State of New Jersey v. Franklin Prather ( 2024 )


Menu:
  •                                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0533-22
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    FRANKLIN PRATHER,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Submitted September 12, 2024 – Decided September 24, 2024
    Before Judges Natali and Vinci.
    On appeal from the Superior of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Union County, Indictment No. 06-10-1015.
    Jennifer Nicole Sellitti, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Laura B. Lasota, Assistant Public
    Defender, of counsel and on the brief).
    William A. Daniel, Union County Prosecutor,
    attorney for respondent (Meredith L. Balo, Assistant
    Deputy Prosecutor, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Franklin Prather appeals from the Law Division's September
    30, 2021 order denying his motion for a new trial based on newly discovered
    evidence. We affirm.
    Following a 2008 trial, a jury convicted defendant of first-degree
    robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15–1; felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11–3(a)(3); third-
    degree unlawful possession of a handgun, N.J.S.A. 2C:39–5(b); and second-
    degree possession of a handgun for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39–4(a).
    After appropriate mergers, defendant was sentenced to an aggregate forty-year
    term of imprisonment, with an eighty-five percent period of parole ineligibility
    pursuant to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43–7.2.
    We affirmed defendant's conviction and sentence. State v. Prather, No.
    A-3221-08 (App. Div. May 13, 2013). The Supreme Court denied certification.
    State v. Prather, 
    216 N.J. 430
     (2013).
    We recount certain facts summarized in our unpublished opinion and other
    pertinent evidence adduced at trial.
    In the late evening hours of Monday, July 3, 2006, the
    lifeless body of Paul Capers, Sr., a locally well-known
    paving and construction contractor, was found in his
    basement apartment on Valley Street in the Vauxhall
    section of Union Township. Capers operated his
    business from the same address. He had been shot once
    in the chest. Defendant . . . and Maurice Knighton were
    indicted for the murder and other related crimes.
    A-0533-22
    2
    Pursuant to a plea bargain reached with the State before
    trial,   Knighton     pled      guilty to    aggravated
    manslaughter, N.J.S.A. 2C:11–4a, and subsequently
    testified at defendant's trial.
    [Prather, slip op. at 1-2.]
    Detective William Fuentes of the Union Township Police Department was
    assigned to investigate the murder and worked closely with Detective Patricia
    Gusmano of the Union County Prosecutor's office. Id. at 4-5. On July 4,
    Detective Fuentes interviewed Knighton based on what he described as "chatter
    in the neighborhood." Id. at 5.
    On July 6, Detective Fuentes interviewed defendant's cousin, Larry
    Prather (Larry). 1 Ibid. While in the detective's car, Larry received a phone call
    from defendant. Ibid. Larry told defendant he was with Detective Fuentes
    driving to the police station and asked if defendant wanted to speak with the
    detective. Ibid. Defendant hung up. Ibid. Later that day, Detective Fuentes
    learned defendant was in the lobby of police headquarters waiting for him , and
    Detectives Fuentes and Gusmano interviewed defendant for the first time. Ibid.
    The detectives interviewed Knighton again . . . on July
    6. Knighton confessed to shooting Capers and claimed
    defendant was there at the time because they planned to
    rob Capers. [Detective] Fuentes left headquarters to go
    1
    To avoid confusion, we refer to members of defendant's family by their first
    names. By doing so, we intend no disrespect.
    A-0533-22
    3
    next door to purchase . . . cigarettes [for]
    Knighton . . . . Although [Detective] Fuentes had told
    defendant he "could go home" after his interview,
    defendant approached [Detective] Fuentes in the lobby
    of police headquarters and began questioning him about
    the investigation. Defendant was in the company of his
    father, Franklin Prather, Sr. (Franklin Sr.), from whom
    [Detective] Fuentes had already secured a statement.
    [Detective] Fuentes acknowledged speaking with
    Knighton again.      Defendant followed [Detective]
    Fuentes as he purchased cigarettes . . . and returned to
    headquarters, persistently asking him questions about
    the case. . . .
    [Id. at 6-7.]
    Detective Fuentes left headquarters again to obtain arrest warrants for
    Knighton and defendant. Id. at 7. When he returned to headquarters, defendant
    was still in the lobby.     Ibid.   Detective Fuentes arrested defendant and
    interviewed him a second time. Ibid.       Both interviews of defendant were
    recorded and played for the jury.
    During the second interview, Detective Fuentes told defendant there were
    security cameras at a shopping mall adjacent to Capers's residence, implying
    there was video evidence of defendant's presence at the scene. In response,
    defendant admitted he was in the rear yard of Capers's residence on the night
    Capers was shot, but contended he was there because he was chasing Knighton
    who had stolen money from him, not to rob Capers. Specifically, defendant
    A-0533-22
    4
    claimed he jumped a fence from the shopping mall into Capers's yard and saw
    Knighton leaning into Capers's window. Defendant contended Knighton was
    armed and fired at him, grazing defendant's leg, and defendant fled by again
    jumping the fence.
    Sandra Dean [testified at trial she] lived in a first-floor
    apartment in Capers's building on Valley Street.
    Sometime between 11:00 and 11:30 p.m. on the
    evening of July 3, 2006, she heard a loud noise from the
    downstairs apartment and called 9–1–1. . . .
    Between 10:30 and 11:00 p.m., Geiner
    Fernandez, Dean's next door neighbor, was on his front
    porch . . . . A [Black] man in a white t-shirt approached
    and asked for permission to walk across the
    sidewalk. . . . Fernandez also saw another [Black] male
    in dark clothing a short time later. . . . [Detective]
    Fuentes subsequently showed Fernandez some
    photographs in an attempt to identify the two men he
    had seen. Fernandez was "[seventy] percent" sure that
    one of the pictures was of a man who had spoken to
    him. It was a photo of Knighton.
    ....
    James D. Draper, an Essex County corrections
    officer, testified that, on August 5, 2006, while in
    Weequahic Park in Newark, a young [Black] male
    approached and asked if he (Draper) was a police
    officer[.] . . . The young man told Draper that he had
    bought a gun from a friend, who in turn bought it from
    someone in Vauxhall. He found out that it was used in
    a robbery that "went bad." . . . .
    A-0533-22
    5
    After speaking with Draper, he handed Draper a
    brown T-shirt that was wrapped around something;
    Draper knew it was a weapon. He took the package to
    the Union Township Police Department without
    unwrapping it. Inside was a .38–caliber revolver with
    a black handle. Ballistics tests revealed it was the
    murder weapon.
    ....
    Knighton testified, having already pled guilty to
    aggravated manslaughter and been sentenced [on
    August 3, 2007] to a prison term of twenty-three years,
    eighty-five percent to be served without parole. Under
    the terms of the plea bargain, he was not required to
    testify against defendant.
    Knighton had grown up in Vauxhall and went to
    school with defendant. . . . Knighton and defendant
    spent much time together at Hawk's Tavern in
    Vauxhall. Each confided to the other that they needed
    money, and during one of the conversations, they
    discussed committing a robbery. Defendant agreed to
    get his gun from his father's house, and the two men
    settled on Capers as the victim, believing there
    "[w]ould[ not] be a fight."
    Knighton claimed that Larry was in the car with
    them on several occasions when they discussed robbing
    Capers; he even participated in the conversation "a little
    bit." While Knighton and Larry were in the car,
    defendant called his father and arranged to retrieve his
    gun. Defendant later told Knighton he "got the gun."
    Together with Larry, defendant and Knighton went to a
    CVS drugstore and purchased stockings to use as
    masks; Knighton and defendant went back alone to
    purchase duct tape to bind Capers.
    A-0533-22
    6
    The State introduced surveillance tapes from the
    store, along with records that timed transactions shown
    on the tape. It suffices to say that Knighton's version
    of these events was corroborated by the CVS store
    records.
    Knighton testified that the plan was to "scare"
    Capers into giving them money by using defendant's
    gun. On the afternoon of July 3, 2006, defendant called
    Knighton and told him that the robbery was "a go."
    They spotted Capers's car in the parking lot of a Dunkin'
    Donuts shop and decided to arrive at his house before
    he did and surprise him as he exited his car. On the way
    to Capers's house, however, Knighton saw a girl,
    Tanisha Jones, whom he knew. He and defendant spoke
    to her for a few minutes before proceeding to Capers's
    home. Jones testified and corroborated Knighton's
    testimony in this regard.
    Knighton explained that when they arrived,
    Capers's truck was already parked in the rear of the
    house. Defendant parked the car a half block away, and
    the two men got out and walked, defendant ahead of
    Knighton. Knighton had a brief conversation with
    "[t]wo Spanish guys" next door to Capers's house.
    Defendant handed him the gun, picked up a "big
    piece of concrete" and threw it through the window.
    Knighton, wearing a stocking cap, climbed through the
    window feet first. He was startled when he saw Capers
    standing in the bedroom doorway holding a hammer.
    He fired the gun, and Capers fell to the floor.
    Knighton . . . climbed back through the bedroom
    window without taking anything.
    Knighton and defendant met back at defendant's
    car and drove away. They returned to defendant's
    father's house and then to Knighton's house, where
    A-0533-22
    7
    Knighton changed his clothes and noticed a cut on his
    right arm. Knighton and defendant then went to Hawk's
    Tavern. Later that evening, Knighton sold defendant's
    gun to someone he knew only as "Jamal," for $200,
    drugs and cash.
    Larry testified that, on Saturday or Sunday before
    the murder, he drove with defendant and Knighton in
    defendant's car to CVS. Defendant purchased, among
    other things, stockings. The next night, while riding
    again in defendant's car with defendant and Knighton,
    Larry heard the two men talk about robbing somebody
    to get some money. Capers's name came up as a
    possible target because he operated a business out of
    his house and "always had money on him."
    Larry was also present when defendant got his
    gun from his father. Larry had seen the gun before and
    described it as a ".38[-]Special with [a] black handle."
    When they arrived at Franklin Sr.'s house, defendant
    went in while Larry and Knighton waited in the car.
    Defendant returned with a brown paper bag that he gave
    to Knighton; although Larry could not see what was in
    the bag, defendant said it was a gun. . . .
    ....
    Franklin Sr. reluctantly testified against his son.
    He had previously seen two guns in the garage of the
    property on Augustine Place in Vauxhall that his family
    owned and from which he was vacating during the
    weeks leading up to July 3, 2006. He knew defendant
    "had a weapon." . . . .
    Defendant called him several nights in a row
    immediately before the murder, asking about things that
    Franklin Sr. had moved from the house on Augustine
    Place. Defendant asked for his gun and bullets. On
    A-0533-22
    8
    Friday or Saturday before the murder, defendant called
    Franklin Sr., angry because he could not find some of
    the things he wanted. That night, Franklin Sr. gave
    defendant some brown bags and some boxes taken from
    [the] Augustine Place house.            Although he had
    previously admitted to detectives that he knew
    defendant's gun was in one of the brown bags, Franklin
    Sr. testified at trial that he was not sure.
    [Id. at 12-19.]
    Defendant filed a petition for post-conviction relief (PCR) alleging
    ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court denied the petition without an
    evidentiary hearing, and we affirmed. State v. Prather, No. A-3631-14 (App.
    Div. Feb. 21, 2018). The Supreme Court denied certification. State v. Prather,
    
    234 N.J. 572
     (2018).
    While the appeal of his petition for PCR was pending, defendant filed a
    motion for a new trial. The motion was supported by defendant's certification
    and the notarized affidavits of Donta Wilson and Phillipe Barthelus, who were
    incarcerated with defendant at the time.      Wilson and Barthelus contended
    Knighton separately told them that Knighton falsely testified against defendant
    at trial and defendant was not involved in the Capers murder.
    According to defendant, Wilson approached him while he was conducting
    legal research in the prison law library. Wilson asked defendant where his case
    was tried, and defendant replied, "[U]nion [C]ounty." Wilson "revealed he was
    A-0533-22
    9
    familiar with [defendant's] name" because of an "engagement [he had] with . . .
    Knighton" in the Union County jail. Soon after, defendant received Wilson's
    notarized affidavit dated August 24, 2015, through the prison mail.
    In his affidavit, Wilson contended he met Knighton in October 2008 in
    the holding cells at the Union County courthouse.           Knighton initiated a
    conversation with Wilson and asked him "what steps were needed to be taken in
    order to withdraw his guilty plea." Knighton told Wilson "he was not, in fact,
    testifying truthful[ly]," and was "being compelled to testify against
    [defendant] . . . who was not involved in the crime, . . . in order to avoid a life
    time sentence."
    Knighton told Wilson "he started getting high again and ran low on
    money," at which point he "hooked up with an old friend name[d] Larry who he
    was getting high with" and "the two of them decided to rob one of their ex -
    employers who they knew always kept money on his person."
    Knighton said "he took a gun from [defendant's] car [for] the robbery,"
    and "he and Larry broke inside of the victim[']s home." "Larry attacked the
    victim by striking him with a hammer . . . which resulted in a tussle." "[I]n a
    panic[,] [Knighton] then [shot] the victim and he and Larry ran out of the house
    empty handed."
    A-0533-22
    10
    According to Wilson, Knighton told defendant "everything that happened
    regarding the incident . . . ." Defendant "was so paranoid [that] his fingerprints
    could be on the gun" he "insisted that [Knighton] and Larry turn themselves into
    the police and to explain to the police that [the killing] was an accident."
    Knighton "told Larry about the conversation between [him] and [defendant,]"
    and said "they may have to kill [defendant] to prevent him from going to the
    authorities." Larry "was against murdering his own cousin."
    Wilson contended Knighton admitted "he and Larry decided . . . they
    would pin the murder on" defendant. "[O]nce [Knighton] [was] arrested and
    was informed that his blood was [found] in the victim[']s house, . . . he knew
    that he was jammed." "[W]hen the detectives told [Knighton] that he better say
    something to help himself, [Knighton] . . . told them that he and [defendant]
    committed the robbery and it was [defendant's] plan and gun."
    According to defendant, Barthelus "remembered [him] and . . . Knighton
    from Union County jail in 2006" and "while attending a program [in prison] . . .
    made contact with" defendant. Barthelus asked defendant if he was in prison
    "for the Union [C]ounty case in July 2006." Defendant responded affirmatively.
    Barthelus was "surprised, and revealed he and [Knighton] had conversations
    about the case." Soon after, defendant received Barthelus's notarized affidavit
    A-0533-22
    11
    dated September 9, 2015, through the prison mail.
    In his affidavit, Barthelus claimed he and Knighton were housed in the
    same unit in the Union County jail in 2006 and Knighton "often spoke to [him]
    about" Knighton's case.      "Although [Knighton] never revealed the specific
    details of his case with [Barthelus,] . . . . [Knighton] often expressed . . . he had
    falsely implicated [defendant] . . . ." According to Barthelus, Knighton "asked
    for suggestions[] from [him], as well as other inmates[,] . . . regarding how to
    reveal the truth about [defendant's] innocence." Barthelus claimed, "[a]lthough
    [he] never read it, [Knighton] showed [him] a letter that he had written" which
    "explained how [defendant] [did not] have anything to do with the crime."
    On September 1, 2021, the court heard oral argument. On September 30,
    2021, the court entered an order denying defendant's motion supported by a
    written opinion.2 The court found defendant failed to satisfy the applicable
    three-prong test set forth in State v. Carter, 
    85 N.J. 300
     (1981).
    The court determined the Wilson and Barthelus affidavits were not
    material, nor were they the sort of evidence that probably would change the
    jury's verdict if a new trial were granted. Specifically, the court found:
    [D]efendant asserting he has had conversations with
    similarly situated defendants does not rise to the level
    2
    The order is dated September 29, 2021, but was filed on September 30, 2021.
    A-0533-22
    12
    of showing the [c]ourt there is evidence that indeed
    suggests he was framed . . . or that . . . Knighton
    falsely testified against him. In fact, there is a plethora
    of evidence to suggest otherwise . . . based on the
    testimony by [d]efendant's father, the testimony and
    videotape evidence from the CVS store, the testimony
    of [Larry], . . . [Jones], . . . [Fernandez], . . . [other
    witnesses], . . . and Detective Fuentes detailing
    [d]efendant's own videotaped statement.
    The court also found the proffered evidence did not satisfy the reasonable
    diligence prong of the Carter test because defendant "failed to assert he was
    being set up . . . during his trial or in his appeal."
    On appeal, defendant raises a single point for our consideration:
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL
    BASED ON NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE.
    "We review a motion for a new trial decision for an abuse of discretion,"
    State v. Fortin, 
    464 N.J. Super. 193
    , 216 (App. Div. 2020) (citing State v.
    Armour, 
    446 N.J. Super. 295
    , 306 (App. Div. 2016)), and will not interfere with
    the decision "unless a clear abuse has been shown." State v. Russo, 
    333 N.J. Super. 119
    , 137 (App. Div. 2000) (citing State v. Artis, 
    36 N.J. 538
    , 541 (1962)).
    Motions for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence are "not favored
    and should be granted with caution by a trial court [because they] disrupt[] the
    A-0533-22
    13
    judicial process." State v. Conway, 
    193 N.J. Super. 133
    , 171 (App. Div. 1984)
    (citing State v. Haines, 
    20 N.J. 438
    , 443 (1956)).
    "A motion for a new trial based on the ground of newly-discovered
    evidence may be made at any time[.]" R. 3:20-2. In Carter, our Supreme Court
    set forth the applicable three-prong test. 
    85 N.J. at 314
    . Under that test,
    the movant seeking a new trial based on newly
    discovered evidence must demonstrate that the
    evidence is, indeed, newly discovered; a new trial is
    warranted only if the evidence 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. Szemple, 
    247 N.J. 82
    , 99 (2021) (quoting
    State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 549 (2013))].
    All three prongs must be satisfied before a defendant is entitled to a new
    trial. State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    , 187 (2004). Under the first prong, "[m]aterial
    evidence is any evidence that would have some bearing on the claims being
    advanced." Nash, 
    212 N.J. at 549
     (alteration in original) (quoting Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 188
    ).   "'[D]etermining whether evidence is "merely cumulative, or
    impeaching, or contradictory,"' necessarily implicated prong three, 'whether the
    evidence is "of the sort that would probably change the jury's verdict i f a new
    trial were granted."'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 188-89
    ). In this respect,
    A-0533-22
    14
    the first and third prongs of the Carter test "are inextricably intertwined." Ibid.;
    see also State v. Behn, 
    375 N.J. Super. 409
    , 432 (App. Div. 2005) (recognizing
    the "analysis of newly discovered evidence essentially merges the first and third
    prongs of the Carter test").
    A "reviewing court must engage in a thorough, fact-sensitive analysis to
    determine whether the newly discovered evidence would probably make a
    difference to the jury." Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 191
    . This requires assessing such
    evidence in the context of the "'corroborative proofs' in th[e] record." Szemple,
    247 N.J. at 110 (quoting State v. Herrerra, 
    211 N.J. 308
    , 343 (2012)).
    "Newly discovered evidence must be reviewed with a certain degree of
    circumspection to ensure that it is not the product of fabrication, and, if credible
    and material, is of sufficient weight that it would probably alter the outcome of
    the verdict in a new trial." Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 187-88
    . "The power of the newly
    discovered evidence to alter the verdict is the central issue, not the label to be
    placed on that evidence." 
    Id. at 191-92
    . Evidence that "would shake the very
    foundation of the State's case and almost certainly alter the earlier jury verdict"
    would clearly satisfy prongs one and three of the Carter test. 
    Id. at 189
    .
    "Courts generally regard recantation testimony as suspect and
    untrustworthy." State v. Carter, 
    69 N.J. 420
    , 427 (1976) (citing 58 Am. Jur. 2d
    A-0533-22
    15
    New Trial § 175 (1976)); accord State v. Hogan, 
    144 N.J. 216
    , 239 (1996).
    "Consequently, the burden of proof rests on those presenting such testimony to
    establish that it is probably true and the trial testimony probably false." 
    Ibid.
    (citing State v. Baldwin, 
    47 N.J. 379
    , 400 (1966)).
    Defendant contends the court erred by denying his motion for a new trial
    because the Wilson and Barthelus affidavits set forth the sort of evidence that
    would probably change the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted. We are not
    convinced.
    Considering defendant's contentions in light of the record and applicable
    law, we discern no abuse of discretion or legal error in the court's decision to
    deny the motion. The court properly conducted a "thorough, fact-sensitive
    analysis to determine whether the newly discovered evidence would probably
    make a difference to the jury," Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 191
    , and assessed the evidence
    in the context of the "'corroborative proofs' in th[e] record." Szemple, 247 N.J.
    at 110 (quoting Herrerra, 
    211 N.J. at 343
    ).
    The jury was presented with testimony from multiple witnesses who
    implicated defendant in the murder, video evidence of defendant and Knighton
    in CVS purchasing materials used in connection with the murder, and
    defendant's own statements. The evidence included testimony by defendant's
    A-0533-22
    16
    father that defendant was looking for his handgun in the days leading up to the
    murder, and the testimony of Jones who saw Knighton and defendant driving in
    defendant's vehicle shortly before Capers was killed. In addition, the jury heard
    defendant's own recorded statement in which he admitted he was in the rear yard
    of Capers's residence with Knighton immediately before Knighton shot Capers.
    Moreover, the affidavits of Wilson and Barthelus lack indicia of reliability
    necessary to ensure they are not the product of fabrication. For example, Wilson
    contends Knighton told him in October 2008 that he was being compelled to
    testify against defendant to avoid a life sentence and wanted to withdraw his
    guilty plea. That contention, however, is directly contradicted by undisputed
    evidence in the record. Knighton was sentenced to twenty-three years in prison
    in August 2007, more than one year before the alleged conversation with Wilson.
    He was never compelled to testify against defendant as a condition of his plea
    agreement or otherwise and was not facing the possibility of a life sentence in
    October 2008. If he did not want to testify against defendant, he could have
    simply refused to do so. The Barthelus affidavit is similarly lacking because he
    admits Knighton "never revealed the specific details of his case to" him and he
    did not read the letter Knighton allegedly showed him in which he exonerated
    defendant.
    A-0533-22
    17
    Accordingly, we are persuaded the proffered evidence would neither
    "shake the very foundation of the State's case" nor "alter the earlier jury verdict."
    Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 189
    . "[T]he test is whether the evidence if introduced is such
    as ought to have led the jury to a different conclusion – one of probability and
    not mere possibility." Haines, 
    20 N.J. at 445
    . The affidavits of Wilson and
    Barthelus do not satisfy that test.
    We part ways with the trial court on its analysis of the second prong of
    the Carter test. If we assume for purposes of defendant's motion the facts set
    forth in his certification are true, the proffered evidence was discovered after
    trial and was not discoverable by reasonable diligence beforehand. Defendant,
    however, must satisfy all three prongs of the Carter test. Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 187
    .
    Because we are satisfied defendant failed to set forth the sort of newly
    discovered evidence that would probably change the jury's verdict if a new trial
    were granted, his motion was properly denied.
    Affirmed.
    A-0533-22
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-0533-22

Filed Date: 9/24/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/24/2024