State of New Jersey in the Interest of A.B.

99 A.3d 782, 219 N.J. 542, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 909
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 24, 2014
DocketA-74-12
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 99 A.3d 782 (State of New Jersey in the Interest of A.B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of New Jersey in the Interest of A.B., 99 A.3d 782, 219 N.J. 542, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 909 (N.J. 2014).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, the State challenges an order of the family court allowing seventeen-year-old A.B. and his attorney to conduct a thirty-minute inspection of a home where the juvenile is alleged to have committed sexual offenses against his six-year-old cousin, N.A.

The juvenile moved for the inspection after the prosecutor’s investigators had photographed the home and cut a piece of rug from it for forensic testing. The juvenile’s attorney gave specific and particularized reasons for the need to visit and photograph the home in preparation for A.B.’s defense. The prosecutor opposed the juvenile’s motion on the ground that the defense inspection of the home — the crime scene — constituted “intimidation, harassment or abuse” in violation of the Crime Victim’s Bill of Rights, N.J.S.A. 52:4B-36(e).

*547 On interlocutory review, the Appellate Division upheld the inspection order, finding that the family court had exercised its sound discretion. The order provided that the inspection be conducted at a reasonable time and in the presence of a prosecutor’s investigator and with N.A.’s parents present in the home, if they wished.

We now affirm. The right to the effective assistance of counsel in a criminal proceeding includes the right to conduct a reasonable investigation to prepare a defense. The right of the accused to a fair trial, and the right of a purported victim and her family to privacy must be balanced. The family court found that A.B. made a sufficient showing of need to inspect and photograph N.A.’s home. The court issued the inspection order only after carefully weighing the juvenile’s fair-trial rights and N.A.’s privacy interests and imposing reasonable time and manner restrictions. We conclude that the family court did not abuse its discretion.

I.

A.

In September 2011, A.B., then seventeen years old, was charged in a juvenile complaint with offenses that would constitute first-degree aggravated sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a), and third-degree endangering the welfare of a child, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-^(a), if committed by an adult. The victim named in the complaint is A.B.’s six-year-old cousin, N.A. The offenses allegedly occurred during a three-week period when A.B. was staying with his aunt and uncle in Old Bridge in Middlesex County.

The genesis of this appeal is defense counsel’s letter to the prosecutor requesting to inspect the scene of the alleged crime— N.A.’s home — for the purpose of gaining an understanding of the dimensions and relative locations of the rooms where alleged sexual acts occurred and to take pictures for preparation and use at trial. The prosecutor responded that he would not agree to such an inspection without a court order. A.B. then filed a motion *548 to secure an inspection order. The record before the family court included testimony from N.A.’s mother and an investigator from the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office. 1 We now review that record. 2

B.

On July 2, 2011, A.B., then seventeen years old, began what would be a three-week stay at the Old Bridge home of his aunt and uncle, Karen and George. They resided there with their six-year-old daughter, N.A., who is A.B.’s cousin. A.B. lived in Connecticut with his mother, Nancy, who did not accompany him on this visit. Nancy and Karen are sisters. During his stay, A.B. slept on a couch in the den, and N.A. slept in her own room.

On the Fourth of July, Karen and George hosted a cookout attended by Karen’s brother from Connecticut and her sister and brother-in-law from Texas. At this family gathering, nothing seemed amiss, and the weeks that followed were uneventful.

On Sunday morning, July 24, as Karen passed the bathroom, her daughter said, “Mommy, my peepee hurts.” When Karen asked why, N.A. responded, “Because [A.B.] rubbed me down there.” Karen observed that her daughter’s genital area was red and irritated. Karen awakened her husband, a physician, who then examined his daughter. He too noticed redness but saw no evidence of penetration. Karen and George then went to the den to confront A.B., who was asleep. They awoke A.B., and he denied improperly touching his cousin, saying, “I wouldn’t do that.” Karen had left the children home alone for two hours the *549 previous evening and presumed that the sexual contact occurred then.

Karen told A.B. that she would take him home later that day. Karen spoke with her sister Nancy, who apparently was made aware of the accusation by her son. The sisters agreed to meet at a McDonald’s in Connecticut with the children present.

At the McDonald’s, Karen allowed her sister to talk alone with N.A. Nancy video-recorded her conversation with N.A., during which N.A. admitted to “massaging” herself. At some point, Karen approached her daughter, and N.A. said to her mother, “I did it to myself.” Karen asked if she was sure, and N.A. said, “yes.” Karen further questioned her daughter, who replied, “Pm red-handed[.] I did it to myself. I can’t help it. I just like to touch it.” To further vouch for her honesty, N.A. put her hand in the air and said, “I pinky swear.” In her testimony, Karen admitted that one time she caught her daughter rubbing her private parts in the bathtub.

Karen was distraught and yelled at her daughter for having lied. But Karen admitted that she was not “truly convinced” that her nephew had not abused her daughter. Karen returned home and several days later broached the subject again with her daughter. While the two sat on the sofa, Karen asked N.A. whether she told the truth to her aunt. She assured her daughter, “you will not be in trouble if you ... lied about it. You know, I love you no matter what.” According to Karen, N.A. then related an incident in which A.B. offered her playtime with his iPod if she would suck his “ding-dong.” When N.A. did so, “some milky white stuff came out,” and “she spit it out and brushed her teeth.” N.A. explained that she did not tell her aunt Nancy the truth because she did not want to get in trouble.

Karen suspected that the oral-sex incident must have happened during the Fourth of July cookout because of an unusual remark made by N.A. that day. Mid-day, N.A. said to Karen, “Mommy, I brushed my teeth,” when Karen typically had to remind her daughter to brush. Later, during a video-taped interview with a *550 prosecutor’s investigator, N.A. also indicated that the sexual incident with A.B. occurred during the cookout. Investigators cut out a piece of the rug in the area where N.A. claimed to have spit out the semen, but the forensic test results were negative. Investigators took forty-one photographs of the home.

II.

At a hearing on the motion to inspect, defense counsel insisted that he had to visit “the scene of the crime” to prepare his case and that he was not adverse to a thirty-minute time limit or to excluding A.B.’s parents from participating.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A.3d 782, 219 N.J. 542, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-new-jersey-in-the-interest-of-ab-nj-2014.