In Re Saferstein

390 A.2d 137, 160 N.J. Super. 393
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 3, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 390 A.2d 137 (In Re Saferstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Saferstein, 390 A.2d 137, 160 N.J. Super. 393 (N.J. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

160 N.J. Super. 393 (1978)
390 A.2d 137

IN THE MATTER OF FRANCINE SAFERSTEIN, VICTIM/DECEDENT, AND MICHAEL SAFERSTEIN, VICTIM/DECEDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued March 13, 1978.
Decided July 3, 1978.

*394 Before Judges FRITZ, BOTTER and ARD.

Mr. Franklin J. Riesenburger argued the cause for appellant (Messrs. Greenblatt & Greenblatt, attorneys; Mr. Jay H. Greenblatt on the brief).

Mr. Bertram P. Goltz, Jr., Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for Violent Crimes Compensation Board (Mr. John J. Degnan, Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney; Mr. William F. Hyland, former Attorney General of New Jersey, and Ms. Erminie L. Conley, Deputy Attorney General, of counsel).

The opinion of the court was delivered by FRITZ, P.J.A.D.

This is an appeal by the claimant from the denial of a claim by the Violent Crimes Compensation Board (Board). While the problem is said by the Board in its majority opinion to be the "first instance in which the Board has been faced with this question," whereby we consider it novel and important, we make note at the outset of the narrowness of the issue before us. In the words of the Board, that issue is "whether the Board as an administrative agency may or should make an independent finding by a preponderance of the evidence that a crime was in fact committed." In this connection we are also advised by that opinion that the Board has "heretofore relied on the determination by the police enforcement agency as to whether criminal conduct occurred." In the matter before us, by a majority opinion to which there was a forceful dissent, the Board "reaffirms its policy of relying on police determination *395 as to the presence of criminal conduct." The determination by the Board to make conclusive upon it the classification by police authorities as to the nature of the event (i.e., criminal or noncriminal) is the gist of this appeal.

The issue involved was brought into focus by the bizarre nature of the event involved. Mrs. Francine Saferstein and her 3 1/2-year-old son Michael, wife and son respectively of the claimant, were burned, grotesquely dismembered and fatally injured by a violent "high order explosion" at about 11 A.M. in front of a corner of the garage attached to their home. The tremendous force of the explosion was apparent not only from the horrible nature of the injuries but from the fact that debris was spread over a radius of about 400 feet. This was confirmed by the description in the police report of the damage:

* * * The crater was directly in front of the southeast corner of the garage, bordering the flower bed located to the left of the black macadam driveway. The crater was approximately three feet in diameter and eighteen inches deep. Chunks of the macadam were blown into the street and on the victim's front lawn. The force of the explosion moved three of the interior walls of the garage causing heavy damage to the dining room, kitchen and laundry room. All of the front windows of the house were blown in, as was the front door. The windows on the second floor and the east side first floor were intact [sic]. The soffits in the front of the house were also down. In the two car garage was a light green Ford LTD, N.J. registration RIU-195 with heavy blast damage to the trunk area and the rear undercarriage. On the north side of the garage were three metal garbage cans, plastic bags of garbage, near the laundry room entrance what was left of a cabinet. The garage was heavily littered with debris from the explosion. * * * Debris from the explosion was blown all over the neighborhood with most of it in the garage and front lawn area of the victim's house.

The claimant is Chief Forensic Chemist for the State Police. His testimony indicated that there were some chemicals in the attic of his home used in an experiment in a course in forensic science he taught at Trenton State College. He vigorously denied that these chemicals could have formed *396 an explosive mixture. He was equally vigorous in his denial that there were "any chemicals, anywhere in [his] house or in [his] garage or any other out buildings" which alone or in combination were explosive. He did concede the presence, in a white metal cabinet in the garage, of some chemicals in "micro-quantity" prepared in the study for his doctorate. In the course of the investigation Saferstein underwent a polygraph examination "to ascertain if he deliberately placed an explosive device at his home on May 30, 1973." The result was reported thusly: "The physiological reactions of the subject did not indicate any significant emotional disturbances indicative of deception when answering relevant questions pertaining to the object of the examination."

That which followed the explosion, not at all surprisingly, is described in the report of the Board's special investigator: "An intensive investigation was conducted by the Willingboro Twp. Police Dept. They were aided by the Burlington Co. Prosecutor's Office, N.J. State Police, the AT & F Division of the Treasury Department and the Dept. of the Army's Picatinny Arsenal." The intensity and thoroughness of the investigation, technical and otherwise, cannot be exaggerated.

The essence of the results of this thorough and professional investigation was uncertainty with respect to the precise nature of the explosive and only a little more than speculation as to precisely what happened, derived from such facts as particles of a fragmented milk carton found embedded in certain of the bones of Mrs. Saferstein. This uncertainty carried over to the expression of an opinion by the State Police with respect to the criminality vel non of the act producing the event.

Lieutenant John J. Toth, who commanded the Field Services Bureau of the State Police and testified at the hearing before the Board, frankly characterized the matter as "one of the most difficult cases we have ever come across." The substance of the opinion of the State Police with respect to the criminality aspect clearly appears in a question posed *397 by the chairman of the Board and answered by Lieutenant Toth 2 1/2 years after the event:

MR. JAHNKE: Everything you have done until now, everything that appears in these supplementary investigative reports, all the things that you have checked out, you still cannot come to a clear conclusion that it was a crime or not a crime?

THE WITNESS: No, we cannot at this time.

As noted above, the majority of the Board gave conclusive effect to this opinion and denied the claim. We are satisfied that in thus delegating to the State Police the decisional responsibility imposed on it by statute, the Board erred.

We are not insensitive to the argument that (1) N.J.S.A. 52:4B-11 defines as "offenses," by the use of words of art, the occurrences necessary to bring into play the invocation of its powers, and (2) this demonstrates legislative intent that there is necessary to Board jurisdiction the prior pronouncement of the happening of an "offense." This argument presumes that such a pronouncement is the natural responsibility of law enforcement authorities and so it is to them that the Board should look at the time of the seminal inquiry. We reject this argument for three reasons.

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Bluebook (online)
390 A.2d 137, 160 N.J. Super. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-saferstein-njsuperctappdiv-1978.