State of New Jersey v. Jeffrey Walker

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 3, 2024
DocketA-2384-22
StatusPublished

This text of State of New Jersey v. Jeffrey Walker (State of New Jersey v. Jeffrey Walker) 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
State of New Jersey v. Jeffrey Walker, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2384-22

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Plaintiff-Respondent, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION June 3, 2024 v. APPELLATE DIVISION

JEFFREY WALKER,

Defendant-Appellant. __________________________

Submitted May 6, 2024 – Decided June 3, 2024

Before Judges Sabatino, Marczyk, and Chase.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Monmouth County, Indictment No. 11-02-0411.

Wolf Law PC, attorneys for appellant (Robert W. Ruggieri, of counsel; Randolph H. Wolf, on the brief).

Raymond S. Santiago, Monmouth County Prosecutor, attorney for respondent (Monica Lucinda do Outeiro, Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

CHASE, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned)

The question before us on appeal is whether, in the context of a criminal

case, a defendant has the right to direct the sequence in which victims receive restitution payments and if restitution can be extinguished when a victim has

not been located. Cancelling out restitution would run counter to the

remunerative, rehabilitative, deterrence, and punitive goals of restitution, allow

a defendant to keep the fruits of their offense, and deprive victims of

compensation for the losses suffered. As such, we conclude a defendant

cannot control in which order his victims get paid, and restitution should not

be extinguished when a victim has not been located.

I.

In 2011, defendant Jeffery Walker was indicted for second-degree theft

by illegal retention, N.J.S.A. 2C:20-9; second-degree misappropriation of

entrusted property, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-15; third-degree theft by deception,

N.J.S.A. 2C:20-4; and third-degree misappropriation of entrusted property,

N.J.S.A. 2C:21-15. Defendant misappropriated health care insurance

premiums from his company's employees instead of paying them to the

insurance carrier. Pursuant to an agreement with the State, defendant pleaded

guilty to an amended count of third-degree theft by illegal retention and third-

degree misappropriation of entrusted property. In exchange, the State

recommended a sentence of five years' probation conditioned on defendant's

disqualification from holding future government employment, maintenance of

full-time employment, and paying of over $72,000 in restitution to his victims.

A-2384-22 2 In July 2012, defendant was sentenced to probation in accordance with

the plea agreement. An amended judgment of conviction set the restitution

amount at $72,471.35, payable to his 101 victims "over a period of five years

. . . payable through probation in equal installments over the period of

probation." Defendant's probation ended in 2017, and the then-outstanding

balance of his restitution was transferred to collections. As of October 20,

2022, defendant had paid only $27,746 of the money he misappropriated, still

owing $45,595.35.

Rather than paying the substantial arrears of the restitution amount he

agreed to and was ordered to pay, defendant sought instead to reduce that

amount by attempting to obtain information from the Monmouth County

Probation Department to determine what amount was still owed to the

individual victims and to pay off their claims. Defendant learned his

restitution had been prorated among all of the victims. He also learned some

of the victims had not been located and their prorated restitution escheated to

the State in case they were later located.

In November 2022, defendant filed a PCR petition to return the

escheated funds to the Monmouth County Probation Department, to pay those

funds to victims who had been located, to reduce the amount of restitution to

the amounts still owed after escheated funds had been distributed to the located

A-2384-22 3 victims, or alternatively, to fix the current balance of restitution only to those

amounts still owed to located victims. Defendant then argued it would be in

the interest of justice that his restitution obligation be deemed completed once

the located victims were paid the amount of their loss and he be relieved from

having to make any further payments for those victims who had not been

located.

After hearing oral argument, Judge Chad N. Cagan authored a thorough

nineteen-page written opinion denying defendant's PCR. Although the court

held the motion was procedurally deficient because defendant offered no proof

of service upon the probation department, a necessary party, the court

addressed the procedural and substantive errors inherent in defendant's

attempts to use PCR to obtain his desired relief.

The court held the PCR petition was untimely under Rule 3:22-

12(a)(1)(A) and defendant's claim of "excusable neglect" was unsupported by

the facts presented, but even if defendant's factual assertions were true, there

was no reasonable probability enforcement of the time bar would result in a

fundamental injustice. The court cited defendant's agreement to pay

restitution, his clear awareness of his obligations, and his failure to entirely

A-2384-22 4 pay them over the five years of probation as he had been ordered. 1 The court

also found no fundamental injustice warranting waiver of the five-year

statutory time limit to file a PCR because defendant had agreed to pay the

entire amount as part of his plea, had not followed his agreement, and did not

allege the outcome of the proceedings was unjust. Judge Cagan then noted

defendant agreed at oral argument his sentence was not illegal, and so even if

the application was not time-barred, it did not fit into any cognizable ground

for relief under Rule 3:22-2. Defendant appeals from a March 7, 2023 order

denying his petition.

On appeal, defendant argues:

POINT I.

THE COURT BELOW ERRED IN DENYING [DEFENDANT'S] MOTION OF NOVEMBER 1, 2022. THE COURT BELOW GAVE THREE REASONS FOR DENYING THE MOTION, BUT UPON CLOSE REVIEW NONE OF THESE HAVE MERIT. THUS, THE DECISION OF THE COURT BELOW MUST BE REVERSED. AT THE VERY LEAST, THE COURT BELOW SHOULD HAVE DIRECTED THE PROBATION DEPARTMENT TO ALLOCATE THE PAYMENTS ALREADY RECEIVED FROM [DEFENDANT] TO THE VICTIMS WHO HAVE BEEN LOCATED. BEYOND THAT, THE COURT BELOW SHOULD HAVE MODIFIED THE JUDGMENT OF

1 Defendant's probation could have been extended for up to five additional years in order for him to complete his restitution. N.J.S.A. 2C:45-2(c)(2).

A-2384-22 5 CONVICTION SO THAT ONCE THE VICTIMS ALREADY LOCATED HAD BEEN FULLY COMPENSATED, [DEFENDANT] WOULD HAVE NO FURTHER OBLIGATIONS TOWARDS RESTITUTION.

A. The [c]ourt [b]elow denied the Motion in part because defendant had not served the Motion papers on the Probation Department. There is absolutely no [Rule] that requires such service. Furthermore, if the [c]ourt below felt that under the circumstances such service was appropriate and/or necessary, it should have directed defendant's counsel to do so, and held consideration of the Motion until it was complete, and Probation had an opportunity to respond if it so chose. The holding of the [c]ourt [b]elow must be reversed.

B. The [c]ourt [b]elow denied the Motion in part because it determined it was untimely under R[ule] 3:22-12. In so ruling the [c]ourt [b]elow applied the wrong standard, holding that the excusable neglect standard applied rather than the discovery doctrine standard.

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State of New Jersey v. Jeffrey Walker, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-new-jersey-v-jeffrey-walker-njsuperctappdiv-2024.