STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DURRELL HEARD (15-08-1935, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-4003-17T2
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DURRELL HEARD, a/k/a
    DURRELL A. HEARN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    Submitted November 9, 2020 - Decided January 13, 2021
    Before Judges Currier and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Criminal Division, Essex County, Indictment No. 15-
    08-1935.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Daniel S. Rockoff, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, of counsel and on the brief).
    Theodore N. Stephens, II, Acting Essex County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Emily M. M. Pirro,
    Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant appeals from the denial of his motion to suppress the out-of-
    court identifications and from his conviction after a jury trial.         He also
    challenges his sentence, asserting it is inconsistent with the verdict, and the
    judgment of conviction (JOC) differs from the orally pronounced sentence. We
    affirm.
    I.
    Defendant was charged in an indictment with first-degree murder,
    contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(1)-(2) (count one); second-degree conspiracy to
    commit robbery, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2 (count two); three counts of first-
    degree robbery, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1 (counts three, four, and five); first-
    degree felony murder, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3a(3) (count six); second-
    degree unlicensed possession of a firearm, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)
    (count seven); and second-degree possession of a firearm for an unlawful
    purpose, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a) (count eight).
    A.
    The charges arose out of events that took place on January 8, 2015 in a
    fast food restaurant where defendant and co-defendant Leon Trent robbed
    several individuals – Tyreese Barkley, Jahod Onque, and Tykwan Crenshaw –
    A-4003-17T2
    2
    and defendant shot and killed Crenshaw.1 At the time, Hasim Salimi was
    working in the restaurant and he witnessed the shooting.
    After the shooting, Barkley gave a statement to police. He described the
    shooter as 6'2", with brown skin, dreadlocks, and wearing a vest over a
    sweatshirt. Barkley described the accomplice as heavyset, dressed all in black,
    and with a black do-rag on his head.
    Salimi also gave an initial statement to police that day. Salimi said he saw
    several people, including defendant, in his restaurant just prior to the shooting.
    He stated he was in the back area of the restaurant near the freezer when he
    heard a gunshot. Although he could not see the shooter at that point, he did see
    Crenshaw holding his hands up, saying "no, no, no" and then falling to the floor.
    Salimi ran closer and saw defendant with his right arm down at a 45-degree
    angle towards Crenshaw who was laying on the floor. He described the shooter
    as six feet tall with an average build. He said the shooter had dreadlocks and
    was wearing a vest.
    In the days after the shooting, Essex County Prosecutor's Office (ECPO)
    detectives retrieved surveillance footage from the area of the restaurant in the
    minutes before and just after the homicide. In their review of the footage, the
    1
    Trent was charged in counts two, three, four, five, and six of the indictment.
    A-4003-17T2
    3
    detectives spotted two individuals who matched the descriptions Barkley and
    Salimi had given of the perpetrators in their initial statements. A detective from
    Irvington identified the men in the surveillance footage as Trent and defendant.
    The detectives made some still photographs of defendant and Trent from the
    footage.
    A week after the shooting, the police asked Salimi to come to the ECPO.
    When he arrived, Salimi gave a second recorded statement to Detectives David
    Fontoura and James Ventola. His description of the events was similar to his
    first statement – he was in the back of his store, heard one shot, ran to the front,
    and saw defendant shoot Crenshaw a second time. He also described how the
    accomplice seemed to be standing as a lookout and added that he heard
    defendant say "you robbed my man last week" before shooting Crenshaw.
    Fontoura showed Salimi the still photo, stating: "My partner . . . had a
    chance to review some surveillance footage and we have a still image of a few
    individuals.   Tell me do you recognize anyone in this photo?"               Salimi
    immediately identified defendant as the shooter.
    Salimi then picked defendant's photograph out of a six-person, blind-
    administered photo array. He was certain defendant was the shooter. Afterward,
    Fontoura re-entered the room and stated, "[a]nd just for the record, the male you
    A-4003-17T2
    4
    identified is known to the [ECPO] as Durrell Heard whose SBI number is
    721168 Delta."
    At the suppression hearing, Salimi testified that he identified defendant as
    the shooter in the surveillance still photo "[b]ecause I saw him, he was the
    shooter." He denied identifying defendant in the still photo only based on the
    person having dreadlocks. He stated that he was not instructed by anyone to
    identify defendant in the photo or to say he was the shooter.
    Barkley was also asked to come to the ECPO to give a second recorded
    statement. Once there, Fontoura and Ventola stated: "We asked you to come in
    here today because we wanted to show you a picture of a possible suspect and
    wanted to see if you can identify this person." Ventola added, "if you recognize
    this person just let us know as the person who robbed you, victim of a robbery,
    and -- and/or the same person that -- responsible for the shooting. So, this is a
    surveillance photo."
    Barkley immediately stated he recognized both men in the photo. He
    identified defendant as the person who shot Crenshaw and Trent as the one who
    robbed them. Barkley testified at the suppression hearing that he did not know
    if the shooter would be in the still photo until the police showed it to him, and
    when they did, he identified defendant because he "saw his face as clear as day,"
    A-4003-17T2
    5
    and stated "I know it's him because I know his face." Barkley confirmed he was
    sure defendant and Trent were the perpetrators of the crime, "[b]ecause I
    identified those faces." He denied that anyone directed him to identify the two
    men.
    Barkley then picked defendant and Trent out of two separate photo arrays
    with two different detectives. He denied that anyone told him that the person he
    had picked out of the surveillance still would be in the photo array, or that he
    had picked the right people out of the photo arrays. When Fontoura came back
    into the room, he stated, "[f]or the record the male you identified is known to
    the [ECPO] as Durrell Heard whose [SBI] Number is 334741 Delta."
    When Trent was later questioned, he admitted to being at the scene of the
    crime and identified himself and defendant on the surveillance still photo.
    B.
    Defendant moved to suppress Salimi's and Barkley's out-of-court
    identifications of him.    The motion was denied in a well-reasoned written
    decision. The court stated:
    Here, the photo array procedure was not significantly
    suggestive by itself. It was not a show up identification.
    It was administered in a double[-]blind manner. The
    detectives who conducted the photo arrays did not
    know who the suspect was or if his photo was included
    in the array. The detectives provided adequate pre-
    A-4003-17T2
    6
    identification instructions to the witnesses. The photo
    arrays were comprised of six photos, five of which were
    of men who looked similar to [d]efendant. There was
    only one suspect, [d]efendant, included in each photo
    array. Detectives did not provide feedback on the
    witnesses' identifications.
    Defendant focuses his argument on the fact that each
    witness was shown a surveillance still of [d]efendant
    and . . . Trent shortly before the photo array was done.
    This issue falls under the system variable of multiple
    viewings. The process of first showing the witnesses a
    still photo of [d]efendant makes it difficult to know
    whether the subsequent photo array identification was
    based on their memories of the original event or on the
    still photo they had just viewed. See [State v.
    Henderson, 
    208 N.J. 208
    , 255 (2011)]. This is
    particularly true given that the still photo and the photo
    arrays were shown to the witnesses close in time on the
    same day.
    With regard to the identifications by . . . Salimi and . . .
    Barkley from the single surveillance camera still, it is
    true that [d]efendant met his burden of producing some
    evidence tied to a system variable that demonstrates
    that the identifications are suggestive. However, under
    the totality of the circumstances and through the
    application of the reliability factors, . . . Salimi and . . .
    Barkley's identifications are reliable.
    In addressing the identification by . . . Salimi, the State
    did offer proof that the identification was reliable. As
    to the system variables, there is no evidence that the
    police told . . . Salimi that the shooter was in the still
    photograph and no evidence that the police told . . .
    Salimi that he had to identify someone. Defendant was
    not the only one in the photograph. Finally, there is no
    A-4003-17T2
    7
    evidence that the detectives provided feedback during
    or after the procedure.
    As to the estimator variables and the reliability factors,
    . . . Salimi had ample opportunity to view [d]efendant
    at the time of the incident. . . . Salimi saw [d]efendant
    for sixteen seconds, which were not fleeting glimpses.
    The lighting was also abundant in the . . . restaurant and
    he was less than 20 feet away from the shooter. There
    were no obstructions between . . . Salimi and
    [d]efendant's face. Defendant also was not wearing a
    disguise.
    Second, . . . Salimi was attentive during the shooting.
    There is no evidence that . . . Salimi was under any
    stress at the time of the incident. Furthermore, because
    the gun was not pointed at . . . Salimi nor could . . .
    Salimi see the gun from his position, . . . Salimi was not
    focused on the weapon.
    Third, the evidence shows that . . . Salimi's prior
    description matches [d]efendant's physical appearance.
    Fourth, . . . Salimi's level of certainty when identifying
    [d]efendant is clearly satisfied in this case. There is no
    evidence that . . . Salimi hesitated in his identification.
    Finally, only six days elapsed between the shooting and
    . . . Salimi's identification. It is unlikely that his
    memory of the incident would have significantly faded
    in six days.       Thus, under the totality of the
    circumstances, . . . Salimi's identification was reliable.
    In addressing the identification by . . . Barkley, once
    again, the State did offer proof that the identification
    was reliable. Similarly[] to the identification by . . .
    Salimi, there is no evidence that the police told . . .
    Barkley that the shooter was in the still photograph.
    The detectives informing . . . Barkley that they had a
    A-4003-17T2
    8
    possible suspect is not sufficient to demonstrate that the
    detectives significantly influenced . . . Barkley's
    identification. There was also no evidence that the
    police told . . . Salimi that he had to identify someone
    or that his identification was correct.
    [B]arkley had ample opportunity to view [d]efendant at
    the time of the incident. . . . Barkley saw [d]efendant
    prior to the robbery, as he was waving the gun around
    while the robber was collecting the money, and during
    the shooting, which were not fleeting glimpses. As
    mentioned above, the lighting was also abundant in the
    . . . restaurant. There were no obstructions between
    . . . Barkley and [d]efendant's face . . . [d]efendant was
    not wearing a disguise.
    Second, . . . Barkley was attentive during the shooting.
    . . . [T]here is no evidence that . . . Barkley was under
    any stress at the time of the incident. Furthermore,
    because the gun was not pointed at . . . Barkley, [he]
    was not focused on the weapon.
    Third, the evidence shows, as it did for . . . Salimi's
    identification, that . . . Barkley's prior description
    matches [d]efendant's physical appearance.
    Fourth, . . . Barkley's level of certainty when identifying
    [d]efendant as the shooter is clearly satisfied in this
    case. There is no evidence that . . . Barkley hesitated
    in his identification.
    Finally, only six days elapsed between the shooting and
    . . . Barkley's identification. In comparison to . . .
    Salimi's memory, it is unlikely that his memory of the
    incident would have significantly faded in six days.
    Thus, under the totality of the circumstances, . . .
    Barkley's identification was reliable.
    A-4003-17T2
    9
    Therefore, because the out-of-court identifications of
    [d]efendant by . . . Salimi and . . . Barkley are reliable,
    they will not be suppressed, and the State may also
    elicit in-court identifications by these two witnesses as
    well.
    C.
    Defendant was tried before a jury in November and December 2017. Both
    Salimi and Barkley testified. In addition, the third robbery victim – Onque –
    was called as a witness. He stated that he was standing three feet from defendant
    at the time of the robbery and right next to Crenshaw when defendant shot
    Crenshaw. Onque stated that defendant entered the restaurant and said "this is
    a shake[,]" which Onque knew meant he was about to get robbed. When Onque
    was questioned by police in February 2015, he described the shooter as having
    dreadlocks, wearing a hoodie and jeans, and missing about four front teeth. At
    trial, defendant displayed his teeth for the jury, showing that he had missing or
    rotted top teeth. Onque testified that defendant accused Crenshaw of robbing
    Trent before shooting Crenshaw.
    Onque's identification of defendant in a blind-administered photo array in
    February 2015 was not challenged. During the array, Onque stated he was
    "positive" defendant was the one who shot Crenshaw, because "I'll never forget
    that day."
    A-4003-17T2
    10
    Trent also testified, identifying himself as the lookout and defendant, his
    cousin, as the shooter. Trent told the jury that he and defendant planned to rob
    the restaurant. He also informed the jury that he had pled guilty earlier that year
    to conspiracy to commit robbery and robbery. The plea agreement required him
    to testify truthfully at defendant's trial. The State recommended a ten-year
    sentence with an eighty-five percent parole disqualifier.
    D.
    During the charge to the jury, the judge advised them that Trent was
    indicted for conspiracy to commit robbery, three counts of first-degree robbery,
    and felony murder. He further stated that Trent had pled guilty to conspiracy to
    commit robbery and first-degree robbery of Crenshaw.             The judge then
    instructed: "Evidence of . . . Trent's plea of guilty may be used only to determine
    the credibility or believability of the witness' testimony."
    The judge continued, stating:
    You may consider such evidence along with all the
    other factors that I mentioned previously in determining
    the credibility of the witness. However, you may not
    use . . . Trent's plea of guilty as evidence that this
    defendant is guilty of conspiracy to commit robbery or
    first-degree robbery for which defendant is charged."
    The law requires that the testimony of such a witness
    be given careful scrutiny. In weighing his testimony,
    therefore, you may consider whether he has a special
    A-4003-17T2
    11
    interest in the outcome of the case and whether his
    testimony was influenced by the hope or expectation of
    any favorable treatment or reward or by any feelings of
    revenge or reprisal. If you believe this witness to be
    credible and worthy of belief, you have a right to
    convict the defendant of conspiracy to commit robbery
    and first-degree robbery of Tykwan Crenshaw on . . .
    Trent's testimony alone, provided, of course, that upon
    a consideration of the whole case, you're satisfied . . .
    beyond a reasonable doubt of the defendant's guilt on
    those charges.
    E.
    Defendant was convicted on all charges. He was sentenced on March 5,
    2018 to a fifty-five-year prison term for first-degree murder (count one), subject
    to N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, the No Early Release Act (NERA). The court imposed
    fifteen-year prison terms for robbery (count four and five) and stated the
    sentences for count four and five would run concurrent to each other, but
    consecutive to count one. The remaining counts merged or were made solely
    concurrent. The Judgment of Conviction (JOC) entered that day also indicated
    that defendant's sentence on counts four and five was consecutive to the sentence
    on count one, but concurrent with each other and all unmerged charges.
    However, the judge listed the total custodial term as eighty-five years.
    On March 12, 2018, the Department of Corrections (DOC) advised the
    sentencing court that the JOC reflected an eighty-five-year sentence, although
    A-4003-17T2
    12
    the aggregate term imposed by the sentences on each count only added to
    seventy years. The DOC asked the court for clarification. The court issued a
    letter and amended JOC. The letter stated "per [the] letter from DOC, dated
    3/12/18 – counts [four and five] should run consecutive to count [one] [and]
    consecutive to each other."
    II.
    On appeal, defendant presents the following arguments:
    I.  DID THE COURT ERR IN DENYING A
    MOTION TO SUPPRESS IDENTIFICATIONS FROM
    TWO OUT-OF-COURT PHOTO ARRAYS?
    II. DID THE COURT ERRONEOUSLY INVITE
    THE JURY TO USE CO-DEFENDANT'S GUILTY
    PLEA AS SUBSTANTIVE EVIDENCE THAT
    DEFENDANT WAS GUILTY OF THE HOMICIDE
    AND WEAPONS OFFENSES?
    III. IS A REMAND             FOR   RESENTENCING
    REQUIRED?
    a.    Was the Judgment of Conviction inconsistent
    with the court's oral sentence?
    b.    Was the court's rationale for consecutive terms
    inconsistent with the verdict?
    c.    Was defendant's refusal to speak at sentencing
    held against him as an aggravating factor?
    A-4003-17T2
    13
    A.
    Defendant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress
    the out-of-court identifications made by Barkley and Salimi. In reviewing the
    denial of a motion to suppress an out-of-court identification, we must uphold
    the trial judge's factual findings so long as those findings are supported by
    sufficient credible evidence in the record. State v. Wright, 
    444 N.J. Super. 347
    ,
    356 (App. Div. 2016). We owe particular deference to findings of fact that are
    based on "a trial judge's assessment of the credibility of a witness he has
    observed firsthand." 
    Id. at 357
    .
    Defendant contends the still photo of him taken from surveillance footage
    shown to Salimi and Barkley prior to the photo array irreparably tainted their
    identifications of defendant as the perpetrator of the homicide. In addition,
    defendant asserts the detective's statement made after the identification – "for
    the record" the person you identified was "known to the [ECPO] as Durrell
    Heard" – was improper feedback that tainted the identifications.
    To challenge an out-of-court identification, "defendant has the initial
    burden of showing some evidence of suggestiveness that could lead to a
    mistaken identification." State v. Henderson, 
    208 N.J. 208
    , 288 (2011). Once
    a hearing has been granted, the State must present proof that the identification
    A-4003-17T2
    14
    is reliable. 
    Id. at 289
    . The State's burden to offer proof is the same as the burden
    of producing evidence described in N.J.R.E. 101(b)(2), which is sometimes
    referred to as the burden of going forward. State v. Henderson, 433 NJ. Super.
    94, 107 (App. Div. 2013).        "The burden of producing evidence has been
    described . . . 'as so light as to be little more than a formality.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting
    State v. Segars, 
    172 N.J. 481
    , 494 (2002)). The evidence need not be persuasive,
    the State must merely "provide evidence on the issue that is germane to the
    inquiry with sufficient clarity so that the opposing party has a full and fair
    opportunity to respond." 
    Ibid.
    Although the State must present proof that the identification is reliable, it
    is defendant's ultimate burden "to prove a very substantial likelihood of
    irreparable misidentification." 
    Ibid.
     Defendant may cross-examine the State's
    witnesses and present his own witnesses and relevant evidence related to system
    and estimator variables to meet this burden. 
    Ibid.
     If, under the totality of the
    circumstances, defendant meets this burden, the court will suppress the out-of-
    court identification. 
    Ibid.
     Although the Rules of Evidence apply in pre-trial
    evidentiary hearings, they may be relaxed "to admit relevant and trustworthy
    evidence in the interest of justice." R. 101(a)(3)(E).
    A-4003-17T2
    15
    A defendant's evidence of suggestiveness "must be tied to a system
    [variable] – and not an estimator – variable." Henderson, 208 N.J. at 288-89.
    System variables are "factors . . . within the control of the criminal justice
    system." Id. at 247. Examples of system variables include:
    1. Blind Administration.    Was the lineup procedure
    performed double-blind?
    ....
    2. Pre-identification instructions. Did the administrator
    provide neutral, pre-identification instructions warning
    that the suspect may not be present in the lineup and
    that the witness should not feel compelled to make an
    identification?
    3. Lineup Construction. Did the array or lineup contain
    only one suspect embedded among at least five
    innocent fillers? Did the suspect stand out from other
    members of the lineup?
    4. Feedback. Did the witness receive any information
    or feedback, about the suspect or the crime, before,
    during, or after the identification procedure?
    5. Recording Confidence. Did the administrator record
    the witness' statement of confidence immediately after
    the identification, before the possibility of any
    confirmatory feedback?
    6. Multiple Viewings. Did the witness view the suspect
    more than once as part of multiple identification
    procedures? Did police use the same fillers more than
    once?
    A-4003-17T2
    16
    7. Showups. Did the police perform a showup more
    than two hours after an event? Did the police warn the
    witness that the suspect may not be the perpetrator and
    that the witness should not feel compelled to make an
    identification?
    8. Private Actors. Did law enforcement elicit from the
    eyewitness whether he or she had spoken with anyone
    about the identification and, if so, what was discussed?
    9. Other Identifications Made. Did the eyewitness
    initially make no choice or choose a different suspect
    or filler?
    [Id. at 248-61, 289-90.]
    Estimator variables are "factors related to the witness, the perpetrator, or
    the event itself . . . over which the legal system has no control." Id. at 247.
    Estimator variables include: stress, weapon focus, duration, distance and
    lighting, witness characteristics, characteristics of the perpetrator, memory
    decay, race-bias, opportunity to view the criminal at the time of the crime,
    degree of attention, accuracy of prior description of the criminal, level of
    certainty demonstrated at the confrontation, and the time between the crime and
    the confrontation. Id. at 261-72, 291-92.
    Here, the system variable at issue is "multiple viewings", as the ECPO
    detectives showed Salimi and Barkley the surveillance photo of defendant prior
    to the photo array. "Viewing a suspect more than once during an investigation
    A-4003-17T2
    17
    can affect the reliability of the later identification." Id. at 255. "[S]uccessive
    views of the same person can make it difficult to know whether the later
    identification stems from a memory of the original event or a memory of the
    earlier identification procedure." Ibid.
    However, multiple viewings do not automatically warrant suppression of
    an out-of-court identification.     To determine whether a multiple viewing
    identification should be suppressed, the question becomes "whether under the
    'totality of the circumstances' the identification was reliable even though the
    confrontation procedure was suggestive." State v. Herrera, 
    187 N.J. 493
    , 503
    (2006) (quoting Neil v. Biggers, 
    409 U.S. 188
    , 199 (1972)). A number of factors
    are considered in making this determination: (1) the opportunity of the witness
    to view the criminal at the time of the crime; (2) the witness's degree of attention;
    (3) the accuracy of the witness's prior description of the criminal; (4) the level
    of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation; and (5) the length
    of time between the crime and the confrontation. Henderson, 208 N.J. at 238.
    "These factors are to be weighed against 'the corrupting effect of the suggestive
    identification itself.'" Ibid. (quoting Manson v. Brathwaite, 
    432 U.S. 98
    , 114
    (1977)).
    A-4003-17T2
    18
    Defendant argues that Salimi's identification is tainted because Fontoura
    asked Salimi to assist in identifying those responsible for the "shooting
    homicide" that Salimi had witnessed. In addition, Fontoura told Salimi he had
    found a "still image" of "surveillance footage." Defendant contends that these
    statements signaled to Salimi that the suspects were in the photo.
    Defendant's arguments are not supported by the record. The following
    exchange takes place in Salimi's recorded statement:
    [FONTOURA]: [M]y partner . . . had a chance to
    review some surveillance footage and we have a still
    image of a few individuals. Tell me do you recognize
    anyone in this photo?
    [SALIMI]: This one.
    [FONTOURA]: This guy here with the dreadlocks?
    [SALIMI]: Yes.
    [FONTOURA]: Okay. And this is the individual you
    described to me the night of the shooting?
    [SALIMI]: Yeah.
    [FONTOURA]: Okay. And this is the individual you
    saw do what?
    [SALIMI]: Shooting the guy.
    Fontoura did not tell Salimi he had to choose an individual in the still
    photo, nor did he state that the perpetrators were in the photo, or that Salimi's
    A-4003-17T2
    19
    identification was correct. Salimi testified during the suppression hearing that
    he identified defendant in the surveillance photo "[b]ecause I saw him, he was
    the shooter." He also testified that he did not pick defendant out solely because
    of his dreadlocks.
    Defendant's challenge to the photo array procedure also lacks merit. He
    contends that the photo array, which included defendant's photograph, conveyed
    police approval of Salimi's identification of defendant in the still photo.
    However, after Salimi identified defendant in the surveillance photo, Fontoura
    excused himself from the room and another detective came in and conducted the
    photo array. The detective instructed, in pertinent part:
    In a moment I will show a number of photographs one
    at a time. You may take as much time as you need to
    look at each of them. You should not conclude that the
    person who committed the crime is in the group merely
    because a group of photographs are being shown to you.
    The person who committed the crime may or may not
    be in the group. And mere[] display of the photograph
    is . . . not meant to suggest that the police believe that
    the person who committed the crime is in the
    photographs.
    You do not have to select any photograph. If you don't
    understand anything that I'm telling you stop me. . . .
    There is no significance in the order in which the
    photographs are displayed. Even if you select a
    photograph all of the photographs will be shown to you.
    A-4003-17T2
    20
    Tell me immediately if you recognize anyone in the
    photographs.
    ....
    If you do select a photograph please don't ask me
    whether I agree or disagree to support your selection. I
    do not know whom the suspect [is], if he or she is in the
    lineup, or what photograph he or she may be present in.
    It is your choice alone that counts. Please do not
    discuss whether or not you selected a photograph with
    any other witness.
    Salimi was shown six photos; he identified defendant in the third one. The
    inclusion of defendant's photograph in the photo array does not demonstrate that
    the detectives conveyed to Salimi their approval of his identification of the still
    photo. There is no logic to defendant's assertion that the detectives should not
    have included his photograph in the photo array; there would be little to no value
    to the photo array if it were exclusively conducted with photographs of non -
    suspects. Moreover, when questioned about the identification at trial, Salimi
    testified that he did not pick defendant out of the lineup because of the still
    photo. He stated he selected him because he saw defendant shoot Crenshaw
    inside his restaurant.
    Defendant also asserts that the statement "just for the record, the male you
    identified is known to the [ECPO] as Durrell Heard whose SBI number is
    721168 Delta," was impermissible feedback, telegraphing to Salimi that
    A-4003-17T2
    21
    defendant was a bad actor. This statement was made after the identification and
    defendant has not established that Salimi found this statement to be anything
    more than a recitation of defendant's name.
    Defendant reiterates his arguments with regard to Barkley's out-of-court
    identification. We equally find them without merit. On January 16, 2015, after
    Barkley gave detectives a second statement, he was asked to review a still
    photograph from surveillance footage of the restaurant area:
    [VENTOLA]: Okay. And I remember . . . speaking to
    you the day it happened. . . . [T]hroughout the
    investigation we were able to obtain some surveillance
    photos. One of them on Springfield Avenue and we
    wanted to bring it to your attention and show it to you
    and then we also wanted to bring another detective in
    just to show you a few pictures . . . is that okay?
    [BARKLEY]: Yeah.
    [VENTOLA]: I just want to bring your attention to a
    photo. And please if you recognize this person just let
    us know as the person who robbed you, victim of a
    robbery, . . . and/or the same person . . . responsible for
    the shooting. So, this is a surveillance photo. Do you
    recognize anyone? Who do you recognize?
    [BARKLEY]: Both of them.
    [VENTOLA]: You recognize both          . . . [o]kay. Are
    these the individuals you described    to me the night of
    the incident? Okay. And which           one of these two
    individuals actually was the one       that robbed you?
    A-4003-17T2
    22
    Okay. He robbed you. And which one actually shot?
    And he's the one who shot?
    [BARKLEY]: Uh-huh.
    ....
    [VENTOLA]: We're going to step out. We're going to
    have another detective come in. He's going to show you
    a couple photographs. And just see if you recognize
    anyone in the photographs as either of these two males.
    Another detective then came into the room to conduct the photo array. He
    gave Barkley the same instructions previously given to Salimi. Barkley stated
    that he understood them.
    As he reviewed the photographs, Barkley recognized defendant in the
    fourth one. He told the detective that the man in photograph number four was
    the shooter. As with Salimi, Fontoura re-entered the room and told Barkley the
    man he picked from the photo array was "known to the [ECPO] as Durrell Heard
    whose [SBI] Number is 334741 Delta."
    We reject defendant's arguments regarding the photo array for the reasons
    stated above. During the suppression hearing, Barkley stated that he did not
    know if the shooter would be in the still photo until the police showed it to him .
    When they did, he could identify defendant because he "saw his face as clear as
    day." He stated, "I know it's him because I know his face." In addition,
    A-4003-17T2
    23
    defendant's long dreadlocks in the photo also matched Barkley's description of
    the shooter. There is no evidence that Barkley was given any guidance to help
    him identify the shooter.
    When Barkley was asked about Fontoura's statement at the end of the
    process, he said "They didn't – they didn't say if I was right or wrong. They said
    okay. And they took the pictures away." Barkley also testified that police did
    not tell him that the person he saw in the still photo would be in the photo array.
    The descriptions Salimi and Barkley gave police immediately after the
    incident matched defendant's appearance on the surveillance photo. Barkley
    stated defendant was wearing a vest and long dreads, walking with another,
    chubbier man who was wearing all black and a black do-rag. Salimi's initial
    statement was even more specific: the shooter was wearing a black vest over a
    white sweater. The only person on the surveillance video at the time of the
    shooting wearing a black vest over a white shirt was defendant.
    The surveillance video was taken from the area outside the restaurant
    minutes before the crime occurred, and depicts people fleeing the scene
    moments after it occurred. Defendant does not dispute that the footage and still
    photograph made from it shows him and Trent. And, both witnesses stated that
    they identified defendant in the still photo and again in the photo array because
    A-4003-17T2
    24
    they recognized him as the man they saw in the restaurant robbing the customers
    and shooting Crenshaw.
    In addition, the witnesses' testimony was corroborated by certain physical
    evidence. Salimi recalled a second shot hitting the doorframe, and indeed, a
    bullet was discovered in the doorframe. Barkley stated the gun was a .38
    revolver. The bullets recovered at the crime scene belonged to a .38 revolver.
    The trial judge found Fontoura, Salimi, and Barkley credible. According
    that finding and the deference it is owed, we are satisfied defendant has not
    demonstrated "a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification"
    requiring the suppression of the out-of-court identifications. See Henderson,
    208 N.J. at 289 (holding that a court should suppress the identification only if it
    "finds from the totality of the circumstances that defendant has demonstrated a
    very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification."). The presence of
    a single, potentially suggestive factor does not defeat an eyewitness
    identification. See State v. Adams, 
    194 N.J. 186
    , 203-206 (2008) (based on the
    totality of the circumstances, there was sufficient evidence in the record for the
    trial court to conclude that, despite the clear suggestive nature of the
    identification procedures, the identifications were reliable and did not result in
    a substantial likelihood of misidentification).
    A-4003-17T2
    25
    B.
    Defendant argues for the first time that the court erred in giving the
    following instruction to the jury regarding co-defendant Trent: "[Y]ou may not
    use [Leon] Trent's [guilty plea] as evidence that this defendant is guilty of
    conspiracy to commit robbery or first-degree robbery for which defendant is
    charged." Defendant contends this instruction was "grossly prejudicial" because
    the model jury charge is more general and precludes jurors from using a co -
    defendant's guilty plea as "evidence that this defendant is guilty of the crimes
    that he/she is charged with." See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Testimony
    of a Cooperating Co-Defendant or Witness" (rev. Feb. 6, 2006). He asserts that
    this charge gave the jury implicit permission to use Trent's guilty plea as
    evidence that defendant was guilty of all the other offenses he was charged with.
    Defense counsel did not object to this jury instruction. Therefore, we
    review for plain error. See R. 1:7-2; State v. Wakefield, 
    190 N.J. 397
    , 473
    (2007) ("[T]he failure to object to a jury instruction requires review under the
    plain error standard."). Where there is a failure to object, a reviewing court
    presumes the instruction was "not error" and "unlikely to prejudice defendant's
    case." State v. Singleton, 
    211 N.J. 157
    , 182 (2012).
    A-4003-17T2
    26
    It cannot be disputed that "[c]orrect charges are essential for a fair trial."
    State v. Martin, 
    119 N.J. 2
    , 15 (1990). "[T]he court must explain the controlling
    legal principles and the questions the jury is to decide." 
    Ibid.
     We "evaluate any
    alleged error in a portion of a jury charge in the context of the entire charge."
    State v. Marshall, 
    173 N.J. 343
    , 355 (2002).
    To sustain a showing of plain error, a defendant must demonstrate "legal
    impropriety in the charge prejudicially affecting the substantial rights of the
    defendant and sufficiently grievous to justify notice by the reviewing court and
    to convince the court that of itself the error possessed a clear capacity to br ing
    about an unjust result." State v. Nero, 
    195 N.J. 397
    , 407 (2008). Defendant has
    not met his burden here where four eyewitnesses identified defendant as the
    perpetrator of the charged crimes. He was seen at the scene of the crime
    participating in the robberies of Onque and Barkley and shooting Crenshaw.
    Moreover, the judge gave the jury limiting instructions that Trent's guilty
    plea could only be used to assess his credibility, and that his plea to robbery and
    conspiracy to commit robbery could not be used as evidence against defendant
    for the same charges. In addition, defense counsel conducted an extensive cross-
    examination of Trent, highlighting his inconsistent statements to police, and
    arguing to the jury during his summation that Trent was lying to "save himself."
    A-4003-17T2
    27
    In light of the overwhelming evidence against defendant, we cannot discern that
    the limiting instruction regarding Trent effected any change in the case's
    outcome.
    C.
    Defendant also challenges his sentence, contending the amended JOC is
    inconsistent with the court's oral pronouncement of his sentence. We agree that
    the trial judge was inconsistent at times during the sentencing hearing regarding
    the concurrent or consecutive nature of counts four and five. And the initial
    JOC listed counts four and five as running concurrent to each other. However,
    a reading of the sentencing transcript in conjunction with the JOCs as well as
    the judge's clarification reflects the clear intention of the court was for the
    fifteen-year sentences on counts four and five to run consecutively to each other
    and to the fifty-five-year sentence imposed on count one.
    We support our conclusion with the following evidence. After explaining
    the various sentences, the judge stated: "Your earliest eligibility for release on
    parole based on the published parole eligibility tables will be [seventy-two]
    years, three months, and nine days." This calculation is 85% of an eighty-five-
    year sentence. In addition, each of the JOCs lists an aggregate prison term of
    eighty-five years.   Finally, when the judge was asked to clarify his intent
    A-4003-17T2
    28
    regarding counts four and five, he amended the JOC to indicate counts four and
    five were to run consecutive to each other as well as to count one.
    "[S]entences can be upheld where the sentencing transcript makes it
    possible to readily deduce the judge's reasoning." State v. Miller, 
    205 N.J. 109
    ,
    129 (2011). A court can "safely discern the sentencing court's reasoning when
    the record is clear enough to avoid doubt as to the facts and principles the court
    considered and how it meant to apply them." 
    Id. at 130
    .
    Here, the sentencing transcript and the court's clarification make the
    judge's intended sentence easy to "readily deduce." The judge intended to
    sentence defendant to an aggregate eighty-five-year term; fifty-five years on
    count one, fifteen years on count four, and fifteen years on count five, all running
    consecutively.
    We discern no merit in defendant's argument that the court's sentence was
    inconsistent with the jury's verdict.        The judge carefully considered each
    Yarbough2 factor and placed his extensive findings on the record. Because he
    found the murder of Crenshaw took place to facilitate the robbery of him, he ran
    the sentence on count one concurrent to count three, but consecutive to counts
    2
    State v. Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. 627
    , 643-44 (1985).
    A-4003-17T2
    29
    four and five, as the murder was a separate act from the robbery of the other
    victims.
    The jury convicted defendant on all counts, therefore finding that
    defendant killed Crenshaw with a separate, purposeful criminal intent apart from
    the other charged offenses. We are satisfied that the imposition of a consecutive
    sentence is supported by the credible evidence in the record.
    Any remaining arguments not considered lack sufficient merit to warrant
    discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Affirmed.
    A-4003-17T2
    30