STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. TATIANNA I. HARRISON (16-05-1381, CAMDEN 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0984-18
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    TATIANNA I. HARRISON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Submitted February 2, 2021 – Decided May 24, 2021
    Before Judges Fisher, Moynihan and Gummer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Indictment No. 16-05-1381.
    Edward Crisonino, attorney for appellant.
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Debra G. Simms, Deputy Attorney
    General, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Tatianna I. Harrison was tried by jury 1 for first-degree murder,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1), (2) and corresponding gun charges related to the death
    of a victim who died from a single gunshot wound to his head. Found guilty of
    all indicted crimes, she appeals her conviction arguing:
    POINT ONE
    ADMISSION OF DEFENDANT'S                 STATEMENT
    WAS IN ERROR.
    POINT TWO
    THE   PROSECUTOR'S  REMARKS                    DURING
    CLOSING WERE IMPROPER.
    POINT THREE
    THE   NEWLY    DISCOVERED   EVIDENCE
    REQUIRED THE TRIAL COURT TO GRANT A
    NEW TRIAL.
    Unpersuaded by any argument, we affirm.
    I
    In determining defendant's motion to suppress, the trial judge considered
    three discrete statements she made to law enforcement officers. She made the
    1
    Defendant was sixteen years old at the time of the homicide. A Family Part
    judge granted the State's motion to involuntarily waive the Family Part's
    jurisdiction allowing defendant to be tried in adult court. See N.J.S.A. 2A:4A-
    26 (the statute still in effect at the time of the juvenile waiver hearing).
    2                                   A-0984-18
    first to Berlin borough police officer Eric Wolf, Sr., who responded to
    defendant's home in Berlin two days after the victim had been shot in Camden
    on August 12, 2015, to ascertain defendant's well-being after the officer received
    a report that, after her grandmother reported defendant missing, defendant's
    mother advised police she had returned home and was threatening to harm
    herself and others. The second statement was made that same day to Berlin
    borough police officer Robert Murray, who had arrived at defendant's home just
    as Wolf walked the handcuffed defendant down the driveway before
    transporting her to a hospital crisis center; Murray greeted defendant asking,
    "Hey Tatianna, how are you doing, what's going on?" The third was a recorded
    audio statement given to Camden County Police Department Metro Division
    detectives Dennis Convery and Edward Gonzales at a juvenile detention facility.
    In her merits brief, defendant challenges only the recorded audio statement, not
    the statements she made to Wolf—"I shot him, I shot that boy," specifying that
    she shot him in the back of the head with a hollow-nose bullet—or Murray—"I
    shot that boy in the back of the head with a hollow."
    3                                   A-0984-18
    As such, we will consider only defendant's argument that her recorded
    statement to the detectives should be suppressed. 2 See Sklodowsky v. Lushis,
    
    417 N.J. Super. 648
    , 657 (App. Div. 2011) (holding that issue not briefed on
    appeal is deemed waived).
    After a N.J.R.E. 104 hearing at which Wolf and Convery testified, the trial
    judge found both credible.       The one-hour-five-minute audio recording of
    defendant's statement was also played in open court. From the trial judge's
    record-supported findings, we glean the facts pertinent to defendant's challenge
    to the admission of her statement to the detectives. See State v. Boone, 
    232 N.J. 417
    , 425-26 (2017) ("An appellate court reviewing a motion to suppress
    evidence in a criminal case must uphold the factual findings underlying the trial
    court's decision, provided that those findings are 'supported by sufficient
    credible evidence in the record.'") (quoting State v. Scriven, 
    226 N.J. 20
    , 40
    (2016)). We defer to the trial judge's determination of facts "because those
    findings 'are substantially influenced by [an] opportunity to hear and see the
    witnesses and to have the "feel" of the case, which a reviewing court cannot
    enjoy.'" State v. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 412
    , 424-25 (2014) (alteration in original)
    2
    The trial transcripts do not list Murray as a witness, ostensibly confirming the
    assistant prosecutor's representation to the trial judge that the State did not plan
    on eliciting defendant's statement to Murray at trial during its case-in-chief.
    4                                    A-0984-18
    (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 161 (1964)); see also State v. Tillery,
    
    238 N.J. 293
    , 314 (2019) (extending deference to trial-court findings based on
    recordings).
    After defendant told Wolf of the shooting and said it had occurred in
    Camden, Wolf contacted Camden police to inquire if there had been any
    shootings at the location defendant had disclosed to him. He eventually spoke
    with Convery and provided Convery with the contact information for
    defendant's grandmother who had reported her missing.
    When Convery called the contact number, defendant's mother—who has
    the same surname as defendant's grandmother—answered and identified herself.
    She advised Convery defendant was at the crisis center, and that she was seeking
    to have defendant's juvenile probation violated so she could be detained.
    After defendant was released from the crisis center and transported to the
    juvenile detention facility, Convery, unsuccessful at reaching anyone using the
    contact phone number, went to defendant's home. Defendant's mother agreed to
    meet him at the detention facility. He told her he was going to take a statement
    from defendant to further explore defendant's prior statement that she had shot
    someone in Camden.
    5                                    A-0984-18
    Convery, Gonzales and defendant's mother were in "a classroom[-]type
    area" as Convery reviewed a "Juvenile Statement of Rights" form "line by line,"
    advising defendant of her Miranda rights, see Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    (1966), as well as those accorded juveniles, see State in the Int. of A.A., 
    240 N.J. 341
     (2020); State ex rel. A.S., 
    203 N.J. 131
     (2010); State v. Presha, 
    163 N.J. 304
     (2000). The judge found defendant
    answered affirmatively to having answered each
    question as she did so and she and [her mother] each
    signed off on the form. [Defendant] agreed to waive
    her right to remain silent and to counsel and further
    agreed to give a statement. She read out loud a portion
    of the form acknowledging this. Likewise, [her mother]
    read out loud that she had been advised of all of
    [defendant's] rights and consented to [defendant]
    waiving her rights and to answering the questions and
    to give a statement.
    Defendant then gave a detailed account of the prelude to the shooting, her
    shooting of the victim and the aftermath.
    Although we defer to the trial judge's findings of fact, we owe no
    deference to his conclusions of law, which we review de novo. State v. Watts,
    
    223 N.J. 503
    , 516 (2015). That review requires our determination if the State
    proved beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant's waiver of the privilege
    against self-incrimination was knowing, intelligent and voluntary in light of all
    6                                   A-0984-18
    the circumstances. Presha, 
    163 N.J. at 312-13
    . We utilize the familiar polestar
    in our analysis:
    At the root of the inquiry is whether a suspect's will has
    been overborne by police conduct. In determining
    whether a suspect's confession is the product of free
    will, courts traditionally assess the totality of
    circumstances surrounding the arrest and interrogation,
    including such factors as "the suspect's age, education
    and intelligence, advice as to constitutional rights,
    length of detention, whether the questioning was
    repeated and prolonged in nature and whether physical
    punishment or mental exhaustion was involved." State
    v. Miller, 
    76 N.J. 392
    , 402 (1978). Additionally, "[a]
    suspect's previous encounters with the law has been
    mentioned as [a] relevant factor." 
    Ibid.
     We reaffirm
    those factors as germane to an evaluation of the
    admissibility of either adult or juvenile confessions.
    [Id. at 313.]
    Defendant argues the totality of the circumstances "weighed heavily in
    favor of the suppression of the statement" in light of "defendant's unbalanced
    mental health, cognitive limitations, the misleading representations of law
    enforcement, and the lack of parental presence as defined by our law[.]" We
    disagree.
    In her merits brief, defendant notes Wolf had brought her to the crisis
    center the day prior to her statement; and avers she suffers from bipolar disorder
    7                                   A-0984-18
    and had not taken her medications prior to admission to the center. She makes
    no specific argument how these conditions impacted her statement.
    The trial judge considered defendant's more expansive argument
    regarding her intelligence, education and experience and concluded "[t]he
    information submitted to the court relative to th[o]se factors [to be] a mixed
    bag." The judge found "[d]efendant ha[d] an IEP[3] classification of a learning
    disability and a low IQ"; was "considered cognitively limited with difficulty
    understanding basic questions"; "suffer[ed] from ADHD and bipolar disorder
    for which she is prescribed medication." He also observed defendant's statement
    referenced that she "was off of prescribed medication until her time" at the crisis
    center. But the judge also considered evidence that "defendant does excellent
    at school[,] . . . was the student of the month and was an honor roll student."
    The judge highlighted defendant's "responsive answers to numerous detailed
    questions" and the "absence of any expert opinion [about the impact of] . . .
    defendant's mental condition or the effect of taking or not taking certain
    medications" as supporting the voluntariness of her statement.
    3
    An "IEP," or "individualized education program," is written statement for a
    child with a disability that includes information about the child's current
    academic performance, the child's annual academic goals, instructions for
    tracking the child's progress, and other details relating to the child's learning
    environment and necessary accommodations. 
    20 U.S.C. § 1414
    (d)(1)(A)(i).
    8                                    A-0984-18
    Deferring to those factual findings, we perceive no evidence that
    defendant's mental or cognitive states rendered her statement involuntary. As
    we observed in State v. Smith:
    The fact that defendant was suffering from a mental
    illness at the time of the questioning did not render his
    waiver or his statement involuntary. The United States
    Supreme Court has held that "coercive police activity is
    a necessary predicate to [a] finding that a confession is
    not 'voluntary' within the meaning of the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment." Colorado v.
    Connelly, 
    479 U.S. 157
    , 167 (1986). The Court
    stressed that the "Fifth Amendment privilege is not
    concerned 'with moral and psychological pressures to
    confess emanating from sources other than official
    coercion.'" 
    Id. at 170
     (quoting Oregon v. Elstad, 
    470 U.S. 298
    , 304-05 (1985)). "The voluntariness of a
    waiver of this privilege [was said to] depend[] on the
    absence of police overreaching, not on 'free choice' in
    any broader sense of the word." 
    Ibid.
     The Court added
    that "the relinquishment of the right [to remain silent]
    must have been voluntary in the sense that it was the
    product of a free and deliberate choice rather than
    intimidation, coercion or deception. . . ." 
    Ibid.
     (citing
    Moran v. Burbine, 
    475 U.S. 412
    , 421 (1986)).
    [
    307 N.J. Super. 1
    , 10-11 (App. Div. 1997) (alterations
    in original).]
    Nothing in the record supports the argument that the detectives exploited
    defendant's mental illness or cognitive status to obtain her statement.
    Defendant's claim of "misleading representations" by the detectives is
    based on her contention that Convery gave defendant's mother "the indication
    9                                 A-0984-18
    that he was attempting to help the juvenile [defendant]" and the mother "then
    reiterated this to [defendant], telling her she [would be] going to 'come home to
    mommy[,'] 'given protective custody, and . . . going to a new house to live.'"
    Defendant argues the detectives "did nothing to correct this perception, in fact
    they escalated it," telling defendant it was "okay to open up"; she did not "have
    to stay closed in all the time"; and "repeatedly told her that they were trying to
    help her." She asserts "[t]he entire theme of . . . defendant's statement was that
    the police were there to help her, which [was] far from the truth and
    contradictory to the Miranda warnings."
    "Although police misrepresentations are relevant in analyzing the totality
    of the circumstances surrounding a claim that a confession was involuntary,"
    State v. Pillar, 
    359 N.J. Super. 249
    , 269 (App. Div. 2003), such
    misrepresentations "alone are usually insufficient to justify a determination of
    involuntariness or lack of knowledge. Moreover, a misrepresentation by police
    does not render a confession or waiver involuntary unless the misrepresentation
    actually induced the confession," State v. Cooper, 
    151 N.J. 326
    , 355 (1997)
    (citations omitted); see also Pillar, 
    359 N.J. Super. at 269
    .
    We agree with the trial judge that the detectives did not explicitly
    contradict the Miranda warnings. There was one point, well after defendant
    10                                   A-0984-18
    explained how she had shot the victim, that Convery showed defendant a
    photograph of the victim and asked, "Who's that?" Convery explained to the
    trial judge at the evidentiary hearing that defendant "turned her head away from
    the photograph so that she wasn't looking at it." The following colloquy ensued
    after defendant gave no audible response:
    DETECTIVE GONZALES: Why did you look away?
    It's okay to talk to us, [defendant]. We're here trying to
    help. Who is it?
    [DEFENDANT]: I don't know.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: You don't know who this
    is?
    [DEFENDANT]: No.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:              But you recognize the
    person.
    DETECTIVE GONZALES: It's okay to open up,
    [defendant]. You don't have to stay closed in all the
    time, okay?
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Are you all right? What's
    wrong? Did you tell anybody who did this besides the
    officers?
    [DEFENDANT]: No.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: So is there a reason why
    somebody would be trying to claim what you did, or
    you trying to claim what someone else did?
    11                                 A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: Uh-uh.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Were you with anybody
    else that would know more information than you know?
    [DEFENDANT]: I told everybody to leave.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: So you walked up by
    yourself, just you and him? Or you guys walked up as
    a group?
    [DEFENDANT]: By myself.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. So who is this
    picture? Do you know his name? Do you know the
    street name? Do you know what they called him? Do
    you want me to put the picture away?
    Convery testified "[a]fter a few questions which she wasn't answering as much,
    I then put the photograph away, at which time she turned back and engaged in
    conversation and made eye contact again."
    Gonzales's statements that it was "okay to open up" and defendant did not
    "have to stay closed in all the time" arguably contradicted defendant's right to
    remain silent.   But it was obvious defendant didn't open up.        Gonzales's
    statements did not induce any part of the confession so as to "render [the]
    confession or waiver involuntary." Cooper, 
    151 N.J. at 355
    .
    We disagree with the remainder of defendant's arguments based on the
    skewed view of the record she advances. Although Convery did tell defendant
    12                                  A-0984-18
    he wanted to help her, he did so primarily in the context of ascertaining if, as
    defendant ultimately contended, someone other than she had shot the victim as
    evidenced by exchanges after defendant finished describing the shooting:
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Now when you shoot, if
    you shoot semi-automatic, the difference between a
    revolver and a semi-automatic is semi-automatic will
    eject or kick out the shell casing.
    [DEFENDANT]: That's what.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. What happened to
    that casing? Did you grab it?
    [DEFENDANT]: (No verbal response.)
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: No?
    [DEFENDANT]: I didn't stay for nothing. I looked at
    the guy.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:             Was there anybody else
    there?
    [DEFENDANT]: Not around.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: [Defendant], here's the
    deal, you've gotta tell me the truth. You understand
    me? If you were there, you were there. But if
    somebody else did it, there's a difference. You
    understand what I'm saying?
    [DEFENDANT]: Mm-hmm.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: I don't want you trying to
    claim somebody[] else's stuff for stupid reasons.
    13                                   A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: I would never claim someone else's
    stuff.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:              All right.    Would
    somebody, one of your boys, try to claim some of your
    stuff?
    [DEFENDANT]: They did before.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: And that's why I want to
    find out who you're hanging out with, because
    somebody has more information or knows more about
    something than you do. So I'm going to ask you this.
    Did you actually pull the trigger, or was it somebody
    else and you were just there with them?
    [DEFENDANT]: It was me.
    Convery later pressed defendant again to tell him who shot the victim:
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Did you recognize the
    picture I showed you earlier when you turned away?
    [DEFENDANT]: Yeah.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who was that?
    [DEFENDANT]: Another person I don't like.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who was it?
    [DEFENDANT]: He's dead.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: He's dead?
    DETECTIVE GONZALES: How do you know he's
    dead? [Defendant], how do you know he's dead?
    14                                  A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: 'Cause.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:               'Cause why?        Did
    somebody shoot him?
    [DEFENDANT]: He's dead.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who shot him?
    [DEFENDANT]: He is dead.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who shot him?
    [DEFENDANT]: He's dead.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who shot him?
    [DEFENDANT]: Me.
    Despite her constant admissions that she had shot the victim, he questioned her
    once again:
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: I'm going to show you this
    picture again, all right? Is this the person that you're
    saying was shot?
    [DEFENDANT]: (No verbal response.)
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. And you're saying
    that you shot him?
    [DEFENDANT]: (No verbal response.)
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Who was with you when it
    happened?
    [DEFENDANT]: (No verbal response.)
    15                               A-0984-18
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. [Defendant], who
    actually pulled the trigger?
    [DEFENDANT]: Me. I was told to so I did it.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: You were told to. Who told
    you to do it?
    [DEFENDANT]: I did it. It doesn't matter know who
    told—
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:           It does matter, to me it
    does.
    [DEFENDANT]: Well to me it doesn't.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Listen, listen, listen. I don't
    know what the answer's going to be for this but I'm
    going to ask you anyway. Do you care about yourself?
    [DEFENDANT]: No.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. Now here's a more
    important question. Do you care about your mom?
    [DEFENDANT]: Not really.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: What about your brother?
    [DEFENDANT]: No.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY:           Then who do you care
    about?
    [DEFENDANT]: Nobody.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Why not?
    16                              A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: 'Cause.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Because why? Why? Your
    mom wants—
    [DEFENDANT]: What's there to live for?
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Your mom, your brothers.
    How many brothers you got?
    [DEFENDANT]: Three.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: You don't want no nieces
    and nephews, you don't want no kids, none of that?
    Why not?
    [DEFENDANT]: 'Cause I want to be a killer.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. But yet it doesn't get
    you far, right? What's your favorite food?
    [DEFENDANT]: Fries.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: French fries? What about
    your favorite drink?
    [DEFENDANT]: I don't know.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: You don't know? You don't
    like milk, Pepsi?
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Smoothies.
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Smoothies?
    [DEFENDANT]: No.
    17                            A-0984-18
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Mom always buys you
    smoothies she's saying. I'm trying to help you out as
    much as I can, all right. If you did it, then you did it.
    But if somebody told you to do it, you have to tell me
    who told you.
    [DEFENDANT]: The person that told me to do it is
    nowhere in the state no more it don't matter.
    Defendant attempts to analogize the detective's statements in A.S.—where
    the detective told the defendant "that answering his questions would show that
    she was a 'good person' and would actually benefit her," 
    203 N.J. at
    151—to
    Convery's statements. The Court held "[n]ot only was the veracity of [the
    detective's statements to A.S.] dubious, a fact of which an attorney would have
    made A.S. aware, it also contradicted the Miranda warning provided to A.S.:
    that anything she said in the interview could be used against her in a court of
    law." 
    Ibid.
    The detective's actions in this case were different. The record evidences
    that Convery attempted to learn from defendant, even after she had confessed,
    if someone else pulled the trigger. By telling her he was trying to help her, he
    did not vitiate the Miranda warnings. And it must be remembered defendant
    provided the chilling details of her motive, planning and homicidal act before
    the detectives said any of the remarks that defendant describes as misleading
    representations.
    18                                A-0984-18
    We also note that defendant was not a fourteen-year-old "of tender
    sensibilities [who] may have great difficulty withstanding the rigors of a police
    interrogation," as was the defendant in A.S. 
    Id. at 149
    . Defendant had previous
    involvement with the juvenile justice system. She was a gang member with
    "First Lady" status in her Crip set. She admitted both formulating a calculated
    plan to shoot the victim in a public space as an act of retribution and carrying
    out that plan. She was no shrinking violet.
    Her independence was evident in the interchanges she had with her mother
    during her statement. The first time her mother spoke during the statement, after
    defendant had already told the particulars of the homicide, Convery was
    attempting—without success—to gather information about others who were
    with defendant on the night of the shooting:
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Can I?
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Yeah, go ahead.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: [Defendant], all this, for
    one, you're going to come home to mommy. You're
    going to get into protective custody.
    [DEFENDANT]: I'm not going in no protective
    custody. I broke the law. (Inaudible)
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: No, we're going into a
    house, a house far away and nobody gonna know where.
    19                                   A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: I'm not doing all that. That's just
    movie stuff. I'm not doing all that.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: I don't think that you did
    this.
    [DEFENDANT]: You're going to think all you want. I
    know what I did.
    Defendant's exchange with her mother after the detectives had finished
    questioning further manifests that defendant was not swayed by any of her
    mother's comments:
    DETECTIVE CONVERY: Okay. Put down your
    initials and the date and time. And the time's going to
    be 1:25. Do you have any questions before we leave?
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: I don't know what to
    say. I just know that I love you with all the life in me.
    You do have a heart, [defendant]. You are on
    medication. You do have a diagnosis.
    [DEFENDANT]: (Inaudible) medication stuff like—
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Yeah but you told me
    different—
    [DEFENDANT]: No, I'm not. I'm just saying that I
    just don't, I don't want to be home.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Because you don't want
    to take it.
    [DEFENDANT]: Yeah. What's the point of taking
    medicine for no reason, just so I can feel all sleepy and
    what[]not.
    20                                A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: No, [defendant].
    [DEFENDANT]: But I don't need medicine. I never
    did need medicine. Just 'cause last year I got locked up
    for (inaudible), just 'cause of that they wanted me to
    take medicine.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: You understand you
    don't have to make marks on your—
    [DEFENDANT]: Understand, cut, same thing, cut with
    a knife.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Okay, and you was not
    on medicine then. (Inaudible) The point is this is not
    you, this is not you at all. I'm not accepting it. My
    higher power ain't accepting it. It's going to be a change
    around.
    [DEFENDANT]: I told you what I wanted to do.
    Ever[] since I mentioned it, what did you want me to
    say when I said, when I always said, mom I want a gun.
    (Inaudible).
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: What happened to,
    mommy, I want to go in the Army?
    [DEFENDANT]: Because of the gun.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: No. What happened to,
    mommy, I want to be a cheerleader?
    [DEFENDANT]: That's all out the window.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: Why does it have to be
    out the window? What happened to mommy, I want to
    be a poet, I want to write books.
    21                                A-0984-18
    [DEFENDANT]: I'm done talking.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: You don't want to hear
    that stuff?
    [DEFENDANT]: Nope.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: What happened to,
    mommy, I'm going to make it, I'm going to be
    somebody.
    [DEFENDANT]: I never said that.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]:             You never said that,
    [defendant]?
    DETECTIVE GONZALES: What grade are you in
    now? When you was in school, what grade were you
    in?
    [DEFENDANT]: Tenth.
    DETECTIVE GONZALES: Tenth grade?
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: A student. Why are you
    turning everything negative[?]
    [DEFENDANT]: 'Cause nothing is positive.
    [DEFENDANT'S MOTHER]: It is positive.
    Those exchanges also refute defendant's argument that her mother
    was physically present at the interrogation but was not
    acting as the buffer between the police and the juvenile
    that a parent is expected to be. In fact, she acted in the
    complete opposite, telling defendant she would be
    coming home with mommy, and would be going to a
    22                                 A-0984-18
    new house in protective custody, and that the police
    were there to help her.
    As stated, defendant had already confessed by the time her mother said anything
    and defendant did not at all agree with her mother's statements.
    Moreover, defendant's mother never told her the police were there to help
    her. She did not, as defendant contends in her merits brief, reiterate Convery's
    "indication [to the mother prior to the statement's commencement] that he was
    attempting to help" defendant. This was not the case, as in A.S., where police
    had the juvenile's adoptive mother "read A.S. her rights, a procedure which
    tainted the interview from its outset and must not be utilized in the future." 
    Id. at 137, 149
    .    A.S. is also inapposite because Convery reviewed each of
    defendant's rights with her and her mother, even adding some explanation to the
    printed material, emphasizing "we can talk and if you don't feel comfortable[,]
    we can stop at any time," and later reiterating "you can stop me at any time."
    And, again, defendant was not like A.S.: an unsophisticated fourteen-year-old
    juvenile.
    Of course, "the parent's role as a 'highly significant factor' in the totality
    of the circumstances analysis used to assess whether a juvenile's confession was
    knowing, intelligent, and voluntary," 
    Id. at 147
     (quoting Presha, 
    163 N.J. at 315
    ), and "courts should give that factor added weight when balancing it against
    23                                     A-0984-18
    all other factors," Presha, 
    163 N.J. at 315
    ; see also A.S., 
    203 N.J. at 147
    . The
    Court explained "[t]he role of a parent in the context of a juvenile interrogation
    takes on special significance," because "[i]n that circumstance, the parent serves
    as advisor to the juvenile, [and as] someone who can offer a measure of support
    in the unfamiliar setting of the police station." Presha, 
    163 N.J. at 314
    . The
    Court particularly explained "[w]hen younger offenders are in custody, the
    parent serves as a buffer between the juvenile, who is entitled to certain
    protections, and the police, whose investigative function brings the officers
    necessarily in conflict with the juvenile's legal interests." 
    Id. at 315
    . The Court
    held a parent's "mere presence" did not provide the buffer expected by the Court.
    A.S., 203 at 148. "In order to serve as a buffer, the parent must be acting with
    the interests of the juvenile in mind." 
    Ibid.
    The record belies defendant's contention that her mother worked against
    her during the statement. The mother expressed caring concern for defendant—
    albeit, at times, laced with fanciful wishes, ones that defendant knew were just
    that. So the detective's failure to correct the mother's statements had no impact
    on defendant, who had already confessed.         The facts of this case are not
    analogous to those in A.S., where the parent replied to A.S.'s question whether
    she had to talk if she had a lawyer: "[Y]ou . . . have to talk"; "[Y]ou . . . have
    24                                    A-0984-18
    to answer," 
    203 N.J. at 139
    , and harangued the fourteen-year-old to answer the
    detective's questions notwithstanding A.S.'s "imperfect, child-like efforts to
    assert her right to" remain silent, 
    id. at 136
    . Defendant's mother never urged her
    to confess, and her words did not engender defendant's confession; defendant's
    mother did not "provide the police with an assistant." See 
    id. at 137
    .
    We discern that, although Convery advised defendant of her rights in her
    mother's presence, he did not follow the Court's instruction to "then let the parent
    and child consult in private" to afford the mother "a meaningful opportunity to
    help [defendant] understand [her] rights and decide to waive them." A.A., 240
    N.J. at 345. To be sure, that practice should have been followed. But we note
    the detectives did not prevent consultation between defendant and her mother.
    Defendant said she understood each of the rights and both defendant and her
    mother read the waiver portion aloud before agreeing to its terms. Thereafter,
    Convery confirmed that defendant's mother wanted to remain present during the
    statement.
    "If law enforcement officers do not allow a parent and juvenile to consult
    in private, absent a compelling reason, that fact should weigh heavily in the
    totality of the circumstances to determine whether the juvenile's waiver and
    statements were voluntary." Id. at 359. That heavy weight is lightened here.
    25                                    A-0984-18
    Defendant was a savvy sixteen-year-old, experienced with law enforcement and
    the streets, who fully understood her rights. She showed unwillingness to listen
    to her mother. And neither defendant nor her mother impliedly or overtly
    expressed any desire to talk after Convery administered defendant's rights. This
    was not the case where the detectives did "not allow a parent and juvenile to
    consult in private." Ibid.
    We deem the balance of defendant's suppression-related arguments,
    including that police did not provide defendant with the assistance of her
    grandmother—her legal guardian—and instead selected defendant's mother as
    her buffer during the statement even though the mother's parental rights had
    been terminated, to be without sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-
    3(e)(2). A close review of the record reveals that Convery called the number
    Wolf provided for the grandmother, and defendant's mother answered the phone.
    Any attempted contact by Convery always resulted in interactions with the
    mother; there is no evidence he ever met or talked with the grandmother. Indeed,
    at the start of the statement, Convery recited the statement was being taken "[i]n
    the presence of her mother, Ms. [Doe 4]." He then asked, "Is it Eda [Doe]?"
    4
    For both the mother and grandmother, we use a fictitious surname for the one
    they shared.
    26                                   A-0984-18
    Defendant's mother corrected, "Tawanna [Doe]."          That Convery thought
    defendant's mother was the same person for whom Wolf gave Convery the
    contact information is evidenced by his subsequent statement to defendant:
    "You were reported missing. Your mother reported you missing." Convery did
    not circumvent defendant's legal guardian, her grandmother, in selecting her
    mother to be present during the statement. Indeed, defendant never asked for
    her grandmother or protested her mother's presence.
    Defendant's arguments for suppression of her statement also ignore the
    totality of the circumstances. The trial judge also considered other factors that
    militated against suppression:    defendant had prior experience with police
    questioning, having been involved in multiple juvenile proceedings; the length
    of detention—"about an hour and five minutes starting at 12:25 p.m."; the lack
    of evidence of physical punishment or mental exhaustion as "defendant appeared
    generally alert during the interrogation" and "gave responsive answers to the
    questions without any particular delays."
    The circumstances under which defendant's statement was taken were not
    perfect. But the totality of the circumstances demonstrate that the State met its
    burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt defendant's waiver of her privilege
    against incrimination was knowing, intelligent and voluntary. See A.S., 203
    27                                   A-0984-18
    N.J. at 148. The trial judge did not err in denying her motion to suppress the
    recorded statement.
    II
    Defendant also argues the assistant prosecutor's comments about the
    trajectory taken by the bullet that struck the victim were not based on the
    evidence and had the "clear capacity to have led to an unjust verdict," see State
    v. Frost, 
    158 N.J. 76
    , 88-89 (1999), thus warranting a new trial. Defendant
    specifies the portion of the State's summation where the assistant prosecutor
    countered defendant's trial testimony that a person known as "Scrap" shot the
    victim and threatened her if she disclosed his culpability:
    And then, lastly, the medical examination. This is a key
    point. Back to front; right to left, slightly upwards.
    She's 5'4". Tyrell, Savage—whatever you want to call
    him—Scrap, big dudes, tall, at least 5'10". She told you
    that. She told you that. She told you she was 5'4".
    When you put a gun that close to the back of
    somebody's head, if you're 5'10" or above, that's down
    on Vinny, who his mother . . . said was approximately
    5'5", 5'6". That's down, that's not slightly upwards.
    She's shorter than Vinny. If she's going to put a gun to
    the back of his head that pathway is going to be slightly
    upwards.
    Defendant claims the State's failure to call any expert, including the medical
    examiner or a ballistics expert, "to opine on the likely path a bullet would travel
    28                                    A-0984-18
    given the relative heights of a shooter and a victim" rendered the assistant
    prosecutor's remarks extrinsic to the evidence.
    Our Supreme Court recently reiterated the standards to which we hold the
    State's lawyer when summing to a jury:
    While "prosecutors in criminal cases are expected to
    make vigorous and forceful closing arguments to
    juries" and are "afforded considerable leeway," "their
    comments [should be] reasonably related to the scope
    of the evidence presented." [Id.] at 82. "[R]eferences
    to matters extraneous to the evidence" may constitute
    prosecutorial misconduct. State v. Jackson, 
    211 N.J. 394
    , 408 (2012). "In other words, as long as the
    prosecutor 'stays within the evidence and the legitimate
    inferences therefrom,'" [State v. McNeil-Thomas, 
    238 N.J. 256
    , 275 (2019)] (quoting State v. R.B., 
    183 N.J. 308
    , 330 (2005)), "[t]here is no error," 
    ibid.
     (quoting
    State v. Carter, 
    91 N.J. 86
    , 125 (1982)).
    [State v. Williams, ___ N.J. ___, ___ (2021) (slip op. at 14).]
    The assistant prosecutor did not stray from the Court's strictures. The trial
    record shows the parties stipulated that, had the medical examiner testified, he
    would have stated the victim sustained "a gunshot wound to the back of [his]
    head[,] . . . located approximately two inches above and three inches posterior
    to the right ear canal[;]" and "the overall pathway of the projectile was back to
    front, right to left, and slightly upward."
    29                                     A-0984-18
    In her statement, defendant told the detectives that as she walked with the
    victim and he stopped and slowed down, she told him "you all behind me
    walking, can you walk ahead of me." She said she stopped and acted like she
    was tying her shoe then shot him in the back of the head at close range.
    During the trial, the victim's mother testified he was approximately 5'6"
    tall. In her statement to the detectives, defendant said she was 5'4". Convery
    testified he identified Scrap as Zihere Sabre whom he met and ascertained Scrap
    was Convery's height—approximately 5'10"—or "maybe actually about an inch
    taller."
    The assistant prosecutor did nothing more than link the stipulated fact that
    the projectile's path was "slightly upwards" to the relative heights of defendant,
    Scrap and the victim, proposing that the path indicated it was fired from
    defendant who was shorter than both the victim and Scrap. Although the height
    and angle of the gun could have been adjusted no matter the height of the
    shooter, those facts and conclusions did not require expert testimony as the
    subject was not beyond the ken of an ordinary juror. As the trial judge said in
    his oral decision denying defendant's motion for a new trial, "[t]his is really
    layperson physics and geometry. No expert is needed to understand a simple
    argument about how a bullet would travel given the position of the gun relative
    30                                    A-0984-18
    to the position of the shooting victim at the time the shot was fired." We wholly
    agree, considering that the inference the assistant prosecutor was asking the jury
    to draw related only to the source of the upward path of the fired bullet, a path
    established by the medical examiner's stipulated finding.
    As the trial judge instructed the jury in conformance with the model jury
    charge,
    circumstantial evidence means evidence that proves a
    fact from which an inference of the existence of another
    fact may be drawn.
    An inference is a deduction of fact that may logically
    and reasonably be drawn from another fact or group of
    facts established by the evidence. Whether or not
    inferences should be drawn is for you to decide using
    your own common sense, knowledge and every day
    experience. Ask yourselves is it probable, logical and
    reasonable.
    [Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Criminal Final
    Charge" (rev. May 12, 2014).]
    The jury was free to make the inference based on the evidence presented even if
    the assistant prosecutor said nothing of the issue. Defendant had the same
    opportunity to argue the factual evidence supported a divergent finding.
    Indeed, defendant posed no objection to the assistant prosecutor's
    comments. Although, in the absence of an objection, we generally apply the
    plain error standard and will not reverse unless the error was "of such a nature
    31                                   A-0984-18
    as to have been clearly capable of producing an unjust result," R. 2:10-2, we
    need not decide whether, in the context of this jury trial, relief need be afforded
    because the possibility of an unjust result is "sufficient to raise a reasonable
    doubt as to whether the error led the jury to a result it otherwise might not have
    reached," State v. Macon, 
    57 N.J. 325
    , 336 (1971). The assistant prosecutor
    committed no error, much less plain error, by his evidence-based comments.
    Thus, there is no need to further analyze and
    weigh "the severity of the misconduct and its
    prejudicial effect on [defendant's] right to a fair trial,"
    State v. Wakefield, 
    190 N.J. 397
    , 437 (2007), and
    reverse a conviction on the basis of prosecutorial
    misconduct only if "the conduct was so egregious as to
    deprive defendant of a fair trial," 
    ibid.
     (quoting State v.
    Papasavvas, 
    163 N.J. 565
    , 625 (2000)).
    [Williams, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 14).]
    III
    Defendant advances a single argument regarding the trial judge's denial of
    her motion for a new trial: a new trial was warranted because "[a]fter the verdict
    . . . defendant recalled that she told a friend named Wayne Roberts on the day
    of the shooting that 'Scrap' was the shooter and had threatened . . . defendant."
    The judge considered Roberts's witness statement under the "stringent" test to
    which newly discovered evidence is put in determining a new-trial motion: "the
    32                                    A-0984-18
    new evidence must be (1) material to the issue and not merely cumulative or
    impeaching or contradictory; (2) discovered since the trial and not discoverable
    by reasonable diligence beforehand; and (3) of the sort that would probably
    change the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted." State v. Carter, 
    85 N.J. 300
    , 314 (1981). A defendant must satisfy all three prongs to be entitled to a
    new trial. State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    , 187 (2004).
    Concluding defendant met the first prong, the trial judge found "the
    alleged conversation between . . . defendant and . . . Roberts is arguably material
    because it tends to show that she was not the real shooter and that she was merely
    taking the fall for someone else." Although the judge deemed the evidence
    "largely cumulative" of defendant's trial testimony "since it essentially
    constitutes her telling another person the same thing at an earlier time," the judge
    noted the evidence "also cuts against the [S]tate's implied argument of recent
    fabrication given that the statement actually was made, according to . . .
    defendant, shortly after the incident."
    Turning to the third prong, the judge gave the evidence "moderate weight"
    because, "if believed, it would bolster . . . defendant's recantation and denial of
    guilt that she testified to at trial." The judge discerned that the "exceedingly
    unreliable nature of recantation testimony" and Roberts's probable impeachment
    33                                  A-0984-18
    with his criminal history, it was "not probable that this new evidence would
    change the jury's verdict[.]" The judge also determined the "evidence clearly
    fails" the second prong because Roberts was "incarcerated in a [S]tate
    correctional facility at the time of trial" and was accessible to defendant.
    The trial judge's comprehensive and cogent findings well support his
    analysis of the three pertinent prongs, and we perceive no abuse, much less a
    clear abuse, of his sound discretion, see State v. Russo, 
    333 N.J. Super. 119
    , 137
    (App. Div. 2000), that "arises on demonstration of manifest error or injustice[,]"
    Hisenaj v. Kuehner, 
    194 N.J. 6
    , 20 (2008) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted); State v. Torres, 
    183 N.J. 554
    , 572 (2005), and occurs when the trial
    judge's "decision is 'made without a rational explanation, inexplicably departed
    from established policies, or rested on an impermissible basis,'" Jacoby v.
    Jacoby, 
    427 N.J. Super. 109
    , 116 (App. Div. 2012) (quoting Flagg v. Essex Cnty.
    Prosecutor, 
    171 N.J. 561
    , 571 (2002)).
    The judge properly discerned evidence is considered material under prong
    one if it has "'some bearing on the claims being advanced' . . . [including]
    evidence that supports a general denial of guilt." State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    ,
    549 (2013) (quoting Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 188
    ). The Court in Nash recognized that
    "prongs one and three are inextricably intertwined." 
    Ibid.
     As such,
    34                                      A-0984-18
    [d]etermining whether evidence is merely cumulative,
    or impeaching, or contradictory, and, therefore,
    insufficient to justify the grant of a new trial requires
    an evaluation of the probable impact such evidence
    would have on a jury verdict. Therefore, the focus
    properly turns to prong three of the Carter test, whether
    the evidence is of the sort that would probably change
    the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted. The
    characterization of evidence as merely cumulative, or
    impeaching, or contradictory is a judgment that such
    evidence is not of great significance and would
    probably not alter the outcome of a verdict. However,
    evidence that would have the probable effect of raising
    a reasonable doubt as to the defendant's guilt would not
    be considered merely cumulative, impeaching, or
    contradictory.
    [Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 188-89
     (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted).]
    Under both of these prongs, the "central issue" is whether the newly discovered
    evidence has the power to "shake the very foundation of the State's case and
    almost certainly alter the earlier jury verdict." Nash, 212 N.J. at 549 (quoting
    Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 189, 191
    ).
    The second prong "recognizes that judgments must be accorded a degree
    of finality and, therefore, requires that the new evidence must have been
    discovered after completion of trial and must not have been discoverable earlier
    through the exercise of reasonable diligence." Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 192
    .
    35                                  A-0984-18
    The trial judge's denial of the new-trial motion adhered to our holding
    that, when considering a motion for a new trial under Rule 3:20-1, a judge "shall
    not set aside a jury verdict unless 'it clearly and convincingly appears that there
    was a manifest denial of justice under the law.'" State v. Armour, 
    446 N.J. Super. 295
    , 305-06 (App. Div. 2016). There is no reason to disturb the judge's
    sound decision. See Russo, 
    333 N.J. Super. at 137
    .
    Affirmed.
    36                                    A-0984-18