State v. Jaquindo

350 A.2d 252, 138 N.J. Super. 62
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 12, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 350 A.2d 252 (State v. Jaquindo) 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 v. Jaquindo, 350 A.2d 252, 138 N.J. Super. 62 (N.J. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

138 N.J. Super. 62 (1975)
350 A.2d 252

STATE OF NEW JERSEY, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
GAETANO JAQUINDO, SALVATORE RIZZO AND FELIX JAQUINDO, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued May 27, 1975.
Decided June 12, 1975.

*63 Before Judges MICHELS, MORGAN and MILMED.

Mr. Allen C. Marra argued the cause for the appellants (Messrs. Citrino, Balsam & Ford, attorneys).

Mr. Steven E. Rosenfeld, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for the respondent (Mr. Joseph P. Lordi, Essex County Prosecutor, attorney).

PER CURIAM.

The Law Division, by separate orders, relieved Allen C. Marra as counsel for the defendants Gaetano Jaquindo, Salvatore Rizzo and Felix Jaquindo "because of conflict of interest due to his former position as an Assistant Prosecutor of Essex County during the period between September of 1970 to April, 1973." Defendants applied for *64 leave to appeal from the orders. We granted such leave and accelerated the appeals. See R. 2:5-6, R. 2:9-2.

The pertinent facts may be briefly summarized. Marra joined the Essex County Prosecutor's Office as an assistant prosecutor on September 28, 1970. He served in that capacity until April 23, 1973. In August 1965 an investigation was undertaken by the Essex County Prosecutor's Office regarding possible criminal activity within the Police Department of the City of Orange. The investigation is still continuing.

According to the prosecutor's office a primary source of information throughout the investigation has been Rocco Zarillo, Director of Information and Complaints for the City of Orange, who continuously reported regarding police improprieties in Orange. It is his testimony which forms in substantial part the basis for (1) pending indictments against defendants, Gaetano Jaquindo, Captain in the Orange Police Department, and Salvatore Rizzo, Sergeant in the Police Department, charging them with (a) conspiracy to obstruct justice from on or about May 28, 1974 through on or about July 9, 1974, obstructing justice and malfeasance in office (Indictment No. 1995-74), and (b) conspiracy, between on or about September 26, 1974 through on or about March 24, 1975, to obstruct justice by endeavoring to persuade Rocco Zarillo to testify falsely before the grand jury, obstructing justice and attempted subornation of false swearing (Indictment No. 1996-74); (2) additional pending indictments against defendant Gaetano Jaquindo charging him with (a) conspiracy, between on or about January 1, 1971 through on or about February 1, 1971, to commit extortion, extortion and malfeasance in office (Indictment No. 2010-74); and (b) conspiracy, between on or about October 27, 1970 through on or about November 3, 1970, to commit extortion, extortion and malfeasance in office (Indictment No. 2011-74), and (3) an additional pending indictment against defendant Salvatore Rizzo charging him with malfeasance in office (Indictment *65 No. 2003-74). There is a separate indictment against defendant Felix Jaquindo charging him with voting fraud on or about May 14, 1974 (Indictment No. 1992-74). At the hearing in the Law Division in a related matter,[1] assistant prosecutors informed the court that Rocco Zarillo had played certain tape recordings for the prosecutor's office; that one of Marra's present associates in the practice of law, Thomas P. Ford, Jr., then first assistant prosecutor, was present at the interrogation of Zarillo during the playing of the recordings; that one recording made in 1969, called the "Split the Pie" tape recording, referred "to certain Orange police officers allegedly on the pad to certain gamblers in the City of Orange," and that this tape recording was played for Ford in 1970.

It is clear from the record before us that one of the pending indictments (No. 1996-74) against defendants Jaquindo and Rizzo, charges them, in substantial part, with (among other things) attempting to keep from the grand jury evidence of alleged criminality involving the Orange Police Department uncovered by the prosecutor's office during Marra's and Ford's tenure there in an investigation in which Ford took part as first assistant prosecutor.[2] Mr. Marra's continued representation of these defendants as well as his associate's (Ford's) continued representation of codefendant Lucarello would, accordingly, be in direct violation *66 of Disciplinary Rule 9-101(B), which reads as follows:

A lawyer shall not accept private employment in a matter in which he had substantial responsibility while he was a public employee.

Cf. N.J.S.A. 52:13D-17.

As pointed out by the court in In re Biederman, 63 N.J. 396 (1973):

The ethical requirement that an attorney who has been a public employee may not, upon retirement, act on behalf of a private client in any matter upon which he was engaged in the public interest is neither new, ambiguous nor difficult to understand. In Formal Opinion 134 of the American Bar Association (1935) it was held that an attorney formerly employed by a state's attorney's office might not, after retiring to private practice, either defend cases that originated while he was connected with that office or defend persons against whom he had aided in procuring indictments. In N.J. Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics, Opinion 207, 99 [sic -94] N.J.L.J. 451 (1971) the same result was reached upon substantially identical facts, even though the attorney had played no part in the investigation and prosecution which had taken place while he was an assistant county prosecutor. [at 399-400]

In the N.J. Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics' Opinion 207, 94 N.J.L.J. 451 (1971), reference was made to the very similarly, although less precisely, phrased predecessor rule to DR 9-101(B) which appeared as part of former Canon 36 of the Canons of Professional Ethics, and which provided that:

A lawyer, having once held public office or having been in the public employ, should not after his retirement accept employment in connection with any matter which he has investigated or passed upon while in such office or employ.

The Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics, in Opinion No. 207, quotes the following from Opinion 134 (1935) of the Committee on Professional Ethics of the American Bar Association:

*67 A lawyer retiring from public employ cannot utilize or seem to utilize the fruits of the former professional relationships in subsequent private practice involving a matter investigated or passed upon either by himself or others of the public legal staff during the time he was identified with it.

And, N.J. Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics' Opinion 111, 90 N.J.L.J. 361 (1967), points out in part that:

The American Bar Association, Committee on Professional Ethics, Opinion 134 (1935), interprets Canon 36 and extends the prohibition [therein] to any matter which originated in the office with which the attorney was connected where he was in a position of confidence and actually knew or had the opportunity to know facts because of his position in said office. [Emphasis supplied].

We find no merit in Marra's suggestion that there is no conflict of interest or appearance of a conflict since some of the dates of the specific charges in the pending indictments are long after he left the prosecutor's office.

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Related

State v. Loyal
753 A.2d 1073 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2000)
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377 A.2d 774 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1977)

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350 A.2d 252, 138 N.J. Super. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jaquindo-njsuperctappdiv-1975.