BEASE v. JOHNSON

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedOctober 8, 2025
Docket2:16-cv-02829
StatusUnknown

This text of BEASE v. JOHNSON (BEASE v. JOHNSON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BEASE v. JOHNSON, (D.N.J. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

ASMAR BEASE, Civil Action No. 16–2829 (SDW)

Petitioner

v. OPINION

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, et al.,

Respondents

WIGENTON, District Judge: Presently before this Court is the amended petition for writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (“Amended Petition”) by Petitioner Asmar Bease challenging his New Jersey state court convictions. (ECF No. 2). Respondents oppose the Amended Petition. (ECF No. 14).1 Petitioner also submitted supplemental claims in a motion to amend (“Supplement”) (ECF No. 29). Respondents oppose the claims in the Supplement. (ECF No. 41). This Court will resolve the Amended Petition and Supplement on the briefs pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 78(b). For the following reasons, the Amended Petition is denied. The claims raised in the Supplement are provisionally dismissed as time barred, but Petitioner may submit equitable tolling arguments.

1 Respondents’ exhibits were filed at Docket Entry No. 14 and are referred to herein by the docket and page numbers assigned by the Court’s Case Management Electronic Case Filing system, CM/ECF. I. BACKGROUND On or about January 6, 2009, Petitioner was charged in a six-count indictment in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Passaic County with first-degree attempted murder, second-degree aggravated assault, fourth-degree aggravated assault by pointing a firearm, second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon

without a carry permit, and two counts of second-degree certain persons not to have weapons. (ECF No. 14–3). The Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division (“Appellate Division”) made the following findings of fact on direct appeal:2 On August 1, 2008, the victim, Alphonso Gee, and his wife, were at home. Gee’s wife asked him if she could go out with a female friend for a couple of hours. Gee reminded his wife the couple had plans the following day and she said she would be home by 2:00 a.m. Around 2:30 a.m., Gee realized his wife was still not home and called her on the telephone. She said she was on her way home from New York and would be there in ten or fifteen minutes. When his wife failed to appear, Gee got in his car and went out looking for her between 3:30 and 4:00 a.m.

Gee found the vehicle his wife was driving that night parked at an intersection. He opened the rear driver’s side door and saw his wife and defendant Asmar Bease in the backseat. Gee testified that “Asmar had his pants down to his ankles” and his wife was “naked from the waist down.” Gee “snatched” his wife out of the vehicle and started to hit her. He then called her mother and brother “just to show them how she was.” Gee drove his wife “a block or two away,” dropped her off with her brother, who was waiting there, and went to find defendant.

Gee testified he knew defendant from fundraisers Gee held for a youth football team he coached. Gee frequently saw and occasionally spoke to defendant at a specific location when he picked up and dropped off children from his football team there. Because Gee knew where defendant usually could be found, he went

2 This Court defers to the state courts’ factual determinations pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254(e)(1) and adopts the facts as set forth by the Appellate Division in its direct appeal and collateral review opinions. 2 to that location to look for him after leaving his wife with her brother.

When Gee arrived at the location, he saw defendant, stopped his vehicle, and got out to approach him. Co-defendant [Corey] Cauthen then “came out of nowhere[.]” Gee recognized Cauthen as someone who hung out with defendant “basically every [ ]day.” Although Gee had spoken to Cauthen at least once in the past, he did not know his name. He described Cauthen as a “tall dark skinned male with dreadlocks.”

As Gee approached the men, he saw them reach in their pockets and pull out guns. Because he was unarmed, Gee got back into his vehicle and tried to “get out of there.” Gee saw both men with guns pointed at the left side of his face. When he tried to start his vehicle, the men shot at him, and Gee “slumped over” after being shot several times in the collar bone and neck.

Officer Fajardo was the first police officer to arrive at the scene. He found Gee inside his vehicle, leaning over toward the console and unresponsive. Officer Fajardo was unable to find a pulse and told the next officer to arrive that he thought Gee was dead. Gee then started grunting. The officers called for an ambulance and applied first aid until it arrived.

Officer English rode in the ambulance with Gee and was instructed by a police sergeant to “try and speak with the victim, find out any information related to the case.” Officer English advised Gee “that his injuries were life threatening, that what he tells me could be his dying declaration ... . I asked him if he knew who shot him. [Gee] stated it was Asmar Bease and a tall dark skinned male with dreadlocks.” The officer repeated the question and Gee provided the same answer, and added, “‘It was because I caught him having sex with my wife.’”

Lt. Reyes arrived at the scene of the shooting at around 6:00 a.m. on August 2, 2008. After reviewing the scene, Lt. Reyes went to the hospital to interview Gee. Upon arriving at the hospital, Lt. Reyes spoke to Gee in the trauma room at the hospital. Gee was paralyzed from the neck down, but was still able to speak. Gee told Lt. Reyes that he caught his wife having sex with Bease, approached Bease to fight him, and Bease, who he knew by name, and a “thin tall black male with long dreads” shot him. Lt. Reyes relayed this information to the other detectives and, because they were familiar with Cauthen from a previous investigation, they knew that Gee was referring to Cauthen as the “thin tall black male with long dreads.” 3 The detectives went back to the scene of the shooting to look for evidence, and then to police headquarters to gather photos of both defendant and Cauthen to show Gee. The detectives returned to the emergency room later that morning and conducted a second interview of Gee. Lt. Reyes showed Gee the photograph of defendant, and Gee confirmed that the photograph was of defendant, that defendant was one of the individuals involved in the shooting, and that he had known him for a while.

Gee stated that he also knew the other individual involved in the shooting because “he always hangs out with [defendant] ... in that location ... on one of the porches.” Lt. Reyes then showed Gee the photograph of Cauthen, and Gee positively identified him as the second individual involved in the shooting. During his testimony, Gee identified both defendant and Cauthen as the men who shot him.

State v. Bease, No. A–5782–11T3, 2015 WL 345841, at *2–3 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Jan. 28, 2015) (“Bease I”) (first alteration added) (omissions in original). The trial court dismissed the certain persons offenses at the conclusion of trial, and the jury convicted Petitioner on the rest of the charges. (ECF No. 2–1 at 8–9). Petitioner was sentenced to an aggregate term of 60 years, subject to an 85 percent period of parole ineligibility, to be followed by a 5-year term of parole supervision. Bease I, 2015 WL 345841 at *1. Petitioner appealed to the Appellate Division. (ECF No. 2–1 at 21).

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BEASE v. JOHNSON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bease-v-johnson-njd-2025.