State v. Josephs

803 A.2d 1074, 174 N.J. 44, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1070
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 15, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 803 A.2d 1074 (State v. Josephs) 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. Josephs, 803 A.2d 1074, 174 N.J. 44, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1070 (N.J. 2002).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

LaVECCHIA, J.

Table of Contents

Introduction........................................65

I. Facts and Procedural History........................66

II. Asserted Guilt-Phase Errors.........................79

A. Failure to Prove Own-Conduct Murder............79

B. Sequential Instruction to Jury on Own-Conduct Murder and Accomplice Liability...........86

C. Other Alleged Guilt-Phase Instruction Errors......96

1. Instruction on Serious-Bodily-Injury Murder V.................................96

2. Additional Asserted Instruction Errors........101

a. Self-Defense/Defense of Others..........101

b. Passion/Provocation.....................103

D. Guilt-Phase Voir Dire Inadequacy...............104

III. Penalty-Phase Errors..............................105

A. Penalty-Phase Jury Selection....................106

1. Reference to Appellate Process...............106

2. Excusal of Juror Based on Views on Death Penalty ...).......................109

B. Conduct of Penalty-Phase Trial..................110

1. Failure to Prove Aggravating Factor 4(g).....110

2. Exclusion of Testimony Criticizing State’s Evidence................................115

3. Improper Introduction of Evidence of Similarity of Prior Murder.................116

4. Introduction of Inflammatory Victim-Impact Evidence............................122

5. Prosecutor’s Remarks During Summation.....122

a. Remarks About Duty to Society..........125

b. Remarks About Experience as a Prosecutor...........................125

c. Remarks About Failure to Testify........126

[65]*65d. Remarks About Inadequacies of Defense Expert.........................127

e. Remarks About Defendant’s Relationship with Son........................128

C. Alleged Error in Jury Charge During Penalty Phase ......................................129

D. Penalty-Phase Jury’s Alleged Failure to Vote Individually on Aggravating Factors............131

IV. Additional Issues ..................................135

A. Standard of Proof of Circumstantial Evidence for By-Own Conduct Murder..................135

B. Constitutionality of New Jersey Death Penalty Statute.....................................137

V. Conclusion........................................142

A Camden jury convicted defendant Daron Josephs of purposeful or knowing murder by his own conduct of Leon Mitchell and Barrington McLean, conspiracy to murder Mitchell, McLean, Christine Williams, and Emil Josephs, and related weapon-possession offenses. A separate jury sentenced defendant to death for the murder of Mitchell and McLean. In this appeal, defendant1 claims error in both the guilt and penalty phases of his trial. He also asserts that his capital sentence is disproportionate and should be vacated.

We affirm defendant’s non-capital convictions. Also, defendant’s convictions of purposeful or knowing murder of McLean and Mitchell are sustained. Because of error affecting the by own-conduct determinations, we hold that defendant’s death eligibility cannot be sustained. Although error in the own-conduct instruction requires reversal of the death sentences, that does not affect defendant’s conviction of the murders provided the State is willing to accept non-capital sentences. However, if the State intends on remand to seek again capital sentences for the murders, then defendant’s guilt by his own conduct will have to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt in a second guilt-phase trial. As a consequence of our disposition, we need not and do not engage in proportionality review. We also reaffirm our case law upholding the constitutionality of New Jersey’s death penalty statute.

[66]*66I.

Facts and Procedural History

The shootings that caused the deaths of Mitchell, McLean, and Williams on January 22, 1995, resulted from a dispute among brothers and friends involved in a marijuana distribution operation led by Emil Josephs. Emil lived in Camden in an apartment located at 3212 Federal Street. Residing with him at the time were his brother, Turan Josephs (TJ), and his friend Barrington McLean. The apartment occupied the second floor and attic of a house. On the second floor were two bedrooms, a kitchen, and one bathroom. McLean and TJ slept in the second floor bedroom located at the front of the house. Emil used the attic as his bedroom.

Although drugs were not distributed from the apartment, Emil kept a quantity of marijuana in a compartment under the stairs leading to the attic. Significant amounts of cash also were kept in the house at times. The drug-dealing business had become very busy around the end-of-year holidays in 1994, taking in approximately $15,000 per week at the time of the shootings. Emil shared the profits with McLean and TJ, allowing them a one-third share to split between themselves.

Sometime during December 1994, defendant (whose nickname is Dee) and Hugh Josephs Jr. (nicknamed Junior), Emil’s half-brothers, moved into the apartment because they had agreed to install carpeting for Emil. It is noteworthy that defendant and Junior arrived in a red Honda Civic that they used while they remained at the apartment on Federal Street. In terms of familial relations, we also note that Emil, TJ, defendant, and Junior share the same father, Hugh Josephs Sr.; however, Emil and TJ have a different mother from defendant and Junior.

• Junior was promised $2500, and defendant $1500, to lay the carpeting. Lacking sufficient cash to pay them in full, Emil compensated Junior and defendant with marijuana to sell. The profits from those sales were sufficient to serve as payment for [67]*67the carpet work. Junior and defendant then stayed on at the apartment, joining Emil’s marijuana distribution business by selling for him at a designated location. Emil also enlisted Leon Mitchell and Christine Williams to become involved in the business. They too stayed at the apartment on Federal Street.

Emil was the only person present in the apartment on the evening of Saturday, January 21,1995, who testified at defendant’s trial. Other than defendant, and Junior, whose whereabouts are unknown, all of the others present were killed. According to Emil’s testimony, on that Saturday he learned from his friend, “Bloody” (a business associate in the marijuana business), that defendant and Junior were selling marijuana purchased from another source, and that they were selling the other drugs at Emil’s sales location. Apparently, the two were pocketing the money from those sales. Selling marijuana purchased from another distributor was contrary to Emil’s direct orders to defendant and Junior when he allowed them to deal drugs for him.

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Bluebook (online)
803 A.2d 1074, 174 N.J. 44, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-josephs-nj-2002.