront any witnesses to corroborate his claim of self -
    defense.
    An inmate charged with fighting may assert self-defense, "and if
    established, [self-defense will] exonerate the individual charged with the
    infraction." DeCamp v. N.J. Dep't of Corr., 
    386 N.J. Super. 631
    , 640 (App. Div.
    2006). N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.13(f) states:
    [T]he inmate claiming self-defense shall be responsible
    for presenting supporting evidence that shall include
    each of the following conditions:
    1.    The inmate was not the initial aggressor;
    2.    The inmate did not provoke the attacker;
    3.    The use of force was not by mutual agreement;
    A-2912-15T4
    8
    4.    The use of force was used to defend against
    personal harm, not to defend property or honor;
    5.     The inmate had no reasonable opportunity or
    alternative to avoid the use of force, such as, by retreat
    or alerting correctional facility staff; and
    6.    Whether the force used by the inmate to respond
    to the attacker was reasonably necessary for self-
    defense and did not exceed the amount of force used
    against the inmate.
    Here, Stanton offered no evidence to corroborate his claim of self-defense
    beyond merely asserting it. To sustain a claim of self-defense, Stanton had to
    present evidence addressing the factors of N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.13(f), in order to
    rebut the officer's observations. In the absence of such evidence, the DOC's
    determination Stanton was fighting because the other inmates had taken his
    television and that he was pepper sprayed in order to stop the altercation, which
    demonstrated he was the aggressor, was supported by sufficient credible
    evidence. Stanton's claim he was attacked and acting in self-defense was not
    supported by credible evidence. Accordingly, we affirm the DOC's decision in
    A-2912-15.
    A-2912-15T4
    9
    B.
    In A-1126-16, Stanton argues the DOC's determination he was guilty of
    .705, commencing or operating a business or group for profit, should be reversed
    for lack of substantial credible evidence. We disagree.
    Stanton pled not guilty and denied he owned or operated a business. He
    claimed he advised unpublished authors how to properly submit their
    manuscripts for publication. However, he denied publishing any manuscripts.
    He explained he was a published author and writer for Starchild Publishing, and
    owned the copyright to his own book. He claimed that during the phone call
    with his girlfriend, he spoke with her "about books and emails" because she was
    his publicist.
    The DOC found Stanton guilty and imposed sanctions.            The DOC
    concluded Stanton intended to sell the magazines because of the large shipment
    he received, and found he was the CEO of Starchild Publishing based upon the
    letters he received from other inmates and the printing company. The DOC
    further concluded the telephone call supported the charge.
    We are satisfied the evidence relied upon by the DOC was substantial and
    credible enough to support a finding of guilt, and was not based upon a "hunch,
    conjecture, [and] surmise." Figueroa, 
    414 N.J. Super. at 191
    . Indeed, Stanton
    A-2912-15T4
    10
    received a box of adult magazines, whose quantity was inconsistent with
    personal use, which supports the finding he was either commencing or operating
    a business for profit. Stanton's telephone calls referenced compensation for h is
    efforts, and sought assurances third-parties had received complete copies of
    shipments. The telephone conversations, coupled with a large deposit into
    Stanton's JPay account, supported the finding he was in the magazine-selling
    business. Stanton's letter inquiry seeking a price quote from a publisher, and
    inmate letters asking him to publish their writing, supports the conclusion
    Stanton was operating a publishing business. 1
    For these reasons, we conclude the DOC's determination was based upon
    substantial, credible evidence in the record. We affirm the adjudication of guilt
    under the .705 charge.
    C.
    Finally, in A-3618-16, Stanton argues the DOC determination he was
    guilty of *.803/*.010 for attempting to participate, or participating, in activitie s
    related to a security threat group should be reversed because the DOC violated
    1
    Stanton's claim he was denied due process because the investigator failed to
    produce written verification he was authorized to read Stanton's mail lacks
    merit. No regulation requires the DOC to furnish a copy of the confidential
    authorization list in a disciplinary hearing.
    A-2912-15T4
    11
    due process by delaying his hearing, and did not give a reason why his mail was
    suspected to contain disapproved content. We agree the latter argument is cause
    to reverse the DOC's determination and remand for rehearing.
    Before addressing our reasons for reversal, we address Stanton's due
    process claim. As we noted, this matter was remanded pursuant to a motion by
    the Attorney General for the DOC to make findings regarding the reasons for
    opening Stanton's mail. N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.7 states:
    (a) Hearings that have been postponed for further
    investigation shall be reviewed by the Disciplinary
    Hearing Officer or Adjustment Committee to determine
    if an additional postponement is warranted:
    1.   Within 48 hours of the postponement, if the
    inmate is in Prehearing Disciplinary Housing; or
    2.     Within seven calendar days of the
    postponement if the inmate is in any other unit.
    Should the seventh day fall on a Saturday,
    Sunday or holiday, the last day for the hearing
    shall be the business day immediately following
    the weekend or holiday.
    (b) Additional postponements shall be granted only
    in exceptional circumstances.
    N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.8(b) provides:
    The inmate shall be entitled to a hearing within seven
    calendar days of the alleged violation, including
    weekends and holidays, unless such hearing is
    prevented by exceptional circumstances, unavoidable
    A-2912-15T4
    12
    delays or reasonable postponements. Should the
    seventh day fall on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday, the
    last day for the hearing shall be the business day
    immediately following the weekend or holiday.
    We reject Stanton's argument that the delay of his hearing was tantamount
    to a due process violation. N.J.A.C. 10A:4-9.9(a) states:
    The failure to adhere to any of the time limits
    prescribed by this subchapter shall not mandate the
    dismissal of a disciplinary charge. However, the
    Disciplinary Hearing Officer or Adjustment Committee
    may, in its discretion, dismiss a disciplinary charge
    because of a violation of time limits. Such discretion
    shall be guided by the following factors:
    1.     The length of the delay;
    2.     The reason for the delay;
    3.    Prejudices to the inmate in preparing
    his/her defense; and
    4.     The seriousness of the alleged infraction.
    The postponement here was for purposes of obtaining information for
    Stanton to use in the hearing to confront the DOC's witness. Stanton failed to
    show how he was prejudiced by a postponement whose purpose was to aid him
    in asserting a defense.
    N.J.A.C. 10A:18-2.7(d) states outgoing correspondence "shall not be
    opened, read or censored unless there is reason to believe" (emphasis added) it
    A-2912-15T4
    13
    contains disapproved content, and the prison administrator gives advance
    approval. Unlike the charge in A-1126-16, where the basis to open Stanton's
    mail was justified by his telephone conversations with his girlfriend and large
    deposits to his prison account, here the record contains no basis for the DOC's
    actions. We are constrained to reverse and remand the adjudication of guilt
    because the DOC failed to make findings regarding its grounds for opening
    Stanton's mail.
    We note there is no dispute the SID unit received authorization to open
    the mail, as required by the DOC regulations. According to the record, SID
    sought authorization based on a belief that the mail was gang related
    correspondence. However, even after we granted the Attorney General's motion
    for a remand to enable the DOC to set forth why it believed Stanton's mail
    contained disapproved content, the record still lacks an explanation. Indeed, the
    initial DOC adjudication stated: "See exhibit D4 for questions [and] responses
    . . . relied upon to determine guilt[.] . . . [T]he reason . . . [Stanton's] mail was
    opened is given in exhibits A8 [and] D4." However, exhibit A8 is redacted and
    offers no meaningful information, and D4 is missing from the record. The DOC
    disciplinary appeal disposition sheds no further light on the subject, and only
    states: "SID Investigators are trained in recognizing STG material and their
    A-2912-15T4
    14
    reports have to [be] relied upon as factual. SID stated they had reason to believe
    that the correspondence contained disapproved content and they received
    authorization to search correspondence as per policy."
    We acknowledge that the DOC may be reluctant to provide an explanation
    for the decision to open an inmate's mail as it may compromise prison security
    or reveal the identity of a confidential informant. However, as we noted, our
    review is neither perfunctory nor a rubber stamp. In order for us to engage in a
    meaningful review, an explanation must be provided, by confidential appendix
    if necessary. For these reasons, we reverse and remand the guilty adjudication
    under .705 for a second hearing, which must include an explanation of the DOC's
    reason to believe Stanton's mail contained disapproved content.
    The adjudications in A-2912-15 and A-1126-16 are affirmed. A-3618-16
    is reversed and remanded for re-hearing and further findings in accordance with
    this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-2912-15T4
    15