STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. JESUS ATURO COLON (06-11-1099, UNION 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0728-19
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JESUS ATURO COLON,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    Submitted September 20, 2021 – Decided January 6, 2022
    Before Judges Sabatino and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Union County, Indictment No. 06-11-1099.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Kevin G. Byrnes, Designated Counsel, on
    the briefs).
    William A. Daniel, Union County Prosecutor, attorney
    for respondent (Albert Cernadas, Jr., Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    This matter returns to us after remand. Defendant Jesus Arturo Colon
    appeals from a September 11, 2019 order denying his petition for post-
    conviction relief (PCR). This is defendant's third appeal from a denial of his
    PCR petition. See State v. Colon, No. A-1217-17 (App. Div. Dec. 24, 2018)
    (December 2018 opinion) and State v. Colon, No. A-5125-12 (App. Div. Nov.
    4, 2015) (November 2015 opinion).            Because the court did not address
    sufficiently the issues we outlined in our December 2018 opinion, we are
    constrained to reverse the September 11, 2019 order and remand the matter for
    the court to make necessary factual findings as directed in our December 2018
    mandate.
    I.
    In our previous opinions, we recited the lengthy factual and procedural
    history which we restate here for ease of reference and to provide context for
    our decision. A Union County grand jury charged defendant with second-degree
    eluding a law enforcement officer, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-2(b) (count one); second-
    degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(6) (count two); and third-degree
    joyriding, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-10(c) (count three). The trial court granted the State's
    motion to dismiss count three, and the matter proceeded to trial on the remaining
    two counts.
    A-0728-19
    2
    At trial, the State presented evidence that shortly after midnight on
    September 1, 2006, Officer Paolo Fidalgo and another officer of the Elizabeth
    Police Department were on patrol in the City of Elizabeth in a marked police
    vehicle. The officers stopped at an intersection and observed a motor vehicle
    cross the intersection at a high rate of speed. Fidalgo said the driver was
    possibly a "Hispanic male with facial hair."
    Fidalgo and his partner pursued the vehicle and activated the lights on
    their patrol vehicle. Fidalgo estimated the vehicle had been traveling at over
    fifty miles per hour in a zone allowing vehicles to travel thirty-five miles per
    hour. After running a red light, the driver of the speeding car apparently lost
    control and the car went into a ditch.
    Fidalgo and his partner exited their police vehicle and noticed smoke or
    fire coming from beneath the disabled vehicle. Fidalgo stated that there were
    three persons in the vehicle.
    Fidalgo identified defendant as the person who had been in the driver's
    seat and stated that defendant was the only occupant who had facial hair. When
    the officers observed defendant after the accident he was over the area between
    the driver's seat and the passenger's seat and his legs were in the driver's seat.
    A-0728-19
    3
    Luis Benitez was a passenger in the car, and he testified on defendant's
    behalf. Benitez stated that he had known defendant since they were "kids ," and
    he described his relationship to defendant as being "like family." Benitez said
    defendant was not driving the car during the chase. Instead, Benitez testified
    that a juvenile, whose name he did not know, was driving. Benitez stated he
    was in the rear seat, behind the driver, and defendant was on the passenger side.
    Benitez said the juvenile drove through the red light as the police chased them.
    The jury found defendant guilty on both counts. The trial judge sentenced
    defendant on count two (aggravated assault) to ten years of incarceration, with
    an eighty-five percent period of parole ineligibility, pursuant to the No Early
    Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2 and imposed a concurrent, ten-year
    term on count one (eluding).
    Defendant appealed and we affirmed his conviction. State v. Colon, No.
    A-6370-06 (App. Div. Apr. 14, 2009). Defendant thereafter filed a pro se PCR
    petition in which he alleged he was denied the effective assistance of counsel,
    and that the trial court erred in its assessment of the aggravating and mitigating
    factors at sentencing. The PCR court appointed counsel to represent defendant,
    and PCR counsel filed a brief arguing that trial counsel was deficient because
    he failed to properly investigate and prepare the case.
    A-0728-19
    4
    PCR counsel asserted that after the petition was filed, Jose Rentas, 1 the
    then-juvenile involved in the incident, had been contacted. Rentas said he had
    been driving the car during the police chase, and defendant was a passenger in
    the car. PCR counsel asserted that defendant's trial attorney did not contact
    Rentas.
    PCR counsel claimed that immediately after Rentas exited the car, he told
    the officers he had been driving the car. Counsel asserted that Rentas would
    have testified at trial that he was the driver of the vehicle involved in the
    incident, but defendant's trial counsel never asked him to testify.
    In support of his petition, PCR counsel also submitted a memorandum
    from Sergeant Deborah Baum to an assistant prosecutor in which Baum stated
    that on November 21, 2006, she was assigned to take a statement from Rentas
    regarding the matter. Rentas was seventeen years old at that time, and he said
    he wanted his mother to be present for the interview. Rentas told Baum he was
    driving the car involved in the September 1, 2006 chase.
    Baum brought Rentas's mother into the interview room with Rentas.
    Baum explained that Rentas would be providing a videotaped statement and she
    1
    Rentas is now an adult.
    A-0728-19
    5
    advised Rentas of his Miranda2 rights. Rentas told Baum he wanted an attorney,
    and Baum terminated the interview.
    Rentas's mother inquired as to how she could contact a public defender.
    She asked Baum if her son could return and give a statement after he spoke with
    an attorney which Baum replied was possible. Rentas's mother also asked if her
    son could be charged if he admitted committing an offense. Baum told her that
    anyone who gave a statement in which he admitted committing an offense could
    be charged.
    The PCR judge heard oral argument and placed his decision on the record.
    The judge found that defendant's claim of ineffective assistance was not bar red
    by Rule 3:22-4, but defendant had not presented a prima facie claim of
    ineffective assistance under the two-part test detailed in Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984),3 and an evidentiary hearing was not
    required. The judge found that defense counsel's investigation and strategic
    decisions were not deficient.
    2
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    3
    To establish a deprivation of a person's Sixth Amendment right to counsel, a
    convicted defendant must demonstrate: (1) counsel's performance was deficient,
    and (2) the deficient performance actually prejudiced the accused's defense.
    Ibid.; see also State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
    , 58 (1987) (adopting the Strickland
    two-part test in New Jersey).
    A-0728-19
    6
    The judge determined that defendant's attorney made "an informed
    decision" not to call Rentas as a witness at trial, and once that decision was
    made, there was little to be gained by interviewing Rentas. The judge noted that
    defense counsel could introduce Rentas's off-the-record statements through
    other evidence and witnesses in a manner that would be more credible.
    The PCR judge also surmised that defense counsel could reasonably have
    decided it was highly unlikely Rentas would testify at trial because, while he
    made a statement to the police concerning the incident, he refused to provide a
    videotaped statement inculpating himself. The judge noted that defense counsel
    could have presented Rentas's statement through Fidalgo's testimony.
    In addition, the judge found that defendant had not shown he was
    prejudiced by counsel's failure to interview or call Rentas as a witness. The
    judge stated that defendant had merely shown that counsel's alleged errors had
    "some conceivable effect on the trial." The judge found there was no guarantee
    Rentas would have waived his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination
    and testify at trial. The judge determined that defendant had not shown a
    reasonable probability the result would have been different if Rentas had been
    called as a witness.
    A-0728-19
    7
    II.
    Defendant appealed and we reversed the order denying PCR in our
    November 2015 opinion. State v. Colon, No. A-5125-12 (App. Div. Nov. 4,
    2015) (slip op. at 13). We held that the PCR judge erred by resolving defendant's
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel without conducting an evidentiary
    hearing. Id. at 10. We noted that there was no evidence to support the judge's
    finding that defendant's trial attorney made a strategic decision not to call Rentas
    as a witness at trial. Ibid. We stated that we could not discern whether counsel
    made a specific strategic decision that Rentas would not testify, and if he did,
    the basis for that decision. Ibid.
    We also explained that the PCR judge had assumed it was unlikely that
    Rentas would inculpate himself at trial. Ibid. We pointed out, however, that in
    an affidavit submitted to the PCR court, defendant's PCR counsel asserted that
    he had spoken with Rentas and Rentas told him he was the driver of the car
    involved in the chase and he would have testified to that fact if he had been
    called as a witness at trial. Id. at 11.
    We observed that if that statement is correct, it would "cast an entirely
    different light" on counsel's decision not to call or interview Rentas before trial.
    Ibid.    We stated, "[i]f credible, Rentas's statement suggests that counsel's
    A-0728-19
    8
    decision may have fallen outside the wide range of reasonably competent
    counsel." Ibid.
    We also noted that testimony by defendant's trial attorney and Rentas may
    warrant reconsideration of the PCR court's finding that it was not reasonably
    probable the result of the trial could have been different if Rentas had been
    called at trial and testified that he was the driver of the vehicle involved in the
    chase. Ibid. We stated that Benitez had testified at trial that a juvenile had been
    driving the car, but he did not know the juvenile's name. Ibid.
    We also explained that the evidence showed that when Fidalgo
    approached the vehicle after the crash, he determined that defendant had been
    the driver. Ibid. Fidalgo observed defendant "crunched over" on the driver's
    side. Ibid. Benitez and the juvenile were outside the car. Ibid. On cross-
    examination, however, Fidalgo conceded that the juvenile, whom he identified,
    was a suspect. Id. at 12.
    We stated that Fidalgo did not testify that Rentas admitted he had been
    driving the car at the time of the incident. Ibid. We noted, however that Fidalgo
    testified before the grand jury that Rentas claimed he was the driver, and Benitez
    testified at trial that a juvenile had been driving the car at the time of the chase.
    Ibid.
    A-0728-19
    9
    We concluded that based on this record, we could not determine "that it
    was not reasonably probable the result of the trial would have been different if
    Rentas had testified he was the driver." Ibid. We reasoned that the testimony
    of defense counsel and Rentas were "critical to resolving" the claim of
    ineffective assistance of counsel and remanded the matter to the PCR court for
    an evidentiary hearing on this claim. Ibid.
    We also noted that defendant had raised other issues in his pro se petition.
    Ibid. He claimed his trial attorney was ineffective because he failed to: (1)
    make a timely objection to the prosecutor's remarks; (2) object to the jury
    charge; (3) object or ask the judge to charge the jury on his decision not to
    testify; (4) object to the trial court's supplemental instruction; (5) object to the
    trial court's instruction that one of Benitez's statements was hearsay; and (6)
    interview other potential witnesses. Id. at 12-13. Defendant also had claimed
    that the trial court erred at sentencing in its assessment of the aggravating and
    mitigating factors. Id. at 13.
    We observed that the PCR court had not addressed these claims. Ibid. We
    stated that on remand, the PCR court should determine whether the claims were
    barred by Rule 3:22-4 or Rule 3:22-5 and the merits of the claims not subject to
    those procedural bars. Ibid.
    A-0728-19
    10
    III.
    On remand, the PCR court conducted the evidentiary hearing as we
    directed on May 26, 2017. Defendant's trial attorney testified. He stated that he
    is a sole practitioner, with a general practice, and has been a criminal defense
    attorney since 1990, having handled hundreds of cases. Counsel stated that he
    did not recognize defendant or recollect representing him.
    Counsel testified generally regarding his practices and procedures in
    which he handles a criminal case. He stated that generally, he reviews all of the
    discovery and investigates and considers any reasonable, viable defense. He
    said that if an exculpatory witness is brought to his attention, he customarily
    would investigate, attempt to get the witness to provide a statement, and call the
    witness to testify at trial, if warranted.
    Defendant also testified. He stated that he retained his trial counsel to
    represent him in the case and spoke to him several times regarding the charges.
    He said Rentas was the driver of the car during the police chase on September
    1, 2006. Defendant testified that Rentas's sister is the mother of defendant's
    daughter. He brought Rentas to his attorney's office and asked him to interview
    Rentas.
    A-0728-19
    11
    According to defendant, his attorney told him not to bring Rentas to his
    office again. Defendant stated that his attorney advised him to proceed in that
    manner because Rentas was a juvenile, and defendant could face additional
    charges due to Rentas's involvement in the incident. On cross-examination,
    defendant stated that Rentas attended his trial, but conceded Rentas never stated
    in open court that he was the person who had been driving the car during the
    police chase.
    Defendant's PCR counsel informed the PCR court that he had tried to
    contact Rentas to secure his appearance at the remand hearing.            Counsel
    represented that he sent letters to Rentas, but they were returned, with no
    forwarding address. He said he spoke with defendant's sister, and she reached
    out to friends and relatives, but they were not able to locate Rentas in the City
    of Elizabeth.
    Defendant, however, told the court that he still has contact with Rentas's
    sister. PCR counsel stated he had not spoken with Rentas's sister. He said that
    until the day of the hearing, he did not know she was the mother of defendant's
    child.
    In an order and accompanying letter opinion, the PCR judge again denied
    defendant's petition. The judge found defendant's trial attorney was "a very
    A-0728-19
    12
    credible witness." Although the attorney did not specifically recall representing
    defendant, he had testified "confidently" about his methods of preparation for
    handling criminal cases.       The judge was convinced that if defendant had
    produced an exculpatory witness, counsel would have thoroughly investigated
    and made efforts to have the witness testify at trial. The PCR judge made this
    finding despite the statement Rentas gave to Baum and PCR counsel.
    The judge found that defendant's testimony was not credible. He noted
    that in our November 2015 opinion we stated that defense counsel's testimony
    was critical to resolving the defendant's claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel. The judge stated that Rentas's testimony is "clearly even more critical."
    He wrote that "[w]ithout [Rentas's] testimony there simply is no way of
    determining that [defendant's] version of the events surrounding the offense,
    trial preparation and the trial is true."
    The judge further explained that even if it is true that Rentas told law
    enforcement authorities that he was the driver of the car, he is "obviously not
    now available to [defendant] and perhaps unwilling to testify and incriminate
    himself." The judge seemingly reached the conclusion — again despite Rentas's
    prior statements to Baum, defendant's PCR counsel, and allegedly police at the
    A-0728-19
    13
    scene of the accident — because Rentas left the interview with Baum when he
    was told he could be charged with an offense.
    The judge found that defendant had not established he was denied the
    effective assistance of counsel due to his attorney's failure to call Rentas as a
    witness at trial. The judge also found that defendant's other claims were barred
    by Rule 3:22-4 because they could reasonably have been raised in his direct
    appeal. The judge entered a conforming order dated June 23, 2017, denying
    PCR.
    IV.
    Defendant appealed and argued again that his trial attorney was deficient
    in failing to call Rentas as a trial witness. He asserted that at trial, Rentas would
    not have been able to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-
    incrimination because he had already waived it. Defendant further argued that
    his trial counsel could have proffered Rentas's inculpatory statement, in which
    he admitted driving the vehicle during the September 1, 2006 police chase, by
    calling Baum as a witness. Defendant contended Rentas's statement is hearsay
    but admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) as a statement against interest.
    Defendant also maintained that he established he was prejudiced by
    counsel's failure to call Rentas as a witness or present his inculpatory statement
    A-0728-19
    14
    at trial. He contended the jury rejected Benitez's testimony that a juvenile was
    driving the car at the time of the chase. He noted that the prosecutor elicited
    testimony that Benitez was defendant's friend and had an interest in exonerating
    him. He argued the jury would probably have accepted Rentas's testimony
    because he had nothing to gain and could face criminal charges based on his
    admission.
    In our December 2018 opinion, we reversed the June 23, 2017 order
    denying PCR and remanded the matter again for further proceedings. State v.
    Colon, No. A-1217-17 (App. Div. Dec. 24, 2018) (slip op. at 19). We explained
    that the record was insufficient to resolve defendant's claim that he was denied
    effective assistance of counsel because his attorney did not call Rentas as a
    witness at trial or introduce his inculpatory statements through other witnesses.
    Id. at 15. We also determined that the PCR court failed to address specifically
    some of the key legal issues that defendant raised on appeal. Ibid.
    We stressed that Rentas's testimony was critical in resolving defendant's
    claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. Id. at 16. Rentas did not, however,
    appear to testify at the evidentiary hearing. Ibid. Since defendant was asserting
    a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, and because he claimed Rentas was
    willing to testify that he was driving the car during the incident, defendant had
    A-0728-19
    15
    the burden of producing Rentas or show that he made a reasonable effort to
    locate him and compel his appearance. Ibid.
    At the evidentiary hearing, PCR counsel represented to the court that he
    wrote to Rentas, but his letters were returned, without any forwarding address.
    Ibid. PCR counsel also represented that he spoke with defendant's sister, and
    she reached out to friends and family members to try to locate Rentas in
    Elizabeth, to no avail.    Ibid.   We expressed reservations regarding these
    representations as PCR counsel failed to establish, or even represent to the court,
    that he made any effort to locate Rentas in any place other than the City of
    Elizabeth. Ibid. Moreover, we observed that defendant told the court that he
    had been in contact with Rentas's sister, who is the mother of defendant's child,
    a not insignificant fact in light of PCR counsel's concession that he did not
    contact Rentas's sister.
    In light of these concerns, we directed that on remand PCR counsel should
    make further efforts to locate Rentas and secure his testimony. Ibid. We
    provided specific guidance in this regard stating that PCR counsel's efforts
    should not be limited to locating Rentas in the City of Elizabeth. Ibid. First, we
    stated, "[a]t the very least, PCR counsel should contact Rentas's sister and
    endeavor to determine where Rentas could be found." Ibid. "If counsel [was]
    A-0728-19
    16
    unable to locate and have Rentas appear, PCR counsel should provide the PCR
    court with an affidavit or certification detailing his efforts to locate and secure
    Rentas's testimony." Id. at 16-17.
    Second, we instructed that if Rentas failed to testify at the remand
    proceeding, the PCR court should nevertheless reconsider its decision denying
    PCR. Id. at 17. We gave this instruction inasmuch as defendant argued that
    Rentas waived his right to assert his right against self-incrimination when he
    spoke with Baum and told her he was driving the car when the police were
    chasing them. Ibid.
    Further, we observed that the record established that Fidalgo informed the
    grand jury that Rentas told Baum he had been driving the car. Ibid. Thus, we
    directed as a third item that the "PCR court . . . determine whether Rentas waived
    his right against self-incrimination and could have been compelled to testify that
    he was driving the car during the September 1, 2006 incident." Ibid.
    Fourth, we instructed the PCR court to "address defendant's contention
    that his trial attorney was deficient in failing to introduce the statement that
    Rentas made to Baum where he admitted he was driving the car during the chase.
    Rentas also told Fidalgo he was the driver." Ibid. We required this additional
    A-0728-19
    17
    fact finding because defendant argued that Rentas's statements constituted
    admissible hearsay under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25). Ibid.
    Fifth, we directed the PCR court to reconsider whether defendant was
    prejudiced by counsel's failure to call Rentas as a witness or have his statement
    introduced at trial through other witnesses. Id. at 18. Defendant noted that
    Benitez testified that a juvenile was driving the car at the time of the chase, but
    there were reasons why the jury might not have credited his testimony. Ibid.
    Finally, we instructed the PCR court, after addressing the aforementioned
    concerns, to reconsider if defendant established that it was reasonably probable
    the jury would have reached a different decision if Rentas had testified or his
    statement was introduced as evidence and whether it was reasonably probable
    the jury still would have found Fidalgo's identification of defendant as the driver
    credible. Ibid. We also rejected any challenges to the court's remaining rulings
    as waived due to defendant's failure to preserve those arguments. Ibid.
    V.
    On further remand, the court scheduled proceedings for May 28, 2019 and
    May 29, 2019 to address the issues we raised in our December 2018 opinion. At
    the May 28th proceeding, PCR counsel informed the court of three significant
    events.
    A-0728-19
    18
    First, PCR counsel stated that he was able to locate Rentas and serve him
    with a subpoena directing his appearance in court that day. Second, PCR
    counsel's investigator was also able to secure an unnotarized "certification" from
    Rentas that purportedly stated he was "not able to provide any information at
    this time" because "it was a long time ago and what memories I have are hazy
    to begin with." Rentas purportedly admitted having had some health problems,
    which required him to be placed on different medications that "affect my day-
    to-day awareness and my memories and so I'm not able to say anything that I
    could be sure was true." For reasons not explained by the parties, a copy of
    Rentas's "certification" was not marked as an exhibit at the proceeding, nor
    included in the record on this appeal.
    Third, PCR counsel stated he spoke with Rentas regarding his
    certification, advised him of the court date and location, and Rentas purportedly
    stated that he had medical appointments but if he had a problem appearing he
    would contact counsel. PCR counsel informed the court that he had not heard
    from him despite attempts to confirm his appearance.
    After Rentas failed to appear, the court, with the parties' consent,
    adjourned the hearing to the next day to allow PCR counsel a further opportunity
    to contact Rentas to secure his appearance.        Before doing so, the court
    A-0728-19
    19
    commented on the remaining issues raised in our December 2018 opinion. In
    this regard, when the State suggested the parties brief the issues in the event
    Rentas failed to appear, the court noted at one point that it did not "quite
    understand" our directions and concluded that "unless Rentas shows up and
    testifies specifically about being the driver and saying that he would have
    testified, there[] [was] nothing for [the court] to reconsider." The court further
    explained that because the "jury rejected the notion that someone else was
    driving, based upon two other witnesses testifying at trial, . . . I find that it would
    not have been probable to believe that the jury would have reached a different
    decision."
    When the court reconvened on May 29th, Rentas again failed to appear.
    PCR counsel confirmed he had served him with a subpoena, and that he went to
    two addresses for Rentas, the last being his mother's home where Rentas me t
    with PCR counsel's investigator. PCR counsel reported that as no one responded
    when he rang the doorbell, he left his card and attempted to telephone Rentas,
    to no avail.
    Based on these efforts, PCR counsel concluded "I think it's safe to say that
    . . . Rentas doesn't want to be here," with the court noting in light of his
    certification, it was "not convinced that it would make that much of a
    A-0728-19
    20
    difference." The court determined it was satisfied with PCR counsel's efforts
    and found no basis to reconsider its earlier denial of defendant's PCR petition.
    With respect to our explicit instruction that the court consider trial
    counsel's failure to introduce Rentas's prior statements, the court concluded it
    "already addressed that issue, if not in [its] first decision, certainly in [its]
    second decision after [trial counsel's] testimony." The court also concluded it
    was not required to address our inquiry regarding N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), as "that
    information was already brought out during the trial. That was . . . that issue
    was resolved, as far as I'm concerned."
    The court issued an order on September 4, 2019 denying defendant's PCR
    petition along with an accompanying written opinion that largely mirrored the
    court's comments during the May 28 and 29, 2019 proceedings. In sum, the
    court determined Rentas's certification supported PCR counsel's belief that
    "Rentas would not be able to testify in a manner that would assist his client's
    petition for a new trial or at the trial itself."
    Significantly, in the court's written decision, it added that Rentas certified
    that he "'had' some knowledge of the facts of defendant's 'original case' but does
    not 'remember the year for sure' . . . it occurred." The court rejected any claim
    that Rentas waived his right to self-incrimination based, assumedly, on the
    A-0728-19
    21
    content of his certification. Finally, the court determined defendant was not
    prejudiced by counsel's actions and inactions with respect to the failure to call
    Rentas or introduce his statements because the jury "previously heard testimony
    of Rentas['s] claim" and convicted defendant.
    VI.
    This appeal followed in which defendant argues the State failed to rebut
    his prima facie case of ineffective assistance of counsel. Specifically, he asserts
    trial counsel failed to investigate his case and produce evidence that he was
    misidentified as the driver. He claims evidence of his misidentification could
    have been introduced by calling Rentas as a witness, who waived his Fifth
    Amendment right against self-incrimination, or Baum, who could testify about
    Rentas's confession because it is admissible hearsay as a statement against
    interest. Significantly, defendant asserts there is no evidence that trial counsel's
    failure to call Rentas and Baum as witnesses was a strategic decision, as he
    testified that he had no recollection of defendant's case. Finally, defendant
    asserts that on remand the PCR court summarily rejected his petition without
    addressing many of the issues identified by our December 2018 opinion.
    Based on the PCR court's failure to conduct the remand proceedings
    consistent with our instructions, we are again unable to address in a meaningful
    A-0728-19
    22
    manner the merits of defendant's PCR petition, nor are we able to invoke our
    original jurisdiction to resolve the significant issues raised in this appeal. We
    accordingly are constrained to remand this matter yet again for appropriate fact
    finding.
    We first address a significant procedural infirmity with the remand
    proceedings and the appellate record. The Rentas certification, heavily relied
    upon by the court in determining that Rentas's appearance was not required, was
    not marked or included in the trial or appellate record. See, e.g., Rules 1:2-3
    and 2:6-1(a)(1). That document, based on the limited information we have, was
    not notarized nor can we discern if it contained an appropriate oath or
    affirmation. Instead, it appears to have been prepared by PCR counsel with the
    assistance of his unidentified investigator.
    The precise contents of Rentas's certification, as characterized by the
    court, are also unclear. At various points in the proceedings, the court appeared
    to have been reading from the document, yet in its written statement of reasons,
    the court relied upon additional language not previously referenced.            We
    ordinarily would not take issue with a document not in the record that appears
    to have been provided to the parties and relied upon by the court without
    objection, but the significance of the certification as affecting the remand issues,
    A-0728-19
    23
    and the weight the court gave to it, subjects it to greater scrutiny such that it
    should have been included in the trial and appellate record.
    More importantly, the court determined that the certification obviated the
    need for Rentas's testimony. That is incorrect. We specifically, and clearly,
    stated the need for further exploration of Rentas's prior statements, which
    provided defendant with evidence of third-party guilt, so that counsel's decision
    not to call him at trial or introduce his prior statements — given that Rentas had
    thrice indicated that he, not defendant, was driving the vehicle — could be
    properly evaluated. See State v. Porter, 
    216 N.J. 343
    , 356 (2013) (finding that
    evaluating a witness's credibility based only on her affidavit was an "improper
    approach" and stating "There is no substitute for placing a witness on the stand
    and having the testimony scrutinized by an impartial factfinder.").
    Further, Rentas's testimony is needed not only with regard to whether he
    was the driver, and admitted as such, but also whether he met with and was
    interviewed by trial counsel. That information, apparently not addressed by
    Rentas's certification, would be relevant to the issue whether counsel made a
    strategic choice not to call Rentas.
    Instead, the trial court relied on an unnotarized statement of Rentas that,
    as described in this appeal, vaguely indicated that he had memory and undefined
    A-0728-19
    24
    medical issues, and apparently excused his appearance based on PCR counsel's
    inability to reach him on May 29, 2019. What we cannot discern from the
    record, however, is why the court, and counsel, simply did not enforce the duly
    served subpoena or make an attempt to do so, given that he knew of Rentas's
    recent location, having had served him with a subpoena.
    The court also failed to address any of the remaining issues raised in our
    December 2018 opinion in an adequate fashion. That Rentas indicated his desire
    not to testify, and had certain medical issues and memory lapses, did not obviate
    the need for his testimony, or for the court to address the admissibility of his
    prior statements as affecting defendant's PCR petition.4
    We accordingly conclude further proceedings are warranted under the
    circumstances to develop the record more fully concerning the third-party guilt
    evidence.   As the Supreme Court recently explained, "a failure to present
    available evidence to support an obvious defense will not be characterized as
    reasonable trial strategy." State v. Hannah, 
    248 N.J. 148
    , 180 (2021) (granting
    PCR where trial counsel failed to introduce evidence of third-party guilt); see
    4
    Without resolving it here, we also note that it is conceivable that Rentas's
    police statement could be used to refresh his recollection or as a prior
    inconsistent or consistent statement admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(a)(1) or
    803(a)(2).
    A-0728-19
    25
    also Porter, 216 N.J. at 357 ("Failure to investigate an alibi defense is a serious
    deficiency that can result in the reversal of a conviction."); State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    , 188 (2004) (noting that "evidence that supports a defense, such as alibi,
    third-party guilt, or a general denial of guilt would be material.").
    We also note that defendant's trial counsel's testimony at the evidentiary
    hearing conducted as a result of our November 2015 opinion, stated only
    generally that he would have investigated, obtained a statement from, evaluated
    the credibility of, and, if appropriate, called to testify any exculpatory witness
    brought to his attention. Although the PCR court credited that testimony, neither
    trial counsel, nor the PCR court, ever addressed the fact that defendant's counsel
    was in possession of Rentas's statement to Baum, at a minimum, and never
    testified that he made a specific strategic decision not to call Rentas. In any
    event, on remand, the court may rely on trial counsel's previously sworn
    testimony in conducting its independent evaluation. We also cannot conclude
    on the present record, however, that the trial testimony of Benitez rendered
    Rentas's testimony immaterial under the prejudice prong of Strickland.
    VII.
    We also order that a different judge conduct the remand because the PCR
    court did not carry out our mandate and made determinations that appear to be
    A-0728-19
    26
    inconsistent with the existing record and without the benefit of information that
    we specifically anticipated the second remand would develop.               In such
    circumstances, we have exercised our discretion to reassign a matter "to preserve
    the appearance of a fair and unprejudiced hearing." Steele v. Steele, 
    467 N.J. Super. 414
    , 445 (App. Div. 2021), certif. denied, 
    248 N.J. 235
     (2021); see also
    Luedtke v. Shobert, 
    342 N.J. Super. 202
    , 219 (App. Div. 2001); Graziano v.
    Grant, 
    326 N.J. Super. 328
    , 350 (App. Div. 1999). We have noted that when,
    like here, a "trial court previously made credibility findings, [it may be]
    appropriate that the matter be assigned to a different trial court." R.L. v. Voytac,
    
    199 N.J. 285
    , 306 (2009).
    Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0728-19
    27