STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. ALFREDO LOPEZÂ (13-10-1370, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0070-15T3
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ALFREDO LOPEZ, a/k/a BUGSY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________
    Submitted May 3, 2017 – Decided June 29, 2017
    Before Judges Accurso and Lisa.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Bergen County, Indictment No.
    13-10-01370.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
    for appellant (Stephen W. Kirsch, Assistant
    Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Bergen County Prosecutor,
    attorney for respondent (Catherine A. Foddai,
    Senior Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    After his motion to suppress evidence seized as a result of
    a   search   conducted     pursuant     to,    or   as   a    consequence        of,    a
    communications data warrant authorizing the installation and use
    of a Global Positioning System (GPS) device on his automobile,
    defendant pled guilty to first-degree possession with intent to
    distribute    heroin,     N.J.S.A.      2C:35-5a(1)      and      5b(1).       He    was
    sentenced    in   accordance     with    the   recommendation            in   his   plea
    agreement    to   ten    years   imprisonment       with     a    five-year      parole
    disqualifier, to be served consecutively to a sentence he was then
    serving.     On appeal, defendant argues:
    POINT I
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE ITEMS
    SEIZED SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED; THERE WAS NOT
    PROBABLE CAUSE FOR THE ISSUANCE OF THE SEARCH
    WARRANT.
    POINT II
    THE   MATTER    SHOULD   BE   REMANDED                   FOR
    RECONSIDERATION OF THE SENTENCE.
    We reject these arguments and affirm.
    The warrant authorizing the GPS device was issued on February
    19, 2013.     It was supported by the affidavit of that date by New
    Jersey State Trooper Richard Pogorzelski, who was assigned to the
    Violent and Organized Crime Control North Bureau, Drug Trafficking
    North Unit (DTNU), Strategic Targeting Squad.                     The judge to whom
    the   affidavit    was    presented     was    limited       to    the    information
    2                                      A-0070-15T3
    contained within the four corners of the affidavit.                      State v.
    Wilson, 
    178 N.J. 7
    , 14 (2003).            Accordingly, we will set forth a
    summary of those facts, to which both the Law Division judge and
    we are limited in determining the propriety of the warrant.
    Pogorzelski had extensive training and experience in drug
    identification      and    investigative      procedures,      including       with
    respect to illicit distribution of narcotics, gang investigations,
    and the collection of gang-related intelligence.                He possessed a
    Bachelor of Arts degree in criminal justice, and had been assigned
    to the DTNU for eight years at the time of making the affidavit.
    He had participated in more than one hundred narcotics and criminal
    investigations.       He    had    arrested   and   interviewed    individuals
    involved with violating drug laws as well as members and associates
    of street gangs.     He had conducted surveillance on individuals and
    groups who are members of criminal organizations.                Through these
    activities    and   contacts       with   other   law   enforcement      agencies
    enforcing gang and narcotics violations, he had become familiar
    with methods and patterns of activities associated with street
    gangs and the distribution of illegal drugs.
    In January 2012, the DTNU received information from the Drug
    Enforcement   Agency       (DEA)   that   defendant     was   involved    in   the
    distribution of heroin in and around northern New Jersey and New
    York.   The information provided defendant's date of birth and
    3                               A-0070-15T3
    described the car he was using, a gray Jaguar XJ, to transport and
    store heroin and the proceeds derived from sales.
    A check of motor vehicle records revealed that defendant also
    owned a 2007 Cadillac Escalade.          It was later learned that this
    vehicle received a parking ticket in the area of Charles Street
    in Garfield on October 10, 2012.
    A subsequent criminal history check revealed that on March
    3, 2012, defendant had been arrested in Paramus for eluding the
    police.   During the pursuit, he allegedly threw approximately 2500
    decks of heroin out of the motor vehicle before being apprehended.
    He was under indictment in Bergen County for those charges at the
    time of Pogorzelski's affidavit.
    The criminal history check also revealed that defendant had
    indictable convictions for drug distribution crimes committed in
    1998,   2003   and   2005,   resulting   respectively   in   State    Prison
    sentences of eight, four, and five years.            He also had other
    criminal convictions.
    An inquiry into employment records revealed that defendant
    was unemployed at the time of Pogorzelski's affidavit.           His last
    known employment was in 2009.
    Physical surveillance of defendant by the DTNU began on
    January 9, 2013.       The affidavit described observations made on
    January 9, 21 and 25, and February 12, 2013.
    4                               A-0070-15T3
    On January 9, 2013, defendant's Jaguar was observed parked
    in front of 217 MacArthur Avenue in Garfield.                       An individual
    matching defendant's description walked toward it, entered it, and
    drove away from the area.          The car had a temporary registration
    tag, a look-up of which revealed that it had been issued to
    defendant, with an address of 22 Stegman Terrace in Jersey City.
    Surveillance was conducted at that location, but neither the Jaguar
    nor defendant were ever seen there.
    On   January   21,    2013,   the       Jaguar   was   again    seen   at   217
    MacArthur Avenue. Defendant was observed walking around the block,
    repeatedly     looking     from    side-to-side,        scanning      the     area.
    Defendant did not approach the Jaguar, but continued looking side-
    to-side, as if checking for law enforcement presence.
    Based on his training and experience, Pogorzelski stated that
    the use of fictitious addresses is a typical practice utilized by
    large-scale drug dealers to thwart detection of their actual
    whereabouts.     Likewise, his training and experience taught him
    that "squaring the block and looking inside parked cars are
    counter-surveillance maneuvers used by individuals to detect the
    presence of law enforcement."
    On January 25, 2013, the Jaguar was parked in front of 217
    MacArthur Avenue.        It contained a temporary registration issued
    to defendant, but this was different than the one previously
    5                                  A-0070-15T3
    observed.     Based on his training and experience, Pogorzelski was
    aware that "criminals often change the license plates on their
    vehicles in order to hide their true identity or to avoid detection
    of law enforcement."    Further, a second temporary registration is
    not typically issued for a vehicle.          The temporary registration
    initially issued is typically replaced by a permanent license
    plate.
    Another observation was also made on January 25, 2013.                 A
    black Dodge Challenger bearing a Georgia temporary registration
    was parked in front of 217 MacArthur Avenue.        An individual later
    identified as Brandon Pinzon exited the vehicle and walked up to
    the front door while talking on his cell phone, and then returned
    to the Dodge Challenger and sat in the driver's seat for some
    time.    A criminal record check revealed that Pinzon had been
    arrested for distribution of heroin, cocaine and marijuana, and
    possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime.
    After about an hour, Pinzon travelled slowly around the block,
    a maneuver Pogorzelski described as another counter-surveillance
    technique.     Defendant then exited 217 MacArthur Avenue and got
    into the Challenger with Pinzon.       After traveling approximately a
    half of a block, they parked for a short time and then returned
    to where defendant had entered the vehicle.        Defendant got out of
    the   Dodge   Challenger,   entered    his   Jaguar,   and   drove     away.
    6                                 A-0070-15T3
    Pogorzelski stated that, based on his training and experience, he
    believed   this   short   meeting   was    indicative   of   a   narcotics
    transaction or narcotics business meeting, having taken place away
    from 217 MacArthur Avenue because "many times drug dealers conduct
    their illicit business inside vehicles in order to remain hidden
    from view and away from their homes or stash locations."
    On February 12, 2013, defendant came out of 217 MacArthur
    Avenue and walked toward his Jaguar, the whole time talking on his
    cell phone and scanning the area side-to-side.          He got into the
    Jaguar and drove off. He was followed and observed to make erratic
    lane changes and turns without signaling.          He traveled to the
    Paterson Stamp Store in Clifton.          He got out of the Jaguar and
    entered the store for about five minutes.        The store is known to
    members of the DTNU, based on debriefing several defendants and
    confidential sources, as a place used by narcotics traffickers,
    specifically heroin mill managers, to purchase stamps for their
    production facilities.     These are used to affix their brand name
    to the drugs they sell.
    Defendant then drove from the stamp store to Hackensack.             He
    was observed squaring blocks, driving past the same locations,
    repeatedly passing the same streets, looking into vehicles as they
    passed him, and, in one instance, activating his left-turn signal
    but making a right turn.       He eventually parked the Jaguar and
    7                              A-0070-15T3
    walked into a building.         These maneuvers appeared to Pogorzelski
    to     be   further    counter-surveillance           techniques   utilized          by
    defendant to see if law enforcement was following him.
    A utility company record check, with subpoenaed records,
    revealed that defendant was not among the names and addresses of
    any subscribers or customers at 217 MacArthur Avenue. The building
    contained four apartments but defendant was not listed as a
    subscriber or customer in any of them.                   Again, based upon his
    training and experience, Pogorzelski knew "that members of drug
    trafficking organizations utilize fictitious or third party names
    when renting apartments in an attempt to isolate themselves from
    prosecution or detection by law enforcement."
    Pogorzelski expressed the need for the GPS device in order
    to continue this investigation.          Because of the observed counter-
    surveillance techniques defendant was utilizing, it was his belief
    that    "continued    physical    surveillance         increases   the    risk       of
    compromising      the     integrity          and      effectiveness      of       this
    investigation"        because    their        cover     would   eventually           be
    compromised, "thereby endangering the chances of ascertaining the
    full scope of the illegal operation."              Accordingly, "the requested
    device is a crucial aid to physical surveillance that will permit
    the investigation to remain covert and for the safety of the
    officers involved in this surveillance."               Further, the device will
    8                                    A-0070-15T3
    permit monitoring of the location of the Jaguar, "which there is
    probable cause to believe will be the transport vehicle for the
    narcotics."   Additionally, the device would help to establish a
    pattern for defendant's movements and contacts.
    The affidavit also contained the following paragraphs:
    17.     Based upon my training and
    experience, and the information developed thus
    far in this investigation, I know that
    transactions and meetings related to the
    transportation and distribution of controlled
    dangerous substances occur at diverse hours
    of the day and night on a seven day-a-week
    basis. I also know, based upon my training
    and experience, that persons involved in
    illegal drug distribution activities often
    vary the patterns of operation to avoid
    detection.     I further believe that the
    captioned gray Jaguar XJ, will be used in the
    furtherance of the commission of the specified
    crimes on an unpredictable basis and at all
    hours of the day and night, seven days-a-week.
    18. I believe that the execution of the
    Communications Data Warrant and Search Warrant
    described in Paragraph 2, supra, will reveal
    the location of the captioned gray Jaguar XJ
    as it travels in and around New Jersey, as
    well as to neighboring jurisdictions.       By
    tracking the captioned vehicle, I will be able
    to determine the time and route of the
    captioned vehicle and the locations to which
    it is driven.      I will be able to make
    arrangements to place the said vehicle under
    physical surveillance when feasible and safe
    to do so. The combined use of the monitoring
    device and physical surveillance will assist
    in identifying other individuals involved in,
    and significant locations used by this
    organization for the processing, transfer, and
    storage of illicit narcotics, and the proceeds
    9                         A-0070-15T3
    generated   therefrom.       Determining   the
    identities of all the individuals involved in
    this operation, as well as key locations used,
    will assist in defining the overall scope of
    the operation and in gathering sufficient
    evidence   to   successfully   prosecute   its
    members.
    The affidavit was presented to Judge Edward A. Jerejian, who
    issued the warrant.     By its terms, the warrant expressed the
    judge's findings that
    the facts presented in said application show
    probable cause for believing that issuance of
    an Order to install and monitor a tracking
    device . . . upon the subject automobile will
    lead to the discovery of evidence of [drug]
    crimes . . . and that said installation and
    monitoring will tend to identify individuals
    engaged in violations of the aforementioned
    offenses.
    Defendant pled guilty on January 13, 2015, to possession with
    intent to distribute heroin.   In the plea colloquy he acknowledged
    that on March 21, 2013, he possessed, along with others, five
    ounces or more of heroin with the purpose to give or sell it to
    others.   The pre-sentence report reveals that the incident in
    which the drugs were seized and the arrests were made involved
    defendant who arrived at the location in the gray Jaguar.        The
    matters contained in this paragraph, of course, are not contained
    within the four corners of the search warrant affidavit. We merely
    state them for purposes of completeness.
    10                          A-0070-15T3
    Defendant moved to suppress the evidence seized as a result
    of the search warrant authorizing installation of the GPS device
    on his Jaguar.     The motion came before Judge Liliana S. DeAvila-
    Silebi.    No testimony was presented.           The sole issue was whether
    the search warrant affidavit provided the requisite probable cause
    to authorize issuance of the warrant.
    After hearing oral argument, Judge DeAvila-Silebi issued a
    comprehensive oral opinion.           She recognized the deference that
    should    be   accorded    to   the    issuing     judge's    probable     cause
    assessment, and she set forth the proper standards required to
    establish probable cause.       She recognized that the information in
    the   affidavit   must     be   considered   under     a     totality    of   the
    circumstances test.       Recognizing Pogorzelski's extensive training
    and experience, she observed that it is necessary "to take into
    account what is the trooper observing or what is the police officer
    reporting based on his training and experience because to a
    layperson certain information may be just innocent behavior but
    to a trooper with specific training and experience may see it
    differently."
    The judge then went through the particulars set forth in
    Pogorzelski's affidavit.        She noted that each incident could be
    viewed as innocent behavior, especially by a layperson, but even
    by a law enforcement officer.         However, in the aggregate, she was
    11                                 A-0070-15T3
    persuaded that based on all of the information provided, including
    defendant's       criminal   history     and   the        counter-surveillance
    maneuvers recognized by members of the DTNU, a pattern of conduct
    emerged.   When viewed through the perspective of a law enforcement
    officer    well    trained   and   experienced       in    investigating    the
    behaviors of individuals involved in high-level drug distribution
    enterprises, that pattern of conduct established probable cause
    that defendant was engaged in drug distribution activity and was
    utilizing his Jaguar in those activities.             She therefore denied
    defendant's suppression motion.          She said:
    So for that reason based on everything that
    I've   said   and   the    totality   of   the
    circumstances and all the specific facts that
    I've brought out out of the affidavit, and
    you'll notice I didn't bring out all the facts
    because the other facts are not important in
    my evaluation of the standard.     Those facts
    alone that I brought out are sufficient enough
    to establish a suspicion of criminal activity
    to warrant the GPS installation.
    It's a well founded suspicion or belief
    of guilt. And also traditional surveillance
    methods would not have been effective in this
    case based on the totality of everything that
    happened in the affidavit, how it was
    difficult for them to follow them for long
    periods of time because of the fact that in
    fact they were doing a lot of squaring of the
    blocks.
    So for that reason the GPS was valid.
    The search warrant was valid. It's not going
    to be suppressed, any of the evidence.
    12                                 A-0070-15T3
    Under the Constitutions of the United States and New Jersey,
    individuals are protected from unreasonable searches and seizures,
    and no warrant shall issue except upon probable cause. U.S. Const.
    amend. IV; N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 7.         Unless a search falls within
    one of the recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement, the
    police must first obtain a warrant from a neutral judicial officer
    as a prerequisite to a search.          State v. Sullivan, 
    169 N.J. 204
    ,
    210 (2001).    Before issuing a warrant, the judge must be satisfied
    that probable cause exists to support the belief that a crime has
    been or is being committed at a specific location, or that evidence
    of a crime will be found at the place to be searched.             
    Ibid.
       The
    installation of a GPS device on a vehicle is a search within this
    context.    United States v. Jones, 
    565 U.S. 400
    , 404-12, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
    , 949-53, 
    181 L. Ed. 2d 911
    , 917-23 (2012).
    The concept of probable cause "eludes precise definition."
    Sullivan, 
    supra,
     
    169 N.J. at 210
     (quoting Wildoner v. Borough of
    Ramsey, 
    162 N.J. 375
    , 389 (2000)).         Courts generally accept it to
    mean "less than legal evidence necessary to convict though more
    than mere naked suspicion."         Id. at 210-11 (quoting State v. Mark,
    
    46 N.J. 262
    ,   271   (1966)).      Probable   cause   is   "consistently
    characterized . . . as a common-sense, practical standard" for
    testing a warrant's validity, State v. Novembrino, 
    105 N.J. 95
    ,
    120 (1987), which is met when police have a well grounded suspicion
    13                             A-0070-15T3
    that a crime is being committed.             Sullivan, 
    supra,
     
    169 N.J. at 211
    .
    In   identifying    the   competing    policy    concerns    behind    the
    probable cause requirement, our Supreme Court has said:
    Probable    cause   is    a    flexible,
    nontechnical concept. It includes a conscious
    balancing of the governmental need for
    enforcement of the criminal law against the
    citizens' constitutionality protected right
    of privacy.       It must be regarded as
    representing an effort to accommodate those
    often competing interests so as to serve them
    both in a practical fashion without unduly
    hampering the one or unreasonably impairing
    the significant content of the other.
    [State v. Kasabucki, 
    52 N.J. 110
    , 116 (1968).]
    The United States Supreme Court similarly described probable cause
    as a "practical, non-technical conception."                  Illinois v. Gates,
    
    462 U.S. 213
    , 231, 
    103 S. Ct. 2317
    , 2328, 
    76 L. Ed. 2d 527
    , 544
    (1983).      Probable cause requires more than mere suspicion; it
    requires a showing of a "fair probability" that criminal activity
    is taking place.       State v. Demeter, 
    124 N.J. 374
    , 380-81 (1991).
    A probable cause determination must be based on the totality
    of the circumstances and requires consideration of probabilities.
    State   v.    Jones,    
    179 N.J. 377
    ,   389.      The    totality   of   the
    circumstances     is,     by   definition,     very    fact     sensitive.       A
    qualitative analysis is required to be applied to the unique facts
    and circumstances in any given case.                State v. Keyes, 
    184 N.J. 14
                                    A-0070-15T3
    541, 556 (2005).   The analysis comes down to a "practical, common-
    sense decision."   Jones, 
    supra,
     179 N.J. at 390.      Whether probable
    cause exists "involves no more than a value judgment upon a factual
    complex rather than an evident application of a precise rule of
    law, and indeed a value judgment which inevitably reflects the
    seasoning and experience of the one who judges."           Schneider v.
    Simonini, 
    163 N.J. 336
    , 362 (2000), cert. denied, 
    531 U.S. 1146
    ,
    
    121 S. Ct. 1083
    , 
    148 L. Ed. 2d 959
     (2001) (quoting State v.
    Funicello, 
    60 N.J. 60
    , 72-73 (Weintraub, C.J., concurring), cert.
    denied, 
    408 U.S. 942
    , 
    92 S. Ct. 2849
    , 
    33 L. Ed. 2d 766
     (1972)).
    For these reasons, a reviewing judge should pay "substantial
    deference" to the discretionary determination of the judge who
    issued the warrant.   Sullivan, 
    supra,
     
    169 N.J. at 211
    ; Kasabucki,
    
    supra,
     
    52 N.J. at 117
    .    Review of a warrant's efficacy "is guided
    by the flexible nature of probable cause and by the deference
    shown to issuing courts that apply that doctrine."            Sullivan,
    
    supra,
     
    169 N.J. at 217
    .      Warrant applications "should be read
    sensibly rather than hypercritically and should be deemed legally
    sufficient so long as they contain[] factual assertions which
    would lead a prudent [person] to believe that a crime [has] been
    committed and that evidence . . . of the crime [is] at the place
    sought to be searched."    
    Ibid.
            (quoting State v. Laws, 
    50 N.J. 15
                               A-0070-15T3
    159, 173 (1967) (alteration in original), cert. denied, 
    393 U.S. 971
    , 
    89 S. Ct. 408
    , 
    21 L. Ed. 2d 384
     (1968)).
    If the information in the affidavit could have reasonably led
    the   issuing     judge     to   find    probable      cause,    that     judge's
    determination should not be second guessed upon review.                 When the
    adequacy of the facts supporting probable cause in a search warrant
    affidavit   is    challenged,     "and       their   adequacy   appears    to    be
    marginal, the doubt should ordinarily be resolved by sustaining
    the search."     Jones, supra, 179 N.J. at 388-89 (quoting Kasabucki,
    
    supra,
     
    52 N.J. at 116
    ). It is therefore well settled that a search
    executed pursuant to a warrant is presumed valid, and the defendant
    bears the burden of proving lack of probable cause in the warrant
    application.     Sullivan, 
    supra,
     
    169 N.J. at 211
    .
    For the purposes of this court's appellate review, a Law
    Division judge's review of whether a search warrant was supported
    by adequate probable cause is a question of law. The trial court's
    interpretation of the law is not entitled to any special deference,
    and our review is de novo.          Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm.
    of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995).
    Applying these principles, upon our de novo review, we concur
    with Judge DeAvila-Silebi's conclusion that the issuing judge did
    not   err   in    finding    that    Pogorzelski's        affidavit     provided
    sufficient facts to establish probable cause that defendant was
    16                                A-0070-15T3
    engaged    in     ongoing   drug     distribution      activity.      We      reject
    defendant's argument that Pogorzelski set forth nothing more than
    a series of hunches which, even if considered in the aggregate,
    did not establish a reasonable probability of criminal activity.
    We agree, as did Judge DeAvila-Silebi, that viewed in isolation,
    each of the observed incidents would not support a probable cause
    finding. Likewise, the information received from the DEA, although
    reliable and sufficiently detailed to lend credibility to it, was
    a year old when physical surveillance of defendant began. However,
    it   did    provide       background      information     which,    along       with
    defendant's       prior   criminal     history,     including    three   separate
    indictable      convictions     for      drug    distribution    offenses,      was
    properly considered.         It was also appropriate for members of the
    DTNU to take into account defendant's arrest on March 3, 2012, for
    a drug related offense, in which he allegedly possessed a very
    large quantity of heroin which was packaged for distribution.
    The counter-surveillance techniques described by Pogorzelski
    might not be obvious to laypersons, and might not be significant
    in a single isolated incident.                  However, through the lens of
    training    and      experience,   the    continuous    utilization      of   these
    techniques demonstrated to law enforcement officers possessing
    expertise       in     investigating       high-level     drug     distribution
    organizations a substantial probability that drug distribution
    17                                A-0070-15T3
    activity was being conducted.           Defendant's suppression motion was
    properly denied.
    Defendant's excessive sentencing argument requires little
    discussion.      Pursuant      to     the    plea    agreement,      defendant       was
    sentenced for this first-degree crime to a base term at the bottom
    of   the   first-degree      range,    namely       ten   years,   with     a    parole
    disqualifier    of    five   years.         Also,    as   provided     in   the     plea
    agreement, the sentence was ordered to be served consecutively to
    the sentence defendant was then serving for a drug conviction
    arising out of the March 3, 2012 arrest.
    Judge James J. Guida imposed the sentence.                       He found the
    applicability of aggravating factors (3) the risk that defendant
    will commit another offense, (6) the extent and seriousness of
    defendant's prior criminal record, and (9) the need for deterrence.
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1a(3), (6) and (9). Because of defendant's advanced
    kidney disease for which he was receiving dialysis treatment, the
    judge   found   the   applicability         of   mitigating       factor    (11)     the
    imprisonment    of    defendant        would     entail     excessive       hardship.
    N.J.S.A.     2C:44-1b(11).            The      judge      found    a    substantial
    preponderance of aggravating factors.                Defendant does not dispute
    those findings by Judge Guida.
    This, of course, would have justified at least a mid-range
    base term of fifteen years up to the twenty-year maximum for a
    18                                      A-0070-15T3
    first-degree crime.       However, because of the plea agreement,
    defendant was given the benefit of the bottom-of-the-range ten-
    year base term.       In these circumstances, we find no abuse of
    discretion in the imposition of a period of parole ineligibility
    of five years, rather than the three-and-one-third years defendant
    seeks.
    Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5h, when a defendant is sentenced
    for an offense committed while released pending disposition of a
    previous offense,
    the   term   of    imprisonment   shall   run
    consecutively to any sentence of imprisonment
    imposed for the previous offense, unless the
    court, in consideration of the character and
    conditions of the defendant, finds that
    imposition of consecutive sentences would be
    a serious injustice which overrides the need
    to deter such conduct by others.
    Defendant    argues    that   Judge    Guida     did   not     give   adequate
    consideration to whether or not defendant satisfied the serious
    injustice test. Defendant seeks a remand for further consideration
    of the issue.    We do not agree.
    Judge Guida expressed his reasons for finding that the serious
    injustice test was not satisfied.               In doing so, he gave due
    consideration   to    defendant's     serious    medical     condition.     His
    stated reasons included the following:
    I also find that he is suffering from late-
    stage or end-stage kidney disease which
    19                               A-0070-15T3
    apparently is being treated at the prison
    facility. To the extent that he's performing
    now -- he appears to be healthy and I -- I say
    that exteriorly; I don't know what's going on
    inside him.    He's able to communicate with
    me, answer questions and gave me a statement
    as to his position which was actually
    eloquent, and also indicating from the records
    that were given to me or the letters that were
    given to me, certificates that he's able to
    be a mentor in the prison. So while it is a
    hardship, I don't find that it is an extreme
    hardship in that regard.
    The judge did not err in finding that defendant had not
    satisfied the very high standard required to trigger the exception
    to the presumptive consecutive sentencing requirement of N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-5h.    We are satisfied that the judge's findings regarding
    aggravating and mitigating factors were based on competent and
    credible    evidence   in   the   record,   he   correctly   applied   the
    sentencing guidelines set forth in the Code of Criminal Justice,
    and the sentence imposed was not excessive or unduly punitive and
    did not constitute an abuse of discretion.          State v. O'Donnell,
    
    117 N.J. 210
     (1989); State v. Gertler, 
    114 N.J. 383
     (1989); State
    v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
     (1984).
    Affirmed.
    20                            A-0070-15T3