STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. YOHER A. JIMENEZ (11-07-1355, BERGEN 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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5560-16T3
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    v.
    YOHER A. JIMENEZ, a/k/a
    YOHER A. CUBILLOS,
    Plaintiff-Respondent.
    ________________________
    Submitted March 30, 2020 – Decided June 17, 2020
    Before Judges Fasciale and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Bergen County, Indictment No. 11-07-1355.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Richard Sparaco, Designated Counsel, on the
    brief).
    Mark Musella, Bergen County Prosecutor, attorney for
    respondent (William P. Miller, Assistant Prosecutor, of
    counsel and on the briefs).
    Appellant filed a pro se reply brief.
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Yoher A. Jimenez appeals from his conviction after jury trial
    of first-degree murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1),(2) (count one); second-degree
    endangering the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a) (count two); and third-
    degree hindering apprehension or prosecution, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3(b)(1),(4)
    (count three), in connection with the death of his live-in paramour's daughter,
    Valerie,1 and his concomitant aggregate sentence of life imprisonment, subject
    to the No Early Release Act (NERA), N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2(a).2 On appeal, he
    argues:
    [POINT I]
    DEFENDANT WAS DENIED THE RIGHT TO A
    FAIR TRIAL DUE TO INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE
    OF COUNSEL [(IAC)].
    (A) DEFENDANT WAS DENIED THE
    RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL DUE TO [IAC]
    WHEN TRIAL COUNSEL FAILED TO
    SUBPOENA AN EXPERT WHO HAD
    EXAMINED THE EVIDENCE AND OPINED
    THAT THE DEATH WAS DUE TO
    DROWNING, AND WHICH WOULD HAVE
    1
    We use a pseudonym to protect the privacy of the victim and her family. See
    N.J.S.A. 2A:82-46; R. 1:38-3(c)(12).
    2
    The life sentence was imposed on count one. The trial court merged count
    two into count one and imposed a five-year sentence on count three concurrent
    to count one.
    A-5560-16T3
    2
    COMPLETELY     CONTRADICTED     THE
    STATE'S EXPERT WITNESSES' THEORY ON
    CAUSATION OF DEATH.
    (B) DEFENDANT WAS DENIED THE
    RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL DUE TO [IAC]
    WHEN TRIAL COUNSEL FAILED TO
    OBJECT   TO UNDULY PREJUDICIAL
    TESTIMONY,      INCLUDING     THE
    INTERVIEWING           DETECTIVE'S
    EXPRESSION   OF    OPINIONS   AND
    IMPLICATION THAT THE DEFENDANT
    WAS "A MONSTER."
    [POINT II]
    DEFENDANT WAS DENIED THE RIGHT TO A
    FAIR TRIAL AT THE CONCLUSION OF THE
    STATE'S CASE DUE TO THE TRIAL COURT'S
    FAILURE TO ALLOW DEFENDANT SUFFICIENT
    TIME TO CONSULT WITH COUNSEL BEFORE
    MAKING THE DECISION ON WHETHER OR NOT
    TO TESTIFY.
    [POINT III]
    DEFENDANT WAS DENIED THE RIGHT TO A
    FAIR TRIAL WHEN THE COURT DENIED HIS
    MOTION TO SUPPRESS HIS STATEMENT TO
    [THE DETECTIVE].
    [POINT IV]
    IT WAS ERROR FOR THE COURT TO GIVE THE
    JURY THE INSTRUCTION "FALSE IN ONE, FALSE
    IN ALL," THEREBY DENYING DEFENDANT THE
    RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL.
    A-5560-16T3
    3
    [POINT V]
    THE SENTENCE OF LIFE IN PRISON WAS
    EXCESSIVE.
    [POINT VI]
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN PERMITTING
    PROPENSITY EVIDENCE IN THE FORM OF PRIOR
    BAD ACTS OF DEFENDANT.
    Unpersuaded, we affirm.
    I.
    We review the trial evidence in considering defendant's IAC claim.
    Defendant testified he left thirteen-month-old Valerie in the bathtub while he
    retrieved boxes from his car. When he returned after ten or fifteen minutes, he
    found Valerie face down in the tub.         Valerie was "having some trouble
    breathing" and was "gasping for air" so defendant called 911 but had trouble
    communicating in English. He took Valerie to the superintendent of the building
    to which he and Valerie's mother had just moved; the superintendent directed
    emergency personnel to his residence. Despite stout efforts by the EMTs and
    medical professionals at two hospitals, four days later Valerie was removed from
    the life support that had been sustaining her. In essence, the defense contended
    Valerie died from her submersion in the bathtub water.
    A-5560-16T3
    4
    The State presented contrary trial evidence. The Bergen County medical
    examiner (ME), qualified as an expert in forensic pathology, presented her
    autopsy findings to the jury. Valerie had fifteen ribs that had been traumatized
    or fractured; although two fractures were fresh, thirteen were either healed or
    healing. The ME labeled the multiple, posterior fractures highly suspicious for
    inflicted injury because they are typically caused by force applied to a young
    child's torso, not by accident. Valerie's brain was swollen in a symmetrical
    fashion, but the ME did not observe any evidence of direct injury to the skull.
    There was an odd cluster of blood vessels on the top surface of the skull,
    however, and an area of tan discoloration on the left side. The ME did not see
    any indication of bleeding in the eyes.
    The ME determined a neuropathologist—a specialist in diseases and
    injuries of the brain and spinal cord—should be consulted to do a formal
    examination of Valerie's brain, eyes, and spinal cord and prepared and shipped
    specimens to Dr. Douglas Miller, a clinical professor in the Department of
    Pathology and Anatomical Sciences at the University of Missouri School of
    Medicine, who had been a professor at New York University for twenty years
    during which time he was a consultant to the ME's office.
    A-5560-16T3
    5
    Using slides of brain-tissue cuts to illustrate his findings, Dr. Miller
    testified at trial that, although there was no direct evidence of fresh trauma to
    the brain itself, Valerie's brain was clearly swollen, indicating a deprivation of
    oxygen or blood supply. He identified areas of brown discoloration in the brain
    tissue that were indicative of an old hemorrhage that probably occurred weeks
    or months prior to Valerie's death. That evidence of previous head trauma,
    however, was not related to Valerie's cause of death.
    Dr. Miller also used tissue cuts and microscopic cross-sections of the
    spine to illustrate his examination-finding of hemorrhaging inside the cervical
    spinal cord at Valerie's C4-C6 levels. Tissue was pushed out of its normal
    position above and below the location of the hemorrhage in what the doctor
    termed a "crush injury" of the spinal cord. Dr. Miller testified that a very severe
    and significant force was required to cause a crush injury of the spine, akin to
    the sort of injury one might see if an unrestrained child was involved in a hi gh-
    speed motor vehicle accident.
    Dr. Miller explained that hemorrhaging in the tissue around the spinal
    cord showed the injury unquestionably happened while Valerie was alive; and
    could not have been the result of the ME's mishandling of the spine after death,
    or of rough handling of the specimens in transit to him. He opined the acute
    A-5560-16T3
    6
    "pencil of necrosis with a central loss of tissue" that was apparent from the slides
    indicated the tissue was dead before Valerie died.
    Dr. Miller also found evidence of an old hemorrhage in the thoracic region
    of the spine, a highly unusual injury in a child caused by significant force. He
    did not see any retinal hemorrhaging and, hence, no evidence of shaken baby
    syndrome. His formal findings were:
    1.    For the brain: (1) "[A]cute hypoxic/ischemic injury, severe. . . .
    [S]evere hypoxic/ischemic neuronal injury particularly affecting the
    cerebellar [or] Purkinje cells. . . . [B]rain death prior to somatic
    death." (2) "[B]lunt head trauma, remote . . . associated with
    subdural membranes."
    2.    For the spinal cord: (1) "[C]rush injury, acute, with hemorrhage at
    the C4 to C6 levels." (2) "[S]ubarachnoid hemorrhage, old, with
    residual hemosiderin from the T3 to T7 levels."
    3.    For the eyes: "[N]o abnormality recognized."
    When asked about the information that Valerie had been submerged in a
    bathtub, Dr. Miller stated that submersion in water had no relevance whatsoever
    to Valerie's death because once the crush injury to the cervical spinal cord
    occurred, Valerie's ability to breathe ceased. He opined the spinal cord injury
    was unquestionably the actual cause of death. He deduced a powerful force must
    have been inflicted such that Valerie's head was suddenly moved ("hyper-
    flexed") far backward or far forward in a way that caused the bones of her spine
    A-5560-16T3
    7
    to move against one another. Such a high cervical spinal cord injury is almost
    always fatal.
    When asked on cross-examination if Valerie might have drowned, Dr.
    Miller admitted that the brain injury, standing alone, might be consistent with
    drowning. He stated, however, that Valerie would have to have been submerged
    for a much longer period than the three occasions of five seconds each that
    defendant had described in one of his versions of events. Dr. Miller admitted
    he first entertained the possibility of drowning as a cause of death, but rejected
    it as soon as he saw definite evidence of the spinal cord injury. He emphasized
    that there was no uncertainty that the spinal cord injury was the cause of
    Valerie's death.
    When the ME received the results of Dr. Miller's examination, she issued
    a death certificate listing the cause of death as acute cervical spinal cord injury
    and the manner of death as homicide.
    Defendant claims his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to subpoena
    Dr. Zhongxue Hua, a forensic pathologist, whose trial testimony would have
    buttressed defendant's defense that Valerie drowned while he left her alone in
    the bathtub, countering the State's evidence as to her cause of death.
    A-5560-16T3
    8
    In order to establish a claim of IAC, defendant must satisfy the familiar
    two-pronged standard formulated in Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    687 (1984), and adopted by our Supreme Court in State v. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. 42
    , 58
    (1987), first by "showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was
    not functioning as the 'counsel' guaranteed . . . by the Sixth Amendment," Fritz,
    
    105 N.J. at 52
     (quoting Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687
    ); then by proving he suffered
    prejudice due to counsel's deficient performance, Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 687, 691-92
    . Defendant must show by a "reasonable probability" that the deficient
    performance affected the outcome. Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at 58
    .
    "Our courts have expressed a general policy against entertaining [IAC]
    claims on direct appeal because such claims involve allegations and evidence
    that lie outside the trial record." State v. Preciose, 
    129 N.J. 451
    , 460 (1992).
    Consequently, "[IAC] claims are particularly suited for post-conviction review
    because they often cannot reasonably be raised in a prior proceeding." 
    Ibid.
     The
    under-developed record on appeal does not allow us to properly evaluate
    defendant's claim.
    Dr. Hua had been consulted by defendant's prior counsel who reported to
    the trial court on July 22, 2013, that he had yet to receive items he subpoenaed
    including "the full films [the hospitals that treated Valerie] used to do their
    A-5560-16T3
    9
    analysis[,] like the MRIs [and a] CAT scan" because Dr. Hua required them for
    his review. Although not clear from the record, the State contends in its merits
    brief defendant's former counsel decided sometime prior to August 16, 2016 ,
    not to use Dr. Hua as an expert; and on August 25, 2016, defendant agreed to
    proceed without an expert witness to counter the State's proofs. 3 The transcript
    of those proceedings is the last we have until January 9, 2017, when defendant's
    trial counsel appeared—the day before jury selection commenced; that was
    according to the record, his first appearance on defendant's behalf.
    Trial counsel included Dr. Hua, albeit without his full name, on a witness
    list he submitted on January 3, 2017, and the State moved to preclude his
    testimony because the defense had not submitted a report or curriculum vitae
    (CV) from Dr. Hua. See R. 3:13-3(b)(2)(E) (requiring expert's reports to be
    submitted not later than thirty days prior to trial). Trial counsel represented to
    the court on January 9, that he had "a commitment, if you would" from the
    doctor, and had his CV which he intended to exchange with the State when the
    State gave him its experts' CVs which had been sent to defendant's prior counsel,
    but not trial counsel. However, he later told the trial court that he "should be
    3
    The trial court noted on January 9, 2017, that there was "correspondence going
    back to 2012 or [20]13 where [defendant's former counsel] said that we
    discussed getting experts and decided not to get experts."
    A-5560-16T3
    10
    able to secure" Dr. Hua's report that week "[b]ut [would] have to get a full
    commitment from [the] expert." Trial counsel later explained that he talked to
    Dr. Hua, and told the trial court, "[w]e've gone [over] . . . everything. He was
    previously committed. The Public Defender's Office [(OPD)] chose not to use
    him. I'm trying to get him to recommit. I sent him—there are two experts'
    reports. He's looking everything over. We're schedule [sic] to talk today or
    tomorrow." In response to the trial court's request for a proffer of Dr. Hua's
    testimony, trial counsel responded: "He is going to basically explain that the
    alleged spinal cord injury could not and did not happen the way the State is
    proposing that it happened. [He] [i]s basically going to take their entire medical
    testimony and put it where it belongs."
    Jury selection was still in progress on January 12, 2017, when trial counsel
    represented he did not have a full report from Dr. Hua but tendered a summary
    report to the State. The summary report, which the trial court later characterized
    as a net opinion, synopsized the doctor's review:
    1. [Valerie's] cause of death was due to her
    drowning on April 4, 2010.
    2. Her eventual brain death with global brain and
    spinal hypoxic ischemia changes on [April 8, 2010] was
    due to her prolonged cardiopulmonary arrest on [April
    4, 2010].
    A-5560-16T3
    11
    3. The autopsy described discoloration of outer
    table of left parietal skull was due to her medical
    treatment and/or resuscitation.
    4. [Valerie's] rib fractures and healed subdural
    membrane were not related to . . . her cardiopulmonary
    . . . arrest on [April 4, 2010] and subsequent death.
    5. [Valerie] had no evidence of fatal trauma on
    her head and neck on [April 4, 2010].
    The above . . . opinions are within a . . .
    reasonable degree of medical certainty and I reserve the
    right to amend them in the event of additional
    information becoming available.
    On January 20 and 25, 2017, trial counsel represented that he expected to
    call Dr. Hua on February 1. On February 1, trial counsel told the trial court he
    was trying to contact Dr. Hua, but if the doctor was not able to attend trial that
    day, he would just "press through it." Trial counsel said Dr. Hua was unavailable
    because he was testifying in another trial, and there were financial issues with
    regard to the doctor's compensation. Although arrangements had been made to
    hold Dr. Miller after he testified so he could hear Dr. Hua's testimony in
    anticipation of possible rebuttal, trial counsel advised that Dr. Hua would not
    appear and that Dr. Miller was free to return to his home state.
    On February 2, 2017, the court again questioned trial counsel if it was
    defendant's position that the OPD denied him funds for ancillary services to
    A-5560-16T3
    12
    retain Dr. Hua. Counsel represented the OPD had agreed to pay for ten hours of
    consultation, but that Dr. Hua was offended by that offer.
    A representative from the OPD,4 who apparently had entered the
    courtroom during trial counsel's explanation to the court, was invited by the
    court to speak to the financial issue. The representative stated that he spoke to
    Dr. Hua that morning and "the reason Dr. Hua [was] unavailable [was] not
    because of a money issue but . . . because he[] [was] unavailable." He also said
    that Dr. Hua "would need more than ten hours." He explained that if it were
    determined that Dr. Hua's preliminary finding was helpful to the defense,
    supplemental funding would likely be granted.           The representative also
    conveyed that Dr. Hua advised that he told trial counsel, who he said called him
    for the first time during defendant's trial:
    He was already scheduled in many different [c]ourts to
    testify and therefore is unavailable now.
    And he would need more – he would need more
    time to have – review all of the documents, not just a
    limited amount of information that [trial counsel]
    provided us – provided him. And he does not recall
    what he reviewed, you know, years ago on this matter
    that was provided by our office when we were
    representing [defendant].
    4
    In its merits brief, the State identifies the representative as the Deputy Public
    Defender.
    A-5560-16T3
    13
    Trial counsel advised the court that was his "first time hearing" of the
    availability of supplemental funds. The trial court expressed its willingness to
    accommodate Dr. Hua's schedule, and asked trial counsel to reach out to Dr.
    Hua again to ask if he could come in anytime, including evenings, during the
    next few days. Dr. Hua never testified.
    We are unable to discern many facts necessary to resolve defendant's IAC
    claim. We do not know if defendant's prior counsel chose not to retain Dr. Hua
    because an opinion he formed when first consulted was adverse to defendant's
    case. We do not know when trial counsel began representing defendant. Trial
    counsel told the court on January 9, 2017, that the first time he "actually touched
    base" with Dr. Hua was the Friday before: January 6, 2017. He said Dr. Hua
    was "vaguely familiar with the case because he had worked with [defendant's
    prior counsel] two or three years" before. We cannot ascertain when counsel
    became aware of Dr. Hua, or any need for his expertise. We do not know if trial
    counsel was dilatory in contacting the doctor. We cannot tell if any dilatory
    conduct resulted in Dr. Hua's unavailability. We cannot tell if Dr. Hua was truly
    offended by the financial compensation or what transpired between trial counsel
    and the OPD regarding that compensation. We do not know the true reason Dr.
    Hua did not testify.
    A-5560-16T3
    14
    Further, we do not know if counsel's conduct played any part in Dr. Hua's
    submission of only a summary report—a net opinion that did not address the
    State's cause-of-death determination. We do not know if counsel's conduct
    played any part in Dr. Hua's incomplete review of the evidence in advance of
    defendant's trial. And we do not know what Dr. Hua would have opined in a
    complete report, same not having been submitted in support of defendant's IAC
    claim.
    We cannot judge if counsel's conduct fell below the Strickland/Fritz first-
    prong standard, Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at 52
    , or if there was a "reasonable probability"
    that, but for counsel's conduct, the result of the trial would have been different,
    satisfying the second prong, 
    id. at 58
    . As such, we leave those issues for post-
    conviction relief because of the many issues that lie outside the trial record.
    Preciose, 
    129 N.J. at 460
    .
    Defendant also claims trial counsel was ineffective because he failed to
    object to instances of "unduly prejudicial testimony"—which defendant argues
    was inadmissible lay opinion—by one of the detectives who took defendant's
    statement at the Prosecutor's Office. Specifically, defendant contends:
    In the interview of . . . defendant played to the
    jury, [the detective] questioned . . . defendant, "[d]o you
    want to be remembered as a monster?" Also, [the
    detective] testified that he wanted to get a "[c]lean
    A-5560-16T3
    15
    version" of events from . . . defendant, implying . . .
    defendant's version was "dirty" or untruthful. [The
    detective] testified that he had been conducting
    interrogations for twenty-five years and never had
    obtained a false confession, implying that it was his
    opinion that . . . defendant's ultimate confession could
    not have been false.
    We see no merit in defendant's argument that contorts the detective's
    testimony. The detective did not call defendant a "monster." The "monster" to
    which the detective referred was a person from a past case whose actions the
    detective presented as an "alternative" to defendant's actions. In explaining his
    interrogation methods to the jury, the detective explained that he provided
    defendant "with the alternatives of do you want to . . . have people look at you
    and think that you're such a monster or are you this person who . . . this just
    happened [to] and you didn't mean it[?]" Likewise, the detective's comment
    about a "clean version" was an explanation of one of his methods: "try[ing] to
    let [a suspect or witness] tell . . . what happened without interrupting and asking
    any questions." Those comments did not express any opinion and were not
    objectionable; trial counsel was not ineffective when he did not interpose
    objections.
    Defendant also skews the detective's testimony about false confessions.
    The detective said he had never "had [a false confession] happen" to him but
    A-5560-16T3
    16
    admitted they did occur.     First, that testimony was elicited during cross-
    examination as trial counsel attempted to establish the flaws in the damaging
    statement given by defendant. Counsel could not have lodged an objection to
    the responsive answer.      Further, trial counsel's attempt to discredit the
    detective's interrogation techniques, which he carried to his summation arguing
    that the detective pursued a theory that defendant was guilty and did not care if
    he obtained a false confession, did not render his assistance ineffective.
    Even if trial counsel's tactics were imprudent, which we do not determine,
    defendant's "complaints 'merely of matters of trial strategy' will not serve to
    ground a constitutional claim of inadequacy of representation by counsel."
    Fritz, 
    105 N.J. at 54
     (quoting State v. Williams, 
    39 N.J. 471
    , 489 (1963)). "Mere
    improvident strategy, bad tactics or mistake do not amount to [IAC] unless,
    taken as a whole, the trial was a mockery of justice." State v. Bonet, 
    132 N.J. Super. 186
    , 191 (App. Div. 1975). The simple fact that a trial strategy fails does
    not necessarily mean that counsel was ineffective. State v. Bey, 
    161 N.J. 233
    ,
    251 (1999).
    Defendant also avers trial counsel highlighted the detective's opinion tha t
    defendant was untruthful, allowing the detective to describe "[r]ed flag signals"
    and how defendant's version "[d]idn't seem to fit right" and was "not making
    A-5560-16T3
    17
    sense" to the detective, and that defendant's body language showed "signs of
    deception." Defendant argues counsel allowed the detective's testimony that the
    defendant gave three or four different versions and that defendant's failure to
    disclose that Valerie expelled clear liquid from her mouth "bothered" and was
    "concerning" to the detective.
    Again, these comments were an attempt to explain the detective's
    interrogation method in the face of trial counsel's repeated attempt to negate
    defendant's statement. And trial counsel's attempted strategy did not render him
    ineffective.     In reviewing trial counsel's actions, we heed the standards
    synopsized by our Supreme Court in State v. Arthur:
    In      determining    whether     defense     counsel's
    representation was deficient, "'[j]udicial scrutiny . . .
    must be highly deferential,' and must avoid viewing the
    performance under the 'distorting effects of hindsight.'"
    State v. Norman, 
    151 N.J. 5
    , 37 (1997). Because of the
    inherent difficulties in evaluating a defense counsel's
    tactical decisions from his or her perspective during
    trial, "a court must indulge a strong presumption that
    counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of
    reasonable professional assistance; that is, the
    defendant must overcome the presumption that, under
    the circumstances, the challenged action 'might be
    considered sound trial strategy.'" Strickland, 
    466 U.S. at 689
    .
    In determining whether defense counsel's alleged
    deficient performance prejudiced the defense, "[i]t is
    not enough for the defendant to show that the errors had
    A-5560-16T3
    18
    some conceivable effect on the outcome of the
    proceedings." 
    Id. at 693
    . Rather, defendant bears the
    burden of showing that "there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional errors,
    the result of the proceeding would have been different.
    A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
    undermine confidence in the outcome." 
    Id. at 694
    .
    [
    184 N.J. 307
    , 318-19 (2005) (alterations in original).]
    According the presumption that counsel's conduct fell within the range of
    reasonable professional assistance, ibid., and adhering to the tenet that "an
    otherwise valid conviction will not be overturned merely because the defendant
    is dissatisfied with his or her counsel's exercise of judgment during the trial,"
    State v. Castagna, 
    187 N.J. 293
    , 314 (2006), we conclude defendant has not
    established his counsel's performance was deficient.
    We determine defendant's remaining arguments regarding trial counsel's
    alleged ineffectiveness are without sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R.
    2:11-3(e)(2). Even if the detective's testimony improperly expressed his belief
    as to defendant's veracity, see State v. Tung, 
    460 N.J. Super. 75
    , 101-02 (App.
    Div. 2019) (recognizing a witness may not offer an opinion on another witness's
    credibility), or guilt, see State v. Frisby, 
    174 N.J. 583
    , 593-94 (2002) (finding a
    police officer testifying as a fact witness was not allowed to opine regarding
    whether the defendant committed the crime), the trial court's timely jury
    A-5560-16T3
    19
    instruction explained both the purpose of the testimony and clearly explained
    that the jurors were the "final arbiters" of credibility:
    [THE COURT]: Counsel, let me just – forgive me, just
    let me interrupt one second and advise the jury . . . this
    witness is telling you his technique.
    ....
    But just because this witness believes or says to
    you he believes that that person is or is not telling the
    truth, you're not to consider that at all. His opinion on
    what's the truth doesn't matter, you're ultimately going
    to decide what's the truth and what's not the truth. He's
    just telling you why – the reasons why and the
    mechanism that he does the interview. But I just want
    to make that clear, that you're going to be the final
    arbiters of the truth and any opinion of any witness
    should be disregarded as to what they think the truth is.
    The jury was presumed to have followed that instruction, which was echoed in
    the court's final instructions. State v. Smith, 
    212 N.J. 365
    , 409 (2012).
    Defendant obtusely mentioned the "plain error" error standard in making
    this IAC argument. See R. 2:10-2 (requiring that we disregard "[a]ny error or
    omission . . . unless it is of such a nature as to have been clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result"); State v. Ross, 
    218 N.J. 130
    , 142-43 (2014). To the
    extent he is arguing the trial court erred in allowing the detective's testimony,
    the forgoing analysis of the circumstances surrounding that testimony does not
    reveal any error, much less one "sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to
    A-5560-16T3
    20
    whether [it] led the jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached." State
    v. Macon, 
    57 N.J. 325
    , 336 (1971).
    II.
    Defendant's argument that he was deprived of a fair trial because the trial
    court forced him to make a decision about testifying without having adequate
    time to consult with counsel—allowing him twenty minutes to decide—has no
    support in the record.
    On January 25, 2017, during a scheduling conference, the trial court
    advised both counsel that "we should be able to sometime Thursday, [February
    2, 2017] sum and charge. . . . depending on [defendant's] witnesses," which the
    court recognized as character witnesses and, possibly, defendant. Defendant's
    trial counsel expressed no disagreement. At the beginning of proceedings on
    February 1, 2017, prior to the testimony of Dr. Miller—the State's last witness—
    the trial court advised trial counsel that after the State rested, it had to address
    with counsel and defendant if defendant intended to testify. Trial counsel told
    the court defendant was "still mulling that over"; the court replied that it was
    "not going to hold him to that right now."
    A-5560-16T3
    21
    After Dr. Miller testified, the jury was excused at 12:35 p.m. and was told
    to return at 1:30 p.m. Trial counsel then informed the court that Dr. Hua would
    not be testifying. This discussion between the court and counsel ensued:
    I suggest that between now – over the lunch break
    discuss your client's intentions. If he's going to testify
    we could do that this afternoon. If not – if you have a
    character witness only we'll – we'll do that tomorrow
    and then we could sum up. But – and if – if your client's
    not going to testify I'll go over on the record with him.
    Then I'll excuse the jury and later, after we take a break,
    we do a – a charge conference –
    [TRIAL COUNSEL]: Okay.
    [THE COURT]: – depending on what you want to do.
    [TRIAL COUNSEL]: Okay.
    After lunch, the trial court explained to defendant his options to testify or
    not. After defendant said he understood the options, the trial court as ked
    defendant for his decision. Defendant said he was not yet sure; he wanted to
    speak with trial counsel "in more detail." Although the trial court, considering
    the long pre-trial and trial process leading to that moment, initially expressed its
    desire to have defendant's decision that day and offered defendant an extra
    fifteen or twenty minutes because it did not wish to hold the jury "much later"
    that day, the trial court relented to trial counsel's entreaty for more time. When
    defendant's character witnesses, who were supposed to be in court that da y, did
    A-5560-16T3
    22
    not appear, the judge decided to release the jury and, invoking N.J.R.E. 611(a), 5
    told trial counsel:
    [I]f [your] client is not testifying today – if he's telling
    me he's not sure I'll give him that option and the first
    thing tomorrow morning if you want – well, you – you
    want to put your character – however you want to do it.
    After the character witnesses testify if he's going
    to – if he's going to testify we'll put him on the stand
    and then we'll – we'll sum up and do charges. We'll
    have – I want the jury to have the case tomorrow.
    Otherwise, if he's not testifying then be ready to sum
    up. There's no reason why we can't sum up.
    Trial counsel replied, "[t]here definitely is no reason why we can't sum up . . .
    in the morning if he . . . does."
    The next morning, after counsel advised the court he believed defendant
    was prepared to state his intentions, the following colloquy took place between
    the trial court and defendant:
    [DEFENDANT]: Your Honor, respectfully, I'm – I
    [want to] apologize for yesterday not making a
    decision. It was –
    5
    N.J.R.E. 611(a) provides: "The court shall exercise reasonable control over
    the mode and order of interrogating witnesses and presenting evidence so as to
    (1) make the interrogation and presentation effective for the ascertainment of
    the truth, (2) avoid needless consumption of time, and (3) protect witnesses from
    harassment or undue embarrassment."
    A-5560-16T3
    23
    [THE COURT]: No. You don't have to apologize.
    Like you said – like your counsel said, –
    [DEFENDANT]: Yeah.
    [THE COURT]: – this is –
    [DEFENDANT]: I just –
    [THE COURT]: – this is your life.
    [DEFENDANT]: Yeah. It's –
    [THE COURT]: And I – I understand its all – its all
    coming to the proverbial head and, so, go ahead.
    [DEFENDANT]: Yes, Your Honor. And I – I just –
    first of all I just [want to be] be thankful for the whole
    process. It was very fair. And my attorneys and – and
    Your Honor. And I wasn't sure of my decision
    yesterday but I – I went through deep meditation and
    we spoke about it. And after seven years I was ready
    for – you know, for my side of the story to come out. I
    will then tell Your Honor that I will decide to take the
    stand.
    [THE COURT]: You will take the stand?
    [DEFENDANT]: Yes, sir.
    Summations did not take place until February 7, 2017.
    Defendant had ample opportunity to consult with counsel. We reject his
    fanciful argument to the contrary.
    A-5560-16T3
    24
    III.
    Judge Liliana S. DeAvila-Silebi,6 after a two-day evidentiary hearing at
    which the judge viewed the video of defendant's statement and heard testimony
    from one of the detectives who questioned defendant at the Prosecutor's Office,
    denied defendant's motion to suppress the statement he made at the Prosecutor's
    Office. Challenging that ruling, defendant claims the "failure of the detectives
    to give . . . defendant his Miranda7 warnings before engaging him in discussion
    about himself, where he was living, where he came from, and with whom he was
    living, deprived . . . defendant of his Fifth Amendment constitutional rights."
    He contends that part of the statement given after defendant received the
    warnings was "inadmissible under the doctrine of 'fruit of the poisonous tree,'"
    citing Wong Sun v. United States, 
    371 U.S. 471
     (1963). We disagree.
    We defer to the judge's factual findings on a motion to suppress, "unless
    they were 'clearly mistaken' or 'so wide of the mark' that the interests of justice
    require[] appellate intervention." State v. Elders, 
    192 N.J. 224
    , 245 (2007)
    (quoting N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. M.M., 
    189 N.J. 261
    , 279 (2007)).
    We owe "deference to those findings of the trial judge [that] are substantially
    6
    Judge DeAvila-Silebi was not the trial judge.
    7
    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966).
    A-5560-16T3
    25
    influenced by [the judge's] opportunity to hear and see the witnesses and to have
    the 'feel' of the case, which a reviewing court cannot enjoy." State v. Locurto,
    
    157 N.J. 463
    , 471 (1999) (quoting State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 161 (1964)).
    In State v. S.S., our Supreme Court extended that deferential standard of review
    to "factual findings based on a video recording or documentary evidence" to
    ensure that New Jersey's trial courts remain "'the finder of the facts[.]'" 
    229 N.J. 360
    , 381 (2017) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a) advisory committee's note to
    1985 amendment). The Court explained that "[p]ermitting appellat e courts to
    substitute their factual findings for equally plausible trial court findings is likely
    to 'undermine the legitimacy of the [trial] courts in the eyes of litigants, multiply
    appeals by encouraging appellate retrial of some factual issues, and ne edlessly
    reallocate judicial authority.'"   Id. at 380-81 (second alteration in original)
    (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a) advisory committee's note to 1985 amendment).
    The trial court's application of its factual findings to the law, however, is subject
    to plenary review. State v. Cryan, 
    320 N.J. Super. 325
    , 328 (App. Div. 1999).
    In State v. M.L., we recognized the United States Supreme Court's ruling
    that "Miranda's safeguards 'come into play whenever a person in custody is
    subjected to either express questioning or its functional equivalent.'" 253 N.J.
    A-5560-16T3
    26
    Super. 13, 20 (App. Div. 1991) (quoting Rhode Island v. Innis, 
    446 U.S. 291
    ,
    300-01 (1980)). We further followed that decision, holding
    [n]ot all statements obtained by the police after taking
    a person into custody, however, must be considered the
    product of interrogation.
    The definition of interrogation has been extended only
    to a police officer's words or actions that the officer
    "should know are reasonably likely to elicit an
    incriminating response from the suspect."
    [Ibid. (citation omitted) (quoting Innis, 
    466 U.S. at 301
    ).]
    We agree with Judge DeAvila-Silebi that the detective's questioning prior
    to the administration of Miranda warnings "elicited general information from
    defendant that included his pedigree information, cell phone number, and other
    background information as it related to the victim and the victim's mother."
    Miranda warnings need not have preceded those ministerial questions. Id. at 21;
    State v. Cunningham, 
    153 N.J. Super. 350
    , 352 (App. Div. 1977). The balance
    of the pre-warning colloquy consisted of the detective asking defendant if he
    wanted something to drink, explaining the interview procedure and the
    investigation, reconfirming defendant's previous consent to search his apartment
    and ascertaining defendant's ability to understand English. Defendant also took
    a telephone call from his mother on his cell phone during which the detective
    A-5560-16T3
    27
    left the room.    Defendant's statements just prior to the administration of
    warnings were not preceded by any questions; in fact, the detective told
    defendant that he had to wait for the other detective "before [he] continu[ed] any
    further."
    Importantly, defendant did not make any inculpatory statement during the
    pre-warning colloquy. Thus, our Supreme Court's prohibition on "question-first,
    warn-later" interrogations, State v. O'Neill, 
    193 N.J. 148
    , 180 (2007), holding
    "when Miranda warnings are given after a custodial interrogation has already
    produced incriminating statements, the admissibility of post-warning statements
    will turn on whether the warnings functioned effectively in providing the
    defendant the ability to exercise his state law privilege against self-
    incrimination," 
    id. at 180-81
    , was not implicated. Nothing elicited during the
    pre-warning interview provided the detective with defendant's "motive,
    opportunity, and personal involvement" in Valerie's death, 
    id. at 182
    , causing
    defendant to think he had "crossed a psychological bridge from which there was
    no turning back," 
    id. at 170
    , thereby obviating the effect of the warnings, see
    State v. Yohnnson, 
    204 N.J. 43
    , 60 (2010). Defendant was not asked about
    Valerie's death until Miranda warnings were given. The Court's analysis of the
    facts in Yohnnson are applicable here:
    A-5560-16T3
    28
    Our rejection of the "question-first, warn-later"
    approach is due in part to the risk that, because the
    defendant has already made incriminating statements,
    he will not actually hear or comprehend the warnings,
    or will eventually confess based on a belief that he is
    merely repeating what has already been said. This
    record presents no facts that give rise to such a risk and
    none to suggest that anything that happened prior to the
    time when defendant was fully and correctly advised of
    his rights operated to wear him down psychologically
    in the manner we found troubling in O'Neill.
    [Id. at 61-62.]
    Judge DeAvila-Silebi correctly denied defendant's motion to suppress his
    statement.
    IV.
    Defendant argues the trial court erred by giving the "false in one, false in
    all" charge to the jury. Although he concedes in his merits brief "[t]here were
    prior inconsistent statements allegedly given . . . to law enforcement ," he argues
    the instruction was improper because those statements were not "under oath, so
    it could not be said [he] intended to deceive [the] jury[.]"
    Trial counsel did not object to the charge so we consider it for plain error.
    As we heretofore determined, under that standard, we will not reverse unless "it
    is of such a nature as to have been clearly capable of producing an unjust
    result[.]" R. 2:10-2; see Ross, 218 N.J. at 142-43.
    A-5560-16T3
    29
    The "false in one, false in all" instruction may be given in a situation
    where a witness "has been discredited out of his own mouth either by cross -
    examination or by an unimpeached record," State v. Ernst, 
    32 N.J. 567
    , 583
    (1960) (quoting State v. Sturchio, 
    127 N.J.L. 366
    , 369 (Sup. Ct. 1941)), so long
    as there has been "conscious falsity as to a material fact," 
    ibid.
     Moreover, "a
    trial judge in his [or her] discretion may give the charge in any situation in which
    he [or she] reasonably believes a jury may find a basis for its application." Id.
    at 583-84.
    Defendant gave varying accounts of how thirteen-month-old Valerie came
    to be critically unresponsive while in his sole care to:               the building
    superintendent, the EMTs and police who responded to a 911 call, a detective at
    the hospital at which Valerie was treated, detectives during defendant's
    statement taken at the Prosecutor's Office, Valerie's mother; and at trial. In light
    of defendant's numerous prior inconsistent statements, the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in presenting the instruction to the jury.
    Contrary to defendant's argument, the prior alleged false statements need
    not have been under oath. The instruction allows the jury to assess the testimony
    of a witness if it "believe[s] that any witness or party willfully or knowingly
    testified falsely to any material facts in the case, with intent to deceive" the jury.
    A-5560-16T3
    30
    Model Jury Charge (Criminal), "False in One-False in All" (rev. Jan. 14, 2013).
    Thus, the focus of the charge was on defendant's testimony under oath. The
    charge allowed the jury to assess whether defendant intended to deceive the jury
    through trial testimony that was willfully or knowingly false. The jury could
    use any prior statement from defendant's "own mouth" in making that
    assessment, not just those under oath.
    V.
    Defendant also argues the trial court erred in admitting evidence under
    N.J.R.E. 404(b), permitting Valerie's mother to testify: "defendant put [Valerie]
    'on her crib hard – he[] put her down hard'"; Valerie returned from a trip to the
    park with defendant with a "'bluish' mark on her cheek that . . . defendant said
    came from when he was playing around and pressed her with his lips"; and
    defendant, while in the car with Valerie and her mother, "turned and just pressed
    [a crying Valerie's] leg with his hand." Specifically, defendant contends the
    evidence did not meet the third and fourth prongs of the test for admissibility of
    such prior-bad-act evidence established in State v. Cofield, 
    127 N.J. 328
     (1992).
    That test requires the proffering party to prove:
    1. The evidence of the other crime must be admissible
    as relevant to a material issue;
    A-5560-16T3
    31
    2. It must be similar in kind and reasonably close in
    time to the offense charged;
    3. The evidence of the other crime must be clear and
    convincing; and
    4. The probative value of the evidence must not be
    outweighed by its apparent prejudice.
    [Id. at 338.]
    "The admissibility of other-crime evidence is left to the [sound] discretion
    of the trial court[.]" State v. Covell, 
    157 N.J. 554
    , 564 (1999); State v. Marrero,
    
    148 N.J. 469
    , 483 (1997). "The trial court, because of its intimate knowledge
    of the case, is in the best position to engage in this balancing process. Its
    decisions are entitled to deference and are to be reviewed under an abuse of
    discretion standard." State v. Ramseur, 
    106 N.J. 123
    , 266 (1987).
    Pursuant to the State's motion to admit defendant's prior acts of violence
    against Valerie, the trial court found clear and convincing evidence of
    defendant's prior abuse from defendant's admission in his statement at the
    Prosecutor's Office "to striking the child . . . on prior occasions, to biting the
    child . . . in the face, [and] to the [child's] broken ribs." The court, at that early
    proceeding, also anticipated that the doctors called by the State would testif y in
    accordance with their reports about Valerie's injuries, both old and new.
    A-5560-16T3
    32
    In fact, in his statement defendant admitted hitting Valerie on the back,
    front and leg over a nine-month period and biting her on the face. Dr. Miller
    testified of his findings of an old hemorrhage in the thoracic region of the spine.
    And Valerie's mother testified about the evidence defendant now challenges.
    The trial court's findings of clear and convincing evidence were supported.
    The trial court carefully weighed the probative value of the evidence
    against its prejudicial impact, obviously recognizing that admission of prior bad
    acts under N.J.R.E. 404(b) is inevitably problematic; "such evidence creates the
    strong potential for prejudice because of its natural 'tendency to demonstrate a
    criminal predisposition.'" State v. Blakney, 
    189 N.J. 88
    , 93 (2006) (quoting
    State v. G.S., 
    145 N.J. 460
    , 468 (1996)). The court found there was "clear
    prejudice" to defendant from the proffered evidence but "on balance" it did not
    outweigh the probative value. The court also considered that defendant was
    contending Valerie's death was accidental, and his actions were not purposeful
    or knowing, so as to satisfy those elements of murder. The court weighed the
    relevance of the proffered prior acts, ultimately ruling the evidence was more
    relevant than prejudicial to show defendant's intent and lack of mistake or
    accident, but the evidence was more prejudicial than probative to show
    defendant's motive.
    A-5560-16T3
    33
    The trial court's pragmatic evaluation in the context in which the evidence
    was to be offered, see State v. Long, 
    173 N.J. 138
    , 162 (2002), was not an abuse
    of discretion. "[E]vidence claimed to be unduly prejudicial can be excluded
    only where its probative value 'is so significantly outweighed by [its] inherently
    inflammatory potential as to have a probable capacity to divert the minds of the
    jurors from a reasonable and fair evaluation' of the basic issues of the case."
    Covell, 157 N.J. at 568 (second alteration in original) (quoting State v.
    Thompson, 
    59 N.J. 396
    , 421 (1971)). The trial court fully recognized that tenet,
    further evidenced by its careful instruction regarding the prior-bad-acts
    evidence—which is unchallenged by defendant.              We, therefore, reject
    defendant's contention that the trial court erred in finding the third and fourth
    Cofield prongs were met.
    VI.
    Finally, defendant contends his life sentence was manifestly excessive,
    claiming the trial court erred in finding aggravating factors one and two,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(1), (a)(2) 8 and "failed to properly weigh the aggravating
    8
    Aggravating factor one considers: "The nature and circumstances of the
    offense, and the role of the actor therein, including whether or not it was
    committed in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner[.]" N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-1(a)(1). Aggravating factor two considers:
    A-5560-16T3
    34
    and mitigating factors for sentencing in giving . . . defendant a sentence above
    the mid-range."     We determine these sentencing arguments are without
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion in this opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We
    briefly add the following comments.
    The record, including the ME's and Dr. Miller's testimony, supports the
    trial court's finding that Valerie's death was caused by defendant's "extremely
    and extraordinarily brutal act" that finding alone fully supports the court's
    finding of aggravating factor one. That the "brutal act" was committed on a
    thirteen-month old child entrusted to defendant's care fully supports the court's
    finding aggravating factor two. Defendant does not otherwise explain how the
    trial court improperly weighed the aggravating and mitigating factors.
    The gravity and seriousness of harm inflicted on the
    victim, including whether or not the defendant knew or
    reasonably should have known that the victim of the
    offense was particularly vulnerable or incapable of
    resistance due to advanced age, ill-health, or extreme
    youth, or was for any other reason substantially
    incapable of exercising normal physical or mental
    power of resistance.
    [N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(2).]
    A-5560-16T3
    35
    Our review of the record leads us to conclude the sentencing guidelines
    were followed, the aggravating and mitigating factors found below were based
    upon competent credible evidence in the record, and the application of the
    guidelines to the facts resulted in a sentence that was clearly reasonable under
    the facts of the case and did not "shock the judicial conscience." See State v.
    Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 364-65 (1984). Under our deferential standard of review,
    State v. Dalziel, 
    182 N.J. 494
    , 500 (2005), we see no reason to second guess the
    trial court's sentence, 
    id. at 501
    .
    We determine defendant's remaining arguments, to the extent not here
    addressed, to be without sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written
    opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    Affirmed.
    A-5560-16T3
    36