STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. SHANE TIMMONS STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. JOSEPH D. KEARNEY STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DANA S. KEARNEY (16-10-1645, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2020 )


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  •                                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 NOS. A-2567-17T4
    A-2843-17T4
    A-4138-17T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    SHANE TIMMONS, a/k/a
    SHANE JAMILL TIMMONS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JOSEPH D. KEARNEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DANA S. KEARNEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________
    Submitted December 16, 2019 – Decided January 7, 2020
    Before Judges Sabatino, Sumners and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Middlesex County, Indictment No. 16-10-
    1645.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant Shane Timmons in A-2567-17 (Michael
    James Confusione, Designated Counsel, on the brief).
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant Joseph D. Kearney in A-2843-17 (Frank M.
    Gennaro, Designated Counsel, on the brief).
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant Dana S. Kearney in A-4138-17 (Jay L.
    Wilensky, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    Christopher L. C. Kuberiet, Acting Middlesex County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Joie D. Piderit,
    Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    These three related appeals, which we consolidate for purposes of this
    opinion, are pursued by defendants Dana S. Kearney, his cousin Joseph Kearney,
    A-2567-17T4
    2
    and Shane Timmons. Defendants were tried together in this homicide case, and
    found guilty of numerous crimes.
    The State's proofs showed that the victim, Christopher Sharp, was stabbed
    to death after an altercation at a house party in Perth Amboy at the home of
    Alicia Boone. During the course of the party, an argument erupted between
    Sharp and the three defendants. Dana Kearney went upstairs and grabbed an
    object and returned. The victim was then stabbed fatally three times in the chest.
    Outdoor surveillance footage showed the three defendants leaving the house in
    the middle of the night. A bloody palm print of Joseph Kearney was found on
    the porch railing.
    Boone and other witnesses provided testimony corroborating the
    altercation. Boone fled the house with her children in the middle of the night
    because the argument appeared to be escalating. When she returned later that
    early morning, Sharp had been killed.
    The jury found Joseph and Dana Kearney were both guilty of conspiracy
    to commit murder and aggravated assault, that all three defendants were guilty
    of hindering the prosecution, and that Dana Kearney was guilty of endangering
    an injured victim and witness tampering.
    The trial court sentenced Dana Kearney, the apparent stabber, to a fifty-
    A-2567-17T4
    3
    year aggregate custodial term. It imposed an aggregate thirty-year sentence
    upon Joseph Kearney, and seven years upon Timmons.
    Defendants raise a host of arguments challenging their convictions and
    respective sentences. Having considered those arguments in light of the law and
    the record, we affirm.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    I. .................................................................................................................... 5
    A.        Background ......................................................................................... 5
    B.        Events Surrounding the Killing ........................................................... 6
    C.        The EMT Response and Crime Scene Investigation ........................... 11
    D.        Autopsy Findings .............................................................................. 14
    E.        The Officers' Interviews .................................................................... 16
    F.        The Indictment .................................................................................. 18
    G.        Trial Testimony ................................................................................. 19
    1.     Boone ............................................................................................. 19
    2.     Evelyn ............................................................................................ 19
    3.     The State's Experts ......................................................................... 21
    4.     Character Witnesses for Defendants ............................................... 24
    H.        Motions ............................................................................................. 24
    I.        Verdict and Post-Trial Motions ......................................................... 25
    J.        Sentencing ........................................................................................ 25
    II. ................................................................................................................. 26
    III. Severance Issues – All Defendants .......................................................... 28
    A.        Timmons ........................................................................................... 30
    A-2567-17T4
    4
    B.      Joseph ............................................................................................... 34
    C.      Dana ................................................................................................. 40
    IV. Hindering – Timmons and Joseph ........................................................... 44
    A.      Timmons ........................................................................................... 46
    B.      Joseph ............................................................................................... 48
    V. Substitution of Juror No. 10 – Dana and Joseph ....................................... 51
    A.      Substitution of Juror Ten ................................................................... 59
    B.      Length of Deliberations ..................................................................... 60
    VI. Non-Redaction of Evelyn's Assertions of Fear – Joseph and Dana .......... 64
    VII. Confrontation – Timmons ...................................................................... 71
    VIII. Late Discovery – Timmons .................................................................. 73
    IX. Fingerprint Evidence – Joseph ................................................................ 78
    A.      Curran ............................................................................................... 82
    B.      Napp ................................................................................................. 83
    X. Flight Charge – Joseph ............................................................................. 87
    XI. Excessive Sentences – Timmons and Dana ............................................. 91
    A.      Timmons ........................................................................................... 92
    B.      Dana ................................................................................................. 97
    XII. ............................................................................................................ 101
    I.
    The State's evidence at trial adduced the following facts pertinent to our
    review.
    A.       Background
    As noted in our introduction, this case arises from the stabbing death of
    A-2567-17T4
    5
    Christopher Sharp at the home of Alicia Boone. Boone lived on William Street
    in Perth Amboy with her three children, and the youngest child's father, Dana.1
    Boone's home had front steps leading to a porch. The front door opened
    into a small vestibule with steps leading upstairs. To the right, there was a living
    room area with a small coffee table and three couches, followed by a dining
    room area, another living room area, which Boone called the "kids' room," with
    another set of stairs, and the kitchen. The second level had bedrooms.
    B.    Events Surrounding the Killing
    Boone testified that on August 17, 2013, Dana and Joseph were at her
    house when she arrived home from work with her children. At approximately
    5:00 p.m., she left to take her children and her goddaughter, N.B., who was
    staying with them that night, to a local festival.
    Tori Evelyn testified that on that same day, he and his cousin, Shane
    Timmons, also known as Jamel, went to Boone's home for a party to celebrate
    Timmons's birthday. Evelyn drove Timmons there in his mother's minivan. He
    did not recall the time they arrived in Perth Amboy.
    Joseph (also known as "Hood") and Dana (also known as "Moose") were
    1
    For stylistic reasons, we shall refer to Dana and Joseph Kearney by their first
    names.
    A-2567-17T4
    6
    at the house when Timmons and Evelyn arrived. They were playing cards, and
    Timmons joined them. Evelyn said other people also were present. At some
    point, a tall individual wearing a black t-shirt, later identified as Sharp, joined
    the card game. People were drinking alcohol at the party.
    By the time Boone returned home with her children and N.B., there were
    "quite a few" people at her house. Dana, Joseph, Timmons, and Sharp were
    playing cards at a table in the living room area. Sharp, who was Boone's cousin,
    lived in another house in Perth Amboy with Boone's mother, Beverly Williams,
    and grandmother. Boone described Sharp as "very tall." Alcoholic beverages
    were present and Boone was "sure they were drinking."
    Barry Gibbons, who lived with Boone's mother, arrived at her home
    before 9:00 p.m. to drop off Boone's sister Bria2, her stepsister, B.G., and Bria's
    friends. Evelyn testified he was at the house when the "girls" arrived .
    After entering the home, Gibbons saw Sharp asleep on a couch. Earlier
    that day, Dana told Gibbons that Sharp and Joseph had been drunk and "passed
    out" at Boone's house. Gibbons stayed at the house for about twenty minutes.
    Around 9:00 p.m., Boone and her children went upstairs to bed.
    2
    Because Bria and Beverly Williams share the same surname, we refer to them
    by their first names, intending no disrespect.
    A-2567-17T4
    7
    At 12:30 a.m. Boone went downstairs to get a drink of water. She saw
    Sharp passed out on the couch next to the coffee table in the living room . She
    also saw Joseph lying on the floor in his own vomit. Boone noticed the front
    door was open. Boone called Dana, who had left the house earlier with Timmons
    and Evelyn to go to "someone else's house." Boone told Dana the door was open
    and the house was in disarray.
    Evelyn confirmed that a surveillance video recovered from a neighbor's
    house showed that he, Timmons, and Dana returned to Boone's house at 1:13
    a.m. Boone testified that Dana came upstairs and told her Sharp had urinated
    on the floor and that Gibbons was at the house. Boone asked Dana to tell
    Gibbons to help with Sharp, but Gibbons apparently had left to drive Bria home.
    Boone heard a "commotion" and went downstairs. She observed Sharp
    still sleeping on the couch and Dana cleaning and yelling at Sharp to get up .
    Joseph and Timmons were arguing. Boone and Dana went upstairs, where he
    changed into red shorts and a white tank top.
    After Dana returned to the first floor, Boone heard another commotion .
    When Boone went back downstairs, Joseph and Timmons were still arguing, and
    Sharp was still sleeping. According to Boone, she told Dana to "leave Joseph
    alone." Then Sharp awoke and got between Dana and Joseph to keep them from
    A-2567-17T4
    8
    fighting. Boone asked Sharp to go with her to her grandmother's house, but he
    refused.
    At some point, Boone grabbed Dana by his shirt and it ripped. She heard
    a crash and the sound of shattering glass. She thought it was the small table in
    the living room. By that time, Timmons had separated Sharp and Joseph, and
    had placed Sharp in a headlock on the couch with his other hand trying to hold
    off Joseph. Evelyn also tried to break up the fight, but Timmons and Joseph told
    him to go outside.
    Boone decided to leave the house, explaining Sharp "was mad" and
    "getting ready to fight somebody." She went upstairs and woke her children and
    N.B.
    Boone's oldest child A.B., who was age fifteen when the stabbing
    occurred, testified that Dana was already upstairs when she left her room, and
    that she saw him going into her mother's room and taking something off the
    nightstand. A.B. did not recall the object, but acknowledged that three days
    after the incident she told the police it was a black and silver switch blad e, later
    explaining it was a folding knife switch blade. She thought Dana was getting
    ready to fight.
    N.B., who was thirteen at the time, testified that she saw Dana grab a small
    A-2567-17T4
    9
    object from a desk or dresser beside the bed. Boone and N.B. also saw Dana in
    the bedroom before they went downstairs. E.B. and N.B. testified that Dana ran
    downstairs and went into the living room, where Joseph ran towards him . N.B.
    saw Dana raise both hands.
    Boone and her children left the house and got into her car. Before she
    drove away, Dana came out of the house and entered the car, asking Boone to
    drive him to Plainfield. Instead, Boone drove Dana and her children to her
    mother's house. After the children went inside, Boone returned to the car. She
    drove Dana back to her house, and he went inside.
    Evelyn testified that he was on the porch when he saw Dana leave the
    house without his shirt. He then went inside to get Timmons and saw "the dude
    in the black shirt" lying on his left side. Timmons was standing by the couch
    and Joseph was standing by a table. They told him to go outside.
    Evelyn got into his van. Shortly afterwards, Timmons went to the van and
    told Evelyn that "they knocked him out. Like, he was hurt." Timmons returned
    to the house and left again with something in his hand, but Evelyn did not know
    what it was. Timmons got into the van, but told Evelyn to wait for Joseph, which
    he did.
    At approximately 2:00 a.m., Gibbons arrived to check on Sharp. Dana
    A-2567-17T4
    10
    met Gibbons outside and said he and Sharp had gotten into a fight. He then got
    into the van before Evelyn drove off. Jose Rodriguez, the principal detective
    who worked on the case for the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office, testified
    that Evelyn told law enforcement officers at his interview that everyone in the
    van was "nervous, not talking."
    Gibbons testified that he went inside Boone's house, saw Sharp on the
    floor, and called 9-1-1. At some point, Gibbons spoke with Beverly over the
    phone and told her that "it doesn't look good." He told Beverly to go to her
    daughter's home "right now," and Boone said they drove over there .
    C.    The EMT Response and Crime Scene Investigation
    Dennis Petrick, an emergency medical technician ("EMT") for Raritan
    Bay Medical Center in Perth Amboy, and his partner, Gary Battista, received a
    dispatch from the Perth Amboy Police Department to respond to the house on
    William Street. They arrived on the scene at 2:04 a.m. A man, who appeared
    to be in his fifties (later identified as Gibbons), told EMT Petrick there was a
    man inside who was having difficulty breathing.
    EMTs Petrick and Battista proceeded into the residence, where they found
    the victim on the floor with stab wounds to his chest. Battista checked the
    victim, but did not detect a pulse. After realizing it was a crime scene, the EMTs
    A-2567-17T4
    11
    left.
    Officer Daniel Gonzalez of the Perth Amboy Police Department testified
    that he received a dispatch call around 2:00 a.m., and arrived at the William
    Street house about three or four minutes later. He met with other officers at the
    scene. On his way to secure the second floor, Officer Gonzalez observed the
    victim through a doorway. Afterwards, he went outside and spoke to Gibbons,
    Boone, and Boone's mother.
    Perth Amboy Detective Marcos Valera arrived at the crime scene at
    approximately 3:00 a.m., and Police Sergeant Raj Chopra arrived about twenty
    minutes later. Detective Rodriguez arrived at approximately 3:30 a.m.
    Valera, Chopra and Rodriguez conducted an initial walk-through of the
    crime scene. They went through the front door and entered the living room area,
    which Valera described as disheveled with couches "moved around." In the
    dining room area, he observed tables with bottles of alcohol on them . Valera
    saw the victim on the floor between the living room and dining room areas.
    Valera said it was apparent that "some type of altercation occurred ." Valera,
    Chopra, and Rodriguez left the house to wait for members of the Police
    Department's Crime Scene Response Unit to arrive.
    Valera and Rodriguez then searched the area around Boone's house. They
    A-2567-17T4
    12
    located two cameras attached to the front side of a neighbor's house. One camera
    faced Boone's lawn, driveway, and front porch, and the other faced the back of
    her house. Both cameras were recording that night.
    After receiving the homeowner's permission, Rodriguez and Detective
    Frank Dinnino of the Prosecutor's Office wound back the recording to 2:00 a.m.
    when the call came into police headquarters, and determined the date and time
    on the surveillance video were consistent with live events.
    Bree Curran, an investigator in the crime scene unit, arrived at 3:32 a.m.
    Curran walked through the residence with Valera and took photographs. She
    observed the victim on the floor of the "living room/dining room area," blood
    stains on the back of a couch, displaced furniture, a bloody towel and tank top
    on the living room floor, and broken bottle glass. She also found a bloodstained
    white t-shirt on the arm of a blue couch in the second living area between the
    dining area and kitchen.
    Investigator Curran searched the residence for biological specimens. She
    located and documented the presence of blood on the front steps, the front door,
    and the doorknob. She found blood on the living room floor and wall, under the
    dining table, on a chair, on the floor in the foyer, and outside the family room,
    along with a bloody footprint on the living room floor. She collected blood
    A-2567-17T4
    13
    samples for later analysis.
    Curran also searched the residence for latent fingerprints that were visible
    to the naked eye with the aid of oblique lighting and black fingerprint powder .
    Curran recovered a fingerprint in blood on the interior of the front storm door,
    and a bloody palm print on a porch railing.
    She recovered more fingerprints on a mirror and various liquor bottles .
    She removed the prints for processing and transported all evidence to the crime
    scene lab.
    According to Detective Rodriguez, the murder weapon was never
    recovered.
    D.     Autopsy Findings
    On the morning of August 18, 2013, Dr. Andrew Falzon, then the medical
    examiner for Middlesex County, performed the autopsy. Dr. Falzon was the
    State's expert at trial in the fields of medicine and anatomical, clinical and
    forensic methodology. Dr. Falzon determined that Sharp died of three stab
    wounds to the chest. The wounds were similar in appearance, but Dr. Falzon
    could not say with certainty whether they were made by the same knife.
    Dr. Falzon testified that one wound was directed from front to back and
    "poked a hole" into the diaphragm, but did not penetrate the body cavity. The
    A-2567-17T4
    14
    second wound struck the sternum or breastplate, but did not penetrate the chest .
    The third stab wound was directed from front to back and to the right, passing
    through the intercostal space between the fifth and sixth ribs and penetrating the
    left lung, the heart, and the back of the left lung. This wound caused the lung
    and heart to bleed significantly into the chest cavity, compressing the lung and
    further preventing breathing. Dr. Falzon described the third wound as a "very
    extensive injury," and opined the victim would have died within a minute of the
    infliction of this stab wound.
    Dr. Falzon also observed two bruises on the skin surface near the clavicle,
    a small cut on the ear, two abrasions or blunt force injuries on the right forearm,
    an abrasion on the fifth finger of the right hand, and bruising with some
    abrasions on the right upper back. There was hemorrhaging over the right
    eyebrow, which the doctor did not observe externally, caused by blunt trauma
    to the head. He did not observe any defensive wounds.
    A toxicology report indicated the victim had a blood alcohol level of .211,
    which was more than twice the legal limit of .08 for driving under the influence .
    In Dr. Falzon's opinion, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, the
    manner of death was homicide and the cause of death was stab wounds to the
    chest.
    A-2567-17T4
    15
    E.       The Officers' Interviews
    Detective Rodriguez and Officer Valera took video statements with an
    audio soundtrack from all three defendants. The recordings were played, with
    redactions, for the jury during Rodriguez's testimony. In Joseph's statement, he
    said he had gone to Boone's house the previous day and stayed overnight.
    According to Joseph, before the incident, people were "partying," he was
    playing cards with Timmons, "got too drunk," and fell asleep. Joseph claimed
    that when he awoke, he left the party with Timmons and Dana before the
    "incident went down," and went to a social club in Plainfield. When told by the
    officers that a surveillance video showed him leaving Boone's house around 2:00
    a.m., Joseph repeatedly denied arguing or fighting with Sharp or seeing an
    altercation.
    Dana, meanwhile, claimed he, Joseph, and Timmons left Boone's house
    and went to the club in Plainfield "no later than 12:30." Dana claimed Sharp
    was on the couch when he left. Dana similarly insisted that he, Joseph, and
    Timmons were not the people shown on the surveillance video.
    Lastly, Timmons told Valera and Rodriguez he had arrived at the house
    on William Street at approximately 11:30 p.m. He "chilled" for about "forty -
    five minutes, thirty minutes," and then "dipped" with Dana and Joseph and went
    A-2567-17T4
    16
    to the club in Plainfield. When confronted with the existence of the surveillance
    video, Timmons insisted he was not lying. He denied that Dana was playing
    cards at all, that Evelyn was at the party, and said "nobody was arguing."
    The detectives interviewed Evelyn twice. Rodriguez testified at trial that
    Evelyn said he left Boone's house at 11:45 p.m. with Joseph and Timmons.
    Evelyn told the detectives that during the thirty minutes he was there everyone
    was "chilling," and no one was arguing. After being shown the surveillance
    video, Evelyn confirmed the video showed a car driven by Timmons pulling into
    Boone's driveway at 1:13 a.m., and he, Timmons, and Dana getting out of the
    car. It also showed him on Boone's porch at 1:44 a.m., and showed Dana leaving
    the home without his shirt.
    Detective Rodriguez interviewed Boone three times at the Perth Amboy
    police station.   He also took statements from Gibbons.       Valera, who had
    reviewed the surveillance footage for the period from 6:00 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.,
    observed conflicts between the statements of Boone and Gibbons, and re-
    interviewed them both.        According to Rodriguez, the investigators asked
    Gibbons for a second statement in order to identify Dana and Joseph in the
    photographs.
    Boone was re-interviewed and segments from her video recording were
    A-2567-17T4
    17
    played for the jury. In her second statement, Boone expressed concerns for her
    family because Dana was "mean." She said her first statement to the officers
    was "90 percent true." She acknowledged initially telling detectives that Dana
    said he thought Boone was "cut," but told them in her second statement that
    Dana said he "poked" Sharp or "another word like that."
    On August 21, Boone voluntarily returned to the police station and gave
    a third statement to the police. She said that Dana told her, "I poked Chris."
    Valera testified the surveillance video confirmed Boone and the children
    left her house in the early morning hours of August 18, and Dana got into her
    car before she drove off. It also showed Dana returning to the house and going
    inside. Valera testified the stabbing incident occurred sometime around 2:00
    a.m.
    F.    The Indictment
    A superseding indictment charged defendants with:
    • second-degree conspiracy to commit aggravated
    assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(2) and N.J.S.A.
    2C:5-2(a) (Dana, Joseph, and Timmons) (count
    one);
    • first-degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a) and
    N.J.S.A. 2C:2-6(a) (Dana, Joseph and Timmons)
    (count two);
    • third-degree endangering an injured victim, in
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    18
    violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1.2(a) (Dana and
    Timmons) (count three);
    • second-degree hindering, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(5)
    (Joseph and Timmons) (count four);
    • second-degree hindering, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(3)
    (Dana) (count five); and
    • third-degree witness tampering, N.J.S.A. 2C:28-
    5(a) (Dana) (count six).
    G.    Trial Testimony
    Nineteen witnesses testified at trial. None of the three defendants elected
    to testify on their own behalf.
    1.     Boone
    In her testimony as a State witness, Boone recalled telling the police that
    Dana told her that he had "poked" Sharp. At trial, however, she did not recall
    that Dana said those words to her. She later admitted that Dana "probably" said
    he poked Sharp. Boone told the jury she loved Dana, but was afraid of him.
    2.     Evelyn
    Evelyn expressed reluctance about answering questions at trial and after
    a lunch break, he feigned a lack of recollection even after reviewing his recorded
    statements to law enforcement officers. For example, Evelyn initially testified
    that he and his cousin arrived at Boone's house "probably like midday," and that
    A-2567-17T4
    19
    a fight broke out in the home between Dana and "the other guy." After the lunch
    recess, he could not recall details about the night of the stabbing, even when
    shown a transcript of his prior statements.
    After redacting non-relevant information, the prosecutor played Evelyn's
    recorded statements for the jury. Contrary to his initial trial testimony, Evelyn
    told the police he and Timmons arrived at the party around 6:30 p.m., when it
    was still light outside. He said there were five or six people in the house, and
    three people were playing cards: Joseph, who wore a white t-shirt; Dana, who
    wore a black tank top, and had a rose tattoo on his arm; and a man in a black t-
    shirt, who was "at least six feet tall." Around 9:00 p.m., Evelyn left the party to
    buy some liquor.
    According to Evelyn, by 1:30 a.m., there were four people in the house:
    "Jamel [Timmons], Hood [Joseph], Moose [Dana], and me." Around this time,
    the man in the black tank top (Dana) and the man in the black t-shirt (Sharp)
    began to argue. Evelyn, who was watching the card game, told them to "chill."
    The men continued to drink and play cards, so Evelyn went outside on the porch
    to smoke a cigarette. When he heard crashing, yelling and screaming, Evelyn
    went back inside and tried to break up the fight by stepping between the men .
    A "girl" came downstairs and also tried to break up the fight. Joseph and
    A-2567-17T4
    20
    Timmons told Evelyn to go outside, which he did.
    Evelyn said he reentered the house but left again because the men were
    still fighting; the last time he went inside, he saw the man in the black t -shirt
    lying on his left side on the floor. Joseph, Dana, and Timmons were inside the
    house, and appeared to be "in shock." Evelyn said the victim looked "knocked
    out pretty bad or hurt."
    Evelyn said he and Timmons went to the van, but Timmons returned to
    the house and exited with something in his hand. He waited for Timmons,
    Joseph, and Dana to get inside the van before driving away. Evelyn dropped off
    Joseph and Dana somewhere in Plainfield and drove home with Timmons.
    On cross-examination, Evelyn did not recall how many people were in the
    house or playing cards or what defendants were wearing. He acknowledged
    lying to detectives about when he arrived at the party, when he left the party,
    and where he went afterwards. He admitted being concerned about going to jail
    when he spoke to the police.
    3.     The State's Experts
    In addition to Dr. Falzon, the State presented testimony from two experts
    in the field of fingerprint identification: Curran; and Sergeant James Napp .
    Their testimony, which was objected to on certain grounds, is discussed in detail
    A-2567-17T4
    21
    in Part IX, infra.
    The State also called Frank Basile, an expert in serology and DNA
    analysis. Defendants presented no expert witnesses.
    Basile worked at the Union County laboratory, where he performed
    forensic DNA testing on the items delivered by Curran. He confirmed the
    presence of blood on the ripped tank top found on the living room floor, the
    white t-shirt found on a couch, and a swab from the palm print on the front
    railing. Basile took samples of the blood, generated DNA profiles, and analyzed
    the results using defendants' buccal swabs and Sharp's blood samples as
    references.
    Basile concluded the DNA profile obtained from the stain on the exterior
    back right shoulder of the tank top matched Sharp's DNA profile. He explained
    that the DNA profile found on this specimen occurred in "1 in 21 quintillion
    African Americans, 1 in 9.4 quintillion Caucasians, and 1 in 17 quintillion
    Hispanics." The second stain on the exterior front lower abdomen area of the
    tank top contained DNA from a minimum of two individuals. He concluded
    Sharp matched the DNA profile of the major contributor to the mixture .
    Basile tested five areas for the presence of blood on the white t-shirt, and
    obtained at least a partial DNA profile from each location. After comparing the
    A-2567-17T4
    22
    results with the reference samples, he concluded the DNA profiles from two
    bloodstains were a match to Joseph. He explained that statistics showed these
    profiles occurred in 1 in 5.3 quintillion African Americans, 1 in 40 quintillion
    Caucasians, and 1 in 7.2 Hispanics. DNA testing of a third bloodstain revealed
    a mixture from at least two individuals. Basile determined the DNA profile
    identified Sharp as the major contributor, and did not exclude Joseph as a minor
    contributor. He also detected blood in a fourth area, which yielded a single-
    source DNA profile that was a match to Sharp. The statistics showed the profile
    was rare such that "the probability of selecting an unrelated individual at random
    with the DNA types obtained from [this sample] is 1 in 9.4 quintillion
    Caucasians, 1 in 17 quintillion Hispanics, and 1 in 21 quintillion African
    Americans."
    As for the palm print, Basile determined that the mixed sample of DNA
    did not exclude Sharp as a possible major contributor and Joseph as a possible
    minor contributor. Basile also tested eight of twelve fingerprint clippings from
    the victim's right hand and four clippings from his left hand. He found a positive
    association to Dana on one of the fingernail clippings from Sharp's right hand.
    Joseph was excluded as a possible foreign contributor to the mixture . The DNA
    on the four clippings from the left hand all matched to Sharp.
    A-2567-17T4
    23
    Basile testified that his analysis of data from the DNA and his conclusions
    went through an independent examination to confirm the statistics and the work
    performed.
    4.   Character Witnesses for Defendants
    Defense counsel for Joseph presented two character witnesses: Joseph's
    aunt, who described her nephew as "a very sweet, loving young man," and a
    church pastor who described Joseph as "quiet" and "well-mannered."
    Dana's counsel called Boone as a character witness. Boone testified that
    she told police during her first statement she did not recall Dana's exact words
    on the night of the incident. She acknowledged telling the police in her later
    statements that Dana said: "I poked Chris." She testified at trial that she was
    not sure at the time what Dana said to her.
    H.     Motions
    After the State rested its case, each defendant moved for a judgment of
    acquittal pursuant to Rule 3:18-1. The court granted Timmons's motion to
    dismiss counts one (conspiracy to commit aggravated assault), two (murder),
    and three (endangering an injured victim), but denied his request to dismiss
    count four (hindering the prosecution). The court denied the applications by
    Joseph and Dana to dismiss any of the charges against them.
    A-2567-17T4
    24
    I.    Verdict and Post-Trial Motions
    Following deliberations, the jury found Dana, Joseph, and Timmons guilty
    on all counts.
    Joseph subsequently moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict
    and a new trial. On December 22, 2017, the court denied both motions.
    J.    Sentencing
    At sentencing, the court merged Dana's and Joseph's convictions for
    conspiracy to commit aggravated assault (count one) into their convictions for
    murder (count two). It sentenced Dana on count two to a forty-year prison term
    with an eighty-five-percent period of parole ineligibility under the No Early
    Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2 ("NERA"), on count three (endangering an
    injured victim) to a term of five years to run consecutive to count two, on count
    five (hindering ) to a term of ten years to run concurrent with count two, and on
    count six (witness tampering) to a five-year term to run consecutive to count
    three. Dana received a total sentence of fifty years.
    The court sentenced Joseph on count two to a thirty-year prison term
    without parole eligibility, and on count four to a five-year term to run concurrent
    with count two.
    Lastly, the court sentenced Timmons on count four (hindering) to a term
    A-2567-17T4
    25
    of seven years.
    II.
    On appeal, defendants present the following overlapping points in their
    briefs:
    Timmons
    Point I: The trial court erred in denying
    defendant's motion to sever the defendants for
    separate trials.
    Point II: The trial court erred in denying
    defendant's motion for acquittal of the hindering
    charge.
    Point III: The trial court violated defendant's
    right to confront the witnesses against him and
    attempt to raise reasonable doubt before the jury.
    Point IV: The trial court erred in failing to afford
    defendant relief because of late discovery
    produced by the prosecution.
    Point V: Defendant's sentence is improper and
    excessive.
    Joseph Kearney
    POINT I: THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY
    DENIED DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SEVER
    DEFENDANTS.
    A-2567-17T4
    26
    POINT II:   THE IMPROPER ADMISSION OF
    TESTIMONY FROM FINGERPRINT EXPERTS
    CURRAN AND NAPP DENIED DEFENDANT A
    FAIR TRIAL.
    POINT III: DEFENDANT WAS ENTITLED TO A
    JUDGMENT OF ACQUITTAL ON THE CHARGE OF
    HINDERING THE PROSECUTION OF ANOTHER.
    POINT IV:    THE TRIAL COURT'S JURY
    INSTRUCTION ON THE DOCTRINE OF FLIGHT
    WAS ERRONEOUS.
    POINT V: THE TRIAL COURT WRONGFULLY
    DENIED DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A NEW
    TRIAL.
    Dana Kearney
    POINT I.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN SUBSTITUTING A
    JUROR       AFTER         DELIBERATIONS  HAD
    PROGRESSED SUBSTANTIALLY, AND THE JURY
    CLEARLY DID NOT FOLLOW THE COURT'S
    INSTRUCTIONS TO DELIBERATE ANEW. U.S.
    CONST., AMEND. VI; N.J. CONST. (1947), ART. 1,
    PAR. 9. (Partially raised below).
    A. The Court Erred in Substituting For a Juror After the
    Jury's Deliberations Clearly Had Progressed to a Stage
    Precluding Reconstitution.
    B. The Reconstituted Jury Clearly Did Not Deliberate
    Anew.
    C. Standard of Review.
    A-2567-17T4
    27
    POINT II.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED TO DEFENDANT'S
    GREAT PREJUDICE IN REFUSING TO REDACT
    THE STATEMENT OF A KEY WITNESS. U.S.
    CONST., AMENDS. VI; XIV; N.J. CONST. ART. 1,
    PARS. 1, 10.
    POINT III.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED TO DEFENDANT'S
    GREAT PREJUDICE IN DECLINING TO SEVER
    THE DEFENDANTS, BECAUSE THEIR DEFENSES
    WERE ANTAGONISTIC. U.S. CONST., AMEND.
    XIV; N.J. CONST. (1947), ART. 1, PARS. 1, 10.
    POINT IV.
    THE TRIAL COURT IMPOSED AN EXCESSIVE
    SENTENCE, NECESSITATING REDUCTION.
    We discuss these various arguments in a reorganized manner.
    III.
    (Severance Issues – All Defendants)
    Defendants each argue the trial court erred by refusing to sever their trials
    into individual cases. We reject their contentions, and conclude the joint trial
    was proper under the circumstances.
    The relevant procedural background is as follows. In July 2017, the trial
    court issued an oral decision denying Joseph's motion for severance, which
    A-2567-17T4
    28
    Timmons joined. The court agreed with the State's allegation that "defendants
    operated in concert together in this crime, and they're to be tried together" and
    found Joseph's severance arguments based on third-party guilt lacked merit.
    Dana did not join Joseph's motion, but asked for severance later during the trial.
    The applicable law of severance is clear. "Two or more defendants may
    be tried jointly 'if they are alleged to have participated in the same act or
    transaction or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an offense
    or offenses.'" State v. Brown, 
    170 N.J. 138
    , 159-60 (2001) (quoting R. 3:7-7).
    Courts generally prefer to try co-defendants jointly, "particularly when 'much of
    the same evidence is needed to prosecute each defendant.'" 
    Id. at 160
    (quoting
    State v. Brown, 
    118 N.J. 595
    , 605 (1990)). "That preference is guided by a need
    for judicial efficiency, to accommodate witnesses and victims, to avoid
    inconsistent verdicts, and to facilitate a more accurate assessment of relative
    culpability." 
    Ibid. A single joint
    trial, however, may not take place at the expense of a
    defendant's right to a fair trial. State v. Sanchez, 
    143 N.J. 273
    , 290 (1996).
    When considering a motion for severance, a trial court "should balance the
    potential prejudice to defendant's due process rights against the State's interest
    in judicial efficiency." 
    Brown, 118 N.J. at 605
    (quoting State v. Coleman, 46
    A-2567-17T4
    
    29 N.J. 16
    , 24 (1965)).
    Courts apply a rigorous test for granting severance. 
    Brown, 170 N.J. at 160
    . A mere claim of prejudice is insufficient to support a motion to sever.
    State v. Moore, 
    113 N.J. 239
    , 274 (1988). A defendant also does not have the
    right to severance simply because he or she believes that a separate trial "would
    offer defendant a better chance of acquittal." State v. Johnson, 
    274 N.J. Super. 137
    , 151 (App. Div. 1994) (quoting State v. Morales, 
    138 N.J. Super. 225
    , 231
    (App. Div. 1975)).
    Our scope of review on this issue is limited. The decision to sever rests
    within the trial court's discretion. State v. Weaver, 
    219 N.J. 131
    , 149 (2014).
    An appellate court will defer to the trial court's decision on a severance motion
    unless it constitutes an abuse of discretion. 
    Ibid. We deal with
    each defendant, in turn, with respect to the severance issues.
    A.    Timmons
    Timmons argues the court erred by denying his motion for severance
    because he was "factually situated very differently" than his co-defendants, as
    reflected in the dismissal of the more serious charges against him. We reject
    this argument.
    Timmons's counsel did not raise this argument at the hearing on the
    A-2567-17T4
    30
    severance motion. The court's decision addressed only Joseph's application,
    joined by Timmons, to sever the trial so he could raise the defense of third-party
    guilt.
    "Where the evidence establishes that multiple offenses are linked as part
    of the same transaction or series of transactions, a court should grant a motion
    for severance only when defendant has satisfied the court that prejudice would
    result." 
    Moore, 113 N.J. at 273
    . Although there is concern about "guilt by
    association" inherent in all joint trials, the danger by itself is not sufficient to
    sever if proper jury instructions can preserve the separate status of the co -
    defendants. 
    Brown, 170 N.J. at 162
    . A defendant therefore is not entitled to a
    reversal of his or her conviction where the trial court's instruction adequately
    allowed the jurors to consider the defendant's guilt separately from his or her
    co-defendants. 
    Ibid. (holding "jury was
    able to consider the co-defendant's guilt
    separately from defendant because it convicted them of different crimes.").
    However, "where a significant portion of evidence to be adduced at a joint
    trial is admissible only as to one defendant, the probability of harm to the other
    may be so great that the trial judge should, as a matter of fair practice, exercise
    his discretion in favor of a severance." State v. Bellucci, 
    165 N.J. Super. 294
    ,
    300 (App. Div. 1979), modified on other grounds, 
    81 N.J. 531
    (1980).
    A-2567-17T4
    31
    Here, the State used the same facts and witnesses to prosecute Timmons
    and his co-defendants. Three separate trials would have taken an undue amount
    of time. This case does not present a situation where a significant portion of the
    evidence was admissible only as to Dana and Joseph such that the probability of
    harm to Timmons was so great that discretion would favor a severance.
    Moreover, the court gave adequate and timely protective instructions.
    
    Ibid. Specifically, the court
    instructed the jury in its final charge to "return
    separate verdicts for each defendant as to each of the charges being tried" a nd
    "to decide each case individually."       It further instructed that the verdicts
    depended on the evidence and the counts of conspiracy to commit aggravated
    assault and murder applied only to Dana and Joseph.
    The court therefore instructed the jury to consider the evidence against
    each defendant separately and to consider the guilt of each defendant
    individually as to each count.        It is presumed the jury followed these
    instructions. See State v. Loftin, 
    146 N.J. 295
    , 390 (1996). Indeed, the jury
    manifestly was able to consider Timmons's guilt separately from co-defendants,
    as it convicted them of different additional crimes.
    Timmons relies on State v. Savage, 
    198 N.J. Super. 507
    , 513 (Law Div.
    1984), to argue that severance was required because, unlike co-defendants, he
    A-2567-17T4
    32
    was charged only with hindering.       In Savage, one of the jointly indicted
    defendants was charged with capital murder and the other defendant was
    charged with hindering after the murder. 
    Id. at 508-09.
    The hindering charge
    related to post-death efforts to find defendant and prosecute him for murder.
    
    Ibid. The court found
    that, '[u]nder these circumstances, where the alleged
    murder and post-murder events [we]re separate," severance was appropriate. 
    Id. at 509.
    In contrast, the murder of Sharp and the acts taken to evade apprehension
    and prosecution of that crime comprised "a common scheme or plan." R. 3:7-6.
    See State v. Wilkins, 
    219 N.J. Super. 671
    , 676 (Law Div. 1987) (holding joinder
    was proper where sufficient nexus existed between murder and witness
    tampering that occurred one month later to evade prosecution).            Evelyn's
    testimony and the surveillance video showed Timmons leaving Boone's house
    with an object in his hand, likely the murder weapon, and Evelyn testified that
    Dana instructed Timmons and Joseph to adopt an alibi as they fled the crime
    scene. Given that the hindering charge arose from the same crime of murder,
    there were insufficient grounds for the court to sever Timmons's trial.
    Moreover, appropriate jury instructions on the need for separate verdicts
    overcame any potential prejudice. Timmons had no right to a separate trial
    A-2567-17T4
    33
    based on the belief that it would have offered him a better chance of acquittal.
    
    Brown, 118 N.J. at 619
    .
    The court therefore acted within its discretion when it denied the motion
    for severance as to Timmons.
    B.     Joseph
    Joseph contends the court erred by denying his motion to sever based on
    its finding that his proposed evidence of Dana's prior bad acts was inadmissible
    under N.J.R.E. 404(b) at a joint or separate trial. He argues evidence of Dana's
    violent character and gang membership supported his defense of third-party guilt
    and such proof was admissible if tried alone.      We hold this evidence was
    inadmissible, even in a separate trial.
    The trial court understood Joseph wanted "to point the finger" at Dana ,
    and rely on witnesses that would say Dana was a "bad guy," "a gang member,"
    and "violent." The court rightly noted such bad character evidence would never
    be admissible against Dana, even if Joseph were tried alone. The court agreed
    with the State that "defendants operated in concert together in this crime, and
    they're to be tried together."
    Under N.J.R.E. 404(b), "[e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts may
    not be introduced into evidence to prove a defendant's criminal disposition as a
    A-2567-17T4
    34
    basis for establishing guilt of the crime charged." State v. Covell, 
    157 N.J. 554
    ,
    563 (1999). This rule, however, permits the admission of such evidence "to
    prove other facts in issue, such as 'motive, intent, plan, knowledge, identity, or
    absence of mistake or accident.'" 
    Id. at 563-64
    (quoting State v. Stevens, 
    115 N.J. 289
    , 293 (1989)).
    An inherent danger of the admission of other-crimes evidence is that "a
    jury may convict a defendant not for the offense charged, but for the extrinsic
    evidence." State v. Garrison, 
    228 N.J. 182
    , 193-94 (2017). A court will admit
    evidence of other crimes only if: (1) relevant to a material issue; (2) similar in
    kind and reasonably close in time to the offense charged, (3) supported by clear
    and convincing evidence; and (4) its probative value is not outweighed by its
    apparent prejudice. State v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
    , 338 (1992).
    However, where, as here, with respect to Timmons, "[w]hen a person
    charged with a criminal offense seeks to use other-crimes evidence defensively,
    the Cofield standard does not govern because 'an accused is entitled to advance
    in his defense any evidence which may rationally tend to refute his guilt or
    buttress his innocence of the charge made.'" 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 150
    (quoting
    State v. Garfole, 
    76 N.J. 445
    , 453 (1978)); see also State v. Williams, __ N.J.
    __, __ (2019) (slip op. at 12) (reiterating that the Cofield factors do not apply to
    A-2567-17T4
    35
    a reverse Rule 404(b) situation, but that principles of relevance and undue
    prejudice pertain). Generally, a defendant may introduce "similar other-crimes
    evidence defensively if in reason it tends, alone or with other evidence, to negate
    his guilt." 
    Ibid. (quoting Garfole, 76
    N.J. at 453).
    As explained by the Court in Weaver, "even though 'a fairly rigid standard
    of similarity may be required' of the prosecution, when it is the defendant who
    'offer[s] that kind of proof exculpatorily, prejudice to the defendant is no longer
    a factor, and simple relevance to guilt or innocence should suffice' as the
    admissibility standard."   
    Ibid. (quoting Garfole, 76
    N.J. at 452-53).        "The
    defensive use of similar other-crimes evidence is sometimes referred to as
    'reverse 404(b)' evidence." 
    Ibid. Although evidence of
    third-party guilt must be relevant, State v. Fortin,
    
    178 N.J. 540
    , 591 (2004), "parties cannot introduce evidence that suggests a
    person is predisposed to commit wrongful acts to argue that the party committed
    the wrongful act at issue." 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 149
    . A trial court must determine
    the probative value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by the risk
    of "(a) undue prejudice, confusion of issues, or misleading the jury, or (b) undue
    delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence." N.J.R.E.
    403. "This determination is highly discretionary." 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 151
    .
    A-2567-17T4
    36
    Joseph does not argue that evidence of Dana's violent nature and gang
    membership was admissible at his joint trial. In fact, Joseph concedes in his
    brief that such evidence was highly prejudicial to Dana. Instead, he argues this
    evidence would have been admissible at a separate trial to rebut his guilt and
    bolster his claim that Dana was solely responsible for Sharp's death.
    The evidence proffered by Joseph does not provide any direct connection
    to Sharp's murder. There is no suggestion in the record that Dana previously
    threatened or attacked Sharp or anyone else. Likewise, there is no indication of
    a causal link between Dana's gang membership and the murder. Even if Dana
    was a gang member, there is no evidence that Sharp's murder was gang related.
    Although Joseph claims the other-crimes evidence was admissible to show
    "motive, intent, plan and absence of accident," the evidence "simply afford[ed]
    a 'possible ground of suspicion against'" Dana. State v. Koedatich, 
    112 N.J. 225
    ,
    305 (1988) (holding evidence of third-party guilt did nothing more than cast
    "mere suspicions"). The relevance of the other-crimes evidence on the issue of
    who stabbed Sharp has not been established.
    Notably, the proposed defensive use of this 404(b) evidence by Joseph
    does not "negate" Joseph's guilt of the crime charged against him. 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 157
    (quoting 
    Garfole, 76 N.J. at 453
    ). There was sufficient evidence for
    A-2567-17T4
    37
    the jury to find Joseph guilty even without the proffered evidence. Various
    witnesses placed Joseph in the room with Dana at the time of Sharp's murder,
    and the surveillance video showed him fleeing the crime scene with Dana and
    Timmons around 2:00 a.m., immediately after the stabbing. Evelyn confirmed
    that he drove Joseph from the scene, that Dana told Joseph and Timmons what
    alibi to give the police, and that Joseph, Dana, and Timmons seemed nervous.
    Moreover, the evidence supports the jury's finding that Dana was the
    person who stabbed Sharp. The testimony established that immediately before
    the stabbing Dana ran upstairs, removed a small object from a table in the room
    he shared with Boone, ran back downstairs, and entered the room where the
    fighting took place with his hands in the air. Shortly thereafter, Dana left the
    house shirtless and got into the car with Boone and her children and asked for a
    ride to Plainfield. Boone testified that when they got to her mother's house,
    Dana said he "poked" Chris. In his closing argument, the prosecutor argued
    these were the actions of a guilty man and that Dana stabbed Sharp "with
    Joseph's help." Basile confirmed the presence of Sharp's blood on the ripped
    tank top, which belonged to Dana.
    Thus, even if the other-crimes evidence suggested by Joseph was relevant,
    its probative value was substantially outweighed by the risk that its admission
    A-2567-17T4
    38
    would cause "undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative
    evidence." N.J.R.E. 403. See State v. Cook, 
    179 N.J. 533
    , 568-69 (2004)
    (affirming trial court's denial of the defendant's asserted evidence of third-party
    guilt, where probative value of proffered evidence was minimal).
    Although the court below applied the Cofield analysis to consider Joseph's
    404(b) other-crimes evidence, this error by itself does not require a reversal. No
    one disputes that evidence of Dana's bad character and his gang membership
    was inadmissible at the joint trial. It is unlikely the proffered evidence, if
    admitted at a separate trial, would lead to the success of Joseph's defense
    strategy of third-party guilt. In fact, the jury found Dana guilty of murder
    without evidence of his bad character or gang membership. Indeed, the State's
    theory of the case identified Dana as the man who stabbed Sharp, not Joseph.
    Thus, severance was not necessary to protect Joseph's right to a fair trial. The
    court's legal error in applying a 404(b) analysis to a reverse 404(b) stipulation
    was harmless. See, e.g., 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 157
    , 162 (holding that court erred
    by relying on Cofield factors to deny motion to sever and exclude other-crimes
    evidence proffered by the defendant and that error by itself did not warrant
    reversal).
    A-2567-17T4
    39
    C.      Dana
    Dana argues the court erred by denying his motion to sever because he
    and Joseph raised defenses that were "antagonistic at their core." We discern no
    such error.
    While acknowledging he did not join Joseph's motion, Dana argues his
    trial counsel requested severance in the context of seeking to bar Joseph's
    statement to the police. Specifically, his counsel objected to a question by the
    interrogating officers asking what Joseph would do if he saw Dana stab
    someone. Joseph replied: "I don't know. I've never been in that situation."
    After arguing the question was highly prejudicial because it suggested to the
    jury that the police had information about Dana, his counsel requested
    severance.
    The trial court found that the police sought to ask in different ways
    whether Joseph saw the stabbing and whether he would have told the police if
    he saw Dana "do something bad." It understood the concern that the statement
    might suggest to the jury the police knew something, but did not exclude the
    statement. The court explained:
    But the fact of the matter is that the Jury is going
    to hear evidence that the Defendant was at the scene,
    and if he's at the scene and now he lies to the police
    about being at the scene, that's an element of the crime
    A-2567-17T4
    40
    that they have to prove. So, I—I'm hard pressed to bar
    the State from introducing that statement, because that's
    part of their proofs in this case.
    So, we'll give a—we'll give a[n] instruction to the
    Jury, a cautionary instruction to the Jury, and I think
    that should address or allay any concern that
    [Joseph's defense counsel] has.
    The court suggested instructing the jury that a police officer's quest ions are
    "merely an interrogation technique" and are "not based on any particular
    information that they have."
    During Detective Rodriguez's testimony, the State played for the jury
    Joseph's audio and video-recorded statement, including the question and answer
    about what he would do if he saw Dana stab somebody. The court did not give
    a cautionary instruction before or after the playback of Joseph's statement. At
    the charge conference, Dana's counsel did not ask the court to instruct the jury
    that an officer's question was an interrogation technique, and the court did not
    include such an instruction in its final charge.
    A defendant generally is required to move for severance before trial. R.
    3:15-2(c); R. 3:10-2. Because Dana did not move before trial, he must show
    plain error, that is, an error "clearly capable of producing an unjust result." R.
    2:10-2. Dana must show plain error by making "a strong showing of probable
    prejudice in fact." State v. Keely, 
    153 N.J. Super. 18
    , 22-23 (App. Div. 1977)
    A-2567-17T4
    41
    (quoting State v. Baker, 
    49 N.J. 103
    , 105 (1967)). He has not done so.
    Separate trials are required when co-defendants present defenses that "are
    not simply at odds, but are 'antagonistic at their core,' meaning that they are
    mutually exclusive and the jury could believe only one of them." 
    Weaver, 219 N.J. at 149
    (quoting 
    Brown, 118 N.J. at 606
    ). It is not enough to show "[t]he
    mere existence of hostility, conflict, or antagonism between defendants."
    
    Brown, 118 N.J. at 606
    . Defenses therefore are mutually exclusive if they "force
    the jury to choose between the defendants' conflicting accounts and to find only
    one defendant guilty." 
    Ibid. "The fact that
    one defendant seeks to escape
    conviction by placing guilt on his or her co-defendant has not been considered
    sufficient grounds for severance." 
    Id. at 606-07
    (holding that although the
    defendants gave conflicting versions, their defenses were not mutually exclusive
    because jury could find both of them at fault).
    Dana argues he and Joseph presented defenses that were "antagonistic at
    the core" because they both blamed each other for Sharp's murder and therefore
    severance was necessary to ensure his right to a fair trial. In support, he relies
    on closing arguments. Dana contends Joseph's counsel primarily argued that he
    committed the murder, saying he had the knife in the living room, he told Boone
    that he "poked" Sharp, and witnesses reported seeing him grab a blade off a
    A-2567-17T4
    42
    nightstand upstairs and running downstairs "ready to fight." Joseph's counsel
    argued "[t]his was not Joseph's fight." Dana further argues his counsel sought
    to blame Joseph by referring repeatedly to the discovery of Joseph's fingerprints
    on a banister and doorframe.
    The arguments of Dana's and Joseph's defense attorneys in summation did
    not establish versions of the events that were antagonistic, mutually exclusive ,
    or irreconcilable. Similar to what occurred in Brown: "The jury could have
    believed that [Dana and Joseph] were both lying, and convicted them of all
    crimes charged; believed aspects of both of their stories, and fashioned a suitable
    verdict; or believed both of them completely, and acquitted them." 
    Brown, 170 N.J. at 161
    .
    Although neither Dana nor Joseph testified at trial, the jury heard their
    videotaped statements at trial. Both defendants gave similar descriptions of the
    events that took place before and after the stabbing. They also gave similar
    alibis to law enforcement officers.
    The jury evidently did not believe the arguments of defense counsel
    because it found Dana and Joseph guilty of the more serious charges of murder
    and conspiracy to commit aggravated assault. The court duly instructed the jury
    to consider the evidence separately as to each defendant, and there is no reason
    A-2567-17T4
    43
    to believe the jury did not follow these instructions.
    Thus, there was no error, let alone plain error, in the court's order denying
    the motion for severance.
    IV.
    (Hindering – Timmons and Joseph)
    Count four of the indictment charged that "with purpose to hinder the
    detention, apprehension, investigation, prosecution, conviction or punishment
    of another for an offense," Timmons and Joseph "did prevent or obstruct by
    means of deception, anyone from performing an act which might aid in the
    discovery or apprehension of such person" in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:29 -
    3(a)(5).
    At the close of the State's case, Timmons and Joseph moved pursuant
    to Rule 3:18-1 for a judgment of acquittal on this hindering charge. The trial
    court denied their motions. It found both defendants hindered the prosecution
    by creating a false alibi when they spoke to law enforcement officers , and that
    Timmons further hindered the prosecution by hiding the knife. Joseph and
    Timmons appeal that ruling.
    Under Rule 3:18-1, a defendant is entitled to a judgment of acquittal at the
    close of the State's case, "if the evidence is insufficient to warrant a conviction."
    A-2567-17T4
    44
    The test is "whether, based on the entirety of the evidence and after gi ving the
    State the benefit of all its favorable testimony and all the favorable inferences
    drawn from that testimony, a reasonable jury could find guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt." State v. Williams, 
    218 N.J. 576
    , 594 (2014). The evidence
    can be direct or circumstantial, State v. Reyes, 
    50 N.J. 454
    , 459 (1967), and
    "inferences need not be established beyond a reasonable doubt."         State v.
    Tindell, 
    417 N.J. Super. 530
    , 549 (App. Div. 2011).
    We review the record de novo to assess whether the State presented
    sufficient evidence to defeat a motion for a judgment of acquittal. State v.
    Dekowski, 
    218 N.J. 596
    , 608 (2014).
    The hindering statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a), provides that "[a] person
    commits an offense if, with purpose to hinder the detention, apprehension,
    investigation, prosecution, conviction or punishment of another for an
    offense . . . ," he or she:
    (5) Prevents or obstructs, by means of force,
    intimidation or deception, anyone from performing an
    act which might aid in the discovery or apprehension of
    such person or in the lodging of a charge against him.
    An offense under paragraph (5) is a crime of the second degree, unless the actor
    meets certain exceptions, none of which apply here. N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a).
    A-2567-17T4
    45
    A.    Timmons
    Timmons argues the evidence was insufficient to support his guilt of
    hindering. He argues the court's reliance on his attempt to create a false alibi
    was "legally insufficient" to support a charge of hindering.
    In denying Timmons's request for acquittal on the hindering charge, the
    trial court explained:
    And he's going to remain—he's going to continue
    to stand trial on the hindering charge because there is
    substantial evidence—or at least giving the State the
    benefit of the favorable inferences, that he was trying
    to hide the knife and that he was trying to create a false
    alibi for the others and himself when he spoke to the
    police.
    There was ample evidence to support the trial court's decision to deny
    Timmons's motion on this charge. The record establishes Timmons tried to
    create a false alibi by telling law enforcement officers that he arrived at Boone's
    home around 11:30 p.m., that he left about forty-five minutes later with Joseph
    and Dana, that he, Dana, and Joseph went to a club in Plainfield, and that they
    were at the club when Sharp died. Notably, to the contrary, Evelyn, Gibbons,
    and the surveillance video, placed Timmons, Joseph, and Dana inside Boone's
    home moments before and after the stabbing, and immediately before Gibbons
    discovered the body.
    A-2567-17T4
    46
    Evelyn testified that when he drove defendants away from the crime
    scene, Dana "came up with the idea" for defendants to tell the police that they
    left Boone's house around 11:30 p.m. and went to Plainfield, and that Dana told
    them "over and over again" to say they were there when Sharp died. Each
    defendant, including Timmons, gave the same false alibi in his statement to law
    enforcement officers.
    Evelyn further testified that immediately before leaving the crime scene,
    Timmons returned to Boone's house and came outside with something in his
    hand. Evelyn confirmed the surveillance video also showed Timmons holding
    something when he exited the house, but Evelyn did not know what it was.
    Detective Rodriguez similarly testified that the surveillance video confirmed
    Evelyn's testimony that he left Boone's house after 2:00 a.m. with three
    passengers. Moreover, Timmons's defense counsel conceded in summation that
    Timmons "witnessed a killing" and "[h]e was told what to say, and he went along
    with it."
    Based on these proofs, the jury had sufficient evidence to find that when
    Timmons gave his first statement to law enforcement, he violated the hindering
    statute by attempting to mislead his interrogators.
    Timmons further argues his attempt to create a false alibi did not
    A-2567-17T4
    47
    constitute hindering because the evidence was "legally insufficient" to support
    such a charge. In support, he relies on State v. Valentin, 
    105 N.J. 14
    , 17 (1987),
    for the holding that a defendant "must take the initiative in providing false
    information," and "cannot be culpable if he responds falsely to questioning by
    law enforcement officers."      Valentin, however, relied on a definition of
    hindering that has since been superseded by statute.
    Specifically, when the Court decided Valentin, it was a crime to
    "volunteer" false information to police. 
    Valentin, 105 N.J. at 17
    (referring to
    the word "volunteer" in N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(4), addressing hindering of person
    who committed an offense). In 1999, the Legislature substituted the word
    "gives" for "volunteers" in N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(7) and N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(4).
    L. 1999, c. 297, § 1. Thus, contrary to Timmons's assertion, evidence that a
    defendant simply "gave" wrong information to an officer is sufficient to
    establish that he hindered another's apprehension or prosecution. In any event,
    Timmons was charged here with hindering under a different subsection of the
    statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(5), so this argument has no merit.
    B.    Joseph
    Joseph similarly contends the court erred by failing to grant him a
    judgment of acquittal on the hindering charge. He argues N.J.S.A. 2C:29-
    A-2567-17T4
    48
    3(a)(5) requires "more than simply lying to a police officer to prove a second -
    degree offense, otherwise the third-degree offense set forth in N.J.S.A. 2C:29-
    3(a)(7) would be rendered superfluous."
    The trial court found the evidence showed Joseph went voluntarily to
    police headquarters and purposely gave a false narrative about leaving Boone's
    home before the killing occurred and going to a nightclub in Plainfield. It found
    this "false alibi" by Joseph was "deception."
    Joseph contends that, at most he could only be found guilty of third-degree
    hindering under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(7). N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(7) provides that a
    person commits an offense if he or she "[g]ives false information to a law
    enforcement officer" with the purpose of hindering the detention, apprehension,
    investigation, prosecution, conviction or punishment of another. An offense
    under paragraph 3(a)(7) is a crime of the third degree. N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a). As
    explained by the Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee Statement with
    Committee Amendments to L. 215, c. 265 (Jan. 27, 2016), it is a third-degree
    crime to "give false information to a law enforcement officer if the illegal
    conduct which is charged would constitute a crime of the first or second degree."
    Joseph challenges the prosecutor's statement to the trial judge that "the
    proof of both [N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(5) and N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(7)] are similar,"
    A-2567-17T4
    49
    and that "[i]f [the State] proved he lied to the police, we prove he deceived
    them." He claims the judge mistakenly agreed with the prosecutor.
    Joseph acknowledges N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(5) requires a defendant to use
    force, intimidation or deception, but claims the facts here show otherwise. He
    denies preventing or obstructing the investigation by refusing to confess or
    implicate Dana in light of the testimony of Boone and her children, the physical
    evidence, and the surveillance video. He therefore argues the jury wrongly
    convicted him of second-degree hindering for refusing to cooperate with the
    police, when at most his conduct was only a third-degree offense under N.J.S.A.
    2C:29-3(a)(7). We disagree.
    "The sentencing prerogatives of the prosecutor, a member of the executive
    branch, include 'determin[ing] the extent of a defendant's sentencing exposure
    when deciding what charges will be brought.'" State v. A.T.C., 
    239 N.J. 450
    ,
    468 (2019) (quoting State v. Lagares, 
    127 N.J. 20
    , 27 (1992)). "The grading of
    the offense is dependent upon a defendant's conduct and the nature of the
    underlying charge." State v. Young, 
    448 N.J. Super. 206
    , 223 n.12 (App. Div.
    2017). "Generally, where specific conduct may violate more than one statute,
    the more serious grade or offense will govern." State v. D.V., 
    348 N.J. Super. 107
    , 115 (App. Div. 2002).
    A-2567-17T4
    50
    "[T]he selection of the charge rests in the sound discretion of the
    prosecutor."   State v. Moorer, 
    448 N.J. Super. 94
    , 104 (App. Div. 2016).
    However, "[w]here it is clearly and convincingly shown that an exercise of
    prosecutorial discretion is arbitrary, capricious or otherwise constitutes a patent
    or gross abuse of discretion, the judiciary will intervene." 
    D.V., 348 N.J. Super. at 116
    .
    The record supports the court's finding that Joseph acted with deception
    to hinder Dana's apprehension and prosecution by giving a false alibi to the
    police.   In essence, defendants made a concerted effort to conceal their
    involvement with the nightclub story.        The prosecutor did not abuse his
    discretion by charging Joseph with the more serious offense of second-degree
    hindering under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(a)(5). Accordingly, the trial court did not err
    by denying Joseph's motion for a judgment of acquittal on that charge.
    V.
    (Substitution of Juror No. 10 – Dana and Joseph)
    Dana and Joseph contend the court erred by substituting juror number ten
    after deliberations had progressed substantially and the reconstituted jury did
    not follow its instructions to deliberate anew.         Joseph argues the court
    wrongfully denied his motion for a new trial on this issue. Dana, who did not
    A-2567-17T4
    51
    move for a new trial, argues the court's decision to substitute the juror was highly
    prejudicial and constituted plain error.        We are unpersuaded by these
    contentions. The events unfolded in this fashion.
    On August 31, 2017, at 2:39 p.m., the jury began its deliberations. It
    ended deliberations at 4:26 p.m., after deliberating for one hour and forty-seven
    minutes.3
    Deliberations resumed on September 5, 2017, at 10:37 a.m. and continued
    until 12:22 p.m., a total of one hour and forty-five minutes. At that time, the
    jury sent a note to the judge asking a question about passion/provocation
    manslaughter and requesting to view the "video testimonies" of Boone and
    Dana. The jury then took a lunch recess.
    After the jury returned to the courtroom, the court answered the question
    on passion/provocation manslaughter and then played an excerpt of Dana's video
    statement from 1:55 p.m. to 2:16 p.m., a total of twenty-one minutes. Five
    seconds before the court paused the playback, juror number five asked: "Are
    we able to just go in a room, talk for a couple minutes," saying the jury did not
    need to see the "whole thing." Another juror apparently agreed. The trial judge
    3
    In his brief, Dana asserts that on the first day the jury deliberated for "one
    hour and 46 minutes" and that it began deliberations on the second day at 10:38
    a.m.
    A-2567-17T4
    52
    advised the jury that he could not take a request from one juror, "although others
    seem to be acquiescing to your request," and instructed them to return to the jury
    room to "[t]alk about this." If the jurors wanted to re-listen to the video as
    initially requested, the judge told them to send out a request and he would
    continue the playback and if not, they should continue to deliberate .
    At that point, juror ten asked if court would recess at 3:00 p.m., saying:
    "I have a class at four, and then with my kids and everything else, if we don't
    get this done by today, I can't come back. Like, I have no sitter." The trial judge
    replied: "[Y]ou've got to come back, you're on the jury."
    At sidebar, the judge and counsel discussed juror ten's scheduling
    problem. The judge noted the jury had deliberated for a short time on a trial that
    lasted two months. The judge sent the jurors back to the jury room and directed
    them to stop deliberations and not to talk about the case. After discussing the
    matter further, counsel agreed it was not too late to reconstitute the jury. The
    judge noted in the record that counsel agreed the jury in this "lengthy trial" had
    not deliberated "for an inordinate amount of time," that the jury had actually
    deliberated "a very short time," that it was "not inappropriate to reconstitute the
    jury," and that the newly constituted jury had to commence their deliberations
    again. At the request of Joseph's counsel, the judge and co-counsel agreed to
    A-2567-17T4
    53
    replace juror ten with an alternate other than juror fourteen, who had slept
    through some of the proceedings.
    After the jury returned to the courtroom, juror number one, who wa s
    pregnant with twins, indicated at side bar that she could not stay after 3:00 p.m.
    for a medical reason. The parties agreed to stop at 3:00 p.m. After sidebar
    ended, the court advised the jury that juror one had an appointment at 4:00 p.m.
    and then excused juror ten and replaced her with an alternate. It then sent the
    jury, including juror one, back to deliberate after giving the following
    instruction:
    Ladies and gentleman, as you–as is evident here,
    Juror Number 10 has been excused from the jury. As—
    an alternate, Juror Number 2 has been selected to take
    her place. Now, you—you know why she is not here,
    and this is a personal matter. It was personal to her. It
    had nothing to do with her relationship with other
    members of the deliberating jury. She had child care
    issues.
    So, as of this moment you are a new jury and you
    must start your deliberations over again. The parties
    have the right to a verdict reached by 12 jurors who've
    had the—the full opportunity to deliberate from start to
    finish. The alternate juror, Juror Number 2, has no
    knowledge of any earlier deliberations. Consequently,
    the new deliberating jury must start over at the very
    beginning of deliberations.
    Each member of the original deliberating jury
    must set aside and disregard whatever may have
    A-2567-17T4
    54
    occurred and anything which may have been said in the
    jury room following my instructions to you. You must
    give no weight to any opinion expressed by Juror
    Number 10 during deliberations before that juror was
    excused. Together as a new jury you must consider all
    evidence presented at trial as part of your full and
    complete deliberations until you reach your verdict.
    I will send you now out to commence your
    deliberations. I'll bring you back in at 3:00.
    The reconstituted jury began its deliberations at 2:33 p.m. and returned to
    the courtroom at 3:09 p.m., a total of thirty-six minutes. It sought no additional
    playbacks before rendering the verdicts. The jury found defendants guilty on
    all counts.
    The trial court rejected Joseph's motion for a new trial based on the
    replacement of juror ten. It cited State v. Williams, 
    171 N.J. 151
    , 169 (2002),
    and explained there was no "bright-line rule" with respect to the question of
    whether jury deliberations had progressed too far to permit substitution of an
    alternate juror. The court further explained the question required consideration
    of the length of time a jury had deliberated and the effect that progress in
    deliberations had on the reconstituted jury's ability to begin deliber ations anew.
    (citing State v. Jenkins, 
    182 N.J. 112
    , 132 (2004)).
    With respect to timing, the court noted it had polled every attorney in the
    case regarding the position of the parties. The State and all defense counsel
    A-2567-17T4
    55
    agreed to the juror's replacement and urged the court to act immediately before
    further deliberations occurred. The court also noted it offered to compel juror
    ten to remain, but that it "acceded to the request of all the attorneys and —and
    removed that juror."
    The court found the original jury had deliberated for approximately two-
    and-a-half hours and that it had not reported reaching a partial verdict. Although
    there was "a lot of evidence," the court found the jury had heard it "many, many
    times" through various witnesses and playbacks. It found that "even in closing
    arguments by counsel . . . [t]here was a playback of the surveillance tape where
    the jury was able to repeatedly view what was occurring outside the residence ."
    The court gave the jury specific instructions about commencing their
    deliberations anew. It concluded:
    There's no indication that because the jury
    deliberated for 36 minutes that somehow the defendant
    suffered a manifest denial of justice as a result of the
    [reconstituted] jury. There was an overwhelming
    amount of evidence in this case in which the jury could
    rely on in reaching a quick verdict.
    The trial court's handling of these issues was sound.
    Rule 1:8-2(d)(1) provides that, after a jury begins its deliberations, the
    court may not substitute an alternate juror unless "a juror dies or is discharged
    by the court because of illness or other inability to continue."         When a
    A-2567-17T4
    56
    substitution is made, the court must instruct the jury "to recommence
    deliberations" and to give "such other supplemental instructions as may be
    appropriate." R. 1:8-2(d)(1).
    Rule 1:8-2(d)(1) balances the goals of the right to a fair trial and judicial
    economy. State v. Musa, 
    222 N.J. 554
    , 565 (2015); 
    Jenkins, 182 N.J. at 124
    .
    Given these competing interests, "the trial court must determine the cause of the
    juror's concern and assess the impact of the juror's departure on the deliberative
    process." State v. Ross, 
    218 N.J. 130
    , 147 (2014). Then, "in light of the timing
    of the juror's dismissal and other relevant consideration, the trial court must
    ascertain whether a reconstituted jury will be in a position to conduct open -
    minded and fair deliberations." 
    Ibid. A court cannot
    replace a deliberating juror with an alternate "unless the
    record 'adequately establish[es] that the juror suffers from an inability to
    function that is personal and unrelated to the juror's interaction with the other
    jury members.'" 
    Jenkins, 182 N.J. at 124
    -25 (quoting State v. Hightower, 
    146 N.J. 239
    , 254 (1996)). A trial court must determine whether personal issues or
    troubled relationships in the jury room prompted a juror to seek removal in the
    midst of deliberations. 
    Ross, 218 N.J. at 149
    . It also should consider whether
    a reconstituted jury could meaningfully evaluate and discuss the case. 
    Ibid. A-2567-17T4 57 "No
    bright line rule in respect of the length of jury deliberations triggers
    a finding that deliberations have progressed too far to permit the substitution of
    an alternate." Ibid. (quoting 
    Williams, 171 N.J. at 169
    ). In lieu of a bright line
    rule, a judge should consider such factors as "the timing of the juror's departure,
    his or her explanation of the problem prompting the inquiry, and
    communications from the jury that may indicate whether deliberations have
    progressed to the point at which a reconstituted and properly charged jury will
    be unable to conduct open and mutual deliberations." 
    Ibid. If a court
    permits the substitution of an alternate juror for an excused juror,
    it must provide instructions to the newly reconstituted jury before its
    deliberations. 
    Ibid. It should charge
    the jury as follows:
    the excused juror's departure was prompted by personal
    issues, rather than by his or her view of the case or
    relationships with other jurors, that the reconstituted
    jury should not speculate on the reasons for the juror's
    departure, and that the jury should begin deliberations
    anew by setting aside their previous discussions so that
    the reconstituted jury may conduct full and complete
    deliberations.
    [Ibid.]
    An appellate court's review of a trial court's decision to remove or
    substitute a deliberating juror is deferential. 
    Musa, 222 N.J. at 564-65
    . We will
    not reverse a conviction on this basis absent a proven abuse of discretion. 
    Id. at A-2567-17T4
                                            58
    565.
    A.    Substitution of Juror Ten
    Joseph and Dana argue the court erred by substituting juror ten after jury
    deliberations had progressed significantly.     Joseph acknowledges the court
    replaced juror ten by mutual consent, but argues the parties mistakenly
    concluded that deliberations had not progressed to the point where substitution
    was no longer an option. Dana, meanwhile, argues that remarks by jurors that
    they did not need to hear the remainder of the playback of his testimony
    indicated the jury "had resolved the issue of identity and was focusing on the
    applicability [of the] passion-provocation manslaughter, before the jury was
    reconstituted."
    A court can remove a juror for "purely" personal reasons "without fear
    that the ultimate verdict's validity has been compromised." 
    Jenkins, 182 N.J. at 130
    . Personal reasons may include a juror's "illness, need to attend to a sick
    relative or child-care responsibilities, [or] financial hardship due to absence
    from work" or "the need to meet a family emergency." 
    Musa, 222 N.J. at 570
    (holding juror's failure to appear on second day of deliberations amounted to
    "inability to continue" under Rule 1:8-2(d)(1)).
    Here, the court justifiably removed juror ten for childcare reasons. The
    A-2567-17T4
    59
    court met with the juror at sidebar to ascertain her childcare needs and advised
    the jury of the reason for dismissal. Her removal amounted to an "inability to
    continue" under Rule 1:8-2(d)(1), based on personal reasons.
    Notably, defense counsel did not object below to the removal of juror ten
    and agreed that it was not too late to reconstitute the jury. Dana's claim that the
    jurors' comments during a pause in the readback of his testimony indicated the
    jury had already reached "significant decisions" is nothing more than
    speculation.
    The trial court therefore did not commit plain error by excusing juror ten
    for reasons personal to her and at the urging of all counsel.
    B.       Length of Deliberations
    Joseph and Dana contend the reconstituted jury ignored the instruction to
    deliberate anew. They argue the reconstituted jury deliberated only thirty-six
    minutes, which was an insufficient amount of time to consider testimony of at
    least twenty witnesses and review 384 exhibits over twenty days of trial
    involving three defendants on multiple charges. We reject these claims.
    In making a decision whether to substitute a juror during deliberations,
    courts consider the timing of a juror's departure, the reasons for the departure,
    and any communications from the jury indicating whether deliberations had
    A-2567-17T4
    60
    progressed to a point where a reconstituted jury would be unable to conduct
    "open and mutual deliberations." 
    Ross, 218 N.J. at 149
    . The Model Criminal
    Jury Charge, on which the court below relied, "accurately and concisely conveys
    these instructions."   
    Id. at 151-52
    (citing Model Jury Charges (Criminal),
    "Judge's Instructions When Alternate Juror Empaneled After Deliberations Have
    Begun" (rev. Mar. 14, 2016).
    Joseph relies on 
    Jenkins, 182 N.J. at 112
    , which is factually
    distinguishable. In that case, a deliberating juror became emotional during
    deliberations and told the judge at sidebar that she could not agree with what the
    jury wanted. 
    Id. at 119.
    She agreed with the judge that "[b]ut for the emotional
    factor," the case was already resolved. 
    Id. at 122.
    The judge determined the
    juror was "unable to continue according to the case law," and "removed her from
    the panel." 
    Id. at 122-23.
        The reconstituted jury resumed deliberations and
    returned a guilty verdict twenty-three minutes later. 
    Id. at 123.
    The Court concluded in Jenkins that the reasons for the juror's removal
    were personal to her, but that her colloquy with the judge indicated the
    remaining jurors were about to convict the defendant and therefore jury
    deliberations had advanced too far to permit a substitution with an alternate
    juror. 
    Id. at 131.
    In support of its assessment that the "die appear[ed] to have
    A-2567-17T4
    61
    been cast," the Court stated that the return of a verdict in twenty-three minutes
    lent "credence to the argument that minds were closed when the alternate joined
    the deliberations." 
    Id. at 133.
    It therefore held that the trial court erred by
    failing to declare a mistrial. 
    Ibid. Thus, in Jenkins,
    the Court did not look solely
    at the length of the reconstituted jury's deliberations. Instead, it considered the
    juror's reasons for seeking removal and her statements to the court that indicated
    deliberations had progressed too far to permit the substitution of an alternate.
    By contrast, the record in this case does not compel the conclusion that
    the trial judge's decision to replace juror ten constituted an abuse of discretion.
    During deliberations, the jury requested playbacks of the videos of Boone's and
    Dana's statements. These requests suggest the jury's uncertainty concerning
    guilt or innocence of defendants. Indeed, there is nothing in the record to
    suggest the original jurors had reached a decision as to any factual or legal issue
    or that the reconstituted jury was unable to engage in open-minded discussions.
    The request by a juror to return to the jury room, which was spoken out of turn,
    was insufficient to permit the judge to determine that jury deliberations had
    progressed too far to permit a substitution.
    Unlike the excused juror in Jenkins, juror ten did not suggest that the other
    jurors had reached any decisions on guilt or innocence.
    A-2567-17T4
    62
    Notably, all counsel agreed with the prosecutor that the jury had not
    deliberated "beyond a point" where it could be reconstituted. Because counsel
    for Joseph and Dana asked the court to reconstitute the jury, and the court did
    so, they cannot now claim the procedure they requested below was error and
    prejudicial. State v. Jenkins, 
    178 N.J. 347
    , 358 (2004) (holding criminal analog
    of the invited error doctrine prevents defendants from manipulating the system).
    See also State v. A.R., 
    213 N.J. 542
    , 561 (2013) (acknowledging the "common
    sense notion" that a "disappointed litigant cannot argue on appeal that a prior
    ruling was erroneous when that party urged the lower court to adopt the
    proposition now alleged to be error.") (internal citations omitted).
    There also is no support in the record for the claim by Joseph and Dana
    that the court rushed the jury to reach a verdict "before the 3 p.m. deadline ."
    Both Joseph and Dana claim the jury quickly reached a verdict based on juror
    one's medical condition. The court, however, only instructed the jury that juror
    one had an appointment at 4:00 p.m. and that deliberations would end that day
    at 3:00 p.m. The court also instructed the jurors to consider "all evidence" and
    conduct "full and complete deliberations" until it reached a verdict.        It is
    presumed the jury followed these instructions. 
    Loftin, 146 N.J. at 390
    .
    We decline to speculatively assume that the replacement juror did not
    A-2567-17T4
    63
    meaningfully contribute to the deliberations simply because the jury deliberated
    for about a half hour. Given the overwhelming evidence, including the video
    statements, the surveillance video, the testimony of witnesses, law enforcement
    officers, and experts, the jury could have quickly reached its verdicts. The court
    appropriately instructed the reconstituted jury to begin deliberations anew , and
    we must presume the instruction was heeded.
    We further note that although there was extensive testimony for the jury
    to consider, the evidence against defendants was very strong and the jury
    reached different verdicts based on each defendants' individual culpability.
    In sum, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it dismissed juror
    ten and directed the reconstituted jury to begin deliberations anew. Likewise, it
    did not err by denying Joseph's motion for a new trial based on the lack of jury
    deliberations.
    VI.
    (Non-Redaction of Evelyn's Assertions of Fear – Joseph and Dana)
    Joseph and Dana contend the trial court erred by admitting into evidence
    Evelyn's two statements without any redactions for expressions of fear . Joseph
    argues the risk of prejudice from Evelyn's repeated statements that "he would be
    murdered if he talked" far outweighed their probative value, and that the court
    A-2567-17T4
    64
    erred by denying his motion for a new trial without "specifically referencing
    N.J.R.E. 403." Dana argues the court's refusal to redact Evelyn's expressions of
    fear violated Evidence Rules 403 and 404(b) and his constitutional right to a fair
    trial. We conclude the court did not err by admitting Evelyn's statements
    without these redactions.
    The pertinent context is as follows. On August 20 and 21, 2013, Evelyn
    gave two recorded statements to the police. He gave the second statement after
    viewing the surveillance video.        At that time, Evelyn changed his initial
    statement and acknowledged that he did not leave Boone's home on the night of
    the murder until after Gibbons arrived at approximately 2:00 a.m.
    At trial, Evelyn testified about events that occurred on the evening of
    Sharp's death, but after a lunch break he repeatedly claimed a lack of recollection
    even when shown a transcript of his statements. The court conducted a Gross
    hearing at which the prosecutor played Evelyn's statements through the
    testimony of Rodriguez.       At various times in his statements, Evelyn was
    reluctant to answer questions, saying the police would be investigating his own
    murder next.     He referred to himself as "definitely dead" if he testified,
    explaining "they're definitely gonna come after me," that "people on the streets
    talk," and that "[t]here's rules on the streets."
    A-2567-17T4
    65
    After the playback of the first statement, Joseph's counsel argued Evelyn's
    expressions of fear were "[h]ighly prejudicial." The court indicated that based
    on what it heard, the jury needed to understand why Evelyn lied to the police.
    It found the expressions of fear were relevant because they provided "one
    explanation" for why Evelyn initially was "somewhat forthcoming" in court, but
    after lunch claimed he had no recollection of the details even after viewing
    transcripts to refresh his memory.
    At the conclusion of the Gross hearing, the court found that Evelyn was
    feigning a lack of recollection based on a fear of the consequences. After
    reviewing the fifteen Gross factors, the court concluded that the statements were
    reliable and admissible as prior inconsistent statements under N.J.R.E.
    803(a)(1).   The court acknowledged Evelyn's expressed fear of "being the
    subject of a homicide investigation himself were he to cooperate with the
    police," but found that his only motive in expressing reluctance to cooperate was
    "to protect his friends, his cousin, and also to protect himself."
    After the court's ruling, Dana's counsel sought to redact "all things such
    as, obviously, [Evelyn's statement] I'm a dead man on the street." The court
    noted it had to balance any prejudice against the probative value of the evidence.
    In the court's view, Evelyn's expressions of fear were highly probative to explain
    A-2567-17T4
    66
    why he did not want to testify.
    In his later motion for a new trial, Joseph's counsel raised the redaction
    argument, claiming Evelyn's expressions of fear inferred that defendants were
    dangerous people who would retaliate if he told the truth and that their
    prejudicial effect outweighed any probative value. The court found that Evelyn
    appeared in court to testify and swore to tell the truth, that the State had no notice
    of Evelyn's lack of recollection before he testified, and that defense counsel had
    the opportunity to cross-examine him. It concluded:
    So it was the jury's decision to determine what credit
    should be afforded to his . . . prior recorded statement
    to the police. It's not for this Court to interfere with
    that fact-finding function of the jury. Therefore, that
    does—there was no manifest denial of justice on these
    grounds.
    The trial court's rulings on this issue comported with the applicable law.
    Evidence Rule 403 "mandates the exclusion of evidence that is otherwise
    admissible 'if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the risk of (a)
    undue prejudice, confusion of issues, or misleading the jury or (b) undue delay,
    waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.'" State v. Cole,
    
    229 N.J. 430
    , 448 (2017) (quoting N.J.R.E. 403). To determine undue prejudice,
    the inquiry is "whether the probative value of the evidence 'is so significantly
    outweighed by [its] inherently inflammatory potential as to have a probable
    A-2567-17T4
    67
    capacity to divert the minds of the jurors from a reasonable and fair evaluation
    of the' issues." 
    Ibid. (quoting State v.
    Thompson, 
    59 N.J. 396
    , 421 (1971)).
    Thus, "the mere possibility that evidence could be prejudicial does not justify
    its exclusion." State v. Wakefield, 
    190 N.J. 397
    , 429 (2007) (quoting State v.
    Koskovich, 
    168 N.J. 448
    , 486 (2001)).
    A trial court has broad discretion under Rule 403 to exclude evidence that
    might be prejudicial or that might divert a jury's focus from relevant issues in
    the case. State v. McGuire, 
    419 N.J. Super. 88
    , 135 (App. Div. 2011). When a
    trial court weighs the probative value of evidence against its prejudicial effect
    pursuant to N.J.R.E. 403, its ruling should be overturned only if it constitutes "a
    clear error of judgment." 
    Koedatich, 112 N.J. at 313
    . An appellate court will
    affirm a trial court's decision unless it was "so wide of the mark that a manifest
    denial of justice resulted." 
    McGuire, 419 N.J. Super. at 135
    (quoting State v.
    Lykes, 
    192 N.J. 519
    , 534 (2007)).
    Contrary to Joseph's assertion, the court conducted the required
    "balancing" under Rule 403, and found that Evelyn's expressions of fear were
    prejudicial but "highly probative" to explain why Evelyn did not want to testify .
    The record supports the court's conclusion.
    Evelyn expressed a fear of testifying in his statements to the police and a
    A-2567-17T4
    68
    failure of recollection at trial. The jury, however, had the opportunity to observe
    his demeanor on the video recordings of his statements. By viewing these
    recordings, the jury could assess Evelyn's "facial expressions and gestures as
    well as his words," and determine whether his expressions of fear were "strategic
    or sincere." 
    Cole, 229 N.J. at 451
    . The jury also had the opportunity to observe
    his demeanor at trial, and defense counsel had the opportunity to cross-examine
    him. The court properly instructed the jury that it was their role to assess the
    credibility of the witnesses.
    The trial court therefore did not abuse its discretion by admitting Evelyn's
    statements without redacting his expressions of fear. As the court below found,
    his statements were highly probative to explain why he did not want to testify.
    The possibility that this evidence might be prejudicial by suggesting that
    defendants or their associates were dangerous men did not justify its exclusion.
    Instead, Evelyn's expressions of fear provided important context for his
    changing statements and lack of recollection, and explained his conduct as a
    witness.
    Dana also argues that Rule 404(b) requires the exclusion of Evelyn's
    expressions of fear because they accuse him of "bad character" and suggest he
    committed another bad act. Dana, however, did not raise this objection at trial.
    A-2567-17T4
    69
    Instead, he argued below that the admission of Evelyn's assertions were
    "incredibly prejudicial," that they were "clearly stuff that ha[d] to be redacted,"
    and that he wanted to redact "all things such as, obviously, I'm a dead man on
    the street." On appeal, he now argues the court erred by not excluding this
    evidence under Rule 403, "as reinforced by N.J.R.E. 404(b)."
    N.J.R.E. 404(b) applies to evidence of "other crimes, wrongs or acts . . .
    ." This rule recognizes that evidence of other crimes can be unduly prejudicial
    and therefore inadmissible when offered solely to prove a defendant's guilt of
    the crime charged. State v. Rose, 
    206 N.J. 141
    , 159 (2011). However, if the
    misconduct evidence is material to a non-propensity purpose, it may be
    admissible "if its probative value is not outweighed by the risk of prejudice."
    
    Ibid. Evelyn's expressions of
    fear do not assert a bad act or wrong individually
    on the part of Joseph or Dana. He did not testify that, more generically, he
    feared reprisal from them, but only that he was afraid of being killed if he
    testified. He could have been expressing his fear of retaliation from their family
    members or other members of the community. See State v. Byrd, 
    198 N.J. 319
    ,
    341 (2009) (recognizing a "persistent problem of witness intimidation in New
    Jersey"). Moreover, his fears were vague. Because Evelyn's expressions of fear
    A-2567-17T4
    70
    do not implicate uncharged bad act evidence, a Rule 404(b) analysis is not
    required. 
    Rose, 206 N.J. at 179
    (addressing the viability of res gestae). Thus,
    this evidence does not meet the threshold determination under Rule 404(b) to
    relate to "other crimes." 
    Ibid. In addition, neither
    Joseph nor Dana challenge the court's ruling that this
    evidence was reliable and admissible as prior inconsistent statements under
    N.J.R.E. 803(a)(1)(A).
    The trial court did not err or misapply its discretion by admitting Evelyn's
    statements, without redactions for his expressions of fear.
    VII.
    (Confrontation – Timmons)
    Timmons argues that the court violated his right to confront the witnesses
    against him by limiting his defense counsel's opening statement concerning the
    timing of the superseding indictment. Specifically, he argues that the court erred
    by refusing to allow his counsel to comment on the fact that the State initially
    charged him with hindering and added the other charges against him "over three
    years later." This argument has no merit.
    During opening argument by Timmons's counsel, the State objected to his
    reference to a grand jury's indictment three years after the murder. The State
    A-2567-17T4
    71
    argued the delay was not relevant. Defense counsel argued such evidence "went
    to the quality of the investigation."
    The relevant timing is as follows. The crimes here occurred on August
    18, 2013. An initial indictment dated October 15, 2014, charged Timmons with
    hindering. On October 21, 2016, he was charged in a superseding indictment
    with additional counts of conspiracy to commit aggravated assault, murder, and
    endangering an injured victim. On August 29, 2017, the jury granted Timmons's
    motion for judgment of acquittal on all counts except hindering.
    The court ruled the quality of the investigation had nothing to do with the
    prosecution of the case. It agreed with the State's position and sustained the
    objection, finding the fact the case was presented to the grand jury three years
    later was not relevant to any issue.
    The purpose of an opening statement is to better prepare a jury to
    understand the evidence. 
    Wakefield, 190 N.J. at 442
    . These statements are
    limited to facts that counsel intends to prove. 
    Ibid. Assertions in opening
    statements are not evidential. State v. Cordero, 
    438 N.J. Super. 472
    , 486 (App.
    Div. 2014); State v. Anastasia, 
    356 N.J. Super. 534
    , 543 (App. Div. 2003).
    Contrary to Timmons's assertion, the court did not deprive Timmons of
    the right to cross-examine witnesses by limiting his defense counsel's opening
    A-2567-17T4
    72
    argument with respect to the timing of the additional charges in the superseding
    indictment. The trial court duly advised the jury in the preliminary instructions
    and final charge that the attorney's comments were not evidence. Defense
    counsel had ample opportunity to cross-examine all of the State's witnesses who
    testified at trial.
    The timing of the later charges was not relevant to any fact in issue. See
    N.J.R.E. 401 ("'Relevant evidence' means evidence having a tendency in reason
    to prove or disprove any fact of consequence to the determination of the
    action."). Furthermore, at the close of the State's case, the judge acquitted
    Timmons of the additional charges, and the jury found him guilty only of
    hindering. Timmons therefore suffered no prejudice.
    For these many reasons, the trial court did not err by sustaining the
    prosecutor's objection to the opening comments by Timmons's counsel regarding
    the timing of the additional charges.
    VIII.
    (Late Discovery – Timmons)
    Timmons argues the court erred by failing to preclude Bria's testimony
    about the contents of a report that the State produced late in discovery . This
    argument is unavailing.
    A-2567-17T4
    73
    This is the relevant chronology. In July 2017, Joseph moved to preclude
    the late discovery of typewritten notes prepared by Detective Rodriguez from
    an interview of Boone in 2015. Boone told Rodriguez and Valera that Bria
    claimed Joseph had a knife on the night of Sharp's murder. Joseph's counsel
    sought a ruling that Bria could not be examined about her statement to Boone
    because it was "highly prejudicial" to his client.
    The court reserved its decision until it could hold a Rule 104 hearing with
    Rodriguez. Because Rodriguez then was out of state, the court ruled that it
    would hold the hearing after he returned during which time the defense could
    interview Boone and Bria about the proposed testimony. It is unclear from the
    record whether the defense conducted any such follow-up investigation.
    At the hearing on August 2, 2017, Detective Rodriguez testified that he
    received a call from Boone in January 2015 offering additional information
    about Sharp's murder. He and Valera spoke with Boone at her new residence.
    Boone advised the officers that Bria, who was dating Joseph at the time of the
    murder, told her Joseph had a weapon that night, and that she had picked up the
    knife after it had fallen to the floor and had placed it back into his pocket .
    Rodriguez subsequently went to Bria's home and recorded her statement on May
    7, 2015. Rodriguez determined that Bria's information was unsubstantiated and
    A-2567-17T4
    74
    had no investigative value. He typed up his notes, filed them in his computer,
    and forgot about them. He discovered the document while "prepping" for trial
    about "two or three weeks" before the Rule 104 hearing, and turned them over
    to the prosecutor. The State provided the document to the defense on July 17,
    2017.
    The court found the failure to provide the notes was inadvertent,
    explaining that the detective prepared it some years after the incident, that he no
    longer was in the same unit, and that he immediately sent it to the prosecutor,
    who then forwarded the notes to the attorneys. It found that since the production
    of the notes, the defense had "more than enough time" to inquire about them and
    interview witnesses. The court concluded: "I don't find that there was anything
    untoward on the conduct of the State or this witness. I don't—I further find that
    there is no undue prejudice to the parties in this case. And so I will allow
    testimony regarding the contents of that."
    Officer Valera testified that he and Rodriguez re-interviewed Boone in
    2015, and that the interview was not recorded. When asked by Dana's defense
    counsel whether, "[a]s a result of that interview did you question any—other
    than—well, did you question anyone regarding the presence of a knife at the
    scene on William Street[,]" Valera replied: "In 2015, no, we did not ."
    A-2567-17T4
    75
    Further, Rodriguez testified that he conducted an additional investigation
    in 2015. After receiving information from Boone, he went to her house and
    interviewed her. Rodriguez said Boone provided information that she heard
    secondhand. He also took another statement from Bria in June 2015, and
    examined Sharp's phone. Bria did not testify at trial on behalf of the State or
    the defense.
    We recognize a defendant in a criminal case is entitled to broad discovery.
    State in Interest of A.B., 
    219 N.J. 542
    , 555 (2014). The purpose of discovery is
    "to assure the parties every legitimate avenue of inquiry prior to trial to enhance
    the search for the truth." State v. Burnett, 
    198 N.J. Super. 53
    , 58 (App. Div.
    1984). A defendant, however, "cannot transform the discovery process into an
    unfocused, haphazard search for evidence." State v. D.R.H., 
    127 N.J. 249
    , 256
    (1992).
    A party has a continuing duty to provide discovery. R. 3:13-3(f). If a
    party fails to comply, the court may "order such party to permit the discovery of
    materials not previously disclosed, grant a continuance or delay during trial, or
    prohibit the party from introducing in evidence the material not disclosed, or it
    may enter such other order as it deems appropriate." R. 3:13-3(f).          Where
    circumstances permit, an adjournment or continuance is the preferred remedy.
    A-2567-17T4
    76
    State v. Clark, 
    347 N.J. Super. 497
    , 509 (App. Div. 2002).
    An appellate court reviews a trial court's discovery order for abuse of
    discretion. 
    A.B., 219 N.J. at 554
    . We generally defer to a trial court's resolution
    of a discovery matter, "provided its determination is not so wide of the mark or
    is not 'based on a mistaken understanding of the applicable law.'" 
    Ibid. (quoting Pomerantz Paper
    Corp. v. New Cmty. Corp., 
    207 N.J. 344
    , 371 (2011)).            We
    only will reverse a conviction if the State's discovery violation so prejudiced the
    defendant that a new trial is required. State v. Blake, 
    234 N.J. Super. 166
    , 173
    (App. Div. 1989). That standard is not met here.
    There was no unfair prejudice to Timmons. As the court found, the State's
    late discovery was inadvertent, and immediately after receiving Rodriguez's
    notes from the 2015 interview the prosecutor forwarded them to all defense
    counsel.   Cf. 
    Blake, 234 N.J. Super. at 173
    (holding discovery violation
    prejudiced the defendant because it could not have been inadvertent). Moreover,
    Timmons's defense counsel had time between July 19, 2017, when the court
    reserved decision on his motion, to August 2, 2017, when the court held the Rule
    104 hearing, to interview Boone and Bria about the matter. It does not appear
    from the record that anyone did so.
    Furthermore, Bria did not testify at trial. Bria told her sister that Joseph
    A-2567-17T4
    77
    had a knife, not Timmons. In sum, although we do not encourage similar delays
    in future cases, there is no support for Timmons's argument that the late
    discovery of Rodriguez's notes warranted a reversal and remand for a new trial.
    IX.
    (Fingerprint Evidence – Joseph)
    Joseph contends the court erred by admitting testimony from fingerprint
    experts Curran and Napp. He argues Curran's testimony was an improper net
    opinion and that Napp's testimony violated discovery rules. He also argues the
    court's failure to grant a new trial based on Napp's testimony resulted in a
    miscarriage of justice that required reversal. We reject those contentions, and
    hold the trial court did not err by admitting the expert opinions of Curran and
    Napp.
    Curran was the investigator who identified the fingerprints and palm print
    recovered at the crime scene. On the morning of opening arguments, defense
    counsel moved to preclude her testimony regarding the bloody palm print
    because her report did not discuss the methodology used to support her opinion
    that it belonged to Joseph. The prosecutor responded that there was no time for
    Curran to prepare a supplemental report because he planned to call her as a
    witness that day.
    A-2567-17T4
    78
    The trial court conducted a Rule 104 hearing to address the "why,
    wherefore, and how of her palm print opinion." Curran explained at that hearing
    how she recovered the bloody palm print on the porch railing and removed the
    section of railing for further examination. She followed the ACE-V method to
    analyze, compare and evaluate the palm print, and then sent it to another
    fingerprint examiner for verification.
    Curran detailed her methodology, noting that she first determined there
    was enough detail on the palm print to conduct a side-by-side comparison. She
    compared the palm print with two "ten print cards" provided by the prosecutor's
    office.   The two cards belonged to Dana and Joseph, and included their
    fingerprints and their left and right palm prints. Curran looked for general
    patterns and individual ridge details to find "all common points." She found
    thirty-five points of comparison. She testified that no points on the palm print
    were inconsistent with Joseph's print, and concluded they were a match . She
    sent the bloody palm print to Napp, who verified her results.
    Curran acknowledged her report to Sergeant Chopra did not include a
    discussion of the "ACE-V analysis" of the palm print and did not note whether
    a verification took place. However, she stated at the Rule 104 hearing that she
    used the ACE-V methodology to analyze, compare, and evaluate the bloody
    A-2567-17T4
    79
    palm print recovered at the scene.
    Curran testified at trial that the ACE-V methodology was the industry
    standard for fingerprint identifications and comparisons.         She stated the
    prosecutor's office, where she worked in the Crime Scene Response Unit,
    followed those industry standards, and that she also followed them when
    conducting print comparisons. She explained that ACE-V stood for analysis,
    comparison, evaluation, and verification, and described the first three steps.
    Curran used the ACE-V methodology to examine the palm print. After
    determining the print had sufficient clarity, she scanned it into her computer and
    compared it to Joseph's ten-print card to find matching points. She found no
    differences and concluded based on a reasonable degree of scientific certainty
    that the palm print was a match to Joseph's right palm. Curran then gave the
    photograph and the inked palm print to Napp to verify and reach an independent
    conclusion.
    Curran testified that she wrote a seven-page report for her supervisor that
    outlined her investigation. The report indicated she had completed a "formal
    comparison" of the palm print and determined that it belonged to Joseph .
    Although her report did not mention that she followed the ACE-V methodology
    with regard to the palm print, Curran testified that a "formal comparison"
    A-2567-17T4
    80
    referred to the ACE-V methodology.
    The court denied Joseph's motion to bar Curran, finding that Curran's
    report indicated she had compared the palm print and Joseph's "inked" print, and
    that her testimony at the Rule 104 hearing amplified the basis for her opinion .
    The court concluded that, based on the additional testimony, Curran's opinion
    was "no longer net, if in fact, what she had written in her report was a net
    opinion."
    After Curran's first day of testimony, the prosecutor informed the trial
    judge he might seek to also qualify Napp as a fingerprint expert, in anticipation
    of Curran's testimony that Napp performed the verification. Joseph's counsel
    objected, saying the State had not named Napp as an expert witness. The court
    reserved its decision, noting Napp was on the State's witness list.
    Before calling Napp as a witness, the State renewed its request to call him
    as an expert. The prosecutor explained:
    in addition to him testifying as to his responsibilities at
    the autopsy, based on what Dr. Falzon indicated, the
    State intends to qualify Sergeant Napp as a fingerprint
    expert to elicit the verification procedures that he did in
    relation to the fingerprints in this particular case.
    He argued expert testimony was necessary in response to attempts by Joseph's
    counsel to undermine Curran's opinion at trial, noting Curran identified Napp as
    A-2567-17T4
    81
    the verifier in her report and at the Rule 104 hearing.
    The court conducted another Rule 104 hearing. Napp testified that as a
    member of the crime scene unit he had attended a State Police course on how to
    compare fingerprints using the ACE-V methodology and that he had performed
    comparisons for ten years. He explained the prosecutor's office and his lab used
    the ACE-V methodology. Napp said he went through the ACE-V steps to verify
    Curran's findings regarding the fingerprints and palm print. He did not write a
    report in his "secondary" role, explaining, "the verification phase doesn't write
    a report."
    Upon hearing this explanation, the court granted the State's application to
    allow Napp to offer expert testimony.
    The admissibility of opinion evidence rests within the trial court's
    discretion. State v. J.L.G., 
    234 N.J. 265
    , 301 (2018). We are satisfied the court
    did not abuse its discretion in admitting the expert testimony of Curran and
    Napp.
    A.    Curran
    Contrary to Joseph's assertion, the State demonstrated at the Rule 104
    hearing, that Curran's methodology met the benchmark of N.J.R.E. 702. See
    State v. J.R., 
    227 N.J. 393
    , 410 (2017) (holding at Rule 104 hearing proponent
    A-2567-17T4
    82
    of expert's testimony could demonstrate that methodology met benchmark of
    N.J.R.E. 702, and opposing party could challenge reliability of expert's opinion).
    Curran testified that the ACE-V methodology was the industry standard and that
    she used this method when examining the fingerprints and the bloody palm print
    recovered at the crime scene.
    She explained in detail the steps that she followed to analyze, compare
    and evaluate the print, and to reach the conclusion that it belonged to Joseph .
    She also testified that although her report indicated only that she did a "formal
    comparison" of the palm print, the phrase referred to her use of the ACE-V
    methodology. Curran therefore supported her conclusions with factual evidence
    and explained her methodology, and the results were reliable. 
    Fortin, 178 N.J. at 597
    (holding expert testimony was admissible under N.J.R.E. 702 if
    methodology was valid, procedures were applied correctly, and results were
    reliable). Defense counsel had an ample opportunity to cross-examine Curran
    about her fingerprint analysis and comparison.
    Given the circumstances, the court properly admitted Curran's expert
    testimony and did not abuse its discretion.
    B.    Napp
    Joseph contends the discovery rules barred Napp's expert testimony
    A-2567-17T4
    83
    because the State did not notify defense counsel before trial that he would testify
    as an expert and failed to provide an expert report. Specifically, he argues the
    State violated Rule 3:13-3(b)(1)(I), by failing to list Napp as an expert witness
    and to provide the defense with his curriculum vitae and expert report. He
    further argues the court erred by denying his motion for a new trial on this issue.
    In denying Joseph's motion, the trial court found the State had provided
    all counsel with Napp's curriculum vitae before trial and that all counsel had the
    opportunity to challenge Napp's qualifications at a Rule 104 hearing . The court
    also noted that Napp's name appeared on the State's witness list and in Curran's
    report as an independent verifier. It therefore concluded Joseph "failed to show
    how the admission of Napp's testimony unfairly prejudiced him."
    Napp testified during voir dire that he had worked for the prosecutor's
    office for eighteen years, of which he spent ten years in the Crime Scene
    Response Unit, where he performed fingerprint work. He completed a two-week
    training course on fingerprint identification held by the New Jersey State Police,
    and stated that his lab used the methodology called ACE-V.
    Napp performed the verification phase of the ACE-V methodology for the
    identifications made by Curran.        To verify her work, he performed an
    independent analysis, comparison, and evaluation of the bloody fingerprint and
    A-2567-17T4
    84
    the palm print recovered at the crime scene.          He explained the ACE-V
    methodology and the factual bases for his opinions. Napp reached the same
    conclusions as Curran. In his opinion, to a reasonable degree of scientific
    certainty, both prints were a match to Joseph.
    When asked if he wrote a report in this case about his verification, Napp
    replied: "No. The verifier doesn't write reports. They just get mentioned in the
    report by the person who does the initial comparison." Napp did not think it was
    unusual or irregular that Curran did not indicate in her report that she followed
    the ACE-V methodology with respect to the palm print, explaining it was
    "unimportant as long as her conclusions are written."
    Rule 3:13-3(b)(1)(I) provides, in relevant part, that post indictment
    discovery include:
    names and addresses of each person whom the
    prosecutor expects to call to trial as an expert witness,
    the expert's qualifications, the subject matter on which
    the expert is expected to testify, a copy of the report, if
    any, of such expert witness, or if no report is prepared,
    a statement of the facts and opinions for which the
    expert is expected to testify, and a summary of the
    grounds for each opinion.          Except as otherwise
    provided in R. 3:10-3, if this information is not
    furnished 30 days in advance of trial, the expert witness
    may, upon application by the defendant, be barred from
    testifying at trial . . . .
    A trial court has "broad discretion to determine what remedy, if any, it
    A-2567-17T4
    85
    should impose because of a failure to make expert disclosures." State v. Heisler,
    
    422 N.J. Super. 399
    , 414-15 (App. Div. 2011), rev'd and remanded on other
    grounds, No. A-3343-13 (App. Div. Mar. 14, 2016). "Court rules allow, but do
    not require, a court to bar an expert's testimony if discovery is withheld."        
    Id. at 415.
    In the exercise of its discretion, a court may consider such factors as:
    (1) the absence of any intent to mislead; and (2) the absence of surprise or
    prejudice that would result from admission of the expert testimony. State v.
    LaBrutto, 
    114 N.J. 187
    , 205 (1989); 
    Heisler, 422 N.J. Super. at 415
    . In this
    context, prejudice "refers not to the impact of the testimony itself, but the
    aggrieved party's inability to contest the testimony because of late notice."
    
    Heisler, 422 N.J. Super. at 415
    .
    Joseph cannot demonstrate surprise in this case because Napp appeared
    on the witness list and Curran's report identified him as the verifier. The State
    called Napp as an expert witness in response to concerns raised in Joseph's
    motion, which his defense counsel argued on the first day of trial. As the State
    notes in its brief, the late objection to Curran's report left the State "insufficient
    time" to put Joseph on notice that Napp would testify as an additional expert.
    Moreover, the court conducted a Rule 104 hearing which provided defense
    counsel with the opportunity to challenge Napp's qualifications. Under these
    A-2567-17T4
    86
    facts, there is no evidence to show that Napp's testimony was a surprise or that
    the prosecutor's intent was to mislead.
    Napp testified that the verifier of fingerprint comparisons did not prepare
    a report and that, at most, his name would appear in the initial report addressing
    the first three steps of the ACE-V methodology. In this context, the lack of an
    expert report did not prevent defense counsel from cross-examining Napp in
    order to point out any flaws or inconsistencies in his verification, as he
    performed the same analysis, comparison, and evaluation as Curran.
    We are satisfied the trial court did not abuse its discretion by allowing
    Napp to give expert testimony without prior notice. The lack of earlier notice
    was not "clearly capable of producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2. Joseph also
    is not entitled to a new trial based on the admission of Napp's expert test imony.
    X.
    (Flight Charge – Joseph)
    Joseph contends the court erred by giving the jury a flight charge . He
    further argues the court's failure to limit the charge to the first three counts led
    the jury to ascribe consciousness of guilt to the hindering count against him. We
    reject this claim.
    The State requested a jury charge on flight as to all defendants. Counsel
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    for Joseph objected, arguing there was insufficient evidence that Joseph fled the
    scene. His attorney argued Joseph did not live at 143 William Street and that he
    did not have to stay there after Gibbons called the police. The State responded
    that Joseph was staying at Boone's house on William Street, explaining "that's
    why his book bag and his clothing" were found inside Boone's house.
    The trial court ruled that a jury could interpret Joseph's actions as flight
    and that "[i]t's evident in this case," noting "[h]e didn't return to the house."
    Defense counsel acknowledged Joseph did not provide an explanation as to why
    he left the scene. The court then read the proposed charge. Joseph's counsel did
    not raise an objection to its contents.
    The prosecutor argued flight in summation, telling the jury that while
    Gibbons was calling 9-1-1, Dana, Joseph, and Timmons fled the scene. He
    argued: "Are these actions of men who have done no wrong? To leave their
    friend on the floor before any help arrives? No, ladies and gentlemen. No." He
    then argued these were actions of men, who were guilty of the crimes charged.
    In its final instructions, the court gave the following flight charge:
    There's been some testimony in this case from
    which you may infer that a defendant fled shortly after
    the alleged commission of a crime. Defendants deny
    any flight. The question of whether a defendant fled
    after the commission of a crime is another question of
    fact for your determination. Mere departure from a
    A-2567-17T4
    88
    place where a crime has been committed does not
    constitute flight.
    If you find that a defendant, fearing that an
    accusation or arrest would be made against him on the
    charge involved in the indictment, took refuge in flight
    for the purpose of evading the accusation or arrest on
    that charge, then you may consider such flight in
    connection with all the other evidence in the case as an
    indication of proof of consciousness of guilt.
    Flight may only be considered as evidence of
    consciousness of guilt if you should determine that a
    defendant's purpose in leaving was to evade accusation
    or arrest for the offense charged in the indictment. It is
    for you as judges of the facts to decide whether or not
    evidence of flight shows a consciousness of guilt, and
    the weight to be given to such evidence in light of all
    the other evidence in the case.
    The court's instruction on flight largely tracked the Model Jury Charge. See
    Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Flight" (rev. May 10, 2010).
    We are mindful that "[a]ppropriate and proper jury instructions are
    essential for a fair trial." State v. Baum, 
    224 N.J. 147
    , 158-59 (2016) (quoting
    State v. Reddish, 
    181 N.J. 553
    , 613 (2004)). The court must ensure that the jury
    receives "accurate instructions on the law as it pertains to the facts and issues of
    each case . . . ." 
    Ibid. An appellate court
    reviews a jury charge "as a whole" to
    determine whether there was any error. State v. Torres, 
    183 N.J. 554
    , 564
    (2005).
    A-2567-17T4
    89
    Joseph did not request the trial court to limit the flight charge to the first
    three counts of the indictment. Because he raises the limitations argument for
    the first time on appeal, we must apply the plain error standard. R. 2:10-2.
    "Flight from the scene of a crime, depending on the circumstances, may
    be evidential of consciousness of guilt, provided the flight pertains to the crime
    charged." State v. Randolph, 
    228 N.J. 566
    , 594 (2017). The circumstances of
    flight must "'reasonably justify an inference that it was done with a
    consciousness of guilt' to avoid apprehension on the charged offense." 
    Id. at 594-95
    (quoting State v. Ingram, 
    196 N.J. 23
    , 46 (2008)); see also State v.
    Latney, 
    415 N.J. Super. 169
    , 177 (App. Div. 2010) (holding evidence of the
    defendant's flight was not sufficient to infer that he fled to avoid apprehension
    for robbery, where court excluded pertinent facts).
    Here, the jury could draw reasonable inferences from the evidence that
    Joseph fled the crime scene to avoid arrest. Contrary to Joseph's assertion, he
    stayed overnight at Boone's house on the evening prior to the murder and left
    the scene shortly after Sharp's death. His flight occurred after the commission
    of the offenses for which he was charged. He knew that Gibbons would discover
    the body after entering the home. Moreover, he fled the home in a van with
    Dana and Timmons, at which time, according to Evelyn, Dana told the others
    A-2567-17T4
    90
    what alibi to tell the police. The surveillance video confirmed that Joseph left
    the scene shortly before the police arrived.
    The jury could draw a reasonable inference that the circumstances
    surrounding the flight were intrinsically indicative of a consciousness of guilt
    of all crimes charged, including hindering. Joseph adopted the alibi as he fled
    the scene, knowing that police would discover Sharp's body and that the police
    would consider him as a suspect. It therefore was not inappropriate for the jury
    to consider flight to prove the hindering charge.
    The jury charge on flight was warranted.
    XI.
    (Excessive Sentences – Timmons and Dana)
    Timmons and Dana argue the court imposed excessive sentences upon
    them. These contentions require little comment.
    An appellate court reviews a sentence under an abuse-of-discretion
    standard. State v. Miller, 
    237 N.J. 15
    , 28 (2019). It must "consider whether the
    trial court has made findings of fact that are grounded in competent, reasonably
    credible evidence and whether 'the factfinder [has] appl[ied] correct legal
    principles in exercising its discretion.'" State v. Blackmon, 
    202 N.J. 283
    , 297
    (2010) (quoting State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 363 (1984)). An appellate court may
    A-2567-17T4
    91
    not substitute its judgment for that of the sentencing court. State v. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. 57
    , 70 (2014). Rather, an appellate court must affirm the sentence unless a
    trial court violated the sentencing guidelines, found aggravating or mitigating
    factors not based on competent and credible evidence in the record, or applied
    the guidelines in such a manner as to "make[] the sentence clearly unreasonable
    so as to shock the judicial conscience." 
    Miller, 237 N.J. at 28
    (quoting 
    Fuentes, 217 N.J. at 70
    ).
    When sentencing a defendant, a court must identify and balance the
    aggravating and mitigating factors pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a) and (b), and
    explain the factual basis supporting its findings. 
    Fuentes, 217 N.J. at 73
    , 81;
    State v. Bieniek, 
    200 N.J. 601
    , 608 (2010).
    "It is sufficient that the trial court provides reasons for imposing its
    sentence that reveal the court's consideration of all applicable mitigating factors"
    in reaching its decision. 
    Bieniek, 200 N.J. at 609
    . "After balancing the factors,
    the trial court may impose a term within the permissible range for the offense."
    
    Id. at 608.
    A.      Timmons
    Timmons argues the court erred by finding aggravating factors three and
    nine without adequate reasons, by failing to find any mitigating factors, and by
    A-2567-17T4
    92
    denying his request to sentence him to a lower degree of hindering.
    The trial court found aggravating factors three (risk defendant will re-
    offend) and nine (need for deterrence) applied to Timmons. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-
    1(a)(3) and (a)(9). The court based these findings on Timmons's juvenile record
    as an adjudicated delinquent for aggravated assault on a school employee and
    for violation of probation. It noted Timmons had "a number of other arrests"
    for harassment and shoplifting that did not appear to result in adjudication . It
    further found that Timmons was arrested as an adult in February 2010 on a
    charge of hindering, noting: "So this isn't the first time that he has faced similar
    charges."4 The court also found that Timmons's second indictable offense was
    a guilty plea to an "unlawful possession of a weapon in an offense that occurred
    about a year and a half after this offense in Woodbridge. And currently he's
    awaiting sentence in Pahotcong, New Jersey, well, that's where the offense
    occurred in Warren County, for distribution of a controlled dangerous
    substance."
    Based on these findings, the court reasonably concluded there was a risk
    Timmons would commit another offense and there was a need to deter him and
    4
    The prosecutor represented at the sentencing hearing that Timmons pleaded
    guilty to a disorderly persons offense in March 2011.
    A-2567-17T4
    93
    others from violating the law.
    The court also soundly rejected Timmons's arguments to apply mitigating
    factors one, two, four, seven, eight, nine and ten. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(1), (2),
    (4), (7), (8), (9), (10). Regarding factors one ("defendant's conduct neither
    caused nor threatened serious harm") and two ("defendant did not contemplate
    that his conduct would cause or threaten serious harm"), it found that a "very
    serious crime occurred," that it was a "difficult investigation," and that if
    Timmons and his co-defendants had remained free it would have posed a "threat
    to the community." It further found Timmons's actions to hinder the murder
    investigation caused harm to the well-being of the victim's family. With respect
    to mitigating factor eight, the court found "[t]he notion that his conduct was the
    result of circumstances unlikely to recur is belied by the—his prior conviction
    for—for hindering." The court determined that the other mitigating factors did
    not merit any discussion.
    The court concluded the aggravating factors preponderated over the
    mitigating factors and that there was a presumption of imprisonment.             It
    sentenced Timmons on count four—second-degree hindering—to a term of
    seven years. It also sentenced him with respect to a charge in a separate
    Indictment 16-01-00076 to a concurrent term of twelve months pursuant to a
    A-2567-17T4
    94
    plea agreement.
    The court sufficiently explained its reasons for finding two aggravating
    factors and no mitigating factors. It based the identification of aggravating
    factors three and nine on Timmons's juvenile and adult criminal history. His
    presentence report confirms the court's findings, indicating defendant had two
    juvenile adjudications and had committed five known offenses as an adult .
    Given his repeated criminal conduct beginning as a juvenile, his prior
    arrest for hindering, and his commission of a second indictable offense while
    awaiting trial on the present charges, the court was justified in finding Timmons
    was at high risk of re-offending. Likewise, it was justified in finding the need
    to deter based on his criminal history and his attempts to hinder a murder
    investigation. "'Deterrence has been repeatedly identified as one of the most
    important factors in sentencing,' and 'is the key to the proper understanding of
    protecting the public.'" 
    Fuentes, 217 N.J. at 78-79
    (quoting State v. Megargel,
    
    143 N.J. 484
    , 501 (1996)). Although the court did not discuss in detail the
    circumstances of the offense, it adequately explained its application of
    aggravating factors three and nine to Timmons. Its findings were supported by
    competent and credible evidence in the record. The court justifiably found no
    applicable mitigating factors. None of the claimed mitigating factors were
    A-2567-17T4
    95
    clearly supported by the record. 
    Bieniek, 200 N.J. at 608
    .
    We also reject Timmons's contention that the court erred by failing to
    sentence him to fourth-degree hindering. Under N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(f)(2), if a
    defendant was convicted of a first or second-degree offense, and a sentencing
    court is "clearly convinced that the mitigating factors substantially outweigh the
    aggravating factors and where the interest of justice demands, the court may
    sentence the defendant to a term appropriate to a crime of one degree lower than
    that of the crime for which he was convicted."          "[F]or a sentence to be
    downgraded, a two-step test must be satisfied." 
    Megargel, 143 N.J. at 495
    . The
    sentencing court must be "(1) clearly convinced that the mitigating factors
    substantially outweigh the aggravating factors and (2) the interest of justice must
    demand the downgrade." 
    Ibid. Because there were
    no mitigating factors, the
    court did not err by failing to impose a downgraded sentence upon Timmons.
    Timmons's sentence fell within the middle of the sentencing range. The
    length of his sentence for second-degree hindering does not "shock the judicial
    conscience." 
    Miller, 205 N.J. at 128
    (quoting 
    Roth, 95 N.J. at 365
    ).
    In sum, the court did not abuse its discretion by sentencing Timmons to
    seven years on count four.
    A-2567-17T4
    96
    B.    Dana
    Dana argues his aggregate fifty-year sentence was excessive because the
    court improperly found aggravating factors three, six and nine, and no mitigating
    factors, and failed to impose sentences within the "mid-range terms" for the
    offenses of hindering, witness tampering, and endangering an injured victim.
    These arguments are unavailing.
    At the sentencing hearing, the trial court appropriately applied to Dana
    aggravating factors three, the risk "defendant will commit another offense,"
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3), six, defendant's "prior criminal record and the
    seriousness of the offenses," N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(6), and nine, the need for
    deterrence, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(9). The court found the evidence was clear that
    on August 18, 2013, Dana
    angrily went and retrieved a knife and purposely and
    knowingly stabbed Chris Sharp a number of times. And
    Chris Sharp died in front of him. A person who
    purportedly was a friend or associate, the cousin of his
    girlfriend, the mother—the cousin of the mother of his
    child. And then he left him there to die. Who came
    back to concoct a deliberate plan to evade detection. I
    know the argument from the defense here is that he was
    so intoxicated that that somehow is—mitigates his
    culpability, but that's undermined by the fact that he
    was able to contrive a plan to—and to convince others
    to mislead the police in his detection.
    This is a very serious crime. This is the most
    A-2567-17T4
    97
    serious crime for which one could be convicted in our
    State, which carries with it a very serious penalty.
    The court also found that Dana's criminal history was poor. It found that
    he had been arrested "a number of times" beginning as a juvenile in 1996 with
    an adjudication for receiving stolen property.
    Dana was found guilty of disorderly conduct in October 2000, was fined
    in March 2001 for a "riot," and was the subject of an outstanding drug charge in
    New York. In 2001 he was indicted for aggravated manslaughter, but apparently
    pleaded guilty to reckless manslaughter for which he received an eight-year
    sentence subject to NERA. In September 2011, he was discharged from custody
    and less than two years later, he murdered Sharp. He had been incarcerated
    since August 2013.
    The court noted that Dana had "caused a lot of hurt not only to the victim's
    family, but to his own family." It then found that the aggravating factors were
    "the risk he'll commit another offense, his prior record, a—a homicide, and a
    need to deter this defendant and others from violating the law ." In applying
    these factors, the court reasonably found Dana's criminal record reflects he was
    dangerous and a threat to society, and that he was easily provoked.
    The court found no mitigating factors, and determined the aggravating
    factors clearly preponderated.
    A-2567-17T4
    98
    Dana's presentence report confirmed he had eight complaints as a juvenile,
    including four adjudications for possession of a CDS, robbery, and two for
    simple assault. It also confirmed he had eleven offenses as an adult dating back
    to 2000, which included one felony conviction for manslaughter.
    The court rejected defense counsel's arguments that mitigating factors
    three (defendant acted under strong provocation), and four (substantial grounds
    tended to excuse defendant's conduct) applied. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(3), (4).
    The evidence supports the finding that mitigating factor three did not
    apply because Dana left the scene of the argument at Boone's house to run
    upstairs to retrieve a knife and then ran downstairs where he stabbed Sharp. He
    also was not so intoxicated as to excuse his conduct because he created an alibi
    for himself and co-defendants as they fled the scene.           Moreover, at the
    sentencing hearing, Dana told the court: "I feel remorse for what happened. We
    all lost somebody, and it's just been hard for everybody. But I'm still maintaining
    my innocence. I didn't do this to Chris." Dana's request for the judge to apply
    mitigating factor three for provocation is undermined by his contention that he
    did not stab Sharp. There was competent credible evidence in the record to
    support the court's findings of three aggravating and no mitigating factors.
    The court merged count one (conspiracy) into count two (murder), and
    A-2567-17T4
    99
    sentenced Dana on count two to forty years in prison subject to an eighty -five
    percent period of parole ineligibility under NERA. It sentenced him on count
    three (endangering an injured victim) to a term of five years, on count five
    (hindering) to a term of ten years, and on count six (witness tampering) to a term
    of five years. It ordered count five to run concurrent with count two, count six
    to run consecutive to count three, and count three to run consecutive to count
    two. The court imposed a total sentence of fifty years.
    Dana's sentences fell within the appropriate statutory ranges. N.J.S.A.
    2C:43-6(a)(2), (3).   Because the aggravating factors preponderated in the
    absence of any mitigating factors, the court did not err by sentencing Dana at
    the higher end of the range. 
    Fuentes, 217 N.J. at 57
    .
    Dana argues the court improperly imposed a term of forty years on the
    charge of first-degree murder. He argues a term of thirty years subject to NERA
    would "be sufficient for the purposes of deterrence and punishment ." He also
    argues the court failed to consider the real-time consequence of a parole
    disqualifier.
    A sentencing court must consider the real-time consequences of NERA
    and the role it plays in fashioning a sentence. State v. Marinez, 
    370 N.J. Super. 49
    , 58 (App. Div. 2004). The sentencing court may consider "the judge's
    A-2567-17T4
    100
    evaluation of the aggravating and mitigating factors in that light." 
    Ibid. After finding two
    aggravating and no mitigating factors, the court ordered Dana, then
    thirty-six years old, to serve eighty-five percent of the maximum term on count
    two (thirty-four years) before being eligible for parole under NERA. Dana
    therefore would be age seventy when first eligible for parole.
    Dana's forty-year sentence for first-degree murder was appropriate,
    especially considering his prior record that supported the application of
    aggravating factors. The court found no mitigating factors. Although the real -
    time consequences of the sentence are serious, Dana's actions also were serious.
    The sentence fell within the standard range for first-degree murder of
    thirty years to life imprisonment. N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(b)(1).        The court duly
    imposed an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier as mandated under NERA for
    the first-degree crime of murder. N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2(a), (d). The sentence does
    not shock the judicial conscience. 
    Miller, 205 N.J. at 128
    .
    XII.
    To the extent we have not discussed them expressly, all other arguments
    raised by defendants lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Affirmed.
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