STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. KEMAL ALBUT (09-04-0422, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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 NO. A-2867-18T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    KEMAL ALBUT, a/k/a KEMEL
    ALBUT, and KEMAL ALBERT,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ____________________________
    Argued October 7, 2019 – Decided January 14, 2020
    Before Judges Rothstadt and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Passaic County, Indictment No. 09-04-0422.
    Christopher W. Hsieh, Chief Assistant Prosecutor,
    argued the cause for appellant (Camelia M. Valdes,
    Passaic County Prosecutor, attorney; Christopher W.
    Hsieh, of counsel and on the brief).
    Adam W. Toraya, Designated Counsel, argued the
    cause for respondent (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
    Defender, attorney; Adam W. Toraya, on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    We granted the State leave to appeal from the Law Division's order
    granting defendant Kemal Albut's petition for post-conviction relief (PCR).
    Defendant's petition was entered after the PCR judge rejected defendant's
    arguments that his trial and appellate counsel rendered ineffective assistance of
    counsel (IAC), but concluded that defendant was deprived of due process by the
    court's failure to conduct a pretrial conference or receive from counsel a pretrial
    memorandum under Rule 3:9-1(f).
    On appeal, the State argues the following point to us:
    POINT I
    BECAUSE TRIAL COUNSEL COMPETENTLY
    ADVISED DEFENDANT REGARDING EXTENDED
    TERM SENTENCING CONSEQUENCES OF GOING
    TO TRIAL VERSUS ACCEPTING A GUILTY
    OFFER, THE TRIAL COURT'S INADVERTENT
    FAILURE TO REPEAT THOSE ADVISEMENTS
    DURING   A   [RULE]  3:9-1(f) PRETRIAL
    CONFERENCE OR PRETRIAL MEMORANDUM
    DID NOT GIVE RISE TO A DUE PROCESS
    VIOLATION.
    Having considered the State's argument in light of the record and
    applicable legal principles, we reverse the PCR judge's determination as it was
    unsupported by any controlling law.
    We summarize the pertinent facts from the record. In 2009, a grand jury
    charged defendant in a five-count indictment with first-degree murder, N.J.S.A.
    A-2867-18T4
    2
    2C:11-3(a)(1) or (2), first-degree attempted murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-1, and
    weapons charges, all arising from a 2008 shooting that caused one person's death
    and the injury of another. After his trial in 2011, a jury convicted defendant of
    the lesser-included offenses of aggravated manslaughter, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-
    4(a)(1), aggravated assault by attempting to or causing bodily injury with a
    deadly weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b), and the weapons charges. At his January
    19, 2012 sentencing, in response to the State's motion, the trial judge sentenced
    defendant in the extended term under N.J.S.A. 2C:44-3(a), to an aggregate
    sentence of life in prison, subject to an eighty-five percent period of parole
    ineligibility, under the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.
    Defendant appealed his convictions and argued his sentence was
    excessive. We affirmed, State v. Albut, No. A-3389-11 (App. Div. Apr. 15,
    2015); and the Supreme Court denied defendant's petition for certification. State
    v. Albut, 
    222 N.J. 19
    (2015).
    On October 6, 2015, defendant filed a petition for PCR. In his petition,
    defendant argued eight reasons why he received IAC from both his trial and
    appellate attorneys. Defendant's petition was considered by the PCR judge on
    June 29, 2017. At the conclusion of oral argument, the PCR judge rejected all
    but one of defendant's contentions. Specifically, the judge ordered that an
    A-2867-18T4
    3
    evidentiary hearing be held on defendant's argument that trial counsel provided
    IAC by "fail[ing] to counsel defendant to avoid an extended term of
    imprisonment."
    The hearing took place over three days in 2018, almost ten years after
    defendant's indictment and counsel being assigned to him. At the hearing, each
    of the three attorneys that represented defendant before and during his trial and
    sentencing testified about whether defendant was informed that if he was
    convicted, he would be facing a sentence in the extended term of up to life in
    prison, and whether he should accept a plea offer from the State. Although two
    of defendant's previous attorneys could not specifically remember having a
    conversation with defendant about his possible sentence, they were experienced
    attorneys who recalled regularly communicating plea offers and possible
    sentencing outcomes with their clients. Defendant's last trial counsel, however,
    recalled talking to defendant before trial "about the plea offer" and that he was
    "extended term at that point in time."
    Defendant also testified about whether he was ever advised of the
    possibility of a life sentence and about plea offers that were being discussed.
    According to defendant, had he been advised of a possible life sentence, he
    would have accepted the plea offer that he understood called for him to plead
    A-2867-18T4
    4
    guilty to aggravated manslaughter in exchange for the State recommending a
    sentence of twenty-four years subject to NERA. According to defendant, after
    the matter was scheduled for trial, and during the days leading up to the trial
    date, he was still attempting to negotiate a better plea offer than the twenty-four
    years offered by the State. When those efforts proved unsuccessful, he decided
    to take his chances on going to trial because he believed he would be facing
    thirty years if convicted.
    Under cross examination, however, defendant confirmed he understood
    that if he went to trial on the murder charges, if convicted, he would face a term
    of life imprisonment, and rather than accept a plea offer, he opted to "take the
    chance at trial." He also acknowledged that he spoke to his attorneys about the
    State's plea offers, and that considering his prior record, he understood before
    trial that he was facing a sentence of thirty years to life if he was convicted of
    murder. Moreover, he also understood that if he did not accept one of the State's
    multiple plea offers, he would have to go to trial. According to defendant, he
    rejected the plea offers because he wanted to go to trial.
    At the hearing, it was established that a pretrial conference under Rule
    3:9-1(f) never occurred and that counsel never submitted a pretrial
    memorandum. In considering defendant's argument that he was entitled to relief
    A-2867-18T4
    5
    under Rule 3:22-2(a), the PCR judge defined the issue before him as "(1)
    whether [defendant]'s right to due process was violated when neither a [p]retrial
    [c]onference was held nor a [p]retrial [m]emorandum prepared pursuant to the
    Rules; and (2) whether counsel was ineffective for not advising [defendant] of
    the potential consequences of a guilty verdict following trial . . . ."
    As explained in his thoughtful, comprehensive written decision granting
    defendant relief, the PCR judge found that "defendant was not made aware by
    the court or counsel that upon the setting of a trial date plea negotiations would
    terminate pursuant [to] Rule 3:9-3(g)." According to the PCR judge, this was a
    "material element of . . . plea negotiation[s]," and "the failure to explicitly and
    timely convey that essential element" could result in a "manifest injustice."
    The judge then applied the evidence adduced at the hearing to the two-
    prong test for PCR under Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    (1984), and
    found defendant failed to establish that any of his attorneys' performance of
    services on his behalf amounted to IAC. Specifically, as to counsels' discussions
    with defendant relating to the State's plea offers and defendant's exposure if he
    went to trial, the judge stated the following:
    [Defendant] has failed to meet his burden by presenting
    no factual evidence for his claim that his attorneys did
    not discuss the plea offer or potential sentences [he]
    faced at trial. Each trial counsel testified credibly that
    A-2867-18T4
    6
    they discussed with all their clients, [defendant]
    included, the legal consequences of accepting plea
    offers and the risks and exposures by electing to
    proceed to trial. This court finds all three attorneys met
    with the [defendant] multiple times and followed their
    normal practice of discussing the details and
    significances of accepting a plea offer as well as the
    potential consequences of going to trial, including the
    sentencing exposure of life imprisonment upon
    conviction.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The judge also found that defendant failed to establish the second
    Strickland prong because "the impediment" to defendant securing "a plea
    bargain . . . to avoid the maximum exposure he faced" was not due to
    "counsel[s'] failure to advise as to that maximum exposure and the implications
    of rejecting the State's plea offer," rather it was "the court's" fault. For that
    reason, the PCR judge concluded defendant was entitled to relief because the
    failure to conduct the pretrial conference was a due process violation since the
    court never advised defendant in person of the possibility of a sentence to life
    in the extended term, and that after the pretrial hearing all plea offers would be
    withdrawn.
    The PCR judge also found that because "every indication [was] that
    [defendant] rejected the State's offer of twenty-four years with the understanding
    that his maximum exposure would be thirty years, not life," he ordered that
    A-2867-18T4
    7
    defendant be resentenced within the parameters of the plea negotiations and the
    maximum ordinary exposure for the offenses for which he was convicted.
    Finally, the PCR judge rejected any contention that defendant's application was
    procedurally barred because the trial court did not conduct the required pretrial
    conference, causing
    multiple deficiencies in that the defendant was never
    definitively told his final plea offer, was never told
    whether or when negotiations had irrevocably ceased,
    and never received the mandated benefit of a court
    gauging the completeness of his understanding
    regarding sentencing exposure under various scenarios
    (conviction of [a]ggravated [m]anslaughter versus
    [m]urder, e.g.) for the very charges he stood trial. In
    other words, there was a complete abdication of
    compliance with the five factors set forth under Rule
    3:9-l(f).
    The judge concluded by stating the following:
    Fundamental fairness and due process demand a
    defendant be definitively apprised of the State's last
    best plea offer, the virtually irrevocable cessation of
    plea negotiations and the penal consequences of
    rejecting the State's plea in the event of conviction.
    These aspects of due process are embodied in Rule 3:9-
    1(f) and Rule 3:9-3(g). The function of counsel cannot
    supplant the court's ultimate responsibility to convey
    these concepts and to determine whether they have been
    understood. The trial court's duty in this regard was not
    fulfilled. Absent even a preponderance of evidence that
    defendant understood these elemental aspects of the
    prosecution against him, the original sentence imposed
    cannot stand.
    A-2867-18T4
    8
    The PCR judge stayed his order in response to "both parties['] . . .
    intention to appeal an adverse ruling." Thereafter, we granted the State's motion
    for leave to appeal.
    In our review, we defer to the PCR judge's findings so long as they are
    "supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record." State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 540 (2013). See State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 244 (2007) ("A trial
    court's findings should be disturbed only if they are so clearly mistaken 'that the
    interests of justice demand intervention and correction.'"). Legal conclusions
    which flow from those facts, however, are reviewed de novo. 
    Nash, 212 N.J. at 540-41
    .
    On appeal, the State contends that while the PCR judge correctly
    determined that defendant failed to establish IAC as to either trial or appellate
    counsel, the judge erred when he concluded "that defendant suffered a due
    process violation because the trial [judge] failed to inform defendant of his
    extended term exposure in open court and in a pretrial memo in accordance with
    [Rule] 3:9-1(f); and because the trial [judge] failed to inform defendant in open
    court that 'plea negotiations would cease upon the scheduling of a trial date.'"
    We agree.
    A-2867-18T4
    9
    At the outset, we disagree with the PCR judge's legal conclusion that
    defendant's petition was not procedurally barred by Rule 3:22-4(a)(2) because
    defendant failed to raise any argument about the trial judge's failure to hold a
    pretrial conference or require the submission of pretrial memorandum before his
    conviction or in his direct appeal. The Rule specifically bars any ground for
    relief that could have been raised earlier unless one of three exceptions apply:
    (1) the issue could not have reasonably been raised, (2) enforcement of the bar
    would result in fundamental injustice, or (3) denial of relief would be contrary
    to state or federal constitutional mandate.       We conclude that none of the
    exceptions apply here.
    Even if the petition was not barred, we conclude that under the
    circumstances presented, where a PCR judge conducts an evidentiary hearing
    and finds that counsel properly advised defendant about the consequences of
    accepting a plea as compared to going to trial, and that defendant faced a
    sentence in the extended term, the trial court's failure to conduct a pretrial
    conference under Rule 3:9-1(f) does not justify granting a defendant relief.
    Rule 3:9-1(f) provides:
    If the court determines . . . that all reasonable efforts to
    dispose of the case without trial have been made and it
    appears that further negotiations or an additional status
    conference will not result in disposition of the case, or
    A-2867-18T4
    10
    progress toward disposition of the case, the judge shall
    conduct a pretrial conference. The conference shall be
    conducted in open court with the prosecutor, defense
    counsel and the defendant present. Unless objected to
    by a party, the court shall ask the prosecutor to describe,
    without prejudice, the case including the salient facts
    and anticipated proofs and shall address the defendant
    to determine that the defendant understands: (1) the
    State's final plea offer, if one exists; (2) the sentencing
    exposure for the offenses charged, if convicted; (3) that
    ordinarily a negotiated plea should not be accepted after
    the pretrial conference and a trial date has been set; (4)
    the nature, meaning and consequences of the fact that a
    negotiated plea may not be accepted after the pretrial
    conference has been conducted and a trial date has been
    set and (5) that the defendant has a right to reject the
    plea offer and go to trial and that if the defendant goes
    to trial the State must prove the case beyond a
    reasonable doubt. If the case is not otherwise disposed
    of, a pretrial memorandum shall be prepared . . . . The
    pretrial memorandum shall be reviewed on the record
    with counsel and the defendant present and shall be
    signed by the judge . . . .
    The pretrial conference under the Rule has a significant impact on further
    plea bargaining due to the plea cut-off rule. "After the pretrial conference has
    been conducted and a trial date set, the court shall not accept negotiated pleas
    absent the approval of the Criminal Presiding Judge based on a material change
    of circumstance, or the need to avoid a protracted trial or a manifest injustice."
    R. 3:9-3(g). Rule 3:9-1(f) therefore requires the prosecutor to present all plea
    offers to defense counsel in writing and the trial judge to ask the prosecutor to
    A-2867-18T4
    11
    describe the State's final plea offer as part of the procedure for implementing the
    plea cut-off rule.
    The Rule also requires a pretrial memorandum setting forth the State's
    final plea offer if the case is not disposed of at the pretrial conference. See R.
    3:9-1(f). The pretrial memorandum sets forth the pending charges, maximum
    possible sentence on each charge, whether defendant qualifies for an extended
    term, maximum parole ineligibility period, and the State's final plea offer. The
    pretrial memorandum also asks the defendant to confirm his understanding that
    "if you reject this plea offer, the [c]ourt could impose a more severe sentence
    than recommended by the plea offer, up to the maximum sentence permitted if
    you are convicted after trial" and, if he chooses to "reject this plea offer today,
    no negotiated plea can be accepted by this [c]ourt unless specifically authorized
    by the Criminal Presiding Judge pursuant to [Rule] 3:9-3(g)." Administrative
    Directive #5-02, "Pretrial Memorandum (R. 3:9-1); Written Acknowledgment
    (R. 3:16)" (Aug. 21, 2002), superseded by Administrative Directive #23-17,
    "Pretrial Memorandum and Written Acknowledgment (Notice of Trial)" (Aug.
    21, 2017).
    Here, the PCR judge found the record contained no indication that the trial
    court conducted a pretrial conference or required the submission of a pretrial
    A-2867-18T4
    12
    memorandum. Thus, defendant was not advised by a judge in open court of the
    State's final plea offer and the consequences of rejecting that offer. We conclude
    the evidence supports the judge's finding.
    We also agree with the PCR judge that, where neither a court nor counsel
    advises a defendant that he is facing a sentence in the extended term if he goes
    to trial, "an extended term cannot be imposed unless the defendant is specifically
    apprised at the time of the plea of the potential number of years to which he is
    exposed." See State v. Cartier, 
    210 N.J. Super. 379
    , 381 (App. Div. 1986). "No
    matter which way the defendant ultimately chooses to plead, he should know the
    risk he faces." State v. Martin, 
    110 N.J. 10
    , 19 (1988) (vacating sentence and
    remanding for hearing on mandatory extended term sentence); see also Lankford
    v. Idaho, 
    500 U.S. 110
    , 127 (1991) (holding that due process of law was denied
    by the imposition of a death sentence when neither the defendant nor his counsel
    had notice of the possibility that such a sentence might be imposed).
    For that reason, where a defendant turns down a plea offer without
    knowing that he faces sentencing in the extended term, a proper remedy would
    be to resentence him in the range contemplated by the last plea offer. That
    remedy appears to be "the best accommodation of 'pragmatic necessity' and
    'essential fairness.'" State v. Kovack, 
    91 N.J. 476
    , 486 (1982).
    A-2867-18T4
    13
    We part company with the PCR judge's finding, however, that under the
    circumstances of this case, relief was warranted. Here, the judge found that all
    of defendant's attorneys had reviewed with defendant the terms of the State's
    plea offers and that defendant would be facing a maximum sentence of life in
    prison if he was convicted at trial. That finding was supported by trial counsels'
    and defendant's testimony at the evidentiary hearing, including his confirmation
    that with that knowledge, he rejected plea offers because he wanted to go to trial.
    We are satisfied that the concerns about a defendant being properly
    informed about plea offers and the consequences of either accepting a plea or
    going to trial were adequately addressed by trial counsels' unrefuted
    conversations with defendant and that he understood those consequences and
    chose to go to trial. We find no support in the record for the PCR judge's
    conclusion that defendant maintained a reasonable expectation that if he was
    tried, he would only be facing a term of twenty-four or thirty years, especially
    in light of the advice about exposure that the PCR judge found defense counsel
    had given to defendant before he decided to go to trial.
    Finally, contrary to the PCR judge's legal conclusion, we also find no due
    process violation with defendant not being told about a plea cut-off date, as it
    was undisputed at the hearing that plea negotiations continued right up to the
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    14
    days just preceding trial and that those negotiations ended when defendant
    rejected the last offer.
    Reversed.
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    15