IMO Wilfredo Benitez, J.M.C
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Opinion
FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY M-1149 September Term 2024 090357
In the Matter of :
Wilfredo Benitez, : ORDER A Judge of the Municipal Court :
Pending before the Court is an application by Wilfredo Benitez, a Judge of
the Municipal Court, to remove his disqualification from hearing matters that
involve charges of driving while intoxicated (DWI). He has been disqualified
from hearing such matters since November 12, 2016, pursuant to Directive #04-
09 and multiple Court orders.
The pending motion asks the Court to reconsider its order dated April 14,
2025, which denied petitioner’s most recent application to remove his
disqualification from hearing DWI matters. He asks to be provided with “clear
findings” if he is not reinstated to hear DWI matters.
First Application
Petitioner initially sought to have his DWI disqualification removed when
he was acquitted of the charges that led to his disqualification. On April 10,
2018, the Court denied the request and ordered that his disqualification continue
pending the outcome of disciplinary charges before the Advisory Committee on FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
Judicial Conduct (ACJC).
Second Application
As part of the proceedings to adjudicate the judicial disciplinary matter,
petitioner asked that the Court, when imposing discipline, lift the restriction on
his hearing DWI matters. On September 6, 2018, the Court entered an order
censuring petitioner for violations of the Code of Judicial Conduct, which
stemmed from misconduct during his DWI arrest. A recording of the arrest
revealed that (a) petitioner tried to get preferential treatment by informing State
Troopers he was a judge several times; (b) he asked the Troopers to extend
“courtesy”; (c) he confronted them with inappropriate language; and (d) he
threatened them, saying “I’m gonna f*** you.” The Court’s order also stated
that petitioner could not apply to have his DWI disqualification removed for one
year.
Third Application
On September 9, 2019, petitioner filed an application to resume hearing
DWI matters. In his verified petition, he stated “[t]here have been no complaints
lodged against Petitioner over the past year, and none are pending.” At that time,
the ACJC had before it a grievance that a litigant had filed about Judge Benitez.
On October 4, 2019, the Court denied petitioner’s request to resume hearing DWI
2 FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
matters and precluded him from hearing DWI matters for an indeterminate
period. The Court’s order noted that “Judge Benitez verified to the Court . . .
there had been ‘no complaints lodged against [him] over the past year, and none
are pending.’ To the extent the statement encompassed disciplinary matters, it is
not accurate.”
Fourth Application
On November 26, 2019, petitioner filed a supplemental petition for
reconsideration. In the petition, he acknowledged, through counsel, that he
should have disclosed a prior letter grievance a litigant had filed against him with
the ACJC. On February 14, 2020, the Court denied reconsideration and ordered
that petitioner not file another application to resume hearing DWI matters for a
period of five years.
Fifth Application
On February 10, 2025, petitioner submitted an application to terminate his
disqualification from hearing DWI matters. In a letter to the Court that he
authored, petitioner again acknowledged he was at “fault” in 2019 for not
disclosing a letter grievance filed with the ACJC. He stated he believed the
matter had been resolved.
As to the time period covered by the new petition, his application included
3 FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
a letter he had sent the Assignment Judge in January 2025. The letter stated that
“no formal complaints have been lodged against me during the ‘disqualification’
period and none are pending.”
On March 13, 2025, the Court directed petitioner to file an amended
application that included a certification to the Court “address[ing] disciplinary
matters, if any, that [petitioner was] notified of or that were disposed of during
the disqualification period.” (emphasis added).
On March 14, 2025, petitioner filed an amended application to the Court
and certified as follows: “I am not aware of nor have I been notified of any
disciplinary action(s) or formal complaints lodged against me during the
‘disqualification’ period and to the best of my knowledge, none are pending.”
Notwithstanding petitioner’s representation, the ACJC had issued a private
letter of caution to petitioner on May 28, 2020 -- during the five-year
disqualification period -- finding that he violated the Court’s prohibition on
hearing DWI matters and the Code of Judicial Conduct by releasing a defendant
in a DWI matter on his own recognizance.
The Court denied petitioner’s application on April 8, 2025 and directed
that his disqualification from hearing DWI matters continue indefinitely.
The Current (Sixth) Application
4 FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
On July 23, 2025, petitioner filed the pending motion for reconsideration
(M-1149), as well as a motion for leave to file the motion as within time (M-
1150). We grant the latter motion.
In seeking reconsideration, petitioner asks the Court to reconsider and
rescind the indefinite disqualification, or, alternatively, to provide clear findings.
In his brief, petitioner contends that the Court’s order denying his request for
relief “does not set forth any rationale, factual findings, or explanation, leaving
[him] without the ability to understand or meaningfully respond to the
reasoning.” He submits that “[t]he lack of transparency in the decision
undermines the princip[le] of fairness.” Petitioner states that “while [he]
certainly appreciate[s] [the Court’s] rationale not being made public, an
accompanying letter directed solely to [him] was warranted.” Petitioner asserts
that he is “entitled to be informed of the basis for the decision” and requests
“clear findings.”
The Court does not provide reasons or findings in private. We therefore
respond to petitioner’s motion and request in the form of a public order.
Petitioner’s involvement in matters before the ACJC and this Court reveal
not only serious misconduct by a sitting judge of the Municipal Court, in the
course of a DWI arrest that resulted in acquittal, but also two later instances in
5 FILED, Clerk of the Supreme Court, 23 Oct 2025, 090357
which petitioner was not forthcoming in representations he made to the Court.
He misrepresented that no complaints had been filed against him in a 2019
application. He later acknowledged he should have disclosed a grievance filed
with the ACJC. Yet he made a similar misrepresentat ion to the Court in
connection with his 2025 application. And, significantly, the judge violated the
Court's order that he not participate in hearing DWI cases.
Petitioner's conduct and history before this Court demonstrate that his
disqualification from presiding over DWI matters should not be removed. For
good cause shown, it is therefore
ORDERED that the motion for reconsideration is denied; and it is further
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