STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. MICHAEL SAMPSON (13-01-0098, BERGEN 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4923-16T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    MICHAEL SAMPSON, a/k/a
    MICHAEL PEREZ, JOSE
    GONZALEZ, and JOHN
    SAMPSON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Submitted October 22, 2019 – Decided November 25, 2019
    Before Judges Fisher, Accurso and Rose.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Bergen County, Indictment No. 13-01-0098.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Alison Stanton Perrone, Designated
    Counsel, on the brief).
    Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney for
    respondent (Jenny Xiaoying Zhang, Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    In appealing his convictions for murder, as well as various weapons and
    drug offenses, defendant contends the trial judge erred in denying his motions
    for a severance and for substitution of counsel, in limiting his cross-examination
    of a prosecution witness, and by imposing an excessive sentence. Because we
    agree with defendant's argument that the trial judge's denial of severance
    constituted an abuse of discretion, and because the circumstances that preceded
    sentencing provided grounds for the trial judge's recusal, we vacate the judgment
    of conviction and remand for separate trials before a different judge.
    I
    Because the severance issue that undergirds our disposition requires
    consideration of the prosecution's allegations in this multi-faceted indictment,
    we discuss the evidence at some length. During the course of a twenty-one-day
    trial in October, November and December, 2016, the jury heard evidence that,
    in July 2012, defendant and his wife, Jacqueline Pierro, resided in Garfield with
    two teenage children from prior relationships and their own two younger
    children, M.S., who was just a toddler, and A.S., then an infant. Defendant was
    the sole breadwinner and supported the family by working in his own body shop
    while managing another. When defendant lost the latter job, the family began
    A-4923-16T4
    2
    experiencing financial problems. According to Pierro, the couple resorted to
    selling marijuana to make ends meet.          Defendant's cousin supplied the
    marijuana, defendant packaged it, Pierro and defendant sought buyers, and
    defendant completed the sales.
    During the afternoon of July 7, 2012, defendant and Pierro delivered
    marijuana to a customer and then stopped by the Cliffside Park home of Lydia
    Homsi, Pierro's longtime friend. A children's birthday party was underway;
    outside, Pierro attempted to find buyers by asking another friend whether anyone
    was interested. There were no takers, and defendant and Pierro returned home.
    Around 10:30 p.m. that evening, defendant and Pierro drove back to
    Cliffside Park in their black Nissan minivan to attend a party at TJ's Boom Bar.
    The event was a "moms' night out" for the purpose of allowing Pierro and several
    other women, including Homsi, to catch up with another friend, Christine
    Perrone, who was visiting from Texas. On arrival, defendant sat by himself with
    a large black umbrella or stood near Pierro while she socialized with her friends.
    A friend, Dominick Visconti, stopped by and joined the group.
    Pedro Santiago was at the same bar with Hector Tito Zabala and several
    other men; they were there to celebrate someone's birthday. According to
    Santiago, Zabala grew progressively more intoxicated as the night wore on.
    A-4923-16T4
    3
    Visconti, who first met Zabala several months earlier, also observed that Zabala
    was drunk. According to Pierro, Zabala intruded on her and defendant at one
    point. Zabala said he was "strapped," meaning he was armed. Defendant found
    Zabala off-putting.
    Santiago chatted with Homsi and Perrone. Zabala, whose behavior grew
    increasingly obnoxious, attempted to socialize with the women. He flirted with
    Homsi and Perrone and offered to buy them drinks. Homsi declined; Perrone
    accepted. Homsi and Perrone were not overly bothered by Zabala, whose
    drunken behavior they found goofy but not threatening.         Santiago felt it
    necessary to tell Zabala to "chill out."
    Pierro and her friends, as well as Santiago and Zabala, stayed at the bar
    until around 2:00 a.m., when it closed. The entire group moved outside, still
    laughing and talking; they gradually moved up the street. At the corner there
    was a bus stop bench on which Zabala sat, slumped over. It appeared to Homsi
    and Perrone that Zabala had had too much to drink. Santiago urged him to go
    home and offered to call a cab, but Zabala still wanted to party. Santiago did
    not think Zabala was behaving in a nasty or aggressive manner.
    A-4923-16T4
    4
    At one point Pierro and defendant approached Santiago and tried to sell
    him some marijuana. Santiago was not interested but either gave his or took
    defendant's phone number to end the conversation.
    When Zabala got up from the bench, Pierro and her friends sat down.
    Defendant, who was standing behind Pierro, wanted to go home, but Pierro
    asked him to wait a little longer. According to Pierro, Zabala stepped in front
    of her at that moment and said, "oh, I like that." Although Pierro was neither
    alarmed nor frightened by this, defendant immediately intervened and said,
    "Okay, that's my wife." According to Pierro, Zabala then moved behind the
    bench, away from her.
    While Pierro was still sitting on the bench facing forward, she heard
    Zabala loudly call defendant "the N-word" behind her back; she also heard
    Zabala say: "I'll take whatever you got." Pierro heard a scuffle of feet and then
    gunshots. She turned quickly and saw a flash of light by defendant's hand, which
    was pointed down.     She ran to defendant and saw Zabala on the ground,
    bleeding. Pierro and defendant then walked to their car. Santiago watched
    defendant walk away from Zabala.
    Raymond Jenkins, a taxicab driver, was inside the taxi company office
    across the street from TJ's Boom Bar, facing the bus stop bench when he heard
    A-4923-16T4
    5
    gunshots. He saw a dark-skinned man standing with another man lying at his
    feet and others running from the scene. The dark-skinned man Jenkins saw was
    holding something black and silver in his hand. Jenkins watched as that man
    calmly walked away with a white woman; they both got in a car and drove off.
    Police arrived; their attempts to revive Zabala proved unsuccessful. An
    autopsy later revealed that Zabala had been shot five times at close range, once
    to the chest, twice to the abdomen, once to each of his hands and once to his left
    forearm. The fatal shot to his chest was fired after Zabala had collapsed , and
    death occurred soon after. Zabala's blood alcohol content at the time of his death
    was .235; he also had marijuana metabolites in his system.
    The police interviewed bystanders and quickly obtained the names and
    descriptions of defendant and Pierro and used motor vehicle records to learn
    where they lived. Meanwhile, Pierro had driven home with defendant who told
    her he was intoxicated and "felt woozy." During the trip, they stopped so
    defendant could change their flat tire. Perrone called to check on them and
    Pierro hysterically said, "he's going to get in trouble . . . [h]e's the father of my
    kids," before defendant began yelling and Pierro hung up. According to Pierro,
    defendant then told her to calm down and asked her whether she would rather
    he were dead.
    A-4923-16T4
    6
    Upon arriving home, Pierro called her friend Xiomara Falu and asked if
    she and defendant could come over. When they arrived at Falu's two-bedroom
    Garfield apartment, defendant was carrying a black duffle bag. He spent the
    night at Falu's apartment; Pierro went back home to stay with the children.
    In the morning, Pierro and the children returned to Falu's home. Pierro
    called Perrone to find out if anything happened and whether police were
    involved. Perrone told Pierro the police had contacted her and that they wanted
    to question defendant.
    Pierro and defendant left their infant with Falu and took the toddler to the
    Lodi home of their longtime friend Jessica Lewis. While there, Pierro used
    Lewis's iPad and learned Zabala was dead.           She then had a whispered
    conversation with defendant, following which defendant and Pierro left, leaving
    the toddler with Lewis.
    Defendant and Pierro returned to Falu's home. Pierro and Falu then went
    to retrieve the toddler, leaving defendant and the infant at Falu's apartment.
    Pierro and Falu drove with the toddler to a Burger King in Lodi. They were
    spotted there by police, who had traced Pierro's cell phone to Lodi. Falu told
    the police that defendant and the infant were at her Garfield apartment. Because
    defendant was considered armed and dangerous, the police sent a SWAT team
    A-4923-16T4
    7
    to Falu's apartment; there, they arrested defendant who had been lying down
    with the infant in the apartment's second bedroom.
    Police searched Falu's apartment and found on the bed in Falu's master
    bedroom, a .380 caliber handgun and ammunition, a Foot Locker bag, and a
    shoebox containing a digital scale, glassine baggies, and a large bag of what was
    later determined to be marijuana. Falu denied she owned any of these items.
    Police also searched defendant's minivan and found a large black umbrella and
    a blown-out tire. At the scene of the shooting, police recovered five shell
    casings, which were later determined to have come from the handgun found in
    Falu's apartment.
    Police also obtained video from the surveillance camera at a nearby
    grocery store. This video captured images of a man with an umbrella and a gun,
    a flash, and another man falling to the ground.
    At trial, Andre DiMino, an expert in computer and digital forensics,
    explained that he recovered deleted texts from phones used by defendant and
    Pierro. These texts appeared to show that defendant and Pierro were selling
    marijuana to various customers. DiMino also determined that defendant made
    several calls of momentary duration to one number, later determined to be
    Santiago's, at about 2:30 a.m. on July 8, 2012.
    A-4923-16T4
    8
    Detective Douglas Rager of the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office
    testified that based upon his law enforcement experience, the vegetation, digital
    scale and glassine baggies found in Falu's bedroom suggested that whoever
    owned these items was involved in marijuana distribution.
    Detective Michael Perez, the State's expert in drug distribution, testified
    that: (1) a shoebox and sneaker store bag, like the ones found on the bed in
    Falu's bedroom, were often used to conceal marijuana; (2) the digital scale and
    baggies found were of the type used by drug distributors; (3) the large package
    of marijuana found in Falu's bedroom contained more than expected for
    individual use; and (4) the individual who possessed the marijuana, the scale
    and the baggies was more likely selling the marijuana than using it perso nally.
    Perez also reviewed the texts between defendant and Pierro, identified words
    contained therein that were associated with drug dealing, and interpreted the
    messages in that context.
    Defendant testified on his own behalf. He asserted that, on the evening of
    July 7, 2012, he agreed to accompany Pierro to the bar to visit with Perrone and
    that he took his gun "for protection" because he believed Cliffside Park was
    unsafe. He denied that he or Pierro brought marijuana with them.
    A-4923-16T4
    9
    Defendant also testified that while he and Pierro were sitting at a table,
    Zabala approached and sat down in front of Pierro. Defendant did not know
    who Zabala was and was unhappy with this development, but Zabala told
    defendant that he was "strapped" and that defendant would have to put up with
    him. Defendant did not think Zabala was drunk.
    Defendant told Zabala that Pierro was his wife and that Zabala should go
    back to his friends. Zabala moved away but later returned. Defendant again
    told Zabala to rejoin his friends. Defendant felt that Zabala was singling him
    out in a threatening way and tried to intimidate him.
    When the bar closed, defendant went outside with Pierro and her friends.
    He denied speaking with Santiago or giving him his phone number. Defendant
    also denied that he was intoxicated.
    While Pierro was sitting on a bench, defendant leaned over from behind
    and asked if they could leave. Pierro said she wanted to stay a little longer.
    According to defendant, Zabala instead moved behind him and said, "Nig[g]er
    I'm a – show you what – what I got" or "Nigger, I'll take what you got," or
    something to that effect. Defendant turned around and saw Zabala reaching for
    a revolver sticking out of his waistband. Defendant was afraid and stepped back,
    A-4923-16T4
    10
    drew his own gun and fired at Zabala's hand to prevent him from pulling the gun
    out. He continued firing at Zabala even when Zabala was on the ground.
    Defendant insisted he had not been trying to kill Zabala. He stated,
    though, that he found Zabala's conduct to be "an affront to humanity." He also
    denied that the marijuana and other drug paraphernalia found in Falu's bedroom
    belonged to him. He did, however, acknowledge ownership of the gun.
    II
    Defendant was indicted and charged with:
    • first-degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1)(2);
    • second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful
    purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a);
    • second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b);
    • two counts of third-degree possession of a controlled
    dangerous substance (CDS) with intent to distribute,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(1) and -5(b)(11);
    • third-degree CDS possession near or on school
    property, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7;
    • two counts of fourth-degree CDS possession, N.J.S.A.
    2C:35-10(a)(3);
    • second-degree possession of a weapon during the
    course of a CDS-related offense, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4.1;
    and
    A-4923-16T4
    11
    • second-degree endangering the welfare of a child,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a).1
    In March 2016, defendant moved to sever those counts pertaining to the murder
    and weapons offenses from the counts related to the drug and endangerment
    offenses. His motion was denied.
    On April 5, 2016, the trial court permitted defendant's private counsel to
    withdraw from the case after it appeared he would have to testify as a witness,
    and an attorney affiliated with the Office of the Public Defender was appointed
    as substitute counsel. Because of this late substitution, the trial was adjourned
    from March to October 2016, to allow new counsel to prepare for trial. On
    October 18, 2016, defendant unsuccessfully moved for the removal of his new
    attorney and for an adjournment of the trial.
    Defendant was tried in October, November and December 2016. On
    December 21, 2016, the jury acquitted defendant of CDS possession near or on
    school property and child endangerment but found him guilty on all remaining
    counts.
    1
    Pierro was also charged under this indictment with the same drug offenses, as
    well as third-degree hindering and second-degree child endangerment. Pursuant
    to a plea deal, Pierro pleaded guilty to hindering and agreed to testify truthfully
    for the State at defendant's trial in the hopes of being sentenced to probation.
    A-4923-16T4
    12
    Because defendant filed civil suits against both his attorneys, his
    sentencing was postponed for six weeks. Sentencing was again adjourned for
    another week because bomb threats were apparently directed at the Bergen
    County Courthouse and the Bergen judiciary.
    The trial judge held an in-chambers conference after the first adjournment
    of the sentencing. Based on comments made by the judge at that time, defendant
    moved for recusal, claiming the judge's comments in chambers demonstrated a
    bias against him. This motion was denied.
    After appropriate mergers, the judge sentenced defendant to: a fifty-year
    prison term, subject to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2:43-7.2, on
    the murder conviction; a consecutive five-year prison term on the conviction for
    third-degree CDS possession with the intent to distribute; and a ten-year
    consecutive prison term with five years of parole ineligibility on the conviction
    for possession of a firearm in the course of a CDS-related offense.
    III
    Defendant appeals, arguing:
    I. THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION IN
    DENYING DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SEVER THE
    MURDER AND WEAPONS CHARGES FROM THE
    WHOLLY UNRELATED CDS CHARGES, THEREBY
    DENYING THE DEFENDANT A FAIR TRIAL.
    A-4923-16T4
    13
    II. DEFENDANT WAS DEPRIVED OF HIS RIGHT TO
    COUNSEL WHEN THE TRIAL COURT REFUSED TO
    ALLOW A SUBSTITUTION OF COUNSEL BASED ON
    THE COMPLETE BREAKDOWN OF DEFENDANT'S
    RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS ATTORNEY.
    III. THE TRIAL COURT DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF
    HIS RIGHT TO PRESENT A DEFENSE BY
    PROHIBITING THE DEFENSE FROM CROSS-
    EXAMINING DOMINIC VISCONTI ABOUT THE
    VICTIM'S AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR.
    IV. THE DRUG EXPERT'S TESTIMONY SHOULD
    HAVE BEEN BARRED BECAUSE IT CONSTITUTES
    AN INADMISSIBLE OPINION ON DEFENDANT'S
    GUILT THAT INVADES THE PROVINCE OF THE
    JURY.   IN ADDITION, THE PREJUDICE TO
    DEFENDANT WAS EXACERBATED WHEN A POLICE
    OFFICER WHO WAS NEVER EVEN QUALIFIED AS
    AN EXPERT GAVE A SIMILAR OPINION ON
    DEFENDANT'S GUILT (Not Raised Below).
    V. THE JUDGE SHOULD HAVE GRANTED
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR RECUSAL.   THE
    MATTER SHOULD, THEREFORE, BE REMANDED
    FOR A NEW SENTENCING IN FRONT OF A
    DIFFERENT JUDGE.
    VI. THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION IN
    SENTENCING DEFENDANT TO A FIFTY-YEAR TERM
    WITH AN 85% PERIOD OF PAROLE INELIGIBILITY; A
    CONSECUTIVE FIVE-YEAR TERM; AND A
    CONSECUTIVE TEN-YEAR TERM WITH A FIVE-
    YEAR PERIOD OF PAROLE INELIGIBILITY BECAUSE
    A PROPER APPLICATION OF THE AGGRAVATING
    FACTORS DOES NOT SUPPORT SUCH A SENTENCE.
    A-4923-16T4
    14
    As mentioned at the outset, we are satisfied that the trial judge erred in denying
    defendant's motion to sever the CDS and child endangerment charges from the
    murder and weapons charges. Consequently, we need not reach defendant's
    second, fourth and sixth arguments. We do, however, reach the third argument
    to remove any doubt about that testimony at the next trial. And we also reach
    the fifth argument because we agree the trial judge should have recused herself
    and, as a result, all future proceedings should take place before a different judge.
    IV
    In considering the judge's denial of defendant's severance motion, we
    initially observe that the version of events offered by the State at trial consisted
    of separable incidents, some with no logical connection to others. Prior to trial,
    defendant moved for a severance of the CDS charges (arising from events
    preceding and following the shooting) and the child endangerment charge
    (which arose from events that followed the shooting) from the murder and
    weapons charges. We agree that the judge erred in denying the severance
    motion.
    According to Rule 3:7-6, two or more offenses may be joined if the
    offenses are "of the same or similar character or are based on the same act or
    transaction or on 2 or more acts or transactions connected together or
    A-4923-16T4
    15
    constituting parts of a common scheme or plan." Rule 3:15-2(b) imbues trial
    judges with the authority to sever offenses when a joint trial will result in
    prejudice to the defendant.
    The critical inquiry is whether, if the charges were tried separately,
    "evidence of the offenses sought to be severed would be admissible under
    [N.J.R.E. 404(b)] in the trial of the remaining charges." State v. Alfano, 
    305 N.J. Super. 178
    , 191 (App. Div. 1997) (quoting State v. Chenique-Puey, 
    145 N.J. 334
    , 341 (1996)); accord State v. Sterling, 
    215 N.J. 65
    , 73 (2013). That is,
    "[i]f the evidence would be admissible at both trials, then the trial court may
    consolidate the charges because 'a defendant will not suffer any more prejudice
    in a joint trial than he would in separate trials.'" 
    Chenique-Puey, 145 N.J. at 341
    (quoting State v. Coruzzi, 
    189 N.J. Super. 273
    , 299 (App. Div. 1983)).
    In moving to sever the murder and weapons offenses from the CDS and
    endangerment offenses, defendant argued that the murder charge predominated,
    defendant would be greatly prejudiced by the admission of testimony regarding
    the drug charges, and the jury would be inflamed by the inclusion of the
    endangerment charge.      The prosecutor argued severance was unwarranted
    because all the offenses occurred on the same day and the same evidence would
    have to be introduced at two separate trials.
    A-4923-16T4
    16
    By way of a written opinion, the judge briefly explained the rationale for
    denying severance:
    the charges arise from the same transaction. The
    actions that allegedly took place on July 8, 2012
    occurred over the course of less than a day. The
    defendant allegedly shot the victim at approximately
    2:40 a.m. and was arrested that evening around 10:20
    p.m. Additionally, the murder and weapons charges
    bear a direct relation to the drug and child abuse
    offenses. First, the State alleged that the defendant had
    the weapon on his person at the bar where he attempted
    to sell the drugs. Then, when the . . . SWAT team
    arrested the defendant, the same gun and drugs were in
    his vicinity, while his child was on his lap. The proofs,
    including the homicide, guns, drugs and [defendant's]
    flight from the police, are the very circumstances that
    the State alleges place the child in harm's way. Clearly,
    there is sufficient overlap between the charges.
    In appealing, defendant continues to insist he was denied a fair trial when
    the trial court wrongly "combine[d] two trials into one" because there was an
    absence of commonality between the murder/weapons offenses and the
    CDS/endangerment offenses. In defendant's view, since one set of crimes added
    no probative value to the other, and vice versa, their joinder served only to
    improperly suggest to the jury that defendant had a criminal disposition and
    likely committed all of the offenses of which he was accused.
    Admittedly, all the charged offenses allegedly occurred in a short window
    of time. In addition, defendant was alleged to be in possession of the weapon
    A-4923-16T4
    17
    used to shoot Zabala as he and Pierro attempted to sell drugs at TJ's Boom Bar
    hours prior to the shooting. And the police found the same weapon, as well as
    CDS, drug paraphernalia and the allegedly-endangered child when they arrested
    defendant at Falu's apartment. These circumstances might suggest a nexus
    among all the charges.
    But, on closer analysis, we agree with defendant that any link joining all
    these charges together was superficial at best. More to the point, the trial judge
    failed to conduct a Cofield2 analysis, which is required for any disposition of a
    severance motion. So, we reverse the order denying severance and remand for
    a new trial on the murder/weapons charges and a separate new trial on the
    surviving CDS charge.
    Again, the central question in any severance inquiry is whether, if the
    charges were tried separately, evidence of the offenses sought to be severed
    would be admissible under N.J.R.E. 404(b) in the trial of the remaining charges.
    
    Chenique-Puey, 145 N.J. at 341
    . Severance would not be required if it could be
    said that the evidence would be admissible at both trials because the defendant
    would not suffer any more prejudice in a joint trial than he would at separate
    trials. Ibid.; see also 
    Coruzzi, 189 N.J. Super. at 299
    . The Chenique-Puey
    2
    State v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
    , 338 (1992).
    A-4923-16T4
    18
    admonition requires that the judge considering the severance motion conduct a
    Cofield analysis. That is, the judge here was required to determine whether
    evidence about the CDS/endangerment charges would be admissible in a trial on
    the murder/weapon charges, and vice versa. As noted, the judge never employed
    the Cofield test; even if we were to view expansively the judge's rationale –
    which we quoted in its entirety above – at best, the judge considered only the
    second half of Cofield's second prong, when the judge recognized that all the
    offenses were alleged to have occurred closely in time. The judge's rationale,
    however, provided no inkling of her view of the other part of the second prong
    or the other three prongs. That failure alone requires a reversal of the order
    denying the severance motion. But we go further and conclude that had the
    judge conducted the proper analysis, the only option available was to grant the
    motion.
    N.J.R.E. 404(b) allows for the admission of evidence of other crimes or
    wrongs for one of the reasons delineated in the rule – which will be discussed
    shortly – but not to prove "the disposition of a person in order to show that such
    person acted in conformity therewith." In determining the analysis required by
    N.J.R.E. 404(b), the Cofield Court provided four factors to be considered:
    1. The evidence of the other crime must be admissible as
    relevant to a material issue;
    A-4923-16T4
    19
    2. It must be similar in kind and reasonably close in time to
    the offense charged;
    3. The evidence of the other crime must be clear and
    convincing; and
    4. The probative value of the evidence must not be
    outweighed by its apparent prejudice.
    [127 N.J. at 338.]
    As mentioned, there is no doubt that all the crimes charged were
    "reasonably close in time" and the judge's decision appears to lean heavily on
    that circumstance. It is also appropriate to recognize there is also an overlap of
    sorts between the murder/weapons offenses and the CDS/endangerment offenses
    in that defendant was charged with possession of a weapon during the course of
    a CDS-related offense; that overlap, however, related only to defendant's
    possession of a weapon. So, to the extent the prosecution would have sought to
    offer evidence about one of these "other crimes" in order to prove defendant's
    possession of a weapon in the crime being tried, the circumstance here is that
    defendant did not dispute his possession of the weapon and, in fact, his defense
    to the murder charge was never that he was not in possession of a weapon.
    Instead of the few superficial connections between these two groups of
    offenses, we find the Cofield test – when properly applied – would have led the
    trial judge to grant severance. The first prong required consideration of whether
    A-4923-16T4
    20
    the other crime would be relevant as to a material issue. In other words, the
    judge was required to determine that evidence of the CDS or endangerment
    charges would be relevant to a material issue in the prosecution of the murder
    and weapons offenses. 3 N.J.R.E. 404(b) describes how evidence of other crimes,
    wrongs or acts may be relevant, "such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent,
    preparation, plan, knowledge, identity or absence of mistake or accident."
    There was nothing about the evidence offered to prove the CDS charges
    that would suggest a motive for shooting Zabala. Indeed, the conduct leading
    to the charge of endangerment and some of the CDS offenses occurred after the
    shooting. It cannot be seriously argued that the post-shooting offenses revealed
    a motive for the shooting. And evidence of the pre-shooting CDS offenses
    suggests no motive for the shooting. The prosecution did not assert – and
    certainly had no evidence to show – that the shooting occurred during the course
    of a CDS transaction or that the shooting was motivated because defendant and
    Zabala were in a dispute about a CDS transaction.
    The other crime evidence also had no bearing on the other purposes for
    which N.J.R.E. 404(b) evidence might be admitted, such as "opportunity, intent,
    3
    We put aside, for the moment, whether evidence of the murder and weapons
    charges would have been admissible in a trial of the CDS and child
    endangerment offenses.
    A-4923-16T4
    21
    preparation, plan, knowledge, identity or absence of mistake or accident." There
    was no dispute that defendant was in possession of the weapon used to shoot
    Zabala nor was there any dispute that defendant shot Zabala. The central dispute
    concerned the reason for the shooting. The CDS and endangerment offenses
    provided no probative value in the murder case.
    Turning to Cofield's second prong, it is true, as we have already observed,
    that all the offenses occurred "reasonably close in time," but the second prong
    also requires that the other crime evidence "be similar in kind." Again, because
    there was no assertion that defendant shot Zabala because of some CDS dispute,
    there is nothing about evidence of the pre-shooting and post-shooting CDS and
    endangerment offenses that was "similar in kind" to the shooting. All that the
    prosecution – even now – can argue is the nearness in time and the argument,
    also adopted by the trial judge, that all the evidence was part of the same
    "narrative" because the events occurred reasonably close in time. There is no
    difference between this contention and the "res gestae" argument jettisoned by
    our Supreme Court in State v. Rose, 
    206 N.J. 141
    (2011). Moreover, the State's
    argument that the evidence of the CDS charges or the endangerment charge are
    "intricately intertwined" – stripped of the circumstance that they all allegedly
    occurred within the same reasonable time period – is simply inaccurate. The
    A-4923-16T4
    22
    "narrative" about the CDS offenses could be told without reference to the
    shooting, and vice versa.
    The third prong requires consideration of whether the evidence of the
    other crime was "clear and convincing." The judge never analyzed the evidence
    and applied that standard. 4 For present purposes, we assume the prosecution
    had clear and convincing evidence of these other crimes.
    Despite our assumption that evidence of the other bad acts was clear and
    convincing, there is no doubt that any probative value – as to which we find
    none – was outweighed by the "apparent prejudice" of the admission of the other
    bad act evidence. Proving that defendant was attempting to sell marijuana in
    the bar prior to the shooting, or even that he and Pierro were attempting to make
    a sale to Santiago within minutes of the shooting, has no relevance to defendant's
    shooting of Zabala or his defenses to that murder charge. And, surely, there was
    4
    Interestingly, the jury acquitted defendant of the school zone CDS charge,
    which was alleged to have occurred in Cliffside Park prior to the shooting, and
    the child endangerment charge, which was alleged to have occurred in Garfield
    after the shooting. Arguably, those charges could be viewed as being based on
    evidence that was less than clear and convincing since the jury was not
    convinced. To be fair, it might similarly be argued that the other offenses could
    be clearly and convincingly established because the jury found defendant
    committed those offenses beyond reasonable doubt. But, we also do not know
    what role the evidence of the CDS offenses had on the murder charge and vice
    versa. Of course, that is all speculative. The point here, however, is that the
    judge did not analyze this prong at all.
    A-4923-16T4
    23
    no relevance in any aspect of the murder charge that would have been
    illuminated by evidence of the CDS and endangerment offenses alleged to have
    been committed after the shooting.5
    Even if some arguable basis could be presented for finding probative value
    in any of these other crimes in the prosecution of the murder and weapons
    offenses, the prejudicial effect would certainly outweigh that slim probative
    value. In the final analysis, the evidence of other crimes served only to suggest
    to the jury that defendant was a lawbreaker "act[ing] in conformity" with that
    disposition when he shot Zabala – the very thing for which N.J.R.E. 404(b)
    evidence may not be used.
    To summarize, we reverse the order denying severance because the judge
    erred in not conducting a Cofield analysis. Moreover, because a Cofield analysis
    would have unmistakably led to a determination that defendant was entitled to
    separate trials, 6 we reverse and remand for that purpose.
    5
    It should also be plainly obvious that evidence of the murder and weapons
    charges would undoubtedly have been excluded if offered in a prosecution of
    the CDS and endangerment charges because of the incendiary nature and
    tenuous link between the murder and the CDS and endangerment charges.
    6
    Our analysis focused on the admissibility of evidence of the CDS and
    endangerment charges in a trial on the murder and weapons charges. The other
    question – whether evidence of the alleged murder and weapons offenses would
    have been admissible in a trial on the CDS and endangerment offenses – brings
    the same result. It is unimaginable that there was anything about the evidence
    A-4923-16T4
    24
    V
    In his third point, defendant argues that the judge improperly curtailed his
    cross-examination of Visconti. Because the matter has to be retried, we express
    our disagreement with defendant's argument because this issue is likely to be
    repeated at any new trial that follows.
    Prior to Visconti taking the stand, the State moved in limine to bar the
    defense from cross-examining Visconti about an earlier incident Visconti had
    witnessed. On that earlier occasion, he saw Zabala at a Cliffside Park barber
    shop. Zabala was then, according to Visconti, drunk and behaving in a loud and
    obnoxious manner to the point that his friends had to calm him down. In
    opposing the State's motion, defendant argued that this testimony would
    of the shooting that would prove a motive, identity or the other stated grounds
    for admission of other crimes evidence under N.J.R.E. 404(b), in the CDS and
    endangerment offenses, particularly in the pre-shooting CDS charges. The State
    has argued that the fact that defendant was wanted in connection with the murder
    and was armed and with his infant child when arrested suggests that the reason
    for his avoiding the police – that he was wanted for murder – was necessary to
    prove the child endangerment offense. It was enough in that case – for which,
    we would again note, defendant was acquitted – for the State to show that
    defendant was wanted and reasonably believed to be armed and dangerous
    without needing to prove the specific reason a SWAT team was sent to arrest
    him. Without going through each of the four Cofield factors again, it seems
    clear to us that any arguable probative value of the other crimes in a trial of the
    CDS and endangerment offenses would not outweigh the obvious prejudice that
    evidence would have caused.
    A-4923-16T4
    25
    demonstrate Zabala had a propensity for behaving a certain way when drunk and
    this story would support defendant's claim that he acted in self-defense.
    The trial judge concluded that this testimony about Zabala's prior bad acts
    was inadmissible under N.J.R.E. 404(b) and Cofield because there had been no
    showing that this information: (1) was relevant to a disputed material issue; (2)
    was similar in kind and close in time to the homicide; (3) met the clear and
    convincing evidentiary standard; and (4) was of significant probative value that
    outweighed any prejudice to the State. Defendant moved for reconsideration,
    arguing the judge applied the wrong legal standard. The judge directed the
    defense to have Visconti appear for a N.J.R.E. 104 hearing, but Visconti refused
    to come to court and the defense was unable to serve him with a subpoena. The
    judge decided to accept defense counsel's proffer as to what Visconti's testimony
    would be and reconsidered the ruling in light of State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    (2014).
    Weaver recognizes that a defendant is entitled to advance in his defense
    similar other-crimes evidence that tends to "refute his guilt or buttress his
    innocence of the charge 
    made." 219 N.J. at 150
    (quoting State v. Garfole, 
    76 N.J. 445
    , 453 (1978)). The standard for introducing defensive other -crimes
    evidence is lower than the standard imposed on the State when it seeks to use
    A-4923-16T4
    26
    such evidence against a defendant. 
    Garfole, 76 N.J. at 452-53
    . This is because,
    when used against the State's case, the defendant is offering the proof for
    exculpatory purposes and, so, there is no risk of prejudice. State v. Cook, 
    179 N.J. 533
    , 566 (2004).
    The standard of admissibility simply turns on the relevance of the
    evidence to defendant's guilt or innocence. 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 150
    ; 
    Garfole, 76 N.J. at 452-53
    . But the trial judge must still determine that the probative
    value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by the risk that its
    admission will either unduly consume time, likely confuse the issues, or mislead
    the jury. 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 151
    . Such a ruling is highly discretionary. 
    Cook, 179 N.J. at 567
    .
    The judge determined that the issue of self-defense, as asserted here,
    raised questions about whether defendant
    reasonably believed that such force was necessary to
    protect himself against death, or serious bodily harm.
    N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4(b)(2). Therefore, it is the defendant's
    state of mind at the time of the shooting that is of
    critical importance. There is no indication that the
    defendant had any knowledge of the victim's prior
    incident where he "was called out" for "rude and
    obnoxious" behavior. The court does not find that this
    "prior bad act" evidence of the victim is probative or
    relevant to his defense. The proffered testimony of
    Dominic Visconti was a specific act of the victim on a
    A-4923-16T4
    27
    prior occasion, and does not comport with the
    requirements of N.J.R.E. 405, or N.J.R.E. 404(a)(2).
    Defendant maintains that had they heard Visconti's testimony about this
    earlier incident, the jurors could have concluded that, because defendant
    "frequented the same barber shop," he too was aware of this "prior instance of
    aggressive behavior" and that Zabala's prior actions had a bearing on the
    reasonableness of defendant's actions on July 8, 2012. But defendant has not
    cited any evidence in the record to support his assertion that defendant
    "frequented the same barber shop," or that there was otherwise a reasonable
    basis upon which a jury could find that defendant was aware of the incident he
    wanted to elicit from Visconti. Without that, there was no logical nexus between
    Visconti's story about this barber shop incident and defendant's alleged use of
    self-defense.
    We conclude that, as the issue was then presented and based on the record
    as it then existed, the trial judge acted within her discretion in precluding
    defendant's cross-examination into this earlier event allegedly witnessed by
    Visconti.
    VI
    Defendant argues that the judge should have recused herself prior to
    sentencing him.
    A-4923-16T4
    28
    Defendant was originally scheduled to be sentenced in March 2017. That
    proceeding was postponed to April 28, 2017, because defendant had filed
    lawsuits against his original private attorney and the deputy public defender who
    represented him at trial, as well. The April sentencing here was interrupted and
    adjourned when bomb threats forced the court house's closure. At a conference
    a few days later, the judge scheduled sentencing to occur on May 4, 2017. The
    judge also ordered that defendant appear by way of video-conferencing.
    After the conference, defense counsel filed motions seeking:            (1)
    reconsideration of the court's order precluding defendant's physical presence at
    his sentencing; and (2) the recusal of the trial judge because of her allegedly
    unwarranted suspicions of, and bias against, defendant, as expressed during the
    May 2 conference. In a supporting certification, defense counsel asserted that,
    "without any substantive proof" the judge "kept referring to the 'coincidental'
    delays in the completion of this case," such as defendant's
    attempt to change counsel, his civil complaint against
    his former attorney and the [deputy public defender],
    and the "back-and-forth" leaving the courtroom of
    someone on the 4/28/17 date which was being
    investigated as the cause of the court evacuation. In
    addition, the [the trial judge indicated] that the
    defendant would not . . . further delay this matter and
    that this was coming from the "top" or some higher up.
    A-4923-16T4
    29
    Defense counsel believed it clear the judge had baselessly concluded that
    defendant was behind the bomb threats and was deliberately delaying his
    sentencing. Defense counsel faulted the judge for insisting, based on this "wild
    speculation," that defendant appear only by video conference at his own
    sentencing. On receipt of defense counsel's motions, the judge reconsidered and
    reversed the decision to require defendant's appearance by video conference.
    At the outset of defendant's sentencing hearing, with defendant in
    attendance, the judge explained why she had initially concluded that remote
    sentencing was warranted and why that decision had been reconsidered,
    emphasizing that at no point had she ever made a finding that defendant was
    behind the bomb-threat disruption.
    The judge then proceeded to deny the recusal motion, explaining:
    I want to make it very clear that, first of all, this court
    has made, or arrived at no opinion on the matter in
    question, nor . . . is the impartiality of this court
    affected in any way by the events. My concern is to
    sentence [defendant] . . . in a timely fashion – and to
    assure the victim's closure in this matter, as well. The
    matter has gone on for too long. There is no proof . . .
    that the defendant, or anyone else at his behest, was
    involved in the threats made to the [j]udiciary, or to the
    courthouse, or to the [c]ounty buildings today, and I add
    that, as well.
    Moreover, this [c]ourt does not impute the threats to the
    defendant or any of his family members, friends or
    A-4923-16T4
    30
    acquaintances. That is an issue for the State Police or
    the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office to investigate.
    The [c]ourt makes absolutely no findings and does not
    impute in any way the threats made. The [c]ourt is fully
    confident that it can weigh the applicable aggravating
    and mitigating factors presented and arrive at a just
    sentence, without regard to Friday's events. Further
    delay is neither appropriate nor fair to the victim's
    family, who have traveled to this courthouse for a third
    time, after having waited for closure for almost five
    years. The defendant's motion for the [c]ourt to recuse
    itself is denied.
    A judge should not preside over a proceeding if it does not appear the
    judge can be wholly disinterested, impartial, and independent. State v. Muraski,
    
    6 N.J. Super. 36
    , 38 (App. Div. 1949). The Supreme Court has held that recusal
    is required when "a reasonable, fully informed person [would] have doubts about
    the judge's impartiality." State v. Dalal, 
    221 N.J. 601
    , 606 (2015) (quoting
    DeNike v. Cupo, 
    196 N.J. 502
    , 517 (2008)).
    The judge's statements when discussing the rescheduling of the sentencing
    proceedings surely suggested her suspicions that defendant was behind the bomb
    threat.   We are satisfied that, in applying the Dalal/DeNike standard, a
    reasonable, fully informed person would have doubts about the judge's
    impartiality. The judge's later insistence that she had formed no opinion on that
    question could not alleviate those concerns; it was enough that the judge
    A-4923-16T4
    31
    entertained the notion, and expressed it to counsel, to form a doubt about her
    impartiality in the mind of a reasonable, fully informed individual.
    ***
    To summarize, because the trial judge erred in denying defendant's motion
    to sever, we vacate the judgment of conviction and remand for separate trials in
    conformity with this opinion. We also direct that another trial judge preside
    over all future proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-4923-16T4
    32