State v. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 22, 2025
DocketA-41-23
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta (State v. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta) 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. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta, (N.J. 2025).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

State v. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta (A-41-23) (089274)

Argued November 18, 2024 -- Decided July 22, 2025

WAINER APTER, J., writing for the Court.

In this appeal, the Court considers whether sentencing counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to investigate defendant’s citizenship status beyond asking him if he was a United States citizen and receiving an unequivocal “yes,” and therefore not advising him that his plea could make him subject to deportation.

In 2019, defendant pled guilty to three counts of third-degree burglary and one count of second-degree robbery. During the plea colloquy, the court asked defendant whether he was a United States citizen. Defendant responded, “yes, sir.” The court then asked defendant where he was born. Defendant, who was born in Mexico, replied “I was born in New York.” The court asked defendant whether he understood “everything” about his plea, the recommended sentence, and the plea forms. Defendant responded, “yes.” The court accepted the guilty plea. Defendant was then interviewed by a probation officer for the presentence report. The report stated that defendant “was born in Mexico and moved to New York with his family as a toddler.” Many fields on the report were left blank.

At sentencing, defendant was represented by Carol Wentworth of the Public Defender’s Office. Wentworth stated that she had “received and reviewed” the presentence report with defendant and that the report was “accurate for the purposes of sentencing.” Defendant stated that he was satisfied with Wentworth’s representation. The court asked no questions about defendant’s citizenship or place of birth, and the parties raised no information about either at the hearing. The court sentenced defendant in accordance with his plea agreement, which included five years of Recovery Court Probation.

Defendant twice violated the terms of Recovery Court Probation, and at the hearing held after each violation stated that he was born in Mexico. After the second violation, the court terminated defendant’s Recovery Court Probation and sentenced him to five years’ incarceration subject to the No Early Release Act. A new judgment of conviction was entered. Defendant did not appeal. 1 In July 2022, defendant filed a petition for post-conviction relief (PCR), alleging ineffective assistance of counsel because he was “not properly informed of the immigration consequences of [his] plea.” The PCR court held evidentiary hearings during which defendant, his plea counsel, and Wentworth testified. The PCR court granted defendant’s petition, concluding that plea counsel was effective but sentencing counsel was not. The PCR court found that defendant’s untruthfulness “did not relieve sentencing counsel of the obligation to investigate the discrepancies between his claim to be a U.S. citizen and the contrary information presented in the [presentence report].” The PCR court also concluded that defendant established he had been prejudiced by sentencing counsel’s deficient performance under Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), because defendant proved “to a reasonable probability that he would have rejected the State’s plea offer and not pled guilty had he been properly advised of the adverse immigration consequences.”

The Appellate Division affirmed in part and remanded in part. The appellate court agreed that Wentworth “failed to meet her affirmative duty to advise defendant that deportation was a clear consequence of his guilty plea” but determined, on the prejudice prong, that a remand was necessary for the PCR court to consider whether defendant would be entitled to withdraw his plea. The Court granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal. 257 N.J. 599 (2024).

HELD: Under the circumstances presented here, sentencing counsel was not constitutionally ineffective because her performance was not deficient.

1. Under both the Federal and State Constitutions, criminal defendants are entitled to the effective assistance of counsel. The “benchmark” for judging whether counsel’s assistance was constitutionally ineffective is “whether counsel’s conduct so undermined the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on as having produced a just result.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 686. A defendant alleging ineffective assistance of counsel must satisfy both prongs of the two-part test: “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient,” and second, the defendant must show that counsel’s “deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” Id. at 687. (pp. 17-18)

2. In Padilla v. Kentucky, the United States Supreme Court applied Strickland to the case of a lawful permanent resident. 559 U.S. 356, 359 (2010). Padilla pled guilty to transporting a large quantity of marijuana in his truck, which made his deportation under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) “virtually mandatory.” Ibid. Yet Padilla’s attorney wrongly “told him that he ‘did not have to worry about [his] immigration status since he had been in the country so long.’” Ibid. Padilla alleged that he would not have pled guilty “if he had not received [the] incorrect advice from his attorney.” Ibid. The Court concluded that counsel’s “false assurance” that Padilla’s conviction would not result in deportation constituted deficient 2 performance. Id. at 368. The Court explained that “[w]hen the law is not succinct and straightforward . . . a criminal defense attorney need do no more than advise a noncitizen client that pending criminal charges may carry a risk of adverse immigration consequences.” Id. at 369. When, however, “the deportation consequence is truly clear, as it was in [Padilla’s] case, the duty to give correct advice is equally clear.” Ibid. The U.S. Supreme Court therefore held that under the Sixth Amendment, “counsel must inform her client whether his plea carries a risk of deportation.” Id. at 374. In State v. Gaitan, the Court imposed the following new rule, to be applied “[p]rospectively from the time when the decision in Padilla was announced”: “counsel’s failure to point out to a noncitizen client that [the client] is pleading to a mandatorily removable offense will be viewed as deficient performance of counsel.” 209 N.J. 339, 380 (2012). (pp. 19-21)

3. The Court has previously explained that reasonable professional assistance does not require the best of attorneys -- it simply requires that defendant’s attorney is not one so ineffective as to make the idea of a fair trial meaningless. There was no such ineffectiveness here. At the time Wentworth met defendant and reviewed the presentence report with him, she had already reviewed his plea form, in which defendant had selected “Yes” in response to the question, “Are you a citizen of the United States?” The presentence report contains no information that clearly rebuts that statement, or even reasonably calls it into question. Instead, the information in the report can reasonably be read as consistent with defendant’s statements that he was a U.S. citizen. It therefore did not require sentencing counsel to undertake an investigation beyond asking defendant if he was indeed a U.S. citizen and receiving a response of “yes.” And to the extent that specific blank boxes created ambiguity about defendant’s citizenship status, counsel testified that she addressed that ambiguity by asking defendant directly whether he was a United States citizen.

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Related

Padilla v. Kentucky
559 U.S. 356 (Supreme Court, 2010)
United States v. Mondragon-Santiago
564 F.3d 357 (Fifth Circuit, 2009)
United States v. Guzman-Bera
216 F.3d 1019 (Eleventh Circuit, 2000)
Mempa v. Rhay
389 U.S. 128 (Supreme Court, 1967)
McMann v. Richardson
397 U.S. 759 (Supreme Court, 1970)
Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
United States v. Gonzalez-Coronado
419 F.3d 1090 (Tenth Circuit, 2005)
United States v. Asencio-Perdomo
674 F.3d 444 (Fifth Circuit, 2012)
Lafler v. Cooper
132 S. Ct. 1376 (Supreme Court, 2012)
Missouri v. Frye
132 S. Ct. 1399 (Supreme Court, 2012)
United States v. Carlos Pacheco
225 F.3d 148 (Second Circuit, 2000)
Shaya v. Holder
586 F.3d 401 (Sixth Circuit, 2009)
State v. Melvins
382 A.2d 925 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1978)
State v. Slater
966 A.2d 461 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2009)
State v. Harris
859 A.2d 364 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2004)
State v. Fritz
519 A.2d 336 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1987)
State v. Timmendequas
737 A.2d 55 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1999)
State v. Savage
577 A.2d 455 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Juan C. Hernandez-Peralta, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-juan-c-hernandez-peralta-nj-2025.