State v. Johnson

706 A.2d 1160, 309 N.J. Super. 237, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 99
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 9, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 706 A.2d 1160 (State v. Johnson) 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. Johnson, 706 A.2d 1160, 309 N.J. Super. 237, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 99 (N.J. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

COLLESTER, J.S.C.

(temporarily assigned).

Defendant was convicted following a jury trial of murdering and sexually assaulting Gail Shollar as well as kidnapping her and her three-year-old daughter, A.S., in their vehicle from a supermarket parking lot on November 3, 1992. He received a sentence of life imprisonment with thirty years of parole ineligibility for murder and a consecutive term of 100 years with fifty years of parole ineligibility for the other crimes. He appeals both his conviction and sentence. We affirm.

Defendant makes the following legal arguments on appeal:

POINT i

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT REFUSED TO SUPPRESS INCUL-PATORY STATEMENTS MADE BY THE DEFENDANT.

A THE INVESTIGATIVE DETENTION ORDER WAS A SHAM AND CREATED A COERCIVE ENVIRONMENT THEREBY REQUIRING SUBSEQUENT INCULPATORY STATEMENTS MADE BY THE DEFENDANT WHILE IN CUSTODY TO BE SUPPRESSED.

B. DEFENDANT’S STATEMENTS TO JO ANN KEITH IN WHICH HE CONFESSED TO STABBING GAIL SHOLLAR SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED BY THE TRIAL JUDGE BECAUSE SUCH STATEMENTS WERE MADE IN VIOLATION OF DEFENDANT’S MIRANDA RIGHTS.

C. STATEMENTS MADE BY THE DEFENDANT TO SERGEANT PAUL OST AND TO OFFICER QUIGLEY SHOULD HAVE BEEN SUPPRESSED.

POINT II

PREJUDICIAL ERROR WAS COMMITTED BY THE TRIAL JUDGE WHEN HE PERMITTED MARK JANSEN TO TESTIFY AS TO THE MEANING OF THE TERM “GET PAID” WHICH WAS SAID TO JANSEN BY THE DEFENDANT IN A CONVERSATION.

POINT III

THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRONEOUSLY CHARGED THE JURY WITH RESPECT TO FIRST AND SECOND DEGREE KIDNAPPING AS TO COUNT EIGHT. THE TRIAL JUDGE’S CHARGE WITH RESPECT TO THE MEANING OF “UNHARMED AND IN A SAFE PLACE” WAS ERRONEOUS.

POINT IV

PLAIN AND PREJUDICIAL ERROR WAS COMMITTED BY THE TRIAL JUDGE WHEN HE DID NOT GIVE A JURY INSTRUCTION ON INTOXICATION.

POINT V

[244]*244THE TRIAL COURT’S CHARGE WITH RESPECT TO THE DEFENSE OF DIMINISHED CAPACITY WAS ERRONEOUS BECAUSE IT FAILED TO STATE THAT THE DEFENDANT COULD BE ACQUITTED IF THE JURY FOUND THAT THIS DEFENSE WAS PRESENT.

POINT VI

THE DEFENDANT’S OVERALL SENTENCE SHOULD BE VACATED BECAUSE IT VIOLATES THE SENTENCING GUIDELINES SET FORTH IN State v. Yarbough, 100 N.J. 627, 498 A2d 1239 (1985), cert, denied, 475 U.S. 1014, 106 S.Ct 1193, 89 L.Ed.2d 308 (1986).

The State presented the following facts. On Tuesday evening, November 3, 1992, the Shollar family, husband Robert, wife Gail, and three children had dinner together at their Piscataway home. At 7:30 p.m. Gail along with her three-year-old daughter, A.S., left in the family’s 1992 Plymouth Voyager minivan to return a videotape of “Beauty and the Beast” to a local video store and do some grocery shopping at the Pathmark Supermarket in the Middlesex County Mall. She never returned to her home again. Computer records show that she rented another video, “All Dogs Go To Heaven,” at Quick Video at 7:54 p.m. and completed her shopping at Pathmark at 9:06 p.m.

At about 5:00 p.m. that afternoon, defendant’s former girlfriend, Jo Ann Keith, met him in Plainfield and drove him back to her home at 6 Halley Court in Piscataway. At 6:30 p.m. defendant knocked on the door at 17 Water Street, the nearby residence of Mark Jansen and his mother, Barbara. Mark did not personally know defendant although he was familiar with him since he had stolen cars with defendant’s brother. Defendant was dressed in dark clothing and appeared to Jansen to be high, wide-eyed and jittery. He asked Jansen if he wanted to steal a car to get money for drugs. Jansen refused, claiming a headache, and defendant told him, “[Y]ou motherfuckers think I’m playing. I’m going to get paid.” Jansen construed the remark to mean that defendant was going to get either money or sex. At the end of the five-minute conversation, defendant mumbled something about a mall and walked down Jansen’s driveway toward the Middlesex County Mall.

[245]*245Later that night between 10:00 and 10:10 p.m. Barbara Jansen, Mark’s mother, answered a knock on her door. A black man with a goatee and dark clothing whom she did not know was standing under her porch light and asked if her son was home. When she said no, the man left.

Robert Shollar had worked the late shift the night before and fell asleep at about 10:00 p.m. When he awoke at about 2:30 a.m. and found that Gail and A.S. were not home, he called the Piscataway Police Department.

At 6:20 a.m. on Wednesday, November 4, the Piscataway police received a call from Michelle Carnavale, a teacher’s assistant at the First Class Day Care Center, saying that a cold and wet little girl had been found on the grounds and that she was crying and would not answer any questions. After the police called Robert Shollar and told him that they had found a little girl matching A.S.’s description, he went to the day care center and identified A.S., who was scared and crying.

On the way to the Piscataway Police Department, A.S. told her father that “a bad man got mommy.” She described the man as a black man, wearing black pants and a black shirt with an “X” on it. She then said that the man had a knife and mommy was crying. At the police station A.S. told Ellen Marie Price, a sergeant in the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office, that outside the supermarket, a black man with a knife had grabbed her mother by the shirt and got into the van. She said that her mother was crying and seemed scared. Her mother drove with the black man who was still there when she was let out of the van.

While A.S. and her father were at police headquarters, Piscataway police responded to a call concerning a suspicious van on Poplar Road at the corner of Water Street near Halley Court. The driver’s side window was partially open, and the keys were in the ignition. Lying on the floor was Gail Shollar’s driver’s license. Bloodstains were observed on the driver’s door as well as on the inside carpet and on a plastic bag and a roll of paper towels. Groceries from Pathmark Supermarket were in the cargo area.

[246]*246John Haley of the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office Identification Bureau found a latent print on the sliding door of the passenger side of the van as well as a print on a paper towel wrapper in the back of the van. He also retrieved a sanitary napkin, clothes of Gail and A.S. and a Sports Park coin on the floor near Gail’s purse.

Members of the Piscataway Police Department and the Middle-sex County Sheriff’s Department immediately commenced a search for Gail Shollar in the vicinity of the recovered van and canvassed the surrounding neighborhoods for possible witnesses. That morning the police knocked on Barbara Jansen’s door and asked her whether she had observed anything the night before. She described the previous night’s visitor and told police of finding blood drippings on a leaf and her outside steps earlier that morning when letting her pets outside. The officer summoned a sketch artist from the sheriffs department and prepared a composite sketch with Barbara Jansen of the person she saw the previous night.

Police also spoke with Mark Jansen who said that he was uncertain of the identify of the person who had come to his house the prior night but that he would try to find out.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 A.2d 1160, 309 N.J. Super. 237, 1998 N.J. Super. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-johnson-njsuperctappdiv-1998.