State v. Morton

757 A.2d 184, 165 N.J. 235, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 1015
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 2, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 757 A.2d 184 (State v. Morton) 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. Morton, 757 A.2d 184, 165 N.J. 235, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 1015 (N.J. 2000).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

COLEMAN, J.

Two terms ago, we affirmed defendant’s conviction and death sentence for the murder of Michael Eck. State v. Morton, 155 N.J. 383, 715 A.2d 228 (1998) (Morton I). We preserved defendant’s right to seek “proportionality review of his sentence, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3e, in a separate proceeding.” Id. at 464, 715 A.2d 228. On that review we find no disproportionality in defendant’s death sentence.

I. FACTS

The facts are set forth in detail in Morton I, supra, 155 N.J. at 398-410, 715 A.2d 228. We will, however, briefly restate those facts relevant to our proportionality review.

On the night of February 23, 1993, defendant, who was twenty-five years old at the time, and co-defendant Alonzo Bryant, agreed to go out and “get paid,” a colloquialism for committing robberies. After leaving the Playhouse, a go-go bar in Burlington Township at approximately 10:20 p.m., defendant and Bryant encountered Toby Chrostowski in the parking lot. The driver of defendant’s [241]*241Ford Escort tried to block Chrostowski’s path; the passenger walked around the ear and approached Chrostowski from behind. Chrostowski tried to walk past the driver, and felt a sharp pain in his chest as he walked by. After entering the Playhouse, Chros-towski discovered that he had been stabbed, but did not know which of the two men had stabbed him. Chrostowski survived.

Later that evening, defendant and Bryant drove to Francine’s, a Cherry Hill nightclub with a wealthy clientele. They decided not to rob anyone there because the valet parking system would have made a robbery risky.

Approximately two hours after the Chrostowski robbery, defendant and Bryant drove into the Delran Amoco gas station. They waited by the air pump until a limousine departed from the station. Thereafter, they drove up to the gas pumps and attacked Michael Eck, the gas-station attendant. Eck was stabbed twenty-four times in the chest, shoulder, forearm, and groin. A stab wound to Eck’s heart was fatal, and the two wounds to Eck’s liver could also have been lethal. Eck, bleeding severely and gasping for breath, called 9-1-1. He died that night at the hospital from massive bleeding.

Later that evening, defendant went to the hospital to treat a knife wound to his left index finger sustained while stabbing Eck. The nurse who had treated Chrostowski’s stab wound earlier that evening suspected that defendant’s injury, which looked like a knife wound, was related to that stabbing. She called the police. The ensuing investigation by the police led to the identification and arrest of defendant and Bryant as the perpetrators of both stabbings.

During the initial custodial interrogation of defendant, he denied any involvement in the gas-station robbery-murder. However, he changed his story a number of times. In his first taped statement to police, defendant admitted to being present at the Amoco station, but he accused Bryant of being the one to stab Eck. In a second taped statement, defendant confessed to the crimes. He divulged that he and Bryant had agreed to commit a series of [242]*242robberies that night and that both he and Bryant stabbed Eck. Defendant admitted that he had intended to kill Eck, not to facilitate the robbery, but to eliminate him as a witness. Throughout his confession defendant showed very few signs of emotion or remorse.

A Burlington County jury convicted defendant of purposeful-or-knowing murder by his own conduct, felony murder, first-degree robbery (four counts), second-degree aggravated assault, and third-degree aggravated assault.

Defendant absented himself from the ensuing penalty phase of the trial. In lieu of presenting witnesses, defense counsel submitted a 200-page “mitigation book,” which included defendant’s school, medical, and psychiatric records, his Child Study Team report, a documentation of defendant’s childhood misbehavior, Bryant’s criminal and prison record, Bryant’s brother’s statement to the police inculpating Bryant as the primary perpetrator, and defense counsel’s prediction that defendant would die in prison if he were not sentenced to death. Defense counsel’s opening and closing argument stressed defendant’s troubled childhood, during which he suffered a stress ulcer, his mother’s deficient parenting, and his slow mental development and borderline intellectual functioning. Defendant, however, refused to meet with a psychiatrist or psychologist.

The jury unanimously found the existence of two aggravating factors: c(4)(f) (escape detection) and c(4)(g) (felony murder). Only ten of the twelve jurors concluded that the State had proven the c(4)(c) (torture or depravity) aggravating factor. At least one juror found four of the sixty c(5)(h) (catch-all) mitigating factors submitted by the defense. One juror found as mitigating the likelihood that defendant would die in prison prior to becoming eligible for parole, seven found as mitigating defendant’s lack of a criminal record, and ten concluded that defendant would not have committed the offenses “were it not for Alonzo Bryant.” Three jurors found sua sponte under the catch-all factor that defendant is his mother’s only child.

[243]*243The jurors unanimously concluded that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors. Accordingly, the sentence of death was imposed. Additionally, the trial court imposed an aggregate noncapital sentence of forty years imprisonment with a twenty-year parole disqualifier. This Court affirmed defendant’s convictions and sentences. Morton I, supra, 155 N.J. at 466, 715 A.2d 228.

II. INDIVIDUAL PROPORTIONALITY REVIEW

In State v. Loftin, 157 N.J. 253, 453-57, 724 A.2d 129 (Loftin II), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 897, 120 S.Ct. 229, 145 L.Ed.2d 193 (1999), this Court appointed Judge David S. Baime as a Special Master and ordered him to examine and make findings and recommendations regarding “individual proportionality review,” which concerns whether a specific defendant’s death sentence is out of proportion when compared with similarly-situated defendants and “systemic proportionality review,” which addresses allegations that invidious discrimination permeates the administration of the death penalty in this State. Judge Baime’s recommendations for individual proportionality review were adopted, for the most part, by this Court in In re Proportionality Review Project, 161 N.J. 71, 735 A.2d 528 (1999) (Proportionality Review I). Judge Baime’s report on systemic proportionality review, see David S. Baime, Report to the Neiv Jersey Supreme CouH: Systemic Proportionality Revietv Project (Dec. 1, 1999) (Baime Report II), has been examined in In re Proportionality Review Project II, 165 N.J. 206, 757 A.2d 168 (2000) (Proportionality Review II).

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Bluebook (online)
757 A.2d 184, 165 N.J. 235, 2000 N.J. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morton-nj-2000.