STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. AMY LOCANE (10-12-0770, SOMERSET COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 22, 2020
DocketA-2828-18T4
StatusUnpublished

This text of STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. AMY LOCANE (10-12-0770, SOMERSET COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. AMY LOCANE (10-12-0770, SOMERSET 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 VS. AMY LOCANE (10-12-0770, SOMERSET COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ."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-2828-18T4

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Plaintiff-Appellant/ Cross-Respondent,

v.

AMY LOCANE, a/k/a AMY BOVENIZER, AMY LOCANE-BOVENIZER,

Defendant-Respondent/ Cross-Appellant.

Argued November 21, 2019 – Decided July 22, 2020

Before Judges Alvarez, Suter and DeAlmeida.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Somerset County, Indictment No. 10-12- 0770.

Matthew Murphy, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for appellant/cross-respondent (Michael H. Robertson, Somerset County Prosecutor, attorney; Matthew Murphy, on the briefs). James R. Wronko argued the cause for respondent/cross-appellant (Wronko Loewen Benucci, attorneys; James R. Wronko, of counsel and on the briefs; Gilbert G. Miller, on the briefs).

PER CURIAM

This opinion addresses the unique circumstance, truly sui generis, of a

defendant who must be resentenced a fourth time because the first three

occasions resulted in either illegal sentences or sentences imposed outside of the

New Jersey Criminal Code's sentencing scheme.

To summarize, defendant Amy Locane was convicted by a jury of second-

degree vehicular homicide, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-5(a), a lesser offense; and third-

degree assault by auto, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(c)(2). The judge convicted defendant

of related motor vehicle offenses. The State appealed the judge's sentence,

defendant cross-appealed, and this court remanded for resentencing. State v.

Locane, No. A-2728-12 (App. Div. July 22, 2016) (Locane I).

On remand the judge, due to a change in the law, downgraded the assault

by auto offense and resentenced defendant to eighteen months state prison

concurrent to the same three-year sentence he first imposed for the vehicular

homicide. We again vacated the sentence and remanded for resentencing,

finding the judge’s application of aggravating and mitigating factors contrary to

the sentencing scheme found in our Code. State v. Locane, 454 N.J. Super. 98

A-2828-18T4 2 (App. Div. 2018) (Locane II). We also directed a new judge to conduct the

resentencing. Id. at 108.

The new sentencing judge sentenced defendant to a five-year term. The

State appeals on the basis that the judge's analysis did not comply with the Code,

and that his discussion of individual aggravating and mitigating factors did not

comply with our directives on appeal. Defendant cross-appeals, arguing that

neither the second nor this third appeal by the State are tenable because of

principles of double jeopardy.

The judge who most recently sentenced defendant employed a

methodology all his own. In the process, he ignored our mandate on remand

regarding certain aggravating and mitigating factors. Finding in this unique case

that double jeopardy principles do not bar a final proceeding, we thus vacate the

sentence and remand for a new sentence to be imposed. During that proceeding,

the sentencing judge must apply the sentencing analysis found in our Code, not

his own, and relevant precedents. He must also apply the findings we made in

Locane II regarding factors other than defendant's personal circumstances,

which have changed over time.

This is the third occasion we have addressed defendant's sentence. We

vacate this sentence and remand.

A-2828-18T4 3 The facts are as stated in the two prior opinions. We reiterate only that at

the time of the accident, the State's expert testified that defendant's blood alcohol

content was .23 percent. Defendant's excessive speed was a contributing cause

to the collision, which resulted in the death of one victim, and the severe injuries

inflicted on the other.

Over the course of the most recent proceeding, the judge, although

repeatedly stating he would not stray into In re Mathesius 1 territory while

discussing our earlier decisions in the matter, opined that, "assuming either a

different appellate panel or a federal judge, [defendant] may have more than a

puncher's chance of success" on an issue he disagreed with, which was our ruling

regarding double jeopardy. The judge reviewed each aggravating and mitigating

factor, disagreeing both with the first judge's analysis, as well as that of the

appellate panel.

The judge explained to those gathered in the courtroom that he had spent

over 100 hours studying the complete trial record. The judge continued:

"Rarely, in my experience, can I remember a case which reflects from beginning

to end such a lack of consistent judgment by all parties involved. It seems as if

1 188 N.J. 496 (2006) (holding that a trial judge’s openly critical comments of an Appellate Division judge’s opinion violated Canon 1 of the Code of Judicial Conduct). A-2828-18T4 4 anyone who touched this case made mistakes." The judge included in his

criticism, extraneous to a resentence, "the scope" of the indictment, plea

negotiations, the conduct of the trial, and the appeals—in other words, the

prosecutor's office, defense counsel, the trial judge, and our court as well.

Before he actually imposed sentence, the judge explained at some length

that prior to coming to the bench, he was mentored by a federal court judge who

explained to him the "yin and yang" of sentencing. He explained that this judge

had taught him that a lawyer needed to "ascertain what he called the indicia of

reliability," and expressed his astonishment at "how many lawyers do not

understand that and who try cases based on what people say." The judge said

that mentor explained to him that there are three factors key to any sentencing,

namely, aggravating factors one and two, and mitigating factor seven.

Based on the mentor judge's teachings, one must determine the extent of

a defendant's record in order to "give[] context to the second[-]degree crime."

In the judge's view, if you do not do that, and merely "formulaically apply a

specific sentence to a specific crime, you're violating the law. You have to look

at those two before you go anywhere else. You look at those two for the context

in which you have to look at it."

A-2828-18T4 5 The judge moved on to this case, finding mitigating factor seven applied

and giving it "great weight because it gives context to the offense." He then

described in detail a "second [unrelated] case" that he said "came before this

[c]ourt[,]" presumably referring to himself. He claimed that in that case, the

defendant driver was not only intoxicated, but listening to music on his phone,

and talking to a drunk girlfriend, when he drove through a red light. That

defendant had three prior DWIs. The judge opined that vehicular homicide

could not be equated with this one even though both had inflicted terrible pain

to the victims' families. To sentence the two defendants in the same fashion

"would deprecate the sentence given to that three-time loser."2 The judge then

criticized the State for requesting a nine-year sentence be imposed on defendant.

The judge also stated that he did not consider himself "bound by the

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STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. AMY LOCANE (10-12-0770, SOMERSET COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-new-jersey-vs-amy-locane-10-12-0770-somerset-county-and-njsuperctappdiv-2020.