STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. RICHARD R. HAROLD (15-04-0370, CUMBERLAND COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 NO. A-2315-16T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    RICHARD R. HAROLD, a/k/a
    RICHARD B. HAROLD, RICKY
    HAROLD, RICK HAROLD, RICK
    SMITH, ERIC R. HAROLD, and
    MIKE SMITH BEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ______________________________
    Submitted October 22, 2018 – Decided November 20, 2018
    Before Judges Sabatino and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Cumberland County, Indictment No. 15-04-
    0370.
    Wayne Powell, attorney for appellant.
    Jennifer    Webb-McRae,        Cumberland       County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Stephen C. Sayer,
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    After a four-day jury trial in 2016, defendant Richard R. Harold was found
    guilty of first-degree attempted murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-1 and N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
    3(a)(1) (count one); second-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1)
    (count two); second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(4) (count three); fourth-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A.
    2C:12-1(b)(4) (count four); and a second-degree "certain persons" weapons
    possession offense, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-7(b)(1) (count five). The court sentenced
    defendant to a forty-five-year custodial term on the attempted murder offense in
    count one, subject to an eighty-five percent parole ineligibility period pursuant
    to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, plus a concurrent ten-year
    custodial term on the weapons offense in count five. The remaining counts
    merged at sentencing.
    For the reasons that follow, we reverse defendant's conviction and grant
    his request for a new trial. We do so because of errors in the jury instructions
    that were not harmless, given the tenor of the issues, the circumstantial nature
    of the evidence presented by the State of defendant's guilt, and the hotly
    contested issue of his identity as the perpetrator.
    A-2315-16T4
    2
    I.
    The State presented only circumstantial evidence at trial concerning the
    underlying shooting incident which it charged as an attempted murder. There
    were no eyewitnesses to the incident who identified defendant as the shooter,
    nor any confession by defendant. We proceed to summarize some of the key
    aspects of the evidence.
    On October 25, 2014, Millville City Police responded to a report of shots
    fired in the parking lot of an apartment complex in Millville. No one believed
    to be involved with the shooting was present when the police arrived. Shell
    casings were found in the parking lot. After speaking with local residents the
    following day, police obtained a copy of an outdoor video recording from a
    nearby apartment complex that contained footage of the incident. The video
    showed the shooter firing a weapon, entering a van parked at the location, and
    leaving the scene. The identity of the shooter is not discernable from the video
    footage, although it apparently shows he was wearing a black and white shirt.1
    No one was injured or killed, and no eyewitnesses were located. The person(s)
    who were fired at were not identified.
    1
    Counsel did not furnish a copy of the video to this court on appeal. However,
    the State acknowledges the video is not clear enough to identify defendant
    definitively as the shooter.
    A-2315-16T4
    3
    Three days later, the police received information from a confidential
    informant indicating that the defendant had been involved in the shooting.
    Police Detective Jason Vinzinski and Officer Darrell Meyer, dressed in plain
    clothes, drove in an unmarked vehicle to a residence in Newfield looking for the
    defendant. They parked in the driveway outside the residence and waited for
    the defendant to appear. Eventually he did so, apparently to dispose of some
    trash.
    Officer Vinzinski testified that he made eye contact with defendant at that
    time, after which defendant briefly reentered the residence, reemerged, and
    drove away in a silver car. 2 Throughout this encounter, the officers never
    attempted to identify themselves or communicate with defendant, and they did
    not follow him when he left. They remained at the location, where they were
    joined by other officers who conducted a search of the residence.
    During the trial, the State relied on several items of circumstantial
    evidence to attempt to connect defendant with the shooting. In particular, the
    State contended that the same gold van that appears in the video footage was
    present at the residence where the defendant was found on October 28. The van
    2
    This incident was the basis for the trial court's flight instruction, which the
    defense contends was erroneous and unduly prejudicial. We discuss that issue
    in Part II(A), infra.
    A-2315-16T4
    4
    was registered under the name of Linda Harold, defendant's mother. In addition,
    the State claimed that the shooter depicted in the video was wearing the same
    black and white shirt that police later found at the residence. Also, police found
    a .40-caliber Smith and Wesson handgun at the residence, which generated test
    shells matched by a ballistics expert to the shells found at the scene of the
    shooting.
    The State did not present any in-court or out-of-court identification of
    defendant as the perpetrator of the shooting.       Although mail bearing the
    defendant's name was found at the residence, his ex-girlfriend and mother both
    testified that he did not live there. The residence belonged to the defendant's
    ex-girlfriend, who was in the process of moving out and who claimed she had
    granted defendant and his brother only limited access. She testified that she had
    never seen the black and white shirt before, and that it was not the defendant's
    "style."
    Forensic analysis was unable to confirm a match between defendant 's
    buccal swab and DNA collected from the black and white shirt. Furthermore,
    Linda Harold testified that she allowed only her other son, Robert Harold, to
    borrow her gold van, and that Robert did so on the day that the shooting
    occurred. According to the mother, Robert returned the van with a broken
    A-2315-16T4
    5
    windshield the next day, and took the van to be repaired at a local auto glass
    shop.
    Robert Flem, an employee at the auto glass shop that serviced the gold
    van on October 27, 2014, two days after the shooting, did not identify defendant
    as the person with whom he interacted that day. The repair receipt states that
    the customer's name was "Rick Smith."
    Defense counsel strenuously argued at trial that defendant was not the
    perpetrator of the shooting, nor responsible for possession of the seized weapon.
    On appeal, defendant argues the jury received improper and inadequate
    instructions, and that he is entitled to a new trial.
    Specifically, defendant raises the following points in his brief:
    POINT I
    THE JURY CHARGE GIVEN BY THE COURT ON
    THE ISSUE OF FLIGHT WAS NOT SUPPORTED BY
    THE RECORD AND ACTED TO DEPRIVE THE
    DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL.
    POINT II
    THE COURT’S FAILURE TO CHARGE THE JURY
    ON THE ISSUE OF IDENTIFICATION ACTED TO
    DEPRIVE THE DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL.
    (Not raised below)
    A-2315-16T4
    6
    II.
    Our appellate courts generally review alleged flaws in jury charges guided
    by the standards of Rule 2:10-2. The Rule provides that "[a]ny error or omission
    shall be disregarded by the appellate court unless it is of such a nature as to have
    been clearly capable of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2; see also State v.
    Ingram, 
    196 N.J. 23
    , 49 (2008). To make such a determination, our courts have
    inquired whether the possibility of injustice arising from the erroneous jury
    charges was "sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether the error led
    the jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached." State v. Macon, 
    57 N.J. 325
    , 336 (1971); see also State v. Jackmon, 
    305 N.J. Super. 274
    , 277 (App.
    Div. 1997).
    "Erroneous jury instructions on matters material to a jury's deliberations
    are ordinarily presumed to be reversible error." 
    Jackmon, 305 N.J. Super. at 277-78
    . A jury charge serves as a "road map to guide the jury, and without an
    appropriate charge, a jury can take a wrong turn in its deliberations." State v.
    Nelson, 
    173 N.J. 417
    , 446 (2002) (quoting State v. Martin, 
    119 N.J. 2
    , 15
    (1990)). The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that "clear and correct
    jury instructions are essential for a fair trial." 
    Nelson, 173 N.J. at 446
    .
    A-2315-16T4
    7
    To determine whether alleged defects in a jury charge rise to the level of
    such reversible error, we must consider those claims within the context of the
    charge as a whole, not in isolation. State v. R.B., 
    183 N.J. 308
    , 325 (2005); see
    also State v. Chapland, 
    187 N.J. 275
    , 289 (2005). When examining the entire
    charge, the reviewing court should consider whether the erroneous instruction
    was fatal to the conviction. 
    Jackmon, 305 N.J. Super. at 299
    (citing State v.
    Rhett, 
    127 N.J. 3
    , 7 (1992)). If the court finds that prejudicial error did not
    occur, the jury's verdict must stand. State v. Coruzzi, 
    189 N.J. Super. 273
    , 312
    (App. Div. 1983); see also State v. Loftin, 
    146 N.J. 295
    (1996).
    Guided by these principles, we consider, in turn, each of defendant's
    allegations of error concerning the jury charge.
    A.
    Over defendant's objection, the trial court issued a flight charge upon
    determining there was sufficient evidence for the jury to infer that there could
    have been flight by defendant indicative of a consciousness of guilt. Although
    flight by an accused may be admissible to demonstrate his or her consciousness
    of guilt, there must be sound evidential support for such an inference. The trial
    court must carefully instruct the jury regarding the inferences it may draw from
    such flight evidence. State v. Mann, 
    132 N.J. 410
    , 420 (1993). Furthermore,
    A-2315-16T4
    8
    while evidence of flight need not "unequivocally" support a reasonable inference
    of guilt, it must intrinsically reflect a consciousness of such guilt. State v.
    Randolph, 
    228 N.J. 566
    , 595 (2017).
    Here, the State presented meager evidence supporting its theory that
    defendant's departure from the residence on October 28 demonstrated a
    consciousness of guilt to avoid his apprehension for the October 25 shooting.
    Notably, when asked by the trial court what evidence demonstrated that
    defendant's flight showed such a consciousness of guilt, the prosecutor candidly
    told the court, "I mean it's not much." The prosecutor stated the best evidence
    he had on this subject was Officer Vinzinski's testimony that he and defendant
    made eye contact on October 28 before defendant left the residence. 
    Ibid. According to Officer
    Vinzinski's testimony, the officers, both dressed in plain
    clothes, waited in an unmarked vehicle outside the residence.        They saw
    defendant leave the residence to dispose of trash, and Officer Vinzinski alleged
    they made eye contact at that time. Defendant then reentered the residence,
    came out shortly thereafter, walked past the unmarked vehicle, got into a silver
    car, and drove away.
    As we have already noted, the officers did not attempt to communicate
    with defendant or follow him. They remained at the residence after he drove
    A-2315-16T4
    9
    away. There is no concrete direct evidence presented that defendant was aware
    that there were undercover police officers outside the residence, or that he left
    the location in an attempt to evade them.
    The Supreme Court has noted that flight from the scene of a crime may be
    evidence of consciousness of guilt if the flight relates to the crime charged.
    
    Randolph, 228 N.J. at 594
    . Although it may be difficult for a jury to determine
    a defendant's actual motive for departure, the jury "must be able to draw
    reasonable inferences from the evidence; it may not be left to speculate." 
    Id. at 595.
    In the present case, the inference that defendant's departure from the
    residence on October 28 showed a consciousness of guilt of the shooting was
    speculative. The event took place three days after the shooting. There was no
    in-court or out-of-court identification of defendant as the perpetrator. The State
    acknowledged the video footage of the crime scene is not clear enough to
    identify the perpetrator's face, but rather, only allows a viewer to "see a couple
    of people, and a couple of vehicles[.]" The State's witness Flem, who had
    supposedly interacted with the defendant at the auto glass shop, did not identify
    defendant. Forensic analysis was not able to match defendant's DNA with the
    DNA on the shirt the State alleged he was wearing during the shooting.
    A-2315-16T4
    10
    In sum, there is simply insufficient evidence linking the defendant's
    departure from the residence on October 28 to the shooting on October 25. The
    fact that the officers' unmarked car partially blocked the driveway does not
    necessarily mean that defendant recognized it was a police car, or that he was
    leaving because he had shot at someone a few days earlier.
    The State argues that a flight instruction is appropriate when there are both
    plausible and sinister explanations for a defendant's flight, citing State v.
    Wilson, 
    57 N.J. 39
    , 48-49 (1970). In Wilson, the circumstances of the alleged
    flight were very different from those of the present case. The defendant in
    Wilson entered a liquor store to commit a robbery, shooting and killing two
    people in the process. 
    Id. at 43.
    After being struck with a bottle and seeing that
    his partner had left, the defendant ran from the store. 
    Ibid. The Court ruled
    in
    Wilson that the flight charge was appropriate: "Although the jury could have
    inferred that [the defendant] left the store because he was threatened with a
    broken bottle, it could also readily infer that he fled to avoid apprehension by
    the police and thereby exhibited consciousness of guilt." 
    Id. at 49.
    In contrast with the defendant in Wilson, who fled after robbing a store
    and killing two people, there are far more benign explanations for why defendant
    in the present case left the residence on October 28 without acknowledging the
    A-2315-16T4
    11
    plainclothes officers who were parked in an unmarked vehicle in the driveway.
    Significantly, the identity of the defendant as the perpetrator was certain in
    Wilson, while that is not so here.
    The trial court's decision in this case to issue the flight charge was based
    in part on the length of time the undercover officers were parked outside the
    residence, and the fact that a person would need to walk by the unmarked vehicle
    in order to get through the driveway. This led the trial judge to determine that
    "it took effort for [defendant] to leave" and "[t]he person leaving is going to
    have to deal with whoever is there." From this, the court concluded that the
    evidence sufficed for a reasonable jury to infer flight and a consciousness of
    guilt from the circumstances. We respectfully disagree. Although the evidence
    presented was somewhat supportive of a flight theory, it did not rise to a level
    that warranted the court's instruction that the proof could be used by the jury to
    support such an incriminatory inference.
    The issuance of the flight charge in this case was not harmless error. The
    Supreme Court has repeatedly held that erroneous instructions in criminal cases
    are typically "poor candidates" for rehabilitation under the harmless error
    doctrine. 
    Loftin, 146 N.J. at 412
    (1996); see also State v. Simon, 
    79 N.J. 191
    ,
    A-2315-16T4
    12
    206 (1979).     Erroneous jury instructions on material points are generally
    presumed to be reversible error. 
    Martin, 119 N.J. at 15
    .
    In State v. McNeil, 
    303 N.J. Super. 266
    , 275 (App. Div. 1997), we
    determined that the flight charge given in that case was "totally inapplicable to
    the evidence" where a perpetrator's act of leaving the scene of the crime was
    presented as evidence of consciousness of guilt. The question for the jury in
    McNeil, as here, was whether the defendant was, in fact, the perpetrator. 
    Ibid. We found that
    the inappropriate jury charge in McNeil, in combination with
    other erroneous charges, was clearly capable of producing an unjust result under
    Rule 2:10-2, and therefore was not harmless error. 
    Id. at 269.
    Similar reasoning
    applies here.
    Another reason the flight charge here was erroneous and prejudicial was
    because it misstated – no doubt inadvertently – the location from which
    defendant's alleged flight 3 occurred. The relevant portion of the charge the court
    gave reads as follows:
    There has been some testimony in this case from
    which you may infer that the defendant fled shortly
    after the alleged commission of the crime. The
    3
    The phrase "the place from where the crime has been committed" appears
    verbatim in the Model Charge, and was not omitted or modified to fit the
    circumstances here. See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Flight" (approved
    May 10, 2010).
    A-2315-16T4
    13
    defendant denies any flight. The question of whether
    the defendant fled after the commission of the crime is
    another question of fact for your determination.
    However, mere departure from the place where
    the crime has been committed does not constitute flight.
    If the [sic] you find the defendant[,] fearing that an
    accusation or arrest would be made against him on the
    charge involved in the Indictment[,] took refuge in
    flight for the purposes of evading the accusation or
    arrest on that charge, then you may consider such flight
    in connection with all other evidence in this case as an
    indication or proof of consciousness of guilt.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Defendant rightly points out that "there is no way to know whether the jury
    wrongly understood that the [c]ourt was instructing that the hurried departure of
    the van from the scene of the crime was the flight conduct referred to in the
    charge." The flight charge did not explain that the alleged flight in question
    occurred three days after the crime took place, rather than directl y from the
    scene of the crime. This unfortunate phraseology increased the potential to
    confuse the jury.
    We recognize that defense counsel did not call this particular
    misstatement to the judge's attention, and that the prosecutor in summation did
    not argue defendant had fled from police officers at the scene of the shooting.
    A-2315-16T4
    14
    Nonetheless, the misstatement within the instruction adds to our concern that
    the jurors could have been misled.
    In sum, the flight charge in this case was not adequately supported by the
    evidence and was phrased in a manner that incorrectly suggested defendant fled
    police at the shooting scene. These errors require a new trial, given that the
    State's proofs of guilt were not insurmountable. Cf. State v. Sterling, 
    215 N.J. 65
    , 102 (2013) (finding no harmful trial error requiring reversal of certain
    charges where DNA evidence had overwhelmingly proved the defendant's
    identity and guilt).
    B.
    The second contested issue on appeal is whether the court should have
    given an identification instruction to the jury. Defense counsel did not request
    such an identification charge, but argues that the court should have sua sponte
    issued this instruction. We review this issue, not raised below, under a plain
    error standard of review. 
    Macon, 57 N.J. at 333
    .
    The model "No In- Or Out-Of-Court Identification" charge reads as
    follows:
    (Defendant), as part of his/her general denial of
    guilt, contends that the State has not presented
    sufficient reliable evidence to establish beyond a
    reasonable doubt that he/she is the person who
    A-2315-16T4
    15
    committed the alleged offense. The burden of proving
    the identity of the person who committed the crime is
    upon the State. For you to find this defendant guilty, the
    State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that this
    defendant is the person who committed the crime. The
    defendant has neither the burden nor the duty to show
    that the crime, if committed, was committed by
    someone else, or to prove the identity of that other
    person. You must determine, therefore, not only
    whether the State has proven each and every element of
    the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt, but also
    whether the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt
    that this defendant is the person who committed it.
    [Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "No In- Or Out-Of-
    Court Identification" (rev. Oct. 26, 2015).]
    Defendant argues that, without this instruction, the jury may not have been
    sufficiently cognizant of the State's burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
    not only that an offense occurred, but that it was this particular defendant who
    committed it.
    Because there was no in-court or out-of-court identification of defendant
    as the perpetrator, and defendant maintains that he did not commit the crime,
    identity was a hotly disputed issue in this case. Given the exculpatory testimony
    from defendant's mother and ex-girlfriend, it is at least plausible that the
    defendant's brother, Robert Harold, was the perpetrator. As we already have
    noted, defendant's mother testified that Robert borrowed the gold van, which
    was linked to the shooting, on October 25, and returned it to her with a broken
    A-2315-16T4
    16
    windshield the next day, October 26. It is also noteworthy that the DNA analysis
    of the shirt the defendant was supposedly wearing during the shooting was not
    conclusive, and that his ex-girlfriend testified, "he wouldn't be caught dead in
    that [shirt]." Flem, the auto glass repair clerk, was unable to identify defendant
    as his customer. All things considered, the identification charge would have
    been appropriate in this setting.
    Trial courts have an "independent duty . . . to ensure that the jurors receive
    accurate instructions on the law as it pertains to the facts and issues of each case,
    irrespective of the particular language suggested by either party."         State v.
    Reddish, 
    181 N.J. 553
    , 613 (2004) (citing State v. Thompson, 
    59 N.J. 396
    , 411
    (1971)). At times, a trial court's failure to sua sponte charge the jury on a
    particular issue may constitute plain error requiring reversal. State v. Fair, 
    45 N.J. 77
    , 93 (1965). Although this omission by itself would not necessitate a new
    trial, the error compounds the prejudice stemming from the erroneous flight
    charge. A new trial in this close case, in which the circumstantial proofs of
    identity were not as "overwhelming" as in other cases, is in the interests of
    justice. R. 2:10-1.4
    4
    Because the jury charge errors could have tainted defendant's conviction on
    the weapons possession count, that count should be tried again as well.
    A-2315-16T4
    17
    Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    A-2315-16T4
    18