STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. JERRY M. REYES (16-06-1877, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2022 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-1340-18
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JERRY M. REYES, a/k/a
    JERRY M. RODRIGUEZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Argued October 20, 2021 – Decided January 13, 2022
    Before Judges Fuentes, Gooden Brown, and Gummer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Indictment No. 16-06-1877.
    Cody T. Mason, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
    argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, attorney; Cody T. Mason, of counsel
    and on the briefs).
    Natalie A. Schmid Drummond, Special Deputy
    Attorney General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued
    the cause for respondent (Jill S. Mayer, Acting Camden
    County Prosecutor, attorney; Linda A. Shashoua,
    Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Jerry M. Reyes appeals from a judgment of conviction for
    murder and related weapons offenses. Based on our review of the record in light
    of applicable law, we are convinced the cumulative effect of multiple errors
    committed before and during the trial rendered the trial unfair. Accordingly, we
    reverse defendant's convictions, vacate his sentence, and remand for further
    proceedings.
    I.
    The jury heard testimony that on March 12, 2016, Luis "Cito" Feliu died
    from the injuries he sustained after being shot twice in Camden near the
    barbershop where he worked.
    At about 5:20 p.m. that evening Camden County police officer Antonio
    Gennetta went to the scene of the shooting after first hearing that another officer
    was responding to "a fight call" in the area and then learning shots had been
    fired. He found at the scene a large crowd of people and Feliu, laying on the
    ground, bleeding and unresponsive. Gennetta placed him in his patrol car and
    drove to a hospital, where Feliu succumbed to his injuries.
    2                                    A-1340-18
    At the hospital, Detectives Michael Sutley and Shawn Donlon met Feliu's
    fiancé Jeanne Castillo, who had been present at the shooting. She gave the
    detectives the nickname and physical description of the shooter. That evening
    the detectives interviewed three other people who had witnessed the shooting:
    Michael Cubbage, Louis Vasquez, and Shawn Cole, none of whom testified at
    trial. Sutley testified that based on those interviews, he identified defendant as
    a suspect.
    [PROSECUTOR:] So, as the night progresses, as
    you’re continuing your investigation, did you locate
    any potential witnesses that night to what had occurred
    earlier in that evening?
    [SUTLEY:] Yeah, . . . we had spoken to three . . .
    additional witnesses other than Jeanne Castillo, who is
    referred to as Jenn.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. And did you interview these
    individuals?
    [SUTLEY:] We did.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. And . . . do you recall their
    names?
    [SUTLEY:] It was Michael Cubbage, Louis Vasquez
    and . . . Shawn Cole.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. All right. And based on
    these interviews that you conducted the night of the
    murder, did you develop a suspect?
    3                                   A-1340-18
    [SUTLEY:] Yes, we did.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. And what was the suspect’s
    name?
    [SUTLEY:] Jerry Reyes.
    In the early morning hours of the next day, Sutley conducted a second
    interview of Castillo.
    [PROSECUTOR:] And what was the purpose of
    conducting this interview?
    [SUTLEY:] Now that we had developed a suspect, we
    wanted to present her with . . . a photo to see if we can
    get an identification.
    Another detective, who was not otherwise involved in the investigation,
    presented Castillo with a photo array prepared by Sutley of eight individuals:
    defendant because he was a suspect and seven other individuals having similar
    physical characteristics. Castillo identified defendant's photograph from the
    array.
    When asked at trial how she knew the person in the photograph, Castillo
    responded: "He had shot Luis." She testified she had first seen defendant two
    or three days before the shooting, when she had dropped Feliu off at a corner
    store and had seen him walk across the street and talk to defendant. On the day
    of the shooting, Castillo was with Feliu at the barbershop.          Feliu left the
    4                                   A-1340-18
    barbershop and went with a friend down the block to a corner store. When he
    returned, he was angry and acting like he was preparing for a fight. Castillo saw
    defendant standing outside the barbershop with other people. She described
    defendant as being "kind of jumpy" and "[i]nstigating," trying to get Feliu to
    come outside, although she could not hear what defendant was saying.
    Eventually, Feliu ran outside and met defendant in the street. From inside the
    barbershop, Castillo could see Feliu "in like a fighting position . . . with his fists
    up" and then with "his hands up like he was surrendering." She heard a gunshot
    and saw Feliu run, with defendant chasing after him. She tried to go outside,
    but someone pushed her back into the shop. She saw defendant "come in front
    of the barbershop window and pull out the gun and shoot him." She did not
    actually observe Feliu being shot but saw defendant point and fire his gun in
    Feliu's direction.
    After the conclusion of the photo array, Sutley and Donlon contacted an
    assistant prosecutor who authorized them to charge defendant with Feliu's
    murder. Police arrested defendant on March 15, 2016. That afternoon Sutley
    and Donlon interrogated defendant, a recording of which was played for the jury.
    Before beginning the interrogation, Sutley read defendant his Miranda rights,
    5                                    A-1340-18
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966); defendant acknowledged
    understanding them and signed the Miranda waiver form.
    Defendant told the detectives he had known Feliu since high school. The
    week before the shooting, defendant and Feliu had what defendant described as
    a "major argument." On the day of the shooting, defendant wanted to fight Feliu
    because he believed Feliu had disrespected him. Defendant saw Feliu and
    suggested they fight behind a store near the barbershop. Instead, Feliu went into
    the barbershop and defendant waited for him outside. Eventually, Feliu exited
    the shop, approached defendant, and attempted to punch him but missed and hit
    defendant's female friend, someone defendant referred to as "Sister." Feliu
    started to run, and defendant chased after him. When he heard a shot, defendant
    ran in a different direction. Later, his "ride" picked him up on another street,
    and defendant went home, where he called his brother and told him "I think
    somebody tried to kill me . . . I could have sworn somebody shot at me, man."
    According to defendant, when his child's mother told him the next day
    "they killed Cito . . . [t]he Cito you been arguing with," defendant responded, "I
    thought it was for me. I thought the shots w[ere] for me." When she told him
    "[y]our name keep[s] coming up," he told her he had run when he heard the
    shots. Sutley asked defendant, "any reason they would say that you . . . shot
    6                                   A-1340-18
    him?" Defendant acknowledged, "There's a reason. . . . We just had a major
    argument . . . I wanted to get him to fight. I was the aggressor. I wanted to
    fight."
    After defendant denied having a gun, Sutley made multiple comments
    about witnesses seeing defendant with a gun. Sutley asked him, "[i]s there any
    reason . . . that people say that when you ran away, . . . you had a gun in your
    hand[?]" Defendant responded he had his phone in his hand. Sutley followed
    up: "people are saying that . . . when you were running away, whether you
    picked up a gun, saw a gun, but you were running with a gun . . . did somebody
    drop the gun, then, and you picked it up[?]" Defendant again denied having a
    gun. Sutley told him, "somebody may have said you picked up the gun or
    something like that and, then, you just kept running away."          Defendant
    ultimately repeated, "I had no gun."
    As part of the interrogation, detectives showed defendant a video of the
    incident recorded by a Realtime Tactical Operations Incident Command "Eye in
    the Sky" camera, located about a block from where the shooting occurred.
    Sutley again commented on witnesses stating defendant had a gun.
    DETECTIVE SUTLEY: We talked to all those people.
    Here's what those people say. Those people say: When
    he came back running through, and you can see all the
    people out here. When he came back and ran through,
    7                                  A-1340-18
    being Jerry -- when he came back and ran through, he
    was holding a gun in his hand. Nobody said you fired
    the gun.
    DEFENDANT: Uh-huh.
    DETECTIVE SUTLEY: But, they said that he was
    holding a gun and that's why I'm trying to figure out
    was it, did – did somebody drop it? Did you get it from
    somebody? . . .
    ....
    I showed you this, and I -- and we talked to these
    people. And we try to make sense of this and I say to
    myself: Is -- is he scared and that’s why he’s running
    and . . . he brought a gun to the fight just in case he was
    jumped? Because you were -- you were outnumbered,
    right?
    When defendant again denied having a gun in his hand, Sutley responded: "Hold
    on, hold on, hold on. When we speak to all these people and they say, 'As he
    runs away.'" Defendant maintained he did not have a gun and questioned
    Sutley's assertion that people had said he had a gun.
    DEFENDANT: Well, that's I would like to know. I
    would like to know where you get that from? Why --
    why they saying I have a gun?
    DETECTIVE SUTLEY: I'm telling you where that –
    DEFENDANT: Why they saying that they seen me
    running with a gun?
    DETECTIVE SUTLEY: Because you had a gun.
    8                                 A-1340-18
    DEFENDANT: I did not have a gun.
    DETECTIVE SUTLEY: . . . they're saying that.
    Sutley questioned why "these people" and "they" would lie. Telling defendant
    "there's no ifs, ands or buts" that he "ended up with a gun," Sutley asserted, "they
    said that he was holding a gun" and "[a]ll of the people out there say the same
    exact thing." Sutley told defendant, "we talked . . . to the people who were out
    there . . . and . . . everybody that we have spoken to, thus far, says when you
    were running away, that you had a gun . . . ."
    While reviewing the surveillance video with defendant, both detectives
    repeatedly asserted the video clearly showed defendant was holding a gun.
    • "See it in your right hand as you run . . . ";
    • "it's clearly you running and in your right hand, . . . you're
    holding something";
    • "Watch your right hand . . . It's clear as daylight . . . ";
    • "As you're running, you're clearly holding something . . .
    in your right hand";
    • "It's clear that when you're running, there is a gun in your
    hand . . .";
    • "People take off because you pulled a gun out";
    • "Watch. Now look, dude, they see the gun. . . . They're all
    looking at you. They're seeing a gun coming out";
    9                                     A-1340-18
    • "The only reason they're running is because the gun's out
    right now";
    • "People are running because you pull a gun out";
    • "You got [the gun] from your waistband"; and
    • "You pulled a gun out right there . . . it's obvious."
    After defendant repeatedly stated, "[t]here was no gun," Sutley told him, "you
    can watch it" and Donlon said, "you see it!"
    The detectives subsequently interviewed two other witnesses who testified
    at trial: Odenell Henry and John Sandy. Sandy owned the barbershop where
    Feliu and Henry worked. Sandy was presented with a photo array, selected
    defendant's photograph, and identified defendant as the person who was in the
    street fighting with Feliu. Sandy was outside when the fight began. When he
    heard someone shout, "he got a gun," Sandy ran in the other direction. As he
    was running, he heard gunshots. At trial, Henry described the person with whom
    Feliu had fought and identified him as "Jerry." Sometime after the fight began,
    Henry saw Feliu run past him, chased by "Jerry," who had a gun.
    Brandon Rice, an acquaintance of defendant, was questioned by detectives
    five months after the shooting and two months after he had been arrested on an
    unrelated weapons charge. He pleaded guilty to the weapons charge, agreed to
    testify against his co-defendant, and was sentenced to probation. Rice asserted
    10                                  A-1340-18
    he was not required to speak with Camden detectives as part of his plea deal and
    was not promised anything in exchange for speaking with them. At trial, Rice
    testified on the day after the shooting, defendant had confessed to killing Feliu.
    According to Rice, defendant told him Feliu had attempted to punch him but hit
    defendant's girlfriend instead. Defendant was "caught off guard by the swing,
    and he turned around, reacted and shot" Feliu. Defendant then "[r]an down the
    alleyway, [and] stashed the gun." Defendant asked Rice to retrieve the gun from
    where he had hidden it, but Rice declined. Instead, five months later, Rice told
    detectives where defendant had told him he hid the gun. Law enforcement
    officials never located the weapon.
    II.
    On June 30, 2016, a grand jury returned a four-count indictment charging
    defendant with first-degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1)-(2); second-degree
    possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a); second-
    degree unlawful possession of a handgun, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b); and second-
    degree being a certain person not permitted to possess a handgun, N.J.S.A.
    2C:39-7(b).
    11                                   A-1340-18
    A.
    More than four months before the trial, the trial judge conducted a
    N.J.R.E. 104 hearing regarding the voluntariness of the statements defendant
    made to detectives during their interrogation. The judge found defendant had
    made the statements freely and voluntarily and held the State could play at trial
    the recording of the interrogation. The judge noted, and the prosecutor agreed,
    that some portions of the video should be redacted. Defense counsel expressly
    requested the redaction of the detectives' statements about defendant having a
    gun, contending "it's almost as [if] they were testifying as to what was on the
    video." The trial judge agreed, finding it "inappropriate for the detectives to
    give their take on what happened."          The judge also indicated a curative
    instruction might be needed. Defense counsel stated he would provide the State
    with a list of proposed redactions and would ask the judge to resolve their
    disputes. Despite that discussion, the recording was played at trial without
    redaction or curative instruction.
    Defense counsel also asked the references to "everybody else saying he
    had a gun" be redacted. The judge denied that request.
    THE COURT: -- that's something else. I think we get
    into everybody else said you had a gun, I'm not saying
    that's an appropriate investigatory technique, but I'm
    saying that at least part of where they're saying you see
    12                                   A-1340-18
    this, don't you agree people usually run to the fight not
    away from the fight, I mean those kinds of comments I
    think are appropriate.
    B.
    Almost four years before the trial, defendant sent to the trial judge a letter
    dated August 8, 2016, asking, among other things, that his attorney, who was a
    public defender, send him his "'full discovery' such as all 'statements' from all
    witnesses, . . . 'original statements,' [and] my 'grand jury transcripts.'" On
    October 11, 2016, defendant sent another letter to the trial judge, advising his
    attorney still had not provided him with the requested "full discovery" or
    transcripts and asserting his attorney "is not doing his job." He told the judge
    he needed "a competent attorney to help [him]." After receiving each letter, the
    judge advised defendant in writing he could not respond but would forward his
    correspondence to defense counsel for review and reply.
    On January 3, 2017, the court received from defendant a handwritten
    "Notice of Motion to Relieve Counsel." Defendant asked the court to relieve
    defense counsel and appoint "replacement counsel." He supported the motion
    with his certification, detailing why he was dissatisfied with his counsel,
    including counsel's purported failure to respond to defendant's requests for
    information and his "complete lack of communication."
    13                                    A-1340-18
    The record is devoid of any evidence that the court scheduled defendant's
    motion for oral argument or addressed his request for new counsel in any pretrial
    conference. Instead, more than a year and a half later, on July 26, 2018, the first
    day of trial, defendant requested and was permitted to express his concerns.
    DEFENDANT: I want to let the Court know that I'm
    ready to go to this trial. I'm ready for this. But what -
    - I am not ready to continue with my counsel. Now, I
    have -- numerous times, I have written -- I got all the
    proof in here that I have written complaining, given
    complaints about his unprofessionalism, how we not
    having communication, him not filing no motion when
    I ask. Proof that's on this case that I point out that he
    clearly shot me down, not making an effort, nothing.
    I've been complaining. If you would like -- you would
    like to see all this, I have it –
    THE COURT: No. I know you've sent correspondence
    to my chambers.
    DEFENDANT: Yes. Nothing to have yet found no
    remedy for this. Now, I have been patient enough and
    I say nothing, because I believe in a higher power. But
    me personally, I'm ready to go to this trial. There's
    nothing that points to it but an argument, but what a
    police reports on numerous witnesses a bunch of
    contradiction, there is nothing. Now, I have spoken to
    this gentleman about my concerns to no avail. Now,
    what can I -- what else can I do? Now I got an attorney
    ethics grievance form that's unprocessed. Now what
    can I do to change my counsel? Because he’s clearly
    not doing nothing but –
    THE COURT: Sir, you have the right to hire other
    counsel if you so desire. Mr. Wertheimer is a very
    14                                    A-1340-18
    experienced trial attorney, he's well-respected. You
    know, I know him to be incredibly professional in the
    way he performs before the [c]ourt. I'm sure he'll, you
    know, fully represent you throughout these
    proceedings, but he is your attorney, sir.
    DEFENDANT: So I can't -- so I'm being forced to
    continue with my counsel that obviously we are not on
    the same page.
    THE COURT: He is your –
    DEFENDANT: Every -- my concern –
    THE COURT: He is your attorney, sir. He will be
    representing you throughout these proceedings.
    DEFENDANT: So I can't do nothing to –
    THE COURT: Well, I mean, you had the right to hire
    your own attorney. I mean, if you're going to go
    through the Public Defender's Office, he has been
    assigned as your attorney. As I said, he's a professional
    -- extremely professional the way he represents clients.
    He's a very experienced attorney, and he is your
    attorney. All right, sir?
    DEFENDANT: So all my complaints will be –
    THE COURT: Your complaints are noted; all right?
    DEFENDANT: No problem. Thank you.
    And with that, the trial judge proceeded with jury selection.
    15                                A-1340-18
    C.
    After three days of trial, the trial judge provided counsel with draft jury
    instructions and conducted a charge conference pursuant to Rule 1:8-7(b).
    The trial judge did not include in the jury instructions a Henderson 1
    identification charge. The judge had asked counsel for their views on whether
    it should be included. Defense counsel, after having an overnight to consider
    the issue, told the judge the charge was not relevant because the case did not
    involve an identification issue.
    During the charge conference, defense counsel initially requested, based
    on Rice's testimony, a "cooperating witness charge," presumably following
    Model Jury Charges (Criminal), “Testimony of a Cooperating Co-Defendant or
    Witness” (rev. Feb. 6, 2006). He subsequently withdrew that request, stating "I
    don't think it applies. There's no present expectation of any favor." With no
    objection, the judge included an instruction based on the model charge for
    "Credibility - Prior Conviction of a Witness."        See Model Jury Charges
    (Criminal), "Credibility - Prior Conviction of a Witness" (rev. Feb. 24, 2003).
    At the charge conference the trial judge advised counsel he intended to
    instruct the jury on murder and the lesser-included offenses of aggravated
    1
    State v. Henderson, 
    208 N.J. 208
     (2011).
    16                                   A-1340-18
    manslaughter and reckless manslaughter. The judge granted defense counsel's
    request to include a passion/provocation manslaughter charge, prepared and
    provided counsel with revised jury instructions and a revised verdict sheet, and,
    with no objection from counsel, charged the jury accordingly.
    As to the passion/provocation manslaughter charge, the trial judge
    included the following language based on the model charge, Model Jury Charges
    (Criminal),      "Murder,    Passion/Provocation      and    Aggravated/Reckless
    Manslaughter (N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(1) and (2); 2C:11-4a, b(1) and b(2))" (rev.
    June 8, 2015):
    If, on the other hand, you determine the State has
    not disproved at least one of the factors of passion
    provocation manslaughter beyond a reasonable doubt,
    but that the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt
    that the defendant purposely or knowingly caused death
    or serious bodily injury resulting in death, then you
    must find him guilty of passion provocation
    manslaughter.
    If, however, the State has failed to prove beyond
    a reasonable doubt that the defendant purposely or
    knowingly caused death or serious bodily injury
    resulting in death, you must find the defendant not
    guilty of murder and passion provocation manslaughter
    and go on to consider whether the defendant should be
    convicted of the crimes of aggravated or reckless
    manslaughter.
    But, when explaining the verdict sheet, the judge stated:
    17                                 A-1340-18
    To assist you in reporting a verdict I have
    prepared a verdict sheet for you. You will have this
    with you in the jury room. The verdict form is not
    evidence. The form is only to be used to report your
    verdict, and the verdict sheet is as follows. It sets forth
    the various offenses set forth in the indictment; Count
    [One], charges the defendant with murder, and you
    would make a determination as to either not guilty or
    guilty. As a lesser included offense of murder is
    passion provocation manslaughter. If you find the
    defendant guilty of murder, you would not answer any
    of the following questions. But if you find him not
    guilty of murder, you would respond to the question of
    whether or not he was guilty or not guilty of passion
    provocation manslaughter.
    Again, if you find the defendant guilty of that
    offense, you would go to the next Count. If you find
    him not guilty, you would consider the charge of
    aggravated manslaughter, and then following that if you
    find him not guilty you would consider the charge of
    reckless manslaughter.
    The   model    jury   charge    for   "murder,    passion/provocation     and
    aggravated/reckless manslaughter" includes a sample verdict sheet containing
    the following questions and instructions:
    QUESTION NUMBER ONE
    On the charge of Murder, we find the defendant:
    1a. Not Guilty of Murder ____
    1b. Guilty of Passion/Provocation Manslaughter ____
    1c. Guilty of Murder ____
    18                                     A-1340-18
    If you have found the defendant Not Guilty of Murder,
    go to question number two.
    If you have found the defendant Guilty of Murder,
    please answer the following:
    Do you find that the defendant committed the Murder
    by his/her own conduct?
    ____       ____
    Yes        No
    QUESTION NUMBER TWO
    On the charge of Aggravated Manslaughter, we find the
    defendant:
    2a. Not Guilty of Aggravated Manslaughter      ____
    2b. Guilty of Aggravated Manslaughter          ____
    If you have found the defendant Not Guilty of
    Aggravated Manslaughter, go to question number three.
    (INSERT IF ADDITIONAL CHARGES: If you have
    found the defendant guilty of question number 2b, go
    to Question Four)
    QUESTION NUMBER THREE
    On the charge of Reckless Manslaughter, we find the
    defendant:
    3a. Not Guilty of Reckless Manslaughter        ____
    3b. Guilty of Reckless Manslaughter            ____
    19                              A-1340-18
    [INSERT   ADDITIONAL                 CHARGES          IF
    APPROPRIATE]
    PLEASE ADVISE THE SHERIFF’S OFFICER THAT
    YOU HAVE REACHED A VERDICT.
    For reasons not explained on the record, the trial judge did not use the
    sample verdict sheet provided in the model jury charge but instead used a verdict
    sheet that included headings, preambles containing language from the
    indictment, and a different set of questions. As to the murder count, the verdict
    sheet contained the following:
    MURDER
    COUNT 1 of the indictment charges that on or about
    the 12th day of March, 2016, in the City of Camden, in
    the County of Camden, aforesaid, and within the
    jurisdiction of this Court, JERRY M. REYES did
    purposely or knowingly cause the death or serious
    bodily injury resulting in the death of Luis Feliu,
    contrary to the provisions of N.J.S. 2C: 11-3a (1)(2) and
    against the peace of this State, the Government and
    dignity of the same.
    a. On the charge of murder of Luis Feliu
    our verdict is:
    NOT GUILTY         ____         GUILTY       ____
    If you find the defendant GUILTY, skip the
    following questions and go on to Count 2.
    If you find the defendant NOT GUILTY,
    please answer the following question.
    20                                   A-1340-18
    b. On the charge of passion/ provocation
    manslaughter of Luis Feliu our verdict is:
    NOT GUILTY         ____        GUILTY        ____
    If you find the defendant GUILTY, skip the
    following questions and go on to Count 2.
    If you find the defendant NOT GUILTY,
    please answer the following question.
    c. On the charge of aggravated
    manslaughter of Luis Feliu our verdict is:
    NOT GUILTY         ____        GUILTY        ____
    If you find the defendant GUILTY, skip the
    following question and go on to Count 2.
    If you find the defendant NOT GUILTY,
    please answer the following question.
    d. On the charge of reckless manslaughter
    of Luis Feliu our verdict is:
    NOT GUILTY         ____        GUILTY        ____
    After deliberating for less than two hours, the jury found defendant guilty
    on all counts. On the murder-count portion of the verdict sheet, the jury checked
    "GUILTY" in response to question a and did not address questions b, c, or d.
    The trial judge subsequently imposed an aggregate prison term of sixty-
    five years with periods of parole ineligibility and parole supervision as
    prescribed by the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7. Specifically, the trial
    21                                   A-1340-18
    judge merged the possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose count with
    the murder count and imposed a sixty-year prison sentence for those
    convictions; imposed a concurrent five-year term on the conviction of unlawful
    possession of a weapon; and on the certain-person conviction imposed a
    consecutive five-year term.
    D.
    On appeal, defendant argues
    POINT I
    REVERSAL IS REQUIRED BECAUSE
    THE TRIAL COURT SUMMARILY
    DENIED DEFENDANT’S PRE-TRIAL
    REQUESTS FOR NEW COUNSEL
    WITHOUT APPLYING THE PROPER
    LEGAL ANALYSIS.
    POINT II
    REVERSAL IS REQUIRED BECAUSE
    THE      STATE    IMPROPERLY
    BOLSTERED    ITS CASE   WITH
    INADMISSIBLE HEARSAY ABOUT
    DEFENDANT BEING THE SHOOTER
    AND TWO DETECTIVES' OPINIONS
    THAT DEFENDANT WAS HOLDING A
    GUN IN A VIDEO.
    A.   The State Presented Improper
    Hearsay That Multiple Non-Testifying
    Witnesses Implicated Defendant.
    22                                 A-1340-18
    B.    The Interrogation Video Improperly
    Included the Detectives’ Opinions that
    Defendant Had a Gun in a Video.
    POINT III
    REVERSAL IS REQUIRED BECAUSE
    THE COURT WRONGLY INSTRUCTED
    THE JURY TO ONLY CONSIDER
    PASSION/PROVOCATION
    MANSLAUGHTER    IF   IT FIRST
    ACQUITTED ON MURDER.
    POINT IV
    THE COURT COMMITTED PLAIN
    ERROR WHEN IT FAILED TO CHARGE
    THE JURY ON HOW TO CONSIDER
    THE IDENTIFICATION, THE ALLEGED
    CONFESSION, OR THE POSSIBLE
    BIAS STEMMING FROM RICE'S
    PROBATION.
    A.    The Court Committed Plain Error in
    Not Charging the Jury on the Key Issue of
    Identification.
    B.   It Was Plain Error to Not Instruct the
    Jury on How to Consider the Alleged
    Confession and Rice's Probation.
    POINT V
    THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE
    TRIAL    ERRORS       DEPRIVED
    DEFENDANT OF DUE PROCESS AND
    A FAIR TRIAL AND WARRANTS
    REVERSAL OF HIS CONVICTIONS.
    23                         A-1340-18
    POINT VI
    RESENTENCING    IS   REQUIRED
    BECAUSE THE TRIAL COURT BASED
    THE   65-YEAR   SENTENCE   ON
    IMPROPER CONSIDERATIONS AND
    AN UNJUSTIFIED CONSECUTIVE
    TERM.
    A.    Resentencing Is Required Because
    the Court Did Not Adequately Explain the
    Sentence Imposed, Put Undue Emphasis on
    the Need for General Deterrence, and
    Considered Improper Factors.
    B.    Resentencing Is Required Because
    the Court Wrongly Imposed a Consecutive
    Five-Year Term.
    III.
    Because defendant did not object or otherwise raise before the trial court
    many of the legal issues he now raises on appeal, we review his arguments under
    the plain-error standard of Rule 2:10-2, unless otherwise indicated. See State v.
    Singh, 
    245 N.J. 1
    , 13 (2021) (finding "[w]hen a defendant does not object to an
    alleged error at trial, such error is reviewed under the plain error standard").
    "[A]n unchallenged error constitutes plain error if it was 'clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result,'" 
    id.
     (quoting R. 2:10-2) and raises a reasonable
    doubt as to "whether the jury came to a result that it otherwise might not have
    reached." State v. R.K., 
    220 N.J. 444
    , 456 (2015). When applying the plain-
    24                                   A-1340-18
    error standard, we evaluate an error "in light of the overall strength of the State's
    case." State v. Walker, 
    203 N.J. 73
    , 90 (2010).
    A.
    We consider first the jury instructions and verdict sheet. "'Correct [jury]
    charges are essential for a fair trial,' and, therefore, 'erroneous instructions on
    material points are presumed to be reversible error.'" State v. Lora, 
    465 N.J. Super. 477
    , 498 (App. Div. 2020) (quoting State v. Martin, 
    119 N.J. 2
    , 15
    (1990)). We "evaluate a challenged jury instruction in the context of the entire
    charge to determine whether the challenged language was misleading or
    ambiguous."     
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Nelson, 
    173 N.J. 417
    , 447 (2002)).
    "Contradictory and inconsistent charges are inherently inadequate as they create
    a reasonable likelihood that a juror understood the instructions in an
    unconstitutional manner." State v. Gonzalez, 
    444 N.J. Super. 62
    , 77 (App. Div.
    2016) (quoting State v. Moore, 
    122 N.J. 420
    , 433 (1991)).
    1.
    Passion/provocation manslaughter is applicable "when a homicide which
    would otherwise be murder under [N.J.S.A.] 2C:11-3, other than felony murder,
    is 'committed in the heat of passion resulting from a reasonable provocation.'"
    State v. Galicia, 
    210 N.J. 364
    , 378-79 (2012) (quoting N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4(b)(2)).
    25                                    A-1340-18
    Thus, "murder can be downgraded to voluntary manslaughter by virtue of a
    finding of passion/provocation." Id. at 380.
    In State v. Coyle, 
    119 N.J. 194
    , 223-24 (1990), our Supreme Court
    reversed the defendants' convictions because of erroneous instructions directing
    the jury not to consider passion/provocation under N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4(b)(2)
    unless it acquitted defendant of murder. The Court held that in a murder case
    containing evidence of passion/provocation, "the jury must find both purposeful
    homicide and an absence of passion/provocation" to convict a defendant of
    murder. Coyle, 119 N.J. at 223 (emphasis in the original). The charge in Coyle
    included a mix of language regarding the State's burden to prove murder and
    disprove passion/provocation, ending with an instruction that the jury did not
    need to consider the lesser-included offenses unless the State failed to prove
    murder.     Id. at 222.      The Court found "despite the evidence of
    passion/provocation in the record, the jury may have convicted [the] defendant
    of murder simply by finding that 'it [was] his conscious object to cause death or
    serious bodily injury,' without having considered the possibility of a
    manslaughter verdict." Id. at 222-23. The Court held the charge "so greatly
    risked confusion as to amount to error." Id. at 224.
    26                                   A-1340-18
    The charge here was similarly flawed. Although the trial judge began by
    following the model jury charge on "murder, passion/provocation and
    aggravated/reckless manslaughter," he directly contradicted that charge in his
    instructions on the verdict sheet.
    If you find the defendant guilty of murder, you would
    not answer any of the following questions. But if you
    find him not guilty of murder, you would respond to the
    question of whether or not he was guilty or not guilty
    of passion provocation manslaughter.
    Again, if you find the defendant guilty of that offense,
    you would go to the next Count. If you find him not
    guilty, you would consider the charge of aggravated
    manslaughter, and then following that if you find him
    not guilty you would consider the charge of reckless
    manslaughter.
    Like the charge in Coyle, that instruction "had the potential to foreclose jury
    consideration of whether passion/provocation should reduce an otherwise
    purposeful killing from murder to manslaughter." Coyle, 119 N.J. at 222.
    That error was compounded by the erroneous verdict sheet. Our Supreme
    Court has "recognize[d] the importance of the verdict sheet as 'an essential
    component' of the trial court's 'road map' for the jury's deliberations." State v.
    Cuff, 
    239 N.J. 321
    , 340 (2019) (quoting Galicia, 210 N.J. at 387). "Jurors are
    likely to refer, and refer often, to the directions on the verdict form." Ibid.
    (quoting State v. Nelson, 
    173 N.J. 417
    , 449 (2002)). "Thus, 'we encourage
    27                                   A-1340-18
    completeness and consistency in the preparation of verdict sheets.'" 
    Id.
     at 340-
    41 (quoting State v. Gandhi, 
    201 N.J. 161
    , 198 (2010)). Because the jury
    instructions "serve as the jury's primary guide as it considers the charges and the
    evidence," errors in a verdict sheet can be regarded as harmless unless the
    verdict sheet was misleading. Id. at 341.
    This verdict sheet was misleading and materially differed in significant
    respects from the model verdict sheet.       The jurors saw a quote from the
    indictment that described only murder and said nothing about the lesser-included
    offenses. The first question asked for their verdict only on murder. Unlike the
    sample verdict sheet in the model charge, they were not asked to consider
    simultaneously with their verdict on murder their verdict on passion/provocation
    manslaughter. That question was followed by instructions telling them to "skip"
    the questions about the lesser-included offenses if they found defendant guilty
    of murder. The verdict sheet thereby directly contradicted the model jury charge
    for "murder, passion/provocation and aggravated/reckless manslaughter" and
    followed the erroneous portion of the jury instructions that told them if they
    found defendant guilty of murder, they should not answer the questions about
    passion/provocation and should go on to the questions about the other counts.
    Like the erroneous portion of the charge, that direction "may have prevented the
    28                                    A-1340-18
    jury   from    considering   passion/provocation    simultaneously     with    its
    determination of defendant's guilt or innocence on the murder charge, as
    required by N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4(b)(2) and [Coyle], 119 N.J. [at 223-24]." Galicia,
    210 N.J. at 387. Unlike the trial judge in State v. Reese, 
    267 N.J. Super. 278
    ,
    283 (App. Div. 1993), this trial judge did not instruct the jury that the verdict
    sheet did not set forth the elements of the offenses they had to consider and did
    not remind them after reviewing the verdict sheet the State had to disprove
    passion/provocation.
    We reject the State's argument that the errors in the charge and verdict
    sheet were harmless because of the insufficient evidence of provocation. Given
    the low threshold for a charge on a lesser-included offense, see Coyle, 
    119 N.J. at 224
    , the passion/provocation manslaughter charge was warranted. See State
    v. Erazo, 
    126 N.J. 112
    , 125 (1991) (quoting N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8(e)) (finding the
    standard to be "whether the evidence provided a 'rational basis' for a
    passion/provocation charge"); Coyle, 
    119 N.J. at 226
     (finding "a third person
    can be provoked when a close friend suffers injury or abuse under circumstances
    that would constitute adequate provocation had the third person been the object
    of abuse"). The alleged provocation, punching a girlfriend or a "sister," was
    adequate and the "intervening time was short enough that defendant did not have
    29                                   A-1340-18
    time to cool off from that provocation." State v. Carrero, 
    229 N.J. 118
    , 131
    (2017). The jury could have found, consistent with his alleged confession to
    Rice, that defendant shot Feliu in reaction to Feliu punching his female friend.
    The errors in the charge and verdict sheet were not harmless. Because the
    erroneous instructions and verdict sheet were capable of producing an unjust
    result, we hold they constitute plain error warranting reversal. See State v.
    Montalvo, 
    229 N.J. 300
    , 323 (2017).
    2.
    Defendant faults the trial judge for failing to give the jury an identification
    instruction. "[W]hen identification is a fundamental or an essential issue at trial,
    'the defendant ha[s] a right to expect that the appropriate guidelines w[ill] be
    given, focusing the jury's attention on how to analyze and consider the factual
    issues with regard to the trustworthiness' of in-court identifications." State v.
    Robinson, 
    165 N.J. 32
    , 41 (2000) (quoting State v. Green, 
    86 N.J. 281
    , 292
    (1981)). "[J]uries must receive thorough instructions tailored to the facts of the
    case to be able to evaluate the identification evidence they hear." Henderson,
    208 N.J. at 302. In cases in which identification is a key issue, the trial court
    must instruct the jury on identification, even if a defendant does not make that
    30                                    A-1340-18
    request. State v. Cotto, 
    182 N.J. 316
    , 325 (2005). Identification is a key issue
    when "[i]t [is] the major . . . thrust of the defense." Green, 
    86 N.J. at 291
    .
    Although defendant agreed he was present for and participated in a
    physical altercation with Feliu, he denied being the shooter. Castillo at trial
    specifically identified defendant as the shooter. That discrepancy was sufficient
    to make defendant's identification as the shooter a fundamental and essential
    trial issue. The trial judge erred in not giving the identification charge.
    If failure to give the identification instruction were the only issue in this
    appeal, our inquiry would not end there. We would consider whether the failure
    to give the instruction was invited error given defense counsel's statement to the
    judge that the instruction was not relevant, see State v. Bailey, 
    231 N.J. 474
    , 490
    (2018), and, if not invited error, whether it was plain error, considering "the
    strength and quality of the State's corroborative evidence rather than . . . whether
    defendant's misidentification argument is convincing." Cotto, 
    182 N.J. at 32
    .
    Because we already found reversible error in the jury instructions and verdict
    sheet on the passion/provocation manslaughter issue, we need not decide
    whether the trial court's failure to give the identification instruction was invited
    or plain error.
    31                                    A-1340-18
    3.
    Defendant faults the trial judge for failing to give the jury a
    Hampton/Kociolek 2 charge based on defendant's alleged statement to Rice. In
    a Hampton/Kociolek charge, a trial judge instructs the jury its "function [is] to
    determine whether or not [any written or oral] statement was actually made by
    the defendant, and, if made, whether the statement or any portion of it is
    credible."   See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Statements of Defendant-
    Allegedly Made" (rev. June 14, 2010). "The principal value of the Kociolek
    charge is to cast a skeptical eye on the sources of inculpatory statements
    attributed to a defendant." State v. Harris, 
    156 N.J. 122
    , 183 (1998); see also
    State v. Feaster, 
    156 N.J. 1
    , 72 (1998) (holding the "purpose of a Hampton
    charge is to call the jury's attention to the possible unreliability of the alleged
    statements made by a criminal defendant"). Although Hampton applies to
    statements made to police witnesses, Kociolek is not so limited. State v. Wilson,
    
    335 N.J. Super. 359
    , 367 (App. Div. 1999), aff'd, 
    165 N.J. 657
     (2000).
    A judge is required to give the Hampton/Kociolek instruction whether or
    not requested by a defendant. State v. Jordan, 
    147 N.J. 409
    , 425 (1997). The
    trial judge erred in failing to give the charge.     Because we already found
    2
    State v. Hampton, 
    61 N.J. 250
     (1972); State v. Kociolek, 
    23 N.J. 400
     (1957).
    32                                    A-1340-18
    reversible error in the jury instructions and verdict sheet on the
    passion/provocation manslaughter issue, we need not decide whether the trial
    court's failure to give the Hampton/Kociolek instruction was plain error, given
    defense counsel's failure to request it, or invited error, given defense counsel's
    reliance in his closing argument on Rice's testimony about defendant's statement
    to support his contention that if the jury found defendant was the shooter, they
    should find him guilty of passion/provocation manslaughter, not murder.
    4.
    Defendant faults the trial judge for not instructing the jury about Rice's
    "probationary status."    "[A] charge against a prosecution witness that is
    unrelated to the current charge against the defendant may be an appropriate topic
    for cross-examination." State v. Bass, 
    224 N.J. 285
    , 304 (2016). "[A] charge
    need not be pending at the time of trial to support an inference of bias." 
    Ibid.
    Even "a charge against a witness that has been resolved by dismissal or
    sentencing before the witness testifies may be an appropriate subject for cross-
    examination." 
    Ibid.
    Defendant took advantage of the full and fair opportunity he received to
    cross-examine Rice regarding his contact with police, his plea agreement and
    the probationary term he had received in the unrelated matter, and his possible
    33                                   A-1340-18
    bias in testifying.    Having asked for and withdrawn his request for a
    "cooperating witness charge," he now faults the trial judge for failing to give
    that charge. We see no error.
    In the notes to the model jury charge on "Testimony of a Cooperating Co-
    Defendant or Witness," trial judges are cautioned against giving the charge if
    not requested by the defendant.
    This charge should not be given except upon the request
    of defense counsel. "While a defendant is entitled to
    such a charge if requested and a judge may give it on
    his own motion if he thinks it advisable under the
    circumstances, it is generally not wise to do so absent a
    request, because of the possible prejudice to the
    defendant. State v. Begyn, 
    34 N.J. 35
    , 54-56 (1961);
    State v. Gardner, 
    51 N.J. 444
    , 460-61 (1968).
    Certainly, it is not error, let alone plain error, for a trial
    judge to fail to give this cautionary comment where it
    has not been requested." State v. Artis, 
    57 N.J. 24
    , 33
    (1970).
    [Model Jury Instructions (Criminal), "Testimony of a
    Cooperating Co-Defendant or Witness" (rev. Feb. 6,
    2006), n.1].
    We see no reason for the trial judge to have deviated from that sound
    direction in a case in which defense counsel withdrew the request for the charge
    and subsequently in his closing argument relied on the witness's testimony in
    support of his assertion that, if the jury found defendant was the shooter, it
    should find him guilty of passion/provocation manslaughter, not murder.
    34                                   A-1340-18
    B.
    We now address defendant's requests and motion for new counsel. "The
    Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 10
    of the New Jersey Constitution both guarantee all defendants in criminal
    prosecutions the right to have the assistance of counsel for their defense." State
    v. Outland, 
    245 N.J. 494
    , 505 (2021). Although that right generally includes a
    defendant's right to the counsel of his or her choice, "an indigent defendant who
    is represented by appointed counsel does not enjoy a right to choose counsel."
    State v. Kates, 
    426 N.J. Super. 32
    , 43 (App. Div. 2012), aff'd, 
    216 N.J. 393
    (2014). Rather, "[t]he Office of the Public Defender retains the flexibility to
    substitute one attorney from its office for another." 
    Ibid.
     "[A] court may not
    require the Public Defender to assign new counsel to a defendant who was
    dissatisfied with the attorney assigned to represent him, absent a showing of
    'substantial cause.'" State v. Coon, 
    314 N.J. Super. 426
    , 438 (App. Div. 1998).
    We don't know whether substantial cause merited a change of counsel
    because the trial judge did not perform a substantial-cause analysis.          We
    recognize that a letter is not a motion. Ducey v. Ducey, 
    424 N.J. Super. 68
    , 73
    n.2 (App. Div. 2012) ("the use of correspondence must not be a substitute for a
    motion when presenting a party's request for specific relief"); see also R. 1:6-2.
    35                                   A-1340-18
    And we understand why the trial judge did not treat defendant's August 8, 2016
    and October 11, 2016 correspondence as motions. But that does not explain why
    the trial judge failed to address defendant's repeatedly-raised concerns about his
    counsel at one of the pretrial conferences, such as the plea cut-off conference. 3
    See R. 3:9-1(c) and (d).
    Simply "not[ing]" on the first day of trial defendant's complaint about his
    counsel is not enough to ensure the protection of defendant's Sixth Amendment
    rights. See Martel v. Clair, 
    565 U.S. 648
    , 664 (2012) (finding "courts cannot
    properly resolve substitution motions without probing why a defendant wants a
    new lawyer"); United States v. Iles, 
    906 F.2d 1122
    , 1130 (6th Cir. 1990)
    (holding when an indigent defendant timely moves for new appointed counsel,
    a trial court must determine the reasons for defendant's dissatisfaction with
    existing appointed counsel). Unlike the defendant in State v. Maisonet, 
    245 N.J. 552
    , 561 (2021), who asked the court right before jury selection began for an
    adjournment to obtain new counsel, defendant first raised concerns about his
    3
    Defendant claimed defense counsel allegedly failed to provide him with
    discovery material and did not keep him fully inform about his defense strategy.
    We do not express any opinion or reach any conclusion about the merit of
    defendant's allegations. However, we note that an attorney has an ethical duty
    to keep the client "fully inform[ed]" and explain "how, when, and where the
    client may communicate with the lawyer." RPC 1.4(a).
    36                                   A-1340-18
    counsel almost four years before trial and formally moved for new counsel
    almost eighteen months before trial. Based on the record containing defendant's
    unopposed assertions regarding the breakdown in communication with counsel
    and other alleged failings of counsel, we cannot conclude his motion would have
    or should have been denied. Failure to decide defendant's timely-submitted
    motion and address substantively his concerns was reversible error.
    C.
    We now turn to defendant's assertion that the trial judge erred in
    permitting the State to "bolster[]" its case improperly by presenting inadmissible
    hearsay or opinion testimony about defendant being the shooter, specifically
    Sutley's testimony that his interviews of Cubbage, Vasquez, and Cole led him to
    identify defendant as a suspect; Sutley's testimony that he interviewed Castillo
    a second time because "[n]ow that we had developed a suspect, we wanted to
    present her with . . . a photo to see if we can get an identification"; the multiple
    statements Sutley made during defendant's interrogation about unnamed people
    saying defendant had a gun; and the multiple assertions about defendant holding
    a gun the detectives made while watching the surveillance video with defendant
    during his interrogation.
    37                                    A-1340-18
    We "defer to a trial court's evidentiary ruling absent an abuse of
    discretion." State v. Garcia, 
    245 N.J. 412
    , 430 (2021). We "will not substitute
    our judgment unless the evidentiary ruling is 'so wide of the mark' that it
    constitutes 'a clear error in judgment.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Medina, 
    242 N.J. 397
    , 412 (2020)). When the appealing party failed to object to the evidentiary
    ruling at trial, we review it under the plain-error standard. Singh, 245 N.J. at
    13. An evidentiary decision is reviewed de novo if the trial court applied the
    wrong legal standard in admitting or excluding the evidence. State v. Trinidad,
    
    241 N.J. 425
    , 448 (2020). Only a mistaken evidentiary ruling having "the clear
    capacity to cause an unjust result" will lead to a reversal of a conviction. Garcia,
    245 N.J. at 430.
    1.
    "The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I,
    Paragraph 10 of the New Jersey Constitution guarantee a criminal defendant the
    right to confront 'the witnesses against him.'" Medina, 242 N.J. at 412 (quoting
    U.S. Const. amend. VI; N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 10). The right of confrontation,
    which is exercised through cross-examination, is "an essential attribute of the
    right to a fair trial." State v. Branch, 
    182 N.J. 338
    , 348 (2005).
    38                                    A-1340-18
    "[B]oth the Confrontation Clause and the hearsay rule are violated when,
    at trial, a police officer conveys, directly or by inference, information from a
    non-testifying declarant to incriminate the defendant in the crime charged."
    Branch, 
    182 N.J. at 350
    ; see also State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    , 151 (2014)
    (finding "testimony of a witness who directly or indirectly provides information
    derived from a non-testifying witness that incriminates a defendant" is
    "generally forbid[den]" at trial); State v. Bankston, 
    63 N.J. 263
    , 268-69 (1973)
    (holding detective's disclosure of information received from an informant while
    explaining reason for arresting defendant contravened defendant's Sixth
    Amendment right to confront witness against him).           "When the logical
    implication to be drawn from the testimony leads the jury to believe that a non-
    testifying witness has given the police evidence of the accused's guilt, the
    testimony should be disallowed as hearsay." Bankston, 
    63 N.J. at 271
    .
    That is exactly what happened here. Sutley's testimony that the interviews
    of Cubbage, Vasquez, and Cole led him to identify defendant as a suspect
    created the "inescapable inference" Sutley received information from them
    implicating defendant in the crime. Ibid.; cf. State v. Kemp, 
    195 N.J. 136
    , 155
    (2008) (finding defendant's right to confrontation was not violated because "all
    of the sources who led [the detective] to focus on defendant testified and were
    39                                  A-1340-18
    cross-examined at defendant's trial"). Sutley's testimony that he interviewed
    Castillo a second time because after the interviews of Cubbage, Vasquez, and
    Cole, he had developed defendant as a suspect "[swept] in inadmissible
    hearsay," implied he had "information suggestive of the defendant's guilt," and
    was irrelevant and highly prejudicial. Branch, 182 N.J. at 352. "The jury only
    needed to know that the police fairly displayed the photographs to the witnesses
    and that the process led to a reliable identification." Ibid. Sutley's repeated
    assertions during the interrogation that unnamed people had described defendant
    as holding a gun – effectively naming him as the shooter – directly conveyed to
    the jury he had obtained from numerous non-testifying witnesses knowledge
    incriminating defendant. See Branch, 
    182 N.J. at 351
     (holding "a police officer
    may not imply to the jury that he possesses superior knowledge, outside the
    record, that incriminates the defendant"). Sutley's hearsay testimony deprived
    defendant of his constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him.
    2.
    Defendant argues that the detectives' repeated assertions about defendant
    having a gun during their recorded interrogation of defendant, which was played
    for the jury, were improper expressions of lay opinions. The State contends they
    were not intended as opinions but mere and obvious interrogation tactics.
    40                                   A-1340-18
    However labeled, the detectives' repeated assertions that defendant had a gun
    were improper, highly prejudicial, and capable of producing an unjust result.
    N.J.R.E. 701, which governs lay witness opinion testimony, states: "[i]f
    a witness is not testifying as an expert, the witness' testimony in the form of
    opinions or inferences may be admitted if it: (a) is rationally based on the
    witness' perception; and (b) will assist in understanding the witness' testimony
    or determining a fact in issue." "The purpose of N.J.R.E. 701 is to ensure that
    lay opinion is based on an adequate foundation." Neno v. Clinton, 
    167 N.J. 573
    ,
    585 (2001); see also Singh, 245 N.J. at 14. Lay opinion testimony can be
    admitted "[only] if it falls within the narrow bounds of testimony that is based
    on the perception of the witness and that will assist the jury in performing its
    function." State v. McLean, 
    205 N.J. 438
    , 456 (2011); see also 
    id. at 459
     (a
    witness may not offer a lay opinion on a matter "not within [the witness's] direct
    ken . . . and as to which the jury is as competent as he to form a conclusion")
    (quoting Brindley v. Firemen's Ins. Co., 
    35 N.J. Super. 1
    , 8 (App. Div. 1955)).
    The detectives' numerous assertions that defendant was holding a gun
    were not "fleeting." See Singh, 245 N.J. at 17 (finding detective's two references
    to a person in a surveillance video he was narrating as "the defendant" to be
    error but harmless error given its fleeting nature). Unlike the detective in Singh,
    41                                    A-1340-18
    245 N.J. at 20, who, as the arresting officer, had first-hand knowledge of the
    sneakers about which he testified, these detectives had no first-hand knowledge
    of the gun, which was never recovered, or of what happened during the shooting,
    which they had not personally witnessed. Their statements were based on their
    review of the surveillance video and, thus, were not "rationally based on [their]
    perception" of the actual events, as required by N.J.R.E. 701. The jury was no
    less competent than the detectives to form a conclusion as to what the
    surveillance video depicted.
    Given that defendant admitted to being present at the shooting, the only
    material factual issues in dispute were whether defendant had a gun and was the
    shooter. Like the officer in McLean, 
    205 N.J. at 445
    , who testified as to an
    ultimate determination that the defendant was engaging in drug transactions,
    these detectives repeatedly stated their opinion as to the ultimate critical issue:
    defendant had a gun.
    Police testimony concerning a defendant's guilt or
    veracity is particularly prejudicial because "[a] jury
    may be inclined to accord special respect to such a
    witness," and where that witness's testimony goes "to
    the heart of the case," deference by the jury could lead
    it to "ascribe[] almost determinative significance to [the
    officer's] opinion."
    [State v. Tung, 
    460 N.J. Super. 75
    , 102 (App. Div.
    2019) (quoting Neno, 
    167 N.J. at 586-87
    ).]
    42                                    A-1340-18
    See also State v. Frisby, 
    174 N.J. 583
    , 595 (2002) (finding the admission of
    certain police testimony to be plain error, noting "[t]he effect of the police
    testimony essentially vouching for" the version of events contrary to a
    defendant's version "cannot be overstated"). The detectives repeatedly asserted
    defendant had a gun while defendant repeatedly denied having a gun. Their
    numerous assertions regarding that critical issue, especially in the face of
    defendant's repeated denials, were highly prejudicial.
    The   State's   contention    that    the   detectives'   assertions   reflected
    interrogation tactics and not opinion is not persuasive. The prosecutor asked
    Sutley to explain his reason for asking defendant a particular question: "whether
    [defendant] had a gun for protection." Sutley responded:
    [SUTLEY:] Yeah. Sometimes when a suspect is
    having trouble with his recollection or facts or doesn't
    want to come open and be honest, one of the things that
    we do is we try to minimize it and give him an excuse
    to tell -- to tell the truth or try to explain his side of the
    story. In that case, when I was offering it for protection
    or something like that, I was offering it for that reason.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. And . . . is there like -- kind
    of like a term in terms of like interviewing tactics that
    that's referred to when you're trying to offer somebody
    a fact to accept or to reject?
    [SUTLEY:] Well, I'm – I'm trying to minimize the
    overall picture, in -- in essence, is what I was trying to
    43                                   A-1340-18
    do. Because, if I asked him why he murdered him, you
    would never get an answer. But, I asked if you have a
    gun for protection, people understand that. Sometimes,
    you can minimize it where they'll – they'll be a little
    more truthful.
    [PROSECUTOR:] Okay. When you were telling him
    that no one said he fired a gun, what was the reason why
    you were telling him that?
    [SUTLEY:] Again, I was trying to minimize it.
    That colloquy did not make clear to the jury that the detectives' assertions about
    defendant having a gun were not factual statements but instead were part of an
    effort to elicit a confession from defendant. Without any curative instruction,
    anyone watching the interrogation video would understand the detectives were
    stating their observations from their viewing of the surveillance video and their
    conclusion that defendant had a gun. The prejudicial effect of those police
    detective statements going to the heart of the case "cannot be overstated."
    Frisby, 
    174 N.J. at 595
    .
    The trial judge's conclusions at the pretrial N.J.R.E. 104 hearing that the
    interrogation video should be redacted and that a curative instruction might be
    needed were correct. Unfortunately, the trial judge erred in not ensuring those
    redactions were made and in not giving that curative instruction.
    44                                   A-1340-18
    As a result of these evidential errors, the jury heard hearsay testimony
    regarding the statements of several named and unnamed non-testifying
    witnesses that violated defendant's constitutional right of confrontation and
    improper lay opinion testimony that was highly prejudicial. These errors had
    the clear capacity to cause an unjust result.
    D.
    "Even if an individual error does not require reversal, the cumulative
    effect of a series of errors can cast doubt on a verdict and call for a new trial."
    State v. Sanchez-Medina, 
    231 N.J. 452
    , 469 (2018); see also Weaver, 219 N.J.
    at 155 (finding "[w]hen legal errors cumulatively render a trial unfair, the
    Constitution requires a new trial"). Our "obligation is to ensure that defendant
    had a fair trial." State v. Jenewicz, 
    193 N.J. 440
    , 473 (2008).
    Considering the individual errors and their cumulative effect, we are
    unable to conclude the cumulative error was harmless or that defendant had a
    fair trial and, thus, are constrained to vacate defendant's convictions and remand
    for a new trial.
    E.
    Because we are reversing his convictions, we need not address defendant's
    argument regarding the sentence.
    45                                    A-1340-18
    Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    46                           A-1340-18