State of New Jersey v. Jacob R. Gentry , 439 N.J. Super. 57 ( 2015 )


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  •                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2481-11T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Respondent,               January 13, 2015
    v.                                      APPELLATE DIVISION
    JACOB R. GENTRY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Argued October 21, 2014 - Decided January 13, 2015
    Before Judges Reisner, Koblitz and Higbee.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey,   Law   Division,  Sussex County,
    Indictment No. 09-02-0094.
    Stephen W. Kirsch, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant
    (Joseph   E.   Krakora,   Public   Defender,
    attorney; Mr. Kirsch, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Gregory   R.    Mueller,  First    Assistant
    Prosecutor, argued the cause for respondent
    (Francis A. Koch, Sussex County Prosecutor,
    attorney; Mr. Mueller and Daniel Bajger,
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    REISNER, P.J.A.D.
    Defendant Jacob R. Gentry appeals from his September 20,
    2011    conviction    for     first-degree      aggravated     manslaughter,
    N.J.S.A.    2C:11-4a,   and    third-degree      endangering      an    injured
    victim,    N.J.S.A.   2C:12-1.2,   and   from    the   sentence    of    thirty
    years in prison subject to the No Early Release Act (NERA),
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.
    On this appeal, defendant raises the following points for
    our consideration:
    POINT I
    THE STATE'S USE, OVER DEFENSE OBJECTION, OF
    THE CO-DEFENDANT'S STATEMENT TO POLICE --
    BOTH WHEN CROSS-EXAMINING THE DEFENDANT, AND
    IN THE PROSECUTOR'S SUMMATION -- WAS A
    BLATANT VIOLATION OF DEFENDANT'S RIGHTS TO
    CONFRONT THE WITNESSES AGAINST HIM AND TO
    DUE PROCESS.
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL JUDGE IMPROPERLY PRECLUDED DEFENSE
    COUNSEL FROM OFFERING EVIDENCE ABOUT DAVID
    HAULMARK REGARDING BOTH: (1) HIS REPUTATION
    FOR AGGRESSIVENESS UNDER N.J.R.E. 404(A)(2)
    AND (2) HIS PRIOR BAD ACT OF TRYING TO BITE
    HIS WIFE DURING A FIGHT, PURSUANT TO
    N.J.R.E. 404(B).
    POINT III
    THE JURY INSTRUCTION ON SELF-DEFENSE:    (1)
    IMPROPERLY LIMITED SELF-DEFENSE TO THE CRIME
    OF MURDER; (2) FAILED TO EXPLAIN TO THE JURY
    THAT, IF THE FIGHT WERE, INDEED, "MUTUAL
    COMBAT," SELF-DEFENSE WOULD NEVERTHELESS BE
    AVAILABLE TO DEFENDANT IF DAVID HAULMARK
    ESCALATED   THE  MATTER   BEYOND  A   NORMAL
    2                                  A-2481-11T4
    FISTFIGHT; AND (3) FAILED TO EXPLAIN TO THE
    JURY THE EFFECT THAT A "COURSE OF PHYSICAL
    ABUSE" CAN HAVE ON THE DETERMINATION OF
    WHETHER A DEFENDANT ACTED REASONABLY IN
    SELF-DEFENSE. (Not Raised Below).
    POINT IV
    THE JURY INSTRUCTION ON PASSION/PROVOCATION
    MANSLAUGHTER IMPROPERLY FAILED TO ADDRESS
    THE ISSUES OF EITHER "MUTUAL COMBAT" AS A
    SOURCE OF ADEQUATE PROVOCATION, OR THE
    EFFECT THAT A "COURSE OF PHYSICAL ABUSE" CAN
    HAVE ON THE JURY'S DETERMINATION OF WHETHER
    THERE WAS ADEQUATE PROVOCATION. (Not Raised
    Below).
    POINT V
    THE    SENTENCE     IMPOSED     IS      MANIFESTLY
    EXCESSIVE.
    Defendant   presents   the   following    argument   in   a   pro    se
    supplemental brief:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY FAILING TO ACT SUA
    SPONTE IN SUPPRESSING DEFENDANT'S CONFESSION
    AS FRUIT OF A POISONOUS TREE WHERE [THE]
    CONFESSION WAS NOT MADE IN A KNOWING AND
    INTELLIGENT   FASHION   AND    WHERE   [THE]
    CONFESSION WAS OBTAINED BY EXPLOITATION OF
    ILLEGAL SEIZURE OR DETENTION, I.E., ARREST
    WHERE DEFENDANT WAS NOT ADVISED OF HIS TRUE
    TARGET STATUS AS A SUSPECT IN THE MURDER
    INVESTIGATION OF DAVID HAULMARK IN ADDITION
    TO RECEIVING MIRANDA WARNINGS CONSTITUTES
    PLAIN ERROR AND DEFENDANT WAS DENIED OF
    [SIC] A FAIR TRIAL AND DUE PROCESS OF LAW
    (U.S. CONST. IV, V, XIV; N.J. CONST. ART[.]
    I PARAS. 1, 10).
    After thoroughly reviewing the voluminous record provided
    to us, we are constrained to reverse defendant's conviction due
    3                               A-2481-11T4
    to prejudicial trial errors. We remand this matter for retrial
    on both counts.        We summarize our reasons as follows.
    Defendant was charged with murder, aggravated manslaughter
    and reckless manslaughter in the death of David Haulmark.                               The
    State's theory was that defendant, his girlfriend Emily Henry
    (Emily or the girlfriend), and his brother Jarrod Gentry (Jarrod
    or    the   brother)     attacked      Haulmark        and    beat   him     to    death.
    Defendant claimed self-defense and denied that the brother or
    the    girlfriend      participated     in       the   incident.        We   find       that
    defendant     was      denied    a    fair       trial    when    the    trial       court
    erroneously failed to charge the jury that self-defense was a
    complete      justification          for         aggravated      manslaughter           and
    manslaughter, in addition to being a defense to murder.                                 The
    jury    acquitted       defendant      of    murder       but    convicted        him    of
    aggravated manslaughter.             Because the evidence, viewed favorably
    to    the   defense,    was     sufficient        to   support   a   claim    of     self-
    defense, that error had the clear capacity to produce an unjust
    result.      R. 2:10-2.         Consequently, the aggravated manslaughter
    conviction must be reversed.
    Other serious trial errors, viewed either separately or in
    combination     with     the    charging         error,   also   require     reversal.
    Defendant, the brother, and the girlfriend were each indicted in
    4                                    A-2481-11T4
    Haulmark's death, but defendant was tried separately.1                      Neither
    the brother nor the girlfriend testified at his trial.                     However,
    during     the   trial,     the    prosecutor2      improperly       cross-examined
    defendant about a statement the brother made to the police.                      The
    statement was hearsay and clearly inadmissible.
    That error was compounded during summations when defense
    counsel    tried     to   ameliorate    the      prejudicial      impact    of   the
    prosecutor's        improper      tactic,     and    the     trial     court     then
    erroneously permitted the prosecutor to tell the jury that the
    brother had made a statement that was kept from the jury due to
    the    court's     evidentiary     rulings.      Thus,     the    prosecution     was
    first    allowed    to    incriminate   defendant      with      hearsay   evidence
    from a co-defendant whom defendant had no opportunity to cross-
    examine.     The State was then permitted to imply to the jurors
    that defense counsel had misrepresented the evidence and that
    the State had incriminating information which the jury had not
    been     allowed    to    hear.      Those    errors       violated    fundamental
    constitutional principles designed to guarantee every defendant
    the right to a fair trial and had a clear capacity to produce a
    1
    Defendant's procedural history advised us that the co-
    defendants pled guilty to "much lesser offenses"; the State's
    brief adopted defendant's procedural history.
    2
    The State's case was presented by two prosecutors, one male and
    one female. When we refer to a specific prosecutor, we use the
    gender-appropriate pronoun.
    5                                 A-2481-11T4
    miscarriage          of    justice.        See     R.   2:10-2.           Because    defendant
    testified       as    to     his    defenses     on     all    issues,      and     the    errors
    allowed the State to unfairly impugn his credibility, we are
    constrained to reverse the conviction in its entirety and remand
    for a retrial.
    I
    We summarize the evidence as it relates to the issues on
    appeal.        In particular, because self-defense must be charged if
    the   evidence,           viewed    most   favorably          to    the    defendant,        would
    support    that       justification,          we     focus     on    "the     evidence        that
    provides a rational basis for a self-defense charge."                                 State v.
    Rodriguez, 
    195 N.J. 165
    , 170 (2008); see also State v. Kelly, 
    97 N.J. 178
    , 200 (1984).3
    During        the     spring    and      summer       of    2008,    defendant          and
    Haulmark       were        among    several      hundred       workers       employed        on    a
    pipeline project in upstate New York.                               Most of the workers,
    known     as    "pipeliners,"          were      housed       at     the    Legends        Resort
    (Legends), a large hotel complex in Sussex County, New Jersey.
    According       to        several    witnesses,         defendant         suffered    repeated
    harassment       and        physical    attacks         at    the    hands     of    Haulmark,
    3
    Contrary to this principle, the State's brief presents the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution.
    6                                        A-2481-11T4
    Haulmark's       friend      Sean    ("Frog")            Taxis4,     and    several       other
    pipeliners who were part of Haulmark's social group.                                Frog also
    made inappropriate advances to Emily.                         Defendant testified that
    complaints       to    the   police       about         the   harassment      met      with   an
    unsympathetic response.
    From the evidence, it can be inferred that Haulmark and his
    friends resented defendant because he was not from the local
    area, he was "scrawny" and dressed oddly, but he nonetheless had
    a beautiful and flirtatious girlfriend living with him in the
    hotel.      According        to   witnesses,            Frog,    a   small,      loudmouthed,
    aggressive individual, tended to start fights, and Haulmark, a
    235-pound former football linebacker, supplied the "muscle" to
    back him up.
    In his statement to the police, and his trial testimony,
    defendant described several incidents in which Haulmark, Frog,
    and their companions attacked him without provocation.                                  In one
    incident,    they       assaulted     him          in    an     elevator.         On   another
    occasion, they emerged from the hotel's bar and attacked him.
    Since defendant had to pass by the bar in order to reach his
    hotel    room,    he    once      asked    a   security          guard     for    an   escort.
    Patricia Prince, a former Legends security guard, corroborated
    4
    We refer to Taxis by his nickname, because all of the witnesses
    did so.
    7                                       A-2481-11T4
    defendant's statement that in June 2008, defendant asked Prince
    to escort him and Emily to their hotel room, because they were
    afraid "[t]hat somebody would jump them."
    In July 2008, defendant and Emily moved out of the hotel,
    and into a house an hour away from the job site, in order to
    avoid further harassment from Haulmark and his friends.         In the
    early morning hours of August 17, 2008, defendant, Emily, and
    Jarrod stopped by the hotel to drop off a friend who lived
    there.   According to defendant, they went into the hotel bar to
    have a drink and say hello to the bartenders, with whom they
    were friendly.      At some point, they unexpectedly encountered
    Haulmark in the bar.        The evidence would support a conclusion
    that both defendant and Haulmark had been drinking heavily that
    night.    According to defendant, Haulmark challenged him to a
    fight.   Believing that he would wind up having to fight Haulmark
    whether he accepted the challenge or not, defendant accepted.
    The two men, accompanied by Jarrod and later joined by Emily,
    walked out of the hotel.       A few minutes later, a bar employee
    found    Haulmark   lying     on    the   ground,   severely   injured.
    Defendant, Emily, and Jarrod were no longer at the scene.
    According to defendant's trial testimony, Haulmark had been
    the aggressor in the fight.        Haulmark advanced toward defendant,
    tackled him into a raised flower bed, clamped his teeth down on
    8                         A-2481-11T4
    defendant's right nipple, and started choking him.                         Defendant
    testified that he was "fighting for [his] life" because Haulmark
    outweighed   him   by   eighty   pounds     and    had    him    in    a   "strangle
    hold."   Defendant testified that he was lying on his back and
    fought desperately to escape Haulmark's grip.                   When he finally
    got Haulmark off him, defendant kicked him once in the head to
    keep him from renewing the attack.          Defendant stated:
    [H]e tackled me into that flower bed.     He
    bit me.   He was choking me.   And I started
    to fight for my life.    And . . . I fought
    with everything that I had. I punched him.
    I elbowed him.   I kneed him.    And when he
    was coming back up, . . . I didn't want him
    to get back up because he was obviously
    going to be very angry.     And, I -- I was
    afraid. And I -- I kicked him.
    Defendant    further   explained      that   he    kicked       Haulmark,    as
    Haulmark was getting back up, because "he was a very large man
    and I was scared of him and I was afraid of what he would do to
    me.   So, yes, I did not want him to get back up."5                        There was
    evidence that Haulmark had been sprayed with pepper spray; the
    defense version was that Emily sprayed him at the end of the
    altercation,   after    which    she,   defendant        and    Jarrod     left   the
    scene in her car.
    5
    Haulmark eventually died at the scene, as the result of brain
    trauma. The State's expert witnesses could not state for certain
    that Haulmark was kicked in the head more than once and could
    not identify any one blow as the fatal one.
    9                                   A-2481-11T4
    An    examinati18on        of    defendant's          body    the   day      after    the
    fight revealed a human bite mark over his nipple, severe enough
    to break the skin, and strangulation marks on his neck.                                    There
    were also signs of disturbance in the mulch of the flower bed,
    consistent with someone having been pushed into it.
    According      to        defendant,      when         he     accepted       Haulmark's
    challenge he thought they would have an ordinary fistfight, and
    both   men    would     walk     away    with      no   major       injuries.        Previous
    fights between them had not resulted in serious injuries.                                     He
    did    not    anticipate         that    Haulmark        would       try     to    kill     him.
    Defendant testified that when he left the scene of this fight,
    he    did    not   realize       that    Haulmark       was       seriously       injured;    he
    expected      Haulmark     to     be    at   work   the       next    day.        Defendant's
    statement to the police a day later, made before the police
    revealed Haulmark's death, reflected that defendant did not know
    Haulmark was either severely injured or dead.
    In    addition      to    the    evidence        of    the    prior        fights    with
    defendant, and the fight that occurred on August 17, 2008, there
    was more general testimony that Haulmark had been aggressive and
    threatening to others at Legends.                        The Legends bar manager,
    Vicki Driemel, testified to an incident about a month before the
    killing,      in   which        Haulmark     and    a    companion         told     her     they
    belonged to "the pipeline mafia" and threatened to kill her,
    10                                      A-2481-11T4
    harm her children, and burn her house down.            Haulmark was banned
    from the bar for a month as a result of that incident.                   On the
    evening of the killing, at about 2:20 a.m., the security camera
    in the bar recorded an incident in which Haulmark appeared to be
    physically aggressive toward another man at the bar.                 Defense
    witness Gene Cobb testified that Haulmark was hitting the man in
    the back of the head and trying to get the man to go outside and
    fight him.
    The defense also presented testimony from Jason Ford, a
    pipeline worker, that at some point prior to the August 17, 2008
    incident, Haulmark told Ford and another employee that he was
    going to "break [defendant's] neck" and "f***" his girlfriend.
    Ford, who was a friend of defendant, testified that he "relayed
    that    information   to   [defendant]."         Defendant    responded    that
    Haulmark and his friends were "a bunch of punks" who called
    themselves the "pipeline mafia."             Defendant also told Ford that
    Haulmark and his friends "don't ever leave him alone."
    Ford   testified    that   as    of   August   2008,   defendant     was
    slightly over six feet tall and weighed about 155 pounds.                  That
    was    consistent   with   a   police    report,   prepared    shortly    after
    defendant's arrest, which described him as weighing 160 pounds.
    There was testimony that Haulmark referred to defendant as a
    11                           A-2481-11T4
    "scrawny little bastard."          As previously noted, Haulmark was six
    feet tall, weighed 235 pounds, and was a former linebacker.
    II
    In State v. Rodriguez, 
    195 N.J. 165
    (2008), our Supreme
    Court "held that a person who acts in self-defense and 'kills in
    the honest and reasonable belief that the protection of his own
    life requires the use of deadly force' cannot be convicted of
    murder,   aggravated        manslaughter,     or   manslaughter."        State   v.
    O'Neil, 
    219 N.J. 598
    , 601 (2014) (quoting 
    Rodriguez, supra
    , 195
    N.J. at 172).        As recently emphasized in O'Neil, the Court has
    "put to rest the 'mistaken assertion' in State v. Moore, 
    158 N.J. 292
    , 303 (1999), that a defendant charged with aggravated
    manslaughter and manslaughter could not assert self-defense."
    
    Id. at 602.
    Where   the    evidence      could   support     self-defense       as    the
    justification for a homicide, the trial court must tell the jury
    that   self-defense     is     a   complete      defense   to    aggravated      and
    reckless manslaughter as well as to murder.                   
    Rodriguez, supra
    ,
    195 N.J. at 174-75.           And, the trial court must tell the jury
    that   the   State    has    the   burden   to     disprove     the   self-defense
    justification.       
    Id. at 175.
    In considering whether to charge the
    jury   on  self-defense,   a  court   should
    consider the circumstances that might give
    rise   to  that   defense,   including   the
    12                                 A-2481-11T4
    defendant's and alleged aggressor's conduct,
    rather than the charges chosen by the
    prosecutor. The reality of the situation
    facing the defendant governs whether he had
    a right to engage in self-defense. As long
    as a self-defense charge is requested and
    supported by some evidence in the record, it
    must be given.
    [Id. at 174.]
    Where    there   is     sufficient      evidence    to    warrant   a   self-
    defense charge, failure to instruct the jury that self-defense
    is a complete justification for manslaughter offenses as well as
    for murder constitutes plain error.             See 
    O'Neil, supra
    , 219 N.J.
    at   617.    In   O'Neil,    the   Court      found     that   the   defendant's
    appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance in failing to
    bring Rodriguez to our attention, in a case where "the trial
    court   instructed     the     jury    that    self-defense       was    a   valid
    justification for murder but not for aggravated manslaughter or
    manslaughter."     
    Id. at 602.
           The Court concluded:
    If the jury found that defendant had an
    honest and reasonable belief that the use of
    deadly force was necessary to save his own
    life, that he was not the aggressor, and
    that he could not have safely retreated,
    then self-defense applied not only to the
    murder charge, but also to the aggravated-
    manslaughter and manslaughter charges.    The
    jury   was   instructed   that   self-defense
    applied to the murder charge and acquitted
    defendant of that offense.     The jury was
    instructed   that   self-defense    did   not
    apply to the aggravated-manslaughter and
    manslaughter charges and convicted him of
    those offenses.
    13                               A-2481-11T4
    Of course, we cannot know the precise
    reason for the jury's verdict of not guilty
    to murder.   Nevertheless, the trial court's
    failure to charge self-defense on aggravated
    manslaughter and manslaughter leaves open a
    reasonable probability that, if properly
    instructed, the outcome would have been
    different.   The erroneous jury instruction
    necessarily undermines confidence in the
    verdict.
    [Id. at 617.]
    In this case, defendant's primary defense to the killing of
    the victim was self-defense.        The judge instructed the jury that
    self-defense      was   a   justification      for   murder,    but    did    not
    instruct the jury that self-defense was a defense to aggravated
    manslaughter or manslaughter.          The jury acquitted defendant of
    murder but convicted him of aggravated manslaughter.                  The State
    contends   that    if   the   charge    was    erroneous,      the    error   was
    harmless because the evidence did not support a claim of self-
    defense.   We disagree.
    At the charge conference on June 16, 2011, the State argued
    that the evidence did not support a self-defense charge.                        In
    rejecting the State's application to exclude the self-defense
    issue, the trial judge cogently explained why the evidence could
    support a claim of self-defense.              We agree with his analysis.
    We add the following discussion.
    Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4a, "the use of force upon or
    toward another person is justifiable when the actor reasonably
    14                               A-2481-11T4
    believes     that     such       force   is    immediately        necessary      for     the
    purpose of protecting himself against the use of unlawful force
    by such other person on the present occasion."                           However, deadly
    force may not be used "unless the actor reasonably believes that
    such force is necessary to protect himself against death or
    serious bodily harm."             N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4b(2).            In addition, deadly
    force is not "justifiable" in a situation where "[t]he actor,
    with   the     purpose      of    causing      death     or     serious    bodily      harm,
    provoked       the    use    of      force     against         himself    in    the     same
    encounter."          N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4b(2)(a) (emphasis added).                       Nor is
    the use of deadly force justifiable where "[t]he actor knows
    that   he    can     avoid     the    necessity         of   using   such      force    with
    complete safety by retreating."                N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4b(2)(b).
    There    is    little      case   law       in   this    State    construing      the
    statute as it applies to the situation presented here.                                  Both
    parties cite State v. Scaduto, 
    74 N.J.L. 289
    , 294 (Sup. Ct.
    1907), as standing for the proposition that if two individuals
    engage in mutual combat, neither of them can claim self-defense.
    Defendant also invokes Scaduto as standing for the proposition
    that if one party escalates the fight by using deadly force, the
    other party may respond defensively with deadly force.                                 We do
    not find Scaduto particularly helpful with respect to either
    proposition.
    15                                  A-2481-11T4
    Scaduto did not involve mutual combat that escalated.                      The
    defendant there claimed that the victim attacked him first by
    drawing a gun and shooting at him.             
    Id. at 290.
           The issue the
    court addressed on the self-defense charge was the admissibility
    of evidence that the victim made previous threats against the
    defendant.     
    Ibid. The court held
    that, even if the defendant
    did not know about those threats, they were admissible if there
    was an issue as to whether the victim was in fact the aggressor
    in the incident.       
    Id. at 291.
    The language in Scaduto concerning mutual combat precluding
    a self-defense claim was dicta and was not directed at self-
    defense   to   a   homicide   charge.     It    was   part   of    the   court's
    explanation as to why the trial judge erred, albeit harmlessly,
    in charging the jury that if the defendant was acquitted of
    manslaughter, he could still be convicted of fighting by mutual
    agreement.     
    Id. at 294.
        At the time, the statute required that
    both combatants be found "jointly" guilty of that offense.                     See
    L. 1898, c. 235, § 40; State v. Jordon, 
    86 N.J. Super. 585
    , 590
    (App. Div. 1965).       The court reasoned that if either party acted
    in self-defense and was acquitted of manslaughter on that basis,
    that party could not then be convicted of combat by agreement.
    
    Scaduto, supra
    , 74 N.J.L. at 294.              In that context, the court
    also stated that if the parties agreed to mutual combat, neither
    16                                  A-2481-11T4
    of them could claim self-defense as a defense to the crime of
    fighting by mutual combat.                   Ibid.; see 
    Jordon, supra
    , 86 N.J.
    Super. at 590-93 (discussing and applying the dicta in Scaduto
    to a charge of fighting under N.J.S.A. 2A:170-27).                           Nor is State
    v. Pasterick, 
    285 N.J. Super. 607
    , 616-17 (App. Div. 1995),
    applicable to this issue, because it addressed mutual combat in
    the     context    of     passion-provocation              manslaughter,          not     self-
    defense, and the defendant there admitted to being the aggressor
    in a fight with his father.
    Defendant      cites       cases       from     other       jurisdictions,         e.g.,
    People     v.     Quach,    116       Cal.     App.       4th     294,    301-02        (2004);
    Commonwealth v. Barber, 
    477 N.E.2d 587
    , 588-89 (Mass. 1985);
    United    States     v.    Lewis,      
    65 M.J. 85
    ,       88-89    (C.A.A.F.       2007).
    Those    cases     are     of   somewhat        limited         utility,    because        they
    construe    self-defense          statutes         that     are    different       from     New
    Jersey's        statute.        For     example,          the      California           statute
    specifically       addresses          "mutual       combat"        and     sets    forth      a
    defendant's four-part proof burden to demonstrate self-defense
    in that context.           
    Quach, supra
    , 116 Cal. App. 4th at 301 n.2.
    However, all of the cases generally discuss the concept that,
    during mutual combat, a defendant may use deadly force in self-
    defense when he has not previously used or threatened deadly
    force    against     his    opponent         but    the    opponent       suddenly       begins
    17                                     A-2481-11T4
    using deadly force.        See also United States v. Stanley, 
    71 M.J. 60
    , 68-69 (C.A.A.F.) (Baker, C.J., concurring), cert. denied,
    ___ U.S. ___, 
    133 S. Ct. 210
    , 
    184 L. Ed. 2d 41
    (2012).                       That
    approach is consistent with New Jersey's statute.6
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    defense, defendant did not provoke the fight and certainly did
    not provoke the fight "with the purpose of causing death or
    serious   bodily    harm"    to   Haulmark.      N.J.S.A.       2C:3-4b(2)(a).
    Rather,   the    235-pound    Haulmark     escalated   a   proposed    garden-
    variety fistfight into a deadly assault on the much smaller
    defendant, and defendant justifiably resorted to extreme force
    to save himself from death or serious bodily injury.
    Essentially,     defendant     testified    that     Haulmark   came    at
    him, tackled him, and was then on top of him, biting his nipple
    and choking him.      Defendant described his desperate attempts to
    get Haulmark to stop choking him.            Defendant's efforts included
    repeatedly      elbowing    and   punching    Haulmark     in   the   head    as
    Haulmark was clamping his teeth down on defendant's nipple and
    strangling him.       We agree with the trial judge's conclusion
    6
    The State's reliance on Commonwealth v. Toon, 
    773 N.E.2d 993
    (Mass. App. Ct. 2002), is misplaced.        In that case, the
    defendant threatened to stab the victim with a knife before the
    fight began, and there was insufficient evidence that the victim
    used deadly force or that the defendant believed he was in
    imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm.    
    Id. at 1001-
    02.
    18                              A-2481-11T4
    that, if the jury accepted defendant's version of the incident,
    defendant reasonably believed that he needed to employ the force
    he used "to protect himself against death or serious bodily
    injury,"    and        defendant     neither       provoked      the     incident    nor
    provoked it "for the purpose of causing death or serious bodily
    injury" to Haulmark.           N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4b(2)(a).
    Next, we turn to the requirement that the actor retreat,
    provided it can be done "with complete safety," N.J.S.A. 2C:3-
    4b(2)(b).         If    defendant     was   being     bitten     and     choked,    with
    Haulmark on top of him, he certainly had no ability to retreat
    from that situation.              See 
    Lewis, supra
    , 65 M.J. at 89.                  Once
    defendant    succeeded         in   getting      Haulmark     off   him,    reasonable
    jurors could conclude defendant was also justified in kicking
    the large, aggressive Haulmark once as he was getting up, so
    that defendant and his companions could safely withdraw from the
    area.
    The trial evidence by no means compelled a conclusion that
    defendant    acted        in   self-defense,       but   if    defendant      and    the
    several witnesses who testified favorably to him were deemed
    credible,    a    jury     could    find    that    he   acted      in   self-defense.
    Because     the        evidence     could     support    self-defense,        we     are
    19                                A-2481-11T4
    constrained   to     reverse   defendant's    conviction      for   aggravated
    manslaughter.7
    Moreover, bearing in mind that the trial judge in this case
    did   not   tailor    the   charge   with    reference   to    the    evidence
    presented by either side, we remind the trial court on remand
    that it is often important to mold jury instructions so that the
    jury clearly understands how the evidence in this particular
    case relates to the legal concepts addressed in the charge.                 See
    State v. Gartland, 
    149 N.J. 456
    , 476 (1997).
    Model jury charges are often helpful to
    trial   courts   performing  this  important
    function.   However, it is not always enough
    simply to read the applicable provision of
    the Criminal Code, define the terminology,
    and set forth the elements of the crime. An
    instruction that is appropriate in one case
    may not be sufficient for another case.
    Ordinarily, the better practice is to mold
    the instruction in a manner that explains
    the law to the jury in the context of the
    material facts of the case.
    In this regard, it is "well settled in
    our State that the trial judge has the
    right, and oftentimes the duty, to review
    the testimony and comment upon it, so long
    as he clearly leaves to the jury * * * the
    ultimate determination of the facts and the
    rendering of a just and true verdict on the
    7
    In arguing for reversal on this point, defendant has raised
    several additional contentions that were not presented to the
    trial court. We decline to address them for the first time on
    appeal. If they are relevant at the retrial they may be raised
    on remand.
    20                               A-2481-11T4
    facts as it finds them."        Incorporating
    specific evidentiary facts into a jury
    charge is especially helpful in a protracted
    trial with conflicting testimony.
    [State v. Concepcion, 
    111 N.J. 373
    , 379-80
    (1988) (citations omitted).]
    In particular, in this case, it would be helpful to mold the
    instructions to explain how the self-defense statute applies to
    the participants in a fight.
    III
    We   next    address    the    prosecutor's          use   of     the    brother's
    incriminating statement to the police.                   It is well-established
    that the prosecution cannot introduce the confession of a non-
    testifying co-defendant as evidence against a defendant.                        Bruton
    v. United States, 
    391 U.S. 123
    , 126, 
    88 S. Ct. 1620
    , 1622, 20 L.
    Ed. 2d 476, 479 (1968); State v. Haskell, 
    100 N.J. 469
    , 478-79
    (1985); State v. Laboy, 
    270 N.J. Super. 296
    , 303 (App. Div.
    1994).      "[T]he   out-of-court        statement       of    a    co-defendant      is
    inadmissible against another defendant because admission of the
    statement     violates     the    rule        prohibiting      hearsay       and    the
    defendant's fundamental right to confront witnesses."                         
    Haskell, supra
    , 100 N.J. at 478.
    More     generally,     absent    exceptions         not       present    here,    a
    witness's     statement    resulting          from   a    police      interrogation
    constitutes    testimonial       hearsay.      Crawford       v.    Washington,     541
    21                                   A-2481-11T4
    U.S. 36, 52, 
    124 S. Ct. 1354
    , 1364, 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 177
    , 193
    (2004); see Michigan v. Bryant, 
    562 U.S. 344
    , ___, 
    131 S. Ct. 1143
    ,     1150,    179     L.    Ed.    2d    93,       101-02    (2011);     Davis     v.
    Washington, 
    547 U.S. 813
    , 822, 
    126 S. Ct. 2266
    , 2273, 
    165 L. Ed. 2d
    224, 237 (2006).             Unless the witness is unavailable and the
    defendant    had    a    prior    opportunity       to     cross-examine      him,     the
    statement cannot be admitted as evidence against the defendant
    without     violating      his    Sixth       Amendment        confrontation     right.
    
    Crawford, supra
    , 541 U.S. at 
    59, 124 S. Ct. at 1369
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d
    at 197; State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    , 151 (2014).8                            It is
    also improper for the prosecution to imply to the jury, through
    argument or witness testimony, that the State has additional
    incriminating evidence that the jury has not heard.                             
    Weaver, supra
    , 219 N.J. at 152-53; State v. Branch, 
    182 N.J. 338
    , 351-52
    (2005); State v. Johnson, 
    421 N.J. Super. 511
    , 519 (App. Div.
    2011).
    In      cross-examining            defendant,        the     prosecutor     clearly
    transgressed those fundamental constitutional principles.                             This
    impropriety       was    compounded      when     the    judge    later   allowed      the
    prosecutor to tell the jury that the brother's statement was
    8
    We agree with defendant that Jarrod's statement to the police
    was not the statement of a co-conspirator made during the course
    of and in furtherance of a conspiracy. See N.J.R.E. 803(b)(5).
    Nor, in a criminal trial, was it admissible against defendant as
    a statement against interest. N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25).
    22                                A-2481-11T4
    kept from them by the court's evidentiary rulings.                  
    Johnson, supra
    , 421 N.J. Super. at 518-20.
    To put the errors in context, defendant's cross-examination
    was not the first time the prosecutor made improper use of the
    statement of an absent witness.            During the prosecutor's opening
    statement, he informed the jury that Emily Henry told the police
    that she had told defendant that Haulmark made crude gestures
    and comments to her on the night Haulmark was killed.              Thus, the
    prosecutor argued, defendant was motivated to kill Haulmark due
    to   his   rage   over   the   way   he    believed   Haulmark   treated   the
    girlfriend.       The prosecutor then told the jury that Emily's
    statement to the police was untrue.
    Out of the jury's presence, defense counsel vociferously
    objected and requested a mistrial, because Emily was not going
    to be a witness at the trial and her out-of-court statement,
    that   she   allegedly    told   defendant      certain    information,    was
    inadmissible hearsay.          The judge denied the mistrial motion;
    however, he ruled that the State was to make no further comment
    to the jury about Emily's alleged statement.              That ruling should
    have enlightened the prosecutor as to the inadmissibility of
    hearsay statements by absent co-defendants.            But it did not.
    In response to the prosecutor's opening statement, defense
    counsel's opening statement reminded the jury that neither his
    23                             A-2481-11T4
    comments nor those of the prosecutor were evidence, and that
    "[t]he only evidence you will hear is going to come from this
    [witness] box, and from exhibits that come from witnesses who
    are in that box."           Defense counsel would repeat that theme in
    his summation.
    During defendant's cross-examination, the prosecutor asked
    defendant about Emily's "statement."                 Defense counsel objected
    and the judge sustained the objection.                    Soon thereafter, the
    prosecutor asked defendant a series of questions about whether
    his brother participated in the fight.                   Defendant denied that
    his brother participated.           The prosecutor then asked: "Is what
    you're   telling     us    here   today    consistent     with        your   brother's
    statement?"        Defense counsel objected and told the judge that
    this    question    might    be   grounds      for   a   mistrial.           The   judge
    sustained the objection.           However, on the next trial day, the
    prosecutor renewed his request to use the brother's statement to
    cross-examine defendant, over defense counsel's objection.                           The
    judge ruled that "the State can pursue this line of inquiry."
    During the subsequent cross-examination of defendant, one
    of the prosecutors asked defendant another series of questions
    about    whether     his    brother   participated         in    the     fight     with
    Haulmark,    allegedly       by   elbowing,      hitting,       and    kicking     him.
    Defendant denied it.         She then asked, "isn't it true that Jarrod
    24                                   A-2481-11T4
    said that he did?"        Defense counsel objected and, at sidebar,
    the judge asked the prosecutor to withdraw the question.                  She
    agreed, but clearly, the information was presented to the jury
    through her questions, and no curative instruction was given.
    On June 16, 2011, defense counsel moved for a mistrial
    based on the prosecutor's conduct.         Defense counsel pointed out
    that during her cross-examination of defendant, the prosecutor
    had been reading from a transcript of the brother's statement,
    and the jury would have received the impression that the brother
    had made a statement which contained the information on which
    the prosecutor's questions were based.            The judge denied the
    motion,   stating   his   belief   that   the   jury   had   not   seen   the
    transcript.
    During his summation, defense counsel attempted to address
    and defuse the potential prejudice posed by the prosecutor's
    improper effort to place Jarrod's statement before the jury.                He
    began by arguing to the jury that the minimal bloodstains on
    Jarrod's pants did not establish that Jarrod participated in the
    fight with Haulmark.        Defense counsel then pointed out that
    there was no testimony that Jarrod participated in the incident:
    Now, that's the bloodstains that Jarrod
    had on him.    You saw how much blood there
    was on Jacob Gentry's knee, you saw how much
    blood there was on Jacob Gentry's boot.   Do
    you think for a minute that Jarrod Gentry
    was involved in the fight – and remember,
    25                              A-2481-11T4
    ladies and gentlemen, when we started this
    case, the judge has already told you, and
    he's probably going to instruct you as to
    this again, instructed you at the beginning
    of the case, . . . what the lawyers say
    isn't evidence.   The only evidence actually
    comes from this box and from that screen or
    from the mouth of a witness as they tell you
    what happened. And did you hear anyone from
    that witness stand say Jarrod Gentry was
    involved in this fight, that this was a two
    on one?    You didn't.     The State has an
    obligation to prove their case beyond a
    reasonable doubt, and you heard nothing
    about that, not once.    Not from a witness,
    that's for sure.
    Before beginning her summation, the prosecutor objected to
    that statement and argued that "[defense counsel] commented on
    the    State    not    presenting     evidence   of   Jarrod's      testimony    and
    basically said we failed . . . [w]hen, in reality, your Honor
    precluded us from using it."              (Emphasis added).        Defense counsel
    responded "that what I said was they heard no competent evidence
    from a witness who testified about Jarrod's involvement.                         And
    they    didn't."            Apparently    misconstruing,     or     misremembering
    defense counsel's summation argument as telling the jury that
    the State failed to introduce Jarrod's statement in evidence,
    the judge admonished defense counsel that "this should not have
    been    brought       up"   because   the    court   had   ruled    that   Jarrod's
    statement was inadmissible.              He granted the prosecutor's request
    that she be allowed to tell the jury that Jarrod's statement had
    been excluded by the court.
    26                             A-2481-11T4
    The prosecutor took full advantage of this ruling, not only
    telling the jury repeatedly that Jarrod had made a statement,
    but    clearly      implying      to   the    jury   that   the    State   possessed
    incriminating evidence that the jury had not been allowed to
    hear:
    [Defense counsel] made a reference to you,
    he said the State failed to prove their case
    . . . because we didn't bring in Jarrod's
    statement.   Well, we did not fail to bring
    in Jarrod's statement.    That was a judicial
    ruling, the judge made the decision.      You
    heard throughout this whole trial there's
    stuff   that's   admissible,   there's  stuff
    that's inadmissible. . . . [I]t's up to the
    judge and all those books that sit up there
    to decide what is relevant for you to hear
    and what is not relevant. The State did not
    fail to do anything and you may not . . .
    infer, that we neglected to prove our case
    from failure to give you Jarrod's statement.
    We conclude that the prosecutor's questions and summation
    comments, and the trial court's ruling permitting the comments,
    were     clearly       improper,          violated       bedrock     constitutional
    principles, and constituted prejudicial error.                        Defendant did
    not    open   the     door   to    this      evidence,   and   its   admission     was
    plainly erroneous.           See State v. Vandeweaghe, 
    177 N.J. 229
    , 237-
    38 (2003); 
    Johnson, supra
    , 421 N.J. Super. at 519-20; State v.
    Rucki, 
    367 N.J. Super. 200
    , 207-09 (App. Div. 2004).
    The    State    argues     that    Jarrod's    statement      was   admissible
    because it only incriminated him.                    Putting aside the obvious
    27                              A-2481-11T4
    Crawford issue, which the State does not address, we find the
    State's argument unpersuasive.             Given the issues in this case,
    if Jarrod admitted participating in the fight, that evidence
    clearly incriminated defendant.              The evidence was admitted in
    error, and the error went to the heart of the dispute between
    the defense and the State – whether Haulmark's death occurred as
    the result of a one-on-one fight or a three-against-one attack.
    See State v. Smith, 
    167 N.J. 158
    , 188 (2001).
    The   trial     errors    not   only     unfairly    undercut    defendant's
    credibility   but     the    prosecutor's       summation     undermined      the
    credibility   of     defendant's        attorney    in    implying     that    he
    misrepresented      the     evidence.         Further,     because    defendant
    testified as to all issues, errors that impugned his credibility
    require that his conviction be reversed as to both counts.                    See
    
    Rucki, supra
    , 367 N.J. Super. at 208-09.
    [At the direction of the court, Part IV,
    which is not deemed to warrant publication,
    see R. 1:36-2(d), is omitted from the
    published version.]
    Reversed and remanded.
    28                              A-2481-11T4