STATE OF NEW JERSEY IN THE INTEREST OF Z.S., A JUVENILE (FJ-17-0013-20, SALEM COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                            RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3516-19T1
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY IN                             APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    THE INTEREST OF Z.S.,                                      August 18, 2020
    a Juvenile, 1
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    __________________________
    Argued telephonically July 14, 2020 –
    Decided August 18, 2020
    Before Judges Sabatino, Natali and Susswein. 2
    On appeal from an interlocutory order of the Superior
    Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
    Salem County, Docket No. FJ-17-0013-20.
    Joseph J. Russo, Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant Z.S. (Joseph E.
    Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Joseph J. Russo,
    of counsel and on the briefs; Gabrielle Brandt Hall,
    Assistant Deputy Public Defender, on the briefs).
    David     M.    Galemba,    Assistant    Prosecutor,
    argued the cause for respondent State of New Jersey
    (John T. Lenahan, Salem County Prosecutor, attorney;
    David M. Galemba, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Daniel Finkelstein, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for amicus curiae Attorney General
    1
    We use initials to protect the minors involved in this case.
    2
    Special panel appointed to hear this appeal by order dated June 17, 2020.
    (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Daniel
    Finkelstein, on the briefs).
    Alexander Shalom argued the cause for amicus curiae
    American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey;
    (Alexander Shalom and Jeanne LoCicero, on the
    brief).
    Elana Wilf argued the cause for amicus curiae Rutgers
    Criminal and Youth Justice Clinic and the National
    Juvenile Defender Center (Rutgers Criminal Youth
    Justice and the National Juvenile Defender Center,
    attorneys; Elana Wilf, of counsel and on the brief;
    Laura Cohen, on the brief; Sherika J. Shnider
    (National Juvenile Defender Center), on the brief;
    Adina Heistein and Hannah Dodson, admitted
    pursuant to Rule 1:21-3(b), on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    SABATINO, P.J.A.D.
    This interlocutory appeal shines a spotlight upon the appropriate
    procedures under current statutes for evaluating whether a juvenile charged
    with a very serious offense should be waived to the Criminal Part and
    prosecuted as an adult.
    On leave granted, the juvenile in this case, defendant Z.S., appeals the
    Family Part judge's order sustaining a prosecutor's decision to waive him to the
    Criminal Part to face a jury trial for committing first-degree aggravated sexual
    assault upon a five-year-old boy.
    A-3516-19T1
    2
    Z.S. was age seventeen at the time of the charged offense.              He is
    intellectually disabled, suffers from diagnosed mental illnesses, and was
    himself the victim of sexual assault as a young child. He has been determined
    after a hearing by the Social Security Administration to be disabled, and he is
    classified as a special-needs student in school. The prosecutor has accepted as
    true the opinion of an evaluating psychiatrist that Z.S. has the "intellectual
    age" of a thirteen-and-a-half-year-old child, which happens to be below the
    chronological age of fifteen required for waiver under the present statute.
    As explained in this opinion, we vacate the trial court's order because of
    several critical deficiencies in the processes that resulted in Z.S.'s waiver.
    Among other things, the prosecutor's written statement of reasons in support of
    waiver was incomplete, conclusory, and utilized obsolete 2000 guidelines that
    do not track the controlling factors under the revised 2016 waiver statute.
    In addition, the prosecutor failed to explain in writing in advanc e of the
    waiver hearing why the extensive mitigating psychological evidence
    marshalled by the defense was inconsequential.
    Further, the trial court misapplied its discretion by declining to adjourn
    the waiver hearing at defense counsel's request, with the State's acquiescence,
    A-3516-19T1
    3
    after she had been released from the hospital for pneumonia only two days
    earlier and was still feeling ill and having difficulty breathing.
    Because of these grave procedural shortcomings, we accordingly remand
    this matter for a renewed waiver hearing. In the course of our discussion, we
    offer guidance on how best to proceed in such waiver matters under the revised
    2016 statute. We do so to assure that such determinations are handled fairly
    by prosecutors and courts in the future, and the problems that occurred here are
    not repeated.
    I.
    Before we delve into the facts and chronology of this case, it is useful to
    describe the legal and constitutional standards that must guide juvenile waiver
    decisions.
    As that term is used in this State, a juvenile waiver 3 entails the transfer
    of jurisdiction from the Family Part to the Criminal Part, where the juvenile
    3
    The long-standing use of the term "waiver" in this context is somewhat
    peculiar. In general, a "waiver" involves a "voluntary relinquishment of a
    known right" evidenced by a clear, unequivocal and decisive act from which
    an intention to relinquish the right can be based. Sroczynski v. Milek, 
    197 N.J. 36
    , 63-64 (2008) (quoting Knorr v. Smeal, 
    178 N.J. 169
    , 177 (2003)). A
    judge's "waiver" of a juvenile to adult court is, by contrast, normally
    involuntary, although it can be requested by the juvenile. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26.1 (involuntary waiver) and N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-27 (voluntary waiver).
    A-3516-19T1
    4
    will be tried as an adult and face adult criminal punishment if found guilty of
    the charged offenses.
    As our Supreme Court has recognized, "waiver to the adult court is the
    single most serious act that the juvenile court can perform . . . . because once
    waiver of jurisdiction occurs, the child loses all the protective and
    rehabilitative possibilities available to the Family Part." State v. R.G.D., 
    108 N.J. 1
    , 4-5 (1987). The minor charged with committing the wrongful acts, if
    they are proven, usually will be exposed to much more severe punitive
    sanctions, often including lengthy prison terms and mandatory periods of
    parole ineligibility. In addition, the offender will no longer be eligible for the
    special programs available to juveniles. The gravity of this decision frames
    our analysis of this appeal.
    The transfer of jurisdiction over a minor to adult court is so momentous
    that it has constitutional dimensions. Procedural safeguards are vital to assure
    the juvenile has a fair opportunity to advocate against waiver. Decades ago,
    the United States Supreme Court recognized "there is no place in our system of
    law for reaching a result of such tremendous consequences without
    ceremony—without hearing, without effective assistance of counsel, without a
    statement of reasons." Kent v. United States, 
    383 U.S. 541
    , 554 (1966). These
    A-3516-19T1
    5
    imperatives for the waiver process are consistent with the Supreme Court's
    recognition that, under the Due Process Clause, a minor who has been charged
    with delinquent acts has a constitutional right to such protections as adequate
    notice of the charges, an opportunity to be heard at a fair hearing, and
    competent counsel. In re Gault, 
    387 U.S. 1
    , 12-59 (1987).
    The Evolution of the Waiver Laws
    The standards for juvenile waiver have evolved over the years,
    culminating with the 2016 statute that controls the present case. The periodic
    changes reflect a re-balancing of who should be subject to involuntary waiver.
    Meanwhile, there has been a continual emphasis on the need for vital
    procedural safeguards that reflects the gravity of the waiver decision.
    As of the time of the Supreme Court's 1966 opinion in Kent, many
    jurisdictions focused more on "determining the needs of the child [charged
    with the offenses] and of society rather than adjudicating criminal 
    conduct." 383 U.S. at 554-55
    . "By the late 1960s, however, dissatisfaction with the
    operation of juvenile courts led to a nationwide shift in emphasis in the
    direction of custodial sentences for older juvenile offenders that commit
    serious crimes." In re Registrant J.G., 
    169 N.J. 304
    , 322 (2001).
    A-3516-19T1
    6
    Our State's juvenile waiver laws have largely mirrored this nationwide
    trend. The 1983 waiver statute, as described by our Supreme Court, reflected a
    "concern that the juvenile justice system had dealt inadequately with serious
    offenders even as it may have dealt too severely with less serious offenders"
    and therefore intended "to shift the process towards waiver" for "certain
    serious juvenile offenders." 
    R.G.D., 108 N.J. at 8-9
    . Under that 1983 version
    of the statute, the court at a prosecutor's request could wa ive a minor who was
    age fourteen or over at the time of the charged offenses, if the State established
    probable cause that the juvenile committed an enumerated serious offense. 4
    Id. at 9.
       Waiver was disallowed only if the defense proved a probability of
    rehabilitation achievable by age nineteen that "substantially outweigh[ed] the
    reasons for waiver."
    Id. at 11.
    The revised waiver statute adopted in 2000 prescribed standards that
    made it easier to waive minors aged sixteen or older to the Criminal Par t if
    they were charged with certain enumerated offenses. 
    J.M., 182 N.J. at 412
    . It
    directed that a prospect of rehabilitation could not prevent waiver for a
    juvenile offender over age sixteen if he or she was charged with homicide,
    4
    For other, less serious crimes, the State was required to "show that the nature
    and circumstances of the offense or the prior record of the juvenile were
    sufficiently serious and that the interests of the public required waiver." State
    v. J.M., 
    182 N.J. 402
    , 411 (2005); N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26(a).
    A-3516-19T1
    7
    first-degree robbery, or other specified very serious offenses. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A -
    26(e).
    Of pertinence here, the 2000 statutory revision also instructed the
    Attorney General to develop and disseminate to county prosecutors "guidelines
    or directives deemed necessary or appropriate to ensure the uniform
    application of [the waiver standards] throughout the State." N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26(f). The Attorney General did so, promulgating such Guidelines in March
    2000. Office of the Attorney Gen., Juvenile Waiver Guidelines (Mar. 14, 2000)
    ("the AG Guidelines").
    As described by the Supreme Court recently in State v. J.V., ___ N.J. __
    (2020), the AG Guidelines:
    instructed prosecutors seeking to file a juvenile waiver
    motion to consider: (1) the nature of the offense; (2)
    the need for deterrence; (3) the effect of the waiver on
    the prosecution of any co-defendants; (4) the
    maximum sentence and length of time served; (5) the
    juvenile’s prior record; (6) trial considerations, such
    as the likelihood of conviction and the potential need
    for a grand jury investigation; and (7) the victim's
    input.
    [slip op. at 5.]
    Further, and significantly for the present case, the AG Guidelines
    "directed prosecutors filing a waiver motion to include a statement of reasons
    A-3516-19T1
    8
    addressing the prosecution’s consideration and the applicabili ty of the factors."
    Ibid. (emphasis added). In
    J.M., 182 N.J. at 419
    , the Supreme Court required
    prosecutors to submit this written statement of reasons with the waiver motion,
    so that judges could review the State's reasons and "determine that the reason s
    seeking waiver were not arbitrary."
    The waiver statute was amended again in 2003 and 2008 in ways that are
    not pertinent to our discussion.
    The 2016 Revised Statute
    In 2015, the Legislature enacted major revisions to our State's juvenile
    justice system, including a revamping of the waiver statute, to be effective in
    March 2016. L. 2015, c. 89, § 1. Section 26 of Title 2A:4A was repealed and
    replaced with new Section 26.1.
    Among other things the revised 2016 statute raised the minimum age for
    an offender's eligibility for waiver from fourteen to fifteen. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A -
    26.1(c)(1).   The Legislature also revised the waiver statute to replace the
    previous construct with "a streamlined process" for determining whether a
    juvenile case should be transferred to an adult criminal court.           Assem.
    Appropriations Comm. Statement to S. 2003 (June 15, 2015). The revised law
    requires the waiver motion to be "accompanied by a written statement of
    A-3516-19T1
    9
    reasons" from the prosecutor "clearly setting forth the facts used in assessing
    all [of the enumerated waiver] factors . . . together with an explanation as to
    how evaluation of those facts supports waiver for each particular juvenile."
    N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(a) (emphasis added).
    The new list of statutory waiver factors that prosecutors must now
    consider is as follows:
    (a) The nature and circumstances of the offense
    charged;
    (b) Whether the offense was against a person or
    property, allocating more weight for crimes
    against the person;
    (c) Degree of the juvenile's culpability;
    (d) Age and maturity of the juvenile;
    (e) Any classification that the juvenile is
    eligible for special education to the extent
    this information is provided to the
    prosecution by the juvenile or by the court;
    (f) Degree of criminal sophistication exhibited
    by the juvenile;
    (g) Nature and extent of any prior history of
    delinquency of the juvenile and dispositions
    imposed for those adjudications;
    (h) If the juvenile previously served a custodial
    disposition in a State juvenile facility
    operated     by     the    Juvenile     Justice
    A-3516-19T1
    10
    Commission, and the response of the juvenile
    to the programs provided at the facility to the
    extent this information is provided to the
    prosecution by the Juvenile Justice
    Commission;
    (i) Current or prior involvement of the juvenile
    with child welfare agencies;
    (j) Evidence of mental health concerns,
    substance abuse, or emotional instability of
    the juvenile to the extent this information is
    provided to the prosecution by the juvenile
    or by the court; and
    (k) If there is an identifiable victim, the input of
    the victim or victim's family.
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(3).]
    The Supreme Court has observed these eleven factors "encompass and expand
    upon the factors listed in the [AG] Guidelines." State in the Interest of N.H.,
    
    226 N.J. 242
    , 252 (2016). 5
    The new enumerated factors eliminate any express reference to a
    juvenile's "possibility of rehabilitation." As we have already noted, under the
    5
    Unlike the previous statute, the 2016 legislation did not mandate the
    Attorney General to issue new Guidelines to prosecutors but did note that he or
    she "may" do so "to ensure uniform application" of the statutory factors
    "throughout the State." N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(3). For reasons that have not
    been explained, the Attorney General thus far has not rescinded the 2000
    Guidelines and issued new ones, despite the many substantive changes caused
    by the 2016 legislation repealing the former statute.
    A-3516-19T1
    11
    prior statute, certain eligible juveniles could defeat a wai ver motion by
    demonstrating that "the probability of his rehabilitation . . . substantially
    outweighs the reasons for waiver." State in re V.A., 
    212 N.J. 1
    , 9 (2012)
    (quoting the prior statute). Such language is omitted from the 2016 revised
    statute. Even so, the new factors arguably allow some consideration of the
    juvenile's prospects for rehabilitation, at least implicitly, by requiring the
    prosecutor to assess a juvenile's "age and maturity," "culpability," "criminal
    sophistication," and prior history with the juvenile justice system. N.J.S.A.
    2A:4A-26.1(c)(3)(a), (c), (f), (g), (h).
    The amended 2016 statute also differs from the prior statute in that the
    obligation to consider relevant factors applies to all eligible juveniles. As we
    noted earlier, under the previous statute, a juvenile who was sixteen or older
    and who committed an enumerated serious crime was not permitted to forestall
    waiver by demonstrating the possibility of rehabilitation. See In re State ex
    rel. A.D., 
    212 N.J. 200
    , 216 (2012) (describing the statute as amended in
    2000). That age-sixteen cutoff no longer exists.
    In comparing the old law with the revised law, the public defender has
    pointed out that none of the eleven factors adopted in the 2016 revision
    mention the term "deterrence," despite the fact that "the need for deterrence"
    A-3516-19T1
    12
    was a key listed consideration under the AG's 2000 Guidelines. It urges us to
    construe the 2016 statute to signify that the Legislature intended to eradicate
    any consideration of deterrence from the waiver calculus.       In this regard,
    counsel cites to recent scholarly research in brain science. According to the
    public defender, that research suggests that younger adolescents tend to be
    more prone to impulsive behavior, and less deterred by penal measu res, than
    was previously understood. 6
    Although we appreciate the references to scholarship, counsel have not
    furnished us with any legislative history from the 2015 enactment specifically
    reflecting that the Senate, General Assembly, and Governor intended to
    eliminate deterrence considerations in waiver cases altogether.         To the
    contrary, it is conceivable that deterrence may be implicitly encompassed in
    factors (a) (the nature and circumstances of the offense charged); (c) (the
    degree of the juvenile's culpability); (g) (the nature and extent of any prior
    6
    We need not make any independent judicial determination here, in the
    absence of an evidentiary hearing with expert testimony, that such research is
    scientifically valid and indisputable. We simply note the research seems to be
    consistent with the Legislature's decision to increase the minimum waiver age
    by one year as an ameliorative measure—a reform that takes into account, at
    least incrementally, the frequent immaturity and impulsivity of younger
    minors. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(1).
    A-3516-19T1
    13
    delinquency adjudications); and (k) (the victim's input, which could logically
    concern his or her fears of a repeated offense). N.J.S.A. 2A:4A -26.1(c)(3).
    While we do not think it inconsequential that deterrence has been
    omitted from the list of eleven waiver factors, we are unpersuaded the
    Legislature intended that prosecutors and judges must ignore that concept
    completely when evaluating whether a juvenile should be waived. Instead, just
    as we have noted with respect to the omission of rehabilitation from the list of
    factors, we construe the statute to leave room for the concept as being
    impliedly subsumed within other factors.          However, because it is not
    enumerated in the revised law, deterrence should not be afforded the full
    weight of a listed factor. Instead, like rehabilitation, it is at most a subsidiary
    and optional consideration.
    Notably, the eleven factors insert concepts that previously had not been
    mentioned in the former statute or in the AG Guidelines, at least explicitly.
    Those additions include such things as: (e) the juvenile's eligibility for special
    education; (i) current or prior involvement with child welfare agencies; and (j)
    mental health concerns, substance abuse, or emotional instability.            Such
    evidence of the juvenile's background, where it exists, seemingly would weigh
    against waiver, although perhaps not universally. Additionally, factor (f), the
    A-3516-19T1
    14
    degree of the juvenile's criminal sophistication, could weigh against waiver if
    the juvenile is shown to be naïve and lacking in that trait, or conversely in
    favor of waiver where such sophistication is present.
    On the other hand, new factor (k), the input of an identifiable victim,
    would seem to weigh often in favor of waiver, if the victim wishes the juvenile
    to be confined for a long period of time or otherwise severely punished. The
    factor could, however, weigh against waiver if the victim urges leniency for
    the juvenile.
    The revised statute does continue the strong presumption in favor of
    waiver for certain juveniles who commit serious acts and maintains the
    associated "heavy burden" on the juvenile to defeat a waiver motion. 
    R.G.D., 108 N.J. at 12
    .
    The standard of review for a waiver decision likewise remains
    unchanged under the new statute. The prosecutor is vested with the discretion
    to seek or not seek waiver in presumptive cases.        
    N.H., 226 N.J. at 249
    ("Recent iterations of the law, as well as the current statute, focus on the
    prosecutor's exercise of discretion.").
    Consequently, the standard of review of the prosecutor's waiver decision
    is deferential. The trial court should uphold the decision unless it is "clearly
    A-3516-19T1
    15
    convinced that the prosecutor abused his discretion in considering" the
    enumerated statutory factors. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(3); R. 5:22-2; 
    N.H., 226 N.J. at 255
    ("[U]nder the new law as well as the old, the prosecutor's decision
    to seek waiver is subject to review—at the hearing—for abuse of discretion.").
    II.
    With this legal backdrop, we summarize the facts and circumstances of
    this case, mindful that the State's charges have yet to be proven at a trial.
    A. The Charges
    In July 2019, Z.S. was charged in complaint number FJ-17-013-20 with
    offenses that would have constituted the following crimes if committed by an
    adult: aggravated sexual assault (first-degree), N.J.SA. 2C:14-2(a)(1) (count
    one) and endangering the welfare of a child (third-degree), N.J.S.A. 2C:24-
    4(a) (count two). At the time of the commission of the alleged offenses, Z.S.
    was seventeen years old.
    B. The Prosecutor's Waiver Motion and Initial Statement of Reasons
    On August 23, 2019, the prosecution filed a motion in the Family Part
    for involuntary waiver of Z.S.      The motion was filed within the sixty-day
    deadline required by statute, N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(a). It was accompanied by
    A-3516-19T1
    16
    a seven-page "Prosecutor's Statement of Reasons," which we will discuss at
    length in Part III of this opinion.
    A waiver hearing was originally scheduled for September 25, 2019.
    According to Z.S., however, his mother refused to allow him to meet with his
    attorney until September 17, 2019. Therefore, on or around September 2 4,
    2019 Z.S.'s assigned public defender requested a postponement due to this
    delay and "to obtain [his] school records, mental health records, and other
    necessary documents." At that time, his counsel also requested a competency
    hearing.
    On September 25, the trial court denied Z.S.'s counsel's request for a
    competency hearing, according to Z.S. because it found he did not present any
    7
    indicia of being incompetent,             and adjourned further proceedings until
    December 4, 2019.
    In October 2019, Z.S. moved to obtain records concerning him from the
    Department of Child Protection and Permanency ("DCPP"). The parties and
    the court then entered into a consent order on November 8, 2019, which was
    submitted to the DCPP to facilitate obtaining the records.
    7
    Neither party provided a transcript from this earlier proceeding, and neither
    describes the court's ruling or rationale in more than cursory detail. It is
    uncontested that if waiver is upheld, a renewed competency evaluation request
    could be filed in the Criminal Part.
    A-3516-19T1
    17
    Thereafter, in November 2019, Z.S.'s counsel requested the appointment
    of a guardian ad litem to assist with his representation because of his mother's
    non-cooperation. The trial court granted this request.   The guardian ad litem,
    an attorney, was present for the subsequent waiver hearing, and the court
    allowed him to confer with Z.S.'s public defender during the proceeding.
    On December 4, 2019, the second scheduled waiver hearing date, the
    trial court granted Z.S.'s request for additional postponement to allow the
    guardian ad litem further time to familiarize himself with the case and because
    the requested DCPP records had not yet been delivered to Z.S. The court gave
    Z.S. until January 6, 2020 to supplement the record with additional materials
    and gave the State until February 12, 2020 to respond. The waiver hearing
    was rescheduled to February 19, 2020.        According to Z.S., his attorney
    obtained the DCPP records on January 7, 2020.
    On January 17, 2020, Z.S. provided the State through counsel with
    various materials supporting his arguments against waiver.         Because the
    contents of those materials are important in evaluating the sufficiency of the
    prosecutor's written analysis of the waiver factors, we discuss them at length
    here.
    C. The Expert Reports and Other Mitigation Materials
    A-3516-19T1
    18
    Z.S. provided the State with the following materials: an October 2019
    psychological evaluation by Dr. David Bogacki; an earlier January 2018
    psychological evaluation conducted by Dr. Billie Slaughter in conjunction with
    the Salem City school district; a November 2017 psychiatric evaluation by Dr.
    Ricardo Oasin; a January 2019 Individualized Education Program ("IEP") from
    the Salem City school district; a Social Security ruling establishing the
    juvenile as disabled as defined in the Social Security Act and under 20 C.F.R.
    § 416.924(c); and DCPP records for in camera review.
    Dr. Oasin's 2017 Evaluation
    In his November 2017 evaluation conducted at the request of the Salem
    City school district, Dr. Oasin concluded that at the time Z.S.'s mental status
    was that of a "15-year-old adolescent male," equivalent to his chronological
    age. However, despite "perfect" attendance in school, he was failing classes
    and was not on track to graduate.
    Dr. Oasin described a variety of "oppositional and defiant behaviors" at
    home and in school, difficulty behaving in public, and in interacting with other
    children and adults. Z.S. was failing classes, regularly acted out in school, and
    was known as a class clown. He suffered from low self-esteem and occasional
    A-3516-19T1
    19
    suicidal thoughts and did not have friends in his neighborhood. Dr. Oasin also
    considered his prior history of being sexually abused as a young child.
    Dr. Oasin concluded that Z.S. suffered from Attention Deficit
    Hyperactivity Disorder ("ADHD") and pediatric bipolar disorder and was
    concerned about the "mood situation" represented by his suicidal ideation and
    low self-esteem. He recommended a regimen of both mood stabilizers and
    psychotherapy to address these issues.     However, he also found Z.S. was
    "intelligent" and expressed "guarded" optimism that this situation could
    improve with treatment.
    Dr. Slaughter's 2018 Evaluation
    In January 2018, Billie A. Slaughter, Ph.D., conducted a confidential
    psychological evaluation of Z.S. on behalf of the Salem City school district.
    Z.S. was referred after a diagnosis of ADHD and "continuing failing grades in
    school."
    According to his teachers, Z.S. could complete his work satisfactorily
    when focusing on a task, but was regularly late to school, highly distractible,
    and struggled to stay focused. He was failing all but one class. He was taking
    medication for his ADHD.
    A-3516-19T1
    20
    Dr. Slaughter concluded that Z.S. had an IQ of eighty-three, which fell
    in the "low-average range of intelligence." He had "poor organizational skills"
    which impacted his ability to complete schoolwork. He was below average in
    "visual-motor perceptual organization, speed and efficiency," deficient in
    "attention to detail, visual information processing, and abstract reasoning ," and
    struggled with "higher order thinking tasks."
    The 2019 IEP Assessment
    In January 2019, Z.S., his mother, and Salem City High School teachers
    participated in an IEP meeting for an annual review of Z.S.'s progress in
    school.
    Z.S. was in special education "pull out" classes for social studies,
    mathematics, science, and language arts literacy. Z.S. was failing or close to
    failing several classes, including Economics, Physical Education/Health, and
    Environmental Science, but was receiving "Bs" or better in several classes. He
    could and did perform well on tests, but frequently did not complete tasks or
    homework.    He had a significant number of absences, and his "attendance
    remains the most significant challenge to his advancement in school . . . . [it]
    directly impacts his education and is a major influence into poor and failing
    grades." The school planned to continue to provide special education classes
    A-3516-19T1
    21
    for Z.S. for a significant portion (between 20-60%) of the school day because
    he would likely struggle with the size and pace of general education classes.
    Dr. Bogacki's 2019 Evaluation
    At the request of Z.S.'s counsel, David Bogacki, Ph.D., conducted a
    psychological evaluation of Z.S. on October 31, 2019.          In reaching his
    conclusions, Dr. Bogacki relied on "a review of materials, [a] mental status
    examination, [an] interview with [Z.S.'s] mother and clinical data derived from
    psychological testing." He performed five different diagnostic assessments on
    Z.S.
    Dr. Bogacki described the available information about Z.S.'s upbringing.
    He noted that Z.S. demonstrated no mental or physical health problems as a
    young child but that he "was sexually molested at age 5 by a cousin."
    Although Z.S. did not apparently have memories of the event, shortly
    thereafter he "began acting out." He started to undergo therapy, but "never had
    any sustained treatment for sexual abuse." He had prior diagnoses for ADHD
    and bipolar disorder.
    According to an interview with Z.S.'s mother, he had frequent angry
    outbursts, and a "bad attitude," but was not aggressive towards family
    members.     He had "a history of school behavioral problems," including
    A-3516-19T1
    22
    insubordination, fighting, and refusing to do homework, and had been
    suspended twice.
    Dr. Bogacki observed that Z.S.'s mood was within "normal limits," his
    speech was logical and coherent, and he was aware of his surroundings. He
    acknowledged his anger problems and did not present psychotic symptoms.
    He suffered from mood swings and depression that made it difficult to
    complete tasks, including schoolwork, but these problems were reduced by
    medication.
    Dr. Bogacki found that Z.S. had "low-average" intellectual functioning
    and an IQ of eighty-one, which was in the 10 th percentile of his age group.
    There were indications of a learning disability. Dr. Bogacki determined that
    he had the "mental age" of a thirteen-and-a-half-year-old child.
    Dr. Bogacki noted that Z.S. suffered from depression and low self-
    esteem, was "quite narcissistic" and could "become argumentative and
    revengeful at times."     He vacillated between "passive compliance and
    obedience" and "stubborn contrariness." He was "aloof and introverted" and
    had serious difficulties forming relationships. He had "borderline personality
    traits" and intense, frequent mood swings. Dr. Bogacki concluded he suffered
    from a Major Depressive Disorder, ADHD and "a subtle learning disability."
    A-3516-19T1
    23
    A "formal diagnosis of Personality Disorder" was not warranted but he had
    many "emerging" negative psychological traits.
    Dr. Bogacki made further findings related to Z.S.'s ability to be
    successfully rehabilitated. He noted that Z.S. had no meaningful early conduct
    with the criminal justice system apart from this arrest. He did not have a
    history of drug use. He had a supportive family structure.
    Dr. Bogacki found Z.S.'s challenges in school, including his "history of
    special education," "mild cognitive defects," and "mild behavioral problems"
    were the result of underlying interpersonal and psychological issues. His
    social isolation and underlying mental issues would require substantial
    rehabilitation efforts but were "amenable to change."
    Dr. Bogacki concluded Z.S.'s actions likely arose "out of confusion
    about his sexual identity, impulsivity related to emerging sexual urges and a
    significant mental disorder (bipolar disorder)" and were not a result of
    underlying "anti-social or pro-criminal attitudes." Z.S. was a "good candidate
    for rehabilitation" and should not be incarcerated as an adult.
    The 2019 Social Security Disability Ruling
    A-3516-19T1
    24
    In a November 13, 2019 decision, federal Administrative Law Judge
    Kimberly Varillo found, after a hearing, that Z.S. was disabled and eligible for
    supplemental Social Security Income ("SSI").
    Z.S. was found to have ADHD, bipolar disorder, and Oppositional
    Defiant Disorder ("ODD"). ALJ Varillo found he had "a marked limitation" in
    "attending and completing tasks" and in "interacting and relating with others."
    His mother testified that he did not have friends and did not get along with
    peers or adults. His grades were poor but improving after being placed in
    smaller classes and after he began using a prescribed stimulant to help his
    focus.
    ALJ Varillo found observations of Z.S.'s frequent outbursts and
    behavioral issues in school were persuasive and indicated "marked limits in
    attending and completing tasks and interacting with others." She found that
    mental assessments by State agency psychological consultants were "not
    persuasive because evidence received at the hearing level shows that [Z.S.] is
    more limited than determined by State agency consultants." She also found
    that the State's experts "did not consider the combined effect of the claimant's
    impairments" in determining that he was not disabled.
    D. The Illness and Hospitalization of Defense Counsel
    A-3516-19T1
    25
    One week before the scheduled waiver hearing of February 19, 2020,
    Z.S.'s counsel was diagnosed with pneumonia and tachycardia and was
    hospitalized. She was "medically cleared" to return to work on February 20,
    2020. 8 A scheduled pretrial conference between the State and Z.S.'s counsel
    on February 13, 2020 did not occur due to these health concerns. According to
    the State, the purpose of that conference was to determine whether testimony
    would be needed to admit any of the mitigating documents Z.S. had provided.
    E. The State's Two-Page Supplemental Letter
    On February 18, 2020, the State filed a two-page letter with the court
    describing the materials it had received from Z.S.'s counsel and asserting that
    the prosecutor had considered those additional materials. The letter stated that
    the materials caused the State to "now find[] applicable" three statutory factors
    that it had not previously found applicable, namely (e) (the juvenile's
    eligibility for special education); (i) (current or past involvement with child
    welfare agencies); and (j) (evidence of mental health concerns, substance
    abuse, or emotional instability).
    As we will discuss in Part III, the prosecutor's cursory supplemental
    letter did not comment substantively on any of the defense submissions, except
    8
    The record contains no doctor's note or medical documentation, and the
    exact meaning of "medically cleared" is uncertain.
    A-3516-19T1
    26
    it noted that the State had considered the materials and "most importantly" had
    "heavily consider[ed]" DCPP records indicating that Z.S. had been sexually
    assaulted himself when he was about six years old.
    The supplemental letter concluded:
    While the State considered the additional information
    and how it relates to the eleven (11) factors the State
    must consider under N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1, the State
    continues to seek waiver as the factors in favor of
    waiver continue to outweigh those against.
    No further written explanation was provided. The letter did not quote
    from or refer to any of the specific contents of the expert psychological
    reports, Social Security findings, or special education records presented by
    defense counsel.
    According to Z.S., his counsel did not receive the prosecutor's written
    supplemental reasons until February 19, 2020. Z.S.'s counsel was informed
    orally at an earlier date of the prosecutor's decision to continue to seek waiver.
    The waiver hearing was postponed for one day until February 20, 2020
    due to Z.S.'s counsel's health concerns. A hearing was conducted on that date
    before a Family Part judge.
    F. The Waiver Hearing and the Court's Adjournment Denial
    A-3516-19T1
    27
    At the hearing, Z.S.'s counsel advised the court that, although she had
    prepared for the hearing, she was still feeling ill, was having difficulty
    breathing, and had not had a chance to review the supplemental letter with her
    client. Defense counsel accordingly requested a further postponement of the
    hearing for these medical reasons, with the consent of the prosecutor and the
    guardian ad litem.
    As we will discuss in Part IV of the opinion, the court denied defense
    counsel's unopposed adjournment request, and elected to proceed with the
    waiver hearing.      Among other things, the court noted the matter had been
    adjourned several times already, that the State's detective was present and
    ready to testify about probable cause, and that members of the victim's family
    were present.     The court also remarked that defense counsel was an able
    attorney, and that it was in Z.S.'s best interests to hold the hearing.
    The State then presented testimony from Sergeant Amy Hill concerning
    probable cause.      Defense counsel, despite her illness, cross -examined Hill.
    The State also played for the court recordings of interviews with Z.S. and the
    alleged victim.
    G. The State's Evidence of Probable Cause
    A-3516-19T1
    28
    Without detailing here prematurely before trial all of the factual details,
    the State's evidence of probable cause at the waiver hearing may be
    summarized as follows.
    On July 5, 2019, Salem City police responded to a 9-1-1 call that one or
    more individuals were attempting to break into a house.              Among the
    responding law enforcement officers was Sergeant Hill, a detective with the
    Salem County Prosecutor's Office, who testified at the hearing.           Several
    individuals outside the home told Hill that their five-year-old relative, A.L.,
    had been sexually assaulted by someone inside the house. Hill entered the
    house, where Z.S.'s mother allegedly told Hill that Z.S. had admitted to his
    stepfather that he had sexually assaulted A.L.
    At Hill's request, Z.S. and his mother went to the Salem City police
    station for further investigation. Once at the station, Hill recorded a formal
    statement from Z.S. with his mother present. His mother initially consented to
    the interview and Z.S. and his mother were both read their Miranda 9 rights.
    Both Z.S. and his mother signed the Miranda card signifying they were read
    and understood those rights.
    9
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 346
    (1966).
    A-3516-19T1
    29
    During the course of his interview, Z.S. recounted that one day he had
    gotten out of a shower with a towel wrapped around him, and went into his
    room, where A.L. was present. According to Z.S., while he was looking for
    his underwear, A.L. touched his leg and asked him "Can I eat it?"            Z.S.
    admitted that he let the boy touch him. A.L. then allegedly asked Z.S. to do
    the same thing to him. When asked if he did anything at that point to A.L.,
    Z.S. responded, "[n]ot at first." Before he elaborated about that, Z.S.'s mother
    asked for an attorney, terminating the interview.
    Sergeant Hill then interviewed A.L., who was accompanied by his
    mother. The officer showed A.L. a drawing of an anatomically correct pre -
    pubescent male. A.L. referred to the penis on that drawing as "pee-pee" and
    the buttocks as "butt." When asked if anyone had ever touched his peni s, A.L.
    responded that Z.S. had. A.L. told the interviewer that Z.S. had pulled down
    his pants on several occasions and had licked his penis and buttocks. Using
    his own vocabulary, A.L. also described how Z.S. had ejaculated.
    The officers also interviewed D.S., a sixteen-year-old family friend of
    A.L.   D.S. told the officers that, on the morning of July 3, 2019 she was
    sleeping in the same bed with A.L.'s grandmother and A.L. She felt A.L.'s
    hand reaching into her pants and pushed it away. She asked A.L. where he
    A-3516-19T1
    30
    learned to do that. A.L. allegedly responded that he had learned it from Z.S.,
    who had put his "pee-pee" in A.L.'s mouth, and vice-versa.         The officers
    interviewed A.L.'s grandmother, and she gave a similar account of the
    incident.
    Upon considering the waiver hearing evidence, the court ruled that the
    State had met its burden as to probable cause.
    H. Argument and Ruling on the Waiver Issue
    Next, the court heard oral argument on the waiver issue. During the
    argument, the prosecutor explained, for the first time in any depth, why its
    office had found the defense's mitigating materials unpersuasive and was
    continuing to press for waiver. Defense counsel extemporaneously attempted
    to respond to these points.
    Defense counsel did not present any witnesses at the waiver hearing, but
    did supply the court with the psychological evaluations, school records, DCPP
    records, and Social Security disability ruling. The prosecutor did not present
    any expert reports or other witnesses to counter the defense materials.     At
    the conclusion of the hearing, the court issued an oral opinion determining that
    the State had not abused its discretion, and accordingly approved the waiver.
    I. Leave to Appeal and the Amici
    A-3516-19T1
    31
    Z.S. moved for leave to appeal the waiver ruling, principally arguing that
    the prosecutor's written statements of reasons were deficient, that his counsel
    had not been given enough time to deal with the State's supplemental letter,
    and that the trial court should have adjourned the waiver hearing given the
    illness of his counsel.    Notably, Z.S. did not appeal the court's finding of
    probable cause.
    We granted leave to appeal. We also invited the Attorney General and
    the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey ("ACLU") to participate as
    amici, both of whom appeared and filed briefs.          In addition, the Rutgers
    Criminal and Youth Justice Clinic ("CYJC") and the National Juvenile
    Defense Center ("NJDC") jointly filed a motion to appear as amicus curiae (the
    "Rutgers amici"). The request was unopposed by the parties and granted by
    this court. 10
    J. Z.S.'s Points on Appeal
    On appeal, Z.S. raised the following points in his initial motion brief:
    POINT I
    THE INTERESTS OF JUSTICE REQUIRE
    INTERLOCUTORY REVIEW, RULE 2:2-4 STATES
    THAT THE APPELLATE DIVISION MAY GRANT
    10
    We thank the amici for their thoughtful contributions to the briefing and
    oral argument in this accelerated appeal.
    A-3516-19T1
    32
    LEAVE TO APPEAL FROM AN INTERLOCUTORY
    ORDER "IN THE INTERESTS OF JUSTICE."
    POINT II
    THE PROSECUTOR ABUSED HER DISCRETION
    IN SEEKING WAIVER OF Z.S. BECAUSE THE
    STATEMENT OF REASONS FAILED TO PROVIDE
    FACTUAL ANALYSIS AS REQUIRED UNDER
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL GUIDELINES.
    POINT III
    THE PROSECUTOR ABUSED HER DISCRETION
    IN SEEKING WAIVER BY FAILING TO ADDRESS
    THE FACTORS SET FORTH IN THE WAIVER
    STATUTE N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1.
    POINT IV
    THE JUDGE ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN
    WAIVING THE JUVENILE, FINDING THE
    PROSECUTOR    HAD NOT     ABUSED   HER
    DISCRETION   IN  CONSIDERING   WAIVER,
    BECAUSE HE FAILED TO REVIEW THE
    EVIDENCE   PRESENTED   AND   ADMITTED
    WHICH APPLIED DIRECTLY TO THE ANALYSIS
    OF FACTORS CONTAINED IN N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26.1.
    In his supplemental merits brief, Z.S. further argued:
    SUPPLEMENTAL POINT I
    THE FAMILY COURT’S DENIAL OF DEFENSE
    COUNSEL’S ADJOURNMENT REQUEST, JOINED
    BY THE GUARDIAN AD LITEM AND NOT
    OBJECTED TO BY THE STATE, WHERE
    A-3516-19T1
    33
    COUNSEL WAS SUFFERING FROM PNEUMONIA
    AND      TACHYCARDIA    AND   HAD   ONLY
    RECEIVED THE STATE’S SUPPLEMENTAL
    STATEMENT OF REASONS ONE DAY PRIOR TO
    THE WAIVER HEARING, DEPRIVED Z.S. OF DUE
    PROCESS.     THEREFORE,   THE    DECISION
    GRANTING WAIVER MUST BE REVERSED AND
    THE      MATTER   REMANDED      FOR    AN
    EVIDENTIARY HEARING BEFORE A DIFFERENT
    JUDGE. U.S. CONST. AMEND XIV; N.J. CONST.
    ART. I, ¶ 1.
    A.   The Lower Court Denied Defense
    Counsel’s Legitimate and Compelling
    Request for An Adjournment Despite
    Counsel’s   Suffering   from Double
    Pneumonia and Tachycardia.
    B.   The State’s Untimely Supplemental
    Statement of Reasons, Received by
    Defense Counsel One Day Prior To The
    Waiver Hearing, Deprived Z.S. of Due
    Process of Law.
    SUPPLEMENTAL POINT II
    THE WAIVER DECISION MUST BE REVERSED
    BECAUSE THE COURT FAILED TO CONSIDER
    THE UNDISPUTED BRAIN SCIENCE IMPLICIT IN
    SEVERAL FACTORS CONTAINED IN N.J.S.A.
    2A:4A-26.1(c)(3),  INCLUDING   THAT   THE
    JUVENILE IS DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED,
    HAS A CHRONOLOGICAL AGE OF 17, AND IS
    FUNCTIONING       AT   THE   INTELLECTUAL
    (COGNITIVE) LEVEL OF A 13 YEAR OLD CHILD.
    FURTHER, IN ITS INITIAL STATEMENT OF
    REASONS THE STATE ABUSED ITS DISCRETION
    A-3516-19T1
    34
    BY RELYNG UPON A MERE CONCLUSORY
    DETERRENCE ANALYSIS WHICH HAS BEEN
    COMPLETELY DEBUNKED BY EXPERTS.
    A.    Z.S. is Functioning at a 13-Year-Old
    Cognitive    Level,     Therefore    a
    Comprehensive Analysis was Critical.
    B.    The State Did Not Conduct an
    Individualized Assessment of Deterrence,
    but Merely Utilized Conclusory Language
    and Failed to Consider Research Studies.
    SUPPLEMENTAL POINT III
    WAIVING A JUVENILE TO ADULT COURT WHO
    MAY      NOT        BE       COMPETENT,          IS
    DEVELOPMENTALLY              DISABLED        AND
    FUNCTIONING COGNITIVELY AS A 13-YEAR-
    OLD, WITHOUT AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING,
    CONSTITUTES       CRUEL         AND    UNUSUAL
    PUNISHMENT. U.S. CONST. AMEND VIII, XIV;
    N.J. CONST. ART. I, ¶ 12; N.J. CONST. ART. I, ¶ 1.
    In his reply brief responding to the amicus Attorney General, Z.S.
    further argues:
    REPLY POINT I
    A REMAND FOR AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING
    WOULD NOT BE "FUTILE" OR "IRRELEVANT"
    AS ARGUED BY AMICUS, THE ATTORNEY
    GENERAL OF NEW JERSEY.
    REPLY POINT II
    A-3516-19T1
    35
    THE JUVENILE WAIVER STATUTE, N.J.S.A
    2A:4A-26.1, MUST BE READ IN PARI MATERIA
    WITH     THE     JUVENILE DEVELOPMENTAL
    DISABLITY STATUTORY SCHEME, SET FORTH
    IN N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-43b.
    REPLY POINT III
    THE PROSECUTOR ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN
    MOVING TO WAIVE THE JUVENILE TO ADULT
    COURT, WHICH WAS RUBBER STAMPED BY
    [THE FAMILY COURT]. THE PROSECUTOR’S
    INITIAL STATEMENT OF REASONS AND
    SUPPLEMENTAL STATEMENT OF REASONS
    WERE CLEARLY UNSATISFACTORY.
    The ACLU as amicus generally supports and amplifies these defense
    arguments. The Rutgers amici also support Z.S., particularly urging that he
    was denied due process when the court declined to adjourn the waiver hearing.
    Meanwhile, the Attorney General and the State contend in opposition
    that the waiver determination should be upheld because the prosecutor's
    decision was not a clear abuse of discretion. The Attorney General takes no
    position, however, concerning Z.S.'s appeal of the trial court's denial of his
    counsel's adjournment request.
    III.
    We first address the critical issue of the sufficiency of the prosecutor's
    written reasons justifying Z.S.'s waiver to the Criminal Part.
    A-3516-19T1
    36
    A. Guiding Principles
    As the Supreme Court has made clear, the State has an "affirmative
    obligation to show that it assessed all the [statutory] factors" concerning
    waiver, and the court must review this assessment. 
    N.H., 226 N.J. at 251
    ;
    N.J.S.A. 2A:4A–26.1(b). The State must provide such a written assessment at
    the time of its waiver motion, laying out the facts it relied on to assess the
    eleven statutory factors, "together with an explanation as to how evaluation of
    those facts support waiver for each particular juvenile."      N.J.S.A. 2A:4A–
    26.1(a) (emphasis added).
    When evaluating whether the State discharged its obligations to consider
    all of the statutory factors and the circumstances fully and not arbitrarily, the
    sufficiency of the prosecutor's written statement of reasons is vital.      "The
    statement of reasons should apply the factors to the individual juvenile and not
    simply mirror the statutory language in a cursory fashion." 
    N.H., 226 N.J. at 250
    .
    A fundamental aspect of the statutory procedure is that the prosecutor's
    reasons for seeking waiver must be expressed in written form, with fair notice
    to the opposing side. The juvenile's attorney must not be forced to guess why
    the prosecutor believes a particular factor does or does not apply, and why that
    A-3516-19T1
    37
    factor is comparatively strong, neutral, or weak. The defense lawyer, and the
    juvenile himself, must be informed about why this momentous decision to
    waive is being pursued. A fulsome explanation will enable the defense to
    prepare to counter it, possibly with additional mitigating evidence about the
    circumstances of the offense or about the juvenile's personal characteristics.
    Upon learning the prosecutor's reasoning, the defense may seek further
    mitigating opinions from experts, as well as records of medical or mental
    health treatment, or additional documents from schools or governmental
    agencies.
    The statement of reasons cannot be incomplete or superficial.
    Conclusory assertions that are devoid of analysis are inadequate. To use a
    metaphor from what a math teacher may tell her students, the prosecutor must
    "show the work." We comparably expect the same in our system of justice
    from expert witnesses, who are forbidden from spouting net opinions that do
    not explain the underlying "why[s] and wherefore[s]" of their analysis.
    Townsend v. Pierre, 
    221 N.J. 36
    , 54 (2015).
    Similarly, our case law has required a reasonable level of detailed factor -
    by-factor analysis in prosecutor's letters rejecting an applicant for pretrial
    intervention ("PTI").     State v. Roseman, 
    221 N.J. 611
    , 627 (2015)
    A-3516-19T1
    38
    (disapproving of a PTI rejection that "merely parroted" the statutory language
    and presented "bare assertions"); see also State v. Wallace, 
    146 N.J. 576
    , 584
    (1996).   Here, the consequences are far greater, as this juvenile faces a
    sentence of a minimum of twenty-five years if found guilty of first-degree
    aggravated sexual assault and up to life in prison. We would expect the level
    of detail in the prosecutor's statement of reasons to be comparable, at the very
    least, to the detail expected in a prosecutor's statement of reasons for denying a
    defendant's application for PTI.
    Nor should the statement of reasons ignore or gloss over highly relevant
    information.   If, for example, the defense attorney has presented evidence
    under factor (j) that the juvenile has mental health concerns, substance abuse
    problems, or emotional instability, it will not suffice for the statement of
    reasons to say, without further explanation, that such evidence was
    "considered" but doesn’t matter.      The written statement must reasonably
    address the content of the defense material and explain why it is flawed,
    inadequately supported, internally contradictory, or otherwise unpersuasive.
    This is not to say that prosecutor waiver statements must emulate
    Victorian novels or academic tomes. They need not elaborate about minutiae.
    And, because positive and negative factors will often exist, the prosecutor's
    A-3516-19T1
    39
    ultimate conclusion balancing those offsetting factors may not be amenable to
    precise articulation.
    No one factor, however, may be treated as dispositive —such as the
    severity of the charged offense. If that were so, the Legislature could have
    categorically declared the offense to be an automatic waiver, and thereby
    obviated the need for a hearing. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(2) (enumerating
    a litany of offenses for which waiver may be granted or denied because of
    mitigating factors, including such extremely serious offenses as homicide,
    sexual assault, and kidnapping). The Legislature could have also identified
    factors among the eleven to carry more weight, or presumptive weight. It did
    not do so. Although all eleven factors may not exist or have equal importance
    in a given case, they must all be considered with a reasonable amount of
    attention and explication when they are present.
    B. The Prosecutor's First Statement of Reasons and Its Flawed Checklist
    The State's first written Statement of Reasons was issued in August 2019
    along with the motion for waiver. The format of the Statement did not track
    the eleven factors listed in the 2016 revised statute. Instead, the Statement was
    generally organized by a point-by-point application and discussion of the old
    categories set forth in the 2000 AG Guidelines, followed by a cursory
    A-3516-19T1
    40
    "checklist" that mixes in factors appearing in both the Guidelines and the 2016
    revised statute.
    The Statement began with a detailed description of the investigation
    leading to Z.S.'s arrest, including relevant information from the interviews
    with Z.S. and the victim.
    The Statement followed with a brief section noting that Z.S. had no
    previous juvenile record or contact with the court system.
    The next section described the comparable sentences Z.S. would receive
    in the Family Part and the Criminal Part.         If convicted of first -degree
    aggravated sexual assault in the Criminal Part, Z.S. faced a maximum of life in
    prison and a minimum custodial term of twenty-five years before becoming
    parole eligible. He also faced a maximum of five years if convicted of third-
    degree endangering the welfare of a child, which would likely be merged in
    the first count. His total expected sentence, if found guilty, would be twenty -
    five years to life.
    The Statement emphasized the possibility of Z.S. serving little, if any,
    time if the case remained in the Family Part.        It asserted the maximum
    sentences for non-homicide first-degree and third-degree offenses in the
    Family Part are four and two years, respectively, and he could be expected to
    A-3516-19T1
    41
    receive a maximum of six years. The prosecution emphasized that juveniles
    are "immediately eligible for parole" under N.J.S.A. 30:4-123.51(f) and that it
    expected Z.S. "will likely be released to parole upon reaching his judicial
    restriction date," which would be roughly one-third of his sentence. It added
    that he could also be released earlier. Finally, the Statement noted that even if
    Z.S. were sentenced to a custodial term, he would be eligible fo r "reassignment
    to a residential non-secure facility under a probationary term, rather than a
    custodial term."
    The next section of the Statement considered the need for deterrence.
    The prosecutor asserted that transferring Z.S. to the Criminal Part would deter
    others from violating the law because the lengthy sentence and period of
    parole ineligibility "will convey the certainty of serious, enhanced penalties to
    the community" and deter people from committing similar acts. The prosecutor
    conceded that Z.S. had no prior offense record but found that a transfer to the
    Criminal Part "would deter and prevent him from engaging in future crimes"
    and "ensure that he remains unable to commit further crimes against children
    during the mandatory period of incarceration."
    The Statement then presented a section on "Applicable and Inapplicable
    Factors." This consisted of a checklist of twenty-three factors, grouped in the
    A-3516-19T1
    42
    following main sections: nature of the offense; deterrence; effect on co -
    defendants; maximum sentence and length of time served; prior record; trial
    considerations; victim's input; and history of juvenile.
    The "history of juvenile" portion of the checklist lumped together
    subparts for: "age and maturity of the juvenile" (thereby addressing the
    applicability of factor (d) of the 2016 statute); eligibility for special education
    (as in factor (e) of the new statute); "current or prior involvement" with child
    welfare agencies (as in factor (i)); and "evidence of mental health concerns,
    substance abuse, or emotional instability," to the extent provided (as in factor
    (j)).
    The "Nature of the Offense" portion of the checklist includes sub-items
    for, among other things, an "offense against a person" (tying to factor (b) of
    the 2016 statute); "degree of the juvenile's culpability" (tying to statutory
    factor (c)); and "degree of criminal sophistication exhibited by the juvenile"
    (tying to statutory factor (f)). Other sub-items are presented that are not listed
    in the statute.   The "victim's input" (which ties in with factor (k) of the
    statute), is given its own category, and marked with an "A" for applicable.
    A-3516-19T1
    43
    Where a factor was "applicable" it was simply noted with an "A;"
    inapplicable factors were noted with an "I."       Eleven factors were deemed
    "inapplicable," and twelve were deemed "applicable."
    Critically, the checklist portion of the Statement contained no analysis,
    but simply a column of "A's" and "I's." For example, the "degree of criminal
    sophistication" sub-item is designated with an "A," without any discussion of
    how or why that applies as a pro-waiver factor to Z.S., whose has diagnosed
    intellectual disabilities and mental health disorders. Nor does the checklist
    explain why "A" is checked for Z.S.'s age and maturity. 11
    At the end of the checklist, the Statement declares: "The applicable
    factors outweigh the inapplicable factors: Yes."       The Statement makes no
    effort to explain how or why. One also cannot tell the meaning of whether a
    factor is "Inapplicable". For instance, does the "I" mean the factor (such as a
    prior offense record or gang involvement) is not present at all? Or does an "I"
    signify that the item may be present (such as emotional instability), but that the
    11
    We recognize Z.S.'s age was nearly eighteen at the time of the charged acts,
    but his maturity is not clear in light of Dr. Bogacki's uncontested finding of an
    intellectual age of thirteen-and-a-half. On appeal, the prosecutor advised us
    during oral argument that his office accepts as true this expert estimate of
    Z.S.'s intellectual age, but he reminds us the statute speaks in terms of a
    juvenile's chronological age. We need not resolve here the legal significance o f
    "intellectual age," or the multiple ways it can be computed.
    A-3516-19T1
    44
    prosecutor didn’t think it was meaningful or weighty? The form used by the
    prosecutor does not explain this.
    The final passage of the Statement concludes that "Based on the serious
    nature of the charges against [Z.S.]," the State moves to have jurisdiction
    transferred from the Family Part to the Criminal Part. We may surmise from
    this conclusion that the "serious nature of the charges" played a crucial,
    perhaps dispositive, role in the State's analysis. However, the Statement does
    not explain how according that factor such pre-emptive weight comports with
    the revised 2016 statute, which makes the "nature and circumstances of the
    offense" only one of eleven enumerated factors.          See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26.1(c)(3)(a). 12
    C. The Prosecutor's Terse Supplemental Letter
    After receiving the mitigating materials from Z.S.'s counsel, the State
    submitted a two-page letter in lieu of a formal addendum to its statement of
    reasons dated February 17, 2020.       The letter stated that, in light of the
    consideration of the above materials and DCPP records, it determined that
    12
    We are cognizant that the severity of the charged offense may often be,
    quite logically, a very weighty consideration in favor of waiver, particularly if
    the mitigating factors are weak or non-existent. Our point is that a prosecutor
    must explain why it regards the other factors as paltry by comparison. Again,
    the prosecution must "show its work."
    A-3516-19T1
    45
    three new statutory factors were now applicable, specifically: statutory factor
    (e), any classification for special education eligibility; factor (i), current or
    prior involvement of the juvenile with child welfare agencies; and (j)
    "[e]vidence of mental health concerns, substance abuse, or emotional
    instability of the juvenile." See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(3)(e), (i), (j). These
    factors had previously been deemed "inapplicable" in the initial Statement of
    Reasons. The prosecution also determined that the information was newly
    "applicable" to factor (c), Z.S.'s culpability, although it did not explain how
    much it affected the culpability assessment, or in what way. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26.1(c)(3)(c).
    The State "[s]pecifically" took into account Z.S.'s prior medical
    diagnoses. "Most importantly," it "heavily considered" the evidence from the
    DCPP records that Z.S. was also sexually assaulted as a young child.
    Although the prosecution considered this information as it relates to the
    statutory factors, it "continue[d] to seek waiver as the factors in favor of
    waiver continue to outweigh those against."
    D. Oral Argument at the Waiver Hearing
    During the oral argument at the hearing, the assistant prosecutor told the
    judge that this was the first waiver application that her office had presented
    A-3516-19T1
    46
    since the statute had been revised in 2016. Consequently, the prosecutor was
    unsure (as was defense counsel) about what mitigating reports and documents
    the court would admit into evidence and consider. As she explained it, the
    assistant prosecutor "did save a lot of the factual analysis for oral argument."
    The assistant prosecutor had also hoped to have a pre-hearing conference with
    Z.S.'s attorney to review the exhibits, but her adversary had been ill.
    The trial court excused this omission, finding a "good faith basis" for the
    prosecutor to have addressed the defense reports at a "late hour." The court
    noted this case had "a special history," citing the lack of cooperation by Z.S.'s
    mother, which delayed defense counsel's ability to obtain the mitigating
    records sooner.   The court declined to find fault on the part of either side for
    the last-minute discussion but suggested that it might not be the norm for
    future cases in the vicinage. The court further observed that "both counsel have
    done a very good job certainly verbally, going over their respective positions."
    The prosecutor assured the court that her office had duly considered the
    mental health reports and other materials supplied by the defense.             She
    conceded that they did make applicable several factors that were originally
    deemed inapplicable. And she also acknowledged that the materials "added to
    the analysis" of Z.S.'s culpability, albeit without explaining how much they
    A-3516-19T1
    47
    mitigated that assessment.     The prosecutor added a caveat that she was
    "willing to stipulate that these are the records [she] received," but could not
    stipulate that "the findings are accurate and appropriate."
    Despite her illness, Z.S.'s attorney forcefully argued to the court that the
    mitigating reports outweighed the factors supporting waiver. She did not call
    any of the experts to the stand. She urged that the prosecutor's decision to
    pursue waiver, despite her client's mental health and disability issues, was a
    clear abuse of discretion.
    As we have noted, the court then issued an oral decision, finding the
    prosecutor had not clearly abused her discretion.      The court ruled that the
    prosecutor's written submissions "meet the statutory criteria." The court found
    the submissions "clearly demonstrate" the prosecutor considered the
    appropriate factors that were known initially. Thereafter, the prosecutor "did
    make pause" in later considering Z.S.'s IEP and the other supplementary
    materials provided by the defense. The court recognized Dr. Bogacki's expert
    opinion that Z.S. has mental health challenges and the intellectual capacity of a
    thirteen-year-old. Even so, the court was satisfied the prosecutor took this
    mitigating information into account when considering the "totality of
    A-3516-19T1
    48
    circumstances,"     including Z.S.'s apparent evasiveness when he was
    interviewed.
    E. Analysis
    Having reviewed this procedural history in light of the applicable law,
    we conclude that the prosecutor's written Statement of Reasons and the cursory
    supplemental letter were materially deficient. Those submissions fell short of
    the critical requirements of written analysis demanded under the statute and
    the case law.
    In reaching this conclusion, we acknowledge that, as counsel have
    represented, this was the first waiver application this county prosecutor's office
    had presented since the Legislature repealed N.J.S.A. 2A:4A -26 in 2016 and
    replaced it with N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1. According to the Attorney General, the
    form of the Statement of Reasons the prosecutor used in this case, including its
    Applicable/Inapplicable checklist, is not used by any other county. It appears
    the prosecutor improvised the form.
    To some extent, the prosecutor might have been led astray by the lack of
    revision of the 2000 AG Guidelines. Those Guidelines are obsolete, in that
    they omit several factors added by the 2016 revision while retaining
    considerations, such as deterrence, that are not listed as full-fledged factors in
    A-3516-19T1
    49
    the newer law. We urge the Attorney General to expeditiously withdraw the
    old Guidelines and replace them with new Guidelines that track the eleven
    factors adopted in 2016.
    The Applicable/Inapplicable checklist supplied by the prosecutor was
    woefully inadequate and largely uninformative. A proper statement of reasons
    must contain explanatory discussion that was lacking here. The prosecution
    did not sufficiently reveal its reasoning.
    Moreover, the checklist's organization gave subsidiary status to some
    subjects that are full-fledged factors under the 2016 statute, while exalting
    other subjects the Legislature did not identify as factors.     To be sure, we
    recognize that the waiver analysis is not a counting exercise. Some factors can
    have more importance or probative strength than others. Because this is not a
    mechanical quantitative process, it is all-the-more vital that the statement of
    reasons be qualitatively sufficient. That did not occur here.
    The prosecutor's supplemental letter likewise fell short of the mark.
    With the exception of the DCPP records showing that Z.S. had been sexually
    abused as a minor, the letter was bereft of any meaningful discussion of the
    expert reports of Dr. Oasin, Dr. Bogacki, and Dr. Slaughter. Nor did the letter
    explain why the Social Security Administration's finding of intellectual
    A-3516-19T1
    50
    disability is inconsequential, despite case law that makes such findings prima
    facie rebuttable proof of disability in Family Part proc eedings. See Golian v.
    Golian, 
    344 N.J. Super. 337
    , 342-43 (App. Div. 2001); see also Gormley v.
    Gormley, 
    462 N.J. Super. 433
    (App. Div. 2019) (reiterating the holding of
    Golian). The letter also does not explain why Z.S.'s special education status
    and IEP plan are immaterial or insignificant. As we have said, it is not enough
    for a prosecutor to declare in conclusory fashion they were considered.
    The combined effect of the prosecutor’s idiosyncratic Statement of
    Reasons format and the brevity of its supplemental letter was to dwell upon the
    characteristics of the charged offense and give little attention to the
    characteristics of this juvenile offender.      This skewed method, nearly
    approaching a categorical approach based on the seriousness of the charges ,
    was unfair to Z.S. It was also inconsistent with the statutory scheme.
    The factors adopted under the 2016 statute treat both the characteristics
    of the offense and the offender as important to the waiver analysis. The
    prosecutor’s submissions here said much about the former but gave short shrift
    to the latter. That was unacceptable.
    The prosecutor's attempt at the waiver hearing to cover omitted ground
    orally did not cure the problem. We accept the judge's finding that neither side
    A-3516-19T1
    51
    was at fault for the last-minute exchange. But the statute calls for written, not
    just oral, statements of reasons. That disclosure gives the defense a fair
    opportunity to make strategic decisions, such as perhaps obtaining
    supplemental expert reports that may persuade a prosecutor's office to
    reconsider its decision to seek waiver, or calling witnesses at the hearing to
    buttress the defense's position.
    Oral argument should not be the first time the defense learns of the
    prosecutor's reasons, particularly in this context that is such a crucial event in
    the charged minor's life.     Adequate written notice is especially important
    where, as we discuss in Part IV of this opinion, the juvenile's attorney is
    battling illness and therefore less able to respond spontaneously to the
    prosecutor's newly presented arguments.
    Our decision in State v. Hoffman, 
    399 N.J. Super. 207
    (App. Div. 2008),
    a PTI case cited by the State, is distinguishable. There we noted shortcomings
    in a prosecutor's letter rejecting the PTI application of a defe ndant charged
    with third and fourth-degree crimes but declined to remand the case because
    the prosecutor had covered the grounds for rejection amply at the hearing
    before the trial court.
    Id. at 217-18.
    In the present case, the stakes, which
    could portend a life sentence for Z.S., are far greater. The differences between
    A-3516-19T1
    52
    a Family Part juvenile case and an adult prosecution for a first-degree crime in
    the Criminal Part are enormous.
    Because of these fundamental deficiencies, the order upholding the
    waiver of Z.S. must be vacated and the matter remanded for a new hearing. In
    advance of that hearing, the prosecution must generate a new written
    Statement of Reasons that tracks, and comments with a reasonable level of
    explanation, upon each of the eleven factors of N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1. Once
    that new Statement of Reasons is furnished, counsel for Z.S. may have a
    reasonable opportunity to generate additional materials and arguments in
    response.
    In the trial court's discretion, the defense may call experts or other
    witnesses at the hearing that may illuminate the issues. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26.1(b) (noting that at the waiver hearing the trial court "shall receive the
    evidence offered by the State and by the juvenile"); N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(e)
    (noting that "testimony" from the juvenile will not be admissible at subsequent
    hearings, suggesting that courts may allow certain testimony to be presented at
    waiver hearings). 13
    13
    The Attorney General and the Public Defender each represented to us at oral
    argument that such evidentiary hearings about the juvenile's characteristics are
    A-3516-19T1
    53
    This is not to intimate any suggestion as to what the waiver decision in
    this case ultimately should be. That is a determination entrusted by statute to
    the prosecutor and can only be set aside by the court upon proof of a clear
    abuse of discretion. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(3). We remand solely because of
    the critical procedural deficiencies that occurred, and do not reach the merits.
    IV.
    We briefly turn to a separate and independent basis for vacating the trial
    court's decision in this case: the denial of the adjournment of the hearing
    requested, without opposition, by the ill public defender. We need not dwell
    upon this issue at length, except to note that it is the sole issue briefed by the
    Rutgers amici, and that the amicus Attorney General (as is its prerogative) has
    chosen not to address the subject.
    At the start of the waiver hearing, Z.S.'s counsel requested a
    continuance.    She recounted for the court that she had recently been
    hospitalized with pneumonia and was still ill but had been "medically cleared"
    to return to work that day. Due to her illness, she had been unable to me et
    with Z.S., his mother, and the guardian ad litem for scheduled meetings to
    review the case. She also stated that she had just received the prosecutor's
    occasionally conducted in some counties on waiver matters, but they are not
    the norm.
    A-3516-19T1
    54
    addendum of reasons the day prior and had been unable to review it with Z.S.
    She advised the court she was "still actively sick and out of breath and not up
    to my normal standards."
    Z.S.'s counsel stated that "to be fair to my client . . . I am 100 percent
    prepared on this case but as to my normal standard of litigating, I don't think
    I'm up to par." Although she was "ready to go" she stated that she had hoped
    to have the week to fully prepare, to meet with Z.S., outline her case, and
    discuss it with the guardian ad litem.
    Counsel stated that her supervising attorney took time to prepare for the
    case the day before and he would have been present at the hearing but "I have
    lived and breathed this case since July and I don’t think it’s appropriate to pass
    it off to him." Given the gravity of the hearing, she sought a continuance until
    she was healthy.
    The guardian ad litem also objected to proceeding while Z.S.'s counsel
    was sick, urging that a "minor adjournment is in order." He argued the court
    was obliged to ensure "there should be adequate time for preparation of the
    case," analogizing this to the obligation to permit discovery in a waiver
    hearing.
    A-3516-19T1
    55
    The prosecutor stated she did not "have any formal objection to a
    postponement." However, she noted the victim's family was present in the
    courtroom, and that the hearing had already been significantly delayed.
    The trial court stated it took defense counsel's health concerns seriously
    and accepted her statements "at face value." However, the court observed that
    it "is challenged with a balancing of interests." On the one hand was Z.S.'s
    right to a "speedy trial." The court acknowledged that this right could be
    waived, suggesting perhaps that it was not immediately in Z.S.'s best interests
    to proceed, but that he had "these charges hanging over his head and he has a
    right to have these charges resolved . . . we have to get the ball rolling, so to
    speak."
    In addition, the court noted that there was an alleged victim in the case,
    and that it had to balance the "interest [of] the victim and the other side,"
    including the risk that the reliability of witness testimony would diminish over
    time.
    Despite the lack of objection to an adjournment, the court concluded it
    was "beyond the pale to allow any more delay at this point." The charges were
    first brought in July 2019, and the waiver motion was supposed to be held in
    October 2019. The court had repeatedly delayed the hearing because Z.S.'s
    A-3516-19T1
    56
    mother had refused to assist his counsel in the case at multiple stages, and it
    recounted the various efforts made by Z.S.'s counsel for important information
    that she ultimately obtained. The court noted that it had ordered, reviewed,
    and released the DCPP case records to the parties in December 2019, and had
    appointed the guardian ad litem to ensure Z.S. had effective representation
    when his mother continued to delay the process.
    The court recounted that it had scheduled the hearing for the day before,
    but received an email from Z.S.'s counsel detailing her illness and stating that
    she "anticipated there was a possibility of being available and cleared by her
    doctor to be back at work Thursday."        The court thereafter "juggle[d] its
    schedule" and pushed back the hearing based on that expectation. This was
    significant because "[t]his is the only Family Court [in Salem County] and this
    Court handles the FJ docket, the FD docket, the Children and Court docket, so
    finding open time and rearranging the schedule further delays justice," not
    only for the present parties but for other cases that would have to be delayed to
    accommodate this one.
    The court praised Z.S.'s counsel and her office, observing that her
    supervisor was ready to take over the hearing if she was unable. The court
    further stated it "has the utmost confidence in the abilities of the attorneys."
    A-3516-19T1
    57
    The court noted Z.S. was "entitled to a fair, not a perfect, proceeding" and that
    under the circumstances it determined that it would not postpone the waiver
    hearing further.
    We review the court's decision by first recognizing that this was no
    ordinary adjournment request. As the Public Defender, the ACLU and the
    Rutgers amici have rightly urged, a hearing to determine whether a minor will
    be prosecuted as an adult is perhaps the most serious proceeding that a minor
    will ever face. The Supreme Courts of the United States and our State have
    repeatedly underscored the gravity of such proceedings, and the constitutional
    Due Process rights attendant to them. Those rights include the right to the
    effective assistance of counsel. In re 
    Gault, 387 U.S. at 41
    .
    As a general matter, trial courts are granted considerable latitude in
    scheduling their proceedings. In most instances, we will not interfere with
    decisions to grant or deny adjournments. We usually will not overturn an
    adjournment denial unless it represents a misapplication of discretion.        See,
    e.g., State v. Hayes, 
    205 N.J. 522
    , 538 (2011). With all due deference to the
    trial court's operational, speedy trial, and other concerns, the court misapplied
    its discretion in denying a short postponement to defense counsel here.
    A-3516-19T1
    58
    The court accepted the truth of the public defender's representations
    about her medical status, and so do we.        She was only released from the
    hospital for pneumonia and tachycardia two days earlier. Although she had
    been "medically cleared" to return to work, she reported that she was still
    feeling ill and was, in fact, having trouble breathing. She asserted that she was
    "prepared" for the hearing, but also told the court she needed some more time
    to rebound from her illness and confer with her client about the State's recent
    letter. 14
    The court was certainly right to consider the previous delays in the case,
    which apparently were not caused by the prosecution, as well as the interests
    of the victim's family who were present. Yet the prosecutor, who must be also
    mindful of the victim's interests, did not oppose a brief delay of the case.
    Also, it bears mention that the best interests of the juvenile were being
    assessed and advocated by his own attorney, and that the court should have
    accepted her position on his behalf.
    In hindsight, it would have been better if the court had explored
    intermediate possibilities. For example, it may have been enough to proceed
    14
    Preparation does not equate to fitness to endure a rigorous event when one
    is feeling sick. A law school graduate may have "prepared" for the bar
    examination by studying all of the subjects for months, but may be too ill on
    the date of the exam to sit for it.
    A-3516-19T1
    59
    solely with the playing of the recordings and the direct examination of the
    detective on probable cause, deferring to another day cross examination by
    defense counsel as well as her presentation of mitigating evidence and
    arguments on the statutory factors. On appeal, the Public Defender agreed that
    such a partial hearing could have been a fair compromise to avoid a wasted
    court session.
    We recognize the transcript does not reveal any clear shortfalls of
    advocacy by the public defender at the hearing, despite her illness. She asked
    pointed questions of the detective on cross and presented thoughtful arguments
    opposing waiver. The court's prediction that she would ably represent her
    client was essentially borne out. But she and her client should not have been
    forced to complete the hearing under the circumstances. The denial of the
    adjournment was improvident and provides a separate reason to remand.
    We decline to reach the remaining arguments presented by counsel and
    the amici, including contentions that the trial court was obligated to consider
    "youth factors" recognized under the Eighth Amendment in Miller v. Alabama,
    
    567 U.S. 460
    , 471 (2012), and its progeny, or that it was required to perform a
    "heightened analysis" of waiver for juveniles with intellectual disabilities.
    Those institutional legal arguments, which were not raised below, may be
    A-3516-19T1
    60
    renewed in some future appeal of this or another waiver case. State v. Galicia,
    
    210 N.J. 364
    , 383 (2012) (noting that appellate courts disfavor reaching issues,
    even constitutional ones, not raised below).
    V.
    For these reasons, we vacate the court's waiver determination, without
    prejudice, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    The court's unchallenged finding of probable cause is affirmed.
    Affirmed in part and remanded in part. The parties and the court shall
    have a case management conference within twenty days to plan the remand
    process. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-3516-19T1
    61