In the Matter of the Registration of K.M.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 20, 2025
DocketA-1841-23
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Registration of K.M. (In the Matter of the Registration of K.M.) 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.

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In the Matter of the Registration of K.M., (N.J. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

RECORD IMPOUNDED

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-1841-23

IN THE MATTER OF THE REGISTRATION OF K.M. __________________________

Argued March 13, 2025 – Decided March 20, 2025

Before Judges Mawla and Walcott-Henderson.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Atlantic County, Docket No. ML-21-01- 0058.

Linda A. Shashoua, Attorney, Special Litigation Unit, argued the cause for appellant State of New Jersey (William Reynolds, Atlantic County Prosecutor, attorney; Courtney Cittadini, Section Chief, and Linda A. Shashoua, on the briefs).

Michael R. Noveck, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for respondent K.M. (Jennifer N. Sellitti, Public Defender, attorney; Michael R. Noveck, of counsel and on the brief).

PER CURIAM The State appeals from a February 12, 2024 order, which classified

respondent K.M. (registrant) as a Tier One offender under Megan's Law. We

reverse and remand for the reasons expressed in this opinion.

In a prior appeal, registrant challenged an initial tier classification of Tier

Two based upon a final Registrant Risk Assessment Scale (RRAS) score of fifty.

In re Registrant K.M., No. A-3199-21 (App. Div. Feb. 6, 2023) (slip op. at 2).

We remanded for the trial judge to undertake "a deeper inquiry into the facts."

Id. at 9.

We found the record was "not clear regarding the role registrant played in

achieving the penetration" of A.B., who was one of two minors transported

across state lines for purposes of prostitution by registrant and his co-

conspirator, C.C. Ibid. Although a federal jury had convicted registrant and

C.C. of conspiracy to transport the minors, A.B. and her sister J.B., in interstate

commerce to engage in prostitution, we and the trial judge recognized the

conviction alone did not make registrant per se liable for penetration for RRAS

scoring purposes. Id. at 2, 9.

We sought clarification regarding registrant's role as to A.B. "and how it

relates to [registrant's] risk of re-offense." Id. at 9-10. This was because

"[r]egistrant did not transport A.B. to New Jersey, room with her, or photograph

A-1841-23 2 and create the advertisement leading to the penetration. According to the record,

these tasks were undertaken by C.C. alone." Id. at 10.

We also noted there was no support for the trial judge's finding "registrant

and C.C. 'frequently traveled together in the same vehicle and stayed at the same

hotels.'" Ibid. The trial judge also assumed registrant and C.C. "'intended to

share the profits from these activities' but we [found no] support for this

assumption in the record." Ibid.

By way of background, registrant and C.C. met J.B. and A.B., then ages

sixteen and fourteen, respectively, outside of their home in Pennsylvania. They

exchanged phone numbers with the girls, and approximately two weeks later,

C.C. drove to Pennsylvania to pick up both girls.

Once C.C. picked up the girls, he

took them to a motel in Allentown, Pennsylvania where he introduced them to registrant. The following day, C.C. drove A.B. to Atlantic City and paid for her stay in a motel. C.C. told A.B.[] registrant "had driven J.B. to the Atlantic City area as well." C.C. then instructed A.B. on how to work as a prostitute, gave her a cellphone to use while working, "and directed her to communicate with him."

. . . J.B. stated she and A.B. met registrant and C.C. in Allentown. C.C. then called J.B. at her home in Allentown and arranged to pick her and her sister up and take them to an Allentown motel. While at the motel, C.C. called registrant to meet them. Registrant

A-1841-23 3 then transported J.B. to the Atlantic City area. Registrant and J.B. stayed in motel rooms in Egg Harbor and Absecon. Registrant instructed J.B. on how to work as a prostitute. When calls responding to a Craigslist advertisement placed by registrant began coming in, he informed J.B. and instructed her to have sex with the callers, but she refused and asked to be taken home. Instead of driving her home, registrant drove her to Philadelphia and left her there. Her father eventually picked her up.

[Id. at 2-3.]

In the federal trial, A.B. testified that at C.C.'s request she agreed to be

photographed nude to appear in a Craigslist advertisement for prostitution. C.C.

posted those photos and A.B. began receiving phone calls on the cellphone he

had given her. A.B. answered a few phone calls and ultimately had oral sex on

two occasions and charged $200 per occasion as instructed by C.C. A.B. was

later arrested after undercover agents accessed her Craigslist post. C.C. was

arrested on June 8, 2007, and registrant surrendered himself to authorities in

Atlantic City soon after.

Following our remand, the State submitted additional evidence from

registrant's federal jury trial, including: the trial transcript; a summary of

registrant's two proffers; and evidence that C.C. admitted he and registrant

recruited the two minor girls for prostitution. Registrant submitted a

psychosexual evaluation "for the purpose of assessing whether the [trial c]ourt

A-1841-23 4 should override [his] RRAS score because [registrant's] case 'falls outside the

"heartland" of cases.'"

At the remand hearing, the judge reiterated "the State must show by clear

and convincing evidence how . . . [registrant] has profited, or how he was

involved in the penetration." She concluded the additional evidence submitted

by the State did not carry its burden because the evidence registrant and C.C.

had acted in tandem was presented the first time she heard the matter.

The State pointed out there was new evidence in the record showing C.C.

reimbursed registrant for the costs he incurred for their enterprise. However,

registrant's counsel pointed out the reimbursement pertained to J.B. and did not

show "how he made money off of the penetration of A.B."

The judge found the record was not materially different and "does not shed

light on how [registrant] participated in A.B.['s] . . . penetration and its relation

to risk for re[-]offense." Indeed, "[r]egistrant did not transport A.B. to New

Jersey, room with her, photograph, [or] create advertising leading to penetration.

According to the record[,] these tasks were undertaken by C.C. alone." She

concluded the State "failed to show [penetration] by clear and convincing

evidence, based on the [a]ppellate remand."

A-1841-23 5 With respect to RRAS factor five, the "number of victims," the judge

found, as she had initially, "there [were], in fact, two victims." Both registrant

and C.C. were operating in tandem and "took [the girls] to a bar, . . . gave them

[both] alcohol, . . . [and] prostitute[ed] these two girls" as "part of their

conspiracy and . . . scheme." The judge kept factor five at a score of three.

Given her finding registrant did not participate in A.B.'s penetration, the

judge modified factor two (degree of contact) from a score of fifteen to zero.

The State agreed with the judge's reduction of factor seven (length of time since

last offense) from a score of nine to three.

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In Re Registrant J.G.
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