State v. Patrick McFarlane(075938) , 224 N.J. 458 ( 2016 )


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  •                                                       SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    State of New Jersey v. Patrick McFarlane (A-7-15) (075938)
    Argued January 5, 2016 -- Decided April 7, 2016
    SOLOMON, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court determines whether a remand for resentencing before a different judge is required
    after the trial judge remarked during a subsequent, unrelated status conference that he always gives sixty-year
    sentences to defendants convicted by a jury of first-degree murder.
    On May 4, 2008, defendant Patrick McFarlane and a co-defendant approached a group of men playing dice.
    Defendant pulled out a revolver and instructed the men to stay where they were. When the men ran, defendant
    chased them, firing his gun at Richard Mason and striking him in the back. As Mason lay on the ground, struggling
    to breathe, defendant robbed him and fled the scene. Mason died shortly thereafter.
    Defendant was charged with first-degree murder, felony-murder, and armed robbery, and second-degree
    possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose. Following a jury trial, he was convicted of all counts. During
    sentencing, the State requested an aggregate term of eighty years, subject to an eighty-five percent period of parole
    ineligibility under the No Early Release Act (NERA). Defendant requested a thirty-year term with thirty years’
    parole ineligibility on the murder count, and a concurrent ten-year term on the robbery count, subject to NERA.
    In determining the appropriate sentence, the trial judge applied three aggravating factors, noting that
    defendant’s prior criminal record was extensive and serious and that he had committed the instant offense during the
    only four-month time period he had not been incarcerated since he was sixteen. The judge also gave a small amount
    of weight to one mitigating factor. After merging the felony murder and unlawful possession charges, the judge
    imposed a sixty-year term on the first-degree murder count and a concurrent twenty-year term on the first-degree
    armed robbery count, both subject to NERA.
    Defendant appealed and moved to supplement the record with a transcript of a status conference in State v.
    Brown, a different murder case involving the same judge that took place thirteen months after defendant’s
    sentencing, as well as three judgments of conviction (JOC) by the same judge involving other defendants convicted
    of murder following jury trials. The transcript of the Brown status conference shows that, after the defendant
    rejected the State’s plea offer of forty-five years for first-degree murder, the trial judge stated: “I always give
    defendants convicted by a jury [of first-degree murder] a minimum of 60 years NERA, and you can check my
    record.” The three JOCs showed that the same judge sentenced three other defendants convicted by juries of first-
    degree murder to sixty-year terms of imprisonment, subject to NERA.
    The Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s conviction and sentence, concluding that the trial judge
    adequately explained his reasons for finding the aggravating and mitigating factors. The panel found that the
    judge’s statement during the Brown status conference and the three unrelated JOCs do not support the claim that
    defendant’s sentence was arbitrary or excessive.
    Approximately four months after the Appellate Division decided this matter, another panel decided State v.
    Richardson in an unpublished opinion. There, defendant Lamont Richardson appealed the same trial judge’s sixty-
    year sentence, citing the Brown status conference statement and the three JOCs. Although the panel held that the
    judge did not violate the sentencing guidelines, it concluded that it could not ignore the judge’s statement suggesting
    that he may not provide each defendant with individualized consideration during sentencing. Accordingly, the panel
    remanded for resentencing of Richardson, requiring a detailed explanation of the Brown status conference statement.
    At the remand hearing, the judge acknowledged that his remarks were inappropriate, but he rejected the notion that
    he had a policy of giving predetermined sentences to those convicted of first-degree murder. He asserted that his
    sentences were not “automatic,” explaining that he uses a five-page worksheet to assess and balance the relevant
    factors and “undertakes an individualized consideration as required in every sentence.”
    The Court granted defendant’s petition for certification, limited to the issue of his sentence. 
    223 N.J. 276
    (2015).
    1
    HELD: The trial judge’s statement during a subsequent, unrelated status conference that he always gives sixty-year
    sentences to defendants convicted by a jury of first-degree murder undermines public confidence in our system of
    criminal sentencing. Consequently, the matter is remanded for resentencing by a different judge.
    1. Under New Jersey’s sentencing jurisprudence, in order to resolve the tension between an individualized
    sentencing approach and the goal of sentencing uniformity, a framework of structured judicial discretion was
    established by the Code of Criminal Justice. Under this framework, the sentencing court must explain its analysis
    and application of the relevant statutory aggravating and mitigating factors, as well as its reasons for imposing the
    sentence, thereby avoiding sentencing disparity, facilitating effective appellate review, and ensuring that the
    defendant, the State and the public understand the reasons for the sentence. (pp. 8-11)
    2. Here, defendant’s contention that he was arbitrarily sentenced to a sixty-year term without due consideration to
    the unique facts of his case is based in part on the trial judge’s sentencing record. Specifically, in the case of
    Lamont Richardson, who was convicted of first-degree murder, related weapons offenses, and fourth-degree
    tampering with evidence, the judge found four aggravating factors and no mitigating ones. He rejected the seventy-
    two year term requested by the State, instead imposing a sixty-year term, subject to NERA. Similarly, in the case of
    Damien Johnson and Brian Johnson, co-defendants who were convicted of first-degree murder and robbery and
    second-degree robbery and possession of weapons for unlawful purposes and were sentenced nine months after
    defendant, the judge found four aggravating factors and no mitigating ones. He again sentenced both defendants to
    sixty-year terms, subject to NERA. (pp. 11-13)
    3. The Court acknowledges that the record of the sentencing hearing in this matter reveals that the trial judge did
    not violate the sentencing guidelines. However, a remark in open court, even in a subsequent, unrelated proceeding,
    that a judge “always” sentences defendants convicted of first-degree murder to sixty years in prison improperly
    suggests that the unique facts of each defendant’s case are not considered when determining the appropriate
    sentence. Although the Court accords substantial deference to sentencing determinations and acknowledges the trial
    judge’s explanation of his sentencing methodology given during the remand hearing in Richardson, it finds that the
    Brown status conference statement, particularly when viewed in light of the trial judge’s sentencing record,
    undermines public confidence in our system of criminal sentencing. Accordingly, to preserve public trust in the
    sentencing framework established by our Code of Criminal Justice, the Court reverses the judgment of the Appellate
    Division and remands for resentencing by another trial judge of the Mercer Vicinage. The Court offers no comment
    on the appropriate sentence to be imposed. (pp. 13-15)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED, and the matter is REMANDED to a different trial
    court judge for resentencing, consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, and PATTERSON; and JUDGE
    CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE SOLOMON’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA did
    not participate.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-7 September Term 2015
    075938
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    PATRICK MCFARLANE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Argued January 5, 2016 – Decided April 7, 2016
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Margaret R. McLane, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant
    (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    attorney).
    Katie Mae Magee, Assistant Prosecutor,
    argued the cause for respondent (Angelo J.
    Onofri, Acting Mercer County Prosecutor,
    attorney).
    Alexander R. Shalom argued the cause for
    amicus curiae American Civil Liberties Union
    of New Jersey (Edward L. Barocas, Legal
    Director, attorney).
    JUSTICE SOLOMON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Defendant chased an unarmed man, whom he was attempting to
    rob, and shot him in the back with a revolver.   The victim was
    alive and gasping for air after he fell to the ground, but
    defendant robbed him and left him to die.   Defendant was
    1
    convicted of first-degree murder, among other things, and
    sentenced to sixty years in prison.
    We are called upon to determine whether defendant’s
    sentence should be vacated and the matter remanded for
    resentencing before a different judge, because the trial judge
    remarked during a subsequent, unrelated status conference that
    he always gives sixty-year sentences to a defendant convicted by
    a jury of first-degree murder.   While we acknowledge the judge’s
    subsequent explanation for his remarks, preservation of the
    public’s confidence and trust in our system of criminal
    sentencing requires that the matter be remanded for resentencing
    by another judge of the same vicinage.
    I.
    A.
    On May 4, 2008, defendant Patrick McFarlane and co-
    defendant Roderick Armstrong approached a group of men playing
    dice in Trenton.   When defendant displayed a revolver and
    instructed the players to stay where they were, they scattered
    in different directions.   Defendant chased and fired his
    revolver at Richard Mason, striking him in the back.     After
    Mason fell to the ground, defendant reached into his pockets and
    took money, a watch, and a chain, and then fled the scene.
    Mason was alive but struggling to breathe when police arrived;
    2
    he died thirty minutes after being transported to a local
    hospital.
    The Mercer County Grand Jury indicted defendant for first-
    degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1) and (2); first-degree
    felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3) and N.J.S.A. 2C:2-6;
    first-degree armed robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1 and N.J.S.A. 2C:2-
    6; and second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful
    purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a) and N.J.S.A. 2C:2-6.   After a jury
    trial, defendant was convicted of all counts.1
    The record at sentencing reflects the following.    The State
    requested that the Court impose a sixty-year term of
    imprisonment for the first-degree murder and a consecutive
    twenty-year sentence for first-degree robbery.   Therefore, the
    aggregate sentence requested by the State was eighty years, both
    with an eighty-five percent period of parole ineligibility under
    the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.    Defense
    counsel requested a thirty-year term of imprisonment with thirty
    years of parole ineligibility on the murder count, along with a
    concurrent ten-year sentence on the first-degree robbery count,
    subject to NERA.
    1 Co-defendant Roderick Armstrong received an aggregate twenty-
    year sentence in exchange for testifying against defendant and
    pleading guilty to first-degree robbery and an unrelated
    carjacking.
    3
    The trial judge applied aggravating factor three, N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-1(a)(3), noting that there was a risk the nineteen-year-
    old defendant would commit a future offense because he had five
    petitions and two adjudications of delinquency as a juvenile2 and
    five adult arrests, and had been incarcerated since age sixteen,
    except for a four-month period during which he committed Mason’s
    murder and another unrelated first-degree robbery.   The judge
    also applied aggravating factor six, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(6),
    finding that defendant’s prior criminal record was extensive and
    serious because defendant was convicted of robbery as a juvenile
    and theft by unlawful taking as an adult.   In addition, the
    judge applied aggravating factor nine, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(9),
    finding that there was a need to deter defendant and others from
    violating the law because defendant targeted and shot the victim
    in the back, robbed him, and left him to die.
    After discussing the three aggravating factors, the judge
    also gave “a small amount of weight” to mitigating factor six,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(6),3 assuming that “during his incarceration
    the [d]efendant chooses to work and . . . the warden at the
    2 The two juvenile adjudications were for robbery and possession
    of controlled dangerous substances.
    3 Mitigating factor six is whether “[t]he defendant compensated
    the victim or will participate in community service.” N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-1(b)(6).
    4
    state facility . . . take[s] one-third of his income and use[s]
    that to reimburse any restitution the Court has ordered.”
    After mentioning his assessment of the aggravating and
    mitigating factors and merging the felony murder and unlawful
    gun possession charges, the judge imposed a sixty-year sentence
    on the first-degree murder count and a concurrent twenty-year
    term on the first-degree armed robbery count, both subject to
    NERA.   The judge rejected the State’s request for a consecutive
    sentence on the robbery count, in part, because defendant was
    nineteen years old when he committed the crime and, after
    serving fifty-one years in prison,4 would be at least seventy
    years of age before becoming eligible for parole.
    On appeal, defendant moved to supplement the record with
    (1) a transcript of a status conference that took place thirteen
    months later on January 14, 2015, in a different murder case,
    State v. Brown, involving the same judge (the Brown status
    conference); and (2) three judgments of conviction by the same
    judge involving other defendants convicted of murder following
    jury trials (the three JOCs).5
    4 Pursuant to NERA, eighty-five percent mandatory period of
    parole ineligibility for the sixty-year imprisonment term on the
    first-degree murder conviction is fifty-one years.
    5Defendant also challenged two evidentiary rulings, the
    prosecutor’s summation, and the jury instructions, none of which
    are the subject of this appeal.
    5
    The transcript of the Brown status conference shows that
    defendant Shaheed Brown rejected the State’s plea offer of
    forty-five years for his first-degree murder charge, and the
    judge then made the following statement:
    I always give defendants convicted by a jury
    [of first-degree murder] a minimum of 60 years
    NERA, and you can check my record . . . . I
    know as much as Mr. Brown thinks 45 years NERA
    is unacceptable[,] my sentence, if he’s
    convicted, and Mr. Brown you’re presumed
    innocent, my sentence [] will be much more
    than 45 years NERA. It’ll be consecutive to
    the . . . [offenses] you’re convicted of by a
    jury.
    The three JOCs showed that the same judge sentenced other
    defendants convicted by juries of first-degree murder -- Lamont
    Richardson, Damien Johnson, and Brian Johnson -- to sixty-year
    terms of imprisonment, subject to NERA.6
    The Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s conviction and
    sentence, concluding that the trial judge properly considered
    and adequately explained his reasons for finding aggravating
    factors three, six, and nine, as well as mitigating factor six.
    In doing so, the panel explained that “the judge’s statement and
    judgments of conviction in unrelated cases do not support
    6 We note that the first time the judge sentenced a defendant
    convicted by a jury of a first-degree murder, he imposed a
    seventy-five year term, subject to NERA, on Peter Klah after
    finding aggravating factors one, three, six, and nine, and no
    mitigating factors.
    6
    defendant’s claim that his sentence here was either excessive or
    arrived at in an arbitrary fashion.”    The panel did not analyze
    the reasonableness of the sentencing determinations in the three
    JOCs, in part, because defendant did not submit the transcripts
    of those sentencing proceedings.
    This Court subsequently granted defendant’s petition for
    certification, limited to the issue of his sentence.    
    223 N.J. 276
     (2015).
    B.
    Approximately four months after the Appellate Division
    decided this matter, another panel decided State v. Richardson
    in an unpublished opinion.   In that case, defendant Lamont
    Richardson appealed the same judge’s sixty-year sentence, citing
    the Brown status conference statement and the three JOCs.
    Although the Richardson panel affirmed the conviction and held
    that the judge did not violate the sentencing guidelines, it
    concluded that it could not “ignore the judge’s own statements
    in open court, which suggests strongly that he may not undertake
    the ‘individualized consideration during sentencing’ to which
    each defendant is entitled under the Code.”    (Quoting State v.
    Jaffe, 
    220 N.J. 114
    , 122 (2014)).    Accordingly, the panel
    remanded for resentencing and required a detailed explanation of
    the judge’s statement during the Brown status conference.
    7
    At the remand hearing, the judge acknowledged that he made
    “inappropriate” and “improper” remarks while being rushed during
    the Brown status conference, but rejected the notion that he had
    a policy of giving predetermined sentences to those convicted of
    first-degree murder.     The judge further explained that his
    sentences were not “automatic”; he described the five-page
    worksheet he used to assess and balance the aggravating and
    mitigating factors and stated, “I strive to have every sentence
    I impose to be in accord with the [Code of Criminal Justice] and
    the directives of the Supreme Court . . . . [T]he court attempts
    in every case, whether it’s a homicide or fourth degree, that it
    undertakes an individualized consideration as required in every
    sentence.”
    II.
    Resolving the divergence between the decisions of the
    Appellate Division here and in the Richardson matter requires a
    brief review of our sentencing jurisprudence.
    In Jaffe, supra, we stated that “each ‘[d]efendant is
    entitled to [an] individualized consideration during
    sentencing.’”   220 N.J. at 122 (quoting State v. Randolph, 
    210 N.J. 330
    , 349 (2012)).    This Court then explained that the
    Legislature wanted trial courts to consider an individual’s
    particular circumstances because “the Legislature listed as
    ‘general purposes’ of the sentencing statute . . .
    8
    ‘differentiat[ion] among offenders with a view to a just
    individualization in their treatment,’ N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b)(6).”
    Id. at 120-21.
    Notwithstanding the need to consider an individual’s
    particular circumstances, we also recognized that one of the
    “paramount goals” of the Code of Criminal Justice “is to
    eliminate arbitrary and idiosyncratic sentencing so that
    similarly situated defendants receive comparable sentences.”
    State v. Case, 
    220 N.J. 49
    , 63 (2014) (citing State v. Natale,
    
    184 N.J. 458
    , 485 (2005)).     Consequently, “‘the Legislature
    codified to a certain extent the traditional emphasis on
    individualized sentencing,’ resulting in a ‘tension between an
    individualized sentencing approach on the one hand, and the
    reforms aimed at sentencing uniformity on the other.’”     Jaffe,
    supra, 220 N.J. at 121 (quoting Randolph, 
    supra,
     
    210 N.J. at 346
    ).
    To resolve this tension and engender confidence in our
    system of criminal sentencing, “the Code has established a
    framework of structured discretion within which judges exercise
    their sentencing authority.”    Case, supra, 220 N.J. at 63.     The
    “structured discretion” established by the Code of Criminal
    Justice compels the sentencing court to explain on the record
    its analysis of the statutory aggravating and mitigating factors
    “with care and precision” so as “[t]o avoid disparity in
    9
    sentencing as the Legislature intended, to facilitate fair and
    effective appellate review, and to ensure that the defendant,
    the State and the public understand the reasons for the
    sentence.”     State v. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. 57
    , 81 (2014).   That is
    accomplished, in part, by the application of Rule 3:21-4(g),
    which provides that “[a]t the time sentence is imposed the judge
    shall state reasons for imposing such sentence including
    findings pursuant to the criteria for withholding or imposing
    imprisonment . . . [and] the factual basis supporting a finding
    of particular aggravating or mitigating factors affecting [the]
    sentence[.]”
    This Court paraphrased those principles as follows:
    “[c]entral to the success of [the sentencing] process is the
    requirement that the judge articulate the reasons for imposing
    sentence.”     Case, supra, 220 N.J. at 54.   “Proper sentencing
    thus requires an explicit and full statement of aggravating and
    mitigating factors and how they are weighed and balanced.”
    Randolph, 
    supra,
     
    210 N.J. at
    348 (citing Natale, 
    supra,
     
    184 N.J. at 488
    ).
    “The balancing process, however, is more than counting
    whether one set of factors outnumbers the other.”     Case, supra,
    220 N.J. at 65 (citing Fuentes, supra, 217 N.J. at 72).
    “Rather, the court must qualitatively assess the relevant
    aggravating and mitigating factors, assigning each factor its
    10
    appropriate weight.”   Ibid. (emphasis added) (citing Fuentes,
    supra, 217 N.J. at 72-73).   Hence, a sentencing judge must
    engage in both quantitative and qualitative assessments of the
    aggravating and mitigating factors, and only then impose a
    sentence consistent with the sentencing range outlined under our
    Code of Criminal Justice.
    III.
    A.
    With this sentencing jurisprudence in mind, we turn to
    defendant’s contention that the trial judge arbitrarily
    sentenced him to a sixty-year term without giving consideration
    to the unique facts of his case, which defendant argues is
    reflected in the judge’s statement in the Brown status
    conference and his sentencing record.    That in turn requires us
    to briefly recount the pertinent aspects of the three JOCs
    involving Lamont Richardson, Damien Johnson, and Brian Johnson.7
    Lamont Richardson was sentenced approximately fifteen
    months before defendant.    Richardson was twenty-one years old at
    the time of his offense, and was convicted of (1) first-degree
    murder of his ex-girlfriend; (2) related unlawful possession of
    7 The parties provided the three JOCs without the associated
    transcripts of the sentencing proceedings. The record therefore
    does not reflect what other assessments and considerations the
    judge may have applied at sentencing, other than the statutory
    aggravating and mitigating factors.
    11
    weapons offenses; and (3) fourth-degree tampering with evidence.
    The judge found aggravating factors one,8 three, six, and nine,
    and no mitigating factors.    After merging the weapons
    convictions with the murder conviction and balancing the
    aggravating and mitigating factors, the judge reviewed the
    sentencing guideline range9 and concluded that the seventy-two-
    year term requested by the State was too high.10    Instead, the
    judge imposed a lesser sixty-year term of imprisonment, subject
    to NERA, and a concurrent one-year term of imprisonment with a
    six-month period of parole ineligibility for tampering with
    evidence.
    Damien Johnson and Brian Johnson, co-defendants but not
    brothers, were both sentenced approximately nine months after
    defendant was sentenced.     Damien Johnson was thirty-two years
    8 Aggravating factor one concerns “[t]he nature and circumstances
    of the offense, and the role of the actor therein, including
    whether or not it was committed in an especially heinous, cruel,
    or depraved manner.” N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(1).
    9 The sentencing range for first-degree murder is thirty years to
    life imprisonment, with a mandatory minimum of a thirty-year
    period of parole ineligibility, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(b)(1), and an
    eighty-five percent parole disqualifier under NERA, N.J.S.A.
    2C:43-7.2(d)(1). A sentence of life imprisonment is deemed to
    be seventy-five years for the purpose of calculating the minimum
    term of parole ineligibility pursuant to a crime of the first
    degree. N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2(b).
    10Defense counsel did not request a specific sentence and
    stated, “there is a possibility for a better Mr. Richardson to
    become a part of our society.”
    12
    old and Brian Johnson was thirty-eight when they committed
    first-degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(2) and (3), first-
    degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1, second-degree burglary,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:18-2(b), and second-degree possession of weapons for
    unlawful purposes, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4.    The judge found that
    Damien Johnson had six prior non-violent drug convictions, and
    that Brian Johnson had three prior convictions involving
    violence.   For both defendants, the judge found aggravating
    factors one, three, six, and nine, and no mitigating factors.
    The judge concluded that the aggravating factors “substantially
    outweigh[ed] and preponderate[d] over the non-existent
    mitigating factors,” and sentenced both defendants to sixty-year
    terms of imprisonment, subject to NERA, on the first-degree
    murder count, concurrent to a fifteen-year term of imprisonment
    on the first-degree robbery count.     Both defendants were also
    ordered to serve a five-year term of parole supervision
    immediately after completing their prison terms.11
    B.
    We acknowledge that the record of the sentencing hearing in
    this matter does not reveal that the trial court violated the
    11Both Damien and Brian Johnson’s direct appeals are currently
    pending before the Appellate Division. Counsel for the
    defendants in those proceedings requested, among other things,
    that the matters be remanded for resentencing after this Court’s
    decision in this matter.
    13
    sentencing guidelines.   Furthermore, the sentencing judge did
    not make any improper comments during the course of this
    proceeding.   However, a remark in open court, even in a
    subsequent, unrelated proceeding, that a judge “always”
    sentences defendants convicted of first-degree murder to sixty
    years in prison undermines public confidence that the unique
    facts of a defendant’s case are considered before a sentencing
    decision is made.   A reasonable person might infer from the
    judge’s statement during the Brown status conference that the
    court arbitrarily imposes a predetermined sentence on those
    convicted by a jury of first-degree murder.
    While we accord substantial deference to sentencing
    determinations and do not substitute our judgment for that of
    the sentencing court, Fuentes, supra, 217 N.J. at 70, and while
    we acknowledge the trial judge’s explanation of his sentencing
    methodology given during the remand hearing in Richardson, we
    find that the Brown status conference statement, particularly
    when viewed in light of the trial judge’s sentencing record,
    undermines public confidence in our system of criminal
    sentencing.   Accordingly, to preserve public trust in the
    sentencing framework established by our Code of Criminal
    Justice, we must reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division
    and remand for resentencing by another trial judge of the Mercer
    14
    Vicinage.   We offer no comment on the appropriate sentence to be
    imposed on remand.
    V.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division with respect to
    sentencing is reversed and the matter is remanded for
    resentencing, consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, and
    PATTERSON; and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE
    SOLOMON’s opinion. JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA did not participate.
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.       A-7                                     SEPTEMBER TERM 2015
    ON CERTIFICATION TO            Appellate Division, Superior Court
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    PATRICK MCFARLANE
    Defendant-Appellant.
    DECIDED               April 7, 2016
    Chief Justice Rabner                       PRESIDING
    OPINION BY           Justice Solomon
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    REVERSE AND
    CHECKLIST
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                         X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                            X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                                X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                            X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                 ---------------
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                              X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                             X
    TOTALS                                       6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-7-15

Citation Numbers: 224 N.J. 458, 134 A.3d 956

Filed Date: 4/7/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023