State v. Drury

919 A.2d 813, 190 N.J. 197, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 24, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 919 A.2d 813 (State v. Drury) 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. Drury, 919 A.2d 813, 190 N.J. 197, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 447 (N.J. 2007).

Opinion

Justice HOENS

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant Jeffrey Drury was convicted of multiple offenses, all arising out of an incident that began when a group of teenagers approached him, seeking to buy marijuana, and that ended after defendant sexually assaulted one teenager and carjacked them and their vehicle. Our grant of certification was limited to two discrete issues, one relating to defendant’s aggravated sexual assault conviction and the other concerning defendant’s kidnapping sentence.

More specifically, the first issue before us is whether carjacking can support an aggravated sexual assault conviction. Sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2c, a second-degree offense, is elevated to aggravated sexual assault, N.J.SA 2C:14-2a, a first-degree crime, when the assault “is committed during the commission, or attempted commission” of certain enumerated offenses, including “robbery,” N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2a(3). In this matter, we consider whether the jury’s verdict finding defendant guilty of carjacking, N.J.SA 2C:15-2, constituted commission of a robbery sufficient to elevate the sexual assault he committed from a second-degree to a first-degree offense. We conclude that the Legislature did not intend to include triggering offenses other than those specifically enumerated in the statute defining aggravated sexual assault and that, therefore, defendant could only have been guilty of second-degree sexual assault.

The second issue before us relates to the sentence imposed on defendant for the crime of kidnapping, N.J.SA 2C:13-lb, and the application, if any, of the principles established in State v. Natale, 184 N.J. 458, 878 A.2d 724 (2005), State v. Abdullah, 184 N.J. 497, 878 A.2d 746 (2005), and State v. Franklin, 184 N.J. 516, 878 A.2d 757 (2005), to this crime. We conclude that because kidnapping is an offense to which a twenty-year presumptive term, see N.J.S.A. *201 2C:44-lf(l)(a), previously applied, defendant is entitled to a remand for reconsideration of the twenty-five year sentence imposed on him for kidnapping pursuant to Nótale.

I.

We derive our recitation of the facts from the extensive trial testimony of each of the participants, including defendant, about what transpired.

A.

On September 16, 2000, Jane Jones, 1 Alexis Armour, Bob Brown, and Mary Morgan were at the home of a friend in Bordentown. All four were high-school students and each of them was sixteen or seventeen years old. Shortly before midnight, they decided to go to Trenton to buy marijuana. Bob drove the others in his father’s car, a four-door sedan. Jane sat in the front passenger seat, with Mary seated behind her, while Alexis sat in the rear seat directly behind the driver. When they arrived in Trenton, they drove along a street where they believed they would be able to make their purchase. They saw a man, later identified as defendant, sitting or lying down and holding a brown bag. As the car began to drive by, they heard defendant say “weed, weed.” Bob slowed the ear to a stop. As he did, defendant approached, opened the back passenger side door where Mary was seated, and got into the car next to her without asking permission.

Defendant, who had a large, partially consumed bottle of beer in the bag, asked the teenagers how much marijuana they wanted to buy. When they told defendant that they wanted ten dollars worth, he offered to give them fifteen dollars worth instead if they *202 would give him a ride to where he wanted to go. The teenagers agreed, and defendant directed Bob to a house. According to Jane, defendant got out of the car and went into the house, but soon returned, telling the teenagers he could not make the purchase at that location and needed to be taken elsewhere. Defendant provided directions, and when they arrived at the second location, defendant said he wanted one of the girls to go with him into the building to make the purchase. He first asked Mary, the back-seat passenger, if she would go with him, but she declined, telling him she felt ill. Jane, the front-seat passenger, agreed to go instead.

Jane testified that she and defendant went into a nearby building and that defendant knocked on the door of an upstairs apartment. Two people answered the door and, after first leaving Jane alone in a bedroom, defendant went with them to a back room. When defendant returned, he told Jane that the others were getting the marijuana. He then locked the bedroom door and asked Jane about the nature of her relationship with Bob. She told him that she and Bob were involved romantically but that she was a virgin.

According to Jane, defendant then told her, in a “strong ... demanding” voice, that he was going to engage in sex with her. She refused and tried to unlock the door to leave, at which point defendant grabbed her from behind. Jane then began to scream and cry as defendant threatened to slit her throat with a knife and choked her into unconsciousness. When she revived, defendant was undressing. As she resisted his efforts to undress her, defendant again began to choke her and threatened to hit her. Jane continued to resist, but eventually defendant pried her legs apart and penetrated her vaginally.

After defendant completed his assault on Jane, he led her downstairs and out to the ear where the other three teenagers were waiting. Instead of getting into the back seat, defendant opened the driver’s door and told Bob to move over. Bob refused, saying that he was driving. Defendant ordered Bob to move over *203 and then shoved him out of the driver’s seat and into the front passenger seat.

As a result, Jane, who had already opened the front passenger door to get back into that seat, instead took the rear passenger-side seat where defendant had been sitting earlier. Jane testified that she was crying when she got into the car and that she told the two other girls in the back seat what had happened. The other teenagers testified that Jane was crying, had bruises on her neck, and that there was a cut on her eyebrow that was bleeding. Mary, who was then sitting next to Jane, testified that Jane told her that defendant had threatened to slit her throat and had raped her. Alexis testified that Jane whispered to her that defendant had raped her. Alexis also noticed that Jane’s “pants were undone and her shoes weren’t tied.”

Although at least three of the four teenagers had cell phones at some point during the night, defendant confiscated Bob’s when it rang, and the teenagers were afraid to use theirs to call for help either during the twenty or thirty minutes when Jane and defendant were gone or after she returned. They testified that they did not call for help because they were afraid of defendant and afraid that they would be punished because they had been involved in an attempt to buy illegal drugs.

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Bluebook (online)
919 A.2d 813, 190 N.J. 197, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-drury-nj-2007.