State v. Chen

27 A.3d 930, 208 N.J. 307, 2011 N.J. LEXIS 1066
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 24, 2011
DocketA-69 September Term 2008, 063177
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 27 A.3d 930 (State v. Chen) 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 v. Chen, 27 A.3d 930, 208 N.J. 307, 2011 N.J. LEXIS 1066 (N.J. 2011).

Opinion

Chief Justice RABNER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, we consider whether suggestive behavior by a private party, without any state action, should be evaluated at a pretrial hearing to determine whether an eyewitness’ identification may be admitted at trial.

Here, a husband suspected that his wife had been attacked by his ex-girlfriend. He showed his wife pictures of the woman to help her make an identification, and she then reviewed the photos many times. Afterward, the victim selected a photograph of the ex-girlfriend from a photo array and identified her at trial. Shortly before trial, defendant requested a Wade 1 hearing to challenge the admissibility of the identification testimony. The trial judge declined to hold a hearing because no government officer had acted in a suggestive manner.

Recent social science research reveals that suggestive conduct by private actors, as well as government officials, can undermine *311 the reliability of eyewitness identifications and inflate witness confidence. We consider that evidence in light of the court’s traditional gatekeeping role to ensure that unreliable, misleading evidence is not presented to jurors. We therefore hold that, even without any police action, when a defendant presents evidence that an identification was made under highly suggestive circumstances that could lead to a mistaken identification, trial judges should conduct a preliminary hearing, upon request, to determine the admissibility of the identification evidence. Accordingly, we remand for an appropriate hearing consistent with the principles outlined below.

I.

On Sunday, January 23, 2005, at 10:16 p.m., Johann Christian Kim (JC) received a phone call from his ex-girlfriend, defendant Cecilia X. Chen. The two had not spoken since June 2000, around the time their relationship ended. JC motioned for his wife, Helen Kim, to come to the phone and listen in on the conversation. During the call, JC relayed that he was happily married and expecting a child. Defendant, by contrast, told him that she was not doing well and had recently broken up with her boyfriend who had mistreated her. She also apologized for having taken JC for granted and wondered aloud “how things might have turned out” had they remained together. According to JC, defendant cried at times before the conversation ended.

Three days later, on January 26, 2005, Helen was home alone recovering from surgery. She was about five months pregnant at the time. While resting, she answered the phone at about 4 p.m., and an unknown woman asked for Mr. Kim. The woman explained that she was calling about a second mortgage with Bank of America, but the Kims had no such mortgage. Helen checked the caller ID after the brief conversation, and it listed “Foley’s Liquor Store”—located in Neptune City. The Kims lived nearby in Ocean Township.

*312 Helen went back to sleep but woke up soon after to the sound of loud knocking on the front door. When she responded, she saw a young woman she did not know—whom Helen later identified as the defendant. The woman explained that her car had broken down and asked to use a phone. Helen offered the woman a cell phone but rather than take it, the woman said she needed to use the bathroom. Helen let the woman enter the house and noticed a computer cord sticking out of her left sleeve as the woman walked toward the bathroom.

Helen then called JC to tell him about the strange phone call and the woman. While they were speaking, the woman returned from the bathroom, grabbed Helen, and stabbed her with a kitchen knife in the back of the shoulder. JC heard screams and called 9-1-1.

Helen fought back as the woman continued to try to stab her, at one point cutting Helen’s eyelid. The woman also appeared to try to use the computer cord as a weapon. Helen resisted and grabbed the woman’s wrist. As the struggle continued, the woman said, “I just want your money,” but at no point did she attempt to take anything.

Helen steered the fight toward the front porch and screamed for help. A neighbor who lived across the street, Lori Schoch, heard the screams and saw part of the struggle on the porch. Schoch then called the police.

Eventually, Helen disarmed her attacker. As Helen was about to strike her, the woman said, “Don’t do anything to hurt your baby.” Helen froze in response, and the woman ran off.

When the police responded, Helen described her assailant to Sergeant Thomas Burke as an Asian or Filipino woman, about 5'4", wearing a black jacket, gray hood, dark pants, brown boots, and black gloves. Helen also spoke with Detective Michael Clancy and added that her attacker was about twenty to twenty-five years old, weighed between 110 and 120 pounds, and wore black frame glasses and a gray scarf. (Helen offered a more detailed descrip *313 tion late that night at the police station as part of a formal, signed statement.) The police were unable to locate the attacker in the area but recovered a pair of black-rimmed glasses, a steak knife, and a computer cord.

Ms. Schoch provided a similar description to the police within about two hours of the attack. She said the woman appeared to be Asian and was at least 5'6". In a signed statement, Schoch stated, “I didn’t see her face except for a second when she turned____” At trial, some twenty-two months later, Schoch testified that she was able to see the front of the attacker’s face “about ten, fifteen seconds as she turned around,” and the attacker’s profile for approximately thirty seconds.

Helen was unable to sleep after returning from the police station and drew a picture of her assailant. She showed JC the drawing the next morning. He later testified that “it looked a little familiar. Between that and the unusual phone call, I said maybe perhaps it might be [defendant] Cecilia [Chen].” JC then accessed defendant’s personal website and showed Helen five to ten pictures of defendant on the computer. When she saw one particular picture, Helen “just jumped” and was “ninety percent positive” that Chen was her attacker. Helen said she was not completely certain because Chen was smiling and not wearing glasses in the picture, unlike her assailant. In response, Helen’s sister, who was also present, drew eyeglasses onto printed copies of two of the pictures. Helen testified that she looked at the photos about five more times during the first month after the attack.

The Kims brought copies of the photos to the police station later in the day. Helen also worked with a police sketch artist who drew a composite sketch. She later testified that the sketch did not completely resemble her attacker. Schoch saw the sketch in the newspaper, but she, too, thought it was not entirely accurate. On seeing the sketch, though, Schoch realized that she “actually saw more” of the attacker than she had thought.

*314 The police conducted an investigation and learned that defendant lived in Maryland and attended medical school there. On the morning of January 26, 2005, defendant worked at a women’s prison in Jessup, Maryland.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A.3d 930, 208 N.J. 307, 2011 N.J. LEXIS 1066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chen-nj-2011.