STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. BRITTANY L. BURNETT (18-12-1258, BERGEN 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-2349-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BRITTANY L. BURNETT,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Submitted February 9, 2021 – Decided June 2, 2021
    Before Judges Gilson and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Bergen County, Indictment No. 18-12-1258.
    Hegge & Confusione, LLC, attorneys for appellant
    (Michael Confusione, of counsel and on the brief).
    Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney for
    Respondent (Ian C. Kennedy, Assistant Prosecutor, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Tried to a jury, defendant Brittany L. Burnett appeals her conviction and
    concomitant sentence for third-degree aggravated assault on a law enforcement
    officer, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(5)(a) (count one); disorderly persons resisting
    arrest, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2(a)(1), as a lesser included charge of third-degree
    resisting arrest (count three); and second-degree eluding, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2(b)
    (count four), arguing:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING
    TESTIMONY ABOUT DEFENDANT'S SUSPENDED
    OUT-OF-STATE DRIVER'S LICENSE[.]
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR ACQUITTAL OF
    THE SECOND[-]DEGREE ELUDING CHARGE
    AND THE THIRD[-]DEGREE AGGRAVATED
    ASSAULT ON A LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER
    CHARGE[.]
    POINT III
    PERMITTING THE PRIMARY STATE WITNESS,
    TROOPER DELGAIZO, TO TELL THE JURY
    ABOUT INJURIES HE CLAIMED TO HAVE
    SUSTAINED THAT WERE NEVER SUPPORTED
    BY EXPERT MEDICAL EVIDENCE VIOLATED
    THE RULES OF EVIDENCE PROHIBITING
    HEARSAY AND DEFENDANT'S RIGHT TO A FAIR
    TRIAL[.]
    2                                  A-2349-19
    POINT IV
    DEFENDANT'S RIGHT TO A FAIR AND
    IMPARTIAL JURY WAS VIOLATED BY THE
    TRIAL JUDGE'S FAILURE TO PROPERLY VOIR
    DIRE THE JURY POOL DURING JURY
    SELECTION, AND BECAUSE OF UNFAIR
    PREJUDICE TO DEFENDANT CAUSED BY THE
    JUDGE'S  REPRIMAND    OF   DEFENDANT'S
    PARAMOUR IN FRONT OF JURY MEMBERS[.]
    POINT V
    DEFENDANT'S SENTENCE IS IMPROPER AND
    CLEARLY UNREASONABLE[.]
    POINT VI
    THE   CUMULATIVE               ERRORS      WARRANT
    REVERSAL.
    We reject defendant's arguments relating to trial error, but are constrained to
    remand for resentencing.
    I
    Turning first to defendant's argument that the trial court erred by denying
    her motion for judgment of acquittal on counts one and four, 1 we apply the same
    standard used by the trial court in our de novo review. State v. Dekowski, 
    218 N.J. 596
    , 608 (2014). We consider:
    1
    The trial court granted, in part, defendant's motion and dismissed count two
    charging third-degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(7).
    3                                   A-2349-19
    whether, viewing the State's evidence in its entirety, be
    that evidence direct or circumstantial, and giving the
    State the benefit of all its favorable testimony as well
    as all of the favorable inferences which reasonably
    could be drawn therefrom, a reasonable jury could find
    guilt of the charge beyond a reasonable doubt.
    [State v. Reyes, 
    50 N.J. 454
    , 459 (1967).]
    From the trial record, we glean the evidence most favorable to the State.
    New Jersey State Trooper Michael Delgaizo, in full uniform, was posted
    approximately seventy-five yards from Route 120 when he heard a traffic-
    control worker, employed to direct vehicles exiting the MetLife Stadium parking
    lot onto Route 120 after a Taylor Swift concert, unsuccessfully ask defendant to
    move her vehicle that was partially blocking West Peripheral Road leading to
    Route 120. Defendant, who had driven concertgoers to the stadium and was
    scheduled to pick them up, ignored the traffic-control worker's requests made to
    defendant from a distance of two feet through her vehicle's open window.
    Delgaizo saw that defendant's vehicle was illegally parked on the ramp
    leading to Route 120 blocking bus travel. Defendant ignored Delgaizo's thrice-
    given commands to move the vehicle, telling the person to whom she was
    ostensibly speaking on her cell phone that "a cop" was talking to her but she was
    not "fucking moving" until she knew where to go, prompting Delgaizo to order
    defendant to wait in place because he was going to issue her a summons.
    4                                   A-2349-19
    Delgaizo took two or three steps toward his troop vehicle when he heard
    defendant's vehicle shift into drive. He "spun around," "slammed" the hood and
    yelled: "Stop. Put the car in park. Put the car in park." Defendant's vehicle
    rolled slowly forward and hit the trooper's knee. Delgaizo again yelled for
    defendant to "[s]top the car." When he reached his arm in the driver's window—
    which was "about three or four inches up"—to unlock the door, defendant "hit[]
    the gas, [and took] off" causing Delgaizo to lose his balance. The door was
    wedged under the trooper's armpit, and defendant's vehicle dragged Delgaizo on
    the ramp leading to Route 120 until he became dislodged and fell "end over end"
    multiple times.
    The traffic-control worker witnessed the incident and, during his trial
    testimony, corroborated Delgaizo's version of events, as did a civilian witness
    who drove his girlfriend and a friend home from the concert. 2 So too, off-duty
    New Jersey State Trooper Brian Miller testified that as he was exiting the
    parking lot after attending the concert with his family, he saw: defendant's
    vehicle partially blocking West Peripheral Road; a trooper, who he would later
    2
    The civilian witness' girlfriend testified she saw defendant's vehicle jolt
    forward, Delgaizo slamming his hand on the vehicle's windshield, and
    Delgaizo's hand inside the vehicle until he fell as defendant drove away "moving
    pretty quickly."
    5                                  A-2349-19
    learn was Delgaizo, speaking to the driver through the driver's open window;
    defendant suddenly pull away and bump Delgaizo; Delgaizo slam the vehicle's
    hood and yell "stop"; defendant's vehicle taking off "like a rocket ship" while
    Delgaizo's arm was inside the vehicle; and Delgaizo being dragged until he
    "tumbled across the ground."
    Miller followed defendant's vehicle onto Route 120, then Route 3 where
    defendant drove erratically, recklessly changing lanes and cutting off vehicles.
    He discontinued pursuit when defendant drove onto Route 17. He obtained the
    vehicle's New York license plate and reported it and the make, model and
    direction of travel to dispatch.
    Defendant's vehicle was later seen by Sergeant Michael Kenyon entering
    the MetLife Stadium lot from West Peripheral Road in a free-parking area also
    designated for Uber drivers to pick up and discharge passengers. Defendant
    resisted Kenyon's initial attempt to arrest her, as well as subsequent attempts by
    Kenyon and Detective Sergeant Clinton Pagano, both of whom were in full New
    Jersey State Police uniform. After she was finally handcuffed, while being
    transported, defendant slipped one arm free from the handcuffs; they were
    resecured.
    6                                   A-2349-19
    When reviewing a motion for judgment of acquittal under Rule 3:18-1, we
    are "not concerned with the worth, nature or extent (beyond a scintilla) of the
    evidence, but only with its existence, viewed most favorably to the State." State
    v. Muniz, 
    150 N.J. Super. 436
    , 440 (App. Div. 1977). "If the evidence satisfies
    that standard, the motion must be denied." State v. Spivey, 
    179 N.J. 229
    , 236
    (2004). Defendant's specific arguments ignore those principles.
    She claims her counsel's cross-examination of Delgaizo showed
    defendant's vehicle was already moving when the trooper inserted his arm
    through the driver's window, and that the trooper's "overreact[ion] to a parking
    issue" caused his injuries; the incident was an accident. She also contends the
    incident occurred in MetLife Stadium's parking lot; thus, the State failed to
    prove that she eluded on a street or highway. Even if the facts claimed by
    defendant were established, those facts are not the facts most favorable to the
    State.
    Under the assault statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(5)(a), the State had to
    prove: (1) defendant purposely "attempt[ed] to cause or purposely, knowingly
    or recklessly cause[d] bodily injury" to Delgaizo; (2) Delgaizo was a law
    enforcement officer; and (3) defendant knew Delgaizo was a "law enforcement
    officer acting in the performance of his duties or while in uniform or exhibiting
    7                                  A-2349-19
    evidence of his authority." See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Aggravated
    Assault - Upon Law Enforcement Officer (Attempting to Cause or Purposely,
    Knowingly or Recklessly Causing Bodily Injury) (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(5)(a),
    (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g))" (rev. Dec. 3, 2001). The record evidence favorable to
    the State established those elements under the Reyes standard.
    We note defendant did not include the eluding charge when arguing for
    judgment of acquittal before the trial court. Typically, we would decline to
    consider an issue not addressed to the trial court. State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    ,
    20 (2009). In its written decision denying defendant's motion, the trial court
    nevertheless analyzed the elements of eluding the State was required to prove:
    (1) defendant was operating a motor vehicle on a street or highway in this state;
    (2) Delgaizo was a police or law enforcement officer; (3) Delgaizo signaled
    defendant to bring the vehicle to a full stop; (4) defendant knew the officer had
    signaled her to bring the vehicle to a full stop; (5) defendant knew Delgaizo was
    a police or law enforcement officer; (6) defendant knowingly fled or attempted
    to elude the officer.     N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2(b); see also Model Jury Charges
    (Criminal), "Eluding an Officer [Second and Third Degree] (N.J.S.A. 2C:29-
    2b)" (rev. Nov. 15, 2004).
    8                                    A-2349-19
    Because defendant did not present the issue, the trial court did not
    explicitly find defendant operated the vehicle on a New Jersey street or highway.
    The record evidence most favorable to the State established defendant was on
    West Peripheral Road blocking traffic when Delgaizo approached the vehicle
    and issued commands to stay in place and, later, to stop her vehicle. Defendant
    fled on that road onto Route 120 after Delgaizo issued his commands through
    the open driver's window while standing proximate to defendant. Thus, under
    the Reyes standard, the trial court properly denied defendant's motion for
    judgment of acquittal.
    II
    We review defendant's arguments regarding the admission of both motive
    evidence under N.J.R.E. 404(b) and Delgaizo's testimony about his reading of
    the MRI of his injured knee, recognizing "the decision to admit or exclude
    evidence is one firmly entrusted to the trial court's discretion." Est. of Hanges
    v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    202 N.J. 369
    , 383-84 (2010); see also State v.
    Scott, 
    229 N.J. 469
    , 479 (2017). We "apply a deferential standard in reviewing
    a trial court's evidentiary rulings and uphold its determinations 'absent . . . an
    abuse of discretion.'" Scott, 229 N.J. at 479 (quoting State v. Perry, 
    225 N.J. 222
    , 233 (2016)). An abuse of discretion may be shown if there is a "clear error
    9                                   A-2349-19
    in judgment" or a ruling that would result in "a manifest denial of justice." 
    Ibid.
    (quoting Perry, 225 N.J. at 233).
    A
    As the trial court instructed the jury, it admitted evidence that defendant's
    license was suspended on the day of the concert—July 20, 2018—for the jury's
    determination if the evidence established her "motive to flee and[/]or lack of
    mistake or an accident." The court strictly limited the jury's consideration of
    that evidence to the eluding charge, prohibiting it from considering the evidence
    in its deliberations on the aggravated assault or resisting arrest counts.
    In a written decision, the trial court analyzed the evidence proffered by
    the State in support of its motion to admit evidence of defendant's license
    suspension under the four-prong Cofield test, 3 focusing on the third factor
    because defendant argued the State had not presented clear and convincing proof
    3
    Under State v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
    , 338 (1992), the party proffering evidence
    of a prior bad act must prove:
    1. The evidence of the other crime must be admissible
    as relevant to a material issue;
    2. It must be similar in kind and reasonably close in
    time to the offense charged;
    3. The evidence of the other crime must be clear and
    convincing; and
    4. The probative value of the evidence must not be
    outweighed by its apparent prejudice.
    10                                    A-2349-19
    defendant knew her license was suspended on July 20, 2018, the date of the
    eluding. The evidence the court found clear and convincing included a New
    York Department of Motor Vehicles abstract of defendant's driving record,
    suspension order, and notice of impending driver license suspension (the notice)
    and conviction with proof of mailing which the court aptly found
    establish[ed] that defendant's driving privileges were
    suspended on May 4, 2018[,] because she failed to pay
    a [d]riving [a]ssessment by virtue of [a] suspension
    order . . . and were also suspended on June 29, 2019[,]
    pursuant to [another] suspension order. [The notice]
    establish[ed] . . . defendant was informed on June 6,
    2019[,] that her license would be suspended on or after
    June 28, 2018[,] because she failed to answer a
    speeding ticket and proof of mailing of [the notice] was
    also supplied. A [s]uspension [o]rder dated April 4,
    2019, establishing an indefinite suspension on May 4,
    2018[,] was also suppled. 4
    The trial court also considered the testimony of New Jersey State Trooper
    Edward Rufolo during the N.J.R.E. 404(b) motion hearing. In what the trial
    court described as a "pedigree interview," the court found "defendant stated that
    she knew that her driver's license was suspended" on July 20, 2018, "while he
    4
    The dates quoted by the judge—June 29, 2019; June 6, 2019; and April 4,
    2019—were incorrectly stated. The exhibits shown to the judge, and provided
    in the State's appendix, show the year was 2018, not 2019.
    11                                   A-2349-19
    acquired her pedigree information." 5        The trial court determined "Rufolo's
    testimony about . . . defendant's admission, by itself, cause[d it] to find that the
    evidence is clear and convincing.       The [New York Department of] Motor
    Vehicle[s] documents merely bolster[ed] that conclusion."
    Defendant argues her admission to Rufolo should not have been
    considered because the trial court "had already determined that defendant's
    Miranda 6 rights were violated and that her statements could not be introduced
    into evidence against her at trial." She also claims her admission to Rufolo was
    not "pedigree information," but responded to Rufolo's inquiry when he "just
    asked her how's her license," a question not set forth or related to information
    directly necessary to complete the report he was writing.
    5
    As we held in State v. M.L., 
    253 N.J. Super. 13
    , 21 (App. Div. 1991), "booking
    procedures and the routine questions associated therewith"—commonly known
    as pedigree questions that result in "pedigree information" provided by a
    suspect—"are ministerial in nature and beyond the right to remain silent." "Even
    unexpected incriminating statements made by in-custody defendants in response
    to non-investigative questions by the police without prior Miranda warnings are
    admissible." Ibid.; see also United States ex rel. Hines v. LaVallee, 
    521 F.2d 1109
    , 1112-13 (2d Cir. 1975).
    6
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    12                                    A-2349-19
    It does not appear from the record provided that defendant challenged
    defendant's statement to Rufolo in her suppression motion. 7 Indeed, the trial
    court noted in its written 404(b) decision:
    This court realizes that the State's motion to admit other
    statements made by . . . defendant was denied based
    upon the failure to proper[l]y advise . . . defendant of
    her Miranda rights. The information addressed in this
    motion is pedigree information. Miranda does not
    apply. . . . Further discussion of this issue is not merited
    as the defense has not raised this issue.
    [(Emphasis supplied).]
    We thus decline to address defendant's present argument that her admission went
    beyond "pedigree information," should have been suppressed and was
    inadmissible to establish clear and convincing proof of her motive to elude.
    State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 15 (2009).
    Furthermore, the trial court's finding that there was clear and convincing
    evidence, even untethered from the "pedigree information," provided clear and
    convincing evidence defendant's license was suspended and she knew it was
    suspended. See State v. Calleia, 
    206 N.J. 274
    , 296 (2011) (holding "in order to
    be admissible as motive evidence, the State must directly or circumstantially
    7
    Neither the transcripts of the Miranda hearing, nor the court's opinion was
    included in the record.
    13                                  A-2349-19
    show that the accused probably knew of the facts that are alleged to have given
    rise to the motive"). Contrary to defendant's contention in her merits brief that
    the July 31, 2018 notice was dated after the incident, other notices and the dates
    of suspension or proposed suspension set forth therein pre-dated July 20, 2018,
    including the notice to which was attached a mailing record establishing it was
    received and scanned at the United States Postal Service's (USPS) facility
    serving defendant's home-address zip code on June 9, 2018, and that "[t]he
    USPS confirmed this information with the [New York] Department [of Motor
    Vehicles]" on that date. There is no evidence defendant complied with the
    conditions to prevent any proposed suspension, or that she took action to clear
    any actual suspension. And, as noted in defendant's merits brief, Rufolo testified
    that, after defendant made her admission, additional "look-ups" revealed her
    license was suspended.
    We also reject defendant's argument that inconsistencies in Rufolo's
    testimony about the unrecorded pedigree procedure rendered it "not credible."
    The trial court found the trooper's testimony "honest and very credible," a
    finding to which we accord deference. See State v. Locurto, 
    157 N.J. 463
    , 474
    (1999)   ("Appellate courts should defer to trial courts' credibility findings that
    are often influenced by matters such as observations of the character and
    14                                    A-2349-19
    demeanor of witnesses and common human experience that are not transmitted
    by the record.").
    The trial court addressed defendant's present argument that the proffered
    evidence did not meet Cofield's fourth prong because it was unfairly prejudicial,
    holding:
    The probative value is great. It may establish motive
    or may answer the question of why . . . defendant
    elected to flee. Its prejudice is slight. Many motorists
    who commit violations do not flee. They stay and are
    served with appropriate summonses. The evidence
    does not conclusively answer the question of why and
    the facts afford the defense opportunity to raise doubts,
    perhaps by cross-examination. For example, if the
    State's evidence is believed, the defendant did not move
    her car when Trooper Delgaizo first asked her merely
    to move the vehicle she was driving.
    The Calleia Court recognized "the special role of motive evidence and its
    unique capacity to provide a jury with an overarching narrative, permitting
    inferences for why a defendant might have engaged in the alleged criminal
    conduct." Id. at 293. Because "motive must [often] be pieced together; potential
    motivating factors must be gleaned from evidence that does not itself bespeak
    criminal intent but merely explains what events might have led the accused to
    commit a criminal act," "motive is treated somewhat differently than other types
    of evidence," and "a 'wider range of evidence' is permitted to prove motive, so
    15                                   A-2349-19
    long as it remains a material issue in a case." Id. at 293-94 (quoting State v.
    Covell, 
    157 N.J. 554
    , 565 (1999)). "'Any evidence which has a legitimate
    bearing on the question of motive is as a general rule admissible' so long as it
    'at least to a slight degree tend[s] to establish the existence of the motive relied
    on.'" Id. at 293 (alteration in original) (quoting 41 C.J.S. Homicide § 325
    (2006)). "Time and again, courts have admitted motive evidence even when it
    did no more than raise an inference of why a defendant may have engaged in
    criminal conduct, and even in the face of a certain degree of potential prejudice
    stemming from the evidence." Id. at 294. When evidence provides proof of
    motive, "a strong showing of prejudice is necessary to exclude [such] evidence
    under the balancing test of N.J.R.E. 403." Ibid.
    The trial court was well within its discretion in finding the probative value
    of the evidence was not outweighed by its apparent prejudice, especially
    considering that the evidence related to non-criminal conduct, see generally
    State v. DiFrisco, 
    137 N.J. 434
    , 497 (1994) ("Considering that defendant
    confessed to the execution-style killing of [the victim], [introduction of
    evidence] that he stole a car, committed a few traffic violations, and yelled at
    his mother had very little tendency to divert the jurors' attention from their
    16                                    A-2349-19
    duties."), and the trial court's limiting instruction narrowly focused the use of
    the evidence.
    We discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court's determination that
    the State established the admissibility of the evidence relating to defendant's
    license suspension under the Cofield test. Even if the admission of the evidence
    was in error—which we neither suggest nor determine—considering the
    numerous eyewitnesses' testimony regarding defendant's eluding, the error was
    not "of such a nature as to have been clearly capable of producing an unjust
    result." R. 2:10-2; see, e.g., State v. Jordan, 
    147 N.J. 409
    , 421-22 (1997); State
    v. Hunt, 
    115 N.J. 330
    , 363 (1989). As described by the witnesses, defendant's
    actions, even absent motive evidence, clearly established the elements of
    eluding.
    B
    Defendant next asserts the admission of Delgaizo's testimony about his
    knee injury "was impermissible expert opinion hearsay evidence." Specifically,
    when asked on direct examination what he saw "on the MRI relating to [the]
    tendons in [his] knee," Delgaizo replied he "[s]aw abnormalities. There was a
    section of my knee that you could see that wasn't completed (sic) connected.
    There was like a – like a minor tear in it. I mean you could see it."
    17                                   A-2349-19
    We agree with defendant; the testimony should not have been allowed,
    especially over defendant's objection. The assistant prosecutor failed to call the
    doctor who actually read the MRI. His elicitation from Delgaizo of what was
    obviously a medical interpretation of that diagnostic study was an indolent
    attempt to introduce hearsay expert medical testimony. In Brun v. Cardoso, 
    390 N.J. Super. 409
    , 421 (App. Div. 2006), we held, over an objection, an
    "interpretation of an MRI may be made only by a physician qualified to read
    such films, and that the MRI report could not be bootstrapped into evidence
    through [a chiropractor's] testimony. Our conclusion is not dependent on [the
    doctor's] status as a chiropractor but on the complexity of MRI interpretations."
    And, the admission of the victim's testimony deprived defendant of a fair
    opportunity to cross-examine the doctor who actually read the MRI. See 
    id. at 422
    .
    Delgaizo was not qualified as an expert in radiology or any other medical
    field. Indeed, the assistant prosecutor did not establish any foundation to show
    Delgaizo had first-hand knowledge of what he was viewing on the MRI. But
    again, the error was not "of such a nature as to have been clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2; see, e.g., Jordan, 
    147 N.J. at 421-22
    ;
    Hunt, 
    115 N.J. at 363
    .
    18                                   A-2349-19
    The severity of the injury depicted in the MRI was necessary to prove the
    significant-bodily-injury element of the aggravated assault count, 8 but that count
    was dismissed. To prove the remaining aggravated assault count, the State was
    required to prove that defendant purposely, knowingly or recklessly caused or
    purposely attempted to cause only "bodily injury," N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(5)(a);
    2C:12-1(a)(1); that is "physical pain, illness or any impairment of physical
    condition." N.J.S.A. 2C:11-1(a).
    Among the other injuries to which Delgaizo testified and were shown in
    photographic evidence, Delgaizo suffered abrasions to his knees. As defendant
    conceded in summation, "[w]e know his knees got bloody." Delgaizo also
    testified about the long rehabilitative process he endured, including physical
    therapy. Thus, in light of the overwhelming, uncontradicted evidence that
    Delgaizo suffered bodily injury, the admission of his hearsay testimony did not
    result in an unjust conviction.
    8
    Under N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(7), a person who "[a]ttempts to cause significant
    bodily injury to another or causes significant bodily injury purposely or
    knowingly or, under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the
    value of human life recklessly causes such significant bodily injury" is guilty of
    aggravated assault. "'Significant bodily injury' means bodily injury which
    creates a temporary loss of the function of any bodily member or organ or
    temporary loss of any one of the five senses." N.J.S.A. 2C:11-1(d).
    19                                    A-2349-19
    III
    Although, as defendant's trial counsel advised the trial court, defendant
    does not contend "there was bias on the part of the troopers[,]" defendant argues
    she was deprived of a fair trial because the trial court did not pose questions to
    the jury venire regarding bias engendered by "the fact that she is an African-
    American lesbian who has adopted a manner of clothing that is more masculine
    than feminine." We fully endorse questioning jurors regarding potential bias of
    any kind. "[L]itigants are entitled to an unbiased jury and . . . a fair jury selection
    process." Pellicer ex. rel. Pellicer v. St. Barnabas Hosp., 
    200 N.J. 22
    , 40 (2009).
    Indeed,
    [t]he purpose of jury selection is to obtain a jury that
    can decide the case without bias against any of the
    involved parties, that will evaluate the evidence with an
    open mind, and that will apply the law as instructed by
    the judge. Voir dire practices must be geared to
    eliciting meaningful information from prospective
    jurors so those with a real potential for bias can be
    excused.
    [State v. Bianco, 
    391 N.J. Super. 509
    , 517 (App. Div.
    2007) (quoting Administrative Directive #21-06,
    "Approved Jury Selection Standards" (Dec. 11,
    2006)).]
    But, considering the trial court's conduct of the voir dire, there is no merit to
    defendant's argument, chiefly because the court did ask those questions.
    20                                     A-2349-19
    Contrary to defendant's merits brief argument that her "counsel asked for
    the voir dire inquiry right away," the record reflects, despite a June 3, 2019
    pretrial order that required counsel to submit proposed voir dire questions to the
    court by September 2, 2019, defendant first requested the sexual-orientation-
    bias question to the court on September 10, 2019, after the court had read the
    standard and additional questions to the venire. The trial court declined the
    request as tardy and irrelevant.
    The next trial day, the court proposed an alternate sexual-orientation-bias
    question, but defendant's counsel rejected it as inadequate; the court, again,
    declined to ask the question proposed by defendant. On September 17, 2019,
    voir dire continued, and defendant renewed her request for her question to be
    posed, added an additional proposed racial-bias question because Delgaizo was
    Caucasian, and, claiming there was "no way to correct the deficiency" caused
    because those questions were not asked "without further tainting the jury pool
    against" her, moved for a mistrial and requested that jury selection begin anew.
    During the September 18, 2019 proceedings, the trial court denied
    defendant's motion for a mistrial, but agreed to add a racial-bias question and a
    sexual-orientation-bias question. The court crafted two questions it would ask
    21                                   A-2349-19
    to all potential jurors, including those seated in the jury box. Defendant did not
    object to the questions and neither party objected to the voir dire procedure. 9
    The court asked the question of the seated jurors and incorporated them
    when questioning jurors subsequently called to the box. Both parties exercised
    peremptory challenges; defendant had fifteen remaining peremptory challenges
    and the State had eight when the court began asking the additional questions.
    Defendant did not exhaust her peremptory challenges.
    We deem meritless defendant's claim that she was deprived a fair trial
    because the two added questions were not asked "from the beginning" of juror
    voir dire, and by the time the questions were asked, "it was too late to correct
    the prejudice." We first note defendant does not specify any prejudice she
    suffered. And we perceive none in light of the fact that all jurors were asked
    about both forms of bias.
    We typically leave the selection and management of the jury to the sound
    discretion of the trial court. State v. Brown, 
    442 N.J. Super. 154
    , 182 (App. Div.
    2015). "This standard respects the trial court's unique perspective and the
    9
    The State agreed to the timing of the questions and, with defense counsel,
    helped draft the racial-bias question, but objected because the questions,
    particularly the sexual-orientation question, would plant a thought in the jurors'
    minds that had no relation to any testimony. The assistant prosecutor stated his
    preference for a more general minority-bias question.
    22                                   A-2349-19
    traditional deference we accord to [it] in 'exercising control over matters
    pertaining to the jury.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. R.D., 
    169 N.J. 551
    , 559-60
    (2001)).
    Voir dire determinations "are traditionally within the broad discretionary
    powers vested in the trial court and 'its exercise of discretion will ordinarily not
    be disturbed on appeal.'" State v. Williams, 
    113 N.J. 393
    , 410 (1988) (quoting
    State v. Jackson, 
    43 N.J. 148
    , 160 (1964)); see also State v. Murray, 
    240 N.J. Super. 378
    , 392 (App. Div. 1990). In the selection of a jury, "trial courts must
    be allotted reasonable latitude when conducting voir dire and, therefore, [our]
    examination . . . focus[es] only on determining whether 'the overall scope and
    quality of the voir dire was sufficiently thorough and probing to assure the
    selection of an impartial jury.'" State v. Winder, 
    200 N.J. 231
    , 252 (2009)
    (quoting State v. Biegenwald, 
    106 N.J. 13
    , 29 (1987)).
    Although we have recognized a trial court is "not obliged to ask any
    particular question or indulge the defendant's requests absolutely," State v.
    Lumumba, 
    253 N.J. Super. 375
    , 394 (App. Div. 1992), the better practice here
    would have been to ask about the two areas of bias from the start. That the
    questions weren't initially posed, however, was due in large part by defendant's
    failure to timely request them. Notwithstanding the delay, "the overall scope
    23                                    A-2349-19
    and quality of the voir dire," during which the remaining jurors were asked about
    potential bias based on race and sexual orientation, adequately explored those
    areas. Biegenwald, 
    106 N.J. at 29
    ; see also Winder, 
    200 N.J. at 252
    . Defendant
    points to no evidence that any of the final jurors were ineffectively questioned
    or were in any way partial. Nor does defendant contend she was precluded from
    exercising peremptory challenges. See State v. Dishon, 
    297 N.J. Super. 254
    ,
    266, 270 (App. Div. 1997) (decrying the trial court's practice of asking
    defendant's supplemental questions only after defendant had exhausted all
    peremptory challenges).
    We also reject defendant's claim that the court's denial of a mistrial was
    error. A mistrial should only be granted "to prevent an obvious failure of
    justice." State v. Harvey, 
    151 N.J. 117
    , 205 (1997). Whether a trial event
    justifies a mistrial is a decision "entrusted to the sound discretion of the trial
    court." 
    Ibid.
     We "will not disturb a trial court's ruling on a motion for a mistrial,
    absent an abuse of discretion that results in a manifest injustice." Ibid.; see also
    State v. Jackson, 
    211 N.J. 394
    , 407 (2012). If there is "an appropriate alternative
    course of action," a mistrial is not a proper exercise of discretion. State v. Allah,
    
    170 N.J. 269
    , 281 (2002).
    24                                    A-2349-19
    The procedure ultimately employed by the trial court was an appropriate
    alternative to a mistrial. We see no abuse of discretion or failure of justice in
    the trial court's decision to continue voir dire and ask all jurors the additional
    questions to elicit any potential bias.
    We determine defendant's remaining argument, that the trial court erred
    by failing to excuse the jury panel because defendant's girlfriend became
    emotionally upset as she left the courtroom after the court addressed its
    perception that she may have been recording jury selection, to be without
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). Despite defendant's
    counsel's claim to the trial judge that "[t]here [was] no way these jurors did not
    potentially see . . . there was something [of magnitude] going on," defendant
    does not specify any juror who saw the distraught girlfriend and was, or may
    have been, thereby tainted. In fact, when the court asked members of the venire
    about the incident, only one juror responded affirmatively, disclosing she had
    heard "the young lady in the back [of the courtroom] . . . yelling about coffee
    and she seemed to be crying." The juror said the incident would not affect her
    ability to be fair and impartial; the court, nevertheless excused her for cause on
    the parties' joint application. The court's course of action was by no means an
    abuse of discretion. See Harvey, 
    151 N.J. at 205
    .
    25                                A-2349-19
    IV
    To the extent not addressed, we determine defendant's remaining
    arguments, including that the cumulative trial errors warrant reversal and a new
    trial, to be without sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Defendant did not receive a perfect trial, but received the fair one to which she
    was entitled. See State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    , 160 (2014); State v. Loftin,
    
    287 N.J. Super. 76
    , 110-11 (App. Div. 1996).
    V
    Defendant challenges the sentences imposed: five years in State prison for
    second-degree eluding; 364 days in the county jail for third-degree aggravated
    assault on a law enforcement officer; and four months in the county jail for
    disorderly persons resisting arrest. The first two sentences ran concurrently; the
    four-month disorderly persons sentence ran consecutive to the five-year term.
    Defendant contends the trial court erred by (1) failing to sentence her one-degree
    lower pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(f)(2) on the eluding charge and (2) imposing
    a consecutive sentence on the disorderly persons conviction.
    We "review sentencing determinations in accordance with a deferential
    standard." State v. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. 57
    , 70 (2014). In our review, we "must
    26                                   A-2349-19
    not substitute [our] judgment for that of the sentencing court." 
    Ibid.
     We will
    affirm a sentence unless:
    (1) the sentencing guidelines were violated; (2) the
    aggravating and mitigating factors found by the
    sentencing court were not based upon competent and
    credible evidence in the record; or (3) "the application
    of the guidelines to the facts of [the] case makes the
    sentence clearly unreasonable so as to shock the
    judicial conscience."
    [Ibid. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 364-65 (1984)).]
    We address defendant's first argument, recognizing the trial court could
    have imposed a sentence in the third-degree range on the second-degree eluding
    count if it was "clearly convinced that the mitigating factors substantially
    outweigh[ed] the aggravating factors and where the interest of justice
    demand[ed]." N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(f)(2).
    Defendant contends the trial court failed to find mitigating factors one,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(1) ("defendant's conduct neither caused nor threatened
    serious    harm");    two,     N.J.S.A.     2C:44-1(b)(2) (whether       defendant
    "contemplate[d] that [her] conduct would cause or threaten serious harm"); six,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(6) (defendant "will compensate the victim" or "will
    participate in a program of community service"); eight, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(8)
    (defendant's conduct was the result of circumstances unlikely to recur); and nine,
    27                                   A-2349-19
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(9) (defendant's character indicates she is unlikely to
    reoffend); and failed to give proper weight to mitigating factors seven, N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-1(b)(7) (defendant's lack of prior criminal record); and, if found, eleven,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(11) (imprisonment would cause great hardship for
    defendant or her dependents). She contends if the court had properly considered
    those factors, defendant would have met the statutory requirements for a
    sentence one-degree lower. We disagree.
    The trial court carefully considered each mitigating factor proposed by
    defendant and, contrary to defendant's argument, did find mitigating factor six.
    The court declined to find mitigating factor one inasmuch as Delgaizo suffered
    "injuries to both knees," had surgery and spinal injections and "missed a
    significant amount of time from work in order to start to recover from his
    injuries." It rejected mitigating factor two because evidence showed Delgaizo
    was dragged backwards by defendant's moving vehicle and was so close to
    defendant that "[s]he had to realize . . . Delgaizo would be injured when she
    drove off, while [the trooper] hung onto her car door." Defendant's offer to
    perform community service led the court to give mitigating factor six 10 "very
    10
    In analyzing whether defendant compensated or would compensate the
    trooper or would participate in a community service program, the trial court
    28                                   A-2349-19
    light weight," finding she had not compensated Delgaizo and offered no
    explanation how—without a job or assets—she would compensate him for his
    injuries.   The trial court accorded mitigating factor seven "light weight,"
    discounting defendant's lack of criminal history due to her young age.
    The trial court considered defendant's actions throughout the entire
    criminal episode on July 20, 2018, and related its reasoning for finding
    aggravating factor three, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3) (the risk that defendant will
    reoffend), concluding defendant "is of the disposition, for whatever reason, to
    believe that nobody is going to tell her what to do." The court deduced that
    attitude was not one "that bodes well when one interacts with the law," and
    rejected mitigating factor eight. As we noted in State v. Towey, 
    244 N.J. Super. 582
    , 593 (App. Div. 1990), aggravating factor three and mitigating factor eight
    are related. The trial court's supported finding of aggravating factor three
    militates against mitigating factor eight. Cf. State v. O'Donnell, 
    117 N.J. 210
    ,
    216 (1989) (finding the defendant's "almost boastful" attitude towards his
    offense evidenced a belief that defendant could "take the law into his own
    hands," thus supporting the trial court's finding that the defendant was likely to
    referred to the factor as "[t]hree." It was the third mitigating factor it considered,
    but the court was obviously analyzing mitigating factor six.
    29                                     A-2349-19
    commit future offenses). The trial court cited the same reason for rejecting
    mitigating factor nine.
    Although defendant argues in her merits brief mitigating factor eleven "is
    noted in the [j]udgment of [c]onviction but [was] not found at sentencing," the
    trial court did find the factor.   In her merits brief, defendant alternatively
    contends the factor should have been given more weight because, as an "openly
    gay woman who suffered sexual assault by a family friend" as a young girl and
    discrimination because of her sexual orientation, she developed a valuable bond
    with her "close-knit, loving, and deeply[-]religious family" who, with her fiancé,
    "will suffer significantly while defendant serves her prison sentence." The trial
    court considered those same facts, found defendant would face hardship in
    prison and accorded light weight to mitigating factor eleven because he doubted
    defendant placed her professed concern for her family and fiancée before the
    self-concern he found she had exhibited.
    The trial court also found aggravating factors three, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-
    1(a)(3) (the risk that defendant will reoffend), and nine, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(9)
    (the need for deterrence), concluding they significantly outweighed the
    mitigating factors.
    30                                   A-2349-19
    In reviewing the trial court's sentencing decision, we do not "substitute
    [our] judgment for that of the trial court." O'Donnell, 
    117 N.J. at 215
    . We are
    "bound to affirm a sentence . . . as long as the trial court properly identifies and
    balances aggravating and mitigating factors that are supported by competent
    credible evidence in the record." 
    Ibid.
     The trial court did just that.
    Considering the trial court's well-reasoned findings, a downgrade under
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(f)(2) was not warranted. Defendant did not meet the high
    standard required for a downgrade. State v. Megargel, 
    143 N.J. 484
    , 500 (1996).
    Not only was the court not "clearly convinced that the mitigating factors
    substantially outweigh[ed] the aggravating factors," defendant's reasons are not
    sufficiently compelling to establish that "the interest of justice demands" a
    downgrade. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(f)(2); see also Megargel, 
    143 N.J. at 501-02
    , 504-
    05.
    Defendant also challenges the trial court's decision to impose consecutive
    sentences. She argues the eluding and resisting arrest offenses "were related to
    each other and occurred close in time" and "was one continuous event or single
    period of aberrant behavior rather than truly separate events causing harm to
    separate victims."
    31                                    A-2349-19
    Trial courts "have discretion to decide if sentences should run
    concurrently or consecutively." State v. Miller, 
    205 N.J. 109
    , 128 (2011); see
    also N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(a). "When a sentencing court properly evaluates the
    [remaining 11] Yarbough factors [12] in light of the record, the court's decision will
    not normally be disturbed on appeal." Miller, 
    205 N.J. at 129
    .
    11
    The Legislature disapproved a sixth factor that set an outer limit on the overall
    cumulation of consecutive sentences. L. 1993, c. 233, § 1.
    12
    In State v. Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. 627
    , 643-44 (1985), superseded by statute in
    part, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-5(a), as recognized in State v. Cuff, 
    239 N.J. 321
     (2019),
    our Supreme Court established factors that a sentencing court must consider
    when deciding whether to impose consecutive sentences:
    (1) there can be no free crimes in a system for which
    the punishment shall fit the crime;
    (2) the reasons for imposing either a consecutive or
    concurrent sentence should be separately stated in the
    sentencing decision;
    (3) some reasons to be considered by the sentencing
    court should include facts relating to the crimes,
    including whether or not:
    (a) the crimes and their objectives were
    predominantly independent of each other;
    (b) the crimes involved separate acts of
    violence or threats of violence;
    32                                     A-2349-19
    The trial court assessed those factors and recognized the eluding and
    aggravated assault crimes stemmed from a single act involving one victim,
    Delgaizo, and ran those sentences concurrent to each other. The court, however,
    (c) the crimes were committed at different
    times or separate places, rather than being
    committed so closely in time and place as
    to indicate a single period of aberrant
    behavior;
    (d) any of the crimes involved multiple
    victims;
    (e) the convictions for which the sentences
    are to be imposed are numerous
    (4) there should be no double counting of aggravating
    factors;
    (5) successive terms for the same offense should not
    ordinarily be equal to the punishment for the first
    offense[.]
    See also State v. Torres, __ N.J. __, __ (2021) (slip op
    at 32, 34) (instructing trial courts "performing the
    Yarbough fairness assessment must be mindful that
    aggravating and mitigating factors and Yarbough
    factors, as well as the stated purposes of sentencing in
    N.J.S.A. 2C:1-2(b), in their totality, inform the
    sentence’s fairness" which "cannot be divorced from
    consideration of the person on whom it is imposed. . . .
    Assessing the overall fairness of a sentence requires a
    real-time assessment of the consequences of the
    aggregate sentences imposed.").
    33                                 A-2349-19
    discerned the resisting arrest charge occurred after defendant returned to
    MetLife Stadium's parking lot one hour after she eluded and assaulted Delgaizo,
    and she resisted multiple times against different troopers. We find no reason to
    disturb the court's exercise of its broad discretion in imposing a single
    consecutive four-month sentence for the resisting arrest offense. In addition to
    the factors cited by the trial court, we note the resisting arrest offense had a
    different objective—preventing her arrest—than did the eluding and aggravated
    assault—avoiding a ticket after blocking traffic. Defendant was violent in each
    of the encounters, even after she had time to cool off after committing the crimes
    against Delgaizo.
    We are, however, compelled to remand this matter for resentencing. The
    trial court's 364-day custodial sentence for third-degree aggravated assault on a
    law enforcement officer contravened N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6(a)(3), which mandates,
    under these circumstances, a three- to five-year sentence. And, in that defendant
    received a State-prison sentence for eluding, the court should not have sentenced
    her to the county jail on the other offenses. See N.J.S.A. 2C:43-10(a), (d).
    On remand, the sentencing court should provide "an explanation for the
    overall fairness of [the newly-imposed, State prison] sentence . . . to 'foster[]
    consistency in . . . sentencing in that arbitrary or irrational sentencing can be
    34                                   A-2349-19
    curtailed and, if necessary, corrected through appellate review.''' Torres, __ N.J.
    at __ (slip op. at 33) (quoting State v. Pierce, 
    188 N.J. 155
    , 166-67 (2006)). We
    also note the judgment of conviction should be amended to reflect the
    aggravating and mitigating factors found by the court during the sentencing
    proceeding: mitigating factors six and seven.
    Defendant's conviction is affirmed; remanded for resentencing. We do
    not retain jurisdiction.
    35                                    A-2349-19