State v. Moore

902 A.2d 1212, 188 N.J. 182
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 21, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 902 A.2d 1212 (State v. Moore) 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. Moore, 902 A.2d 1212, 188 N.J. 182 (N.J. 2006).

Opinions

Chief Justice PORITZ

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case returns to the Court after remand for a plenary hearing in respect of the continued viability of State v. Hurd, 86 N.J. 525, 432 A.2d 86 (1981), wherein the Court established [185]*185guidelines for the admissibility of hypnotically refreshed testimony proffered by a witness in a criminal trial. Based on the record developed below, and the substantial body of case law that has considered the question since Hurd was decided, we have determined that a change in course is now warranted. We are no longer of the view that the Hurd guidelines can serve as an effective control for the harmful effects of hypnosis on the truth-seeking function that lies at the heart of our system of justice. Most important, we are not convinced that it is possible to know whether post-hypnotic testimony can ever be as reliable as testimony that is based on ordinary recall, even recognizing the myriad of problems associated with ordinary recall. We therefore conclude that the hypnotically refreshed testimony of a witness in a criminal trial is generally inadmissible and that Hurd should no longer be followed in New Jersey.

I.

At approximately 2:30 a.m. on the morning of January 14,1986, twenty-five-year-old M.A. was sleeping in the bedroom of her Somers Point cottage when a man woke her by grabbing her neck and demanding money. The man repeatedly sexually assaulted and threatened her, telling her not to look at him when, at one point, she opened her eyes. After the assault, M.A. remained in her bed for four hours, fearing that the man was still in the house. At daylight, she sought assistance from a neighbor, who contacted the police. According to the police report, when the police arrived, M.A stated that she thought her attacker might be an African-American man of medium build.

Later in the day, M.A. provided a written statement to the police in which she described her assailant as black, about five feet ten inches, 175 pounds, in his late twenties to mid-thirties, with short ham and a short beard close to his face. She also indicated that she saw him only once and that he was wearing jeans. Because she was unable to provide sufficient information to develop a composite sketch of her attacker, M.A suggested hypnosis. [186]*186She anticipated that hypnosis might help her to remember her assailant’s face in greater detail.

On January 80, 1986, M.A. visited the office of Dr. Samuel Babcock, a licensed clinical psychologist, to undergo hypnosis. Dr. Babcock first conducted a tape-recorded interview with Detective Gary Gray of the Somers Point Police Department to acquire background information on the assault. He then met privately with M.A. to conduct a pre-hypnotic interview. In that tape-recorded interview, M.A. described the lighting conditions in her bedroom at the time of the assault. She explained that “[t]here’s not much [light], some, a little bit of light comes through the window but there was no light in my house, no lights were on[,] it’s pretty dark.” She stated that a thin curtain covers the bedroom window and that the light was “enough to see ... shadows and stuff ... outlines of things, ... but ... nothing in detail.”

Also pre-hypnosis, M.A. remembered seeing the perpetrator’s face only once, when he was standing over her bed. She stated that the assailant “kept telling [her] over and over to keep [her] eyes closed and not to look at him[,] which [she] did.” She further stated that “at one point ... [she thought she] looked up at him and he immediately told [her] to not look up and to close [her] eyes[,] which [she] did and that was the only time [she] really saw him[;] ... [she] was afraid to look at him.” As a result, besides knowing that he was black, and that he had “what looked like a real light beard or more like shadows on his face[,] ... nothing about his face caught [her] attention.” She did not remember anything distinctive about either his eyes or his nose, but she thought he had a round face and that his legs looked as though they were muscular and stocky.

Dr. Babcock switched off the tape recorder for two minutes before initiating hypnosis. During that period, he observed M.A. remove her contact lenses. Consequently, with the recorder again switched on, he asked how well she could see without them. M.A. responded that if an object is “a couple feet away ... all I see is [187]*187blur,” and that her assailant had been “close enough to see but not in detail.” While hypnotized, M.A. stated for the first time that she thought her assailant wore a tan suede jacket with a zipper and that he was a medium-skinned black male. As the session was ending but prior to bringing M.A. out of hypnosis, Dr. Babcock advised her that she would not be able to remember what they talked about, but that she “will remember the face [of her assailant], crystal clear, very clearly.” Then, to ease her transition to a waking state, Dr. Babcock told her to sleep and switched off the tape during the last minutes of the session.

A few days later, M.A. chose defendant Clarence Moore from a photo array. Subsequently, she identified him from two more arrays, one of which was actually a photograph of a lineup. Moore was the only person common to all three. When she looked at the initial array, M.A. advised detectives that she recalled dirt near or on the pockets of her assailant’s tan suede jacket.

On February 20, 1986, a grand jury in Atlantic County charged Moore with burglary in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:18-2, robbery in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1a(2) (robbery with threat of immediate bodily injury), robbery in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1a(3) (robbery with commission of or threat to commit a first- or second-degree crime), and three counts of aggravated sexual assault in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2a(3). Following pretrial hearings, the trial court ruled that M.A.’s hypnosis complied with this Court’s decision in Hurd, supra, which established standards for the admission of hypnotically refreshed testimony at criminal trials. The court therefore permitted M.A.’s testimony as refreshed recollection. The court also permitted the State to play a substantial portion of the recording of the hypnotic session for the jury. After a Wade1 hearing, the court further ruled that the [188]*188victim’s out-of-court and in-court identifications of Moore were sufficiently reliable to be admitted at trial.

Moore’s jury trial began on February 18 and concluded on March 5, 1987. Dr. Babcock, M.A., and several police investigators testified for the State. As permitted by the court, the State also played a portion of the audiotapes of Dr. Babcock’s session with M.A., including the pre- and post-hypnotic interviews, and provided transcripts of the tapes to the jury. Other than this testimony, the State offered no corroborating evidence of M.A.’s identification of Moore.2

On the witness stand, M.A. made an in-court identification of Moore as the person who assaulted her. She admitted that during the attack she caught only a “glimpse” of his face in what could have been but a “split second” or “could have been more than that.” M.A.

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State v. Moore
902 A.2d 1212 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
902 A.2d 1212, 188 N.J. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moore-nj-2006.