State v. Oliver

627 A.2d 144, 133 N.J. 141, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 722
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 22, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 627 A.2d 144 (State v. Oliver) 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. Oliver, 627 A.2d 144, 133 N.J. 141, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 722 (N.J. 1993).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

*145 CLIFFORD, J.

Defendant, Lorenzo Oliver, was convicted of sexually assaulting two women, A.S. and A.D., and of aggravated assault on A.S. Defendant and the victims had been close friends for many years and had grown up in the same neighborhood. Each assault involved remarkably similar circumstances: the attacker lured the victims into his third-floor room while other family members were downstairs; engaged in conversation with his victims; drank some beer; and then resorted to brute force to cut off the victims’ air supply until they relented.

The trial court denied defendant’s motion to sever the prosecutions arising out of the separate attacks on A.S. and A.D. At a joint trial, over defendant’s objection the State offered the testimony of three other women who claimed that defendant had sexually assaulted them under similar circumstances. After a hearing pursuant to Evidence Rule 8, the trial court ruled the testimony admissible under Evidence Rule 55, apparently on the grounds that the similarity of the attacks showed a common scheme or plan and was relevant to defendant’s intent.

In an unreported opinion a divided panel of the Appellate Division reversed and remanded, holding that the trial court’s limiting instruction regarding the Evidence Rule 55 evidence had been inadequate and that the trial court had erred in not giving the jury a no-adverse-inference instruction regarding defendant’s election not to testify. The dissenting judge believed that the Evidence Rule 55 limiting instructions had been adequate, and that the failure to instruct on defendant’s decision not to testify, although wrong, amounted to harmless error. The State appeals as of right because of the dissent below. R. 2:2-l(a)(2). We affirm.

I

The State presented evidence tending to establish the following facts. A.S. and defendant had been close friends for twenty-six years; they had known each other from childhood and had grown *146 up in the same neighborhood. On the evening of June 2, 1988, defendant came to A.S.’s house to talk about “a case that was pending.” Finding discussion there difficult because of the presence of many other people, A.S. left with defendant at about 8:40 p.m. to go to his home in Newark. On the way defendant stopped to buy beer.

Arriving at defendant’s home, the two went upstairs to his third-floor room, where he customarily entertained guests and where’ A.S. had visited on many other occasions. Defendant’s mother and niece were downstairs, on the first floor. With music playing in the background, defendant and A.S. talked for about an hour, during which time defendant drank three or four beers. A.S. testified that defendant insisted she also have a beer, but that she did not drink much of it. After about an hour, A.S. told defendant that she needed to go back home to her children, but defendant refused to take her home. After another forty-five minutes, A.S. rose to leave. Defendant asked her to let him finish his beer. He then walked over to her, turned out the light, and grabbed her from behind. She thought he was joking and told him to “cut it out” because she had to go home. Defendant, a 250-pound part-time martial-arts instructor, refused to release his hold. They struggled, falling to the floor. During the struggle, defendant became more aggressive, telling A.S., “I want you.” A.S. screamed, and defendant, from his position on top of her on the floor, covered her nose and mouth and held her down with his body weight. Unable to breathe, A.S. stopped struggling and relaxed. Defendant then removed the pressure from her nose and mouth but did not let her up. When A.S. attempted to persuade defendant that he was ruining a twenty-six-year friendship, defendant replied that he did not care. At one point A.S. thought she had “gotten through to him,” and she asked him to let her get up, promising that they would talk and that she would not run.

A.S. stood up, picking up her bracelet, which had been broken in the fall. Almost immediately, the two began to fight again. During that struggle A.S. attempted to “dig [defendant’s] eyes out” with a broken piece of her bracelet and to scratch defendant’s *147 face with her fingernails. Defendant bit A.S.’s fingers, causing a fracture and a pinched nerve. The two ended up on the bed, with defendant on top. He again covered A.S.’s nose and mouth with his hands and pressed down with his body weight. A.S., afraid she would die, stopped struggling. Defendant released the pressure. She said to him, “Okay, okay Lorenzo, you wanted it, you can have it, you can have it.” Defendant thereupon proceeded to have vaginal intercourse with A.S.

After the sexual assault A.S. got up, picked up her underclothes, and headed downstairs. She was dishevelled and bloody. Although she saw defendant’s niece in the living room, A.S. did not say anything. She went into the bathroom to dress. When defendant came downstairs, A.S. left the house but came back in and accepted a ride home from defendant because it was almost midnight and because she “didn’t know where to go” and “didn’t have any transportation.”

Shortly after arriving home she reported the incident to the police, then went to University Hospital for treatment of her injured finger, in the course of which she told a nurse about the sexual assault. She then went to United Hospital because only that facility had kits for use in conducting sexual-assault examinations. There she gave a complete statement about the incident.

The second victim, A.D., was a longtime close friend of defendant and of A.S. as well. She had been trying to communicate with A.S. but had been unable to do so because A.S. had recently moved and A.D. did not know where to find her. On the evening of June 14, 1988, just twelve days after his assault on A.S., defendant visited A.D. at her home. Defendant told her that he had A.S.’s new telephone number at his home. When he asked A.D. to go there with him so he could give her the number, she complied.

Although A.D. “knew there were other people home,” she did not see anyone. Defendant and A.D. went to defendant’s room on the third floor, where defendant turned on music and drank some beer. He then left the room for a few minutes. • When he *148 returned, he closed the bedroom curtain and grabbed A.D. A struggle ensued, during which defendant told her he “wanted” her and that she knew how much he wanted her. Defendant told A.D. to “stop fighting him, it would only take three minutes.” Defendant threw A.D. on the bed, pinned her down, and cut off her breathing by pressing his forearm against her throat. When defendant told his victim that he would let her breathe if she would “shut up” and stop fighting, she stopped struggling. He then attempted to have vaginal intercourse with A.D. but could not maintain an erection. A.D. asked him to “give up,” but he proceeded to perform oral sex on A.D. Defendant drove A.D. home at about 1:30 a.m.

The State proffered the testimony of three other women, K.J., L.C.D., and J.A., who claimed to have been sexually assaulted by defendant in a similar manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
627 A.2d 144, 133 N.J. 141, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-oliver-nj-1993.