STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. DARRYL D. TOWNSEND (17-02-0261, CAMDEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5387-17T4
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DARRYL D. TOWNSEND,
    a/k/a D-BLOCK, and
    ANDREW DEEN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ___________________________
    Submitted August 10, 2020 – Decided August 28, 2020
    Before Judges Moynihan and Mawla.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Indictment No. 17-02-0261.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (John Walter Douard, Assistant Deputy
    Public Defender, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
    respondent (Adam David Klein, Deputy Attorney
    General, of counsel and on the brief).
    Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
    PER CURIAM
    After a jury found him guilty of all crimes for which he was indicted,
    defendant appeals from his convictions and concomitant aggregate sixty -year
    sentence for first-degree murder,1 N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1) and (2) (count one);
    third-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39 -
    4(d) (count two); and fourth-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A.
    2C:39-5(d) (count three), in connection with the stabbing death of Tyree
    Kirkpatrick. In his merits brief, he argues:
    POINT I
    THE     PREJUDICIAL    ADMISSION    OF
    DEFENDANT'S    RECORDED    JAIL  CALLS
    INTERJECTED     IMPERMISSIBLE    OTHER
    CRIME/BAD ACTS EVIDENCE.
    POINT II
    PERMITTING THE JURY TO VIEW THE PORTION
    OF THE BODYCAM VIDEO IN WHICH THE
    POLICE QUESTION [THE DAUGHTER OF
    KIRKPATRICK'S GIRLFRIEND], WHO DID NOT
    TESTIFY, ABOUT THE KNIFE VIOLATED
    TOWNSEND'S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO
    CONFRONT THE WITNESSES AGAINST HIM.
    1
    After merging count two into count one, the judge imposed a sixty-year prison
    term on count one, subject to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, and
    a concurrent eighteen-month term on count three.
    A-5387-17T4
    2
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE
    ERROR BY ISSUING AN INSTRUCTION ON
    FLIGHT AS CONSCIOUSNESS OF GUILT,
    WITHOUT    INFORMING   THE   JURY   OF
    [DEFENDANT'S] REASON FOR ATTEMPTING TO
    LEAVE THE HOUSE.
    POINT IV
    [DEFENDANT'S] 60-YEAR PRISON TERM WAS
    MANIFESTY EXCESSIVE.
    In his pro se supplemental brief, he adds:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN VIOLATION OF
    DEFENDANT'S DUE PROCESS RIGHTS.
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING THE
    STATE TO PROCEED IN THE USE OF TAINTED
    EVIDENCE THAT WAS GIVEN APPROXIMATELY
    ONE MONTH AFTER ARREST THUS VIOLATING
    DEFENDANT'S SIXTH AMENDMENT RIGHT TO A
    FAIR TRIAL AND DUE PROCESS.
    Unpersuaded, we affirm.
    According to the trial evidence, Kirkpatrick was the boyfriend of
    Nakeama Nokes, who had called police to her residence regarding a family
    dispute.   While police were discussing that issue with Nokes, Kirkpatrick
    A-5387-17T4
    3
    entered the home and proceeded to the second floor where defendant, Nokes's
    former boyfriend, was asleep in Nokes's bedroom.            After Nokes called
    defendant's name, she proceeded to the second floor. Her fourteen-year-old son
    was also present; contrary to his prior account to police, he testified he saw
    defendant stab Kirkpatrick.
    In the commotion that followed, Kirkpatrick is captured on police body-
    worn camera (bodycam) footage saying, "[h]e just stabbed me. I don't know."
    While Camden County Police Officer Michael Herring summoned medical
    assistance, he saw defendant climbing out of the second-floor window and
    ordered him back inside. Defendant then ran down the stairs toward the first
    floor, claiming there was a gunman upstairs. Defendant was taken into custody.
    While in jail, he placed two telephone calls which were recorded.
    During the police investigation immediately following the stabbing,
    police questioned Nokes's daughter. That colloquy, like all other police activity,
    was captured on bodycams. Police also seized two knives. The State, however,
    later ruled out both those knives as the murder weapon. Instead, the State
    contended the murder weapon was a bloody pocketknife found behind Nokes's
    bed the next month by Nokes's son, which Nokes later turned over to police.
    A-5387-17T4
    4
    DNA analysis determined the blood on that knife belonged to Kirkpatrick, but
    no forensic evidence linked the knife to defendant.
    Defendant first challenges the admission at trial of the recorded telephone
    calls between defendant and two women while he was in jail and the recorded
    bodycam footage. "Traditional rules of appellate review require substantial
    deference to a trial court's evidentiary rulings." State v. Morton, 
    155 N.J. 383
    ,
    453 (1998). The trial judge's rulings will be upheld "absent a showing of an
    abuse of discretion, i.e., there has been a clear error of judgment." State v. Perry,
    
    225 N.J. 222
    , 233 (2016) (quoting State v. Brown, 
    170 N.J. 138
    , 147 (2001)).
    "An appellate court applying this standard should not substitute its own
    judgment for that of the trial court, unless 'the trial court's ruling "was so wide
    of the mark that a manifest denial of justice resulted."'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v.
    Marrero, 
    148 N.J. 469
    , 484 (1997)); see also State v. Fortin, 
    189 N.J. 579
    , 597
    (2007). Even if there is an abuse of discretion, we "must then determine whether
    any error found is harmless or requires reversal." State v. Prall, 
    231 N.J. 567
    ,
    581 (2018).
    In his merits brief, although he concedes their relevance, defendant argues
    the telephone calls should have been excluded from evidence because they were
    "not probative of the State's case that [defendant] murdered Kirkpatrick." He
    A-5387-17T4
    5
    also claims the "calls contained statements by [defendant] that were far more
    prejudicial than probative and did not constitute admissions that contributed
    significantly to the State's case."
    Defendant made a similar argument to the trial judge, but when asked to
    clarify his argument, he sought to exclude as prejudicial "information about
    [defendant's] previous incarceration . . . mentioned in those calls [and his]
    reference [to items he wished removed from his residence] which . . . may be
    indicative of other crimes." The State agreed to redact those items.
    The trial judge found the recorded conversations were properly obtained
    by the State and were admissible as statements of a party-opponent under
    N.J.R.E. 803(b)(1). 2 She noted that defendant, in both calls, "clearly . . . is
    talking about the incident at the [crime-scene residence] at the time that . . .
    Kirkpatrick met his death," making the calls relevant to the murder. The record
    supports the judge's conclusion.
    Contrary to defendant's present contention that he "made no unambiguous
    admissions that would support the State's case," defendant's account to the first
    2
    Defendant does not challenge the warrant by which the recorded calls were
    obtained or the judge's determination that the calls were admissible under
    N.J.R.E. 803(b)(1).
    A-5387-17T4
    6
    unidentified female 3 related only that Kirkpatrick verbally made demands and
    possible threats. He also told the first female, "well, good thing it wasn't the
    other way around and he got me."
    He also described the confrontation after Kirkpatrick entered the room:
    I got my shit right there, [and Kirkpatrick said] you ain't
    going nowhere until you answer all – he said just tell
    me that that's still your bitch and all – I said, that ain't
    my bitch. I said I ain't got no bitch. I said, man, I go
    home to my baby mom every night. I don't give a fuck
    about her, bro. And he got mad. He said just tell me
    right now, I'll leave, I'll leave. I said you don't got to
    leave, I'm ready to leave, bro. And then he whipped on
    me and told me I ain't going no fucking where.
    ....
    Ain't going nowhere until I answer all (inaudible) and
    then give him my cell phone.
    Although defendant's claim that Kirkpatrick "whipped" on him supported
    defendant's self-defense theory, other portions of his conversation with the first
    female refuted that theory:
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: Oh. So you all wasn't
    supposed – supposed to – (inaudible) him. I[t] was
    supposed to be just a fight.
    [DEFENDANT]: What fight? That [n*****] ain't want
    – man.
    3
    The first female was identified by the State as defendant's daughter's mother.
    A-5387-17T4
    7
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: And then Mya is going
    to say he was whooping your ass and that's why you
    pulled out your knife.
    [DEFENDANT]: He was – if he was whooping my ass,
    I wouldn't have had time to do all that.
    Defendant also told the female he was asleep in the second-floor bedroom
    when Kirkpatrick entered the room and confronted defendant, disavowing third-
    party accounts that Kirkpatrick punched defendant out of his sleep, saying
    Kirkpatrick woke him by tapping defendant's leg. He also told the second
    female that he was awakened by a tap.
    Defendant also told the second female about the family dispute between
    Nokes and her daughter that led to his presence at their residence, and then
    related that Kirkpatrick came in and
    pulled out on me, talking about some – what I'm doing
    there and this and I better answer all of them and before
    I leave from there I better give him my phone[] and all
    this shit and up. I told him, bro, you got to be fucked
    up. I told him (inaudible) – ma, I swear to God, I told
    this [n *****] like six times, bro, I don't want her, I
    don't care about her, just go ahead get out of my face.
    That [n *****] whipped out on me, told me I ain't going
    no fucking where until I answer his questions and this
    and that. And one thing led to another, we got into a
    little scuffle and that's what happened. Like, fuck. It
    ain't like I did it on purpose or something.
    A-5387-17T4
    8
    He later continued that when he was roused, Kirkpatrick was "in
    [defendant's] face" demanding that defendant tell him
    what I want to hear and give me your phone before – I
    told him, bro, you got [to] be fucked up, bro. What the
    fuck you mean? He talking about, [n*****], we can
    take it there, I'll bang this, and I do that, and I know
    where you from and – come on, man, now you
    threatening me. And I told him like five times, I said,
    bro, I don't want to argue with you, bro, just watch out
    and let me leave. The [n*****] flashed on me and told
    me sit the fuck down, I ain't going nowhere until he –
    he get what I want and all – (inaudible) you wild. And
    he said, that's your bitch still. I said, no, it used to be
    my bitch. That ain't my bitch no more, you could have
    her, she don't want me. I told that bitch – I told that
    [n*****] that four times, that ain't my bitch. I got a
    bitch. That ain't my bitch. He was the one mad. So for
    all I know, she could have got him. When that mother
    fucker was in the hallway. That's where all the shit was
    at once I woke up, in the hallway (inaudible). How the
    fuck do I know you ain't do it and just trying to blame
    me for the fall guy. So I don't give a fuck.
    Relevant evidence is "evidence having a tendency in reason to prove or
    disprove any fact of consequence to the determination of the action[,]" and is
    admissible. N.J.R.E. 401; N.J.R.E. 402; see also State v. Castagna, 
    400 N.J. Super. 164
    , 174 (App. Div. 2008). The evidence must be probative of a fact that
    is "really in issue in the case[,]" as determined by reference to the applicable
    substantive law. State v. Buckley, 
    216 N.J. 249
    , 261 (2013) (quoting State v.
    Hutchins, 
    241 N.J. Super. 353
    , 359 (App. Div. 1990)).
    A-5387-17T4
    9
    We see no abuse of discretion in the trial judge's balance of the probative
    and prejudicial values of the calls. Parts of the calls supported defendant's self -
    defense and third-party guilt defenses. Other parts supported the State's claim
    of purposeful and knowing murder and refuted defendant's defenses. See State
    v. Scherzer, 
    301 N.J. Super. 363
    , 469 (App. Div.1997) (noting that "[a]ll
    damaging evidence is prejudicial; it is only when the probative value is
    substantially outweighed by the potential prejudice that the evidence should be
    excluded.").
    We agree with defendant that those portions of the calls referencing
    anonymous allegations that he broke into the crime-scene residence should have
    been redacted. But, defendant did not object to those portions of the calls.
    Moreover, the jury heard evidence that effectively countered the unsupported
    suppositions related by the females to defendant, who vehemently denied the
    burglary accusations:    defendant was asleep in the upstairs bedroom when
    Nokes, in the presence of police, called defendant by name when Kirkpatrick
    entered the home, making no mention to the police of an illegal entry by
    defendant. As such, we determine the admission of that evidence was not "of
    such a nature as to have been clearly capable of producing an unjust result[.]"
    R. 2:10-2. "The mere possibility of an unjust result is not enough" to find plain
    A-5387-17T4
    10
    error. State v. Funderburg, 
    225 N.J. 66
    , 79 (2016). The possibility of an unjust
    result must be "sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether the error led
    the jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached[.]" State v. Melvin, 
    65 N.J. 1
    , 18-19 (1974); see also State v. Macon, 
    57 N.J. 325
    , 335 (1971) ("No
    matter how a test may be stated, the question whether an error is reason for
    reversal depends finally upon some degree of possibility that it led to an unjust
    verdict.").
    That plain error standard also guides our review of defendant's claim that
    defendant's right to confront adverse witnesses was violated by the admission of
    bodycam footage showing an exchange between Nokes's daughter—who did not
    testify at trial—and a police officer after she identified Kirkpatrick as her
    mother's new boyfriend and defendant as her ex-boyfriend:
    [POLICE OFFICER]: Okay. So you don't know why
    he was in the house today?
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: 4 No.
    [POLICE OFFICER]: He wasn't – he wasn't here when
    you was here earlier?
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: Yeah. When I had woke
    up, I found him in bed.
    4
    The record does not reveal the "unidentified" speaker's name. Both the State
    and defendant identify the speaker as Nokes's daughter in their merits briefs.
    A-5387-17T4
    11
    [POLICE OFFICER]: Okay. So how – and he was still
    in the house after you left? You don't know how he got
    in the house?
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: No.
    [POLICE OFFICER]: No. And do you know what
    knife he used?
    [UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE]: He had a – he always
    had a pocket knife with him. A real big pocket knife.
    [POLICE OFFICER]: You don't know what knife he
    used to stab the victim?
    [UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER]: (Inaudible) saw him
    stab in the neck. (Inaudible).
    The United States Supreme Court, in Davis v. Washington, 
    547 U.S. 813
    ,
    822 (2006) (footnote omitted), distinguished between the two types of
    statements:
    Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course
    of police interrogation under circumstances objectively
    indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation
    is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing
    emergency. They are testimonial when the
    circumstances objectively indicate that there is no such
    ongoing emergency, and that the primary purpose of the
    interrogation is to establish or prove past events
    potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.
    Unlike the State, we think the law is sufficiently settled that Nokes's daughter's
    statements to the police were testimonial. "[T]he Confrontation Clause of the
    A-5387-17T4
    12
    United States Constitution bars the 'admission of testimonial statements of a
    witness who did not appear at trial unless he [or she] was unavailable to testify,
    and the defendant had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.'" State v.
    Slaughter, 
    219 N.J. 104
    , 116-17 (2014) (quoting Crawford v. Washington, 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 53-54 (2004)). The law applies no matter the means used to convey the
    testimonial statement; we see no difference between a statement recorded on
    bodycam or any other conventional means.
    Nokes's daughter answered the officer's questions after the stabbing and
    defendant's arrest. See State v. Basil, 
    202 N.J. 570
    , 597-99 (2010) (concluding
    there was no ongoing threat posed by a defendant who no longer possessed a
    weapon and who was under police control). There was no ongoing emergency
    and no threat. Medical units had arrived to assist Kirkpatrick, and police had
    begun to secure the scene and identify evidence.
    Moreover, the questions posed by the officer, asking about the murder
    weapon, was clearly relevant to proofs necessary for defendant's prosecution .
    At that point, the police had identified two kitchen knives. Only after the
    pocketknife was mentioned did the officer tell other officers to look upstairs in
    the residence for a pocketknife. Although one was not immediately found,
    Nokes's son later found the bloody pocketknife behind the bed in the bedroom;
    A-5387-17T4
    13
    the knife did not contain any evidence relating it to defendant. The State
    presented the pocketknife at trial as the murder weapon.
    Nonetheless, we first note that defendant voiced no objection to the
    presentation of that portion of the bodycam footage to the jury; indeed, he
    actively sought its admission.     The State's proffer relating to the bodycam
    footage was limited to that portion recorded before 5:20 a.m.          Defendant,
    however, told the trial judge, "[w]e do want to see more . . . could I carry it
    forward?" After a substantial portion of the bodycam footage was played,
    defense counsel told the judge:5
    If this is ruled admissible, there's a portion later on
    which relates to officers entering the upstairs and
    searching. In other words, there's additional video of
    them walking through and – and observing upstairs. It
    would be an element that I would introduce at trial, but
    given that you've now had an opportunity to see a
    significant portion of the substance of the tape, if I
    would be okay in using the entirety of the tape during
    my defense, then I don't know that there's more value
    or evaluative value to be had by watching the next
    [thirty] to [forty] minutes of the – of the video.
    The judge responded, "I just want to see it because . . . if you want to use all of
    it, . . . I have to see what I think is relevant [and] not relevant." The colloquy
    5
    The transcript notes the State told the court at 11:15 a.m. it did not intend to
    introduce any other footage. The footage was stopped at 11:28 a.m. when
    defendant requested to use the entire bodycam footage.
    A-5387-17T4
    14
    between the officer and Nokes's daughter was played just before the footage was
    paused in court at 11:37 a.m. The video footage was thereafter played to
    conclusion.
    During argument, when asked his position with regard to the bodycam
    footage, defense counsel told the trial judge had the assistant prosecutor "not
    played it, I would have played it. So . . . my position as to the body worn cam
    is that it be available for defense use, along with [p]rosecution use, obviously,
    as an element for the trial." The trial judge then asked, "[s]o you have no
    objection to the body worn cam coming in its entirety?"           Defense counsel
    responded, "[c]orrect. And, in fact . . . if the [c]ourt remembers, I actually asked
    for an extended portion of it to be played after we . . . observed an early portion
    of it because I felt that it was demonstrative of various elements, which . . . I
    would want to bring up at trial."
    In ruling on the admissibility of the bodycam footage, the trial judge
    stated, "both sides have no objection to the body camera footage coming in."
    Only the State requested redactions. At sentencing, the trial judge confirmed
    "[t]he video from the cameras was played for the jury by agreement of the parties
    with appropriate redactions."
    A-5387-17T4
    15
    The hearsay statements of Nokes's daughter should not have been
    introduced, but defendant not only acquiesced to that now-claimed "error," he
    invited it. Generally, under the invited-error doctrine, such choices cannot be
    appealed. State v. A.R., 
    213 N.J. 542
    , 561 (2013). "[I]f a party has 'invited' the
    error, he [or she] is barred from raising an objection for the first time on appeal."
    
    Ibid.
     The doctrine bars trial errors that defendant "induced, encouraged or
    acquiesced in or consented to" as grounds for reversal. State v. Munafo, 
    222 N.J. 480
    , 487 (2015) (quoting A.R., 213 N.J. at 561). "The invited-error doctrine
    is intended to 'prevent defendants from manipulating the system' and will apply
    'when a defendant in some way has led the court into error' while pursuing a
    tactical advantage that does not work as planned." State v. Williams, 
    219 N.J. 89
    , 100 (2014) (quoting A.R., 213 N.J. at 561-62).
    Defense counsel argued to the trial judge that his third-party guilt defense
    was buttressed by the bodycam footage. He also used the bodycam footage to
    illustrate that the police searched the area where the pocketknife was said to
    have been found and did not find that knife. He also referenced the bodycam
    footage showing: defendant's arrest, arguing defendant was not bloody despite
    the copious amounts of blood at the crime scene; Nokes's daughter , claiming
    Nokes's son was also in the bedroom "at least for a short period of time and was
    A-5387-17T4
    16
    engaged in some sort of an altercation as well that led him to run in and call his
    sister"; and Nokes talking to police, "allowing" Kirkpatrick to enter the
    residence and then calling defendant's name, arguing Nokes "put the two of them
    in the same place at the same time." Buttressing his third-party-guilt argument,
    he continued:
    Later on, after [defendant] attempts to escape out a
    window and then attempts to run down the stairs, Miss
    Nokes is seen on the video. And it's stunning to have
    this video. I mean, the idea that you have the video of
    a murder scene is – I mean, you're a very unique – a
    uniquely positioned jury to actually have that picture
    into this scene. You see how distraught this woman is.
    You see how disheveled this woman is. You see the
    state of her hair. You see the fact that she's covered in
    blood. You get to see the aftermath in the two rooms,
    the hallway and the bathroom, that look like – they look
    like a Chicago slaughter house. I mean, the blood is in
    the bedroom as well because we saw the pictures with
    the combs.
    The CSI aspect of it. I told you when we were done it
    would be confusing and I still think four people with
    one dead leaves three to ponder as to who – who might
    have done this. Who might have done this in your
    minds beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Obviously, the defense consented for strategic reasons to the admission of
    all bodycam footage. As such, we see no reason to disturb the jury's verdict.
    See State v. Marshall, 
    123 N.J. 1
    , 93 (1991) ("[E]xcept in the most extreme
    cases, strategic decisions made by defense counsel will not present grounds for
    A-5387-17T4
    17
    reversal on appeal[.]").   We discern "no fundamental injustice that would
    warrant relaxing the invited error doctrine." See N.J. Div. of Youth & Family
    Services v. M.C. III, 
    201 N.J. 328
    , 342 (2010).
    Further, defendant did not raise a Confrontation Clause issue, which, "like
    other constitutional rights, may be waived by the accused." Williams, 219 N.J.
    at 98. In Williams, the court observed that defendant waived his constitutional
    right when he raised no objection to testimony about an autopsy report by a
    substitute medical examiner who had not completed the postmortem procedure,
    id. at 93, holding a "defendant always has the burden of raising his [or her]
    Confrontation Clause objection," id. at 99 (quoting Melendez-Diaz v.
    Massachusetts, 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 327 (2009)). "It is the defendant's choice 'to assert
    (or forfeit by silence) his Confrontation Clause right.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Melendez-
    Diaz, 
    557 U.S. at 326
    ).
    Nor do we perceive that the admission of the colloquy between the
    officer and Nokes's daughter was plain error. Nokes's son's testimony that he
    saw defendant stab Kirkpatrick, defendant's admissions during the intercepted
    jail calls and the evidence of his flight render remote the possibility that the
    bodycam evidence led to an unjust verdict. Macon, 
    57 N.J. at 335
    . In light of
    the discovery of the pocketknife, albeit well after the murder, and the finding of
    A-5387-17T4
    18
    Kirkpatrick's blood on that knife, Nokes's daughter's statements linking
    defendant to a pocketknife was not "of such a nature as to have been clearly
    capable of producing an unjust result[.]" R. 2:10-2.
    We see no merit in the remainder of defendant's arguments on this issue—
    including:   (1) the admission of the officer's belief that defendant stabbed
    Kirkpatrick, as expressed in his questions, was error; and (2) the fact that the
    jury requested to watch the bodycam video, including the colloquy in issue,
    evidenced the importance of that inadmissible evidence—to be without
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). We note the officer did
    not testify, and the beliefs embedded in the questions were not expert or lay
    testimony that defendant was guilty. The officer's questioning took place right
    after the stabbing while the investigation was still fresh; it was obvious his
    theory of the case, at least that used in questioning Nokes's daughter, was based
    on the then-current evidence that linked only defendant to the murder.
    Defendant urges us to reverse and remand for a new trial because the trial
    judge did not include that portion of the model jury charge on flight explaining
    his reason for flight: he "was terrified that Kirkpatrick had a gun[.]" See Model
    Jury Charges (Criminal), "Flight" (rev. May 10, 2010). The Model Charge
    instructs the omitted portion of the instruction "SHOULD BE USED WHERE
    A-5387-17T4
    19
    THE DEFENSE HAS NOT DENIED THAT HE/SHE DEPARTED THE
    SCENE BUT HAS SUGGESTED AN EXPLANATION." 
    Ibid.
     The pertinent
    section provides: "There has been some testimony in the case from which you
    may infer that the defendant fled shortly after the alleged commission of the
    crime. The defense has suggested the following explanation[.]" 
    Ibid.
    Defendant, however, never suggested an explanation. During the charge
    conference, defendant objected only to the inclusion of the flight charge because
    "[t]he idea that he was engaged in some sort of a flight that has anything to do
    with him getting away from what was the scene of danger is not supported by
    the evidence presented."
    The trial judge disagreed, reviewing the evidence pertinent to both
    defendant's attempts to leave the crime scene. In his first attempt, captured on
    Officer Herring's bodycam, defendant was climbing out the second-floor
    window turning "as if he [were] trying to jump down," when Officer Herring
    drew his service weapon and ordered defendant back inside; defendant said, "oh
    shit," and complied. The judge also recounted Officer Herring's testimony and
    bodycam footage showing that, after he was ordered inside, defendant quickly
    ran down the stairs from the second floor with his hands up claiming: "He's in
    here. He's in there. He['s] in there," thrice saying, "He got a gun."
    A-5387-17T4
    20
    Defendant does not contend it was error to give the flight charge. He now
    argues the trial judge should have recognized that defendant was trying to "get
    away from the bedroom where he believed somebody had a gun. He was not
    trying to escape from the police." He concedes in his merits brief that defense
    counsel failed to object to the omission of the explanation section, thus requiring
    us to review the charge under the plain error standard.
    We recognize "'[a]ppropriate and proper charges to a jury are essential to
    a fair trial.' And proper explanation of the elements of a crime is especially
    crucial to the satisfaction of a criminal defendant's due process rights." State v.
    Burgess, 
    154 N.J. 181
    , 185 (1998) (quoting State v. Green, 
    86 N.J. 281
    , 287
    (1981)).
    It is the independent duty of the court to ensure that the
    jurors receive accurate instructions on the law as it
    pertains to the facts and issues of each case, irrespective
    of the particular language suggested by either party.
    Finally, "[a]s an indication of the paramount
    importance of accurate jury instructions, we have held
    that erroneous instructions on material issues are
    presumed to be reversible error."
    [State v. Reddish, 
    181 N.J. 553
    , 613 (2004) (alteration
    in original) (citation omitted) (quoting State v.
    Marshall, 
    173 N.J. 343
    , 359 (2002) (Marshall IV)).]
    The judge's flight instruction mirrored the Model Charge, according it a
    presumption of correctness. See State v. R.B., 
    183 N.J. 308
    , 325 (2005) (stating
    A-5387-17T4
    21
    trial court's obligation to deliver model charges); Mogull v. CB Comm. Real
    Estate Grp., Inc., 
    162 N.J. 449
    , 466 (2000) (noting "[i]t is difficult to find that a
    charge that follows the Model Charge so closely constitutes plain error"). The
    instruction followed the defense theory that he denied any attempt to flee, and
    allowed the jury to assess whether defendant was merely departing the scene or
    fleeing to avoid accusation or arrest for the charged crimes.
    As to the omitted portion of the Model Charge, defendant failed to offer
    an explanation for his flight at any juncture during the trial.             Instead,
    disregarding defendant's attempt to exit through the window, defense counsel
    argued during the charge conference defendant's actions did not constitute flight:
    There's a scuffle in the bedroom and he's looking to
    head out the bedroom door. He comes down the steps
    instead and says that he's observed a gun. At no time
    did he resist the arrest when he was being arrested. At
    no time did he make some attempt that was credible at
    sort of escaping. The idea is at all times he was aware
    the police were there. His testimony provided through
    phone calls and through other means, other people's
    testimony shows that he was present while the police
    were there. They were there at all times during this
    case. He's certainly aware of that.
    At no time during the trial did defendant proffer that he was fleeing from
    a gunman. Indeed, as defendant admits in his merits brief, no gun was ever
    recovered from the crime scene or from any person related to the incident.
    A-5387-17T4
    22
    Moreover, defendant attempted to climb out of the window after the stabbing,
    and he voiced no concern to Herring at that time about a gunman, exclaiming
    about the gunman only after his attempt to leave through the window was
    thwarted.
    Inasmuch as the jury instruction tracked the defense theory about
    defendant's attempts to leave the second-floor crime scene, we discern no "legal
    impropriety . . . prejudicially affecting the substantial rights of the defendant
    and sufficiently grievous to . . . convince the court that of itself the error
    possessed a clear capacity to bring about an unjust result." State v. Hock, 
    54 N.J. 526
    , 538 (1969). There was no error, much less plain error, in the judge's
    flight instruction.
    Defendant avers the trial judge failed to find mitigating factors three
    ("defendant acted under strong provocation"), N.J.S.A. 2C: 44-1(b)(3), and five
    (the victim's conduct induced or facilitated the commission of the crime),
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(5), because there was evidence that defendant, Nokes's
    former boyfriend, was awakened from sleep in Nokes's bed and threatened by
    Kirkpatrick, her then-current boyfriend, and that defendant "was induced or set
    up to engage in a fight that had a high likelihood of turning violent" by Nokes.
    A-5387-17T4
    23
    Defendant adds the judge "provided no reasons" for imposition of the sixty-year
    prison term, thirty years more than the minimum term.
    The trial judge found and gave great weight to aggravating factor three
    (the risk that defendant would commit another crime), N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3);
    aggravating factor six (the extent of defendant's criminal history and seriousness
    of the offenses which he was previously convicted), N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(6); and
    aggravating factor nine (the need to deter defendant and other individuals from
    violating the law), N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(9). Finding no mitigating factors under
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b) applied, the judge found "the aggravating factors clearly
    and convincingly substantially outweigh[ed] the lack of mitigating factors."
    The judge rejected defendant's contention that he was strongly provoked,
    finding no evidence of provocation. She also recognized the jury's rejection of
    defendant's self-defense theory and found inapplicable mitigating factor five.
    "[A]n appellate court should not second-guess a trial court's finding of
    sufficient facts to support an aggravating or mitigating factor if that finding is
    supported by substantial evidence in the record." State v. O'Donnell, 
    117 N.J. 210
    , 216 (1989).    Under our deferential standard of review, we "must not
    substitute [our] judgment for that of the sentencing court," State v. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. 57
    , 70 (2014), and will affirm a sentence unless:
    A-5387-17T4
    24
    (1) the sentencing guidelines were violated; (2) the
    aggravating and mitigating factors found by the
    sentencing court were not based upon competent and
    credible evidence in the record; or (3) "the application
    of the guidelines to the facts of [the] case makes the
    sentence clearly unreasonable so as to shock the
    judicial conscience."
    [Ibid. (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 364-65 (1984)).]
    Under that lens, we discern no reason to overturn the trial court's sentence. The
    judge carefully delineated the reasons for finding all three aggravating factors
    and the weight she accorded each in her comprehensive oral sentencing decision,
    and those reasons are supported by "competent credible evidence in the record."
    State v. Miller, 
    205 N.J. 109
    , 127 (2011) (quoting State v. Bieniek, 
    200 N.J. 601
    ,
    608 (2010)).
    We also agree that there is no evidence that Nokes, who was in the midst
    of a police-involved custody dispute when Kirkpatrick entered the home, sent
    Kirkpatrick to her room where defendant was sleeping, much less that she
    intended violence, or even mischief. We also see no evidence that defendant
    acted under strong provocation to inflict Kirkpatrick's stab wounds. Defendant
    was unharmed and, in the intercepted jail call to the first female, said nothing of
    any physical confrontation or threat initiated by Kirkpatrick; in fact, when told
    that someone said Kirkpatrick was "whooping [defendant's] ass and that's why
    A-5387-17T4
    25
    [defendant] pulled out [his] knife," defendant replied, "if he was whooping my
    ass, I wouldn't have had time to do all that." And when told that someone said
    defendant was sleeping and Kirkpatrick "punched [him] out of [his] sleep,"
    defendant replied "[h]e didn't punch me out of my . . . sleep. He woke me up."
    He said Kirkpatrick only "tapped" his leg to wake him. He, likewise, told the
    second female during the other jail call that Kirkpatrick asked what he was doing
    there and demanded his phones, mentioning nothing about any physical
    provocation by Kirkpatrick. He told the second female the two "got into a little
    scuffle," and that "it ain't like [he] did it on purpose or something." He later told
    her Kirkpatrick had made verbal threats to which defendant, in his own words,
    told Kirkpatrick, "I don't want to argue with you" (emphasis added), but
    described no provocation to justify the stabbing.
    We see no reason to disturb the sentence imposed.
    We determine the arguments made by defendant in his pro se brief are
    without sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2). Defendant's
    challenge to the grand jury presentment was never made to the trial judge and
    there was sufficient evidence justifying the admission of the pocketknife,
    including the testimony of Nokes's son who said he found the knife at the crime
    scene and the DNA evidence linking the knife to the victim.
    A-5387-17T4
    26
    Affirmed.
    A-5387-17T4
    27