STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. JOSEPH J. TALAFOUS (16-05-0072, HUDSON 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-3594-17T2
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JOSEPH J. TALAFOUS, JR.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ___________________________
    Argued February 26, 2020 – Decided June 10, 2020
    Before Judges Koblitz, Whipple, and Gooden Brown.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Hudson County, Indictment No. 16-05-0072.
    Gerald D. Miller argued the cause for appellant (Miller,
    Meyerson & Corbo, attorneys; Gerald D. Miller and
    Nirmalan Nagulendran, on the briefs).
    Evgeniya Sitnikova, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Evgeniya Sitnikova, of counsel and
    on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant, Joseph J. Talafous, Jr., appeals from an April 10, 2018
    judgment of conviction after a jury found him guilty of seventeen counts under
    an indictment charging money laundering, theft, misapplication of entrusted
    property, and failure to make lawful disposition, as well as tax fraud involving
    estate and trust funds of five clients and filing fraudulent tax returns. We affirm.
    We discern the following facts from the trial record. In 1994, de fendant
    began working as a lawyer in his father's law office in Jersey City. About five
    years later, after his father Joseph Talafous, Sr. retired, defendant continued the
    practice and represented clients in areas such as elder law and wills, trusts, and
    estates.
    In 2013, the State began investigating defendant's legal practice after it
    received a referral from the Office of Attorney Ethics (OAE). Detective Scott
    Stevens of the Division of Criminal Justice subpoenaed defendant's attorney
    trust and business account records, as well as account records for Peter
    Pasinosky, the estate of Peter Pasinosky, the Jared Sherengo trust, and the
    estates of Mildred Colavito, Maria Matarazzo, and Michael Zaccaria.
    The investigation resulted in defendant's indictment on nineteen counts
    relating to his theft of client funds and misreporting revenue on his tax returns,
    as follows:
    A-3594-17T2
    2
    Count One, first-degree financial facilitation of criminal activity, N.J.S.A.
    2C:21-25(b)(2)(a);
    Counts Two, Five, and Eight, second-degree theft by unlawful taking,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:20-3, from, respectively, the Jared Sherengo trust, the estate of
    Mildred Colavito, and the estate of Michael Zaccaria;
    Counts Three, Six, Nine, and Twelve, second-degree theft by failure to
    make required disposition of property, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-9, belonging to,
    respectively, the Jared Sherengo trust, the estate of Mildred Colavito, the estate
    of Michael Zaccaria, and the estate of Maria Matarazzo;
    Counts Four, Seven, Ten, Thirteen, and Fifteen, second-degree
    misapplication of entrusted property, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-15, from, respectively, the
    Jared Sherengo trust, the estate of Mildred Colavito, the estate of Michael
    Zaccaria, the estate of Maria Matarazzo, and Peter Pasinosky and the estate of
    Peter Pasinosky;
    Counts Eleven and Fourteen, second-degree theft by deception, N.J.S.A.
    2C:20-4, from, respectively, the estate of Maria Matarazzo, and Peter Pasinosky
    and the estate of Peter Pasinosky; and
    A-3594-17T2
    3
    Counts Sixteen, Seventeen, Eighteen, and Nineteen, third-degree filing
    false or fraudulent gross income tax returns, for tax years 2011, 2012, 2013, and
    2014, N.J.S.A. 54:52-10.
    Defendant moved to dismiss various counts of the indictment, and on
    October 13, 2016, the court heard argument and granted the motion in part,
    dismissing count one and not the remaining counts.
    On June 13, 2017, we affirmed dismissal of the first count of the
    indictment on the State's interlocutory appeal. State v. Talafous, No. A-1838-
    16 (App. Div. June 13, 2017).
    Pasinosky
    Peter Pasinosky1 was blind most of his life and operated a newsstand at
    the courthouse in Hackensack. While working at the courthouse, Peter met
    defendant's father, who he retained to draft a will. The will designated Joseph
    J. Talafous, Sr., as co-executor of the will, along with Peter's nephew, John
    Pasinosky. John testified he moved from New Jersey to California in the mid-
    1990s, but remained in contact with his uncle.
    1
    We use first names where the last names are the same for ease of reference, in
    doing so we mean no disrespect.
    A-3594-17T2
    4
    In March 2007, John traveled to New Jersey to move Peter into a senior
    living facility. While in New Jersey, John reviewed his uncle's will and saw that
    it was written by an attorney named Joseph Talafous. Since John did not know
    any other attorneys who could handle the necessary financial arrangements for
    his uncle, he called defendant and spoke with him on at least two occasions.
    John explained that his uncle had a complicated financial portfolio,
    amounting to between $400,000 and $450,000. Since the senior living facility
    required a down payment of $170,000 to move in, Peter needed someone to act
    as his power of attorney to liquidate some of his assets and make the required
    payment. Peter appointed defendant to serve as his power of attorney, executing
    the requisite form on March 2, 2007. Thereafter, Peter completed the necessary
    paperwork for admission to the senior living facility in the presence of one of
    his relatives and defendant.
    John also took Peter to Hudson City Savings Bank and added himself as a
    joint owner of Peter's bank account to assist Peter with the payments of his
    monthly bills–a phone bill and a maintenance fee. As joint owner of the bank
    account, John paid these bills for his uncle, because he did not believe it was
    worth the expense to have defendant pay the bills.
    A-3594-17T2
    5
    Thereafter, defendant periodically visited Peter whenever Peter called him
    with an issue. Defendant's office assistant, Lizette Vazquez, went to the senior
    living facility with defendant on two or three occasions but never prepared a bill
    for any of defendant's visits. Instead, defendant claimed that Peter agreed to pay
    him a $10,000 yearly retainer during the last few years of his life.
    During a visit in August 2008, John asked Peter for a loan of $14,000 to
    pay his daughter's tuition bill. Peter approved the loan while defendant drafted
    the necessary documents and had John sign a promissory note and mortgage.
    Defendant transferred the loan money from Peter's account to his attorney trust
    account, and then issued the loan check to John from his attorney trust account.
    In March 2009, defendant requested that John repay the loan, after
    learning John sold the property that was used as collateral for the loan. In
    repaying the loan, John wrote a check and deposited it into his uncle's Hudson
    City Savings Bank account. Defendant informed John that this was improper,
    and made John send the check directly to him.
    According to Vazquez, defendant charged Peter $10,000 for his efforts in
    drafting the loan documents and obtaining repayment of the loan. However,
    there is no documentation of the time defendant spent performing these acts,
    A-3594-17T2
    6
    because defendant never prepared any bills for his work for Peter, either before
    or after his death.
    Peter resided in the senior living facility for three years until he was
    hospitalized in February 2010. During Peter's hospitalization, John spoke with
    defendant and told him Peter did not have long to live. Defendant then made
    two withdrawals from Peter's account, the first on March 2 and the second on
    March 5, 2010. On March 10, 2010, Peter died.
    Two weeks after Peter's death, on March 25, 2010, John flew to New
    Jersey to coordinate with defendant to address mortuary services and estate
    issues in accordance with the instructions Peter had written during his lifetime.
    Prior to John's arrival, defendant arranged for the cremation of Peter's rema ins.
    According to John, Peter had already paid for a tombstone and the cost of
    cremation prior to his death; Vazquez, however, testified that defendant
    arranged for payment to the monument company. John further testified he and
    his sister arranged for the burial of Peter's remains.
    While in New Jersey, John met with defendant three times, and went with
    him to Surrogate Court to complete paperwork. John knew Peter's will named
    defendant's father as co-executor of Peter's will; however, defendant informed
    him that he bought out his father's business, and the law firm was transferred to
    A-3594-17T2
    7
    him. John interpreted this information to mean defendant inherited the role of
    co-executor of Peter's will when he took over the law firm.
    Defendant maintained that John agreed for him to serve as co-executor,
    knowing it was his father, Joseph Talafous, Sr., who was named as co -executor
    in the will. Defendant also maintained that he orally informed the Hudson
    County Surrogate that the will named his father as co-executor, and not him.
    Nevertheless, the Surrogate signed the paperwork, approving him to serve as co-
    executor.
    Linda Baisden, the Deputy Surrogate of Hudson County, disputed
    defendant's statements. She testified to her understanding that defendant, not
    his father, was the named co-executor in Peter's will. She further testified
    defendant swore under oath that he was the named co-executor. She stated that
    she did not compare signatures, or otherwise notice that defendant's signature,
    on the probate documents, did not match the signature of the Joseph Talafous
    on the will.
    Detective Stevens testified that defendant made multiple withdrawals
    from Peter's account in the interim between Peter's death, when the power of
    attorney was no longer valid, and the time when defendant was named co-
    executor of the estate.
    A-3594-17T2
    8
    Before John returned to California, defendant gave him a retainer
    agreement to sign. However, John never signed the agreement because there
    were no rates included in it. Defendant asserted that, as co-executor, John
    received statements from Peter's estate account, which was with Morgan
    Stanley. Defendant claimed he kept John apprised of the work that he was doing
    for the estate, including bills he was paying out of the estate account. He also
    claimed he told John he needed to be compensated for the legal work he was
    performing. Defendant admitted, however, that John never approved of any
    withdrawals from the estate account to compensate defendant for his legal fees.
    John testified it was not until March 2011, about a year after his uncle's
    death, that he began receiving statements for his uncle's estate account with
    Morgan Stanley. He stated that he only began receiving the statements after he
    made a specific request for them. He further testified that in reviewing his
    uncle's account statements from before his uncle's death, the time when
    defendant controlled the accounts as power of attorney, he noticed periodic
    withdrawals of between $5000 and $10,000. He testified he did not know what
    this money was used for, or where it had been transferred.
    John provided Peter's accountant with his uncle's financial information
    and asked the accountant to prepare his uncle's tax returns. According to John,
    A-3594-17T2
    9
    defendant "got very upset" when he did this, and insisted he retrieve the
    documents John sent to the accountant and have defendant's "tax people" handle
    Peter's taxes.   On multiple occasions, John asked defendant to provide an
    accounting of Peter's assets, including bank accounts and insurance policies,
    identify any distributions made from those assets, and provide a bill for his legal
    and co-executor services. Defendant never provided such an accounting. John
    hired an attorney to assist him.
    In June 2011, defendant provided John with a certification of services.
    John reviewed the certification and noted numerous overcharges, as well as
    inaccuracies; the certification recorded the 2008 loan to him as an expense and
    did not indicate that the loan had been repaid. John testified he never authorized
    defendant to withdraw any money from the estate in order to pay his attorney
    fees. Defendant admitted that he took attorney fees out of the estate without
    providing a written bill or a signed retainer agreement.
    Detective Stevens testified defendant made withdrawals from Peter's
    estate account after defendant became co-executor of the estate. Detective
    Stevens also testified that, in total, both during Peter's lifetime and after his
    death, defendant withdrew $96,020.23 from Peter's accounts, and used only
    A-3594-17T2
    10
    $2,251.69 for Peter's benefit, while $93,768.54 was transferred to defendant's
    accounts.
    Matarazzo
    Maria Matarazzo lived in Manhattan, on Central Park South, and owned
    and operated a hair salon on Madison Avenue. She also had an online business
    and sold a line of beauty products. Maria died on May 24, 2012 leaving an estate
    valued at $4.3 million. Maria's will, dated 1984, designated her brother as
    executor. However, her brother predeceased her, therefore, Gary Mataraz zo,
    Maria's nephew, served as the executor with defendant sending renunciations to
    other beneficiaries. Gary had known defendant for approximately ten to fifteen
    years, and retained defendant's father to do legal work in the past.
    Gary engaged defendant to handle every aspect of Maria's estate, except
    the sale of her apartment. Although Gary stated he only entered a verbal
    agreement with defendant, a written retainer agreement, presented at trial,
    contained Gary's signature. Gary, however, testified he never saw the document
    until shortly before trial. The agreement set forth a rate of $350 per hour, but
    Gary denied any agreement to pay that amount. Defendant never sent Gary a
    bill describing the work he performed for the estate.        Moreover, Vazquez
    A-3594-17T2
    11
    testified that when defendant's office closed, he had not completed work on the
    estate and no accounting was prepared.
    Although the record is unclear as to what work defendant performed, Gary
    knew defendant created a New Jersey corporation to take over Maria's hair salon,
    with Gary named as the president of the corporation. Defendant also went with
    Gary to New York a few times, to address a problem with respect to paychecks
    at the salon and to convert the salon's bank accounts to estate accounts.
    According to Vazquez, Gary came to the office at least once per week.
    The record reflects, however, that without telling Gary, defendant hired
    another attorney, John Walsh, to handle all New York aspects of administering
    the Matarazzo estate. Walsh was admitted to practice in New York, the location
    of Maria's estate, whereas defendant was not. Walsh testified that he began
    working on the estate in the fall of 2011 and acknowledged he had difficulty
    obtaining   necessary   documents    and   information    from   defendant     for
    approximately two years. Walsh ultimately took over the administration of the
    estate in October 2014. In total, Walsh billed defendant for 33.4 hours of work
    through October 2014, and defendant paid him about $8000. Walsh's billin g
    rate was $425 per hour, and he billed for his paralegal's time at $160 per hour.
    A-3594-17T2
    12
    Defendant periodically asked Gary for payments. Gary paid the amounts
    defendant requested, out of the estate account, believing the payments were for
    legal fees relating to the estate. The total amount Gary paid defendant for the
    estate work was over $300,000. Gary denied approving any loans to defendant.
    Sherengo
    Diana Aponte is the mother of Jared Sherengo, who was seventeen years
    old at the time of defendant's trial. They lived in an apartment in West New
    York, along with Jared's three siblings. When Jared was ten months old, his
    father died in a work-related construction accident. The family obtained a
    consent judgment in workers' compensation court. In August 2005, a court
    awarded Jared fifty percent of the settlement proceeds, amounting to
    $461,881.74, in a separate litigation for damages relating to his father's death.
    Defendant's firm represented Jared in the workers' compensation case and
    represented Jared solely at the settlement hearing in the other litigation.
    The consent judgment in the workers compensation matter reflects
    defendant's counsel fee as $1000. Regarding the other litigation, Aponte never
    discussed with defendant the method of payment, but when that case settled,
    defendant told her he had not yet been paid for his work.
    A-3594-17T2
    13
    The court ordered Jared's settlement money be placed in a trust, and
    appointed defendant to act as trustee, with Aponte's consent. Aponte agreed to
    this arrangement because she trusted defendant. Defendant established a special
    needs trust for Sherengo with Morgan Stanley; however, Aponte testified that
    Jared does not have any special needs and she never told defendant that he did.
    When defendant created the trust account, he deposited only $400,000 of
    the $461,881.74 settlement monies into the account. Vazquez could not recall
    where the additional money was deposited, or whether it was reported as fee
    income.     Thereafter, as trustee, defendant had sole authority to authori ze
    transactions on the trust account.
    Aponte testified she initially received a $2500 check for Jared from
    Morgan Stanley.      After that, whenever she needed money, she would call
    defendant's office, and then travel to the office to sign paperwork regarding any
    payment made to her. Aponte testified that she generally asked for money twice
    per year, but sometimes made more frequent requests. Vazquez, however,
    testified that Aponte came to the office more frequently, four or five times per
    year.
    In terms of the work defendant did with respect to the Sherengo trust,
    Aponte testified that in the beginning, she would give defendant receipts to show
    A-3594-17T2
    14
    how she spent the money. However, at some point she stopped doing that.
    Vazquez testified defendant managed the trust account, inquired about Jared's
    schooling, and sometimes visited Aponte's apartment to check on Jared's living
    arrangements.
    Defendant told Aponte the trust money could be used only for Jared, and
    generally gave her the money she requested. However, on one occasion, she
    asked for money to purchase a vehicle, which she needed to take Jared to school
    and to the doctor, and defendant rejected her request. On two other occasions,
    when she told defendant Jared needed computers for school, defendant
    purchased the computers and brought them to Aponte's home, rather than giving
    Aponte the money to make the purchases herself.
    Defendant never submitted a bill for his services or gave Aponte an
    accounting of the money in the trust. Instead, he discouraged Aponte from
    considering Jared's financial security. He also never asked Aponte to authorize
    his fees, nor did he seek approval for payment of his fees from the trust.
    According to Aponte, she never asked to review the account statements for the
    trust, and never knew defendant was taking money from the trust account other
    than what was given to her for Jared's needs. However, Vazquez claimed that
    on one occasion, defendant provided Aponte with copies of the trust's account
    A-3594-17T2
    15
    statements. Vazquez also testified that she spoke to Aponte about the need to
    pay defendant for his services, although she admitted that she never gave Aponte
    any written notice of defendant's withdrawals from the trust account.
    The record reflects defendant made numerous withdrawals from the trust
    account, with the money sent to defendant's attorney trust or business accounts.
    Anthony Cristiano of Morgan Stanley testified to the specific withdrawals.
    Defendant told OAE that all of the funds he withdrew from the Sherengo
    trust account and deposited into his accounts were disbursed solely for Jared's
    benefit and with Aponte's approval. However, he also admitted he had taken
    money for legal fees, particularly in relation to Aponte's requests for funds.
    Detective Stevens testified that of the $400,000 initially placed into Jared's trust
    account, only $35,000 was withdrawn and paid to Aponte to use for Jared's
    benefit, whereas $400,000 was transferred either to defendant's business or trust
    account.
    Colavito
    Mildred Colavito lived in Jersey City across the street from defendant's
    law office. She died on August 14, 2009, after which her nephew, Dr. Anthony
    Conte, traveled to New Jersey from Florida in order to make funeral
    arrangements. While in New Jersey, Conte visited defendant.
    A-3594-17T2
    16
    Defendant prepared Colavito's will in 2001, and was named executor of
    the will. After Colavito's death, defendant took possession of a metal box of
    currency that the police found in her apartment, and Vazquez signed a police
    inventory of the contents of the apartment. Later, defendant also arranged for
    the apartment to be cleaned out.
    In her will, Colavito made at least nineteen specific distributions to named
    beneficiaries, including Conte. Thereafter, percentages of the balance of her
    estate were bequeathed to various charities, and the residue was bequeathed to
    Conte. Vazquez testified that defendant notified all of the beneficiaries of the
    will and sent them checks for the amounts bequeathed to them. However,
    neither Vazquez nor Conte recall any disbursements from the estate to charitable
    organizations.
    Moreover, Conte testified that he did not receive the amounts bequeathed
    to him. He was specifically bequeathed $5000, another $5000 for expenses, plus
    the residue of the estate. Conte, however, received only $1691.10 for expenses,
    and could not verify having received the additional $5000, nor any amount
    representing the residue of the estate. Conte never saw any bills for defendant's
    work with respect to the estate and was not aware of any monies taken by
    defendant from the estate for legal or executor fees.
    A-3594-17T2
    17
    Vazquez could not recall preparing any bills or accounting for the
    Colavito estate and testified the estate was not complete when defendant's office
    closed. Nevertheless, between February 2011 and February 2014, the Colavito
    estate bank account had a balance of just $596.55. In March 2014, the balance
    on the bank account was zero, with a check for $596.55 having been made out
    to Matthew Cantwell, an attorney who worked in defendant's office on January
    17, 2014.
    The record does not contain the documentation establishing how much
    money defendant received from the Colavito estate. The indictment alleged
    defendant stole $316,275.23.
    Zaccaria
    Michael Zaccaria worked in railway transit and owned and operated an
    iron business. Defendant performed legal services for Michael's business, and
    handled some personal matters for members of his family.           According to
    Vazquez, defendant was not paid for all of his services at the time of Michael's
    death in June 2012. However, no documentation existed to establish what work
    defendant had performed on those matters, or what defendant allegedly was
    owed because defendant never prepared bills. Instead, he would advise Michael
    of the amount owed, and Michael would pay that amount.
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    18
    Michael's wife, Delores Zaccaria, was the named executor of his will.
    Delores and her son Thomas Zaccaria hired defendant to assist in collecting on
    Michael's insurance policies, and in settling his estate. At the first meeting with
    defendant, Thomas paid defendant a fee of $10,000. However, both Delores and
    Thomas testified that they did not sign a retainer agreement at this meeting, nor
    did they discuss how much defendant would charge.
    Although there is a retainer agreement, dated June 27, 2012, between
    defendant, Delores, and Thomas, it was not signed until April 30, 2013, the date
    defendant turned the document over to State investigators. Defendant admitted
    there was no retainer agreement in place before that date. Moreover, while the
    retainer agreement indicated that defendant would be paid $350 per hour, plus
    six percent of any insurance monies recovered, Thomas did not recall ever
    seeing those provisions, and testified that he never discussed these amounts with
    defendant, nor agreed to an amount of legal fees that defendant would charge.
    Defendant never prepared any bills nor did he produce any accounting for
    the Zaccaria estate. Vazquez testified that although defendant was able to obtain
    payments on certain life insurance policies, the estate work was not complete at
    the time defendant's office closed. Nevertheless, at various times defendant
    removed money from the estate and deposited that money into his own accounts.
    A-3594-17T2
    19
    Regarding the life insurance proceeds, Delores testified she never directly
    received the insurance money. Rather, she visited defendant's office, signed the
    checks, and Vazquez gave her copies of the checks. In addition, although the
    record reflects two life insurance checks were made out to Delores, they were
    never endorsed by her. Instead, they were endorsed by defendant and deposited
    into his attorney trust account.
    Delores did not know the total amount defendant was able to recover from
    her husband's life insurance policies and was unaware of any money she had not
    received.   However, Thomas, after reviewing the multiple insurance check
    amounts with the prosecutor during his testimony, stated that they amounted to
    roughly $870,000.
    Both Delores and Thomas acknowledged that defendant deposited a check
    in Delores's account for $400,000. Moreover, Delores testified she received
    additional amounts when she made specific requests to defendant for money to
    pay for a new roof or car repairs. She also authorized defendant to pay her
    husband's funeral expenses, and to make certain payments to her children. Both
    Delores and Thomas testified, however, that Delores did not receive funds for
    other requests made by her. They also testified they did not authorize defendant
    A-3594-17T2
    20
    to use any of the estate money to pay any fees. Thomas further testified that he
    never made any loans to defendant.
    Tax Fraud
    Defendant retained Alan Margulies, of Margulies, Englehart & Veneziale,
    to prepare his income tax returns and payroll tax returns.        Margulies also
    prepared tax returns for various trusts and estates handled by defendant,
    including the Sherengo trust.
    Vazquez would send Margulies a copy of the firm's QuickBooks file and
    other necessary documents to prepare the returns. Thereafter, Margulies or his
    staff would communicate with defendant or his staff about the document
    received. In 2013, Margulies questioned whether the following entries reflected
    fee income or loans: $4000 estate of Colavito; $3000 estate of Colavito; $2200
    Hurley Realty; $16,897.50 Hurley Realty; and $13,000 estate of Matarazzo.
    Defendant responded the entries were loans. The loan designation would change
    defendant's reported gross income.
    Defendant denied ever borrowing money from a client, loaning money to
    a client, or engaging in a business transaction with a client. Vazquez also denied
    knowledge of any loans taken by defendant from Matarazzo, Zaccaria, or
    A-3594-17T2
    21
    Colavito. Moreover, Gary Matarazzo and Thomas Zaccaria denied ever loaning
    money to defendant.
    Each year, Margulies prepared the tax returns and sent them for
    defendant's review.     Only upon defendant's authorization would Margulies
    electronically file the returns.
    Detective Stevens testified as to discrepancies between defendant's
    reported income on the various trust and estate accounts and the actual funds
    withdrawn from those accounts. Specifically:
     In 2011, defendant reported income of $21,050 on the Sherengo trust,
    but received $50,075 from the account.
     In 2012, defendant reported income of $9500 on the Sherengo trust,
    but received $13,000 from the account.
     In 2012, defendant declared income of $5500 on the Colavito account,
    but received $14,500 from the account.
     In 2012, defendant reported $5000 in income from the Matarazzo
    account, but received $20,000 from the account.
     In 2013, defendant reported income of $36,700 on the Matarazzo
    account, but received $118,063.11 from the account.
     In 2013, defendant reported income of $109,800 from the Zaccaria
    A-3594-17T2
    22
    account, but received $128,800 from the account.
     In 2014, defendant reported $78,925 in income from the Zaccaria
    account, but received $267,275.81.
    At the close of the State's evidence, defendant moved to dismiss count
    fifteen of the indictment, as to Pasinosky and the Pasinosky estate, which
    charged him with second-degree misapplication of entrusted property, N.J.S.A.
    2C:21-15.    He argued that this charge was time-barred by the statute of
    limitations to the extent any alleged thefts occurred prior to Pasinosky's death.
    The court denied the motion.
    Defendant also moved to dismiss count fourteen of the indictment,
    charging theft by deception, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4, against Pasinosky and the
    Pasinosky estate. He maintained there was insufficient proof of deception but
    the court nevertheless denied the motion.
    Defendant moved to dismiss the tax fraud counts (counts sixteen,
    seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen), for lack of proof that defendant signed the
    tax returns, which the court denied. Finally, defendant moved to dismiss the
    remaining counts of the indictment for insufficient evidence, which the court
    denied.
    A-3594-17T2
    23
    The court thoroughly instructed the jury as to their role as fact-finders, the
    elements of each offense, and what evidence they were and were not permitted
    to consider, including that they may not consider counsels' arguments as
    evidence. The jury found defendant guilty on all counts except count twelve,
    theft by failure to make required disposition of property as to the Matarazzo
    estate.   With respect to counts fourteen and fifteen (respectively, theft by
    deception and misapplication of entrusted property as to Pasinosky and his
    estate), the jury found that the amount stolen was less than $75,000.
    Defendant moved for a new trial. After hearing argument on February 16,
    the court entered an opinion and order denying the motion. On March 29, 2018,
    the court held a sentencing hearing and entered a judgment of conviction. The
    court sentenced defendant to an aggregate term of twenty-six years.
    This appeal followed.
    Defendant raises the following issues on appeal.
    POINT I.
    THE COURT PERMITTED A DETECTIVE NOT
    QUALIFIED AS AN EXPERT TO COMPARE BANK
    STATEMENTS AND TAX RETURNS AND GIVE
    AN OPINION ON WHAT HAD BEEN REMOVED
    FROM BANK ACCOUNTS AND WHAT WAS NOT
    REPORTED AS INCOME ON TAX RETURNS.
    A-3594-17T2
    24
    POINT II.
    THE COURT'S CONDUCT OF THE TRIAL
    DEPRIVED THE DEFENDANT OF DUE PROCESS
    OF LAW.
    (A)
    THE COURT ADMITTED EVIDENCE WHEN THE
    SUPPLYING    OF    DISCOVERY     GAVE
    INADEQUATE NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANT.
    (B)
    THE     TRIAL   COURT'S    LACK   OF
    UNDERSTANDING      OF     ELEMENTARY
    PRINCIPLES OF JURISPRUDENCE DEPRIVED
    THE DEFENDANT OF DUE PROCESS.
    POINT III.
    THE SENTENCE IMPOSED ON [DEFENDANT]
    WAS EXCESSIVE.
    (A)
    IMPOSING SIX CONSECUTIVE SENTENCES
    VIOLATED THE GENERAL RULE OF NOT
    IMPOSING MORE THAN TWO CONSECUTIVE
    SENTENCES.
    (B)
    SUCCESSIVE TERMS FOR DIFFERENT OFFENSES
    SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN EQUAL TO
    PUNISHMENT FOR THE FIRST OFFENSE.
    A-3594-17T2
    25
    POINT IV.
    THE DEFENDANT'S CONVICTION WAS AGAINST
    THE WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE SINCE THE
    OPINION EVIDENCE OFFERED BY THE STATE
    SHOULD HAVE BEEN STRICKEN AND THE
    STATE FAILED TO PROVIDE ANY PROOF THAT
    [DEFENDANT'S] FEES WERE NOT REASONABLE
    FOR THE SERVICES THAT HE RENDERED.
    POINT V.
    THE ACQUITTAL ON ONE THEFT CHARGE
    (COUNT 12) AS TO THE ESTATE OF
    [MATARAZZO] BARRED CONVICTION OF
    OTHER THEFT CHARGES AS TO THE ESTATE OF
    [MATARAZZO] (COUNTS 11 AND 13) FOR THE
    SAME ACTS.
    POINT VI.
    THE THEFT BY DECEPTION COUNTS AS TO THE
    ESTATE OF [PASINOSKY] (COUNT 17) SHOULD
    HAVE BEEN DISMISSED.
    (A)
    ALL THE ALLEGED THEFTS FROM [PASINOSKY]
    HAD OCCURRED PRIOR [TO] THE EXPIRATION
    OF THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS.
    POINT VII.
    THE THEFT AND MISAPPLICATION OF FUNDS
    OFFENSES AGAINST [PASINOSKY] WERE NOT
    CONTINUOUS OFFENSES.
    A-3594-17T2
    26
    POINT VIII.
    MISAPPLICATION OF ENTRUSTED PROPERTY IS
    NOT A CONTINUOUS OFFENSE.
    I.
    Defendant first argues the court erred in permitting Detective Stevens to
    give expert accounting testimony without having the necessary qualifications to
    do so. Having fully reviewed Detective Steven's testimony, we conclude this
    argument is without merit.
    Detective Stevens testified to information he gleaned from his review of
    the records. He identified amounts defendant withdrew from these accounts and
    deposited into his own accounts, as well as the amounts defendant paid to
    Aponte. Detective Stevens also testified to the amounts defendant took from
    various accounts in specified years, and the amounts defendant reported on his
    tax returns as income from these accounts during those years.
    Detective Stevens did not testify defendant misappropriated or stole the
    amounts taken from the client's accounts, nor did he testify that defendant
    misrepresented his income on his tax returns. He merely reported the amounts
    set forth in the records.
    A-3594-17T2
    27
    We review the trial court's evidentiary ruling for an abuse of discretion,
    and do not reverse unless there has been a clear error of judgment. State v.
    Nantambu, 
    221 N.J. 390
    , 402 (2015).
    Under N.J.R.E. 702: "If scientific, technical, or other specialized
    knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine
    a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
    training, or education may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise."
    Under N.J.R.E. 703:
    The facts or data in the particular case upon which an
    expert bases an opinion or inference may be those
    perceived by or made known to the expert at or before
    the hearing. If of a type reasonably relied upon by
    experts in the particular field in forming opinions or
    inferences upon the subject, the facts or data need not
    be admissible in evidence.
    Finally, under N.J.R.E. 701, lay witnesses may give "testimony in the
    form of opinions or inferences . . . if it (a) is rationally based on the perception
    of the witness and (b) will assist in understanding the witness' testimony or in
    determining a fact in issue."
    Detective Stevens did not give any expert or lay opinion testimony.
    Rather, he gave fact testimony about the contents of the financial records.
    Another witness, Cristiano, from Morgan Stanley, gave testimony similar to that
    A-3594-17T2
    28
    of Detective Stevens, testifying to the dates and amounts of numerous
    withdrawals made from the Sherengo trust account. Defendant did not object to
    Cristiano's testimony.
    Detective Stevens's testimony did not become expert testimony merely
    because he performed simple mathematical calculations, totaling the amounts
    defendant had withdrawn from various client accounts and deposited in his own
    accounts. N.J.R.E. 1006 ("The contents of voluminous writings or photographs
    which cannot conveniently be examined in court may be presented by a qualified
    witness in the form of a chart, summary, or calculation. . . .") (emphasis added).
    Indeed, Gary Matarazzo gave similar testimony as to the dates and amounts of
    payments he made to defendant, giving a rough total of those amounts.
    Defendant did not object to Matarazzo's testimony.
    This case is distinguishable from the cases where witnesses were
    improperly permitted to give opinion testimony that intruded upon the function
    of the jury. See, e.g., State v. McLean, 
    205 N.J. 438
    , 443, 461 (2011) (holding
    that police officers may not testify to their opinion that they observed a drug
    transaction); State v. Hyman, 
    451 N.J. Super. 429
    , 446-52 (App. Div. 2017)
    (holding that trial court erred in permitting detective to provide opinion
    A-3594-17T2
    29
    testimony regarding the meaning of slang words without being qualified as
    expert, but error was harmless), certif. denied, 
    232 N.J. 301
    (2018).
    Detective Stevens issued no conclusions or opinions. He merely testified
    to the results of his investigation into defendant's accounts, including amounts
    taken from client accounts and deposited into defendant's accounts, and the
    amounts defendant reported as income. He gave no conclusions or opinions
    about the legality of defendant's withdrawals from the various accounts, nor did
    he make any conclusion about the legality of defendant's reported income on his
    tax returns. Thus, there was no intrusion upon the jury's function, nor any
    violation of the evidentiary rules governing lay opinion or expert testimony.
    II.
    We reject defendant's argument that the court denied him due process by
    failing to excuse non-English speakers during the jury selection process. The
    record is insufficient to show any error by the court, and defendant has not
    shown that any non-English speakers sat as jurors.
    We also reject defendant's argument that he was deprived of due process
    because the court permitted the State to introduce excerpts from his statements
    to the OAE, notwithstanding that the State provided late discovery of these
    statements and its intent to use them.
    A-3594-17T2
    30
    Utilizing an abuse of discretion standard for evidentiary determinations,
    we find none. The record reflects the State produced discovery to defendant
    before trial and moved in limine to admit defendant’s recorded statements to the
    OAE. The court held a hearing and heard testimony from Isabel McGinty of the
    OAE. McGinty stated that as part of the OAE investigation, she conducted
    seven recorded interviews with defendant.
    McGinty testified defendant had the right to discovery with respect to the
    ethics complaint, including copies of the interviews. However, it does not
    appear that defendant ever requested them, other than three transcripts his
    counsel requested on March 13, 2015, for interviews conducted June 10, 2013,
    February 20, 2015, and February 25, 2015.
    Thereafter, defendant agreed to disbarment on June 23, 2015, and the
    court entered a disbarment order on July 13, 2015. The OAE referred the case
    to the Criminal Division on May 28, 2015, and provided the Criminal Division
    with certain documents related to the OAE investigation.
    McGinty did not forward the tapes and transcripts of defendant's OAE
    interviews to the Deputy Attorney General until November 6, 2017.
    Immediately thereafter, the Deputy Attorney General provided this discovery to
    the defense. After hearing this evidence, and argument from counsel, the court
    A-3594-17T2
    31
    ruled on December 11, 2017, that defendant’s statements to the OAE were
    admissible at trial because they were public record, not confidential, made
    voluntarily, and were statements against interest under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25).
    The admission of the statements did not violate defendant’s due process
    rights as a result of their late disclosure in discovery, as excerpts of the
    transcripts had been produced by the State early in discovery. More importantly,
    defendant knew about all of his OAE interviews and had received transcripts of
    three of the interviews during the OAE process. Therefore, defendant was not
    surprised by the existence of the interviews.
    While there was some delay in the State’s obtaining the statements from
    the OAE and producing them to defendant for use in the criminal case, the State
    produced the statements to defendant immediately upon receiving them, and,
    after redactions, the State intended to use only 100 minutes of the statements,
    which was not voluminous, and counsel had sufficient time to prepare. This
    record reflects no denial of due process.
    III.
    We similarly reject defendant's contention that his convictions of the theft
    charges were not supported by the evidence because the State failed to provide
    any proof that his fees were unreasonable for the services rendered.
    A-3594-17T2
    32
    Before the case was sent to the jury, defendant moved for a judgment of
    acquittal. R. 3:18-1. As part of that motion, he argued broadly that the evidence
    was insufficient to support a conviction for any count of the indictment, which
    the prosecutor contested and the court rejected. Notably however, defendant did
    not argue that expert testimony was necessary to establish the value of his
    professional services.
    In summation, defense counsel argued the evidence was insufficient to
    prove defendant's guilt of the charged offenses, because the State had not
    produced any evidence as to the reasonable value of the services he provided to
    his clients. Through its verdict, the jury rejected this argument.
    Post-verdict, defendant made a motion for a new trial, in which he argued
    that evidence as to his reasonable attorney fees was necessary to prove his guilt.
    R. 3:18-2.   The prosecutor addressed this contention, arguing: it was not
    obligated to present testimony regarding the reasonableness of defendant's
    attorney fees; the evidence was sufficient for the jury to have found theft; and
    the jury clearly made its own determinations, finding defendant guilty of only a
    third-degree crime as to Pasinosky, and finding him not guilty on one count as
    to the Matarazzo estate. In denying the motion, the court rejected defendant's
    A-3594-17T2
    33
    argument and agreed with the State's finding that the evidence was sufficient to
    support the jury's verdict.
    On a motion for judgment of acquittal, made before the case is sent to the
    jury, Rule 3:18-1, or after a verdict has been rendered, Rule 3:18-2, the court is
    tasked with determining
    whether the evidence viewed in its entirety, and giving
    the State the benefit of all of its favorable testimony and
    all of the favorable inferences which can reasonably be
    drawn therefrom, is such that a jury could properly find
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty
    of the crime charged.
    [State v. D.A., 
    191 N.J. 158
    , 163 (2007); State v. Reyes,
    
    50 N.J. 454
    , 458-59 (1967).]
    The court "is not concerned with the worth, nature or extent (beyond a
    scintilla) of the evidence, but only with its existence, viewed most favorably to
    the State." State v. Kluber, 
    130 N.J. Super. 336
    , 342 (App. Div. 1974). Accord
    State v. Zembreski, 
    445 N.J. Super. 412
    , 431 (App. Div. 2016).
    Moreover, "[n]o distinction is made between direct and circumstantial
    evidence." State v. Tindell, 
    417 N.J. Super. 530
    , 549 (App. Div. 2011). See
    also State v. Dancyger, 
    29 N.J. 76
    , 84 (1959) (stating that a criminal conviction
    may be based solely upon circumstantial evidence). Indeed, juries are permitted
    to draw an inference from a fact whenever it is more probable than not that the
    A-3594-17T2
    34
    inference is true; the veracity of each inference need not be established beyond
    a reasonable doubt in order for the jury to draw the inference. Nevertheless, the
    State's right to the benefit of reasonable inferences should not be used to shift
    or lighten the burden of proof, or become a bootstrap to reduce the State's burden
    of establishing the essential elements of the offense charged beyond a reasonable
    doubt. State v. Brown, 
    80 N.J. 587
    , 592 (1979) (citations omitted).
    On appeal from a decision on a motion for judgment of acquittal, we apply
    the same legal standard as the trial court, performing a de novo review of the
    evidence. State v. Fuqua, 
    234 N.J. 583
    , 590 (2018); State v. Dekowski, 
    218 N.J. 596
    , 608 (2014).
    Defendant was in a confidential, fiduciary relationship with each of the
    named clients; he represented that his billing rate was $350 per hour; he took
    enormous amounts of money from the client accounts and deposited them into
    his own (over $90,000 from Pasinosky; over $400,000 from Sherengo; over
    $300,000 from Colavito; over $300,000 from Matarazzo; and over $400,000
    from Zaccaria); 2 and the amounts taken occurred at suspicious times, or in
    frequent succession, and in suspiciously round numbers.
    2
    $300,000 in legal fees, at $350 per hour, would amount to 857 hours of work.
    $400,000 in legal fees, at $350 per hour, would amount to 1142 hours of work.
    A-3594-17T2
    35
    Defendant created no records of the work he performed; the clients did
    not receive bills detailing the work performed, nor any accountings of the estates
    at issue; he never obtained consent to take counsel fees directly from the client
    accounts; he discouraged inquiries into his practices, and discouraged outside
    review of the client's accounts; and on his taxes he reported less in income than
    he took from the various accounts. The jury was entitled to infer from this
    evidence that defendant had the requisite criminal intent to steal his clients'
    money. State v. Williams, 
    190 N.J. 114
    , 125-26 (2007); State v. Bzura, 261 N.J.
    Super. 602, 616 (App. Div. 1993).
    Finally, as to Matarazzo and Pasinosky, against whom defendant was
    charged with theft by deception, the record includes evidence of defendant's
    theft of the client's money through deceit, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4. Specifically, he
    misrepresented that the amounts he requested were for legal fees; presented
    himself as a named co-executor of the Pasinosky estate, discouraged John
    Pasinosky from seeking independent advice from his uncle's accountant; and
    represented that he could handle the Matarazzo estate but did not advise Gary
    However, there was no indication that defendant spent that amount of time on
    the relevant client accounts.
    A-3594-17T2
    36
    Matarazzo that he was not admitted to practice in New York, the location of the
    estate.
    Although expert testimony is sometimes required, for example, to
    establish a standard of care in professional malpractice cases, or the fair
    settlement value of a legal claim, see, e.g., Kelly v. Berlin, 
    300 N.J. Super. 256
    ,
    264-66, 269-70 (App. Div. 1997), expert testimony was not necessary to prove
    defendant's guilt of the crimes charged.
    In the Pasinosky matter, where there was more evidence as to the work
    defendant performed, and where defendant belatedly provided John with a
    certification of services rendered, the jury concluded that the amount stolen from
    Pasinosky was less than $75,000 (the State alleged it was over $90,000), thus
    reducing his crime from a second-degree charge to a third-degree offense.
    Defendant argues the jury's verdict is inconsistent with respect to the
    crimes against the Matarazzo estate (counts eleven, twelve, and thirteen).
    Specifically, he argues that his acquittal on count twelve (second-degree theft
    by failure to make the required disposition of property, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-9)
    "barred" his convictions on counts eleven (second-degree theft by deception,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4) and thirteen (second-degree misapplication of entrusted
    property, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-15). Therefore, he asserts the court erred by denying
    A-3594-17T2
    37
    his motion to dismiss counts eleven and thirteen. Having reviewed the record,
    we consider this argument to be without merit.
    Contrary to defendant's argument, verdicts do not need to be consistent.
    State v. Muhammad, 
    182 N.J. 551
    , 578 (2005). Courts are not permitted to
    "conjecture regarding the nature of the deliberations in the jury room," or
    "speculate whether verdicts resulted from jury lenity, mistake, or compromise,"
    nor do they "attempt to reconcile the counts on which the jury returned a verdict
    of guilty and not guilty."
    Ibid. Instead, courts "determine
    whether the evidence
    in the record was sufficient to support a conviction on any count on which the
    jury found the defendant guilty."
    Ibid. Accord State v.
    Goodwin, 
    224 N.J. 102
    ,
    116 (2016); State v. Terrell, 
    452 N.J. Super. 226
    , 269 (App. Div. 2016), aff’d,
    
    231 N.J. 170
    (2017).
    Here, as to the Matarazzo estate, the record supports defendant's
    convictions for count eleven, second-degree theft by deception, and count
    thirteen, second-degree misapplication of entrusted property. Therefore, the
    court correctly denied defendant's motion to dismiss his convictions on these
    counts.
    A-3594-17T2
    38
    IV.
    Defendant further contends the court erred by failing to dismiss the
    Pasinosky related offenses of theft by deception and misapplication of entrusted
    property, which occurred prior to Pasinosky's death, because the acts were
    beyond the five-year statute of limitations, N.J.S.A. 2C:1-6(b)(1).
    A court should not dismiss an indictment unless it is manifestly deficient
    or defective. State v. Twiggs, 
    233 N.J. 513
    , 531-32 (2018). In general, we apply
    an abuse of discretion standard when reviewing a trial court's decision on a
    motion to dismiss an indictment, but where that decision involves a purely legal
    question, our review is de novo.
    Id. at 532.
    Accord State v. Bernardi, 456 N.J.
    Super. 176, 186 (App. Div. 2018) (reviewing decision to dismiss count of
    indictment de novo because it presented question of law).
    "A criminal statute of limitations is designed to protect individuals from
    charges when the basic facts have become obscured by time." State v. Diorio,
    
    216 N.J. 598
    , 612 (2014). It "balances the right of the public to have persons
    who commit criminal offenses charged, tried, and sanctioned with the right of
    the defendant to a prompt prosecution."
    Ibid. It serves as
    a complete bar to
    prosecution.
    Id. at 613.
    A-3594-17T2
    39
    As it relates to the date of accrual for a statute of limitations, N.J.S.A.
    2C:1-6(c) states, in pertinent part:
    An offense is committed either when every element
    occurs or, if a legislative purpose to prohibit a
    continuing course of conduct plainly appears, at the
    time when the course of conduct or the defendant's
    complicity therein is terminated. Time starts to run on
    the day after the offense is committed. . . .
    Thus, for continuing offenses, defined as "conduct spanning an extended
    period of time," which "generates harm that continues uninterrupted until the
    course of conduct ceases," 
    Diorio, 216 N.J. at 614
    , the statute of limitations
    "does not begin to run until the prohibited conduct ceases."
    Id. at 602.
    By
    contrast, a discrete act "is one that occurs at a single point in time."
    Id. at 614.
    In Diorio, the Court concluded that "most theft by deception offenses are
    not continuing offenses," noting that "the Legislature has declared that the
    various theft offenses addressed in Chapter 20, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-1 to -38 are
    generally single offenses. N.J.S.A. 2C:20-2(a)."
    Id. at 618.
    Nevertheless, the
    Court concluded that theft by deception may sometimes be a continuing offense.
    Ibid. In this regard,
    the Court noted that N.J.S.A. 2C:20-2(b)(4) explicitly
    permits the aggregation of amounts stolen to determine the grade of the offense,
    thus reflecting the Legislature's "recognition . . . that theft by deception is not
    always an isolated event but may actually be a complex scheme involving many
    A-3594-17T2
    40
    persons or businesses and play out over the course of many days, weeks, months,
    or even years."
    Ibid. The Court held:
    "when a defendant engages in a course
    of conduct or single scheme to obtain property of another by deception from one
    or several persons, that conduct is a continuous offense for purposes of the
    statute of limitations."
    Id. at 619.
    The Court applied the same reasoning to hold
    that money laundering, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-25(b), constitutes a continuing offense
    "when the record contains evidence of successive acts that facilitate and promote
    the common scheme to defraud."
    Id. at 622-25.
    In rejecting defendant's motions to dismiss the original indictment, and
    the superseding indictment, the court held that defendant's theft from Pasinosky
    and the Pasinosky estate, which occurred through regular money transfers
    between November 3, 2008, and November 12, 2010, constituted a continuing
    violation because they were part of a single scheme to defraud the victims of
    their money. Therefore, the statute of limitations did not bar prosecution,
    because the indictment was within the five-year statute of limitations period
    based upon the date of the last transaction. The court acknowledged defendant's
    argument that Pasinosky and his estate were two separate victims. However, it
    found no significance in that fact, and neither do we.
    A-3594-17T2
    41
    V.
    Finally, we reject defendant's sentencing arguments. Defendant argues
    that his sentence should be reversed as excessive, based upon the overall number
    of consecutive sentences imposed, and the imposition of a consecutive sentence
    for the tax fraud convictions.
    On March 29, 2018, the court held a sentencing hearing and entered a
    judgment of conviction. The court found that merger of offenses was applicable
    as to each victim, but only for the counts of theft by failure to make the required
    disposition and misapplication of entrusted property.        Therefore, the court
    merged: counts three and four; counts six and seven; and counts nine and ten.
    The court found aggravating factors two, four, nine, ten, and twelve,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(2), (4), (9), (10), and (12) and mitigating factors seven and
    eight, N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(7) and (8). It did not weigh the mitigating factors
    heavily, and found that the aggravating factors substantially outweighed the
    mitigating factors.
    The court made specific findings under State v. Yarbough, 
    100 N.J. 627
    (1985), and determined that consecutive sentences were appropriate for the
    groups of crimes against separate victims. The court noted in particular that "the
    crimes committed by the defendant against six separate victims were
    A-3594-17T2
    42
    independent of each other, and also separate and distinct schemes" and they
    continued over an eleven-year period. The court concluded: "The defendant
    committed multiple offenses against multiple individuals and, therefore,
    consecutive sentences are appropriate in this case."
    Ultimately, the court sentenced defendant to a total of twenty-six years,
    as follows: (1) five years each on counts two and three, to run concurrently with
    each other but consecutive to the sentences for counts five and six; (2) five years
    each on counts five and six, to run concurrently with each other, but consecutive
    to the sentences for counts eight and nine; (3) five years each on counts eight
    and nine, to run concurrently with each other, but consecutive to the sentences
    for counts eleven and thirteen; (4) five years each on counts eleven and thirteen,
    to run concurrently with one another, but consecutive to the sentences on counts
    fourteen and fifteen; (5) three years each on counts fourteen and fifteen, to run
    concurrently with one another, but consecutive to the sentences on counts
    sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen; and (6) three years each on counts
    sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen, to run concurrently with one another,
    but consecutive to the other terms.
    We review the trial court's sentencing decision for an abuse of discretion.
    State v. Miller, 
    237 N.J. 15
    , 28 (2019); State v. Case, 
    220 N.J. 49
    , 65 (2014).
    A-3594-17T2
    43
    Here, the sentence imposed upon defendant is consistent with the law and does
    not shock the conscience.      Notwithstanding the court's finding that the
    aggravating factors substantially outweighed the mitigating factors, the five -
    year sentences on the second-degree offenses are the lowest possible under our
    sentencing scheme, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6(a)(2), as are the three-year sentences on
    the third-degree offenses, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6(a)(3).
    Moreover, the consecutive sentences are consistent with Yarbough,
    because defendant's crimes had separate victims and they continued for so many
    years. Furthermore, although defendant's overall sentence is twenty-six years,
    none of the crimes for which he was convicted carry periods of parole
    ineligibility. Therefore, the real-time consequences of his sentence are not as
    severe as appears from the overall length of the sentence. See State v. Marinez,
    
    370 N.J. Super. 49
    , 53, 58 (App. Div. 2004) (considering real-time consequences
    of sentence as to which No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, was
    applicable).
    Affirmed.
    A-3594-17T2
    44