STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DAVID RAMIREZ (16-04-0537, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2020 )


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  •                                        RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4238-17T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DAVID RAMIREZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Submitted November 14, 2019 – Decided February 27, 2020
    Before Judges Whipple and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Middlesex County, Indictment No. 16-04-
    0537.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Zachary Gilbert Markarian, Assistant
    Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on the brief).
    Christopher L.C. Kuberiet, Acting Middlesex County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (David Michael
    Liston, Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant appeals from a March 19, 2018 judgment of conviction for
    second-degree sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(b) and second-degree
    endangering, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a)(1), after a jury trial.
    Defendant raises the following arguments.
    POINT I: THE ADMISSION OF REPETITIVE,
    CORROBORATIVE HEARSAY STATEMENTS
    PURSUANT     TO   THE   TENDER-YEARS
    EXCEPTION WAS UNDULY PREJUDICIAL AND
    REQUIRES   REVERSAL OF DEFENDANT'S
    CONVICTIONS.
    POINT 2: DEFENDANT WAS DEPRIVED OF A
    FAIR TRIAL BY PERVASIVE MISCONDUCT IN
    OPENING AND SUMMATION, WHEREBY THE
    PROSECUTOR VOUCHED FOR THE CREDIBILITY
    OF THE COMPLAINING WITNESS, ASKED
    JURORS NOT TO HOLD INVESTIGATORS'
    FAILURE TO SPEAK TO A KEY WITNESS
    AGAINST THE COMPLAINING WITNESS, AND
    OFFERED UNSUPPORTED TESTIMONY ABOUT
    WHY OFFICERS FAILED TO PERFORM DNA
    TESTING. (Partially raised below.)
    A.    The Prosecutor Encouraged the Jury to
    Give Extra Weight to D.O.'s 1 Testimony by
    Referring to Video Footage of Her Interview and
    D.O.'s Trial Testimony as Two Separate
    Witnesses, Vouching for Her Credibility, and
    Repeatedly Stating that "No Reasonable Person"
    Could Find She Was Not Credible.
    1
    We use initials to protect the identity of the child victim.
    A-4238-17T4
    2
    B.     Referring to Investigators' Failure to Speak
    to D.O.'s Sister, the Prosecutor Asked Jurors Not
    to "Hold That Against" D.O. in Their Evaluation
    of the Evidence.
    C.    The Prosecutor in Summation Improperly
    Testified About Why Investigators Had Not
    Attempted DNA Testing.
    POINT 3: A REMAND FOR RESENTENCING IS
    REQUIRED BECAUSE THE JUDGE DOUBLE-
    COUNTED AND ERRED IN FINDING AND
    WEIGHING AGGRAVATING AND MITIGATING
    FACTORS.
    We reject these arguments and affirm.
    We glean the following facts from the record. On July 3, 2015, defendant
    lived with then-eleven-year-old D.O., D.O.'s mother, and three-year-old I.R., the
    daughter he shared with D.O.'s mother. Although D.O.'s mother was not married
    to defendant, D.O. referred to him as her step-father.      On that day, D.O.,
    defendant, I.R., and D.O.'s mother were in the one-bedroom apartment they
    shared. They had planned a family outing to an aquarium or waterpark, but
    defendant told them they could not go.
    While D.O.'s mother was washing clothes in the bathroom and I.R. was
    sitting on the couch in the living room occupied with a game on her phone, D.O.
    was sitting on the living room floor doing schoolwork on the coffee table in
    front of the couch. When D.O. asked defendant for help, he sat behind her on
    A-4238-17T4
    3
    the couch and began massaging her shoulders, and then grabbed her breasts both
    over and under her shirt. When defendant "ma[d]e his way towards" D.O .'s
    pants, she stopped him. After D.O.'s mother came into the living room and saw
    D.O. crying, she asked D.O. what was wrong, to which D.O. responded she was
    having trouble with a math problem. D.O.'s mother noticed that the neck of
    D.O.'s shirt was "stretched out." D.O.'s mother went into the kitchen, D.O.
    followed her, and her mother asked her again what happened; D.O. then told her
    that defendant touched her. D.O.'s mother confronted defendant, after which
    defendant threatened to jump out the fourth-story window.
    D.O., her mother, and I.R. then left the apartment, called the police, and
    met them in the lobby. At police headquarters, D.O. reported defendant touched
    her inappropriately on multiple occasions beginning earlier that year, usually at
    home and while her mother and I.R. were in the apartment. On the prior
    occasions, defendant touched D.O.'s breasts over and under her clothing after
    coming up behind her while she was occupied with other tasks. D.O. stated she
    did not tell her mother when this happened because her mother loved defendant
    and D.O. did not want to see her mother hurt.
    That same day, Detective Joseph Chesseri, who was trained in "Finding
    Words," a protocol for interviewing children "in a non-leading, non-suggestive
    A-4238-17T4
    4
    way," was called in by Detective William Coleman from the Middlesex County
    Prosecutor's Office to interview D.O. The interview with D.O. was video-
    recorded.     Defendant was subsequently indicted for second-degree sexual
    assault and second-degree endangering the welfare of a child.
    The prosecutor moved to admit the video-recording of the interview, as
    well as D.O.'s mother's testimony about D.O.'s statements to her, under 1) the
    fresh complaint exception to the hearsay rule, which allows out-of-court
    statements by a sexual assault victim to show the victim did complain, and 2)
    N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27), which allows out-of-court statements made by a child under
    the age of twelve to be admitted in cases involving sexual misconduct against
    that child.
    After conducting a hearing, the trial judge granted the prosecutor's motion.
    As to the fresh complaint exception to the hearsay rule for the statements D.O.
    made to her mother, the trial judge considered the Hill and Bethune 2
    requirements: 1) whether the victim's statement was made to a person she would
    ordinarily turn to for support, 2) whether the statement was made within a
    reasonable time after the alleged sexual assault, and 3) whether the statement
    2
    State v. Hill, 
    121 N.J. 150
    , 163, 167 (1990); see also State v. Bethune, 
    121 N.J. 137
    , 148-49 (1990).
    A-4238-17T4
    5
    was made spontaneously and voluntarily. The trial judge also weighed the Hill
    and Bethune3 factors to determine whether the statement was spontaneous and
    voluntary: 1) the age of the victim, 2) the circumstances under which the
    interrogation takes place, 3) the victim's relationship with the interrogator, 4)
    who initiated the discussion, and 5) the type of questions asked.
    The trial judge found the prosecutor met all the required criteria for
    admitting the testimony of a fresh complaint witness in that it was "undeniably
    clear" that D.O. revealed the sexual abuse to someone she would ordinarily turn
    to for support – her mother. Although the trial judge noted there is no case law
    "that strictly defines what constitutes a 'reasonable time'" after the abuse for
    purposes of the fresh complaint rule, she found that the approximately twenty-
    three minutes was reasonable, given defendant was sitting near D.O. the first
    time D.O.'s mother questioned her, and D.O.'s ultimate revelation to her mother
    occurred within a half hour.       The trial judge further found the statement
    voluntary and spontaneous in that D.O. went to her mother of her own accord
    and told her mother about the assault after her mother asked an open -ended
    question. Thus, having met all the requirements under Hill and Bethune, the
    3
    
    Id.
     at 168 (citing Bethune, 
    121 N.J. at 145
    ).
    A-4238-17T4
    6
    trial judge found D.O.'s statements to her mother admissible under the fresh
    complaint rule.
    As to the admissibility of D.O.'s statements to her mother and the video-
    recorded interview with Chesseri under the "tender years exception" to the
    hearsay rule, N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27), the trial judge noted that because D.O. was
    less than twelve years old at the time she made the statements to her mother and
    Chesseri, and because the prosecutor put defendant on notice of his intention to
    introduce the out-of-court statements and to call D.O. as a witness at trial, the
    only issue for the trial judge to determine was "whether, based on the time,
    content, and circumstances of D.O.'s statements, there is a probability that the
    statements are trustworthy."
    Citing State v. R.M., the trial judge considered the totality of the
    circumstances surrounding the statements to determine their trustworthiness. 4
    Considering the factors set out in Idaho v. Wright 
    497 U.S. 805
    , 821-22 (1990),
    the trial judge found D.O.'s statements to her mother and Chesseri contained
    significant indicia of reliability and were trustworthy and reliable. The trial
    judge found D.O.'s mother's questions were not coercive, as D.O. voluntarily
    followed her mother into the kitchen and told her mother about the incident in
    4
    State v. R.M., 
    245 N.J. Super. 504
    , 517-18 (App. Div. 1991).
    A-4238-17T4
    7
    response to the open-ended question of what was wrong. The trial judge noted
    D.O.'s mother did not ask anything about defendant and whether he had touched
    D.O. or otherwise mistreated her, and that further, D.O.'s description to her
    mother of the way defendant touched her was consistent with D.O.'s later
    description to Chesseri. The trial judge also found no evidence of, nor did
    defense counsel assert, that D.O. had a preconceived aversion to defendant or a
    motive to lie. The trial judge lastly found D.O.'s description of defendant's
    touching used "words within the ken of the average child of her age" that belied
    any suggestion D.O. was coached into her statement.
    As to the video-recorded interview, the trial judge found Chesseri "was
    careful to ask D.O. open-ended questions, to which D.O. gave age-appropriate,"
    spontaneous, highly descriptive responses describing the incident, which were
    consistent and used language one would expect of an eleven-year-old.
    The trial judge found defense counsel's argument regarding D.O.'s
    proximity in age to the cutoff age for the rule was meritless, as 803(c)(27) is a
    "bright-line rule for admitting the statements of child victims who are under the
    age of twelve." She further found Chesseri's role as an investigator did not
    negate the reliability of D.O.'s statements, in that he asked predominately open-
    ended questions in accordance with his training in the Finding Words program.
    A-4238-17T4
    8
    Based on these findings, the trial judge found 1) D.O.'s statement to her
    mother admissible under the fresh complaint exception to the bar against
    hearsay, and 2) D.O.'s statements to her mother and Chesseri (in the video -
    recorded interview) admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27), and granted the
    prosecutor's motion. The same judge presided over a jury trial that began in
    November 2017.
    In his opening statement, the prosecutor referenced the evidence and
    testimony the jury would hear during trial. When he spoke about the witnesses
    the jury would see, he told them:
    Obviously, you're going to hear from the people
    who were involved. In a few moments, [D.O.] is going
    to come in and tell you that she was abused by the
    defendant. Her mother . . . will come in and talk about
    what happened. . . .
    ....
    You will . . . see and hear . . . the interview that
    was conducted with [D.O.] back on July . . . 3[,] . . .
    2015 at the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office.
    Now, in most instances . . . you don't see a
    recorded interview of a witness. But the law does allow
    in certain circumstances, this being one of them, that
    the interview of a child under [twelve] is able to be
    played because the law understands that as . . . children
    grow, that time passes between the event and the day
    that they come into court.
    A-4238-17T4
    9
    [Y]ou not only get [D.O.] as she is today. You
    will be able to see and hear the child as she was on the
    day that she revealed this to her mother and ultimately
    to law enforcement.
    So, in a sense, we have six witnesses, because
    you'll see the [fourteen]-year-old [D.O.] of 2017 and
    you'll see her as the [eleven]-year-old she was on July
    3, 2015.
    The prosecutor then told the jury that when they looked at defendant
    the law says that you're looking at an innocent man.
    And that only changes if the State is able to prove its
    case beyond a reasonable doubt. . . .
    ....
    We have to leave you firmly convinced. And in
    our effort to do that, we are going to rely heavily, most
    importantly, on the testimony of a [fourteen]-year-old
    girl and her [eleven]-year-old self, as we said before, at
    the time that all of this was revealed to . . . her mother
    and to the police.
    Defense counsel told the jury that while police officers would be
    testifying,
    you're not going to hear that there's any DNA evidence
    in this case. And you're not going to hear that anybody
    even tried to get any DNA evidence. You're going to
    hear that no photographs were taken in this case of the
    setup of the living room of the apartment and that no
    one even tried to do that. . . .
    That's what I expect you're going to hear. So,
    what are you left with? What you're left with is two
    A-4238-17T4
    10
    people, [D.O.] and her mother, just what they said.
    What . . . [D.O.] said happened, what [D.O.]'s mother
    said that [D.O.] said happened, and you may hear what
    [D.O.]'s mother says that [defendant] said.
    So, that's just two people. And in holding the
    State to its enormous responsibility to prove to you
    beyond a reasonable doubt the charges in this case,
    that's . . . all you've got is the two people.
    At trial, D.O., testified as to the July 3 incident as well as to the prior
    incidents. D.O.'s mother also testified as to the events of July 3. Officer
    Coleman testified that as a detective with the juvenile bureau he was notified of
    D.O. and her mother's transport to the station, and that because he was "not
    forensically trained to speak with [eleven]-year-old victims . . . as procedure"
    he notified the prosecutor's office to do the forensic interview. That was when
    Chesseri was called in, as Coleman testified that where there is a victim less
    than twelve years old, "I don't generally ask them questions because of their age.
    It has to be done forensically."
    Chesseri then testified as to his interview with D.O., stating the interview
    room is "geared towards a set-up for children," that he "had been trained with
    the forensic interviewing of children" in 2009 and 2014, and that he had
    conducted those types of interviews in Hudson and Middlesex Counties over the
    course of six years in the Special Victims Unit. Chesseri described the interview
    A-4238-17T4
    11
    process as "a non-leading, . . . non-suggestive . . . interviewing process to make
    them comfortable in the setting," and that while there was a structure to it, when
    a child began telling him what happened he would let them talk. The protocol
    was to build rapport with the child, discuss the concept of telling the truth, have
    the child name body parts using diagrams of males and females, and explore
    details if the child made a disclosure.        Chesseri testified there was no
    requirement the interview result in a disclosure, but that D.O. did disclose during
    her interview that defendant had touched her on her breasts under her clothing.
    The trial judge then played the video-recorded interview for the jury. In
    the video, Chesseri told D.O. she could say anything she wanted, that she was
    not in trouble with him, but the "only rule that I have when you talk is that
    everything that we talk about has to be the truth. And the truth is what really
    happened, okay? Do you promise to tell me the truth?" D.O. responded in the
    affirmative.   He also told her it was important she correct him if he got
    something wrong, and to stop him if she did not understand anything. After
    discussing summer plans and books, Chesseri asked D.O. if she knew why she
    was there, to which she responded "[b]ecause my step-dad tried to touch me."
    After Chesseri stopped her to make sure they were on the same page with naming
    body parts, D.O. told him, in response to Chesseri's questions, that defendant
    A-4238-17T4
    12
    touched her breasts, that he had done so before, that he tried to touch her genital
    area but that she pushed him away, and that defendant had touched her breasts
    on other occasions.
    Defendant chose to exercise his right to remain silent. Defense moved for
    acquittal on the evidence presented, submitting the evidence was insufficient as
    a matter of law due to lack of any physical evidence and lack of any attempt to
    obtain physical evidence. In denying the motion, the trial judge noted it was not
    necessary the testimony be corroborated; that it would not be expected in this
    matter to find physical evidence, as there was no penetration or kissing; and that
    the word of the victim in this case was sufficient if the jury chose to believe her,
    in that it was detailed, specific, and consistent with her mother's testimony and
    her prior testimony.
    During summation, the prosecutor told the jury he would "address . . .
    testimony that you've heard that supports a conviction here. We will address
    hopefully all the things that [defense counsel] asked you to consider because
    most of the things that she has asked you to consider you should consider and
    reject almost immediately." The prosecutor noted that while at the outset the
    jurors all took a neutral position as to whether they thought a child was more or
    less likely to be honest when testifying
    A-4238-17T4
    13
    now, at the end of the case, [w]e're asking that question
    about the credibility of . . . this specific child, [D.O.]
    . . . the [fourteen]-year-old [D.O.] who came in here
    yesterday and took an oath on the Bible and made a
    promise to tell the truth. . . . But beyond that, we're
    asking did [eleven]-year-old [D.O.], when she finally
    disclosed to her mother what the defendant had been
    doing to her, was she telling the truth then? Because
    that was another instance where she told somebody
    what was happening to her. Later that same day, going
    back two years, the [eleven]-year old [D.O.] told . . .
    Chesseri . . . this is what has been going on . . . [w]as
    she telling the truth then? . . . Now we are focused on
    one child who I think you've had an opportunity to look
    at and listen to both in person and on video.
    I start with that point . . . because credibility is
    really the central issue . . . of your deliberations here.
    Because if the facts in the case are determined to be
    true, then no reasonable person is going to say even
    though . . . an adult male touched the breasts of an
    [eleven]-year-old, I don't think that's a crime because
    that's not sexual assault. . . . [N]o reasonable person is
    going to say that even though I believe everything
    [D.O.] said, I don't believe that her morals were
    endangered . . . .
    ....
    So, central, important question is [D.O.] being
    honest? . . . Truthful testimony, by nature, by
    definition, is limited testimony . . . [b]ecause if you're
    committed to telling the truth, you're . . . limited by
    reality. That's not true when you're lying . . . if [lying
    is] your intention, you're not bound by anything . . .
    when you say something like he touched my breasts and
    then he moved towards my pants but he didn't pull
    [them] down, well, if you're lying about that, if you
    A-4238-17T4
    14
    wanted to create the misimpression that this person was
    . . . committing a terrible sexual assault, there's nothing
    to stop you from saying, you know, he got his hands in
    my pants . . . that's not to diminish what [D.O.] actually
    said. The point is she actually could have said a lot
    more in the effort to lie if that's what she was doing.
    If you take the oath seriously . . . you're not going
    to say things that didn't happen even if it doesn't
    necessarily help your cause . . . the defense is saying
    she's not telling the truth.
    In response to defense counsel's assertion that D.O. was angry with
    defendant because he told her they could not go to an aquarium or water park,
    the prosecutor told the jury
    do you honestly think that she would say these things
    against this man simply because she wasn't able to go
    on a summer outing? . . . No reasonable person is going
    to see that in her. You didn't see it yesterday when she
    testified. You didn't see it in the video when she told
    []Chesseri . . . [defendant] said no. The tone of voice
    that she used, there was no anger in it. There was no
    frustration in it. She said matter-of-factly like it's just
    something that happened . . . [d]oes anyone honestly
    think that even if she was upset about [defendant] . . .
    ruining the plans . . . she would keep that anger for two
    years and . . . continue the same lie about it? . . . [I]n
    assessing the credibility of the witness, [D.O.], a
    reasonable person can't find any motivation for her to
    say these things unless they are actually true.
    As to defense counsel pointing out that no one took photos of the couch
    or the apartment, the prosecutor remarked
    A-4238-17T4
    15
    [i]f a juror, in this case, needed a photograph of a sofa
    to make a determination about this girl's inherent
    credibility, then I'd suggest to you that you're not a
    reasonable person . . . [the lack of photographs] is really
    an inconsequential or unimportant point.
    In response to defense counsel's assertion there was a discrepancy between
    D.O.'s video-recorded testimony and trial testimony, the prosecutor told the jury
    [t]he [S]tate would characterize it as a very truthful and
    descriptive piece of testimony. Now, she forgot about
    the fact that after [defendant] touched her breasts, he
    got up . . . left the room . . . came back . . . once it was
    brought to her attention, she acknowledged [it] . . .
    [t]hat's what an honest person does, isn't it?
    The prosecutor again noted that D.O.'s testimony was
    always consistent . . . [s]he never once said he touched
    anywhere else . . . [a]nd she could have . . . [i]f you are
    lying . . . you are not bound to the truth . . . you can say
    anything . . . [t]here's nothing to stop her from saying
    that he touched my vagina . . . [b]ut she didn't say that
    because it didn't happen . . . [t]he reason why she didn't
    is knowable; it's clear; it's obvious. She didn't say that
    because it didn't happen. What she's telling you, what
    she's been saying all along . . . is the truth.
    Finally, the prosecutor told the jury
    [t]he ultimate question here . . . is did [D.O.] tell the
    truth . . . [t]he only reasonable answer to that question,
    the only reasonable conclusion that can be drawn from
    that testimony is yes, she did . . . if she was telling the
    truth yesterday, then there is no reason to doubt her
    back on July 3 . . ., 2015.
    A-4238-17T4
    16
    At that point, defense counsel objected, arguing the prosecutor's remarks
    about D.O. constituted vouching for her credibility.        The prosecutor then
    finished summation by stating "[t]he only conclusion that can be drawn by a
    reasonable person based upon what [D.O.] said in court and back when she
    disclosed what happened to her, [is] that she was telling the truth. And because
    she's telling the truth, the defendant is guilty of the crimes [for which he has
    been] indicted."
    The trial judge instructed the jury, including the fresh complaint jury
    instruction, and the jury found defendant guilty on both counts. The pre -
    sentence report (PSR) noted that defendant underwent an evaluation at the
    Avenel Diagnostic Treatment Center (Avenel).              The evaluation found
    defendant's
    behavior meets the criteria for repetition but not for
    compulsion . . . there are several sexually abusive acts
    on several occasions, which provides clear evidence of
    repetition. . . .
    At sentencing, defense counsel asked the trial judge to find mitigating
    factor seven, as defendant had no prior criminal offenses. The prosecutor argued
    for aggravating factor nine, both specific and general deterrence, as well as
    aggravating factor three, the risk that defendant will commit another offense.
    After considering the PSR, the letters defendant submitted in support of his
    A-4238-17T4
    17
    character, and the arguments by defense counsel and the prosecutor, the trial
    judge found aggravating factor three, the risk defendant will commit another
    offense "given that this was not an isolated incident . . . and [the Avenel
    evaluator] found [defendant's] conduct is repetitive." She went on to state that
    she found "a very strong factor [nine], the need to deter the defendant and others
    from violating the law. This [c]ourt and society take sexual offenses against
    children very seriously. And I send a strong message to this defendant and
    others that there are serious consequences for such behavior." The trial judge
    did find mitigating factor seven, but found the aggravating factors outweighed
    the mitigating. Defendant was sentenced to seven years subject to the No Early
    Release Act, for count one, and to a five-year concurrent sentence for count two.
    Defendant was also subject to conditions of: parole supervision for life;
    reporting and registration conditions of Megan's Law; and was to have no
    contact with the victim or her mother.
    I.
    We reject defendant's argument that in the absence of any physical or
    forensic evidence, confession, or other eyewitness testimony, "[t]he repeated
    admission of D.O.'s allegations in different formats was unnecessary,
    A-4238-17T4
    18
    cumulative, and unduly prejudicial" under N.J.R.E. 403 and denied defendant a
    fair trial under both the United States and New Jersey Constitutions.
    A trial judge has "broad discretion in determining whether or not to admit
    evidence alleged to be relevant and has, as well, broad discretion in determining
    that even relevant evidence should be excluded if its probative value is
    outweighed by undue prejudice or undue delay." State v. E.B., 
    348 N.J. Super. 336
    , 344 (App. Div. 2002) (citing N.J.R.E. 403). Therefore, the trial judge's
    evidence ruling is "entitled to deference unless it is a clear error of judgment or
    so wide of the mark that a manifest denial of justice results." 
    Ibid.
     N.J.R.E. 403
    permits the exclusion of relevant evidence "if its probative value is substantially
    outweighed by the risk of (a) undue prejudice, confusion of issues, or misleading
    the jury or (b) undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative
    evidence." The presumption is that relevant evidence will be admitted, and for
    relevant evidence to be properly excluded, "factors favoring exclusion must
    substantially outweigh the probative value of the contested evidence." E.B., 
    348 N.J. Super. at 345
    .
    Under the fresh complaint exception to the rule against hearsay, an out -
    of-court statement by a sexual assault victim is permitted for the purpose of
    "negat[ing] any inference that because the victim had failed to tell anyone that
    A-4238-17T4
    19
    she had been [sexually assaulted], her later assertion of [sexual assault] could
    not be believed." State v. Hill, 
    121 N.J. 150
    , 159 (1990) (citation omitted).
    However, to prevent undue prejudice against the defendant, a fresh complaint
    statement must have been made within a reasonable time after the assault and
    must have been spontaneous and voluntary. 
    Id. at 163
     (first citing State v.
    Tirone, 
    64 N.J. 222
    , 226-27 (1974); and then citing State v. Balles, 
    47 N.J. 331
    ,
    338-39 (1966)). The statement must also have been made to a person the victim
    would ordinarily turn to for support. State v. R.K., 
    220 N.J. 444
    , 455 (2015)
    (citations omitted). Because the New Jersey Supreme Court has recognized a
    child may be too frightened or embarrassed to talk about sexual abuse they have
    experienced, "[t]hese requirements are relaxed when they are applied to juvenile
    victims," to allow them additional time to complain. 
    Ibid.
     (citation omitted).
    In cases involving children, statements made in response to a "yes or no"
    question are not permitted, State v. Bethune, 
    121 N.J. 137
    , 145 (1990), but
    "general, non-coercive questions do not rob a complaint of its admissibility
    under the fresh-complaint rule," 
    id. at 144
     (citations omitted). It is the trial
    court's role to determine the degree of coercion involved and whether the
    statement was spontaneous or made directly in response to interrogation, and
    the court must make its determinations by considering the age of the child, the
    A-4238-17T4
    20
    child's relationship with the interviewer, the circumstances surrounding the
    questioning, whether the child initiated the discussion, whether the questions
    were leading, and the specificity of the questions as it relates to the alleged
    abuser and alleged acts. 
    Id. at 145
    . When a fresh complaint statement is found
    admissible, it is so only for the purpose of proving the victim complained, not
    to corroborate details of the testimony, 
    id. at 146
    , and jury instructions should
    be given to inform jurors the purpose of the fresh complaint is to neutralize the
    inference that the alleged victim's behavior was not consistent with a sexual
    abuse claim, 
    id. at 147-48
    . "Only the facts that are minimally necessary to
    identify the subject matter of the complaint should be admitted." R.K., 220 N.J.
    at 456.
    Here, D.O. made the fresh complaint statement to her mother, with whom
    she had a close relationship, within the half hour, in response to her mother' s
    general question asking why D.O. was crying, which is proper under Bethune.
    The trial judge considered these factors when she made her determination that
    the fresh complaint statement was admissible, and thus did not abuse her
    discretion when admitting D.O.'s mother's testimony as to D.O.'s out-of-court
    statements, under the fresh complaint exception, to show D.O. did complain to
    someone soon after the incident.
    A-4238-17T4
    21
    The "tender years" exception to the hearsay rule, N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27), was
    created when the New Jersey Supreme Court recognized the "difficult problems
    of proof" regarding child-victim testimony in sexual abuse prosecutions, where
    the victim's testimony "is often the indispensable element of the prosecution's
    case." State v. Smith, 
    158 N.J. 376
    , 388-89 (1999) (quoting State v. D.R., 
    109 N.J. 348
    , 358 (1988)). Under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27), a video-recorded interview
    of a child may be admitted on a hearing and preliminary finding that the "out -
    of-court statement is sufficiently reliable based on the time, content and
    circumstances of the statement." See 
    id. at 389
     (quoting State v. D.G., 
    157 N.J. 112
    , 128 (1999)).
    Here, there was a hearing to determine the reliability of the video-recorded
    interview before it was admitted, as required by Smith and D.G. The interview
    happened the same day as the incident, Chesseri asked open-ended questions
    and did not attempt to elicit specific information from D.O., as he was trained
    to do using the Finding Words protocol, and D.O.'s statements in the video -
    recording were consistent with her statements to her mother. The questioning
    was not incessant nor leading, nor were there any suspect gaps in time. Further,
    rather than having a clear motive to fabricate the allegations, D.O. made the
    allegations against defendant despite her fear that her mother would be hurt.
    A-4238-17T4
    22
    The trial judge considered all these factors in making her determination the
    video-recording was admissible. Therefore, there is no indication the trial judge
    abused her discretion in finding the video-recording reliable and admissible
    under 803(c)(27) to provide evidence of D.O.'s account of events close -in-time
    to the incident, which is the purpose of the exception.
    To address a defendant's constitutional rights of confrontation and cross -
    examination that are "so essential to the jury's duty to assess the credibility of
    witnesses," the New Jersey Supreme Court found that combining the
    admissibility of out-of-court statements under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(27) with the
    requirement that the under-age-twelve victim, "if available, testify at trial . . .
    will afford the jury an opportunity to evaluate the testimony relating t he child's
    out-of-court statements in the context of the child's communicative skills,
    demeanor, and credibility as a witness at trial. It also affords the defendant a
    right of cross-examination and limited confrontation." D.R., 
    109 N.J. at
    369-
    70.
    Here, D.O. did testify and was subject to confrontation and cross-
    examination, so the jury was able to assess her credibility in person. Her in -
    court testimony fulfilled defendant's constitutional entitlement to confrontation
    A-4238-17T4
    23
    and cross-examination, and the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in
    admitting both the video-recorded interview and D.O.'s testimony.
    Therefore, the trial judge did not abuse her discretion in admitting the
    three pieces of corroborative evidence. The evidence was not cumulative, as
    each piece of evidence was relevant for a different purpose, and the probative
    value was not outweighed by prejudice to defendant.
    II.
    Defendant argues the statements of the prosecutor during both his opening
    statement and his summation constituted misconduct. We disagree.
    "When a defendant fails to object to an error or raise an issue before the
    trial court, we review for plain error.      We may reverse on the basis of
    unchallenged error only if the error was 'clearly capable of producing an unjus t
    result.'" State v. Ross, 
    229 N.J. 389
    , 407 (2017) (quoting R. 2:10-2). To warrant
    a new trial for prosecutor misconduct, the prosecutor's conduct "must have been
    'clearly and unmistakably improper,' and must have substantially prejudiced
    defendant's fundamental right to have a jury fairly evaluate the merits of his
    defense."   State v. Smith, 
    167 N.J. 158
    , 181-82 (2001) (quoting State v.
    Timmendequas, 
    161 N.J. 515
    , 575 (1999)).
    A-4238-17T4
    24
    Defendant asserts the prosecutor bolstered D.O.'s testimony in his opening
    when he told the jury they "in a sense" would hear from "six witnesses. . . ."
    Defendant asserts this unfairly emphasized D.O.'s on-camera testimony and
    went beyond the scope of what is permissible in openings – which should be
    "limited to the 'facts he intends in good faith to prove by competent evidence'"
    under State v. Wakefield, 
    190 N.J. 397
    , 442 (2007) (quoting State v. Hipplewith,
    
    33 N.J. 300
    , 309 (1960)). This argument was not raised below, so it is reviewed
    for plain error.
    An opening statement's purpose is to generally inform the jury of the
    "nature of the action and the basic factual hypothesis projected, so that they may
    be better prepared to understand the evidence." State v. Tilghman, 
    385 N.J. Super. 45
    , 55 (App. Div. 2006) (quoting Passaic Valley Sewerage Comm'rs v
    Geo. M. Brewster & Son, Inc., 
    32 N.J. 595
    , 605 (1960)). An opening statement
    cannot be argumentative or include issues or facts not legally admissible or able
    to be factually proven. Id. at 55-56.
    Here, the prosecutor's opening included a list of witnesses the jury would
    see, including D.O., her mother, and the three detectives, and then told the jury
    they would see the video-recorded interview, which "in most instances . . . you
    don't see a recorded interview of a witness." He explained why it was permitted
    A-4238-17T4
    25
    in this case, making the statement that "in a sense, we have six witnesses,
    because you'll see the [fourteen]-year-old [D.O.] of 2017 and you'll see her as
    the [eleven]-year-old she was [on the date of the incident]." The statement
    generally informed the jury of the testimony so they would "be better prepared
    to understand the evidence," which is proper under Tilghman.
    During summation, defendant objected to the prosecutor's assertions of
    D.O.'s credibility; however, when asked by the judge what relief was requested,
    defense counsel declined to ask for any. A prosecutor is not permitted in
    summation to bolster a witness's credibility with statements not based in
    evidence on the record, such as telling a jury a police officer "would not lie
    because of the 'magnitude' of charges that could be brought against them," or
    that police testimony should be accepted "not because of its believability but
    because the witnesses were policemen." State v. Frost, 
    158 N.J. 76
    , 85-86
    (1999) (citations omitted). Rather, the prosecutor must "confine [his or her]
    comments to evidence revealed during the trial and reasonable inferences to be
    drawn from that evidence."      State v. Bradshaw, 
    195 N.J. 493
    , 510 (2008)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Smith, 
    167 N.J. at 178
    ).
    And while the prosecutor should not vouch for a witness's credibility,
    "[s]o long as the prosecutor's comments are based on the evidence in the case
    A-4238-17T4
    26
    and the reasonable inferences from that evidence, the prosecutor's comments
    'will afford no ground for reversal.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    31 N.J. 489
    , 510 (1960)). The prosecutor "may argue that a witness is credible, so long
    as the prosecutor does not personally vouch for the witness or refer to matters
    outside the record as support for the witness's credibility." State v. Walden, 
    370 N.J. Super. 549
    , 560 (App. Div. 2004) (citing State v. Scherzer, 
    301 N.J. Super. 363
    , 445 (App. Div. 1997)).
    Defendant argues that in summation, the prosecutor improperly bolstered
    D.O.'s credibility, which was the central issue in the case, to make up for
    "deficiencies" of lack of DNA evidence, lack of photographs of the location of
    the incident, and failure to interview I.R., who was present at the time of the
    incident. Defendant contends the proffered argument that if D.O. were lying she
    would say defendant did more egregious acts "suggested that the prosecutor,
    because of his experience in litigating similar cases, knew certain hallmarks of
    credible testimony" and that the prosecutor's remarks that he would
    "characterize D.O.'s testimony as a very truthful and descriptive piece of
    testimony" was a personal assessment of D.O.'s credibility and "was
    accompanied by persistent comments instructing the jury that a 'reasonable
    person' could only conclude that D.O. had testified truthfully."
    A-4238-17T4
    27
    However, the statements, read in context, show that the prosecutor was
    responding to defense counsel's assertion that there was a discrepancy between
    D.O.'s video-recorded testimony and her trial testimony as to whether defendant
    left the room at some point. The prosecutor said he would characterize D.O.'s
    testimony as truthful and then pointed to D.O.'s testimony, contained in the
    record, where she corrected her account when defense counsel reminded her of
    her prior testimony. The prosecutor went on to note that D.O.'s testimony was
    consistent and that D.O. never said defendant touched her anywhere else, both
    things the jury could see and hear for themselves from the testimony on the
    record. The prosecutor noted that if someone is lying they are not bound to the
    truth and can say anything, pointed out what was not said by D.O. in her
    testimony, which the jury themselves could see and hear for themselves, and
    which defense counsel also brought up in her summation to cast doubt on D.O.'s
    allegations, and implied that it could be inferred that what D.O. did not say in
    her testimony indicated she was credible.
    Arguing for a witness's credibility is permitted by Walden and Bradshaw,
    and the prosecutor did not inappropriately offer his personal opinion that D.O.
    was honest and would not lie, or that he felt defendant was guilty based on
    reasons not contained in the record. Therefore, the prosecutor did not engage in
    A-4238-17T4
    28
    misconduct in his summation, as his statements were all based on testimony
    contained in the record and reasonable inferences that could be made therefrom.
    Defendant's additional assertions that prosecutorial conduct was capable
    of producing an unjust error warranting reversal under Rule 2:10-2 are without
    merit and not worthy of additional discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(2).
    III.
    Finally, a remand for resentencing is not required because the judge did
    not double count and did not err in finding and weighing aggravating and
    mitigating factors.   In reviewing a trial judge's sentencing decision, we
    determine "whether the aggravating and mitigating factors found . . . were based
    upon competent, credible evidence in the record." State v. Yarbough, 
    195 N.J. Super. 135
    , 140 (App. Div. 1984). We apply a deferential standard of review
    unless the trial judge fails to identify relevant aggravating and mitigating
    factors; merely enumerates them; forgoes a qualitative analysis; or provides
    little insight into the decision. State v. Case, 
    220 N.J. 49
    , 65 (2014). Based on
    our review of the record, the trial judge's findings are adequately supported.
    Affirmed.
    A-4238-17T4
    29