State v. Frisby

811 A.2d 414, 174 N.J. 583, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1636
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedDecember 11, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 811 A.2d 414 (State v. Frisby) 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. Frisby, 811 A.2d 414, 174 N.J. 583, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1636 (N.J. 2002).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*587 LONG, J.

Tried to a jury, Monica Frisby was found guilty of second degree endangering the welfare of a child, contrary to N.J.S.A 2C:24-4(a), in connection with the death of her son, Ma’D. She was sentenced to a custodial term of seven years. Frisby appealed her conviction and the Appellate Division affirmed in an unreported decision. State v. Frisby, No. A-294-99T4 (App.Div. Oct. 3, 2001). We granted Frisby’s petition for certification, 171 N.J. 444, 794 A.2d 183 (2002), in which she challenged the admission of prejudicial evidence at trial along with the adequacy of the trial court’s jury unanimity instruction. We now reverse.

I

At trial, the following evidence was adduced in the State’s case. On June 28, 1994, defendant Monica Frisby gave birth to a son, Ma’D. The child’s father was Richard Patterson. From birth, Ma’D had special medical needs and the Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS) intervened to assist Frisby with his medical care. There were no allegations of abuse or neglect against Patterson. However, because he was uncooperative with DYFS, Frisby was instructed not to leave Ma’D with him. On June 7, 1995, the DYFS caseworker, Theresa McNellis, visited Frisby and Ma’D at the motel where they resided. McNellis testified that she regularly saw Frisby at the motel over a seven-month period both on a scheduled and on an unscheduled basis. Prior to that date, DYFS had no record of neglect or abuse by Frisby. According to McNellis, the motel room was clean and the baby was properly attired. Frisby directed McNellis’ attention to two minor scratches on the right side of the child’s face and one on the left, which she attributed to an injury while the child was crawling. Frisby already had made a pediatrician’s appointment to have the scratches looked at the following day.

With the exception of the scratches, McNellis saw no injuries whatsoever on Ma’D’s head or face. However, she acknowledged that Ma’D had an old finger injury that he had sustained when he *588 caught his finger in a stroller and with respect to which he had received ongoing medical treatment. McNellis testified that the child appeared otherwise to be in good health, well cared for, and appropriately developed for his age.

On June 9,1995, Detective Sergeant Bernard R. Buckley, of the Carney’s Point Township Police Department, was involved in the investigation of Ma’D’s death. Ma’D had been brought into Salem County Memorial Hospital on a call from the motel. The caller had indicated that the baby was unresponsive. Upon meeting with an investigator from the prosecutor’s office, Buckley was informed that the baby was dead on arrival. In observing Ma’D’s body, Buckley noted that the baby had a “long, narrow bruise on the ... left cheek and temple area and what appeared to be ligature marks ... around the wrist----reflecting] that something had been placed on the wrist or was on the wrist snugly at some point.” Buckley testified that the “ligature” marks were “not unusual” and a prosecutor’s investigator, Leroy Pierce, testified that they were consistent with “clothing that is often worn by infants.”

The prosecutor’s investigator introduced Buckley to Monica Frisby. Frisby was-not a suspect at that time and willingly talked to Buckley. Frisby told the detective that on June 8, she was in her .motel room with the baby and Patterson, the baby’s father. They all had gone out to visit friends and relatives and returned to the room at about 5:00 p.m. She stated that she asked Patterson to watch Ma’D because she wanted to go into Penns Grove for the evening. According to Buckley, Frisby said she left the baby -with Patterson at about 7:00 p.m. Frisby told Buckley that at about 11:30 p.m. she saw Patterson in Penns Grove and confronted him “as to why he wasn’t in the room with the child.” Frisby said that as soon as she realized that the baby was alone, she immediately-tried to get a ride back to the motel. She was finally able to obtain a ride from a man named Tony and arrived at the motel around 1:30 a.m. Frisby said that, at first, she thought that the baby was asleep in the crib. She then observed mucus around his *589 nose and when she checked more closely, she found that he was not breathing. She tried to get help from a friend in the motel, called 911, and performed CPR. When questioned by Buckley about the bruises on the baby’s face, Frisby indicated that he had fallen off the bed the previous day and had hit himself on a bicycle.

Frisby was taken to headquarters where she signed a consent to search her motel room. The detective did not find a bicycle in the room. However, Frisby indicated that she had used the bicycle to get to Penns Grove and left it there while she sought a ride home. Patterson later confirmed the presence of the bicycle in Penns Grove.

Frisby was released from headquarters while the detective conducted his investigation. At that point, Buckley initiated contact with Patterson regarding Frisby’s claim that she had left Ma’D with him. According to Buckley, Patterson told him that he was not supposed to, nor did he, watch the baby that night. He recounted where he had been during the course of the evening. Buckley testified that he wanted to “substantiate [Patterson’s] claims that he had been at certain places at certain times as opposed to what Ms. Frisby had told us that he was supposed to be at the motel room at these times.” According to Buckley, after speaking to Patterson’s “witnesses,” no charges were brought against him because his witnesses “appeared to substantiate his claims about his whereabouts that evening.”

Patterson testified that Ma’D was his son and that on June 8, 1995, he saw Frisby and the baby coming' out of a neighbor’s house and gave them a ride back to the motel. He kissed the baby good-bye and left. The following morning, Patterson was at work when the police came to talk to him. It was at that point that he was told that the baby was dead. He voluntarily accompanied a police sergeant to the police station where Buckley and Investigator Anthony Rastelli, of the Salem County Prosecutor’s Office, questioned him. In response to their questioning, Patterson outlined all of the places he had been and all of the people he *590 had seen on the previous night. Among them were his sister, his brother-in-law, his nephew, his nephew’s wife, and a cousin. Patterson indicated that he had seen Frisby on three occasions that night. ■ He saw her at about 9:00 p.m. as she went into a woman’s house in Penns Grove where she parked her bicycle on the curb. He saw her again at about 10:00 p.m. on the street. Patterson said he asked her where the baby was and Frisby said something “nasty” to him. He said he then saw Frisby a third time, about midnight, when she asked him for a ride back to the motel. Patterson knew that Ma’D was not with Frisby at any point that night and did not know who was watching him. After Patterson got home that night, he said that Frisby called him twice. “The first time she called she said, ‘Richie,’ ...

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Bluebook (online)
811 A.2d 414, 174 N.J. 583, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frisby-nj-2002.