STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. ANDRE MELLS (11-12-2140, 11-12-2142, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2575-18
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ANDRE MELLS, a/k/a
    RAHMEL JONES, RAMEEL
    JONES, JOSH MELLS, RAHJAN
    MILLS, ANDRE WHITE,
    AUNDRE MELLS, ANDRE
    MELS, TYREE WHITE,
    JAMALE EDWARDS, TYRELL
    WHITE, and TYREE SCOTT.
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________________
    Submitted June 1, 2020 – Decided May 4, 2021
    Before Judges Ostrer and Vernoia.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Essex County, Indictment Nos. 11-12-2140
    and 11-12-2142.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Brian D. Driscoll, Designated Counsel, on
    the brief).
    Theodore N. Stephens II, Acting Essex County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Lucille M.
    Rosano, Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    Defendant Andre Mells appeals from the trial court's denial of post-
    conviction relief after an evidentiary hearing on some of his claims. Mells
    collaterally challenges his convictions for first-degree purposeful murder and
    related second-degree weapons offenses.
    On appeal, he contends that his trial counsel provided ineffective
    assistance by not obtaining his consent before urging the jury to consider lesser-
    included offenses, and by not filing a Brady1 motion where the State failed to
    preserve, or to provide the defense with, crime-scene video footage. He also
    argues that trial counsel ineffectively addressed inconsistencies in three
    eyewitnesses' descriptions, and responded ineffectively when one eyewitness
    quoted the victim's identification of defendant. Mells argues:
    POINT I
    THE COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT THE
    CLAIMS OF INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE DID NOT
    1
    Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    (1963).
    A-2575-18
    2
    PREJUDICE DEFENDANT AND WOULD NOT
    HAVE CHANGED THE RESULT OF THE TRIAL.
    POINT II
    THE COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND
    COUNSEL      RENDERED       INEFFECTIVE
    ASSISTANCE   FOR    FAILURE   TO    GET
    DEFENDANT'S PERMISSION TO ARGUE FOR THE
    LESSER INCLUDED CRIMES.
    POINT III
    THE COURT SHOULD ORDER A NEW TRIAL
    BECAUSE COUNSEL VIOLATED HIS SIXTH
    AMENDMENT RIGHT TO CHOOSE THE
    OBJECTIVE OF HIS DEFENSE.             MCCOY V.
    LOUISIANA, 584 U.S. ___ (2018)[.] [(]NOT RAISED
    BELOW[)].
    POINT IV
    THE COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO FIND
    COUNSEL INEFFECTIVE FOR FAILURE TO FILE
    A MOTION FOR THE STATE'S FAILURE TO
    PRESERVE AND TURN OVER THE VIDEO
    RECORD. BRADY V. MARYLAND, 
    373 U.S. 83
               (1963).
    We affirm.
    I.
    We presume the reader's familiarity with the underlying case, which we
    detailed on direct appeal. State v. Mells, No. A-1035-14 (App. Div. Apr. 3,
    A-2575-18
    3
    2017) (Mells I). As we address the points on appeal, we will highlight relevant
    facts from the trial and the PCR hearing.
    First, we consider Mells's argument that trial counsel ineffectively
    addressed inconsistencies in eyewitness testimony, as well as one eyewitness's
    disclosure that the dying victim named defendant.
    Because the court rejected this aspect of defendant's petition without an
    evidentiary hearing, we review its related findings de novo.       See State v.
    O'Donnell, 
    435 N.J. Super. 351
    , 373 (App. Div. 2014).
    Three eyewitnesses testified at trial: Deborah Jones, Arlene Hopkins, and
    LaStarr LaGrier. Jones and Hopkins gave mutually-consistent testimony; but
    LaGrier, in a recorded statement, claimed she saw things that Jones and Hopkins
    did not.
    Jones was a security guard and a resident at the apartment complex where
    the homicide occurred. She testified that her boyfriend dropped her off at the
    complex on an early afternoon in May. While still in the car, she heard multiple
    pop-pop sounds that she thought were firecrackers. After exiting the car, and
    while she was standing by a fence, she saw the victim sitting on the ground a
    little over forty-five feet away. And she saw defendant — whom she had known
    for twelve years — approach the victim and then, at close range, shoot him three
    A-2575-18
    4
    or four times with a firearm he held in his right hand. After defendant fled,
    Jones went to help the victim as best she could until police, and an ambulance,
    arrived.
    Jones testified that nothing obscured defendant's face. He wore a black-
    and-white striped shirt, black pants ending above his ankles, and a white kufi.
    Jones spoke to police on the day of the homicide, and identified defendant in a
    photo array two weeks later. She also identified defendant in court and referred
    to him as "Dre" in her testimony.
    Jones's mother, eyewitness Arlene Hopkins, testified that she heard
    several shots from her second-floor apartment. When she looked down from her
    window, she saw the victim collapse. She told him she would call 911. Then
    someone approached and spoke to the victim — and shot him again.
    Much like her daughter, Hopkins said that the shooter wore a black-and-
    white or blue-and-white shirt, black or dark blue pants, and a white or off-white
    kufi. But Hopkins could only see the side of the shooter's face; she did not know
    who he was until the victim named him. After she heard the victim say "Dre,"
    Hopkins understood the shooter to be Andre Mells, whom she knew from the
    neighborhood.
    A-2575-18
    5
    As we discussed in our prior opinion, the State had agreed not to elicit the
    victim's statement.2 Mells I, slip op. at 4. After Hopkins disclosed it, defense
    counsel requested a mistrial, which the trial court denied. Instead, the court
    curatively instructed the jury to disregard the victim's naming of the shooter.
    But the court did not instruct the jury to disregard Hopkins's photo-array
    identification. The State had agreed not to elicit the victim's statement — but it
    never agreed to suppress the photo-array identification. According to Hopkins,
    about two weeks after the homicide, she identified Mells as the shooter from a
    photo array. She implied that she relied on the victim's statement when she
    made this identification; specifically, she stated, "I did basically point out Andre
    based on his name." However, in court, she declined to identify defendant as
    the shooter, stating, "I can't say he's the actual shooter but that's the photograph
    I -- I observed."
    Evidently to end on a positive note, the prosecutor returned to Hopkins 's
    photo identification in the following exchange:
    Q.     . . . Who is in S-28?
    A.     Andre.
    2
    The State apparently did so to moot a defense request to suppress the statement
    on hearsay grounds. So, the trial court never ruled on the statement's
    admissibility. We held that it was admissible as an excited utterance. Mells I,
    slip op. at 14-16.
    A-2575-18
    6
    Q.   And you identify him as what, Miss Hopkins?
    What did you tell the police he did?
    But her identification of defendant drew on the victim's naming, which
    the court had directed her to avoid.       Apparently in a quandary, Hopkins
    answered:
    A.    His name is Dre --
    The prosecutor cut in,
    Q.   I mean -- I mean what did you tell him he did?
    Not what his name is.
    A.    What do you mean, what he did?
    Q.   What did he do -- what did you identify him as
    doing?
    A.    Shooting, not -- okay.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel evidently tried to suggest that
    Hopkins selected defendant from the photo array because she discussed the case
    with her daughter, who believed defendant was the shooter. Hopkins repeated
    that she was unable to identify the shooter when he first approached and shot
    the victim. Counsel elicited that Hopkins discussed the case with her daughter
    and that, "by and by," Hopkins went "to the Prosecutor's Office and looked at
    some photos and picked out a picture of Dre." Then, counsel again inquired
    about Hopkins's discussions with her daughter.
    A-2575-18
    7
    LaGrier, the third eyewitness, gave a statement (which the police video-
    recorded) more than two months after the homicide. At the time, she faced
    multiple pending drug-related charges. At trial, LaGrier recanted her earlier
    statement. She said that she was not present at the shooting and that she did not
    recall what she previously told police. After a Gross3 hearing, the trial court
    permitted the State, through the detective who interviewed LaGrier, to present
    her recorded statement to the jury. 4
    In her statement, she evidently said she saw defendant shoot the victim.
    Unlike Jones and Hopkins, LaGrier said that defendant's face was partly
    obscured by a mask. She also said that defendant carried two weapons.
    LaGrier's statement about the guns was consistent with the evidence that
    the shooter or shooters used .38 and .45 caliber bullets. By contrast, Jones said
    3
    State v. Gross, 
    121 N.J. 1
    (1990).
    4
    Defendant has not included, in the record on appeal, the video recording or
    the transcript — as redacted — that was presented to the jury. A party must
    include "such other parts of the record . . . as [he] should reasonably assume will
    be relied upon by the respondent in meeting the issues." R. 2:6-1(a)(1)(I). An
    appellate court need not attempt to review an issue when the relevant portions
    of a record are missing. Cmty. Hosp. Grp. v. Blume Goldfaden Berkowitz
    Donnelly Fried & Forte, P.C., 381 N.J. Super 119, 127 (App. Div. 2005). We
    note also that the transcript was marked for identification, but not apparently
    admitted into evidence. Consequently, the trial transcript should have included
    a verbatim record of the recording replayed at trial. R. 1:2-2.
    A-2575-18
    8
    she saw only one weapon. But she did not see the first shots, which felled the
    victim.
    LaGrier also said that multiple persons were "beefing" and shooting,
    although she did not identify anyone other than defendant. Jones and Hopkins
    only saw one man shooting (although they both heard shots, or what may have
    been shots, before making any observations). LaGrier was the only eyewitness
    who said she saw defendant flee in a car (a white Chevrolet Lumina).
    On cross-examination, defense counsel elicited that three days after
    LaGrier provided her incriminating statement, she secured a favorable
    disposition of her pending drug matters; furthermore, she had recently secured
    admission to Drug Court after violating probation. Defense counsel also elicited
    LaGrier's statement that if she did tell police that she saw defendant kill the
    victim, it would have been a lie. In addition, counsel highlighted differences
    between LaGrier's testimony and that of Jones and Hopkins, and the detective's
    decision not to pursue other leads suggested by LaGrier's statement.
    To secure PCR based on defense counsel's approach to the eyewitnesses'
    inconsistencies and Hopkins's reference to the victim naming defendant,
    defendant must satisfy both prongs of the test established in Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984); see State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
    , 58 (1987)
    A-2575-18
    9
    (adopting the test for claims of ineffective assistance). That is, defendant must
    show, by a preponderance of the evidence, State v. Holland, 
    449 N.J. Super. 427
    , 435 (App. Div. 2017), that (1) counsel "made errors so serious that counsel
    was not functioning as the 'counsel' guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth
    Amendment," 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    ; and (2) that there is a "reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors, the result . . . would
    have been different,"
    id. at 694.
    Defendant failed to satisfy the first prong. Regarding the eyewitnesses'
    testimony or statements, defense counsel ably tried to paint LaGrier's video
    statement as a fabrication by a person seeking favorable treatment. As for
    Jones's and Hopkins's testimony, defense counsel elicited from both women that
    they conferred before they selected defendant from the photo array. Defense
    counsel also tried to raise questions about the witnesses' ability to see the shooter
    clearly.
    Regarding Hopkins's reference to the victim naming defendant, we are
    unpersuaded that defense counsel, to provide constitutionally-effective
    assistance, had to confirm in advance that the State had properly prepared its
    witness not to volunteer evidence that the State had already agreed not to elicit.
    Doing so may have been worthwhile, but it was not constitutionally mandated.
    A-2575-18
    10
    Furthermore, after the disclosure, defense counsel vigorously argued for a
    mistrial.
    And as we have already held, defendant did not suffer prejudice from the
    disclosure. The jury was presumed to follow the court's curative instruction,
    and, in any event, the victim's hearsay statement was admissible. Mells I, slip
    op. at 15, 18-19.    In considering a petition for PCR based on ineffective
    assistance of counsel, "the ultimate focus of inquiry must be on the fundamental
    fairness of the proceeding whose result is being challenged" and whether "the
    result . . . is unreliable" because of counsel's failures. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 696
    . In short, because defendant was not entitled to suppress the naming, its
    inadvertent disclosure did not deny him a fair trial.
    Nor did defense counsel provide ineffective counsel when Hopkins later
    referred to defendant as "Dre" during direct examination, or when defense
    counsel himself referred to "Dre" during cross-examination. The State was free
    to elicit that Hopkins identified defendant in the photo array. And defense
    counsel may have used the name "Dre" to suggest that Hopkins selected
    defendant from the array only after conferring with her daughter, who believed
    defendant guilty.
    A-2575-18
    11
    II.
    Defendant also argues that counsel was ineffective when he neglected to
    file a Brady motion concerning the State's failure to turn over surveillance video.
    At the PCR hearing, the investigating detective testified that he viewed
    the video recording taken by a surveillance camera from atop a medical school
    building, but he decided not to retain a copy of the video. He testified that the
    camera did not record anything of evidential value; in particular, the video
    lacked sufficient detail to help anyone identify the shooter. The detective
    surmised that the camera might have been used to monitor traffic.
    Defense counsel testified that he did not file a Brady motion because he
    concluded that the camera was too far away to help the defense, and the video
    was "[o]ne less thing to deal with." He explained, "I didn't need any . . . evidence
    of a guy running around with a kufi highlighted on that."
    The PCR court credited the detective's testimony and concluded that the
    video did not contain material evidence. Therefore, a Brady motion would not
    have changed the outcome of the trial.
    We discern no error. We defer to the PCR court's factual finding — based
    on its credibility assessment of the evidentiary-hearing witnesses — that the
    video contained no useful evidence. See State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 540 (2013)
    A-2575-18
    12
    (stating that a reviewing court must defer to the PCR court's fact-findings if
    "sufficient credible evidence in the record" supports those findings, because the
    PCR judge is better situated to assess witness credibility).
    Due process requires the State to disclose exculpatory evidence upon
    request. 
    Brady, 373 U.S. at 87
    . "[T]o establish a Brady violation, the defendant
    must show that: (1) the prosecution suppressed evidence; (2) the evidence is
    favorable to the defense; and (3) the evidence is material." State v. Martini, 
    160 N.J. 248
    , 268-69 (1999). Evidence is "material" "if there is a 'reasonable
    probability' that timely production of the withheld evidence would have led to a
    different result at trial." State v. Brown, 
    236 N.J. 497
    , 520 (2019).
    Based on the court's finding, the evidence was neither favorable to the
    defense, nor material. A Brady motion would have failed. And it is not
    ineffective assistance of counsel to withhold a meritless motion. State v. O'Neal,
    
    190 N.J. 601
    , 619 (2007).
    III.
    Finally, defendant argues that his trial counsel was ineffective because (1)
    he failed to obtain defendant's permission to argue for lesser-included crimes,
    including manslaughter; and (2) his summation's references to recklessness were
    both improper and prejudicial to defendant.
    A-2575-18
    13
    In summation, counsel tried to argue that the eyewitnesses had wrongly
    identified defendant as the shooter. He pointed out that, because Jones saw
    someone shoot a person who was already on the ground, she did not see "the
    whole thing." He also suggested that Jones was actually up in her mother's
    apartment when the shooting occurred.
    Counsel further argued that Hopkins could not make an identification
    because she did not have a direct view. He suggested, too, that upon hearing
    gunshots, Hopkins's first instinct was to protect the children she was watching
    that day, not to look out the window.
    He also highlighted discrepancies between LaGrier's testimony and that
    of Jones and Hopkins. He challenged LaGrier's motive, arguing that she would
    "come in with any story" to get help in dealing with her pending charges.
    Defense counsel argued in the alternative that, even if defendant was the
    shooter, he did not commit murder; rather, he committed one or more "lesser
    included crimes":
    I submit to you, as I've indicated in my opening, Mr.
    Mells is not guilty of murder. He's not guilty of a
    purposeful and knowing murder. These circumstances
    that culminated in this result of Mr. Denmark [the
    victim] was something that, I submit, was developing.
    Some conflict between these individuals, and
    somebody was trying to send him a message. The intent
    was not to kill, recklessly causing death. Those are
    A-2575-18
    14
    words that you're gonna [sic] hear by the Judge.
    Causing serious bodily injury resulting in death under
    circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the
    value of human life. That's some of what's going on
    here.
    And after arguing that the eyewitness identifications were not accurate
    beyond a reasonable doubt, counsel continued to press the "lesser included
    crimes" argument:
    And it's just -- it's not -- we're talking about did he do
    it? Or didn't he do it? It's what did he do? If your
    conclusion is that Mr. Mells is the shooter, or part of
    what's going on that resulted in [the victim's] demise[,]
    I submit to you there's ample testimony here that are
    [sic] this is not a situation where one individual walks
    up to another individual and then shoots him ten times.
    There's a history. We can infer that, that there's a
    history. And as a result of that which we can infer, this
    is not purposeful and knowing murder. It's not
    purposeful and knowing. It's the result of recklessly
    [sic].
    Who's living recklessly? That's for you to
    determine. But at the end of the day, that's what we're
    dealing with here and, I submit to you, the lesser
    included offenses . . . are more applicable to the facts
    and circumstances of this case that we know of, because
    I submit to you there's a lot that's unknown here.
    This alternative argument dominated counsel's summation. Counsel also
    repeatedly suggested that the victim lived recklessly and engaged in reckless
    A-2575-18
    15
    behavior, prompting multiple sustained objections and the court's admonition
    that there was no evidence regarding the victim's behavior.
    Counsel testified at the PCR hearing that he disclosed his strategy to
    defendant, although counsel did not obtain defendant's permission to argue for
    the lesser-included offenses. Counsel stated, "I advised him . . . that, you know,
    the case could be tried to a circumstance where the jury could have an
    opportunity to consider a lesser included offense of . . . aggravated manslaughter
    or manslaughter." Counsel added he advised defendant that "[m]aybe even a
    self-defense might have been arguable, arguably relevant." Counsel called it a
    "one-way discussion," because defendant was disengaged, asserting that, as a
    sovereign person, the State lacked jurisdiction over him.
    Counsel testified that his purpose in summation was two-fold: firstly, to
    place reasonable doubt in the jurors' minds about the shooter's identity;
    secondly, if the jurors believed that defendant was the shooter, to convince them
    that the "person [who was] running around doing these things . . . [was] more
    acting in a reckless behavior [sic] as . . . opposed to purposeful and knowing."
    At the hearing, defendant testified that his trial counsel met him in the jail
    only once, for about forty-five minutes, and that counsel met him away from the
    jail for sessions of only ten to fifteen minutes. Defendant asserted that counsel
    A-2575-18
    16
    "never asked [his] opinion or . . . consent regarding conceding guilt or reckless
    [sic] in -- in hopes that it might -- in the hopes that the jury might find [him] not
    guilty." Defendant also stated that he never discussed trial strategy with his
    attorney. Notably, though, defendant did not testify that had counsel asked
    permission for the "lesser included crimes" strategy, defendant would have
    refused it.
    The PCR court found defense counsel more credible than petitioner.
    Specifically, the court found that defense counsel "did confer with Petitioner
    regarding affirmative defenses prior to trial." The court stated:
    While some of counsel's word choices in isolation
    could be read to suggest that Petitioner was the person
    who acted recklessly, taken in context it is clear that
    counsel's argument does not concede that Petitioner
    was the shooter. Furthermore, counsel testified at the
    evidentiary hearing in this PCR that it was his strategy
    to argue against the crime of murder, and in the
    alternative — if the jury believed that Petitioner did in
    fact shoot and kill the victim — that the jury should
    return a verdict of aggravated manslaughter instead of
    murder. Given the overwhelming evidence introduced
    at trial that Petitioner shot the victim, this was a valid
    strategy and did not prejudice Petitioner's defense.
    We shall not disturb the PCR court's determination. As the Supreme Court
    recognized, some trial decisions are for the attorney to make, and others "are
    reserved for the client." McCoy v. Louisiana, 
    138 S. Ct. 1500
    , 1508 (2018).
    A-2575-18
    17
    Trial management is the lawyer's province: [c]ounsel
    provides his or her assistance by making decisions such
    as "what arguments to pursue, what evidentiary
    objections to raise, and what agreements to conclude
    regarding the admission of evidence." Some decisions,
    however, are reserved for the client — notably, whether
    to plead guilty, waive the right to a jury trial, testify in
    one's own behalf, and forgo an appeal.
    [Ibid. (citation omitted) (quoting Gonzalez v. United
    States, 
    553 U.S. 242
    , 248 (2008)).]
    Where does one place the decision to submit a lesser-included charge to
    the jury? The decision is tactical, drawing on an attorney's experience; yet it
    may affect the ultimate verdict. As Professor Uviller observed:
    Apart from disagreements concerning the entry
    of an insanity plea, perhaps the most troubling source
    of contention is the decision whether to consent to
    submitting to the jury counts or charges lower than,
    or included in, the most serious count of the indictment.
    Tactically, the choice is whether to "go for broke," that
    is, have the jury vote up or down on the gravest charge,
    or to provide a possible locus of compromise. Part
    gamble, part experience, it is difficult to say whether
    this vital choice belongs among the defendant's
    reserved prerogatives or has been ceded to the wisdom
    and caution of counsel.
    [H. Richard Uviller, Calling the Shots: The Allocation
    of Choice between the Accused and Counsel in the
    Defense of a Criminal Case, 52 Rutgers L. Rev. 719,
    748 (2000) (footnote omitted).]
    A-2575-18
    18
    The ABA's Criminal Justice Standards used to suggest that the defendant,
    after conferring with counsel, should have the final word on whether to submit
    lesser-included offenses; but the Standards do so no longer. 5 See Simeon v.
    5
    ABA Standards "are guides to determining what is reasonable" in assessing
    reasonably effective assistance of counsel. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688
    . The
    commentary to the 1980 standards stated:
    It is also important in a jury trial for the defense
    lawyer to consult fully with the accused about any
    lesser included offenses the trial court may be willing
    to submit to the jury. Indeed, because this decision is
    so important as well as so similar to the defendant's
    decision about the charges to which to plead, the
    defendant should be the one to decide whether to seek
    submission to the jury of lesser included offenses. For
    instance, in a murder prosecution, the defendant, rather
    than the defense attorney, should determine whether the
    court should be asked to submit to the jury the lesser
    included offense of manslaughter.
    [ABA Standards for Crim. Just., Standard 4-5.2 cmt. at
    4-68 (2d ed. 1980).]
    By contrast, the 1993 standards stated only: "It is also important in a jury trial
    for defense counsel to consult fully with the accused about any lesser included
    offenses the trial court may be willing to submit to the jury," and omitted the
    statement that the client's decision controls. ABA Standards for Crim. Just.:
    Prosecution Function & Def. Function, Standard 4-5.2 cmt. at 202 (3d ed.1993).
    The latest edition of the standards states that an attorney must defer to a client
    regarding "any other decision that has been determined in the jurisdiction to
    belong to the client." ABA Crim. Just. Standards for the Def. Function, Standard
    4-5.2(b)(ix) (4th ed. 2017).
    A-2575-18
    19
    State, 
    90 P.3d 181
    , 183-84 (Alaska Ct. App. 2004) (comparing ABA Standards
    for Criminal Justice, Standard 4-5.2).
    Neither defendant nor the State point to binding New Jersey authority on
    the issue of who — attorney or client — gets to decide whether to seek a lesser-
    included instruction. Nonetheless, without establishing a general rule for all
    situations involving lesser-included offenses, we are satisfied that defense
    counsel here provided effective assistance because, as the PCR court impliedly
    found, he conferred with defendant, and then exercised informed judgment to
    argue for a lesser-included offense in the face of "overwhelming" evidence that
    defendant was the shooter.6
    There is persuasive authority for that conclusion. See, e.g., Cannon v.
    Mullin, 
    383 F.3d 1152
    , 1167 (10th Cir. 2004) (rejecting ineffective-assistance
    claim where trial counsel asserted self-defense argument and, in the alternative,
    argued lesser included offense, stating that "whether to argue a lesser-included
    offense is a matter to be decided by counsel after consultation with the
    defendant"), abrogated on other grounds, Simpson v. Carpenter, 
    912 F.3d 542
    ,
    6
    We recognize that the PCR court did not expressly find that defense counsel
    conferred with defendant about lesser-included offenses. But, the court implied
    as much, by crediting defense counsel over defendant, and by expressly finding
    that defense counsel conferred with defendant, albeit about affirmative defenses.
    A-2575-18
    20
    576 n.18 (10th Cir. 2018); 
    Simeon, 90 P.3d at 184-85
    (rejecting ineffectiveness
    claim where attorney declined to request lesser-included offenses and defendant
    did not show that tactical choice to be unreasonable).
    Even if defense counsel did not disclose his strategy, we are unconvinced
    that failure alone would constitute ineffective assistance, particularly absent
    evidence that petitioner would have objected and dissuaded counsel. Some
    courts have held that the failure to confer need not render an attorney's decision
    regarding lesser-included offenses ineffective. See Mathre v. State, 
    619 N.W.2d 627
    , 628-30 (N.D. 2000) (rejecting ineffectiveness claim where trial counsel did
    not confer with the defendant before deciding not to seek instructions on lesser-
    included offense). In Van Alstine v. State, 
    426 S.E.2d 360
    , 363 (Ga. 1993), the
    court declined to find that the failure to consult regarding lesser-included crimes
    invariably constitutes ineffective assistance.      Although noting that "it is
    critically important" that defense lawyers confer on such matters, the court
    concluded that defense counsel was not ineffective because no evidence
    suggested that the client would have rejected counsel's strategy had counsel
    consulted him. Ibid.7
    7
    We acknowledge that some courts have held that defense counsel must defer
    to a client's wishes on the lesser-included question. See, e.g., People v.
    A-2575-18
    21
    Defendant also misplaces reliance on the United States Supreme Court's
    decision in McCoy. In McCoy, the Court held that an attorney must abide by a
    defendant's expressed objection to a strategy of admitting 
    guilt. 138 S. Ct. at 1509
    . An attorney's failure to do so is a structural error that is subject neither
    to harmless-error review nor to the Court's ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    jurisprudence.
    Id. at 1510-11.
    For three reasons, McCoy provides no help to defendant. First, defendant
    did not testify in the PCR hearing that he objected to counsel's decision to argue
    lesser-included offenses, although the PCR court impliedly found that counsel
    consulted with him. One of McCoy's holdings is directly on point: the Supreme
    Court held that when an attorney consults with a defendant who does not protest
    as McCoy did, but rather acquiesces in the strategy of admitting guilt, then
    counsel's implementation of the chosen strategy does not violate the client's
    Brocksmith, 
    642 N.E.2d 1230
    , 1232 (Ill. 1994) (following the 1986 supplement
    to the ABA Standards). However, some defendants have complained (with
    varying results) when the attorney did defer. Compare In re Trombly, 
    627 A.2d 855
    , 855 (Vt. 1993) (rejecting argument that defense lawyer was ineffective "by
    requesting at the client's insistence that the court not instruct the jury that
    attempted manslaughter is a lesser included offense of attempted murder"), with
    Arko v. People, 
    183 P.3d 555
    , 560 (Colo. 2008) (reversing conviction where
    trial court deferred to "defendant's decision over the objection of defense
    counsel" and refused to give lesser-included instruction).
    A-2575-18
    22
    Sixth Amendment rights.
    Id. at 1505, 1509
    (discussing Florida v. Nixon, 
    543 U.S. 175
    (2004)).
    Second, in McCoy, the attorney actually admitted his client's guilt. But
    here, the PCR court found (with the support of sufficient credible evidence in
    the record) that Mells's trial counsel did not admit defendant's guilt. Rather,
    counsel urged the jury members to find that Mells did not shoot the victim. He
    did encourage them to convict him of a lesser-included offense — but only if
    they believed that Mells did shoot the victim.
    Third, courts have declined to apply McCoy retroactively to collateral
    challenges of convictions. See Smith v. Stein, 
    982 F.3d 229
    (4th Cir. 2020);
    Christian v. Thomas, 
    982 F.3d 1215
    (9th Cir. 2020). Defendant presents no
    argument why we should do so here.
    Affirmed.
    A-2575-18
    23