STATE OF NEW JERSEY V. MICHELLE LODZINSKI (14-08-0871, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 26, 2021
DocketA-2118-16
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF NEW JERSEY V. MICHELLE LODZINSKI (14-08-0871, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (STATE OF NEW JERSEY V. MICHELLE LODZINSKI (14-08-0871, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) 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. MICHELLE LODZINSKI (14-08-0871, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-2118-16T2

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Plaintiff-Respondent, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION

v. May 26, 2021

APPELLATE DIVISION MICHELLE LODZINSKI,

Defendant-Appellant. _________________________

Argued April 1, 2019 – Decided August 7, 2019

Before Judges Messano, Fasciale and Rose.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County, Indictment No. 14- 08-0871.

Gerald Krovatin and David W. Fassett argued the cause for appellant (Krovatin Klingeman, LLC and Arseneault & Fassett, LLP, attorneys; Gerald Krovatin, David W. Fassett, and Gregory D. Jones, on the briefs).

Joie D. Piderit, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for respondent (Andrew C. Carey, Middlesex County Prosecutor, attorney; Joie D. Piderit, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MESSANO, P.J.A.D. On May 25, 1991, defendant Michelle Lodzinski reported that her son,

five-year-old Timothy (Timmy) Wiltsey, went missing while both were

attending a Memorial Day carnival in Sayreville. Search efforts began

immediately, they became widespread, and descriptions of Timmy, the

clothing and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT) sneakers he was wearing,

and his continued disappearance received national media attention. In October

1991, a schoolteacher walking in the area of Olympic Drive, near the Raritan

Center industrial complex in Edison, found a child's TMNT sneaker; believing

it might be related to the case, he provided it to law enforcement authorities.

Defendant had worked for a company in Raritan Center for approximately six

months in the late 1980s.

Police were able to match the model number of the sneaker to a shoebox

defendant provided shortly after Timmy's disappearance. When first shown

the sneaker, defendant said it was not her son's, describing features that

distinguished it from the sneakers Timmy was wearing. In November 1991,

defendant returned to view the sneaker a second time and told authorit ies it

could be her son's. She did not disclose, however, that she had worked in

Raritan Center. Also in November 1991, police and an FBI agent assigned to

A-2118-16T2 2 the case searched the area on foot near where the sneaker was found, but they

discovered nothing of significance.

FBI agent Ron Butkiewicz and police officers returned to the same

general area on April 23, 1992, and the following day, April 24, and found a

matching sneaker and a pillowcase. Approximately 150 yards away, and

across Olympic Drive, they found Timmy's skeletal remains in the stagnant

water of Red Root Creek, a tributary of the Raritan River. They also

discovered remnants of his clothing, a shovel and a TMNT balloon, like

Timmy sometimes kept in his bedroom at home.

Approximately twenty-five feet above the remains, embedded in the soil

in the bank of the creek, Butkiewicz found a blue blanket with multi-colored,

metallic fibers. Although FBI testing on the blanket revealed nothing of

evidential value, years later, a New Jersey State Police forensic scientist

identified metallic fibers found on the pillowcase as being similar to those in

the blanket, although he never performed a full trace analysis. In 1992,

defendant and her parents could not identify the blanket, but, twenty-years

later, detectives showed the blanket to three women who babysat Timmy in the

late 1980s and early 1990s; they identified it as coming from defendant's

home. Police also showed the blanket to several other witnesses when the

investigation was reopened, but none of them could identify it.

A-2118-16T2 3 The medical examiner who examined the remains at the scene, but died

before trial, could not reach a conclusion about the cause of Timmy's death.

However, another medical examiner, Dr. Geetha Natajarian, who reviewed the

autopsy reports, photographs, and investigative and other forensic reports,

testified. She, too, could not determine a cause of death, but through a process

of elimination, opined that the manner of Timmy's death was a homicide. A

forensic anthropologist, Donna Fontana, opined that Timmy's body had

decomposed where it was found, at a "surface burial" site.

Although defendant was immediately a suspect in the investigation of

Timmy's disappearance, and remained so after the authorities found his

remains, she never admitted having a role in either his disappearance or his

death. Within the first two months after her son's disappearance, however,

defendant provided numerous statements that conflicted with the account she

first provided on the night of the carnival, i.e., that she went to purchase a soda

and Timmy simply disappeared.

On June 6, 1991, defendant told authorities that two men abducted

Timmy. The next day, she claimed that a woman she knew only as "Ellen"

was at the carnival and offered to watch Timmy as defendant purchased her

soda. Two men accompanied Ellen. Defendant described them, but did not

know who they were. Initially, defendant claimed the trio just disappeared

A-2118-16T2 4 with Timmy. In a later version, she said one of the men threatened her with a

knife and told her not to say anything or they would harm Timmy.

Twenty-three years after Timmy's disappearance, a Middlesex County

grand jury indicted defendant in a single count charging her with the first -

degree murder of her son. Trial proceeded between March and May 2016. At

the close of the State's case, defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal

pursuant to Rule 3:18-1, which the judge denied. The jury found defendant

guilty. After denying her motions for a judgment of acquittal notwiths tanding

the verdict (JNOV), Rule 3:18-2, or a new trial, Rule 3:20-1, the judge

sentenced defendant to a thirty-year term of imprisonment with a thirty-year

period of parole ineligibility.

Before us, defendant raises the following points:

POINT I

[DEFENDANT'S] CONVICTION SHOULD BE REVERSED, AND JUDGMENT OF ACQUITTAL SHOULD BE ENTERED, BECAUSE NO EVIDENCE SUGGESTED, MUCH LESS PROVED, THAT [DEFENDANT] CAUSED TIMOTHY'S DEATH.1

POINT II

[DEFENDANT'S] CONVICTION SHOULD BE VACATED AND A JUDGMENT OF ACQUITTAL

1 We have omitted the sub-points of defendant's arguments.

A-2118-16T2 5 ENTERED BECAUSE THE STATE VIOLATED HER RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS OF LAW BY WAITING [TWENTY-THREE] YEARS TO SEEK HER INDICTMENT AND BRING HER TO TRIAL.

POINT III

THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED ONE OR MORE REVERSIBLE ERRORS BY UNNECESSARILY AND IMPROPERLY INVOKING RULE 1:8-2(d)(1) TO REMOVE AND REPLACE A DEFENSE- LEANING JUROR WHO WAS ABLE TO CONTINUE DELIBERATING, WHEN DELIBERATIONS HAD ALREADY PROGRESSED TO AN ADVANCED STATE AND WITHOUT FINDING THAT THE RECONSTITUTED JURY WOULD BE IN A POSITION TO CONDUCT OPEN- MINDED AND FAIR DELIBERATIONS, THEREBY VIOLATING [DEFENDANT'S] RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL BY AN IMPARTIAL JURY.

POINT IV

ALTERNATIVELY, THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR BY FAILING TO DECLARE A MISTRIAL UPON LEARNING THAT THE JURY HAD BEEN TAINTED BY OUTSIDE INFORMATION THAT HAD THE CAPACITY TO INFLUENCE THE RESULT.

We have considered these arguments in light of the record and applicable legal

standards. We affirm.

I

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STATE OF NEW JERSEY V. MICHELLE LODZINSKI (14-08-0871, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-new-jersey-v-michelle-lodzinski-14-08-0871-middlesex-county-and-njsuperctappdiv-2021.