State v. Francis

926 A.2d 305, 191 N.J. 571, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 711
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 27, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 926 A.2d 305 (State v. Francis) 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. Francis, 926 A.2d 305, 191 N.J. 571, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 711 (N.J. 2007).

Opinion

Justice RIVERA-SOTO

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we address the related issues of the standard to be applied in respect of the presentation of evidence before a grand jury and what remedy is appropriate in the event that standard is violated. During its initial presentation of a capital murder case to the grand jury, the prosecution subpoenaed four family members of defendant Alturik Francis and questioned them *576 concerning defendant’s upbringing, history of substance abuse, history of violence, and psychological background, as well as the factual underpinnings of the crimes for which defendant eventually was charged. The State also questioned one of those family members — defendant’s mother — about her discussions with a social worker employed by a mitigation firm retained to assist during the penalty phase of defendant’s capital murder trial. At a grand jury proceeding almost a month later, the prosecutor instructed the grand jury to disregard that earlier testimony and to focus instead on the testimony presented that day by law enforcement officers. It was on that latter testimony that the grand jury returned an indictment against defendant.

Advocating the adoption of the dominant purpose test for all allegations of grand jury abuse, defendant asserts that the State overstepped proper boundaries when it questioned defendant’s family members. Specifically, it is defendant’s view that, in addition to using the grand jury for proper investigatory and charging purposes, the State misused the grand jury to secure evidence in respect of defendant’s mitigation case; that such use of the grand jury violates the dominant purpose test; and that the appropriate remedy for that violation is the suppression — for all purposes — of any proofs secured in violation of the dominant purpose test. The State rejoins that the proper test to determine the propriety of a pre-indictment grand jury inquiry is whether the evidence procured is relevant to the grand jury’s inquiry, and that all of the grand jury questioning was relevant.

We reject defendant’s invitation to apply the dominant purpose test to pre-indictment grand jury proceedings. Instead, we hold that the standard to be applied to determine the proper scope of a grand jury’s pre-indictment inquiry is whether the evidence sought is relevant to the grand jury’s task; the dominant purpose test applies only to claims of post-indictment grand jury abuse.

I.

During the early morning of December 7, 2002, Majuly Collins, a thirty-two-year-old woman, her four-year-old son, and her eigh *577 teen-month-old daughter were brutally murdered in their Elizabeth apartment. Collins was sexually assaulted and stabbed numerous times, and her children were suffocated. The police found the three bodies in the bathtub. Susan Vargas, Collins’s twenty-one-year-old cousin who was living with her at the time, also was stabbed in the neck. Vargas, although seriously injured, survived the attack and told the police that a black male who lived in a downstairs apartment committed the rape and murders. The investigation quickly led the police to defendant, who lived in the downstairs apartment with his sister and his brother-in-law.

The police arrested defendant that same day. Over that day and the next, defendant made a total of four recorded statements to the police, each differing from its predecessor. In the first statement taken the morning of December 7, 2002, defendant told the police that he had participated in the robbery, but that his cousin, Jeffrey Corbit, also known as “Jahad,” had committed the murders. Later that same day, defendant informed the police that he had committed all of the acts alone and that he had told them that Corbit was a participant in hopes of “getting] less time in jail.” In the two statements taken the next day, defendant provided further incriminating details of the crimes.

As part of a grand jury proceeding convened on January 31, 2003 to investigate Collins’s rape and murder, the murder of her two small children, and the assault on Vargas, the State subpoenaed four of defendant’s family members to testify: defendant’s stepfather, mother, sister, and brother-in-law. The State first explained to the grand jury that

[t]he first matter is the investigation regarding [defendant]. When I say investigation you’re not going to be hearing evidence on this case at this point to determine whether or not to hand up an indictment. This is an investigative function of the Grand Jury where the purpose of this proceeding is to gather information by way of general background and I will keep it somewhat general because I anticipate that you will be hearing this case for presentation by the time your term is up.

After reciting a summary of the crimes under investigation and defining the inquiry then before the grand jury as designed “to *578 explain why [the crimes] happened or if there is any explanation or if there’s no explanation[,]” the State emphasized that

[t]he basic question that is going to be asked of these [witnesses] is to find out backgrounds about [defendant], to get some kind of insight as to what happened on this day, if there was anything in his upbringing, his childhood, or in his young adult life, he was 23 years old, that would shed light as to why he may have committed these particular acts. And factually I will leave it at that, but that is going to be the essence of the questioning as if, “Tell us everything that you know about [defendant].”

Once it defined the scope of the inquiry then before the grand jury, and responding to a grand juror’s question as their role in the process, the State laid out the procedure to be followed:

You’re going to be able to ask questions yourself, and when I say investigative, you are the investigative body. You can ask any question that you want that is relevant. If there is a question that can’t be asked for legal reasons I will tell you that and cut it off. If there’s a question that’s irrelevant, I will also tell you that, but if it’s something that you as an investigative body, as a member of society want to know because you feel that it would be relevant to determining what happened and more importantly for these witnesses why it happened. That is your purpose and you can participate as much or as little as you see fit. Should this case come to you for consideration as to indictment, at that time I will be advising you as to what role today’s proceedings play. I can’t tell you at this point because I don’t know what we’re going to do here from the witness stand.

The first witness called before the grand jury was defendant’s stepfather. He testified that, although defendant became enraged when drinking alcohol, he appeared psychologically stable; and that, in January 2003, sometime after defendant’s arrest, he spoke with defendant, who confessed that he had participated in the crimes with his cousin, had stabbed Vargas, and had raped Collins.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
926 A.2d 305, 191 N.J. 571, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-francis-nj-2007.