STATE OF NEW JERSEY v. W.J.H., III (14-06-1537, OCEAN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2022 )


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  •                                       RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-0381-20
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    W.J.H., III,1
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Argued May 18, 2022 – Decided June 15, 2022
    Before Judges Hoffman, Whipple and Geiger.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Ocean County, Indictment No. 14-06-
    1537.
    Alan L. Zegas argued the cause for appellant (Law
    Offices of Alan L. Zegas, attorneys; Alan L. Zegas
    and Joshua M. Nahum, on the briefs).
    Dina R. Khajezadeh, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the
    cause for respondent (Bradley D. Billhimer, Ocean
    1
    We use initials to protect the child victims of sexual assault or abuse. R.
    1:38-3(c)(9).
    County Prosecutor, attorney; Samuel Marzarella,
    Chief Appellate Attorney, of counsel; Dina R.
    Khajezadeh, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant W.H. appeals from a September 3, 2020 judgment of
    conviction after a jury found him guilty of twelve sexual abuse offenses
    involving his niece M.M., born in 1995, and his daughter N.H., born in 1996,
    who were children at the time of the alleged offenses.       Defendant chiefly
    contends testimony from M.M.'s friend and her aunt were improperly admitted,
    and evidence of prior sexual activity of M.M. was improperly excluded. We
    affirm.
    Defendant specifically raises the following issues on appeal:
    POINT I:
    THE COURT ERRED BY PERMITTING THE
    EXTENSIVE FRESH COMPLAINT TESTIMONY
    FROM THREE WITNESSES.
    A. FRESH COMPLAINT TESTIMONY WAS
    INAPPROPRIATE BECAUSE THERE WERE
    NO    ALLEGATIONS    OF   RECENT
    FABRICATION.
    B. N.H.'S COMPLAINT WAS TOO REMOTE
    IN TIME TO SATISFY THE FRESH
    COMPLAINT REQUIREMENT.
    A-0381-20
    2
    C. M.M.'S DISCLOSURE TO DAWN STOUT
    WAS NOT A FRESH COMPLAINT BECAUSE
    IT WAS GIVEN IN RESPONSE TO
    INTERROGATION BY THE AUTHORITIES.
    D. THE FRESH COMPLAINT TESTIMONY
    EXCEEDED THE PROPER SCOPE OF SUCH
    TESTIMONY.
    POINT II:
    THE COURT ERRED BY PROHIBITING CROSS-
    EXAMINATION OF A COMPLAINING WITNESS
    REGARDING A PRIOR FALSE ACCUSATION OF
    SEXUAL ABUSE.
    POINT III:
    THE STATE COMMITTED PROSECUTORIAL
    MISCONDUCT IN ITS CLOSING ARGUMENT BY
    IMPROPERLY     VOUCHING      FOR   THE
    CREDIBILITY OF WITNESSES AND USING
    PREJUDICIAL IMAGERY IN ITS [POWERPOINT]
    PRESENTATIONS.
    A.   THE PROSECUTION IMPROPERLY
    VOUCHED FOR THE TRUTHFULNESS OF
    THE TESTIMONY OF M.M. AND N.H.
    B.  THE PROSECUTION IMPROPERLY
    EXPRESSED PERSONAL OPINIONS ON THE
    VERACITY    OF  DEFENDANT     AND
    CHARACTER WITNESSES.
    C.   THE PROSECUTION IMPROPERLY
    USED A [POWERPOINT] PRESENTATION
    IN SUMMATION TO PREJUDICE THE JURY
    A-0381-20
    3
    – PHOTOS OF HOME; STATEMENT IN ALL
    CAPS OF GUILT.
    I.
    In June 2010, M.M. disclosed to a high school friend, A.D., through a
    Facebook conversation that defendant, who was M.M.'s uncle, and M.M.'s
    cousin X.X., were sexually abusing her.        A.D. told her own mother who
    reported it to the Division of Child Protection and Permanency (Division).
    The Division began an investigation, and M.M. confirmed the allegation to the
    investigator Dawn Stout. No charges were brought until three years later when
    defendant's daughter, N.H., disclosed similar abuse to her mother, P.H, who
    reported the allegation to the prosecutor's office.
    On June 11, 2014, defendant was charged with first-degree aggravated
    sexual assault of M.M. (a victim less than thirteen years old), N.J.S.A. 2C:14-
    2A(1); second-degree sexual assault of M.M. (a victim less than thirteen years
    old and the defendant at least four years older), N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2B; first-
    degree aggravated sexual assault of M.M. (a victim at least thirteen years of
    age but less than sixteen years old and the defendant is related to the victim by
    blood or affinity), N.J.S.A. 14-2A(2); second-degree sexual assault of M.M. (a
    victim between thirteen and sixteen years old and the actor at least four years
    older), N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2C(4); fourth-degree criminal sexual contact of M.M.,
    A-0381-20
    4
    N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3B; second-degree endangering the welfare of a child M.M.
    (actor having a legal duty for the care of or having assumed responsibility for
    the care of a child), N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4A(1); first-degree aggravated sexual
    assault of N.H. (a victim less thirteen years old), N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2A(1);
    second-degree sexual assault of N.H. (a victim less than thirteen years old and
    the defendant at least four years older), N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2B; first-degree
    aggravated sexual assault of N.H. (a victim at least thirteen years of age but
    less than sixteen years old and the defendant is related to the victim by blood
    or affinity), N.J.S.A. 14-2A(2); second-degree sexual assault of N.H. (a victim
    between thirteen and sixteen years old and the actor at least four years older),
    N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2C(4); fourth-degree criminal sexual contact of N.H., N.J.S.A.
    2C:14-3B; and second-degree endangering the welfare of a child N.H. (actor
    having a legal duty for the care of or having assumed responsibility for the
    care of a child), N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4A(1).
    The case went to trial, but, before allowing M.M. to testify at trial, the
    court conducted an N.J.R.E. 104 hearing on the State's motion to admit the
    testimony of A.D., P.H. and Stout as fresh complaint witnesses pursuant to
    N.J.R.E. 803(c)(2). A.D. was a high school friend of M.M. P.H. is N.H.'s
    mother and was married to defendant. The State also moved to deem certain
    A-0381-20
    5
    statements made by M.M., consisting of an allegedly prior false statement of
    sexual assault, inadmissible pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:14-7 (permitting parties to
    file what is commonly referred to as a "rape shield" motion).
    A.D. testified that, via Facebook chat, M.M. wanted to tell her a secret
    involving defendant and M.M.'s oldest cousins. M.M. told A.D., "It happens
    every time I sleep over[.] It happens when everyone is asleep and my uncle
    and oldest cousins are the ones who do this." M.M. later told A.D. in the same
    Facebook chat that it was her "uncle really" who was raping her. M.M. also
    testified as to the State's rape shield motion. The court granted both motions.
    The court granted the State's motion to admit A.D., P.H., and Stout's fresh
    complaint testimony and, as to the State's rape shield motion, the court
    precluded cross-examination of M.M.
    The court began the analysis by considering whether to apply the
    Guenther 2 test or the rape shield test, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-7.      The court found
    "sexual contact indisputably occurred," and seemed to find that M.M.'s
    statements regarding her sexual activities with X.X. were probably true. The
    court further found that M.M.'s statements to A.D. regarding X.X. did not rise
    to the level of a criminal allegation as M.M. was mainly referring to defendant
    2
    State v. Guenther, 
    181 N.J. 129
     (2004).
    A-0381-20
    6
    having intercourse with her, and she testified at the hearing that she and her
    cousin were engaging in experimental touching. The court also noted that
    [m]oreover, M.M. clarified immediately during the
    chat that she was only really discussing the actions of
    her uncle with her friend. When considered in the
    context of the entire chat, where M.M. discusses her
    confused feelings, she appears to have only lumped in
    the touching with her cousin as a shameful act. [A.D.]
    testified that she considered the disclosure during the
    chat to be M.M. telling her about her uncle sexually
    abusing her.
    The court also concluded that M.M.'s consensual exploring and touching
    with her cousin qualifies as sexual conduct. Thus, the rape shield law applies,
    and the issue is whether the evidence is admissible.
    The court then analyzed the issue under the two-step Budis3 and Garron4
    test. The court first concluded "[t]he probative value of [M.M.'s] statement
    referencing her cousin is slight as it pertains to [M.M.'s] credibility." M.M.
    immediately clarified she was only really talking about her uncle. The court
    then concluded:
    [T]he prejudicial effect of this statement is great.
    M.M. disclosed consensual touching with her
    biological cousin. It's quite possible that jurors will
    find this to be upsetting. The differences between
    3
    State v. Budis, 
    125 N.J. 519
     (1991).
    4
    State v. Garron, 
    177 N.J. 147
     (2003).
    A-0381-20
    7
    touching with the cousin and rape with the uncle may
    confuse the jurors as to the issues of the present case
    . . . . To allow this testimony to be elicited at trial
    would gravely impact victims reporting of sexual
    abuse, essentially punishing anyone who slipped up
    during a disclosure and said something they did not
    mean. Critical to this last point is that the recipient of
    the chat, [A.D.], walked away at the end of the chat
    thinking M.M. had just accused her uncle of raping
    her and not a thought was given to the cousin.
    The first jury trial resulted a mistrial due to the jury's inability to reach a
    unanimous verdict.     On January 7, 2020, the court denied a motion for
    reconsideration of the fresh complaint testimony of A.D., P.H., and Stout and
    the redacted Facebook chat between M.M. and A.D.
    The second jury trial took place from January 9 to January 22, 2020.
    A.D. testified as a fresh complaint witness about the Facebook chat. M.M.
    told A.D. a secret involving defendant that started when M.M. was twelve
    years old. M.M. stated that when she slept over defendant's house, defendant
    touched her and "put his thing in [her]" in the middle of the night and she
    would fall back asleep. A.D. apologized to M.M. because she felt terrible, and
    the two started crying as they continued to chat.          M.M. told her how it
    happened while she slept, she would wake up, then fall back asleep. M.M.
    explained she would sleep at defendant's house because the family would go to
    A-0381-20
    8
    church on Sunday morning. M.M. did not want anyone to know and coped by
    cutting her wrists. A.D. told her mother about what M.M. told her.
    Next, Stout testified.    She worked at the Division as an intake
    caseworker. In that role, she investigated allegations of abuse and neglect. On
    July 26, 2010, Stout and another caseworker went to M.M.'s home and spoke
    with M.M. privately. At first, M.M.'s demeanor was "open, easy to engage,"
    as she spoke about enjoying her summer. When the Division workers asked
    whether M.M. learned about rape, sexual abuse, and inappropriate sexual
    behaviors, she answered affirmatively, and then became "quieter . . . not
    engaging easily answering . . . questions." M.M. sat on the couch and pulled
    her legs to her chest. The Division workers asked whether M.M. was ever
    raped or if anyone ever touched her private areas.        M.M. shrugged her
    shoulders in response to both questions. Her demeanor changed to no longer
    answering questions and making eye contact. The caseworkers explained they
    had gotten a call with concerns that someone raped her. M.M. began crying
    and nodding her head "yes." When asked if the allegations were true, she
    continued nodding her head "yes." M.M. was crying and nodded her head
    "yes" when asked if defendant put his penis inside her. M.M. sobbed and did
    not make eye contact through the entire interview.
    A-0381-20
    9
    The court was prepared to give the fresh complaint jury charge in
    conjunction with the testimonies of A.D. and Stout.                 Defense counsel
    requested that the court give the charge at the end of the trial.
    M.M. testified that incidents began when she was twelve years old. She
    visited defendant's house and sometimes slept over with her cousin N.H.
    When M.M. slept over, defendant touched her sometimes over her clothes,
    sometimes under them, when she was sleeping on the floor of the living room
    or the couch. N.H. was often next to M.M. M.M. remembered a time when
    she was thirteen or fourteen when she was sleeping on the living room floor
    with only a t-shirt and underwear on. Defendant took off her underwear and
    performed oral sex on her. Then he put his penis inside of her. She kept quiet
    about it because she was scared and did not want to break up the families as
    they were close. She recalled another time when she was twelve or thirteen
    when she was outside with only defendant, who pulled her on to his lap and
    touched her over her clothes, "playing with [her] vagina." Defendant stopped
    when some children started to come outside. M.M. recalled another time when
    defendant picked her up in the living room, carried her to his room, laid her
    down on the bed, pulled down her pants and underwear, and performed oral
    sex on her and made her perform oral sex on him. Defendant "quite often" and
    A-0381-20
    10
    "a lot of times" "touched [her weirdly]" when she slept over. Sometimes if
    they were watching a movie, defendant would sit next to M.M. on the couch,
    put a blanket over them, and put his fingers inside of her.
    Her abuse stopped in summer of 2010 after M.M. told A.D., A.D. told
    her mother, and the Division came to M.M.'s house. Detective John Murphy
    of the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office showed M.M. pictures depicting
    outlines of people, asking what defendant touched and what she touched, and
    she identified the areas on the pictures. When asked why she was testifying,
    M.M. answered, "So it doesn't happen to anyone else."
    Detective Murphy testified for the State. When he interviewed M.M.,
    she was "very withdrawn, she was very hesitant to speak about the allegations.
    It seemed like as cooperative as she was, it appeared to me that it was very
    difficult for her to talk about the subject matter." M.M. directed him to N.H.
    P.H. testified from 1995 until October 2019, she lived with defendant
    and her four children. On October 20, 2013, she went upstairs to speak with
    N.H. who was sitting on her bed behind a pillow and had her hands in her
    mouth. N.H. said that M.M. was not lying, and she was pointing to herself,
    which P.H. understood as N.H. saying that it happened to her, too. N.H. said
    that defendant was "doing it to her, too." P.H. described her own feelings as:
    A-0381-20
    11
    [s]ad, mad, and I felt I let her down protecting her, but
    I didn't think I had to protect her from her dad. And I
    felt, a part of me felt like for three years it was going
    back and forth, who is telling the truth, who is not,
    who is telling the truth. And that was kind of like a
    confirmation.
    The next day, P.H. called the authorities.
    N.H. testified. She and M.M. were "inseparable . . . like sisters . . . very
    close, spen[ding] every weekend together . . ." at sleepovers at defendant's.
    They slept mostly in the living room and sometimes in the game room. She
    had a "general idea" that defendant was sexually abusing M.M. because
    defendant "would use his tongue, the tip of his finger and the tip of his penis to
    rub, go around like my vagina, never in, but like around that area."
    N.H.'s earliest memory of defendant touching her in that way was in
    fourth grade when she was between nine and ten years old. She was laying on
    her parents' bed, and he pulled her pajamas down and started licking around
    her vagina with his tongue. In fifth grade, it happened twice. One time, she
    was sitting on the couch playing Nintendo DS and defendant did the same
    thing, licking her vagina. The other time, she was sitting on the couch with
    defendant with a blanket over them. He put his finger around her vagina,
    grabbed her hand, and tried to get her to touch herself.
    A-0381-20
    12
    The year before M.M. disclosed, when N.H. was in seventh grade,
    defendant would lay next to N.H. in her brother's room and use his tongue, tip
    of his finger, or tip of his penis around her vagina. N.H. recalled another time
    when she was in the hallway with defendant, who pulled his pants down and
    tried to get her to perform oral sex on him. The incidents happened between
    five and ten times.
    N.H. realized the situations with defendant were wrong when M.M.
    disclosed the abuse, and defendant told N.H. not to tell anyone. When M.M.
    disclosed, N.H. was thirteen, and the abuse stopped. N.H. was terrified to
    disclose the abuse was happening to her, too. She stated, "[I] knew if I said
    yes, my dad would go to jail and I was terrified at the time of him going to jail,
    scared of losing the house, scared of, we had so many pets, and like I was so
    scared [of] losing them. . . ." When N.H. was asked why she was testifyi ng,
    she responded, "Because I want justice for me and M.M. and if anyone else
    was like abused by my dad that's not known of."
    Defendant testified. He confirmed that the Division visited his house on
    July 26, 2010 because M.M. made an allegation against him.             He denied
    M.M.'s and N.H.'s allegations. He admitted massaging M.M.'s legs, neck, and
    feet.
    A-0381-20
    13
    On January 22, 2020, the jury returned a verdict of guilty on all twelve
    counts of the indictment. On August 24, 2020, the court sentenced defendant
    to an aggregate thirty-year prison term subject to the No Early Release Act,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, and five years of parole supervision upon release and
    further subject to Megan's Law, N.J.S.A. 2C:7-12 to -19, and Parole
    Supervision for Life. On September 3, 2020, the court entered a judgment of
    conviction. This appeal followed.
    II.
    Defendant argues that the court erred in permitting fresh complaint
    testimony from A.D., Stout, and P.H. because there were no allegations of
    recent fabrication; N.H.'s complaint was too remote in time; M.M.'s disclosure
    to Stout was not a fresh complaint because M.M. was responding to
    interrogation by the authorities; and the fresh complaint testimony excee ded
    the proper scope of such testimony, which defendant did not raise before the
    trial judge. We reject these arguments.
    The fresh complaint doctrine developed in response to jury bias against a
    victim who did not immediately report they were raped. State v. Hill, 
    121 N.J. 150
    , 162-163 (1990). The rule's purpose "is to prove only that the alleged
    victim complained, not to corroborate the victim's allegations concerning the
    A-0381-20
    14
    crime."    State v. Bethune, 
    121 N.J. 137
    , 146 (1990).         Under the fresh
    complaint rule, the State can present "evidence of a victim's complaint of
    sexual abuse, [which is] otherwise inadmissible as hearsay, to negate the
    inference that the victim's initial silence or delay indicates that the charge is
    fabricated." State v. R.K., 
    220 N.J. 444
    , 455 (2015). "Only the facts that are
    minimally necessary to identify the subject matter of the complaint should be
    admitted. . . ." 
    Id. at 456
    .
    "[T]o qualify as [a] fresh complaint, the victim's statements to someone
    she would ordinarily turn to for support must have been made within a
    reasonable time after the alleged assault and must have been spontaneous and
    voluntary." Hill, 
    121 N.J. at 163
    . "Only the fact of the complaint, not the
    details, is admissible." 
    Ibid.
     With respect to allegations by children,
    New Jersey courts recognize that children may be too
    frightened and embarrassed to talk about sexual abuse,
    and that it is therefore necessary to be flexible in
    applying "fresh complaint" guidelines to complaints of
    children who allegedly have been sexually abused.
    We recognize also that not all questioning preceding a
    complaint deprives an utterance of the spontaneity and
    voluntariness needed for it to be admissible under the
    fresh complaint rule.
    [Bethune, 121 N.J. at 144.]
    In addition,
    A-0381-20
    15
    Trial courts should instruct the jury of the limited role
    that fresh-complaint evidence should play in its
    consideration of the case. The trial court should make
    clear that a fresh complaint does not bolster the
    victim's credibility or prove the underlying truth of the
    sexual assault charges but merely dispels the inference
    that the victim was silent.
    [Id. at 148.]
    We "review the admissibility of fresh complaint evidence under an abuse
    of discretion standard." State v. L.P., 
    352 N.J. Super. 369
    , 380-81 (App. Div.
    2002) (citing Hill, 
    121 N.J. at 167-68
    ).        "The Court finds an abuse of
    discretion when a decision is 'made without a rational explanation,
    inexplicably departed from established policies, or rested on an impermissible
    basis.'" U.S. Bank Nat'l Ass'n v. Guillaume, 
    209 N.J. 449
    , 467-68 (2012)
    (quoting Iliadis v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    191 N.J. 88
    , 123 (2007)). "If a
    defendant . . . does not object or otherwise preserve an issue for appeal at the
    trial court level, we review the issue for plain error." R. 2:10-2.
    We reject defendant's first argument, notably, not raised before the trial
    judge, that the fresh complaint rule requires an allegation of recent fabrication.
    The fresh complaint rule as articulated in Hill and Bethune does not contain
    this element. Moreover, the court properly applied the rule in admitting the
    fresh complaint evidence to prevent any potential jury bias based on the de lay
    A-0381-20
    16
    between the alleged abuse and the victims' disclosure.            M.M. testified
    defendant began to abuse her when she was twelve years old, and she disclosed
    to A.D. when she was fourteen in 2010. N.H. testified defendant began to
    abuse her when she was between nine and ten years old, and she disclosed to
    her mother when she was sixteen in 2013. Thus, because both victims here
    reported the abuse years after it first began, the fresh complaint testimony was
    relevant to "negate the inference that the [victims'] initial silence or delay
    indicates that the charge[s] [were] fabricated." R.K., 220 N.J. at 455.
    Further, the court's admission of the fresh complaint was not "clearly
    capable of producing an unjust result," R. 2:10-2, because the court correctly
    instructed the jury of the fresh complaint rule's limited purpose, and the jury is
    presumed to follow the court's instructions. State v. Burns, 
    192 N.J. 312
    , 335
    (2007).
    The court did not abuse its discretion in finding N.H.'s complaint was
    not too remote in time to constitute a fresh complaint. Defendant's abuse of
    N.H. began when she was nine or ten years old and stopped when she was
    about thirteen when M.M. disclosed her abuse in 2010. N.H. disclosed to her
    mother in 2013 when she was sixteen, making the delay about three years. She
    was "terrified" of disclosing her father sexually abused her because of the
    A-0381-20
    17
    potential consequences.     Thus, because of N.H.'s young age and fear of
    disclosure, the court did not abuse its discretion to flexibly apply the fresh
    complaint rule to admit P.H.'s testimony. See Bethune, 
    121 N.J. at 143-44
    ;
    State v. W.B., 
    205 N.J. 588
    , 618 (2011) ("[T]he reasonable time component of
    the fresh complaint rule must be applied flexibly 'in light of the reluctance of
    children to report a sexual assault and their limited understanding of what was
    done to them.'") (internal citation omitted).
    We also agree with the trial judge that M.M.'s disclosure to Stout was a
    fresh complaint even though M.M. was responding to interrogation by the
    authorities. The court found Stout did not question M.M. in a coercive manner
    and did not ask leading questions; Stout's testimony did not divulge
    unnecessary details and was not cumulative; and Stout's testimony was
    necessary to show that M.M. knew what she disclosed to A.D. Although M.M.
    did not have a close relationship with Stout, the court noted that Stout was a
    person with whom M.M. would confide. Moreover, Bethune permits fresh
    complaint testimony when the interrogation of a child victim was not coercive.
    121 N.J. at 144-45. Thus, the court did not abuse its discretion in flexibly
    applying the fresh complaint rule to admit Stout's testimony.
    A-0381-20
    18
    We conclude defendant's fourth argument, which was not raised before
    the trial judge, that the fresh complaint testimony at trial exceeded the proper
    scope of such testimony, has merit. However, the court's careful and thorough
    jury instructions prevented the error from producing an unjust result. R. 2:10-
    2; Burns, 
    192 N.J. at 335
    .
    The error was the admission of excessive details of A.D., Stout, and
    P.H.'s testimonies, which exceeded the permissible scope of fresh complaint
    testimony. "[D]etails of the offense should be confined to those minimally
    necessary to identify the subject matter of the victim's complaint." State v.
    J.S., 
    222 N.J. Super. 247
    , 257 (App. Div. 1988).          The fresh complaint
    testimonies exceeded what was "minimally necessary" to show the victim
    disclosed.    
    Ibid.
       However, this plain error was not "clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result."    R. 2:10-2.   Immediately following A.D. and
    Stout's testimonies, the court was prepared to give the fresh complaint jury
    charge.     But defense counsel requested that the court give it at the end.
    Accordingly, the court gave proper jury instructions on the fresh complaint
    evidence.     The court emphasized the fresh complaint testimonies' limited
    purpose for negating any inference that the victims' claims are false because of
    their silence or delayed disclosure. The court stated that such testimony does
    A-0381-20
    19
    not strengthen the victims' credibility or prove the underlying truth of their
    claims of sexual abuse. The court appropriately instructed the jury regarding
    the limited use of the fresh complaint evidence. "One of the foundations of
    our jury system is that the jury is presumed to follow the trial court's
    instructions." Burns, 
    192 N.J. at 335
    . As a result, the error was not "clearly
    capable of producing an unjust result . . . ." R. 2:10-2.
    III.
    Defendant next argues the court erred by barring cross-examination of
    M.M. regarding her prior accusation of X.X. as another abuser.          More
    specifically, defendant argues that the court erred by finding M.M. did not
    make a false criminal allegation when she told A.D. defendant and X.X.
    engaged in sexual activity with her, and later clarified that she was mainly
    referring to defendant.    Defendant argues M.M.'s later statement that the
    interactions with her cousin were consensual did not negate the initial false
    allegation. Further, defendant argues that the court erred in concluding the
    rape shield law applied because the sexual conduct between M.M. and her
    cousin likely occurred. We disagree.
    A defendant may introduce evidence of a prior false criminal accusation
    to challenge a victim's credibility. N.J.R.E. 608(b). However, the rape shield
    A-0381-20
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    law, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-7, may bar evidence of a victim's previous sexual conduct
    if the evidence is irrelevant and "the probative value of the evidence offered
    substantially outweighs its collateral nature or the probability that its
    admission will create undue prejudice, confusion of the issues, or unwarranted
    invasion of the privacy of the victim."
    Our Supreme Court stated in Guenther:
    In deciding whether to permit the impeachment
    of a victim-witness who allegedly made a prior false
    accusation, trial courts must first conduct an
    admissibility hearing pursuant to N.J.R.E. 104. At
    that hearing, the court must determine by a
    preponderance of the evidence whether the defendant
    has proven that a prior accusation charging criminal
    conduct was made by the victim and whether that
    accusation was false. That standard strikes the right
    balance, placing an initial burden on the defendant to
    justify the use of such evidence while not setting an
    exceedingly high threshold for its admission. We note
    that the admission of this type of specific conduct
    evidence is an exception to N.J.R.E. 608 and should
    be limited only to those circumstances in which the
    prior accusation has been shown to be false. Among
    the factors to be considered in deciding the issue of
    admissibility are:
    1. whether the credibility of the victim-witness
    is the central issue in the case;
    2. the similarity of the prior false criminal
    accusation to the crime charged;
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    3. the proximity of the prior false accusation to
    the allegation that is the basis of the crime
    charged;
    4. the number of witnesses, the items of
    extrinsic evidence, and the amount of time
    required for presentation of the issue at trial;
    and
    5. whether the probative value of the false
    accusation evidence will be outweighed by
    undue prejudice, confusion of the issues, and
    waste of time.
    [
    181 N.J. at 157
    .]
    Here, the court did not abuse its discretion in precluding defendant from
    cross-examining M.M. on the sexual interactions with X.X.             The judge
    properly considered the Facebook chat in its entirety, the substance of M.M.'s
    disclosure, and the surrounding circumstances. State v. Bray, 356 N.J. Super
    485, 495-96 (App. Div. 2003). A.D. testified that when M.M. first disclosed to
    A.D. via Facebook chat that defendant and X.X. touched her, M.M. soon
    clarified in the same chat that it was her "uncle really" who raped her. M.M.
    did not share anything else regarding X.X. who is about a year older than her.
    At the N.J.R.E. 104 hearing, M.M. testified that there was no penetration, and
    she described the interactions with X.X. as experimental and consensual.
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    After hearing A.D.'s and M.M.'s testimony, the court stated that M.M.
    immediately clarified she was talking about her uncle, and it considered "the
    context of the entire chat, where [M.M.] discusse[d] her confused feelings,
    [and] appear[ed] to have only lumped in the touching with her cousin as a
    shameful act."    The judge also noted that A.D. understood M.M. to be
    disclosing that only defendant raped her. Thus, ample evidence in the record
    supports the trial court's conclusion that M.M.'s allegation of sexual conduct
    with her cousin was probably true, but that such conduct did not rise to the
    level of a criminal accusation.    Moreover, because M.M. did not make a
    criminal allegation against her cousin, the court did not make a "clear error in
    judgment," State v. Scott, 
    229 N.J. 469
    , 479 (2017), to conclude the rape
    shield law—not N.J.R.E. 608(b)—applied to prevent admission of M.M.'s
    previous sexual conduct.
    IV.
    Defendant next argues that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct
    by allegedly vouching for the truthfulness of M.M. and N.H.'s testimony,
    expressing the prosecutor's personal opinions on the defendant and his
    character witnesses' truthfulness, and using a PowerPoint presentation in
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    summation that prejudiced the jury. Finding no record of egregious or unfair
    conduct, we reject these arguments.
    "[P]rosecutorial misconduct can be a ground for reversal where the
    prosecutor's misconduct was so egregious that it deprived the defendant of a
    fair trial." State v. Frost, 
    158 N.J. 76
    , 83 (1999). "[P]rosecutors are given
    wide latitude in making their summations and may sum up 'graphically and
    forcefully.'"   State v. Garcia, 
    245 N.J. 412
    , 435 (2021) (quoting State v.
    Johnson, 
    31 N.J. 489
    , 510 (1960)).         "'[P]rosecutors in criminal cases are
    expected to make vigorous and forceful closing arguments to juries' and are
    therefore 'afforded considerable leeway in closing arguments as long as their
    comments are reasonably related to the scope of the evidence presented.'"
    State v. McNeil-Thomas, 
    238 N.J. 256
    , 275 (2019) (quoting Frost, 
    158 N.J. at 82
    ). Prosecutors may not make a prejudicial assertion that is not "sufficiently
    tied to the evidence." State v. Rivera, 
    437 N.J. Super. 434
    , 463 (App. Div.
    2014). "Visual aids such as PowerPoint presentations must adhere to the same
    standards as counsels' spoken words." State v. Williams, 
    244 N.J. 592
    , 617
    (2021).     Having reviewed the arguments defendant asserts about the
    prosecutor's statements, we reject them as unpersuasive.
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    Affirmed.
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