STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. AKBAR SALAAM (10-07-1670, ATLANTIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1278-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    AKBAR SALAAM, a/k/a
    MALIK SALAAM, NAT
    MCDANIEL, WILLIAM
    MCDANIEL, WILLIAM
    MCDANIELS, and
    WILLIAM N. MCDANIELS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Submitted January 13, 2021 – Decided February 10, 2021
    Before Judges Alvarez and Geiger.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Atlantic County, Indictment No. 10-07-1670.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Andrew R. Burroughs, Designated Counsel,
    on the briefs).
    Damon G. Tyner, Atlantic County Prosecutor, attorney
    for respondent (John J. Santoliquido, Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Akbar Salaam appeals from an October 2, 2019 order denying
    his motion for a new trial and petition for post-conviction relief without an
    evidentiary hearing. We affirm substantially for the reasons expressed by Judge
    Donna M. Taylor in her well-reasoned written opinion.
    We derive the following facts from the record. In September 2008, police
    arrested Richard Gillard for selling cocaine to an undercover police officer in
    Atlantic City. During custodial interrogation, Gilliard agreed to cooperate and
    revealed to Atlantic City Police Department (ACPD) Detective Daryl Dabney
    that defendant, also known as "Malik," had been selling heroin at the All Wars
    Memorial, a city-owned building in Atlantic City, where defendant worked as a
    maintenance supervisor for the Atlantic City Department of Public Works.
    Based on this information, Dabney sought to arrange controlled buys of heroin
    from defendant using Gilliard as a confidential informant (CI).
    On April 30, 2009, Dabney arranged the first controlled buy for Gilliard
    to purchase five bricks of heroin from defendant. Police provided Gilliard with
    an audio and video recording device and supplied him with currency from the
    A-1278-19
    2
    Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA). Following the controlled buy, Gilliard gave
    law enforcement the five bricks of heroin he purchased from defendant.
    Four additional controlled buys took place on May 13, May 14, June 11,
    and September 10, 2009.      Gilliard used an audio recording device for the
    purchases on May 13 and May 14, and an audio video recording device for the
    purchases on June 11 and September 10.
    An Atlantic County Grand Jury returned a thirty-count indictment
    charging defendant with five counts of second-degree official misconduct,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:30-2(a), and twenty-five narcotics offenses.
    Defendant moved to dismiss the charges related to the June 11 purchase,
    alleging that Dabney falsely testified before the grand jury, based on the video's
    lack of clarity. When testifying, Dabney provided the following description of
    what the video depicted:
    You can observe Mr. Salaam meeting up with the CI in
    what appears to be a conference room and Mr. Salaam
    goes right into his pocket and he pulls out the packaged
    heroin. You can see it in his hand and he hands it to the
    CI, the confidential informant, and that's when he starts
    to inform the confidential informant to be careful when
    you leave here. The police are in the area.
    A-1278-19
    3
    The court denied the motion, concluding the State had presented some evidence
    that all five controlled buys had taken place and finding it best to leave it to the
    trial jury to decide "what they see on the video and who they believe."
    Thereafter, defendant unsuccessfully moved to dismiss the indictment
    again and requested a Driver1 hearing. He sought to preclude the State from
    providing the jury with transcripts prepared by Dabney of the recordings of the
    controlled buys. The court explained that defendant's motion to dismiss was
    identical to his previous motion but would conduct a Driver hearing to address
    the quality of the audiotapes and videotapes at another time. However, defense
    counsel later withdrew the request.
    During the trial, the State relied on audio and video recordings from
    Gilliard of the controlled buys to prove defendant sold heroin. The recordings
    were played to the jury and admitted into evidence. 2                 The trial judge
    acknowledged the recordings were difficult to understand and allowed the jury
    to use the transcripts as a trial aid but not during deliberations.
    1
    State v. Driver, 
    38 N.J. 255
     (1962).
    2
    The record indicates they were provided to the jurors—without objection from
    defense counsel—when all five of the recordings were played at trial.
    A-1278-19
    4
    On direct examination, Dabney testified that he did not use an undercover
    police officer for the controlled buys because "[it was] well-known from other
    informants that" defendant "ha[d] a particular clientele that he [sold] to." As
    soon as Dabney made this statement, the prosecutor intervened and requested
    that Dabney's testimony be struck from the record. Defense counsel agreed
    without objection. The trial court immediately gave this curative instruction:
    I'm going to strike the last answer that Detective
    Dabney gave. He started to tell [you] about information
    that he may have obtained from other sources and, of
    course, that would be hearsay. I'm going to strike it and
    instruct you not to consider it for any consideration
    whatsoever, so that will be stricken from the record.
    The jury found defendant guilty of all thirty counts. In all, defendant was
    convicted of five counts of each of the following crimes: second-degree official
    misconduct; third-degree distribution of heroin, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(1) and
    2C:35-5(b)(3); second-degree distribution of heroin within 500 feet of a public
    building, N.J.S.A. 2C: 35-7.1; third-degree possession of heroin with the intent
    to   distribute,   N.J.S.A.   2C:35-5(a)(1)   and   2C:35-5(b)(3);       third-degree
    distribution of heroin within 1000 feet of school property, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7; and
    third-degree possession of heroin, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(1). State v. Salaam,
    No. A-6394-11 (App. Div. Feb. 4, 2015) (slip op. at 2), certif. denied, 
    222 N.J. 15
     (2015). On July 6, 2012, defendant was sentenced "to consecutive terms of
    A-1278-19
    5
    imprisonment resulting in an aggregate sentence of forty years subject to twenty-
    five years of parole ineligibility." Id. at 3.
    In his pro se supplement brief on direct appeal, defendant argued: (1) the
    indictment should have been dismissed due to the prosecutor's failure to present
    exculpatory evidence to the grand jury; (2) the prosecutor failed to disclose
    discoverable material which hindered defendant's right to present a defense; (3)
    the trial court failed to conduct a Driver hearing to determine the reliability and
    audibility of the recordings of the drug transactions; and (4) trial counsel was
    ineffective by failing to investigate and prepare an effective defense.         We
    rejected these arguments, explaining:
    Twice defendant unsuccessfully moved pre-trial
    to dismiss Indictment No. 10-07-1670, alleging that
    exculpatory evidence had not been presented to the
    grand jury and that Atlantic City Police Detective Daryl
    Dabney gave false testimony in order to secure the
    return of the indictment. Although counsel and the trial
    judge discussed, pre-trial, conducting Driver hearings
    as to the tapes of the drug transactions, we have no
    indication that such hearings took place.
    ....
    Defendant's first point in his pro se brief requires
    little discussion. His attorney appropriately, pursuant
    to Rule 3:10-2(c), sought dismissal of the indictment
    because of Dabney's "misstatement" to the grand jury
    that he saw defendant during the course of the first
    transaction on the video, when the video itself was
    A-1278-19
    6
    obstructed. Generally, motions based on flawed grand
    jury presentations must be filed before trial, as a
    subsequent guilty verdict renders the error harmless.
    Although Dabney misspoke with regard to the
    video of the first transaction, he was ultimately able to
    identify defendant's voice during the transaction. The
    prosecution relied upon this identification of defendant
    as the drug seller during the trial.
    Defendant's attorney filed a pre-trial application
    to compel the State to provide him with discovery from
    the DEA file regarding another individual who was
    investigated along with defendant. The prosecutor's
    response to the application was that he had provided
    counsel with everything he had related to the
    investigation of defendant. The judge, accordingly,
    denied the motion as defendant could not identify the
    allegedly discoverable materials in the federal file
    related to his charges and the prosecutor had no
    knowledge of any additional documents related to
    defendant in that file. Ultimately, the judge doubted his
    authority to order the DEA to provide defendant with
    the discovery, even if it had existed. The application
    simply lacked any support that made it appear more
    than a fishing expedition. We see no error in the judge's
    refusal to order discovery that may not have even
    existed from a federal agency.
    . . . Apparently, the audio quality of the tapes in this
    case did not necessitate a hearing.
    Defendant also raises the issue of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. We do not address that claim at
    this stage, as ordinarily, such issues are preserved for
    postconviction relief and not in the direct appeal.
    A-1278-19
    7
    In sum, we do not believe that defendant's pro se
    points of error warrant further discussion in a written
    decision.
    [Salaam, slip op. at 3, 25-27 (citations omitted).]
    We affirmed defendant's convictions but remanded for resentencing
    because: (1) "the consecutive terms of imprisonment did not comply with the
    standards articulated in State v. Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. 627
     (1985)"; (2) the trial
    court improperly applied aggravating factors one, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(1), and
    eleven, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(11); (3) defendant's sentence was effectively a life
    sentence given his age; and (4) every CDS-related count needed to be merged
    "into the five separate official misconduct counts to which they chronologically
    correspond." Salaam, slip op. at 3, 28-30, 32.
    On remand, defendant was resentenced to an aggregate thirteen-year term
    subject to a ten-year parole-bar. Defendant appealed his revised sentence, and
    we again remanded because "the court did not provide adequate findings to
    support imposition of consecutive terms." State v. Salaam, No. A-1999-15
    (App. Div. Aug. 2, 2016). On the second remand, the trial court made additional
    findings but did not modify the sentence. Defendant appealed a third time,
    challenging the consecutive sentence.       The appeal was heard on an oral
    sentencing calendar pursuant to Rule 2:9-11 and we affirmed the sentence. State
    A-1278-19
    8
    v. Salaam, No. A-1238-16 (App. Div. Feb. 7, 2017). The Supreme Court denied
    certification. State v. Salaam, 
    233 N.J. 320
     (2018).
    Meanwhile, on August 8, 2017, defendant filed a pro se PCR petition. The
    petition was dismissed without prejudice due to his then pending direct appeal.
    On October 23, 2018, defendant filed a second pro se PCR petition. PCR
    counsel was appointed, who submitted briefs in support of defendant's petition
    and motion for a new trial and filed an amended PCR petition.
    First, defendant argued an evidentiary hearing was required because trial
    counsel provided ineffective assistance by: (1) failing to pursue a Driver hearing
    application; (2) failing to make certain arguments at resentencing; (3) failing to
    call witnesses at trial; (4) failing to object to the admittance of the lab report
    into evidence; (5) failing to move for a mistrial; and (6) failing to argue the "no
    free crime" factor under Yarbough. Second, defendant argued that appellate
    counsel was ineffective by failing to appeal the denial of his motion to dismiss
    and Brady3 motion. Third, defendant argued the trial court should have declared
    a mistrial because the State committed a Brady violation by failing to disclose
    Gilliard's CI status and the existence of the DEA investigation.
    3
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
     (1963).
    A-1278-19
    9
    Judge Taylor concluded that defendant's claims lacked evidentiary
    support.    She further found he failed to satisfy either prong of the
    Strickland/Fritz4 test, "fail[ing] to meet his burden by a preponderance of the
    evidence that trial counsel was ineffective."
    A. Ineffective Assistance of Trial Counsel
    First, the judge rejected defendant's claim that trial counsel was
    ineffective by failing to pursue a Driver hearing, explaining that trial counsel
    stated he wanted the recordings played for the jury and intended to use the
    recordings to cross-examine Dabney. The court emphasized that Driver "does
    not provide the petitioner an avenue for relief to exclude the transcripts, " rather
    it "affords defendants . . . the opportunity to challenge the admissibility of the
    recordings." In addition, the court rejected defendant's contention that the
    transcripts were prejudicial, despite their imperfections, because the jury was
    instructed that the transcripts were not evidence—only the audio recordings
    were evidence. Furthermore, "[t]here [was] nothing in the record to suggest the
    jury failed to adhere to the [c]ourt's instruction."
    4
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
     (1984); State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
    (1987).
    A-1278-19
    10
    Second, the judge rejected defendant's argument that trial counsel should
    have argued against a consecutive sentence during the resentencing hearing.
    The judge found that defendant failed to demonstrate prejudice under prong two,
    noting that appellate counsel specifically raised this issue on appeal, but the
    sentence was affirmed by this court. The judge also found defendant failed to
    demonstrate that, but for trial counsel's failure to raise these arguments during
    his original sentencing, the trial court would have imposed concurrent rather
    than consecutive sentences.
    Third, the judge rejected defendant's argument that trial counsel was
    ineffective by failing to call four witnesses at trial. While defendant alleged he
    requested trial counsel to interview them, who he claimed "would have testified
    they were present at the All Wars Memorial Building with [defendant] on the
    alleged offense dates and did not observe the alleged transaction," defendant
    only submitted a single certification that was not sufficient to demonstrate that
    "the outcome of [defendant's] trial would have been different [had] these
    witnesses" testified. Even if the witnesses had testified, their testimony "would
    not have undermined the State's case let alone resulted in a different verdict. "
    Defendant "was recorded distributing narcotics to a confidential informant on
    five different occasions."
    A-1278-19
    11
    Fourth, defendant argued that trial counsel should have objected to the
    admission of the laboratory report because the State failed to test all the heroin
    seized. The judge explained that the State was not required to do so because it
    may use circumstantial evidence to prove the amount of drugs defendant
    possessed, citing State v. Gosa, 
    263 N.J. Super. 527
    , 537 (App. Div. 1993).
    Fifth, the judge rejected defendant's argument that trial counsel was
    ineffective by failing to move for a mistrial after Dabney stricken testimony.
    testified on direct that he did not believe using an undercover officer "would
    ever work" because defendant "ha[d] a particular clientele that he sells to, and
    it's well-known from other informants." The judge concluded Dabney had
    testified "from [his] personal knowledge rather than relaying what the
    informants may have said to him." Moreover, "[t]the prosecutor successfully
    stopped Det. Dabney from giving hearsay testimony[,] which he was likely
    about to do."
    Finally, the judge rejected defendant's claim that trial counsel was
    ineffective at resentencing by failing to argue the "no free crimes" factor under
    Yarbough. The judge found counsel made this argument and the trial "court
    considered all of the competent and credible evidence raised at re-sentencing,
    A-1278-19
    12
    including trial counsel's arguments under Rogers." 5 Thus, defendant failed to
    demonstrate prejudice.
    B. Ineffective Assistance of Appellate Counsel
    First, the judge did not agree that appellate counsel was ineffective for
    failing to appeal the denial of the motion to dismiss the indictment. The judge
    noted that Dabney's testimony regarding the controlled buys "was not the sole
    evidence presented to the grand jury" as "Dabney gave other testimony in
    support of the indictment." Further, the Appellate Division had considered and
    rejected defendant's pro se argument that the indictment should have been
    dismissed because the prosecutor failed to present exculpatory evidence to the
    grand jury.    Therefore, defendant failed to demonstrate that had appellate
    counsel presented this argument, we would have reached a different outcome.
    Second, the judge rejected defendant's claim that appellate counsel was
    ineffective for failing to appeal the denial of defendant's Brady motion. Judge
    Taylor concluded that the prosecutor's office had turned over all discovery
    concerning defendant and noted the prosecutor stated he did not have access to
    the DEA's file. Thus, the prosecutor fulfilled his discovery obligations.
    5
    State v. Rogers, 
    124 N.J. 113
     (1991).
    A-1278-19
    13
    C. Defendant's Motion for a New Trial
    Defendant moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence,
    arguing:    (1) Dabney's credibility was in question given newly discovered
    evidence; and (2) Gilliard, the State's chief witness, had served as a confidential
    informant on ten prior occasions. Defendant relied on an affidavit from Patricia
    Hall, who was also being investigated, that revealed defendant was a part of a
    drug investigation conducted jointly by the Atlantic City Police Department
    (ACPD), the Prosecutor's Office, and the DEA.             He reiterated that the
    prosecutor's office violated Brady by failing to produce the DEA file.
    Next, defendant, relying in part on an affidavit of Felix Beltran, Sr., who
    was charged with narcotics offenses in May 2009, that asserted Gilliard was
    acting as a CI when he met defendant. Defendant argued that Gilliard "offer[ed]
    himself as an informant to curry favor with the police while facing criminal
    charges," and the affidavit "would have aided the jury in assessing . . . Gilliard's
    credibility." In addition, defendant argued that information about Gilliard's
    "access to at least one other supply of heroin . . . at the same time [he] was
    supposedly obtaining heroin from [defendant] was relevant and exculpatory "
    evidence.
    A-1278-19
    14
    The judge concluded defendant failed to demonstrate there were disputed
    material facts that were "unresolvable through reference to the current record."
    Applying the test adopted in State v. Carter, 
    85 N.J. 300
    , 314 (1981), the judge
    determined that defendant failed to show that the new evidence was "(1) material
    to the issue and not merely cumulative or impeaching or contradictory and (2)
    discovered since the trial and not discoverable by reasonable diligence
    beforehand." The judge found that the new evidence was "impeaching, used for
    the purpose of assessing the respective credibility of Detective Dabney and
    Richard Gilliard."     In addition, the judge found defendant "ma[de] no
    demonstration that this evidence could not have been discovered by reasonable
    diligence beforehand."
    Lastly, the judge found that defendant's remaining arguments6 were
    procedurally barred because he did not establish that: (1) he "could not have
    reasonably raised the issue[s] in a prior proceeding"; (2) enforcing the bar would
    "result in a fundamental injustice"; or (3) "denial of relief would be contrary to
    a new rule of constitutional law." R. 3:22-4. This appeal followed.
    6
    Defendant's remaining arguments were that (1) his sentence was illegal; (2)
    his illegal sentence should be corrected; (3) a mistrial should have been granted
    based on the removal of a juror for bias; and (4) the trial was tainted because a
    paralegal modified recordings of the drug purchases.
    A-1278-19
    15
    Defendant raises the following points:
    POINT I
    AS DEFENDANT HAD ESTABLISHED A PRIMA
    FACIE CASE OF INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
    TRIAL COUNSEL, THE PCR COURT ERRED
    WHEN IT DENIED HIS PETITION FOR POST-
    CONVICTION RELIEF WITHOUT HOLDING AN
    EVIDENTIARY HEARING.
    (1) Trial counsel was ineffective for failing to
    pursue a Driver Hearing.
    (2) Trial counsel failed to investigate and call
    exculpatory witnesses for the defense.
    (3) Trial counsel was ineffective by failing to ask
    for a mistrial after Detective Dabney's testimony
    suggested that defendant had previously been
    engaged in the drug trade.
    (4) Trial counsel was ineffective at defendant's
    final re-sentencing.
    POINT II
    APPELLATE COUNSEL WAS INEFFECTIVE BY
    FAILING TO ARGUE THAT THE TRIAL COURT'S
    DENIAL OF DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS
    THE INDICTMENT WAS ERROR.
    POINT III
    AS THERE WAS A REASONABLE PROBABILITY
    THAT THE VERDICT WOULD HAVE BEEN
    DIFFERENT HAD THE JURY CONSIDERED
    NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE, THE PCR
    A-1278-19
    16
    COURT ERRED WHEN IT DENIED DEFENDANT'S
    MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL.
    POINT IV
    AS THERE WAS A GENUINE ISSUE OF
    MATERIAL FACT IN DISPUTE, AN EVIDENTIARY
    HEARING WAS REQUIRED.
    "The Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I,
    paragraph 10 of the New Jersey Constitution require that a defendant receive
    'the effective assistance of counsel' during a criminal proceeding." State v.
    Porter, 
    216 N.J. 343
    , 352 (2013). A two-pronged test for determining whether
    trial counsel's performance was ineffective was formulated in Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984), and adopted by our Supreme Court in
    State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
    , 58 (1987).
    To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, defendant must
    establish that: (1) counsel made errors that were so egregious that he or she was
    not functioning effectively as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment; and (2) the
    defect in performance prejudiced defendant's right to a fair trial such that there
    exists a "reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the
    result of the proceeding would have been different." Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 694
    .
    "[I]n order to establish a prima facie claim, [the defendant] must do more
    than make bald assertions that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.
    A-1278-19
    17
    He must allege facts sufficient to demonstrate counsel's alleged substandard
    performance." State v. Cummings, 
    321 N.J. Super. 154
    , 170 (App. Div. 1999).
    The defendant must establish, by a preponderance of the credible evidence, that
    he is entitled to the requested relief. State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 541 (2013).
    Rule 3:22-10(b) governs the right to an evidentiary hearing. It provides:
    A defendant shall be entitled to an evidentiary hearing
    only upon the establishment of a prima facie case in
    support of post-conviction relief, a determination by the
    court that there are material issues of disputed fact that
    cannot be resolved by reference to the existing record,
    and a determination that an evidentiary hearing is
    necessary to resolve the claims for relief. To establish
    a prima facie case, defendant must demonstrate a
    reasonable likelihood that his or her claim, viewing the
    facts alleged in the light most favorable to the
    defendant, will ultimately succeed on the merits.
    We "conduct a de novo review" when a PCR petition is denied without an
    evidentiary hearing. State v. Jackson, 
    454 N.J. Super. 284
    , 291 (App. Div. 2018)
    (quoting State v. Harris, 
    181 N.J. 391
    , 421 (2004)).
    As to counsel's decision to withdraw the request for a Driver hearing, a
    partially intelligible recording with probative value "is admissible even though
    substantial portions thereof are inaudible." State v. Nantambu, 
    221 N.J. 390
    ,
    406 (2015) (quoting State v. Zicarelli, 
    122 N.J. Super. 225
    , 239 (App. Div.
    1973)). Accord State v. Cusmano, 
    274 N.J. Super. 496
    , 501 (App. Div. 1994).
    A-1278-19
    18
    Moreover, a defendant may waive a Driver hearing. State v. King, 
    215 N.J. Super. 504
    , 516 (App. Div. 1987).
    Counsel made a strategic decision to allow the jury to hear the recordings
    after deciding the recordings could be effectively used to cross-examine
    Dabney. He "would rather have [Dabney] testify in court and then we cross-
    examine and I can use the tapes as opposed to the detective's transcript of what
    was said to be used as an aid. Because I know the jury's not going to understand
    the tapes."
    Defendant has not "overcome the presumption that, under the
    circumstances, the 'challenged action might be considered sound trial strategy.'"
    Harris, 
    181 N.J. at 431
     (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
    ). "Defendants have
    a right to a reasonable strategy based on reasonable investigation; they may not
    claim ineffective assistance merely because the strategy did not produce the
    result counsel sought." 
    Id.
     at 488 (citing State v. Bey, 
    161 N.J. 233
    , 251 (1999)).
    Driver does not apply to transcripts of recordings. The trial court may, in
    its discretion, allow the use of transcripts to assist the jury in understanding a
    recording. Zicarelli, 
    122 N.J. Super. at 239
    . Here, the trial court properly
    instructed the jury regarding their use.
    A-1278-19
    19
    Defendant's claims that counsel was ineffective by failing to investigate
    and call witnesses also lack merit. At most, the witnesses expected testimony
    would have been used to impeach Dabney's testimony. Defendant's assertion
    that the witnesses did not observe him selling drugs is not direct exculpatory
    evidence that he did not sell heroin to Gilliard. Indeed, none of the witnesses
    recalled whether they saw defendant on the dates the crimes occurred.
    Defendant's assertion that his co-worker, Terry Phillips could have provided
    "exculpatory information" was unsupported. We agree that the testimony of
    these witnesses would not have significantly undermined the State's case or
    resulted in a different verdict.
    Defendant's claim that counsel did not argue the no free crimes factor
    under Yarbough is belied by the record. Defendant was convicted of official
    misconduct for distributing heroin on five separate occasions in the public
    building where he worked. Counsel successfully obtained merger of all but five
    of thirty counts, and only one consecutive term.
    Lastly, the judge correctly denied defendant's motion for a new trial.
    Where the defendant is convicted by a jury, the court may grant the motion for
    a new trial only when "it clearly and convincingly appears that there was a
    manifest denial of justice under the law." R. 3:20-1. Newly discovered evidence
    A-1278-19
    20
    warrants a new trial when it is "(1) material to the issue and not merely
    cumulative or impeaching or contradictory; (2) discovered since the trial and not
    discoverable by reasonable diligence beforehand; and (3) of the sort that would
    probably change the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted." State v. Carter,
    
    85 N.J. 300
    , 314 (1981). A defendant must satisfy all three prongs of the test to
    be granted a new trial. 
    Ibid.
     (citing State v. Johnson, 
    34 N.J. 212
    , 223 (1961)).
    Evidence that is merely impeaching "is not of great significance and
    would probably not alter the outcome of a verdict." State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    ,
    189 (2004). Here, the proffered evidence was at most impeaching. Second,
    defendant did not demonstrate the evidence was not discoverable earlier by
    exercising reasonable diligence.    Third, he did not demonstrate the newly
    discovered evidence was "of sufficient weight that it would probably alter the
    outcome of the verdict in a new trial." 
    Id. at 188
    . Accordingly, the motion was
    properly denied. See Carter, 
    85 N.J. at 314
    .
    In sum, the record amply supports Judge Taylor's factual findings and
    legal conclusions, including her determination that defendant did not satisfy
    either prong of the Strickland/Fritz test and thus did not present a prima facie
    case warranting an evidentiary hearing.
    Affirmed.
    A-1278-19
    21