Matter of Admissibility of Motor Veh. Speed Readings

714 A.2d 381, 314 N.J. Super. 233
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 20, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 714 A.2d 381 (Matter of Admissibility of Motor Veh. Speed Readings) 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
Matter of Admissibility of Motor Veh. Speed Readings, 714 A.2d 381, 314 N.J. Super. 233 (N.J. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

714 A.2d 381 (1998)
314 N.J. Super. 233

In the Matter of the ADMISSIBILITY OF MOTOR VEHICLE SPEED READINGS PRODUCED BY the LTI MARKSMAN 20-20 LASER SPEED DETECTION SYSTEM.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, (Criminal), Morris County.

Decided March 20, 1998.

*382 Michael M. Rubbinaccio, Butler, for the State.

Steven K. Greene, Joseph T. Maccarone and Sohail Mohammed, appeared as Amici Curiae.

STANTON, A.J.S.C.

BACKGROUND

This supplementary proceeding involves the reliability of a device known as the LTI Marksman 20-20 Laser Speed Detection System manufactured by Laser Technology, Inc. For ease of expression, I shall hereafter usually refer to this device as the "laser speed detector" or the "detector." The laser speed detector is a compact, hand-held device which the New Jersey State Police desire to use in enforcing the laws regulating motor vehicle speeds.

In 1996, in connection with a number of motor vehicle speeding cases which were then pending in the municipal courts of Rockaway Township and Parsippany-Troy Hills Township, I conducted an extensive evidentiary hearing in the Superior Court for Morris County on the admissibility of speed readings obtained by the New Jersey State Police through use of the laser speed detector. In that earlier proceeding, Michael M. Rubbinaccio, Esq., who was then serving as the Municipal Prosecutor for both Rockaway Township and Parsippany-Troy Hills Township appeared for the State. Stephen K. Greene, Esq., Joseph T. Maccarone, Esq. and Sohail Mohammed, Esq. appeared as attorneys for various defendants in the motor vehicle cases then pending in the municipal court.

On June 13, 1996, I issued a written opinion in that matter which concluded that the general concept of using lasers to measure speed is widely accepted in the relevant scientific community and is valid. However, I was not satisfied that it had been proven that the laser speed detector device was accurate and reliable enough to be used for law enforcement purposes. My principal reason for not accepting the laser speed detector was that there had not been, in my view, adequate *383 operational testing of the laser speed detector under actual highway conditions. My view was that good performance testing might conceivably put us in a position of being sure that the detector in fact worked reliably.

I suggested that it would be relatively easy to design performance tests which would let independent observers know how accurate the laser detector device was. I suggested that the tests should include vehicles of varying sizes and shapes, that they be conducted under various conditions of traffic flow along actual highways and roads, and that they be conducted at different times of day under varying climatic conditions. I noted that such tests should involve target vehicles whose speed was reliably established either by controlling the driver of the vehicle or through simultaneous measurement of its speed by a reliable device other than the laser speed detector. I further noted that the test data would have to be accurately recorded and reproduced for examination, analysis and replication by other persons and agencies.

The State did not take an appeal from my decision excluding evidence generated by the laser speed detector. The various cases then pending in the municipal courts were resolved without the use of laser speed detector evidence. However, the State did attempt to conduct performance testing of the detector in an effort to develop data which would permit a reexamination of the admissibility of speed readings produced by the detector. Accordingly, the New Jersey Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Data Development, in cooperation with the New Jersey State Police, Division of Highway Traffic Safety, conducted field testing of the laser speed detector during September, October and November of 1996 and June and July of 1997. Closed track testing of the detector was conducted on September 19, 1996.

In 1997, the State moved to have me reopen the evidentiary proceedings involving the laser speed detector. By that time, the pending motor vehicle cases had been resolved and there were no defendants who had an interest in contesting the admissibility of readings from the detector. However, in view of the fact that the State Police were interested in using the detector and were prepared to attempt to justify the admissibility of readings produced by the detector on the basis of the field testing which had occurred, it seemed to me that it would be desirable for any proceeding to take place in this court in a way which would allow the parties to build upon evidence which had been presented during the 1996 hearings before me. Although I thought it useful and in the public interest to try to build on the earlier proceedings, I did not want to have a non-adversarial proceeding before me because such a proceeding would not be likely to produce an appropriately vigorous scrutiny of the data presented.

Fortunately, Mr. Greene, Mr. Maccarone and Mr. Mohammed, attorneys who had represented defendants in the earlier proceedings, remained interested in the issues involved and they agreed to appear as amici curiae and to present evidence and argument designed to subject any data presented by the State to meaningful scrutiny. Although Mr. Greene, Mr. Maccarone and Mr. Mohammed consented to act as friends of the court on an uncompensated basis, I did enter an order on July 8, 1997, requiring the State to cover the reimbursement of defense expert fees and costs. In this way, we were able to make it possible to evaluate the test data generated by the State on an adversarial basis.

I refer to the Opinion which I issued on June 13, 1996 for a detailed description of the laser speed detector and of the operational and conceptual objections which were raised in opposition to its acceptance. I incorporate herein by reference everything which I said in that earlier opinion without repeating it in detail. However, I do think it useful to repeat at this point a general description of the way in which the laser speed detector is supposed to work:

A laser is an artificially generated and amplified light which is in the infrared light section of the electromagnetic wave spectrum. It is not visible to the naked eye. It is very concentrated. The laser speed detector fires a series of laser pulses *384 at a selected remote target. When the laser light strikes the target, a portion of the light is reflected back to the detector. Since the speed of light is a known constant, by measuring the time it takes for the laser pulse to travel to the target and back, the detector is able to calculate the distance between the detector and the target. Each laser pulse which is fired and reflected back establishes one distance reading. The laser speed detector fires 43 laser pulses every time the trigger on the detector is squeezed. These 43 pulses are fired in a total period of approximately one-third of a second. If the target at which the laser pulses are fired is a stationary target, each of the 43 pulses will give the same distance reading to the target, and distance will be the only thing that the detector can tell us about the target. However, if the target is moving, each of the 43 pulses will give a slightly different distance reading and the detector can then compute the velocity or speed of the target from the changes in distance divided by the known elapsed time between the firing of each of the laser pulses.

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714 A.2d 381, 314 N.J. Super. 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-admissibility-of-motor-veh-speed-readings-njsuperctappdiv-1998.