STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. JERMAINE SANDERS (05-04-1004, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not '"constitute precedent or be binding upon any court.'" Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5121-17
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JERMAINE SANDERS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Submitted June 1, 2020 – Decided June 15, 2021
    Before Judges Ostrer and Susswein.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Essex County, Indictment No. 05-04-1004.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant (Lee March Grayson, Designated Counsel, on
    the brief).
    Theodore N. Stephens, II, Acting Essex County
    Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Caroline C. Galda,
    Special Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant
    Prosecutor, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Appellant filed a pro se supplemental brief.
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    Defendant Jermaine Sanders appeals from the trial court's order denying,
    without an evidentiary hearing, his petition for post-conviction relief (PCR).
    Sanders collaterally challenges his convictions for purposeful murder, felony
    murder, conspiracy, aggravated assault, and multiple carjackings, armed
    robberies, and weapons offenses.
    In the course of the hearing on defendant's petition, the State produced,
    evidently for the first time, materials it received in response to a July 4, 2004
    communications data warrant. The date of the materials apparently belies the
    testimony of a detective and a captain of the Essex County Prosecutor's Office
    (ECPO) about when and how they discovered facts establishing probable cause
    to arrest defendant. If the police lacked probable cause when they entered
    defendant's girlfriend's apartment, then the murder weapon and certain stolen
    items the police seized there should have been suppressed.             If the date
    discrepancy is not adequately explained, it also raises significant questions
    about the credibility of the detective and the captain, whose testimony also
    figured prominently in the hearing on defendant's unsuccessful motion to
    exclude his custodial statements. The detective and captain also testified at trial.
    2                                    A-5121-17
    Therefore, we are constrained to reverse in part and remand for an
    evidentiary hearing, so the PCR court can explore whether the detective and the
    captain testified falsely, and whether there is a reasonable probability that the
    outcome of the trial would have been different had the State timely disclosed the
    CDW materials.
    I.
    We assume the reader's familiarity with the facts that we detailed in our
    opinion affirming defendant's conviction on direct appeal. See State v. Sanders,
    No. A-2219-08 (App. Div. December 19, 2012) (Sanders I). According to the
    State's evidence, defendant and two co-defendants, Hafiz Josey and Quawee
    Jones, engaged in a crime spree that began in the early morning hours of July 3,
    2004.
    The spree started after Kendall Blake and Damian Clark left a bar on
    Mount Prospect Place at around 2:30 a.m. As they entered their car, an "ice
    bluish" Grand Cherokee Jeep with tinted windows cut them off and two men
    with guns alighted and approached the driver and passenger's sides. Blake and
    his friend were ordered at gunpoint to exit their car and lay on the ground. Blake
    testified one man went through his pockets and told him he was "going to die
    3                                   A-5121-17
    tonight." But police sirens sounded, and the two men fled, taking Blake's wallet
    and Clark's wallet, phone, and watch.
    The next victim was Andrew De Souza. He was in his car at 16th Avenue
    and South 19th talking with a woman when he heard yelling. The woman ran to
    the rear of his car. Someone approached with an automatic handgun, pointed it
    at De Souza, and ordered him out. De Souza complied, then pushed the gunman
    and began to run when he was shot from behind. De Souza recalled seeing a
    dark colored Jeep Cherokee with tinted windows.
    Between 3:15 and 3:30 a.m., Tiking Wallace-Wilson arrived at an
    apartment building to pick up a friend. Seconds after he stopped, a blue Jeep
    Cherokee pulled in front of him, and two men with guns exited and ordered
    Wallace-Wilson out of his Mercedes. They took his wallet and drove off in his
    car.
    The crime spree continued. Shortly before 5 a.m., Jacque Thelemaque left
    a club and entered his black Lexus. As he opened the car door, a man with a
    gun demanded Thelemaque turn over the car keys. Then, a blue Jeep Cherokee
    pulled up in front of his car, boxed him in, and Thelemaque turned over the keys
    and cell phone.
    4                                 A-5121-17
    Also, around 5 a.m., Alejandro Okoraogu-Loren was waiting at a red light
    on Elizabeth Avenue when a greenish-blue Jeep Cherokee cut him off and two
    armed men jumped out of the car. One of them ran to the driver's side of his
    car, put a gun to Okoraogu-Loren's neck, and demanded he and his passenger
    get out of the car. The two drove off with his car after taking his cell phone and
    a DVD player.
    Then the crime spree took a deadly turn. At around 5:20 a.m., Marquise
    Carter, Jr., was shot to death. The Medical Examiner testified Carter suffered
    three gunshot wounds, one in his head, one in his neck, and one in his back.
    But, there were two more victims. Andre Rossignol was driving his
    taxicab around 5:45 a.m. when a blue Jeep Cherokee parked in front of him.
    Two men got out and approached his car. He tried unsuccessfully to shut his
    door. One of the men got in the car and aimed a gun at him. They took all of
    Rossignol's money and then returned to the Jeep and fled. Rossignol chose
    defendant's picture from a photo array when he gave police a statement, but did
    not identify defendant at trial.
    Around 6:30 a.m., Josefina Rosa was driving her Lexus when a gunman
    left a blue Jeep, approached her window, and demanded money. When she said
    5                                   A-5121-17
    she had none, he ordered her out of her car. He took her driver's license and cell
    phone, and then drove off in her car.
    The ECPO detective testified he applied for a communications data
    warrant (CDW) during July 4th weekend for the cell phones the robbers stole.
    He said he received results within a day or two. The detective learned that
    Okoraogu-Loren's phone was still being used after the robbery. Based on the
    detective's reading of the phone records, two teams were sent to two addresses,
    including defendant's mother's house. After speaking with defendant's mother,
    one team then went to an apartment where defendant lived with his girlfriend.
    The police knocked on the door, and defendant fled out a back window.
    However, the police searched the apartment and found incriminating pieces of
    evidence in plain view, including: a loaded .45 caliber revolver; cell phones;
    Thelemaque's vehicle registration and insurance identification card; and Rosa's
    driver's license.
    The ECPO captain confirmed the detective's version of events.            He
    testified that he, the detective, and other law enforcement officers huddled once
    they had the CDW return in hand. The captain was part of the team that went to
    the defendant's girlfriend's house and discovered the murder weapon and other
    stolen items.
    6                                   A-5121-17
    Police arrested defendant two days after the seizure and charged him with
    unlawful possession of a handgun. Hours after being arrested, defendant gave
    police two statements, admitting he, Josey, and Jones were involved in the
    robberies and Carter's murder.
    Pre-trial, defendant moved unsuccessfully to suppress his statements and
    the evidence seized from his girlfriend's apartment. After an extended trial,
    defendant was convicted of most counts of the indictment.
    On direct appeal, we affirmed the court's orders denying defendant's
    suppression motions. However, regarding the apartment search and seizure, we
    did so for reasons other than those adopted by the trial court. We held the
    police's warrantless entry into the home could not be justified as consensual, or
    an investigative detention supported by reasonable and articulable suspicion.
    Sanders I, (slip op. at 23, 31-32). Rather, it was justified by probable cause to
    arrest defendant, which the trial court properly found, and exigent
    circumstances.   That probable cause was grounded in the totality of the
    circumstances which included, significantly, the police's reported discovery that
    a cell phone stolen in the carjackings was used, after it was taken, to call
    7                                   A-5121-17
    defendant's mother. 1 We wrote, "At the very least, the police had probable cause
    to arrest defendant for receiving stolen property, as there was a basis for more
    than mere suspicion that he possessed one of the cell phones . . . stolen in the
    carjackings." Sanders I, (slip op. at 35).
    We also affirmed the order denying the motion to exclude defendant's two
    custodial inculpatory statements. Defendant contended the statements were
    involuntary because police repeatedly assaulted him while in custody. We
    deferred to the trial court's credibility determination that the police witnesses'
    denials were more believable than defendant's claims of coercion.
    Although we affirmed defendant's convictions, we remanded for
    resentencing. Thereafter, the sentencing court merged defendant's convictions,
    and sentenced him to an aggregate custodial sentence of one hundred years.
    II.
    Defendant filed a timely pro se PCR petition seeking relief on the
    following grounds:
    Ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
    1
    Probable cause was also supported by "the statement by defendant's mother,
    which connected defendant physically to the person involved in the crime, and
    connected defendant by name, given the similarity between Tramaine [the name
    a witness used to identify a person who threatened to rob him during the crime
    spree] and Jermaine; and the [alleged] presence of the black Lexus parked in
    front of [the girlfriend's] apartment." Sanders I, (slip op. at 34).
    8                                   A-5121-17
    Failed to investigate, to locate or interview witnesses.
    Failed to develop facts.
    Missing witness instruction = Clawans instruction.
    Ineffective assistance of appellate counsel.
    Appellate counsel failed to raise confrontation clause
    claim.
    Failed to raise prosecutor misconduct.
    Failed to raise ineffective assistance of trial counsel.
    Anders requirement.
    Wade hearing. 2
    In a two-page addendum, defendant argued that trial counsel was ineffective by
    failing to investigate defendant's arrest, including locating and interviewing
    witnesses, and obtaining the communications data warrant, supporting affidavit,
    and produced phone records. He argued trial counsel improperly litigated
    defendant's suppression motions. Defendant also contended appellate counsel
    was ineffective by failing to raise the prosecutor's misconduct in vouching for a
    State witness and mischaracterizing defendant's mother's statement to police.
    He also contended that defense counsel should have called police detective
    Michael Lalley as a witness to question him about the circumstances of
    defendant's arrest.
    Counsel filed a supporting brief, which is not before us. However, as
    summarized by the PCR court, defendant raised seven points challenging his
    2
    We have corrected defendant's capitalization for easier reading.
    9                                 A-5121-17
    conviction: (1) trial counsel was ineffective by failing to request a change in
    venue away from Essex County, because Marquise Carter, Jr.'s father worked in
    the Essex County Prosecutor's Office; 3 (2) newly discovered evidence that
    Lalley pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice could have been used to impeach
    his testimony if he testified; (3) trial counsel was ineffective by failing to object
    to the prosecutor's remarks in summation denigrating the defense and expressing
    his personal belief in defendant's guilt; (4) the trial court's failure to issue a
    curative instruction after the prosecutor's comments deprived defendant of a fair
    trial; (5) appellate counsel was ineffective by failing to raise the summation and
    jury charge claim on his direct appeal; (6) the prosecutor's failure to disclose
    phone numbers on a carjacking victim's cellphone, which assisted police in
    locating defendant and seizing evidence, deprived defendant of a fair trial; and
    (7) trial counsel was ineffective by failing to call two witnesses at trial. PCR
    counsel also sought a change in venue of the PCR proceeding itself.
    At oral argument on the petition, PCR counsel renewed the request made
    in his papers for the State to produce the CDW and the documents obtained
    thereby.   He noted trial counsel's repeated comments during trial that the
    3
    Marquise Carter Sr. worked for the Newark Police Department when it
    investigated his son's murder.
    10                                    A-5121-17
    documents were not produced in discovery. Pressed by the PCR court to identify
    the prejudice caused by the non-production, PCR counsel responded that it was
    difficult to do that without the documents. However, he stated the documents
    could show that State's witnesses lied about how they arrested defendant. The
    State conceded that the CDW application and order were discoverable at trial.
    The PCR judge ordered the State to produce the documents and continued the
    hearing several weeks later.
    At the resumed hearing, PCR counsel insisted that the State bore the
    burden to establish that defendant's mother's phone number was included in the
    production. The court concluded that defendant had that burden. However, PCR
    counsel did not present evidence that the phone records omitted defendant's
    mother's phone number, nor did counsel otherwise supplement his argument that
    the failure to disclose the CDW and related documents materially affected the
    result at trial. Instead, at defendant's direction, PCR counsel focused on a
    separate point: that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to obtain defendant's
    arrest report.
    However, neither PCR counsel nor the PCR court focused on another
    aspect of the produced documents. The "subscriber history" that the cell phone
    carrier, Nextel, provided bore two facsimile transmission dates — August 19,
    11                                    A-5121-17
    2004 and September 10, 2004. 4 That was over a month or more after the date
    the ECPO detective and the captain claimed they analyzed the CDW production
    and ascertained that someone — presumably defendant — used the stolen cell
    phone to call defendant's mother.
    The PCR court rejected defendant's ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
    argument after applying the familiar two-pronged test in Strickland v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 688, 694 (1984) (holding that to establish ineffective
    assistance of counsel, a defendant must demonstrate (1) counsel's performance
    was so deficient that it "fell below an objective standard of reasonableness," and
    (2) there was "a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional
    errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different").
    Regarding the failure-to-seek-a-change-of-venue claim, the PCR court
    found no error.    The judge explained that defendant's complaint about the
    alleged conflict of interest within the ECPO pertained not to where he would be
    tried, but who would prosecute his case. A change of venue would not have
    changed the prosecutor. And, defendant provided no authority for disqualifying
    the ECPO. Furthermore, defendant failed to establish that the Essex County jury
    4
    The August 2004 date is fuzzy and difficult to make out. It may actually be
    September 10, 2004, based on the dates on subsequent pages.
    12                                   A-5121-17
    in his trial was incapable of rendering a fair and impartial verdict. Thus, trial
    counsel was not ineffective by failing to seek a change of venue.
    The PCR court also denied defendant's motion to change the venue of the
    PCR hearing itself. The court noted that the only authority defendant cited, State
    v. Harvey, 
    176 N.J. 522
     (2003), was inapplicable, as it pertained to a change of
    venue to consider the alleged ineffectiveness of a trial counsel who had become
    a sitting judge in the county where the PCR petition would otherwise have been
    heard.
    The PCR court also rejected defendant's claim that a conviction of one of
    the investigating detectives for obstruction of justice several years after
    defendant's trial constituted newly discovered evidence that entitled defendant
    to a new trial. The PCR court found that defendant satisfied none of the three
    prerequisites for relief under State v. Ways, 
    180 N.J. 171
    , 187 (2004) and State
    v. Carter, 
    85 N.J. 300
    , 314 (1981). Defendant did not show "the evidence [was]
    . . . material and not 'merely' cumulative, impeaching or contradictory; . . . the
    evidence was discovered after completion of the trial and was 'not discoverable
    by reasonable diligence beforehand'; and . . . the evidence 'would probably
    change the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted.'" Ways, 
    180 N.J. at 187
    (quoting Carter, 
    85 N.J. at 314
    ). Notably, the evidence of Detective Michael
    13                                   A-5121-17
    Lalley's obstruction-of-justice conviction was at best, impeachment evidence;
    and since the detective did not testify, his conviction could not possibly have
    changed the jury's verdict if a new trial were granted. 5
    The PCR court held that that defendant's claims regarding the prosecutor's
    summation were barred by Rule 3:22-4, because he could have raised them on
    direct appeal but did not. In any event, the PCR court found that the prosecutor's
    comments were not improper. The prosecutor appropriately advised the jury
    that what he said was not evidence. Also, the prosecutor rhetorically questioned
    the absence of defendant's mother as a trial witness in response to the defense
    summation questioning the absence of a police witness. The prosecutor did not
    shift the burden to defendant; in fact, the prosecutor reminded the jury "the
    defense does not have to do anything." As a result, trial counsel was not
    ineffective when he did not object to the prosecutor's summation. Inasmuch as
    the prosecutor did not make improper remarks, the trial court was not obliged
    sua sponte to deliver a curative instruction, nor was appellate counsel required
    to raise the issue on direct appeal.
    5
    Detective Lalley's conviction arose out of his obstruction of an FBI
    investigation into allegations that he had sexual relations with minors.
    14                                   A-5121-17
    The PCR court then addressed defendant's claim that he was denied a fair
    trial because the State withheld the communications data warrant, the supporting
    affidavit, and the phone records obtained under the CDW. As we explained, the
    police reportedly identified repeated calls from the stolen cell phone to
    defendant's mother's phone number. That allegedly led police to defendant's
    mother, which then led them to defendant's girlfriend's apartment and the seizure
    of the handgun used in the homicide and items that belonged to some of the
    robbery victims.
    The PCR court concluded that defendant "failed to sustain his burden of
    establishing prejudice arising from his untimely receipt of these telephone
    records." The PCR court also held that because trial counsel raised the non-
    disclosure of the phone records in the unsuccessful motion for a new trial, he
    was barred from relying on the issue to obtain PCR. 6
    6
    Apparently citing a court exhibit, the PCR judge stated "trial counsel asserted
    that 'the State failed to ever present the phone records from which they went to
    the defendant's mother's house and eventually to his girlfriend's house where he
    was living.' By allowing this 'hearsay' testimony without the records the jury
    improperly could have inferred that defendant used a stolen cell phone to call
    his mother thus prejudicing the entire case." However, the record before us does
    not contain defendant's new trial motion brief; and the oral argument supporting
    the motion and the trial court's brief oral opinion denying it does not mention
    the CDW materials.
    15                                   A-5121-17
    The PCR court also rejected defendant's argument that trial counsel was
    ineffective by not calling a witness, Rasheed Simmons, who allegedly would
    have testified that police used excessive force when they arrested defendant.
    Notably, Simmons testified at the suppression hearing at which the court
    credited the police witnesses and rejected defendant's argument that he was
    assaulted while in custody and coerced to confess. The PCR court held that trial
    counsel's decision not to call at trial a witness whose testimony the trial court
    already rejected as incredible was a reasonable tactical decision and not
    ineffective assistance of counsel. In any event, the PCR court concluded, in
    light of the other "substantial independent evidence of . . . guilt," that Simmons's
    testimony would not have affected the jury's verdict.
    On appeal, defendant reprises the arguments presented to the PCR court,
    contending:
    POINT I
    THE PCR COURT ERRED BY FINDING THAT THE
    DEFENDANT WAS NOT PREJUDICED BY THE
    STATE'S FAILURE TO PROVIDE DISCOVERY TO
    THE    DEFENSE    CONSISTING   OF   THE
    COMMUNICATIONS DATA WARRANT (CDW),
    AFFIDAVIT AND ACTUAL PHONE RECORDS
    AND THE DEFENDANT ASSERTS THAT CDW
    MATERIALS       CONSTITUTED       NEWLY
    DISCOVERED EVIDENCE WARRANTING A NEW
    TRIAL.
    16                                    A-5121-17
    POINT II
    THE PCR COURT ERRED BY DENYING THE
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO VACATE HIS
    CONVICTION BASED ON NEWLY DISCOVERED
    EVIDENCE CONSISTING OF (A) FORMER
    DETECTIVE LALLEY'S CONVICTION FOR
    OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE; AND (B) TWO
    WITNESSES WHO ALLEGEDLY OBSERVED
    EVENTS LEADING TO THE DEFENDANT'S
    ARREST.
    POINT III
    THE PCR COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE
    DEFENDANT'S   PETITION     FOR    POST-
    CONVICTION RELIEF WITHOUT AFFORDING
    HIM AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING TO FULLY
    ADDRESS   HIS  CONTENTION    THAT    HE
    RECEIVED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
    COUNSEL FROM HIS TRIAL ATTORNEY AND
    APPELLATE COUNSEL IN THE DIRECT APPEAL.
    POINT IV
    THE PCR COURT ERRED BY DENYING THE
    DEFENDANT'S REQUEST TO TRANSFER HIS PCR
    PETITION TO ANOTHER COUNTY FOR
    DISPOSITION.
    POINT V
    THE PCR COURT ERRED IN DETERMINING THAT
    NO ERRORS OCCURRED WARRANTING PCR
    RELIEF.
    17                      A-5121-17
    POINT VI
    THE PCR COURT ERRED BY DENYING THE
    DEFENDANT'S REQUEST FOR AN EVIDENTIARY
    HEARING.
    Defendant also filed a supplemental pro se brief, contending the newly
    discovered evidence (cell phone records) reveal that the police did not have
    probable cause to arrest him, and as such, the unconstitutional arrest and the
    evidence seized as a result should be excluded, resulting in his conviction being
    vacated.
    III.
    When a PCR court does not hold an evidentiary hearing, we "conduct a de
    novo review of both the factual findings and legal conclusions of the PCR court."
    State v. Blake, 
    444 N.J. Super. 285
    , 294 (App. Div. 2016) (quoting State v.
    Harris, 
    181 N.J. 391
    , 421 (2004)). To obtain an evidentiary hearing on a PCR
    petition, a defendant must establish a prima facie case for relief, demonstrate
    there    exist   material   issues   of   disputed   fact,   and   show   that   an
    evidentiary hearing is necessary to resolve the claims.       R. 3:22-10(b). We
    review an order declining to hold an evidentiary hearing for an abuse of
    discretion. State v. Preciose, 
    129 N.J. 451
    , 462 (1992).
    18                                 A-5121-17
    At the outset, we note that defendant seeks PCR on three distinct grounds
    (although he sometimes conflates them): his trial and appellate counsel were
    ineffective; the State withheld exculpatory information; and he has obtained
    newly discovered evidence.      We have already described the two-pronged
    Strickland standard that governs an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, and
    the three-pronged Ways-Carter test that governs his newly-discovered-evidence
    claim.
    To secure relief on the claim that the State withheld exculpatory evidence
    in violation of Brady v. Maryland, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (1963), "defendant must show
    that (1) the prosecution suppressed evidence; (2) the evidence is favorable to the
    defense; and (3) the evidence is material." State v. Martini, 
    160 N.J. 248
    , 268
    (1999). "[E]vidence is 'material' if there is a 'reasonable probability that, had
    the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the proceeding would
    have been different." 
    Id. at 269
     (quoting United States v. Bagley, 
    473 U.S. 667
    ,
    682 (1985)).    Put another way, to establish a due process violation, the
    suppressed evidence must be "material either to guilt or to punishment." Brady,
    
    373 U.S. at 87
    .     "A 'reasonable probability' is a probability sufficient to
    undermine confidence in the outcome." Bagley, 
    473 U.S. at 682
    . Material
    evidence may include impeachment evidence. 
    Id. at 676
    ; see also State v.
    19                                   A-5121-17
    Hyppolite, 
    236 N.J. 154
    , 165 (2018) (stating that "[i]mpeachment evidence, as
    well as exculpatory evidence, is governed by the Brady rule"); State v. Nelson,
    
    330 N.J. Super. 206
    , 215-16 (App. Div. 2000) (stating that "[w]hen the
    reliability of a witness may well be determinative of guilt or innocence, non-
    disclosure of evidence affecting credibility justifies a new trial, irrespective of
    the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution").
    IV.
    We turn first to defendant's argument regarding the phone records
    produced in response to the CDW. As we indicated at the outset, on the basis
    of this argument we are constrained to remand for an evidentiary hearing.
    A.
    Defendant contends the State's failure to provide the CDW materials
    before trial denied him a fair trial. He presents multiple theories to support his
    claim for relief. He argues the State violated his due process rights under Brady.
    He contends "the results of the CDW . . . indicate that the phone records were
    not obtained until after the police had searched the car, residences and had
    arrested the defendant." That "casts significant doubt on the police version of
    the alleged events and undermines confidence in the outcome of the proceedings
    at trial."   He also characterizes the CDW materials as newly discovered
    20                                    A-5121-17
    evidence, requiring a new trial in the interests of justice. And he argues trial
    counsel was ineffective by failing to obtain the CDW materials. He contends
    the PCR court should have ordered an evidentiary hearing to explore the
    ramifications of the CDW materials. Lastly, he challenges the PCR court's
    holding that Rule 3:22-5 barred his claims related to the CDW materials.
    Defendant notes that the rule only bars identical or substantially equivalent
    claims, and the issue raised on direct appeal differed from the issue raised in
    support of PCR.
    In his pro se brief, defendant questions how police, even if armed with the
    phone records, were able to identify the associated addresses. Noting that the
    probable cause finding was based on the CDW materials, defendant contends
    the search and seizure and his arrest should be deemed fruits of unconstitutional
    conduct.
    The State argues that defendant has not demonstrated how the CDW
    materials would have changed the outcome of the case. The State points to the
    other evidence of guilt, including defendant's confession.        Also, because
    defendant allegedly could have raised the non-disclosure of the records on direct
    appeal, the State contends that Rule 3:22-4 bars his present argument based on
    the CDW materials. The State also argues that because PCR counsel did not
    21                                   A-5121-17
    raise the date discrepancy issue before the PCR court, we should decline to
    consider it on appeal.
    B.
    We address the procedural arguments first. Neither Rule 3:22-4 nor Rule
    3:22-5 bars defendant's claim based on the CDW materials.
    The PCR court held that Rule 3:22-5 applies because trial counsel raised
    the non-disclosure of the CDW materials in connection with his new trial
    motion. We are unconvinced. The rule bars claims that "are either identical or
    'substantially equivalent'" to one previously adjudicated. State v. Marshall, 
    173 N.J. 343
    , 351 (2002). Neither party has provided us with the new trial motion.
    But, based on the PCR court's discussion, the new trial motion evidently
    implicated the CDW materials only peripherally, because the motion pertained
    to the admission of the hearsay statements that defendant used the stolen cell
    phone to call his mother. That hearsay issue is distinct from the question
    whether law enforcement witnesses accurately testified at the suppression
    hearing and at trial that they relied on the subscriber history in deciding to visit
    defendant's mother's home and later his girlfriend's home with the intent to
    detain him.
    22                                    A-5121-17
    We also reject the State's argument that defendant could have raised the
    issue of the CDW materials in his direct appeal, and therefore is barred by Rule
    3:22-4.   We must ask "whether the additional facts disclosed in the post-
    conviction relief record sufficiently augment the scope of such claims to
    preclude the conclusion that a substantially similar claim could have been
    advanced on the basis of the trial record." State v. Marshall, 
    148 N.J. 89
    , 147
    (1997). The answer is yes. At most, defendant could have raised the general
    issue of the CDW materials' non-disclosure. But, without knowing the date
    discrepancy in the subscriber history, defendant's argument would have
    presented a mere shadow of the significant issue raised before us regarding
    allegedly false testimony. The rules do not require a court "to acquiesce to a
    miscarriage of justice." State v. Nash, 
    212 N.J. 518
    , 546 (2013).
    Lastly, we decline to disregard the date discrepancy issue simply because
    PCR counsel did not clearly present it to the PCR court. Although we generally
    need not address issues that an appellant did not properly present to the trial
    court, we may do so if the issue "substantially implicate[s] the public interest."
    N.J. Div. of Youth & Fam. Servs. v. M.C. III, 
    201 N.J. 328
    , 339 (2010); Nieder
    v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co., 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234 (1973). Absent an explanation for
    the date discrepancy, the subscriber history indicates that two law enforcement
    23                                   A-5121-17
    witnesses who testified at the suppression hearing, the Miranda hearing, and at
    trial, testified falsely about what they knew and when they knew it. The interests
    of justice command us to address the issue.
    C.
    Turning to the merits, defendant has demonstrated a prima facie case that
    warrants an evidentiary hearing. The State conceded that the CDW materials
    were discoverable. Under Rule 3:13-3(b)(1), the State was obliged to produce
    the materials because they were relevant.
    The State may also have been obliged to disclose these materials under
    the constitutional principles established in Brady. See Biles v. United States,
    
    101 A.3d 1012
    , 1019, 1025 (D.C. 2014) (collecting cases and holding the
    government's failure to disclose information that is material to a suppression
    hearing violates due process under Brady where the suppression of the evidence
    would have affected the outcome of the trial); see also Wayne R. LaFave et al.,
    6 Criminal Procedure, § 24.3(b) (4th ed. 2020) (commenting "[a] number of
    courts have held that 'favorable' evidence includes evidence that is material to a
    suppression hearing, although this position is rejected by other judges who read
    the Court's precedent as protecting against the conviction of an innocent person,
    24                                   A-5121-17
    a concern 'not implicated when the undisclosed information is information that
    would enable a defendant to obtain the suppression of inculpatory evidence.'").
    The United States Supreme Court has not yet ruled on this constitutional
    question. In State v. Marshall, 
    148 N.J. 89
     (1997), our State Supreme Court
    considered a PCR petitioner's argument that withholding certain evidence
    violated his due process rights under Brady by affecting the result of a
    suppression hearing. 
    Id. at 185
    . The Court denied relief after assuming, but
    without clearly deciding, that Brady applied to withholding information material
    to suppression hearings. "Assuming that the failure to turn over the memoranda
    constituted a direct [constitutional] violation . . . our conclusion that disclosing
    the memoranda would not have materially influenced the outcome of the
    suppression hearing indicates that those alleged violations would have been
    harmless." 
    Id. at 189
    .
    Therefore, we need not decide in this appeal whether the Brady doctrine
    extends to information favorable to a defendant's Fourth Amendment
    suppression argument for two reasons.              First, the parties have not
    comprehensively addressed this due process question in their submissions.
    Second, the undisclosed information at issue in this case might have been
    25                                    A-5121-17
    admissible at trial, not just the suppression hearing, to impeach the credibility
    of the detective and captain, both of whom testified at trial.
    Defendant has initially demonstrated the CDW materials were favorable
    to the defense for two reasons. First, the CDW materials could have altered the
    result of the suppression hearing. As we have explained, probable cause was
    predicated on law enforcement's purported discovery that defendant likely used
    the stolen cellphone to call his mother. If that discovery occurred after the
    search and seizure at the girlfriend's apartment, then the police would have
    lacked probable cause, and the murder weapon and other items should have been
    suppressed. The PCR court must determine whether, if the physical evidence
    had been wrongfully seized, there is a reasonable probability the result of the
    trial would have been different. The State would have been unable to introduce
    the physical items at trial.   We recognize the State's proofs also included
    defendant's confessions. But, that may not have been sufficient absent the
    physical evidence.
    Also, arguably, defendant's arrest and subsequent interrogation were the
    fruits of the physical evidence, because he was initially arrested on charges of
    possessing the items seized. The trial court thus may need to consider whether
    defendant's confession, obtained in a custodial setting, is sufficiently attenuated
    26                                    A-5121-17
    from the possible illegal arrest to avoid being excluded as the fruit of the
    poisonous tree. See State v. Chippero, 
    164 N.J. 342
    , 353 (2000).
    Second, defendant has presented a prima facie case that the CDW
    materials were exculpatory because the defense could have used them to
    impeach the two law enforcement witnesses at the Miranda hearing and at trial.
    See Hyppolite, 236 N.J. at 165; Nelson, 
    330 N.J. Super. at 215-16
    . The PCR
    court must determine if there is a reasonable probability that the impeachment
    would have altered the result of the Miranda hearing, and in turn, altered the
    result of the trial itself.
    In sum, the date discrepancy in the subscriber history raises a serious
    question whether law enforcement knew a stolen cell phone was used to call
    defendant's mother, and whether law enforcement personnel had probable cause
    to arrest defendant when they appeared at defendant's girlfriend's home. If they
    lacked probable cause, then the murder weapon, and the other stolen items
    seized should have been suppressed. The date discrepancy may also have so
    impaired the credibility of the ECPO detective and captain as to affect the result
    of the Miranda hearing. 7 The PCR court must determine whether there is a
    7
    The trial court's Miranda decision rested substantially on its credibility
    findings. Notably, the court excluded Sanders' co-defendant's statement because
    27                                   A-5121-17
    reasonable probability the result of the trial would have been different if the
    State had been constrained to go to trial without the physical evidence or the
    confession, or both, and with two law enforcement witnesses subject to
    impeachment.
    V.
    We are unpersuaded by defendant's remaining points on appeal, and affirm
    substantially for the reasons provided by the PCR court. We add the following
    comments.
    Defendant asserts a right to a new trial based on two forms of newly
    discovered evidence: the 2011 obstruction of justice conviction of a police
    detective involved in the investigation of defendant's case; and a 2016
    investigator's report regarding alleged witnesses to defendant's July 9, 2004
    arrest. "We review [the denial of] a motion for a new trial decision for an abuse
    of discretion." State v. Fortin, 
    464 N.J. Super. 193
    , 216 (App. Div. 2020), cert.
    denied, 
    246 N.J. 50
     (2021), and we discern none here.
    of police witnesses' inconsistencies. If the court had found that the detective
    and captain were not credible, that may well have tipped the balance in Sanders'
    favor. That is so, particularly given the discrepancy in the captain's testimony
    about the presence of a stolen car in front of the girlfriend's apartment building.
    See Sanders I, (slip op. at 9).
    28                                    A-5121-17
    The officer's obstruction of justice conviction occurred several years after
    defendant's trial; the crime had nothing to do with the detective's police work in
    defendant's case; and the detective did not testify. The PCR court properly held
    that the conviction was not the kind of evidence that would probably have
    affected the jury's verdict.
    We reach the same conclusion with respect to defendant's contention that
    he was entitled to a new trial based on an investigator's 2016 report regarding
    alleged witnesses to defendant's July 9, 2004 arrest.            Putting aside its
    questionable materiality, defendant has not demonstrated that the report was
    both discovered after the trial and was "not discoverable by reasonable diligence
    beforehand." Carter, 85 NJ. at 314. And, a failure to call either, or both, of
    these witnesses at defendant's suppression hearing does not constitute
    ineffective assistance of counsel, as the report only consists of hearsay
    statements by two individuals, neither of whom provided certifications
    supporting the narrative provided in the investigation report.
    We also reject defendant's contentions that his trial and appellate counsel
    were ineffective in other ways. Defendant contends that trial counsel should
    have objected to comments the prosecutor made in summation, and that
    appellate counsel should have sought reversal based on those comments.
    29                                   A-5121-17
    Defendant argues the prosecutor repeatedly gave his personal opinion of the
    case, denigrated defense counsel, and shifted the burden of proof to defendant
    by questioning why the defense did not call defendant's mother and girlfriend as
    defense witnesses at trial. Trial counsel objected to some of the remarks, but as
    a strategic matter declined the court's offer to issue a curative instruction, out of
    concern that doing so would be counter-productive.
    In any event, the prosecutor's comments were not so significant,
    particularly when viewed as part of the "summation as a whole," see State v.
    Atwater, 
    400 N.J. Super. 319
    , 335 (App. Div. 2008), that there is a reasonable
    probability that they altered the result of the trial. Prosecutorial misconduct may
    compel reversal if it "was so egregious that it deprived the defendant of a fair
    trial." State v. Frost, 
    158 N.J. 76
    , 83 (1999). The conduct must be "'clearly and
    unmistakably improper,' and it must have substantially prejudiced [the]
    defendant's fundamental right to have a jury fairly evaluate the merits of his
    defense." State v. Timmendequas, 
    161 N.J. 515
    , 575 (1999). The prosecutor's
    remarks do not meet that test.
    Finally, defendant's claims regarding trial and PCR venue do not satisfy
    either prong of the Strickland test. Although the murder victim's father was a
    homicide detective in the county where the trial was held, defendant cites no
    30                                    A-5121-17
    authority, and we are aware of none, that entitled defendant to be tried in a
    different county. The father's position did not deprive defendant of a fair trial.
    Nor did defendant present a basis for transferring venue of the PCR hearing
    itself.
    To the extent not addressed, defendant's remaining arguments lack
    sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed in part; and reversed and remanded in part for an evidentiary
    hearing. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    31                                  A-5121-17