STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. BASILIS STEPHANATOS (11-09-0810, BERGEN 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3443-18
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BASILIS STEPHANATOS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Submitted November 15, 2021 – Decided February 23, 2022
    Before Judges Sabatino, Rothstadt, and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Bergen County, Indictment No. 11-09-
    0810.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (David A. Gies, Designated Counsel, on the
    briefs).
    Camelia M. Valdes, Passaic County Prosecutor,
    attorney for respondent (Ali Y. Ozbek, Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Appellant filed pro se supplemental briefs.
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Basilis Stephanatos appeals from his 2019 conviction by a
    jury of having committed the fourth-degree offense of causing or risking
    widespread injury or damage, N.J.S.A. 2C:17-2(c), and from his sentence to
    three-years non-custodial probation. The conviction stems from the events of
    June 28, 2011, when, after Sheriff's officers attempted to execute a writ of
    possession, defendant locked himself inside his home with weapons for several
    hours before surrendering possession.
    On appeal, defendant raises the following arguments:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED WHERE HE FOUND
    AS A MATTER OF LAW THAT DEFENDANT WAS
    A "PERSON" TO WHOM N.J.S.A. 2C:17-2
    APPLIED IN ITS DEFINITION OF THE NUMBER
    OF "PEOPLE" TO BE INJURED IN ORDER TO
    CAUSE "WIDESPREAD INJURY OR DAMAGE."
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED WHERE HE
    REVOKED DEFENDANT'S RIGHT OF SELF-
    REPRESENTATION.
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL JUDGE'S DENIAL OF DEFENDANT'S
    SPEEDY TRIAL MOTION WAS CLEARLY
    ERRONEOUS.
    2                             A-3443-18
    In a Pro Se Supplemental Brief he also argues the following points that
    we have renumbered for clarity:
    POINT [IV]
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED A HARMFUL
    ERROR BY RULING THAT THE VOID AB INITIO
    EX-PARTE WRIT WAS NOT ILLEGAL AND
    PREVENTED DEFENDANT FROM TESTIFYING
    ABOUT THE VOID WRIT. (RAISED BELOW).
    1.  DISCOVERY      OF        THE
    EXTRAORDINARY EVIDENCE THAT THE EX-
    PARTE WRIT ENTERED ON MAY 13, 2011 . . .
    WAS VOID AB INITIO.
    2.   THE TRIAL COURT DID NOT MAKE
    SUFFICIENT FINDINGS IN SUPPORT OF ITS
    DECISION TO DENY THE OMNIBUS MOTIONS
    IN THEIR ENTIRETY.
    POINT [V]
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED A HARMFUL
    ERROR BECAUSE IT PREVENTED DEFENDANT
    TO TESTIFY AT TRIAL ABOUT HIS STATE OF
    MIND, THUS USURPING THE JURY'S ROLE IN
    DECIDING THE ULTIMATE ISSUE OF THE
    RECKLESSNESS STATE OF MIND OF THE
    DEFENDANT THAT WAS ONE OF THE
    REQUIRED ELEMENTS UNDER N.J.S.A. 2C:17-
    2C. (RAISED BELOW).
    1.   THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS
    DISCRETION BY FAILING TO CONSIDER
    LARGER RELEVANCY CONCEPTS WHEN
    3                                A-3443-18
    EVALUATING THE PROFFERED TESTIMONY OF
    [DEFENDANT].
    2.   THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED
    REVERSIBLE ERROR IN FAILING TO COMPARE
    "RECKLESS" WITH OTHER MENTAL STATES
    AFTER      THE     JURY      REQUESTED
    CLARIFICATION.
    3.   VIOLATION OF THE PRESENTMENT
    CLAUSE, N.J. CONST. ART. I, PAR 8.
    POINT [VI]
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED A HARMFUL
    ERROR BECAUSE IT DENIED THE DEFENSES OF
    MISTAKE OF LAW OR FACT. (RAISED BELOW).
    1.  THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY
    PREVENTING    THE    DEFENDANT     TO
    COLLATERALLY ATTACK THE JUDGMENT OF
    FORECLOSURE AND ASSOCIATED ORDERS.
    2.  THIS CASE FALLS WITHIN AN
    EXCEPTION TO THE COLLATERAL BAR RULE
    AND THE TRIAL COURT HAS ERRED BY
    FAILING TO CONSIDER THE EXCEPTIONS.
    POINT [VII]
    THE COURT ERRED BY STATING THAT NO
    WARRANT     FOR  REMOVAL     FROM   A
    RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY WAS REQUIRED
    UNDER THE TAX SALE LAW. AN LLC CANNOT
    TERMINATE A RESIDENTIAL OCCUPANCY
    UNDER NEW JERSEY'S TAX SALE LAW.
    (RAISED BELOW).
    4                       A-3443-18
    POINT [VIII]
    UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CUMULATIVE
    ERRORS, A NEW GRAND JURY SHOULD HAVE
    BEEN BE [SIC] CONVENED PURSUANT TO
    STATE V. ORECCHIO, 
    16 N.J. 125
    , 129 (1954).
    (RAISED BELOW).
    1.  THE LAW ON PERJURY BEFORE A
    GRAND JURY.
    POINT [IX]
    THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION
    DURING SENTENCING BY PRESENTING FACTS
    NOT PRESENTED AT TRIAL; BY WRONGFULLY
    STATING AND WITHOUT ANY FACTUAL BASIS
    THAT [DEFENDANT] HAD A DISDAIN FOR
    POLICE OFFICERS; THAT DEFENDANT HAD
    MADE "THREATS" TO PEOPLE; THIS WAS
    CONTRARY TO THE PRE-TRIAL RULINGS BY
    THE TRIAL COURT THAT NO THREATS WERE
    EVER MADE. (RAISED BELOW).
    1.  THE   TRIAL    COURT   MADE
    ERRONEOUS   STATEMENTS   ABOUT   THE
    PAYMENT OF TAXES THAT ARE NOT IN THE
    RECORD AND THEY ARE NOT TRUTHFUL OR
    ARE NOT BASED ON COMPETENT, CREDIBLE
    EVIDENCE.
    2.  THE TRIAL COURT FAILED TO
    CREDIT [DEFENDANT] FOR THE 68 DAYS
    SPENT IN THE BERGEN COUNTY JAIL.
    [ANOTHER] JUDGE . . . ALREADY HAS RULED
    THAT JAILING WAS IN VIOLATION OF
    [DEFENDANT'S] FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS.
    5                         A-3443-18
    3.  THE COURT FAILED TO CONSIDER
    MITIGATING FACTOR 1 AND MITIGATING
    FACTOR 2 DURING SENTENCING. STATE V.
    DALZIEL, 
    182 N.J. 494
    , 502 (2005) (HOLDING
    THAT TRIAL JUDGES DO NOT HAVE
    "DISCRETION TO REJECT A MITIGATING
    FACTOR ALTOGETHER" DESPITE "EVIDENCE
    IN THE RECORD").
    4.  DOUBLE COUNTING AND DOUBLE
    JEOPARDY PROHIBITED DURING SENTENCING.
    AN ELEMENT OF THE OFFENSE MAY NOT BE
    CITED AS AN AGGRAVATING FACTOR TO
    INCREASE PUNISHMENT.    NO COMPETENT
    AND RELEVANT EVIDENCE WAS USED TO
    ANALYZE THE AGGRAVATING FACTORS.
    5.  MULTIPLE PUNISHMENTS FOR THE
    SAME OFFENSE ARE STRICTLY PROHIBITED.
    6.  IT IS ALSO APPARENT THAT THE
    TRIAL   COURT     MISTAKENLY       FOUND
    AGGRAVATING FACTORS, 3, 8 AND 9 BY
    RELYING "HEAVILY ON THE FACTS OF THE
    VERY OFFENSES THAT DEFENDANT WAS
    ACQUITTED ON[.]"     STATE V. ANTHONY,
    APPELLATE DIVISION (JANUARY 19, 2016).
    POINT [X]
    THE COURT COMMITTED HARMFUL ERROR BY
    FINDING THAT THE DEFENDANT HAD NO
    POSSESSORY RIGHTS AND REASONABLE
    EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY IN HIS FULLY-
    OWNED PROPERTY. (RAISED BELOW).
    6                         A-3443-18
    POINT [XI]
    THE APPLICATION OF THE VAGUE AND
    OVERBROAD STATUTE N.J.S.A. 2C:17-2C TO
    THE PRESENT CASE REPRESENTS ARBITRARY
    ENFORCEMENT,    VIOLATING   THE    DUE
    PROCESS CLAUSE BECAUSE THE STATE
    LEGISLATURE DID NOT INCLUDE IN THAT
    STATUTE REFUSAL TO VACATE A HOME AS A
    PUNISHABLE FELONY OFFENSE.     (RAISED
    BELOW).
    We are persuaded that the almost eight-year delay in bringing
    defendant's matter to trial violated his right to a speedy trial. For that reason,
    we reverse the denial of his 2018 motion to dismiss the indictment on that
    basis and vacate his conviction.
    I.
    The facts leading to defendant's conviction are summarized as follows.
    By 2004 defendant had fallen into arrears in the payment of property taxes for
    his home in Wayne Township. In 2005, the township sold the associated tax
    sale certificate to a third party, which by 2008 began the process of foreclosing
    on the property. In the ensuing litigation, the then-Chancery judge stayed the
    proceedings to allow defendant to file an action against the township
    challenging the taxes owed.        That action was ultimately dismissed with
    prejudice in 2010 and the Chancery action resumed.           In April 2010, the
    7                                   A-3443-18
    Chancery judge struck defendant's responsive pleading and directed that the
    matter proceed as uncontested. The matter proceeded to judgment after the
    Chancery judge gave defendant an additional opportunity to redeem, which he
    failed to do.
    A writ of possession was issued in May 2011, which the Passaic County
    Sheriff scheduled for execution on June 28, 2011. The Sheriff's office knew
    that defendant had vigorously defended against the foreclosure and that he
    possessed several weapons. With that knowledge, four officers were sent to
    defendant's home to execute the writ.
    In response to the Sheriff officers' attempt to execute the writ, defendant
    approached them from inside his home with a rifle in his hand. In accordance
    with their office's protocols, the officers safely retreated from the home and
    retrieved their weapons from their cars where they remained. They then called
    for assistance from hostage negotiators, a special weapons and tactics (SWAT)
    team, and a bomb squad. The requested back-up responded within a half hour.
    In the meantime, while inside the house, defendant called the Chancery
    judge, who took the call on the record. Defendant asked that the judge "stay
    the eviction." In response, the judge asked that he leave the house and speak
    to the officers. Defendant was displeased with her response and told her that
    8                                 A-3443-18
    "the only way he was coming out of the house was dead" and that "there was
    going to be bloodshed." Defendant made these statements "[a] number of
    times."
    According to defendant, he "panicked" and told the judge "there's going
    to be bloodshed today" because he "thought [he was] going to be shot." He
    also stated, "You've got to be kidding me, as I said, only dead I will be coming
    out of this home," and later, "[T]his is not going to happen, okay? Only dead
    will I come out of this home." He explained that he made these statements
    because he "was afraid [that was] going to happen" since armed officers were
    outside. Defendant said he was not holding the rifle to frighten anyone, never
    pointed or displayed any weapon at anyone, or threatened anyone and did not
    intend to cause anyone harm.
    After defendant spoke to the judge, a Sheriff's officer made telephone
    contact with defendant. The officer stayed on the phone with him for several
    hours, urging defendant to leave the house. During the call defendant was
    very emotional and angry. He expressed concern that he was going to get hurt,
    despite the officer's assurance that if he came out no harm would come to him.
    Eventually, defendant left the house and cooperated with the officers. He was
    placed under arrest and his weapons were removed from the house.
    9                                  A-3443-18
    In September 2011, defendant was charged in Passaic County with
    possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-
    4(a) (count one); two counts of aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer
    by knowingly pointing a firearm, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(9) (counts
    two and three); recklessly creating a risk of widespread injury or damage,
    contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:17-2(c) (count four); and hindering apprehension,
    contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(2) (count five).
    Shortly thereafter, defendant was briefly represented by one attorney but
    soon replaced him with another privately retained counsel. From 2011 through
    2017, defendant's criminal case was assigned to a series of seven different
    judges. During that period, defendant filed numerous motions seeking various
    relief. Many of his pro se submissions attacked the underlying judgment in the
    civil actions, individual members of the Sheriff's department, and judges
    involved in his case. At some point prior to 2016, a judge directed that his
    continued filing of pro se submissions would be considered a violation of the
    conditions of his bail.
    Among those motions that defense counsel filed, was a 2013 motion for
    a change in venue. In addition, defense counsel made numerous successful
    requests for adjournments, many based on counsel's health issues and others
    10                                 A-3443-18
    due to schedule conflicts. And, while the venue motion was still pending, in
    October 2015, defendant submitted a pro se "omnibus motion," seeking
    dismissal of the indictment and other relief on various grounds, including that
    his right to a speedy trial had been violated, which he supported with
    complaints about delays caused by his attorney and the court, not the State.
    Four years after the change in venue motion was filed, one of the judges
    granted it on December 26, 2017, without deciding the still pending "omnibus
    motion," and transferred the matter to Bergen County.         After the transfer,
    defendant refiled the "omnibus motion," and several other motions that were
    heard and decided by the trial judge in Bergen County before defendant's trial
    began in January 2019. On February 4, 2019, the jury found defendant guilty
    of the one count in the indictment but not guilty of the remaining counts. The
    trial judge later sentenced defendant to three years non-custodial probation and
    imposed a $7,500 fine. This appeal followed.
    II.
    Because the time between defendant's arrest and his trial was inordinate,
    we turn our attention first to defendant's arguments about the violation of his
    right to a speedy trial. Defendant argues in Point III of his brief that the trial
    judge, in denying his motion for dismissal on speedy trial grounds, improperly
    11                                   A-3443-18
    relied upon the fact that defense counsel asked for many adjournments.
    According to defendant, the attorney's adjournment requests accounted for less
    than half of the adjournments in the case, and the State and the judges
    previously assigned to the case were responsible for the rest.       Defendant
    further argues that he suffered "significant harm," because: 1) he "los[t]" his
    chosen attorney, who he argues could have represented him at trial if it had
    happened earlier; 2) his financial resources were "severely stretched" by legal
    fees; and 3) he lost income and experienced "anxiety and humiliation" due to
    the lingering charges against him.
    A.
    According to defendant, he first addressed the issue of the delay of his
    trial in April 2014, when he wrote to the court "urging [it] to promptly proceed
    with the case." 1 He expressed concern that it had taken "more than a year to
    rule" on his still undecided February 20, 2013 motion to change venue, and
    stated that he "suffered significant economic and non-economic damages . . .
    every day this case [was] delayed." The letter did not prompt any action by
    the court.
    1
    The letter in which this was said is not included in the record, but is
    discussed by defendant in his later October 12, 2015 letter to the court.
    12                                  A-3443-18
    As previously mentioned, on October 12, 2015, four years after the
    indictment was issued, and while the 2013 venue motion was still pending,
    defendant filed a forty-seven-page letter as a pro se "omnibus motion"
    complaining about his attorney causing delays in his case, raising questions
    about the veracity of the attorney's health issues, and asking that the
    indictment be dismissed on several grounds, including that his speedy trial
    rights had been violated. In his letter, defendant complained that there had
    been "no end to the lengthy and inexcusable case delays" caused by the court
    and by his counsel. He said his lawyer had been "attending other clients in
    federal court," and that he had made "numerous inquiries and complaints about
    these unacceptable delays" to the attorney. He concluded by stating, "since
    there is no end to the lengthy and inexcusable case delays caused by this court
    and by [my attorney] (in violation of my speedy trial rights), my family and I
    have decided to remove [my attorney] from representing me before this court."
    He also suggested that his venue motion, which had been pending for two
    years and eight months, was "simple" and should have been decided. None of
    the assigned judges entered any orders in response to the omnibus motion and,
    despite defendant's assertions, his attorney continued to represent him. 2
    2
    On March 18, 2016, during oral argument on the State's motion to revoke
    13                                     A-3443-18
    As noted earlier, defendant's motion for change of venue was not granted
    until December 26, 2017, four years and ten months after it was filed. The
    order stated that the reason for the transfer to another vicinage was that since a
    retired, former judge—presumably the vicinage's Chancery judge—was going
    to be a witness in the case, there was a need to "ensure the absence of any
    appearance of impropriety." No other aspect of defendant's omnibus motion
    was addressed by the judge issuing the order.
    As also already noted, after the change in venue, in March 2018
    defendant refiled his omnibus motion, including his speedy trial claim. The
    trial judge in Bergen County denied defendant's omnibus motion on May 24,
    2018. 3 He also set a peremptory date of August 6, 2018, for the trial to begin.
    __________________________
    bail based on defendant submitting pro se papers to the court in violation of a
    bail condition, one of the Passaic County judges stated that although he did not
    address defendant's motion for change of venue with an order, he had
    "informally advised [c]ounsel" that he "wasn't going to be granting that" and
    that defendant's filing of motions other than through counsel that had been
    drafted by defendant, who "tr[ied] to have them appear to be submissions of
    [c]ounsel," violated the judge's directive from "two years ago" that he would
    not consider pro se submissions, and that defendant's continued attempts to
    represent himself and to obtain a change of venue were "only guaranteed to
    cause this litigation to last much longer." The result of the motion was that
    defendant's bail was revoked and he was referred for a psychiatric evaluation.
    3
    At a conference held by the trial judge in February 2018, defense counsel
    reviewed in detail his serious health issues that prevented him from continuing
    14                                   A-3443-18
    In denying the portion of the omnibus motion concerning defendant's
    speedy trial claim, the judge "acknowledge[d]" that "this matter [had] been in
    the system for too long."       He addressed the four Barker      4
    factors for
    determining speedy trial issues in some detail. For the first factor, the judge
    found that there was "no doubt that the length of the delay [was] substantial,"
    stating that it was "almost unconscionable[] that a matter in the State [c]ourt
    system [was] now in its seventh year or eighth year before being resolved."
    The court found that factor one "weigh[ed] heavily in favor of the defendant."
    Concerning the second factor, the reasons for the delay, the judge stated
    that he had accessed the judiciary's Promis/Gavel System to view a listing of
    all actions taken and proceedings scheduled in this matter.           The judge
    determined that between 2012 and 2018, there had been "over 100 scheduled
    proceedings, including status conferences, pre-trial conferences, motions, and
    other matters," and that "at least 80 times" the matter was adjourned at defense
    counsel's request. While the judge acknowledged that the attorney "had health
    issues" and was "very busy" with "trials in many venues," the judge also stated
    __________________________
    to represent defendant. Ultimately, defendant was initially allowed to
    represent himself with standby counsel and it was defendant appearing pro se
    with that counsel who argued before the trial judge on May 24, 2018.
    4
    Barker v. Wingo, 
    407 U.S. 514
    , 515 (1972).
    15                                   A-3443-18
    that defendant "could have had other [c]ounsel" and instead "chose to keep and
    retain" his attorney.      Meanwhile, the judge found that "the State never
    requested an adjournment" and was "ready to proceed to trial, certainly within
    six months to a year after" the indictment was issued. The judge concluded
    that "the delay, over seven years, was primarily, if not solely, chargeable to the
    defendant." This factor weighed "if not more" than, "at least equally" to the
    length of the delay.
    As to the third factor, the judge found that defendant had asserted his
    right to a speedy trial and filed a motion concerning that right. For factor four,
    the judge found that the seven-year delay was "prejudicial" to defendant and
    noted that while defendant had not been incarcerated during that time period,
    his "life [had] been on hold for the past seven years." However, the judge
    found again that the fact that defendant was not tried more quickly "was due in
    large part to hi[m] or his . . . attorney."     The judge concluded that after
    balancing the four factors, defendant was not "constitutionally denied a speedy
    trial."
    At the hearing on defendant's motion for reconsideration on June 4,
    2018, the judge again said that "seven years is an inordinate delay." Moreover,
    the judge admitted that he had made a mistake as to the number and source of
    16                                  A-3443-18
    the adjournments in the case. The judge stated there were actually seventy-
    five postponements of the case, and that thirty-one came from defense counsel
    and "one or two, if that many," from the State. The judge found that the
    remainder of the adjournments "were either [c]ourt calendars or for reasons
    unknown." Based on this corrected record, the judge again found that "most of
    the delays were caused by, not the defendant personally, but through his
    counsel." The judge did not change his ruling on the speedy trial motion.
    In a June 8, 2018 pro se filing, defendant continued to argue that his
    speedy trial right had been violated. Throughout the remainder of the pretrial
    period, the trial judge maintained that trial would commence on August 6,
    2018.     However, on that date, defendant's new, appointed attorney 5 was
    unavailable, and the trial was postponed until January 22, 2019, when it in fact
    commenced.
    B.
    It is well-settled that "[t]he right to a speedy trial is guaranteed by the
    Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and imposed on the states
    by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment." State v. Tsetsekas,
    5
    At a July 3, 2018 hearing, the trial judge revoked his earlier order allowing
    defendant to proceed pro se.
    17                                   A-3443-18
    
    411 N.J. Super. 1
    , 8 (App. Div. 2009) (citing Klopfer v. North Carolina, 
    386 U.S. 213
    , 222-23 (1967)).         "The constitutional right . . . attaches upon
    defendant's arrest." 
    Ibid.
     (alteration in the original) (quoting State v. Fulford,
    
    349 N.J. Super. 183
    , 190 (App. Div. 2002)). Since it is the State's duty to
    promptly bring a case to trial, "[a]s a matter of fundamental fairness," the State
    must avoid "excessive delay in completing a prosecution[,]" or risk violating
    "defendant's constitutional right to speedy trial." 
    Ibid.
     (citation omitted).
    The right to a speedy trial is of a somewhat different character than
    others, because "deprivation of the right to speedy trial does not per se
    prejudice the accused's ability to defend himself." Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 521
    .
    Indeed, courts have recognized that "[d]elay is not an uncommon defense
    tactic." 
    Ibid.
    The right to a speedy trial must be addressed with a careful analysis of
    the circumstances. 
    Id. at 522
    . Ultimately, the trial court must weigh society's
    right to have the accused tried and punished against a defendant's right to be
    prosecuted fairly and without oppression. Tsetsekas, 
    411 N.J. Super. at 10
    .
    "The only remedy" for a violation of a defendant's right to a speedy trial
    "is dismissal of the charge." State v. Cahill, 
    213 N.J. 253
    , 276 (2013). On
    appeal, "we reverse only if the court's determination is clearly erroneous."
    18                                    A-3443-18
    Tsetsekas, 
    411 N.J. Super. at 10
    ; see also State v. Merlino, 
    153 N.J. Super. 12
    ,
    17 (App. Div. 1977).
    The four-part test to determine if a defendant's speedy-trial right has
    been violated was announced in Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 530-33
    , and adopted by
    our Supreme Court in State v. Szima, 
    70 N.J. 196
    , 200-01 (1976). 6 The test
    requires "[c]ourts [to] consider and balance the '[l]ength of delay, the reason
    for the delay, the defendant's assertion of his right, and prejudice to the
    defendant.'"      Tsetsekas, 
    411 N.J. Super. at 8
     (third alteration in original)
    (quoting Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 530
    ).          "No single factor is a necessary or
    sufficient condition to the finding of a deprivation of the right to a speedy
    trial."    
    Id.
     at 10 (citing Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 533
    ).    Courts are required to
    analyze each interrelated factor "in light of the relevant circumstances of each
    particular case." 
    Ibid.
    The Barker factors to be applied by a court are "related," and "must be
    considered together with such other circumstances as may be relevant."
    Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 533
    . None of them standing alone is "either a necessary or
    6
    We note that effective 2017, although not impacting defendant's claims,
    speedy trial claims are now subject to the considerations set forth in the
    Criminal Justice Reform Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:162-22(a)(2)(a).
    19                                 A-3443-18
    sufficient condition to the finding of a deprivation of the right of speedy trial,"
    and a court must "engage in a difficult and sensitive balancing process." 
    Ibid.
    Regarding the first factor, the Barker Court characterized the length of a
    delay between arrest and trial as a "triggering mechanism," stating that "[u]ntil
    there is some delay which is presumptively prejudicial," there is no need for a
    court to address the other three factors. 
    Ibid.
     Here, it cannot be disputed that,
    as the trial judge found, the delay was unreasonable, especially in light of the
    simplicity of charges that arose from the June 28, 2011 near tragic events. See
    
    id. at 530-31
    ; Cahill, 213 N.J. at 265-66 (recognizing that "longer delays can
    be tolerated for serious offenses or complex prosecutions").
    The trial judge therefore correctly considered the remaining factors. In
    doing so, the judge was required to recognize "[a]s a matter of logic and
    decency, given that the four factors of Barker call for a balancing of
    considerations, when the delay in concluding a trial is excessively long by any
    measure, as here, the burden upon defendant to satisfy the other factors is
    correspondingly diminished." State v. Farrell, 
    320 N.J. Super. 425
    , 453 (App.
    Div. 1999).
    Turning to the second factor, the reason for the delay, "different weights
    should be assigned to different reasons."       Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 531
    .         "A
    20                                    A-3443-18
    deliberate attempt to delay the trial in order to hamper the defense should be
    weighted heavily against the government," while "a valid reason, such as a
    missing witness, should serve to justify appropriate delay." 
    Ibid.
     "A more
    neutral reason such as negligence or overcrowded courts should be weighted
    less heavily" against the State. 
    Ibid.
     However, such a reason may still support
    a finding of a speedy trial violation, "because it is the government's ultimate
    responsibility to prosecute cases in a timely fashion." Cahill, 213 N.J. at 266.
    In Barker, the Court found that seven months of delay by the prosecution
    due to the illness of a key witness were justifiable. Id. at 534. However, four
    years of continuances so that a co-defendant could be tried separately and then
    utilized as a witness were improper, because the prosecution repeatedly failed
    to try the co-defendant "under circumstances that comported with due
    process," lengthening the delay. Ibid.
    In Tsetsekas, 
    411 N.J. Super. at 12
    , we found that the prosecution's
    requests for several adjournments due to scheduling issues with witnesses and
    problems providing discovery "were not a deliberate attempt to hamper the
    defense," but nonetheless supported a conclusion that the defendant's speedy
    trial right was violated. We noted that "[a]djournments should generally be
    21                                   A-3443-18
    granted to either party for legitimate reasons," but found that "every rule has
    its limits." 
    Ibid.
     (emphasis added).
    Delays caused or requested by a defendant will weigh against finding a
    speedy trial violation. State v. Long, 
    119 N.J. 439
    , 471 (1990). In Long, the
    Court held that if the State was "entirely or in large part responsible" for the
    delay of 971 days between the defendant's arrest and his trial for murder, "such
    a time delay would violate [the] defendant's right to a speedy trial." 
    Id. at 469
    .
    However, the defendant had "filed numerous pretrial motions that accounted
    for most of" that time, particularly a challenge to the jury-selection process
    that led to six months delay of the trial. 
    Id. at 469-71
    . Because there was "no
    indication that the prosecution intentionally delayed the proceedings to gain an
    unfair, tactical advantage," the Court found no speedy trial violation. 
    Id. at 471
    .
    The United States Supreme Court has held that because an attorney acts
    as a defendant's agent, defense counsel's requests for adjournments can be
    generally attributed to defendant. Vermont v. Brillon, 
    556 U.S. 81
    , 90-91
    (2009). In Brillon, the Court held that "counsel's failure 'to move the case
    forward' does not warrant attribution of delay to the State," because "the
    individual counsel here acted only on behalf of [the defendant], not the State."
    22                                  A-3443-18
    
    Id. at 92
    . The Court stated "[b]ecause 'the attorney is the [defendant's] agent
    when acting, or failing to act, in furtherance of the litigation,' delay caused by
    the defendant's counsel is also charged against the defendant." 
    Id. at 90-91
    (second alteration in original) (quoting Coleman v. Thompson, 
    501 U.S. 722
    ,
    753 (1991)).
    However, in Brillon, the Court made clear that although the defendant's
    attorneys made requests for adjournments, the primary cause for the delay in
    that case was the defendant's belligerent behavior and conflict with each of his
    consecutively assigned counsel. He repeatedly fired and even threatened his
    appointed counsel, which caused delay because replacement counsel had to be
    appointed several times. The Court summarized the situation as follows:
    [Defendant's] strident, aggressive behavior with regard
    to [his first attorney] whom he threatened, further
    impeded prompt trial and likely made it more difficult
    for the Defender General's office to find replacement
    counsel. Even after the trial court's warning regarding
    delay, [defendant] sought dismissal of yet another
    attorney . . . . Just as a State's "deliberate attempt to
    delay the trial in order to hamper the defense should
    be weighted heavily against the [State]," Barker, 407
    U.S.[] at 531, . . . so too should a defendant's
    deliberate attempt to disrupt proceedings be weighted
    heavily against the defendant. Absent [defendant's]
    deliberate efforts to force the withdrawal of [two of
    his attorneys], no speedy-trial issue would have arisen.
    The effect of these earlier events should have been
    factored into the court's analysis of subsequent delay.
    23                                   A-3443-18
    [Brillon, 
    556 U.S. at 93-94
     (fifth alteration in
    original).]
    Based on the defendant's actions that prompted his various attorneys to
    seek delays, the Court reversed "[t]he Vermont Supreme Court[, which it
    found] erred in attributing to the State delays caused by 'the failure of several
    assigned counsel . . . to move his case forward, . . . and in failing adequately to
    take into account the role of [defendant's] disruptive behavior in the overall
    balance." 
    Id. at 91-92
     (citation omitted). Moreover, the primary danger that
    the Court sought to address in Brillon in the particular context of a speedy trial
    claim, was by attributing a public defender's delays to the State would provide
    a public defender with a perverse incentive to drag his or her feet and request
    frivolous continuances in the hopes of getting charges dismissed on speedy
    trial grounds. Neither the facts nor the policy implications that were key to the
    Court's decision in Brillon are present in the current case.
    In contrast, before Brillon was decided, where delays were attributable
    to the court, we found in Farrell, 
    320 N.J. Super. at 449-50
    , that two
    postponement requests from defense counsel due to scheduling issues
    involving counsel's other cases were not "fairly chargeable to [the] defendant."
    
    Id. at 449
    . There, we stated that delays caused by the court itself may also be
    24                                    A-3443-18
    weighed in the analysis. 
    Id. at 450-51
    . "As a general rule in applying the
    evaluative features of the four-part test of Barker in fundamental fairness
    terms, delays of scheduling and other failures of the process for which the trial
    court itself was responsible are attributable to the State and not to the
    defendant." 
    Id. at 451
     (quoting Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 531
    ). "When there is no
    reasonable explanation or justification for the excessive delay, speedy trial
    principles have been violated." Id. at 453.
    For example, in Farrell, the municipal court adjourned the case for
    extended periods multiple times even after there had already been significant
    delays. Ibid. Though the matter involved simple charges of driving while
    intoxicated and failure to maintain a single lane, the court took 174 days to
    begin addressing the defendant's motions and did not begin the testimonial
    phase of the matter until it was 312 days old. Id. at 451. The court took nearly
    a year to complete the testimonial phase due largely to its own adjournments.
    Ibid. For example, when the matter was 635 days old, the court adjourned it
    "because of other, undefined 'administrative matters' that diverted [its]
    attention." Ibid. We concluded that the defendant's speedy trial right was
    violated because the delays were "plainly excessive" and largely due to "the
    25                                   A-3443-18
    municipal court's patent failure to prepare itself to try the matter expeditiously
    and shepherd it to resolution efficiently." Id. at 452-53.
    As to the third Barker factor, a defendant's assertion of the speedy trial
    right "is entitled to strong evidentiary weight in determining whether the
    defendant is being deprived of the right." Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532-33
    . For
    example, if the record shows that a defendant not only failed to object to
    continuances requested by the government but "hoped to take advantage of the
    delay," denial of a speedy trial motion is appropriate. 
    Id. at 535-36
    . However,
    there is no bright-line rule that a defendant who fails to demand a speedy trial
    has waived the right. 
    Id. at 528-29
    .
    The fourth Barker factor, prejudice to the defendant, should be assessed
    in the light of the interests the speedy trial right was designed to protect.
    Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 532
    .          These include "prevention of oppressive
    incarceration, minimization of anxiety attributable to unresolved charges, and
    limitation of the possibility of impairment of the defense." Cahill, 213 N.J. at
    266.   The last of these is considered the most serious, as it goes "to the
    question of fundamental fairness."          Szima, 
    70 N.J. at 201
    .      However,
    "significant prejudice" may also be found if a delay causes a "loss of
    employment or other opportunities, humiliation, the anxiety in awaiting
    26                                  A-3443-18
    disposition of the pending charges, the drain in finances incurred for payment
    of counsel or expert witness fees and the 'other costs and inconveniences far in
    excess of what would have been reasonable under more acceptable
    circumstances.'" Tsetsekas, 
    411 N.J. Super. at 13
     (quoting Farrell, 
    320 N.J. Super. at 452
    ).
    Applying those factors here, as noted, the trial judge found the delay was
    inordinate, defendant asserted his speedy trial right and that he was prejudiced.
    However, the judge attributed the delays primarily to defense counsel and to
    the court, not the State or defendant individually. Yet the judge concluded that
    the delay would be weighed heavily against defendant because he could have
    pursued obtaining new counsel.        That conclusion ignored the fact that
    defendant repeatedly raised the issue of delay, starting in at least 2014 and in
    2015 his need to secure new counsel, in submissions that no judge at that time
    ever addressed.
    The trial judge's conclusion also glossed over the State's and the court's
    role in what happened here. We agree there is no record evidence that much of
    the delay was intentionally or directly caused by the prosecution. However,
    there is also no evidence in the record that the State attempted to move things
    along faster. As the Court stated in Barker, "[a] defendant has no duty to bring
    27                                   A-3443-18
    himself to trial; the State has that duty as well as the duty of insuring that the
    trial is consistent with due process. Moreover . . . society has a particular
    interest in bringing swift prosecutions, and society's representatives are the
    ones who should protect that interest." Barker, 
    407 U.S. at 527
     (footnotes
    omitted). And, the prosecution shares its "primary burden [with] the courts . . .
    to assure that cases are brought to trial." 
    Id. at 529
    .
    In People v. Williams, 
    315 P.3d 1
     (Ca. 2013), cert. denied, 
    572 U.S. 1140
     (2014), the California Supreme Court concluded that a delay in bringing
    a matter to trial was not attributable to the trial court. But, it described a trial
    court's duty to shepherd a criminal case to trial as follows:
    Thus, the trial court has an affirmative constitutional
    obligation to bring the defendant to trial in a timely
    manner. And to that end, it is entirely appropriate for
    the court to set deadlines and to hold the parties
    strictly to those deadlines unless a continuance is
    justified by a concrete showing of good cause for the
    delay. The trial judge is the captain of the ship; and it
    goes without saying that the ship will go in circles if
    the crew is running around the deck with no firm
    marching orders.
    We do not find the trial court directly responsible for
    the delay in this case. We caution, however, that trial
    courts must be vigilant in protecting the interests of
    the defendant, the prosecution, and the public in
    having a speedy trial.
    28                                    A-3443-18
    [Id. at 40 (emphasis added) (citation omitted) (quoting
    State v. Couture, 
    240 P.3d 987
    , 1009-10 (Mont.
    2010)).].
    Here, there was very little shepherding of defendant's case to trial and
    the resulting delay was inordinate. Moreover, the delay ultimately resulted in
    his attorney of choice becoming unavailable to try the case because of
    counsel's progressing illness that by 2018 made it impossible for him to
    continue to represent defendant as he explained to the judge in detail at the
    March 2018 conference.
    Also, and significantly, it defies all reason as to why this matter
    remained in the original venue when it was clear from the start that a then
    sitting judge from the same vicinage would at the least be likely to be a
    witness. Defendant recognized this reality at least by 2013 and pursued a
    change of venue that was not addressed and granted until 2017. Moreover, in
    the intervening years, while defendant certainly did not behave as a model
    litigant, bombarding the court with various submissions in violation of his bail
    conditions and pursuing his own unsupported defenses, he clearly only sought
    a quick resolution of his case.      Yet nothing happened, motions were left
    unresolved and no trial was ever scheduled, or if it was, it never took place
    until 2019.
    29                                 A-3443-18
    We are sympathetic to the judges in the Passaic vicinage who have to
    deal daily with a significant volume of complex criminal cases. The vicinage
    is home to highly populated areas giving rise to a high rate of serious crime.
    Moreover, we commend them for their compassion. They, like all judges,
    strive to deal with real-life problems confronting litigants and their attorneys,
    which often understandably require postponement of scheduled matters.
    People get sick. Lawyers have conflicts.
    Having said that, we can discern no reason why this matter languished so
    long, other than the various judges being (correctly) sympathetic to defendant's
    counsel's health issues and his need to otherwise seek accommodations. But
    where, as here, a defendant repeatedly asserts his right to a speedy trial, even
    those admirable considerations by the judges had to yield, especially
    considering the simple nature of this matter as compared to many of the more
    complex pending cases on the court's docket. As we said in Tsetsekas, every
    rule does have its limits and here none were recognized, which prevented the
    matter from being tried "expeditiously and shepherd[ed] . . . to resolution
    efficiently." Farrell, 
    320 N.J. Super. at 452-53
    .
    We commend the trial judge for hitting the ground running when this
    matter reached his vicinage in 2018. However, we must part company with his
    30                                  A-3443-18
    conclusion in this matter that defendant's right to a speedy trial was not
    violated.   The delays caused by defense counsel's personal needs were
    certainly not the result of the attorney acting as his client's agent where the
    client made it clear, not always in the most appropriate terms, that all he
    wanted was for the matter to be brought to conclusion sooner than later, which
    was in everyone's best interest.
    Under these circumstances, we are constrained to vacate defendant's
    conviction and dismiss the indictment. For that reason, we need not address
    any of defendant's remaining arguments.
    Reversed.
    31                                  A-3443-18