STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. MAWULDA PINKSTON (16-07-0103 AND 17-03-0041, MERCER 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4459-17T3
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    MAWULDA PINKSTON,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ___________________________
    Argued December 19, 2018 – Decided May 30, 2019
    Before Judges Fuentes, Vernoia and Moynihan.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Mercer County, Indictment Nos. 16-07-0103
    and 17-03-0041.
    Omari S. Reid, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
    cause for appellant (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Omari S. Reid, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Alicia J. Hubbard, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for respondent (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, attorney; Alicia J. Hubbard, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    By leave granted, the State appeals from an April 10, 2018 order imposing
    sanctions, including the dismissal of an indictment, based on the State's failure
    to make timely discovery in two pending criminal cases, which had been
    consolidated for trial, against defendant Mawulda Pinkston. We affirm in part,
    reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    Defendant was charged with various drug offenses and arrested on June
    27, 2015, as the result of a New Jersey State Police investigation during which
    a confidential informant allegedly bought controlled dangerous substances from
    defendant on five separate occasions. The police seized two cellphones from
    defendant at the time of his arrest. Approximately three-and-a-half months later,
    the State sent defendant a letter concerning the charges and a disc containing
    initial discovery.
    On July 6, 2016, over one year after his arrest, a grand jury returned an
    indictment charging defendant with second-degree conspiracy to distribute
    cocaine, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2, 2C:35-5(a)(1) (count one); first-degree distribution of
    cocaine, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(1), (b)(1), (c) (count two); third-degree
    distribution of cocaine within one thousand feet of school property, N.J.S.A.
    A-4459-17T3
    2
    2C:35-7(a) (count three); second-degree distribution of cocaine within five
    hundred feet of certain public property, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7.1(a) (count four); and
    third-degree possession of cocaine, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(1) (count five).
    Defendant was arraigned on July 18, 2016. 1
    On March 7, 2017, a grand jury returned a second indictment charging
    defendant with a single count of third-degree witness tampering, N.J.S.A.
    2C:28-5(a), for contacting the confidential informant involved in his drug case
    and attempting to dissuade the informant from testifying.2 At the April 10, 2017
    arraignment on the indictment, the State did not provide defendant with
    discovery on the witness tampering charge, but represented to the court that the
    discovery would be supplied to defendant. 3
    1
    The State has not provided the transcript of defendant's arraignment on the
    drug charges. See R. 2:5-4(a).
    2
    The confidential informant told police defendant attempted to contact him at
    his workplace on July 22, 2016, and called him on his cellphone the following
    day and attempted to dissuade him from testifying against defendant. The
    informant called defendant on July 25, 2016, and the police recorded that call.
    3
    The State has not provided the transcript of the April 10, 2017 arraignment.
    See R. 2:5-4(a). We discern the facts concerning the arraignment from the
    representations of counsel at other proceedings for which transcripts have been
    provided and the trial court's findings, which the parties do not dispute.
    A-4459-17T3
    3
    In September 2017, a new deputy attorney general took over the
    prosecution of defendant's cases. The court held a pretrial conference and plea
    cutoff proceeding in the drug case on October 16, 2017. Defendant expressed
    uncertainty regarding whether to proceed to trial and the court gave defendant a
    week to consider his decision. On October 23, 2017, defendant appeared before
    the court and rejected the State's plea offer; the State offered to recommend that
    defendant receive a sentence not to exceed fifteen years with a seventy-five
    month period of parole ineligibility in exchange for his plea of guilty to the first-
    degree distribution charge.4 The State's plea offer also included its commitment
    to recommend dismissal of the witness tampering charge.
    The pretrial memorandum, that was signed by defendant, his counsel and
    the deputy attorney general, and entered by the court, expressly stated that "All
    Pretrial Discovery is complete."5 The pretrial memorandum also provided that,
    4
    The State has not provided the transcripts of either the October 16 or October
    23, 2017 proceedings. See R. 2:5-4(a). We discern the facts concerning the
    proceedings from the representations of counsel in other proceedings for which
    transcripts have been provided and the trial court's findings, which are not
    disputed.
    5
    The pretrial memorandum noted that the State would provide defendant with
    a copy of a formal order dismissing charges against the confidential informant.
    The State's compliance with this provision of the pretrial memorandum is not at
    issue.
    A-4459-17T3
    4
    "except in extraordinary circumstances, the filing of [the] [m]emorandum ends
    all plea negotiations, and no further bargaining will take place. Any subsequent
    plea of guilty will be without a plea recommendation." The court scheduled
    November 16, 2017, for the commencement of jury selection for the trial on the
    drug charges.
    On November 14, 2017, two days before jury selection was to begin, the
    State requested a trial adjournment due to purported witness availability issues.
    The trial court held a telephone conference on November 15, 2017, accepted the
    State's representation it had witness availability issues and granted the State's
    adjournment request. The court rescheduled the trial for February 27, 2018.
    On November 15, 2017, hours after the court granted the State's
    adjournment request, the State filed a motion to consolidate the drug and witness
    tampering cases for trial. The deputy attorney general did not disclose the State's
    planned filing of the consolidation motion during the adjournment telephone
    conference with the court.
    The State's representation in the October 23, 2017 pretrial memorandum
    that discovery was complete proved to be inaccurate and disingenuous. On
    November 15, 2017, the State first produced lab notes related to the drug case.
    On November 21, 2017, unbeknownst to defendant and the judge who conducted
    A-4459-17T3
    5
    the pretrial conference and plea cutoff proceeding and was scheduled to try the
    drug case, the State obtained two search warrants from another judge for the
    cellphones that were seized from defendant more than two years earlier during
    his June 2015 arrest.6 The deputy attorney general later admitted she knew prior
    to the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference and plea cutoff proceeding that the
    State planned to obtain the search warrants for the phones, and that she did not
    disclose the State's intention to the court or defendant during that proceeding.
    She nonetheless signed the pretrial memorandum stating all discovery in the
    drug case was complete.
    Police executed the warrants and downloaded information from the
    phones on or before December 18, 2017, but the State did not provide the
    information to defendant at that time. Instead, the State waited until February
    6, 2018, three weeks before the scheduled trial date, to first advise defendant
    that the warrants had been sought and provide defendant with the information
    downloaded from the phones.
    6
    In a later proceeding, the judge who had handled the proceedings in the two
    matters stated that he was not available to consider the search warrant
    applications on the day the warrants were issued, and did not know the State
    sought or obtained the search warrants until February 6, 2018.
    A-4459-17T3
    6
    Confronted in November 2017 with the State's motion to consolidate the
    drug and witness tampering cases, defendant's counsel sent a written request for
    discovery in the witness tampering case on November 21, 2017. Prior to that
    time, defendant had not received any discovery in that case, and his counsel had
    not requested any discovery because she believed, based on her communications
    with the State, the witness tampering case would be disposed of separately after
    trial in the drug case.7 Having not received a reply, defendant's counsel renewed
    the request on December 6, 2017.
    The State first provided discovery in the witness tampering case on
    December 15, 2017, when the State revealed, despite prior assertions to the
    contrary, that the confidential informant had been financially compensated for
    his work as an informant in the drug case. The State provided some additional
    documentation regarding the confidential informant on December 19, 2017, and
    provided information concerning some of the payments made to the confidential
    informant in connection with his cooperation in defendant's drug case on
    January 3, 2018.
    7
    During a February 21, 2017 proceeding, the deputy attorney general agreed
    that the planned handling of the two cases "until very late in the game was that
    the State was going to try the first[-]degree drug charge and then . . . see where
    [it] went with the witness tampering."
    A-4459-17T3
    7
    On January 12, 2018, the court heard argument and granted the State's
    motion to consolidate the drug and witness tampering cases for trial. The court
    found "the evidence that would support the [witness tampering] indictment . . .
    would clearly be admissible to support a consciousness of guilt theory in the
    drug charge." The court was "satisfied that the probative value of this evidence
    is not outweighed by any prejudice," but noted it was "a little bit late" for the
    State "to be filing" the consolidation motion.
    The court also ordered the State to provide any outstanding discovery and
    instructed the parties to return for a pretrial conference on the witness tampering
    case. The court emphasized that the deputy attorney general at the hearing was
    "new to this case, new being in the last several months anyway and a lot of [the
    discovery] discussions occurred with counsel who was in the case prior to " the
    new deputy attorney general's involvement. The State refused to represent that
    all discovery had been produced because it had "been finding out information
    through the State Police . . . over the past several months," but the deputy
    attorney general represented that the State had "provided everything that
    [it] . . . [had] currently."   The court accepted the State's representation, but
    stated the answer was "unacceptable" because the February 27, 2018 trial was
    six weeks away and defendant had already "been to plea cutoff in this case."
    A-4459-17T3
    8
    During the proceeding, the deputy attorney general inexplicably failed to
    mention to the court or counsel that search warrants had been issued for the
    cellphones and information from the cellphones had been obtained from the
    execution of the warrants but not yet provided to defendant.
    On January 16, 2018, defendant reprised his request for information
    regarding any past cooperation between the confidential informant and the State.
    The State objected, arguing it had no obligation to provide information
    concerning the confidential informant's cooperation in other investigations and
    prosecutions.
    On February 5, 2018, the parties appeared for a pretrial conference in the
    witness tampering case. Defense counsel advised the court she intended to file
    a motion to compel the production of discovery related to the confidential
    informant. The court did not conduct the pretrial conference but instead ordered
    a briefing schedule for defendant's motion. The court scheduled a February 21,
    2018 hearing on the motion, but advised that the trial would proceed as
    scheduled on February 27. The deputy attorney general again failed to disclose
    the cellphone search warrants or the information obtained when the warrants
    were executed in December 2017.
    A-4459-17T3
    9
    On February 6, 2018, the State supplied additional discovery in the drug
    and witness tampering cases, including defendant's signed Miranda card, a
    photograph of defendant, the confidential informant's drawing of a house, two
    search warrant affidavits, three evidence receipts and a lab report. For the first
    time, the State also separately alerted defendant concerning the cellphone search
    warrants and searches, providing copies of the search warrant affidavits and two
    discs containing hundreds of pages of encrypted data seized two months earlier
    during the search of the phones. On February 8, 2018, the State provided
    additional discovery in the witness tampering case.
    Six days later, defendant filed a motion to exclude the late cellphone data
    discovery under Rule 3:13(f). The trial court heard oral argument on the motion
    on February 21, 2018, and noted its ongoing frustration with the State because
    of its numerous inaccurate representations during prior proceedings that
    discovery was complete. The court noted the State's failure to search the phones
    for two-and-a-half years, its decision to conduct the searches after the plea cutoff
    proceeding in the drug case, its failure to disclose the December 2017 cellphone
    searches and their results during proceedings in January and February 2018, and
    its belated disclosure on February 6, 2018, of the search warrants and
    information seized from the phones, only ten days before jury selection in the
    A-4459-17T3
    10
    trial was to begin. The court did not rule on defendant's motion to exclude the
    information seized from the phones and instead required the State to submit a
    certification detailing the discovery history in the cases and the reasons for its
    failures and delays in providing discovery. The court adjourned the trial.
    On March 6, 2018, the State finally responded to defendant's request for
    discovery regarding two witnesses who the confidential informant claimed
    observed the witness tampering; the State's response was that it did not have a
    full name or contact information for either individual because they were
    unknown to the confidential informant.
    On March 8, 2018, the deputy attorney general filed the court-ordered
    certification on the discovery history of the cases and mailed defendant a copy
    of ostensibly all discovery in both the drug and witness tampering cases.
    On April 4, 2018, the court heard further argument on defendant's motions
    to compel discovery of information concerning payments to the confidential
    informant and to exclude the cellphone records. The deputy attorney general
    acknowledged that discovery concerning the confidential informant should have
    been disclosed at the outset of the drug case because the distribution charge
    against defendant was dependent on the confidential informant's testimony. The
    deputy attorney general also admitted to the "possibility" that the State made a
    A-4459-17T3
    11
    conscious choice not to disclose the identity of the confidential informant until
    ordered by the court. The deputy attorney general conceded that the State's
    agreement with the confidential informant was an important and relevant
    document in the drug case, but could offer no explanation why it had not been
    turned over to defendant in discovery. The court rejected the deputy attorney
    general's explanation that the delays in the production of discovery were the
    result of State Police actions, noting the Attorney General has supervisory
    authority over the State Police.
    The court heard argument on defendant's motion to bar the information
    seized from the cellphones at trial. The deputy attorney general indicated the
    State perceived it had a strong case against defendant on the drug charges and
    the information from the cellphones was "something additional and
    supplemental for trial." She further acknowledged her failure to disclose the
    State's plan to obtain the search warrants for the phones at the October 23, 2017
    pretrial conference and plea cutoff proceeding "gets pretty close to a sandbag"
    of defendant, deprived defendant of the ability to make a knowing decision about
    how to proceed in the case, deprived defense counsel of the ability to provide
    good legal advice and was not fair.
    A-4459-17T3
    12
    The deputy attorney general represented that the decision to move to
    consolidate the drug and witness tampering cases was not made until after the
    pretrial proceeding in the drug case, and the motion was made without regard to
    the effect it would have on the scheduled trial date. She further admitted the
    motion was filed on November 15, 2017, immediately following the trial
    adjournment request telephone conference during which she did not disclose that
    the motion would be filed, and that, prior to filing the motion, the State had not
    provided any discovery to defendant in the witness tampering case.
    The deputy attorney general also agreed the evidence in the witness
    tampering case should have been provided separately as discovery in the drug
    case because it pertained to the confidential informant who allegedly witnessed
    the drug distribution charged in the indictment. The deputy attorney general
    acknowledged that even after the consolidation of the cases on January 12, 2018,
    there were "significant items . . . missing" from the discovery due to defendant.
    On April 10, 2018, the trial court rendered an oral decision on defendant's
    motions and sua sponte dismissed the witness tampering charge, vacated the
    order consolidating the cases, and barred the State's use of evidence seized from
    the cellphones following the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference in the drug
    A-4459-17T3
    13
    case.8 The court's sua sponte actions were founded on its determination that the
    New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice "displayed . . . a cavalier and arrogant
    indifference to its discovery obligation[s]," and "violated [its] inherent
    obligation to promote fundamental fairness and protect the basic rights of people
    who [are] accused of committing a crime." The court noted that the "Division
    has made representations . . . it didn't keep" and "affirmatively failed to disclose
    information . . . which any reasonable person would know that the [c]ourt
    wanted."
    The court detailed the numerous court proceedings that occurred during
    the two matters,9 recounted the State's failure to provide discovery in the witness
    tampering case until after the consolidation motion was filed, and explained that
    it would not have granted the consolidation motion if it had known th at, due to
    the State's failure to honor its obligation to provide automatic and broad
    8
    The court also ordered that the State provide in discovery information related
    to payments made by the State to the confidential informant. The State does not
    challenge that portion of the court's order and we therefore do not address it.
    9
    The court noted that it reviewed the audio recordings of all of the prior
    proceedings in the two cases and incorporated the record of those proceedings
    into its decision. The State, however, failed to include in the record on appeal
    the transcripts of all of the proceedings, other than the grand jury hearings,
    occurring prior to the January 12, 2018 hearing on the State's consolidation
    motion. See R. 2:5-4(a).
    A-4459-17T3
    14
    discovery, the witness tampering case was not prepared for the trial that was
    scheduled only weeks later. The court observed that the State's failure to provide
    the discovery deprived defendant's counsel of the opportunity to provide
    effective assistance because she could not adequately assess the State's case or
    prepare for trial. The court found the State's failure to timely provide the
    discovery in the witness tampering case "constitutes an egregious carelessness
    tantamount to [a] suppression of evidence against . . . defendant."
    The court further found the State committed a "significant additional
    discovery violation" by choosing to wait until after the pretrial proceeding in the
    drug case to obtain the search warrants and information from the cellphones and
    by misrepresenting at the pretrial hearing and in the pretrial memorandum that
    discovery was complete. The court found the State had the cellphones for more
    than two years before the search warrants were sought and made a strategic
    decision not to search the phones prior to the pretrial conference and plea cutoff
    proceeding, instead opting to obtain the search warrants and information from
    the cellphones only after defendant rejected the State's plea offer and the court
    entered the pretrial memorandum. The court also noted the State's consistent
    and inexplicable failure to disclose the search warrants and the search of the
    cellphones during the October 23, 2017 proceeding and the numerous court
    A-4459-17T3
    15
    interactions and exchanges with defense counsel following the issuance of the
    warrants in November 2017 and prior to February 6, 2017. The court found the
    State's actions constituted a "deliberate failure to candidly share . . . important
    information in this case."
    The court concluded the State's actions unfairly deprived defendant of the
    opportunity to make a fully informed decision concerning the State's plea offer
    at the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference and plea cutoff proceeding, and
    reasoned that "the best way to address this matter is simply to restore the
    defendant to the exact position that he was in on the day that the pretrial
    memorandum was completed [in the drug case] and the day that the State
    represented that its discovery was complete and that it was ready for trial." The
    court found it was "fair to make the State honor that choice" and "fundamentally
    unfair to let the State make representations of plea cutoff and then act to
    strengthen [its] case in anticipation of trial" through, not just the motion to
    consolidate, but "the search warrants concerning the phones."           The court
    concluded that defendant's decision to proceed to trial "was not fully informed"
    because his lawyer did not have all the State's discovery and thus could not
    "provide him with the most effective assistance possible."
    A-4459-17T3
    16
    The court also determined it was inappropriate to reward the State's
    "unilateral decision making" which caused months of delay in bringing
    defendant's drug case to trial following the plea cutoff proceeding. The court
    vacated its January 12, 2018 order consolidating the drug and witness tampering
    cases for trial, finding the State had failed to provide discovery in the witness
    tampering   case   prior   to   filing    the   motion   for   consolidation   and
    "sandbagg[ed] . . . defendant." The court found the State's consolidation motion
    was "designed to increase the likelihood of [defendant's] conviction," the State
    indicated it would provide discovery to defendant when he was arraigned on the
    witness tampering charge but did not, and the State's failure to provide the
    discovery both before and after the consolidation motion was "borne of abject
    indifference and a complete lack of due diligence." The court dismissed the
    witness tampering indictment with prejudice, finding the State's conduct
    appalling and noting discovery in the witness tampering case "should have been
    provided substantially earlier at or near the time of the arraignment at a
    minimum."
    The court barred the State from using at trial any evidence it provided in
    discovery after the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference, where the State
    disingenuously represented that discovery was complete. The court permitted
    A-4459-17T3
    17
    defendant to use at trial evidence provided by the State after October 23, 2017,
    including the cellphone records, without "opening the door" to the State's use of
    the evidence. The court, however, ordered that the State could move at trial to
    utilize evidence produced following the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference if
    defendant relied on such evidence in the first instance at trial. The court also
    directed that the State provide all outstanding discovery related to the drug case.
    The court entered an April 10, 2018 order dismissing the witness
    tampering indictment, vacating the order consolidating the drug and witness
    tampering indictments for trial, barring the State's use of any discovery produced
    following the October 23, 2017 pretrial conference in the drug case, and
    allowing defendant to rely on such evidence without opening the door to the
    State's use of such evidence. We granted the State's motion for leave to appeal
    the court's order.
    On appeal, the State presents the following argument for our
    consideration:
    POINT I
    THE JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION BY
    IMPOSING    UNNECESSARILY  DRACONIAN
    SANCTIONS TO ADDRESS DISCOVERY ISSUES
    THAT WERE NOT INTENTIONAL, EGREGIOUS,
    OR PREJUDICIAL.
    A-4459-17T3
    18
    II.
    We consider the State's argument in the context of basic principles
    applicable to the State's grave responsibilities in its prosecution of criminal
    cases. "Because of the overwhelming power vested in his [or her] office, [a
    prosecutor's] obligation to play fair is every bit as compelling as his [or her]
    responsibility to protect the public." State v. Torres, 
    328 N.J. Super. 77
    , 94
    (App. Div. 2000) (second alteration in original); see also RPC 3.8 (outlining
    special responsibilities of prosecutors). Our Supreme Court has explained that
    "[t]he heightened responsibilities of prosecutors include faithful adherence to
    all . . . protections accorded defendants[.]" State v. Harvey, 
    176 N.J. 522
    , 529
    (2003) (alterations in original) (quoting State v. Carreker, 
    172 N.J. 100
    , 115
    (2002)). Among those protections is the defendant's right to discovery.
    A "[d]efendant's post-indictment right to discovery is automatic" under
    our Rules of Court. State v. Gilchrist, 
    381 N.J. Super. 138
    , 145 (App. Div. 2005)
    (quoting Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, cmt. 3.1 on R. 3:13-3 (2006)). A
    criminal defendant is "entitled to broad discovery under Rule 3:13-3," State v.
    Broom-Smith, 
    406 N.J. Super. 228
    , 239 (App. Div. 2009), and our Supreme
    Court has recognized "our longstanding case-law view in favor of the exchange
    A-4459-17T3
    19
    of pretrial discovery and the court rule that makes pretrial access to the evidence
    a critical right for all defendants," State v. Scoles, 
    214 N.J. 236
    , 257 (2013).
    The State has a continuing duty to provide the requisite discovery during
    the course of a criminal proceeding. R. 3:13-3(f). However, where, as here, a
    trial court determines that the State has failed to comply with its discovery
    obligations under the Rule, the court
    may order such party to permit the discovery of
    materials not previously disclosed, grant a continuance
    or delay during trial, or prohibit the party from
    introducing in evidence the material not disclosed, or it
    may enter such other order as it deems appropriate.
    [Ibid.]
    "A trial court's resolution of a discovery issue is entitled to substantial
    deference and will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion." State v.
    Washington, 
    453 N.J. Super. 164
    , 179-80 (App. Div. 2018) (quoting State v.
    Stein, 
    225 N.J. 582
    , 593 (2016)). However, we will not defer to discovery orders
    that are "wide of the mark" or "based on a mistaken understanding of the
    applicable law." Id. at 180 (quoting State v. Hernandez, 
    225 N.J. 451
    , 461
    (2016)). We review "the meaning or scope of a court rule . . . de novo" and "do
    not defer to the interpretations of the trial court . . . unless we are persuaded by
    A-4459-17T3
    20
    [its] reasoning." 
    Ibid.
     (second and third alterations in original) (quoting State
    v. Tier, 
    228 N.J. 555
    , 561 (2017)).
    Prior to addressing the court's exercise of its discretion in imposing the
    specific sanctions at issue here, we first reject the State's contention that no
    sanctions are appropriate because the discovery violations, which the State does
    not dispute, were inadvertent. Stated differently, the deputy attorney general
    representing the State on appeal 10 contends in part that we should reverse the
    court's order because the "State did not intentionally or carelessly withhold the
    discovery." We are unconvinced.
    The court's findings concerning the State's violation of the discovery rules
    are well-supported by sufficient evidence in the record. After representing to
    the court at defendant's arraignment on the witness tampering charge that it
    would provide the discovery in the matter to defendant, the State simply,
    undeniably and without any explanation failed to do so. As the trial court aptly
    noted, discovery in the witness tampering case was pertinent to the drug case,
    10
    The deputy attorneys general representing the State in the trial court have not
    made an appearance in this appeal. The deputy attorney general representing
    the State on this appeal, who ably handled this matter with professionalism and
    candor, did not participate in any of the proceedings before the trial court and
    was not involved in the State's discovery infractions that are the subject of this
    appeal.
    A-4459-17T3
    21
    but the State failed to honor its continuing obligation to supply that discovery in
    the drug case as well.     Moreover, as we have already detailed, the State's
    discovery improprieties did not end there; it planned to obtain search warrants
    for the cellphones prior to the October 23, 2017 plea cutoff proceeding in the
    drug case but never advised defendant or the court of that fact and instead
    misrepresented to the court and in the pretrial memorandum that discovery was
    complete. More importantly, the State permitted defendant to proceed to plea
    cutoff, and reject the State's plea offer, without all of the discovery the State
    planned to obtain and use later at trial. The State further did not advise the court
    of the warrants or information harvested from the phones during the telephone
    conference on its trial adjournment request, the argument on the consolidation
    motion or the February 5, 2017 conference. When offered an opportunity to
    provide a reason for its consistent and ongoing lack of disclosure, the State
    offered nothing more than a belatedly candid acknowledgment of its
    inexplicable failures.
    The State also failed to disclose its intention to make the consolidation
    motion at the time it requested a trial adjournment for purported witness
    unavailability issues, filing the motion only hours after the adjournment was
    secured even though it had never provided any discovery related to the witness
    A-4459-17T3
    22
    tampering case in either that case or the drug case. When the consolidation
    motion was argued, the State not only failed to disclose the existence of the
    cellphone search warrants and the information seized from the cellphones, it did
    not disclose that it had not provided complete discovery to defendant in the
    witness tampering case or the deputy attorney general's then realization she had
    not been provided all of the discovery from the State Police in that matter.
    Instead, the State was content to ignore its failures to comply with its discovery
    obligations and let defendant and his counsel proceed to a trial scheduled only
    weeks later where the State intended to request that an extended term life
    sentence be imposed if defendant was convicted.
    Here, the trial court generously found the State's conduct constituted gross
    carelessness and indifference, but regardless of how the conduct is
    characterized, it is wholly inconsistent with the State's obligation to "promote
    fairness and protect the basic rights of all citizens, even those [it] believe[s] to
    be guilty." State v. Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. 497
    , 508 (App. Div. 2002). We have
    observed that "[a] criminal trial is not a jousting match or board game in which
    strategy outweighs fairness and rules are celebrated in the letter and not the
    spirit,"   ibid., but here the State's conduct, failure to honor its discovery
    obligations, lack of disclosure, and strategy to gather and slowly mete out
    A-4459-17T3
    23
    additional discovery to strengthen its case against a defendant who rejected a
    plea offer is the paradigm of abhorrent and unacceptable gamesmanship not only
    with defendant, but also with the court.
    The State asserts that the court's order dismissing the witness tampering
    indictment constitutes a "draconian sanction[]" in response to "inadvertent
    discovery violations that did not prejudice defendant and for which any number
    of less severe remedies would have readily sufficed." While the court possesses
    "inherent powers" to dismiss an indictment when the State fails to comply with
    discovery rules, State v. Abbati, 
    99 N.J. 418
    , 429 (1985); see also R. 3:13-3(f),
    the court should only grant a motion to dismiss an indictment in limited
    circumstances, State v. Zembreski, 
    445 N.J. Super. 412
    , 424-25 (App. Div.
    2016).   "One of the guiding principles to be followed by a court when
    considering a motion to dismiss an indictment is that 'a dismissal of an
    indictment is a draconian remedy and should not be exercised except on the
    clearest and plainest ground.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Williams, 
    441 N.J. Super. 266
    , 271 (App. Div. 2015)).
    "Before a dismissal of an indictment is warranted . . . there must be a
    finding of intention inconsistent with fair play and therefore inconsistent with
    due process, or an egregious carelessness or prosecutorial excess tantamount to
    A-4459-17T3
    24
    suppression." State v. Washington, 
    165 N.J. Super. 149
    , 156 (App. Div. 1979)
    (quoting State v. Laganella, 
    144 N.J. Super. 268
    , 282 (App. Div. 1976)). "In the
    absence of these conditions," the court should dismiss an indictment "only if
    otherwise there would be manifest and harmful prejudice to defendant." 
    Ibid.
    (quoting Laganella, 
    144 N.J. Super. at 282-83
    ). However, "the public interest
    in the completion of criminal trials weighs against [dismissing an indictment]
    where other remedies are available," State v. Ruffin, 
    371 N.J. Super. 371
    , 388
    (App. Div. 2004), and "this drastic remedy is inappropriate where other judicial
    action will protect a defendant's fair trial rights," Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. at 508
    .
    We share the trial court's justifiable outrage at the State's conduct and
    failure to honor its discovery obligations and duty to make disclosures where
    appropriate. Nonetheless, we are not convinced the court correctly exercised its
    discretion by dismissing the indictment charging witness tampering, and reverse
    that portion of the court's order. Dismissal of an indictment due to a discovery
    violation is a "last resort because the public interest, the rights of the victims
    and the integrity of the criminal justice system are at stake." Ruffin, 371 N.J.
    Super. at 384. That is particularly true where the charge to be dismissed is one
    for witness tampering, and the putative victim is an important witness in the
    prosecution of other significant criminal charges.
    A-4459-17T3
    25
    Here, dismissal of the witness tampering indictment was unnecessary for
    the protection of defendant's right to a fair trial on that charge because the court's
    decision, which we affirm, to vacate the consolidation order protected
    defendant's right to a fair trial in the witness tampering case.           See, e.g.,
    Zembreski, 445 N.J. Super. at 426-27 (finding no abuse of discretion where the
    court denied defendant's motion to dismiss a superseding indictment after the
    court offered defendant more time to prepare for trial and the defendant
    declined); Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. at 508
     (holding a trial judge "properly denied
    the defense motion to dismiss the indictment" after the prosecutor failed to
    disclose information regarding a witness). Indeed, the court recognized "that it
    ha[d] arguably taken appropriate ameliorative action by vacating the order
    consolidating the two indictments for trial."
    "The choice of sanctions appropriate for discovery-rule violations is left
    to the broad discretion of the trial court." State v. Marshall, 
    123 N.J. 1
    , 134
    (1991).    The court properly exercised that discretion by vacating the
    consolidation order to remedy the State's failure to provide discovery in that
    matter prior to the filing of the consolidation motion and its failure to provide
    complete discovery in the matter after the motion was filed. The court's vacation
    of the consolidation order, however, eliminated any prejudice to defendant's
    A-4459-17T3
    26
    ability to prepare his defense to the witness tampering charge because the trials
    on the drug and witness tampering indictments will proceed separately in
    accordance with defendant's understanding at the time of the October 23, 2017
    pretrial conference and plea cutoff proceeding.
    Moreover, the late delivery of the discovery in the witness tampering case
    did not prejudice defendant in making his decision to reject the plea offer in the
    drug case. Although no discovery on the witness tampering charge had been
    provided prior to the October 23, 2017 plea cutoff proceeding, defendant and
    his counsel were aware they did not have the discovery, but did not deem its
    absence relevant to defendant's determination to accept or reject the State's plea
    offer in the drug case. That is, defendant rejected the plea offer in the drug case
    with full knowledge he did not have the discovery from the witness tampering
    case.
    We therefore affirm the court's order vacating its January 12, 2018 order
    consolidating the drug and witness tampering cases. We reverse the court's
    order dismissing the witness tampering indictment; the sanction is unnecessary
    to protect defendant's right to a fair trial.
    We do not find the court abused its discretion by barring the State's use in
    the drug case of the discovery it produced following the October 23, 2017
    A-4459-17T3
    27
    proceeding at which the State represented that discovery was complete. We
    recognize that "the sanction of preclusion is a drastic remedy and should be
    applied only after other alternatives are fully explored[.]" Washington, 453 N.J.
    Super. at 190 (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Scher, 
    278 N.J. Super. 249
    , 272 (App. Div. 1994)). Rule 3:13-3(f) "specifically provides for discretion
    in formulating a sanction for a discovery violation," Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. at 509
    , and expressly allows for an order "prohibit[ing a] party from
    introducing . . . the material not disclosed," R. 3:13-3(f). "An adjournment or
    continuance is a preferred remedy where circumstances permit." Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. at 509
    . However, "repeated and flagrant derelictions" of the discovery
    rules "may require application of the sanction of preclusion." State v. Burnett,
    
    198 N.J. Super. 53
    , 61 (App. Div. 1984).
    Here, the Court determined the State's discovery violations, including its
    failure to provide discovery in the witness tampering case and in the drug case,
    and other conduct amounted to "repeated and flagrant derelictions" of the
    discovery rules and that preclusion of discovery produced after execution of the
    pretrial memorandum was the appropriate remedy. We agree. The court shall
    only conduct a pretrial conference and schedule a case for trial "[i]f the court
    determines that discovery is complete." R. 3:9-1(f). The State represented in
    A-4459-17T3
    28
    the pretrial memorandum that, but for one document, discovery was complete,
    but at the same time already planned to seek a search warrant for the cellphones
    and knew it failed to provide the discovery in the witness tampering case in the
    drug case. Defendant relied on that representation in deciding to proceed to
    trial, and the court relied on that representation in scheduling the matter for trial.
    The State then obtained search warrants for defendant's cellphones, obtained
    information from the phones, withheld disclosure of the search warrants and
    information for two months, and made disclosure only nine days before jury
    selection was to begin. The State's conduct was not the result of inadvertence
    or the late discovery of previously unknown evidence; it was the product of an
    intentional and hidden strategy.
    The State contends the trial court "effectively created a new rule wherein
    the State is barred at plea cutoff from conducting further investigation to
    strengthen its case or respond to potential defenses at trial."            The State
    mischaracterizes what occurred. The rule has always been that the State must
    provide full and automatic discovery to a criminal defendant, cannot
    misrepresent to the court that discovery is complete when it has an active plan
    to obtain discovery in the future, is not permitted to fail to disclose that it applied
    for search warrants and obtained additional discovery materials after a pretrial
    A-4459-17T3
    29
    memorandum has been executed and a trial date has been set, and cannot delay
    the production of newly discovered information for two months while knowing
    that there are only weeks until a pending trial. The trial court did not create a
    new rule.   It simply imposed an appropriate sanction for the State's clear
    violation of well-established rules and principles that provide the foundation for
    a criminal defendant's right to a fair trial. Cf. Washington, 453 N.J. Super. at
    191 (setting aside the trial judge's exclusion of DNA evidence because the State
    did not intentionally mislead the defendant, the report's completion "was
    delayed for the straightforward reasons set forth in the certifications " regarding
    the State Police's conduct, and the prosecutor immediately supplied the report
    once available).
    The State never sought relief from the pretrial memorandum from the
    court, but instead chose to employ a strategy of quietly developing and thrusting
    upon defendant and the court additional discovery with the goal of bolstering its
    case after defendant rejected the State's plea offer. There is no doubt the State
    acted improperly and unfairly to gain an unfair advantage over defendant
    following his final rejection of the plea offer. The deputy attorney general
    admitted as much in April 2018, after the nature and extent of the State's conduct
    was exposed; she acknowledged the State's actions—her actions—"get[] pretty
    A-4459-17T3
    30
    close to a sandbag," deprived defendant of the ability to make knowing decisions
    about how to proceed in the drug case, denied his attorney the ability to give
    him effective legal advice and were not fair.
    Under such circumstances, we discern no basis to conclude the court 's
    decision to bar the State's use of the discovery disclosed after the October 23,
    2017 proceeding constituted an abuse of discretion. See id. at 179-80. To the
    contrary, the court's measured and well-reasoned decision barring the State's use
    at trial in the drug case of the discovery produced following the October 23,
    2017 proceeding constituted a justified and proper exercise of the court's
    discretion.
    For these reasons, we affirm the court's order precluding the State from
    using discovery submitted after the October 23, 2017 pretrial memorandum. We
    read the remainder of the court's order, which conditions the State's use of the
    discovery materials provided after October 23, 2017, upon the approval of the
    court if defendant uses the materials in the first instance, as nothing more than
    the court's exercise of its standard gatekeeping function concerning the
    admission of evidence at trial. Stated differently, we do not read that portion of
    the court's order limiting the State's use of the post-October 23, 2017, discovery
    materials to prohibit the State's use of the materials, to the extent admissible
    A-4459-17T3
    31
    under the Rules of Evidence, to address, refute or rebut issues raised by
    defendant's use, if any, of those materials.    Thus, contrary to the State's
    contention, the order does not give "defendant free reign [sic]" to use the
    materials while precluding the State from using the records "in any way."
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings.
    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-4459-17T3
    32