State in the Interest of J.F. , 446 N.J. Super. 39 ( 2016 )


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  •                         RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0392-15T3
    STATE IN THE INTEREST OF               APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    J.F.,
    June 16, 2016
    A Juvenile.                           APPELLATE DIVISION
    ______________________________
    Argued March 2, 2016 – Decided June 16, 2016
    Before Judges Fuentes, Koblitz and Gilson
    (Judge Gilson concurring).
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Atlantic
    County, Docket No. FJ-01-620-14.
    Sevan Biramian, Assistant Prosecutor, argued
    the cause for appellant State of New Jersey
    (James    P.   McClain,    Atlantic   County
    Prosecutor, attorney; Elliot J. Almanza,
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Robert   Lougy,  Acting  Attorney  General,
    attorney for appellant State of New Jersey
    (Sarah Lichter, Deputy Attorney General, on
    the supplemental brief).
    Janet A. Allegro, Designated Counsel, argued
    the cause for respondent J.F. (Joseph E.
    Krakora,   Public  Defender,  attorney   for
    respondent; Ms. Allegro, of counsel and on
    the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    KOBLITZ, J.A.D.
    After leave was granted, the State appeals from the August
    27,   2015     order    of     Judge      Michael        Blee    denying    the     State's
    application, filed pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26 and Rule 5:22-
    2, to waive jurisdiction of J.F.1 to adult court for certain
    offenses he allegedly committed when he was fourteen years old.
    Following an extensive hearing, Judge Blee found that J.F. had
    met his burden of proving the probability of his rehabilitation
    before   age    nineteen,        and    that       the    probability      substantially
    outweighed      the     State's         reasons         for     waiver.        We     affirm
    substantially for the reasons set forth in Judge Blee's August
    13, 2015 written opinion.                 We also determine, after receiving
    supplemental       briefs      on   the      issue       at   our   request,      that    the
    State's position is contrary to the intent of the Legislature's
    recent     repeal      and    replacement          of    N.J.S.A.     2A:4A-26,2       which
    excludes     the    possibility         of    waiver      to    adult     court     for   all
    juveniles      whose         unlawful        behavior         occurred     before      their
    fifteenth birthday.             N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(1).                  We therefore
    also affirm on the alternate basis that the new statutory age
    requirement as applied retroactively precludes waiver of J.F.3
    1
    We use initials to protect the confidentiality of the
    juveniles. R. 1:38-3(d)(5).
    2
    See Act of Aug. 10, 2015, ch. 89, 2015 N.J. Laws 89; N.J.S.A.
    2A:4A-26.1.
    3
    It is a well-settled principle that a court may provide several
    bases in reaching its ultimate conclusion. See Massachusetts v.
    (continued)
    2                                    A-0392-15T3
    I.
    On January 8, 2014, when J.F. was only fourteen years and
    eleven months old, he was involved in an incident in which he
    was alleged to have shot two victims under the age of eighteen.
    One   victim,   fifteen-year-old       D.T.,      was   shot   in   the   leg   and
    buttocks, and the other, thirteen-year-old A.M.S., was shot in
    the chest and died as a result of his wounds.
    A juvenile complaint was filed against J.F., charging him
    with conduct that if he were an adult would constitute first-
    degree purposeful murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1), second-degree
    aggravated      assault,        N.J.S.A.       2C:12-1(b)(1),       second-degree
    unlawful   possession      of    a   handgun,     N.J.S.A.     2C:39-5(b),4     and
    second-degree possession of a handgun for an unlawful purpose,
    (continued)
    United States, 
    333 U.S. 611
    , 623, 
    68 S. Ct. 747
    , 754, 
    92 L. Ed. 968
    , 977 (1948) (where a case might have been decided on either
    one of two independent grounds, but was decided on the basis of
    both, the decision "rested as much upon the one determination as
    the other . . . [and] the adjudication is effective for both");
    McLellan v. Miss. Power & Light Co., 
    545 F.2d 919
    , 925 n.21 (5th
    Cir. 1977) ("It has long been settled that all alternative
    rationales for a given result have precedential value.");
    DeVincenzo v. W. N.Y., 
    120 N.J.L. 541
    , 543 (Sup. Ct. 1938)
    (finding that alternative reasons provided in a prior decision
    were not dicta because "[t]hey were the views of the court
    embodying one of two reasons, both of which, obviously, were
    effective in bringing the court to its conclusion").
    4
    The juvenile complaint erroneously categorizes the charge as a
    first-degree offense.   Possession of a handgun, however, is a
    second-degree crime, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1), except when the
    person has a prior conviction for certain specified crimes,
    converting it to a first-degree crime. N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(j).
    3                              A-0392-15T3
    N.J.S.A.    2C:39-4(a).         Additional    charges    were    later    brought:
    conduct that if he were an adult would constitute first-degree
    knowing murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(2); an additional count of
    second-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1); nine
    counts   of    fourth-degree      aggravated        assault,    N.J.S.A.      2C:12-
    1(b)(4); eight counts of third-degree endangering the welfare of
    a child, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4; fourth-degree unlawful disposition of
    a   firearm,    N.J.S.A.    2C:39-9(d);      fourth-degree       tampering     with
    evidence,      N.J.S.A.    2C:28-6(1);        and     third-degree       hindering
    apprehension, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(1).
    The State moved, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26 and Rule
    5:22-2, for the involuntary waiver of jurisdiction of J.F. from
    the Family Part to the Law Division, Criminal Part.                   Judge Blee
    conducted a twelve-day waiver hearing.
    Atlantic City Police Sergeant David Weiss testified to the
    following.       J.F.     was    identified    as     the   shooter      by    other
    juveniles who were present at the January 8, 2014 incident.
    Weiss learned that the victim, A.M.S., had been involved in a
    fight with J.F.'s cousin the day before the incident.                    The fight
    was recorded on a cell-phone camera, and posted to Facebook.5
    5
    Facebook is a website whose self-described mission "is to give
    people the power to share and make the world more open and
    connected."          About          Facebook,          Facebook,
    (continued)
    4                                   A-0392-15T3
    A.M.S. had indicated that there would be retaliation for the
    fight,    and     another   minor,    C.G.,       also    threatened        to    become
    involved in the fight.        On the day of the shooting, C.G. went to
    the school with several others to fight J.F.'s cousin.                                When
    school    let   out,   C.G.   and    the       group   began    to   walk    from      the
    school.     C.G. then encountered J.F. riding a bicycle.                             C.G.
    punched J.F. four to five times in the face, ran away, and
    informed the group that J.F. had a gun.                        Shortly thereafter,
    C.G. and the group encountered J.F., who pulled out the gun and
    opened fire.       The group then ran away until A.M.S. collapsed.
    Sergeant Weiss stated that J.F. and his cousin were allied
    with the "Stanley Holmes Alliances," while the victims and their
    friends    were    associated   with       the    "Back    Maryland     Alliances."
    Weiss also repeated comments by others alleging past criminal
    activity by J.F.
    Atlantic City Police Sergeant Christopher Barber testified
    that certain photographs taken at Harborfields depicting J.F.
    and other residents had been sent from the institution and later
    posted online with gang verbiage written on them.6                          The State
    (continued)
    https://www.facebook.com/facebook/info/?tab=page_info       (last
    visited Apr. 14, 2016).
    6
    Harborfields is a juvenile detention center located in Egg
    Harbor.   See Youth Detention – Harborfields, Atlantic County
    (continued)
    5                                     A-0392-15T3
    offered these postings to demonstrate that J.F. was affiliated
    with a gang while he was in Harborfields.             Barber also discussed
    several Twitter7 postings that he alleged demonstrated J.F.'s
    gang involvement.
    Frederick Wilson, an employee at Harborfields, testified
    that the staff did not open the outgoing mail from residents.
    Wilson described a point system which allowed the residents to
    purchase, among other things, photographs of themselves.                 Wilson
    testified that J.F. was one of the top two residents in earning
    points.      Detective      Lauren   Laielli   of     the    Atlantic    County
    Sheriff's    Office,   testified      that   she     spoke   with   a    former
    resident    of   Harborfields,       who   advised    her    of   gang     feuds
    occurring there between the Stanley Holmes gang and the Back
    Maryland gang.    She testified that she was told J.F. would shout
    gang references at her informant while they were both housed at
    Harborfields.
    During the rehabilitation phase of the trial, J.F. first
    offered the testimony of R.A., J.F.'s aunt, who was a caseworker
    for   the   Division   of   Child    Protection     and   Permanency.        R.A.
    (continued)
    Government,                http://www.atlantic-county.org/public-
    safety/harborfields.asp (last visited Apr. 12, 2016).
    7
    Twitter is self-described as "an information network made up of
    140-character messages called Tweets."      Getting Started With
    Twitter,   Twitter,   https://support.twitter.com/articles/215585
    (last visited April 12, 2016).
    6                                A-0392-15T3
    testified that she was aware that J.F. was beaten up more than
    once by neighborhood residents.              In one incident, J.F. was beat
    up and kicked in the head, and was taken to the hospital for
    treatment.       R.A.     testified    that     J.F.   was    always    quiet    and
    reserved, and that he was "never a bad child."
    Rochelle    Andress,     a    social      worker     who   had    worked    at
    Harborfields      since    1997,      described     the      daily    routine    for
    residents at Harborfields, and also gave a description of the
    living   arrangements       and     rehabilitative        services.        Andress
    testified    that    the     Juvenile        Justice     Commission     supervises
    Harborfields, and its overall goal is to "rehabilitate juveniles
    and help them reach their full potential."                     Andress described
    the   different     programs      offered     at   Jamesburg8    for    juveniles,
    including    certain      vocational     training,        cognitive     behavioral
    therapies and counseling.          Regarding J.F., she stated:
    We don't have any problems with [J.F.]. He
    gets along well with others. He's compliant
    and respectful when he interacts with the
    staff. He participates in everything that we
    provide to him. Been pos[itive] most of the
    time that he's been there. Haven't had any
    problems with him at all I mean and he's
    been there for a year and generally in that
    amount of time behavior tend to rear their
    8
    Jamesburg is also known as the New Jersey Training School, a
    juvenile detention center located in Monroe Township. See
    generally New Jersey Training School, Office of the Attorney
    General, http://www.nj.gov/oag/jjc/secure_njts.htm (last visited
    Apr. 12, 2016).
    7                                A-0392-15T3
    ugly little head with kids and with him we
    just have not had that.      He's been, you
    know, in my opinion a model resident.
    Andress   described       the    rating   and     point       system    utilized     at
    Harborfields,       stating     that   J.F.      had     positive       ratings     and
    responds well to the program.             J.F. was a high "point earner."
    Andress explained that J.F. had earned enough points to have
    special visits, which allowed him extra time to see his family.
    J.F. and his mother speak regularly over the phone.                         According
    to Andress, J.F.'s mother was in the top one percent as far as
    parent involvement with J.F.
    J.F. was also involved in a number of afterschool programs
    at Harborfields.         Andress described the programs, in particular
    a program that sought to teach the residents about decision-
    making skills.       J.F. elected to participate on his own, which
    was not typical of most residents.                  J.F. had been respectful
    throughout his stay and was in the top five percent of students
    at Harborfields in terms of behavior.                  Andress opined that J.F.
    had potential and had done well in the structured environment of
    Harborfields.
    Andress also had been provided gang awareness training at
    Harborfields.       She explained that Harborfields did not have a
    policy    on    separating      juveniles      based     on   gang     affiliations.
    Andress   had     read   the    State's       expert's    report       on   J.F.   that
    8                                   A-0392-15T3
    mentioned    a    gang,    but   was    unaware       of    J.F.       having   any     gang
    affiliation until an investigator came to the school inquiring
    about photographs containing gang verbiage.                        Andress testified
    that it is likely that members of the Back Maryland gang attend
    classes    at    Harborfields     with        J.F.,    but      there     had     been    no
    incidents caused by their attendance together.
    Shannon Rawson, J.F.'s eighth grade teacher, described an
    instance in 2012 when J.F. complained of being "jumped" by grown
    men.      Rawson    contacted    J.F.'s       mother       to    inform     her    of    the
    incident.       Another juvenile stated in class that he was going to
    shoot J.F. in the face, and have other juveniles come beat him
    up.    Boys would frequently come to J.F.'s school to fight him or
    his    younger     brother.        On     another          occasion,       J.F.    cried,
    complaining that other boys were fighting with him outside of
    the school.       Rawson had not witnessed J.F. act as the aggressor;
    he often protected himself and his brother.
    Rawson    also     witnessed     A.M.S.    fight         with    J.F.'s    younger
    brother.    The day of the shooting, Rawson saw a cell phone video
    depicting J.F. "riding up on a bike and this big, fat Spanish
    kid hitting him from behind and knocking him off the bike. And
    he's -- and then the gang of boys who were in the crowd jumped
    on him."    Rawson explained that another boy approached J.F. from
    behind and punched him in the back of the head.
    9                                       A-0392-15T3
    Dr.     Ronald   S.   Gruen,   a   clinical   psychologist,   testified
    that he met with J.F. twice.                On his first visit, J.F. was
    guarded and distrusting, but on his second visit he was more
    forthcoming.     Dr. Gruen conducted a lengthy clinical interview
    followed by psychological testing.             Dr. Gruen stated that J.F.
    expressed
    the fact that he was pursued and harassed
    and beaten up many times by this other
    gentleman that he subsequently shot. And
    that he had appealed to the authorities at
    Crawford School, he had told his mother.
    His mother had told the police and the
    school officials and nothing was really done
    in his opinion and he just couldn’t stand it
    anymore.   He could not stand constantly --
    he said he felt paranoid, he had eyes in the
    back of his head when he would leave the
    school building. He was very unnerved, very
    nervous, upset and feeling he just had no
    way out.
    Dr. Gruen believed J.F.'s claims of being threatened and beaten
    up were legitimate.       J.F. denied being in a gang, although Dr.
    Gruen did not completely believe him.             J.F.'s recitation of his
    poor treatment was consistent with J.F.'s eighth-grade teacher's
    account.    J.F. was respectful in their interactions.            Dr. Gruen
    stated:
    He really suffered from poor self-esteem and
    he felt obligated to protect his brother and
    he didn't feel he was doing a very good job
    of that either. And I think that, you know,
    this tormented him. And when you're a young
    adolescent like that, you want to be king of
    10                          A-0392-15T3
    the hill.   And I think he felt very small
    and very defenseless.
    Dr. Gruen discussed how bullying might affect a fourteen-year-
    old   high     school   student,      stating      that    "desperate   people   do
    desperate things."
    Dr. Gruen also testified that he met with J.F.'s mother,
    who appeared to care for J.F. deeply.                    Dr. Gruen testified that
    the     mother-son      bond    is     a        strong    factor   in   assessing
    rehabilitation potential.            J.F.'s mother indicated that she made
    several attempts to end the bullying, having spoken with other
    parents and the authorities.
    Dr. Gruen also spoke with Andress, who gave J.F. a strong
    endorsement.       Dr. Gruen noted that in his other interactions
    with the administration at Harborfields, he generally did not
    get a positive response about the juveniles detained there.
    Dr. Gruen stated that J.F.'s age was also a positive factor
    in terms of rehabilitation, noting that at fourteen years old, a
    child    has    not     truly   formed      his     personality,    which    could
    therefore be influenced in a positive direction.                   Dr. Gruen did
    not believe J.F. suffered from antisocial personality disorder
    despite some behavioral issues.                 Dr. Gruen believed J.F.'s drug
    involvement negatively impacted his rehabilitation, but he did
    not view this as a long-term issue.                  J.F. seemed relieved that
    he was at Harborfields and not on the street being bullied.                      The
    11                             A-0392-15T3
    Family    Court       could    offer     the      proper    services    for    J.F.     to
    continue    on    a    path    to     rehabilitation.         Jamesburg       offered    a
    "closed setting" where J.F. would be monitored, and he would
    benefit    from       the     group    and     individual     therapy,     vocational
    training, and schooling.                Dr. Gruen's ultimate conclusion was
    that J.F. could be rehabilitated by the age of nineteen.
    In     rebuttal,        the     State    called   Dr.    Louis     Schlesinger,      a
    forensic psychologist.                Dr. Schlesinger testified that he met
    with J.F. once and did not have any contact with J.F.'s mother.
    Dr. Schlesinger testified to J.F.'s family circumstances, noting
    that his mother had been a constant presence in J.F.'s life, but
    that J.F. had no contact with his biological father, who was
    imprisoned in a different state.                    Dr. Schlesinger conducted a
    battery of psychological tests.                   Dr. Schlesinger described J.F.
    as follows:
    He was pleasant, he was very pleasant.    He
    was very cooperative.   He was very polite.
    He worked carefully. He seemed to me to be
    motivated.   He presented himself, to me,
    throughout -- initially as being bullied by
    a group of individuals, as a victim of being
    bullied. Eventually, I told him that I knew
    all the details of all this, and he became a
    little bit more forthcoming. He told me his
    background adequately. I thought he denied
    and minimized his involvement with youth
    gang activity, as well as his drug-selling
    behavior and drug use, as well. I challenged
    him at a few points, as I do with every
    individual, and he kept his composure.    He
    was never disrespectful throughout, ever.
    12                                 A-0392-15T3
    He was not hostile.    He did become tearful
    when discussing his future.
    His concentration was fine. I was with him
    for over five hours. His attention span and
    concentration were fine.   There was nothing
    bizarre about him.   He wasn't inappropriate
    in any way, and he was just very super-
    polite throughout.
    Dr. Schlesinger stated that J.F. described a situation in which
    he    was    bullied,   which       led     J.F.    to    protect       himself     and    his
    younger      brother    by     getting      involved       in    the    shooting.          Dr.
    Schlesinger testified that J.F. denied knowledge of any gangs.
    Dr.    Schlesinger       noted      that    although       Dr.    Gruen's     report
    correctly stated        that J.F. had no prior criminal record,                             he
    believed not being caught was different from not being involved
    in past criminal conduct.                  Dr. Schlesinger testified that J.F.
    had    admitted        using       marijuana,        and        previously     had        used
    prescription      drugs.        He    opined       that    J.F.'s      inconsistent        and
    untruthful      answers      to      his    interview       questions        were    not     a
    positive      indicator      for   rehabilitation.              Dr.    Schlesinger        also
    testified that J.F. had average to low-average intelligence, and
    demonstrated some personality deficiencies that could later lead
    to a personality disorder.                   Other tests evidenced that J.F.
    might be mildly depressed and have problems with impulses and
    inner anger.       He stated J.F. appeared to suffer from a conduct
    disorder.
    13                                     A-0392-15T3
    Dr.     Schlesinger            opined       that      J.F.         had     accepted
    responsibility for his actions relating to the shooting, but had
    not accepted responsibility for many other actions.                               Although
    J.F.    had     made     a     good    institutional         adjustment          while    at
    Harborfields,        J.F.'s      contact          with     gang     members       strongly
    influenced Dr. Schlesinger's opinion of J.F.'s probability for
    rehabilitation.          Dr. Schlesinger opined that J.F.'s "mind is
    still in the street."            Dr. Schlesinger concluded rehabilitation
    was "only remotely possible."
    In his detailed forty-five-page written opinion, Judge Blee
    found, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:26A-26, the State proved probable
    cause for the charge of first-degree murder, but that J.F. had
    demonstrated       the   probability         of    rehabilitation         prior    to    age
    nineteen      by   use   of    the    procedures,        services,    and       facilities
    available to the court, substantially outweighed the reasons for
    waiver.
    Judge Blee found J.F. had been bullied for two years prior
    to   the     incident    and    had     no   prior       exposure    to    the    juvenile
    justice system "in terms of charges, court-ordered services, or
    supervision."          Judge Blee found significant evidence of social
    media interaction evidencing J.F.'s affiliation with a gang, but
    14                                    A-0392-15T3
    noted that the State had not charged him with gang criminality.9
    The    judge    stated    J.F.'s    gang    involvement     "was    a     significant
    factor     to      consider        in      weighing   the      possibility            of
    rehabilitation."         Judge Blee wrote:
    Due to J.F.'s young age and the strong
    possibility of lengthy incarceration, any
    gang affiliations the Juvenile has are
    likely to be severed by the time J.F. is
    released from custody.      It is very likely
    that   current     gang    members    will   be
    disassociated from the gang and living
    relatively normal lives, incarcerated or
    deceased.    There is also the possibility
    that the present gangs will be dissolved at
    the time J.F. is released. The court notes
    that although there was evidence presented
    at the hearing demonstrating possible gang
    affiliations,    the    court    must   equally
    consider the fact that the Juvenile has not
    had exposure to the juvenile justice system
    in terms of charges, court-ordered services,
    or supervision prior to the incident.
    The judge also considered J.F.'s post-incident conduct.                            J.F.
    had     been     compliant    and       respectful    during        his     time      at
    Harborfields,       receiving      positive      reviews     from       supervisors.
    Judge Blee was "disturbed with the communication from J.F. to
    other    alleged      gang    member[s],"       but   explained         that      these
    individuals appeared to be J.F.'s only friends, and because he
    was just beginning the rehabilitative process, some error in
    judgment was to be expected.
    9
    See N.J.S.A. 2C:33-29.
    15                                  A-0392-15T3
    Judge Blee also found the testimony of Sergeants Weiss and
    Barber    to    be     "credible"     and    the     testimony         of    social      worker
    Andress    and       J.F.'s    teacher      Rawson    to     be    "highly         credible,"
    noting     that        Andress's       testimony          had     provided         important
    information      about       J.F.'s   behavior       at    Harborfields.              Rawson's
    testimony regarding the background of J.F. as a student and the
    conflicts      he     faced   "had    the    most     significant           impact     on      the
    court."
    Judge        Blee     found      Dr.    Gruen's       evaluation          of   J.F.        was
    "thoughtful      and     comprehensive,       and     that      his    conclusions            were
    credible       and     well-supported."            Judge        Blee    found      that        Dr.
    Schlesinger          testified    credibly        about     J.F.'s          ability      to     be
    rehabilitated,         but    found   that    Dr.     Gruen's      opinion         was    "more
    reasonable and persuasive."
    Judge Blee found J.F. clearly presented a number of risk
    factors, "including an absent father, gang involvement, previous
    drug use, and defiance."              He found that J.F. was thriving "in a
    structured, safe, organized, and closely monitored environment."
    Judge Blee concluded J.F. had demonstrated that there was a
    probability of rehabilitation before he turned nineteen.
    Judge Blee then balanced the reasons for waiver against the
    prospects of rehabilitation.                 Judge Blee analyzed J.F.'s case
    pursuant to the five factors enunciated in State ex rel. C.A.H.,
    16                                       A-0392-15T3
    
    89 N.J. 326
    (1982).         He found that the first and second factors,
    seriousness of the alleged offense and deliberate nature of the
    offense, militated in favor of waiver.                     The third factor, age of
    the offender, militated against waiver because J.F. was fourteen
    at the time of the offense.                  The       fourth and fifth factors,
    history of prior infractions and prior exposure to the juvenile
    justice      system,     given       J.F.'s        prior     drug     use,       but       also
    considering that J.F. had no exposure to the juvenile justice
    system prior to the instant offense, militated against waiver.
    Judge      Blee   also     considered          other       factors,       such        as    the
    presumption of waiver in murder cases, the legislature's intent
    in adding judicial oversight of waiver cases for juveniles under
    sixteen, the need for deterrence balanced against J.F.'s age and
    the     sentencing     disparity       for        murder    between       juveniles          and
    adults.      Ultimately, Judge Blee determined that "J.F.'s strong
    and     compelling       prospects       for       rehabilitation          substantially
    outweigh the standard of the attenuated argument of deterrence
    in this case."
    II.
    On    appeal,      the     State    contends         that     the    trial           judge
    improperly found certain testimony favoring the juvenile more
    credible than appropriate and gave less weight to the State's
    evidence     concerning        the   juvenile's       gang    ties    than       he    should
    17                                       A-0392-15T3
    have.     The State also argues that the trial judge erred in
    assessing    the    probability     of     J.F.’s   rehabilitation.        We
    disagree.
    Our standard of review in juvenile waiver cases "is whether
    the     correct    legal     standard      has   been    applied,   whether
    inappropriate      factors   have   been   considered,    and   whether   the
    exercise of discretion constituted a 'clear error of judgment'
    in all of the circumstances."            State v. R.G.D., 
    108 N.J. 1
    , 15
    (1987) (quoting State v. Humphreys, 
    89 N.J. 4
    , 13 (1982)).                When
    reviewing these matters, it is required that "1) findings of
    fact be grounded in competent, reasonably credible evidence, 2)
    correct legal principles be applied, and 3) the judicial power
    to modify a trial court's exercise of discretion will be applied
    only when there is a clear error of judgment that shocks the
    judicial conscience."        State ex rel. A.D., 
    212 N.J. 200
    , 215
    (2012) (quoting 
    R.G.D., supra
    , 108 N.J. at 15).                 Importantly,
    consideration should be given to the experience of the Family
    Court in adjudicating juvenile waiver cases:
    The common sense and experience of the
    Family Part must always be brought to bear
    on the ultimate question of rehabilitative
    potential.   For although the weight to be
    given to expert or other evidence bearing on
    the probability of rehabilitation properly
    is to be judged by such factors as the
    extent to which the witness may have tested
    the juvenile, the manner of testimony, or
    the interest of the witness, none can
    18                             A-0392-15T3
    properly substitute for the court's ultimate
    responsibility to determine whether the
    statutory criteria have been met.
    [
    R.G.D., supra
    , 108 N.J. at 16 n.7.]
    In   his   lengthy    written   opinion,   Judge   Blee   applied    the
    settled waiver law to the facts as he found them.               As a Family
    Court judge, he has expertise in matters concerning juveniles,
    as   did   several   of     the   witnesses   who   appeared    before    him,
    including the two experts, J.F.'s teacher and the social worker
    at Harborfields.     We defer to Judge Blee's expertise, and affirm
    on the basis of his thorough opinion, which was based on the
    "competent, reasonably credible evidence."           See 
    A.D., supra
    , 212
    N.J. at 215.
    III.
    Judge Blee's August 13, 2015 opinion stated that he was not
    applying the recent legislation signed by the Governor on August
    10, 2015, effective March 1, 2016, which repealed and replaced
    N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.         See Act of Aug. 10, 2015, ch. 89, 2015 N.J.
    Laws 89.    Under the revised waiver statute, a juvenile cannot be
    waived to the Law Division unless the State can establish that
    "the juvenile was 15 years of age or older at the time of the
    delinquent act."      N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(1).         J.F. was fourteen
    years old at the time of the shooting.              Thus, if the revised
    statute were applied, J.F. would not be subject to waiver.
    19                           A-0392-15T3
    The State argues in its supplemental brief that we should
    not apply the revised waiver statute in this case.                                  The State
    contends that criminal statutes are generally presumed to have a
    prospective        effect,       and   should       not     be    applied         to     pending
    appellate cases.
    As   a    general       principle,      in   criminal          as    well       as    other
    statutes, "the law favors prospective, rather than retroactive,
    application       of     new    legislation       unless    a    recognized            exception
    applies."        Ardan v. Bd. of Review, ___ N.J. Super. ___ (2016)
    (slip op. at 10); State v. Parolin, 
    171 N.J. 223
    , 233 (2002).
    That presumption, however, "is no more than a rule of statutory
    interpretation."           State v. Bey, 
    112 N.J. 45
    , 103 (1988) (quoting
    Rothman v. Rothman, 
    65 N.J. 219
    , 224 (1974)).                                 "Courts must
    apply a two-part test to determine whether a statute should be
    applied retroactively: (1) whether the Legislature intended to
    give   the       statute       retroactive     application;           and     [if       so]      (2)
    whether      retroactive         application        'will       result       in    either        an
    unconstitutional interference with vested rights or a manifest
    injustice.'"            Ardan v. Bd. of 
    Review, supra
    , slip op. at 10
    (quoting        James    v.    N.J.    Mfrs.    Ins.      Co.,    
    216 N.J. 552
    ,      563
    (2014)).
    Under the first part of the test enunciated in James, the
    presumption        against       retroactivity         "can      be        overcome         by    an
    20                                         A-0392-15T3
    indication of contrary legislative intent, either expressed in
    the language of the statute itself, or implied in its purpose."
    See 
    Bey, supra
    , 112 N.J. at 103.                      When an appellate court finds
    that     retroactive        legislative            intent      exists,     it     is      well-
    established that the court must "apply the statute in effect at
    the time of its decision . . . to effectuate the current policy
    declared by the legislative body."                          
    Ibid. (quoting Kruvant v.
    Mayor    &    Council      of    Twp.     of    Cedar       Grove,   
    82 N.J. 435
    ,      440
    (1980)).
    Within the first part of the test, three exceptions to the
    general rule of prospective application are well-established:
    (1) when the Legislature intended retroactive application of the
    statute either expressly, as "stated in the language of the
    statute or in the pertinent legislative history," or implicitly,
    requiring retroactive application to "make the statute workable
    or to give it the most sensible interpretation"; (2) when the
    statute       is   "ameliorative           or      curative";        or    (3)    when       the
    "expectations         of        the     parties          may     warrant         retroactive
    application."        Gibbons v. Gibbons, 
    86 N.J. 515
    , 522-23 (1981).
    "Under       the   second       exception       to    the    general      rule,    the     term
    'ameliorative'        refers       only       to     criminal    laws     that     effect       a
    reduction in a criminal penalty."                      Street v. Universal Mar., 300
    N.J.    Super.      578,    582       (App.     Div.    1997)    (quoting        Kendall      v.
    21                                     A-0392-15T3
    Snedeker, 
    219 N.J. Super. 283
    , 286 (App. Div. 1987)).                          "The
    ameliorative exception first appeared in New Jersey in the case
    of   In   re    Smigelski,    
    30 N.J. 513
    ,   527   (1959),   in   which   the
    Supreme    Court    held     that   a   statutory    amendment    restricting     a
    juvenile's possible exposure to commitment was ameliorative and
    thus could be applied retroactively."                
    Kendall, supra
    , 219 N.J.
    Super. at 286.        Our Supreme Court cited People v. Oliver, 
    151 N.Y.S.2d 367
    (1956), a New York case, for this proposition.
    
    Smigelski, supra
    , 30 N.J. at 527.               Oliver states:
    [W]here an ameliorative statute takes the
    form of a reduction of punishment for a
    particular crime, the law is settled that
    the lesser penalty may be meted out in all
    cases decided after the effective date of
    the enactment, even though the underlying
    act may have been committed before that
    date.
    . . . A legislative mitigation of the
    penalty for a particular crime represents a
    legislative judgment that the lesser penalty
    or the different treatment is sufficient to
    meet the legitimate ends of the criminal
    law.   Nothing is to be gained by imposing
    the more severe penalty after such a
    pronouncement; the excess in punishment can,
    by hypothesis, serve no purpose other than
    to satisfy a desire for vengeance. As to a
    mitigation of penalties, then, it is safe to
    assume, as the modern rule does, that it was
    the legislative design that the lighter
    penalty should be imposed in all cases that
    subsequently reach the courts.
    
    [Oliver, supra
    , 151 N.Y.S.2d at 373.]
    22                            A-0392-15T3
    We note that "[e]very statutory amendment which ameliorates or
    mitigates a penalty for a crime is not automatically subject to
    a presumption of retroactivity.        The ameliorative amendment must
    be aimed at mitigating a legislatively perceived undue severity
    in the existing criminal law."        
    Kendall, supra
    , 219 N.J. Super.
    at 286 n.1.
    The revised waiver statute was intended to ameliorate the
    punitive sentencing previously meted out to adolescent offenders
    after   waiver.   The   legislative     action   was   also   intended    to
    address the treatment needs of children.10         The increase in the
    minimum waiver age is part of that emphasis on rehabilitation
    rather than punishment, a part of the effort to ensure that
    children do not become prey to adult inmates nor suffer the many
    societal consequences of an adult criminal record.11            Among the
    changes in the revised waiver statute is the new post-waiver
    provision, requiring that a juvenile case be remanded to the
    Family Part for disposition if the juvenile is convicted of an
    10
    See Reforms to the Juvenile Justice System: Committee Meeting
    on S. 2003 Before the S. Law & Pub. Safety Comm'n, 216th Leg.,
    2d Sess. (March 12, 2015) (statement of Sen. Nellie Pou); see
    also Michael Booth, Christie OKs Juvenile Justice Reforms,
    N.J.L.J.              (Aug.               11,              2015),
    http://www.njlawjournal.com/id=1202734482923/Christie-OKs-
    Juvenile-Justice-Reforms?slreturn=20160319110141.
    11
    See Reforms to the Juvenile Justice System: Committee Meeting
    on S. 2003 Before the S. Law & Pub. Safety Comm'n, 216th Leg.,
    2d Sess. (March 12, 2015) (statement of Sen. Nellie Pou).
    23                              A-0392-15T3
    offense    that      would     not    have   initially        rendered    him   or    her
    eligible      for    waiver,    N.J.S.A.      2A:4A-26.1(f)(2).           The   statute
    also    for    the    first        time   provides     a      presumption    that,     if
    convicted after waiver, the juvenile will serve any custodial
    sentence imposed in a state juvenile facility until the age of
    twenty-one, and gives the Juvenile Justice Commission (JJC) the
    discretion to allow the individual, with his or her consent, to
    continue      to    serve    the     sentence     in   that    facility     even   after
    turning twenty-one, N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(f)(1).12
    Scientific      knowledge          regarding     the     limited     biological
    development of the teenage mind has advanced13 and society no
    12
    We do not opine on the retroactivity of the other provisions
    in the revised waiver statute because they are not relevant to
    the issues before us.
    13
    With improvements in magnetic resonance imaging technology,
    studies have shown that the frontal lobe, where decisions
    regarding judgment and risk-taking are made, does not fully
    develop in juveniles until their mid-twenties.            See Michele
    Deitch et al., From Time Out to Hard Time: Young Children in the
    Adult      Criminal       Justice      System       13-14      (2009),
    http://www.utexas.edu/lbj/archive/news/images/file/From%20Time%2
    0Out%20to%20Hard%20Time-revised%20final.pdf        (discussing     the
    cognitive    and    psychological     development     of    juveniles;
    specifically, frontal lobe development and its relation to
    decision-making in juveniles); see also Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    , 68, 
    130 S. Ct. 2011
    , 2026, 
    176 L. Ed. 2d 825
    , 841
    (2010) ("As compared to adults, juveniles have a 'lack of
    maturity and an underdeveloped sense of responsibility'; they
    'are more vulnerable or susceptible to negative influences and
    outside   pressures,    including    peer    pressure';    and   their
    characters    are    'not    as   well    formed.'    These    salient
    characteristics mean that '[i]t is difficult even for expert
    psychologists to differentiate between the juvenile offender
    (continued)
    24                                 A-0392-15T3
    longer   thinks       of    a    fourteen-year-old           as    a    fully   developed
    individual who might be incapable of rehabilitation.                                 Recent
    scientific research establishes that children under the age of
    fifteen will change through maturation.                           The Legislature, in
    raising the age requirement for waiver by one year, determined
    that children who commit offenses when under the age of fifteen
    should   never    be       waived       up   to    face    adult       penalties.        This
    legislative determination to ameliorate an unduly harsh penalty
    for   fourteen-year-old             juveniles         supports          the    retroactive
    application of the revised waiver statute.                         See 
    Kendall, supra
    ,
    219 N.J. Super. at 286 n.1.
    Finding that the revised age requirement of the statute
    should be applied retroactively to J.F. pursuant to the first
    part of the James test, we must next consider the second part of
    the two-part test.           See Ardan v. Bd. of 
    Review, supra
    , slip op.
    at 13.    The State makes no argument that it would suffer an
    "unconstitutional interference with a vested right or a manifest
    injustice."           See       
    ibid. Retroactively applying the
         age
    requirement      of    the      revised      waiver       statute      would    impose     no
    (continued)
    whose crime reflects unfortunate yet transient immaturity, and
    the rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable
    corruption.'" (alterations in original) (citations omitted)
    (quoting Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    , 569-70, 573, 
    125 S. Ct. 1183
    , 1195, 1197, 
    161 L. Ed. 2d 1
    , 22, 24 (2005))).
    25                                    A-0392-15T3
    "unfairness   [or]   inequity".        See   Oberhand       v.     Dir.,   Div.    of
    Taxation, 
    193 N.J. 558
    , 572 (2008) (quoting In re D.C., 
    146 N.J. 31
    , 58 (1996)).      Thus, the second part of the James test does
    not limit retroactive application of the revised waiver statute.
    Were we to disagree with Judge Blee's findings and consider
    the extraordinary action urged by the State — waiving J.F. based
    on our review of the record without a remand — we would be
    constrained to "apply the statute in effect at the time of [our]
    decision" in accordance with the "current policy declared by the
    legislative   body."     
    Bey, supra
    ,      112    N.J.     at    103    (quoting
    
    Kruvant, supra
    , 82 N.J. at 440).
    Alternatively,      were      we     to         reverse        Judge    Blee's
    determination and remand for a new waiver hearing, the judge
    would apply the age requirement of the revised waiver statute,
    not only for the reasons expressed above, but also because the
    "savings statute" anticipates the utilization of more lenient
    sentencing provisions enacted prior to the imposition of the
    penalty.   Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 1:1-15:
    No offense committed, and no liability,
    penalty or forfeiture, either civil or
    criminal, incurred, previous to the time of
    the repeal or alteration of any act or part
    of any act, by the enactment of the Revised
    Statutes or by any act heretofore or
    hereafter enacted, shall be discharged,
    released or affected by the repeal or
    alteration of the statute under which such
    offense, liability, penalty or forfeiture
    26                                     A-0392-15T3
    was   incurred,   unless  it   is   expressly
    declared in the act by which such repeal or
    alteration is effectuated, that an offense,
    liability, penalty or forfeiture already
    committed or incurred shall be thereby
    discharged, released or affected; . . . .
    [(Emphasis added).]
    "[T]he   savings   statute      was   designed   to    prevent    a   new     law    —
    absent an express declaration when the new law is enacted — from
    'discharg[ing], releas[ing] or affect[ing]' the application of
    an existing law, but it contains different triggering events for
    different occurrences."          State ex rel. C.F., 
    444 N.J. Super. 179
    ,   188    (2016)   (second,       third,   and    fourth     alterations        in
    original) (quoting N.J.S.A. 1:1-15).                 The statute contains an
    important distinction, noting that "'offense[s]' are 'committed'
    and    'penalt[ies]'      are   'incurred.'"          
    Ibid. (alterations in original)
    (quoting N.J.S.A. 1:1-15).             In evaluating retroactive
    application, we consider the "date an offense was committed in
    determining whether a new law, which discharges, releases or
    affects an offense, should be applied to that offense, but . . .
    look to the date a penalty was incurred to determine whether a
    new law should discharge, release or affect the penalty for the
    offense."     
    Id. at 188-89.
    In C.F., we scrutinized whether a defendant, who was a
    juvenile at the time the offense was committed forty years ago,
    should   be    punished     according     to   the     current    more      lenient
    27                                  A-0392-15T3
    sentencing laws, calling for a maximum of ten years in prison,
    or   the    1976      statute    authorizing      an   indeterminate      to    life
    sentence:
    [P]unishment for criminal offenses is based
    not only on the need to confine an offender
    for the protection of society, but also to
    deter   future  criminal   conduct  and   to
    rehabilitate the offender.    These concerns
    are not necessarily served by imposing a
    penalty society no longer deems proper.   In
    this sense, it has been recognized that an
    "ameliorative"  statute  "may    be  applied
    retroactively."
    [Id. at 190 (quoting 
    Smigelski, supra
    , 30
    N.J. at 527).]
    For the very reasons expressed in C.F., the current age
    provision should be applied to a juvenile such as J.F. who,
    under the revised statute, would no longer face the possibility
    of   waiver     as    a    result   of    any   offenses    he   committed      as   a
    fourteen-year-old.          As we have previously outlined, a waiver to
    adult court is part of the extended process of determining the
    severity      of     the   sentence      that   will   be   doled   out     after    a
    determination that the juvenile has committed an offense.
    Lastly, the State argues in its supplemental brief that the
    holding    in      C.F.    is   inapplicable     because    a    juvenile      waiver
    statute does not deal with penalties, but, rather, is merely a
    28                               A-0392-15T3
    procedural mechanism.14     The State's argument that the revised
    waiver   statute   is     procedural   squarely   contradicts      their
    insistence on adherence to the prior waiver statute.       As stated
    in N.J.S.A. 1:1-15:
    [W]hen the Revised Statutes, or other act by
    which    such   repeal    or   alteration   is
    effectuated, shall relate to mere matters of
    practice    or   mode    of   procedure,   the
    proceedings had thereafter on the indictment
    or in the prosecution for such offenses,
    liabilities, penalties or forfeitures shall
    be   in   such   respects,   as   far   as  is
    practicable,    in    accordance    with   the
    provisions of the Revised Statutes or such
    subsequent act.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Thus, were we to accept the State's argument that the statute is
    procedural and also determine that a new hearing was warranted,
    the revised waiver statute would control that hearing.
    We affirm both on the basis of Judge Blee's comprehensive
    opinion and based upon the retroactive application of N.J.S.A.
    14
    Although not argued by the State, we have considered the
    Legislature's determination to make the statute effective seven
    months   after   enactment.     In   determining   a   statute's
    retroactivity, its effective date is relevant to the first
    exception enunciated in Gibbons and not the analysis of whether
    the statute was ameliorative. See Lombardo v. Revlon, Inc., 
    328 N.J. Super. 484
    , 490 (App. Div. 2000).   Further, the delay was
    likely necessitated by the Attorney General's need to prepare
    guidelines and the requirement that the JJC establish a program
    to gather and report data. N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c), (g).
    29                            A-0392-15T3
    2A:4A-26.1(c)(1), which precludes the waiver of juveniles who
    are less than fifteen years old at the time of the offense.
    Affirmed.
    30                        A-0392-15T3
    RECORD IMPOUNDED
    GILSON, J.S.C. t/a, concurring.
    I join in parts I and II of the majority's well-reasoned
    opinion.      I do not join in part III because we need not address
    whether the age restriction in the recently revised N.J.S.A.
    2A:4A-26.1(c)(1) applies retroactively.
    As the majority noted, Judge Blee did not apply the revised
    statute, which became effective on March 1, 2016.                      Moreover, no
    party   raised      the    retroactive    application        of   N.J.S.A.      2A:4A-
    26.1(c)(1) on this appeal.            Instead, this court raised the issue
    at   oral     argument     and,   thereafter,     we       directed    supplemental
    briefing      on    that    issue.       Under   these       circumstances,       the
    retroactive application of the age restriction in the revised
    statute was not, in my view, an alternative holding.
    My decision not to join in part III of this opinion is
    based on the principle that courts should not reach issues that
    are not necessary to the resolution of a case and, thereby, run
    the risk of giving an advisory opinion.                     See G.H. v. Twp. of
    Galloway, 
    199 N.J. 135
    , 136 (2009) (declining to reach questions
    of   limits    to   statutory     preemption     of    municipal       action    in   a
    challenge to the viability of existing ordinances).                          In that
    regard, our Supreme Court has consistently reasoned that "[t]he
    judicial      function     operates    best   when     a    concrete    dispute       is
    presented to the courts."             
    Ibid. Indeed, the Court
    has recently
    reminded      us   that   we    should       not    make    rulings      that    are       not
    necessary to the disposition of the appeal.                      See State v. J.M.,
    Jr., _____ N.J. _____ (2016) (slip op. at 18, 21) (reversing the
    imposition of "a bright-line rule prohibiting the admission of
    acquitted-act evidence" when such a ruling was "not necessary,"
    "had    no    bearing     on    the     disposition        of   the   appeal[,]"           and
    "effectively rendered an advisory opinion").
    Here,   affirming        Judge    Blee's      ruling     completely       resolves
    this appeal.       The question of the retroactive application of the
    new statutory age requirement is neither necessary nor does it
    bear on the disposition of the appeal.
    Moreover,     as   the    majority        correctly      notes,     there      is   no
    express language in the revised statute itself that addresses
    whether      the   Legislature        intended      the    statute    to    be       applied
    retroactively.       See L. 2015, c. 89.              Although the majority would
    apply the revised statute retroactively to this appeal, it does
    not    clarify     whether      the     revised      statute     applies        in    other
    circumstances.       For example, does the revised statute apply to a
    case where the juvenile has already been waived to adult court
    and    the   trial   is   pending       or   has     actually     begun?         Does      the
    revised statute apply to a case where the juvenile was waived to
    adult court, was convicted, and is pending sentencing or appeal?
    2                                     A-0392-15T3
    Posing     those   questions      illustrates        the   wisdom    of   avoiding
    advisory    opinions,     which    are       not   presented    in    a   concrete
    dispute.
    In     sum,    I   would   affirm    on    the    basis    of    Judge    Blee's
    comprehensive opinion, and I would not reach the retroactive
    application of N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-26.1(c)(1).
    3                                   A-0392-15T3