State v. Papasavvas

790 A.2d 798, 170 N.J. 462, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 14, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 790 A.2d 798 (State v. Papasavvas) 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. Papasavvas, 790 A.2d 798, 170 N.J. 462, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 51 (N.J. 2002).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Last term, we affirmed Peter Papasavvas’s conviction and death sentence for the murder of Mildred Place. State v. Papasavvas, 163 N.J. 565, 751 A.2d 40 (2000) (Papasavvas I). We preserved his right to challenge the proportionality of his death sentence. Id. at 626, 751 A.2d 40. We now conclude that Papasavvas was unfairly singled out for the ultimate sanction of death.

In reaching that conclusion, we remain keenly aware that Papasavvas committed a terrible crime that, standing alone, might legitimately be viewed as deathworthy. Such is not the inquiry on proportionality review, however. Proportionality review is a unique endeavor in our law:

Unlike direct review, proportionality review does not question whether an individual death sentence is justified by the facts and circumstances of the case or whether, in the abstract, the sentence imposed on a defendant is deserved on a moral level. On the contrary, its role is to place the sentence imposed for one terrible murder on a continuum of sentences imposed for other terrible murders to ensure that the defendant “has not been singled out unfairly for capital punishment.”
[State v. Timmendequas, 168 N.J. 20, 746, 773 A.2d 18 (2001) (internal citations omitted) (Long, J., dissenting) (slip op. at 1-2).]

When that singular process is carried out, Peter Papasavvas cannot be condemned to death.

*467 I. FACTS

The facts are set forth in detail in Papasavvas I, supra, 163 N.J. at 578-83, 751 A.2d 40, as modified in State v. Papasavvas, 164 N.J. 553, 553-54, 753 A.2d 1148 (2000) (Papasavvas II). We will, however, briefly restate those facts relevant to our proportionality review.

Shortly before nine o’clock in the evening on April 25, 1996, police officers arrived at Papasavvas’s home in Iselin, New Jersey to serve an arrest warrant on an unrelated matter. Earlier that day, Papasavvas had been told that his brother had attempted suicide. When Papasavvas saw the officers he fled from his house on foot, dressed only in his underwear.

Four blocks away, he broke into the basement of a house owned by Mildred Place, a sixty-four year-old woman who lived alone. There is no suggestion in the record that Papasavvas knew Mrs. Place personally or even knew about her. Mrs. Place returned home from a church function at approximately ten o’clock that evening. Unaware that Papasavvas was hiding in her basement, she spoke with a friend on the phone until 10:30 p.m. Shortly after that conversation ended, Mrs. Place encountered Papasavvas.

Although what happened next is contested by the parties, we do know that Mrs. Place’s body was discovered lying at the bottom of the basement stairs. One of her earrings and two of her sweater buttons were found at the top of the basement stairs, together with her slip and girdle, which had been cut, apparently by a pair of pinking shears. An autopsy revealed that Mrs. Place had sustained multiple physical injuries, including fractured vertebrae and ribs, hemorrhages and abrasions to her back and right side, contusions and abrasions to the bridge of her nose and right cheek, buttocks, and thighs, and extensive braising. Those injuries, according to the State’s experts, were consistent with a fall down the cellar steps. The medical examiner also discovered spermal fluid on Mrs. Place’s body. He did not find any evidence of penetration. Based on the foregoing evidence, the Attorney *468 General and the Public Defender propose different accounts of Mrs. Place’s murder.

According to the Attorney General, Papasavvas broke into Mrs. Place’s house to obtain clothing. He stole money, credit cards, and a telephone calling card and then heard Mrs. Place return home. Papasavvas emerged from the basement and ambushed her. After knocking her to the floor, he dragged her across the room and asphyxiated her by tying a belt around her head and mouth, thereby impeding her breathing. He then proceeded to cut off her clothes piece by piece. The cuts were straight, indicating that Mrs. Place was motionless at the time. When he finished removing her clothes, Papasavvas sexually assaulted and sodomized Mrs. Place. According to the State, after the sexual assault, Papasavvas strangled Mrs. Place and threw her down to the bottom of the basement stairs where she was found the following day. The State’s medical examiner concluded that Mrs. Place died from asphyxiation as a result of the belt pushing her tongue to the side.

The Public Defender offers the following contrary account. Papasavvas broke into Mrs. Place’s house to steal clothing and money. When he heard Mrs. Place return home, he decided to remain hidden in the basement until she went to sleep, at which time he planned to slip out of the house unnoticed. That plan went awry, however, when Mrs. Place opened the basement door and surprised Papasavvas, who was still dressed only in his underwear. To prevent her from screaming, Papasavvas placed her in a “sleeper hold.” When she lost consciousness, he let her go and she accidentally fell down the basement stairs and broke her neck — an injury so severe that it may have caused her death. Mistakenly believing that Mrs. Place was feigning her death, Papasavvas threatened to sexually assault her so that she would stop pretending. When she did not respond, he proceeded to have sexual contact with her as evidenced by the semen found on Mrs. Place’s body during the autopsy. After Mrs. Place’s death, Papa *469 savvas rummaged through her pocketbook and closets, stealing some clothing, two credit cards, and a telephone calling card.

There is little dispute over the remaining evidence. At 11:15 p.m., Papasavvas used Mrs. Place’s telephone to call his own house. Before dialing his phone number, Papasavvas dialed “ *67” so that Mrs. Place’s phone number would not appear on his call recognition (caller ID) box. The telephone call did, however, appear on Mrs. Place’s bill. Papasavvas stole Mrs. Place’s automobile and drove to New York City, where he spent the night with Rosa Talbert, a female acquaintance. The next day, Papasavvas and Talbert drove to a liquor store and purchased wine and champagne using Mrs. Place’s credit card. Talbert signed the receipt at Papasavvas’s request after he told her that the card belonged to his mother. That same day, Papasavvas had his hair cut at a barber shop located in the vicinity of Talbert’s apartment. Papasavvas left Talbert’s apartment two days later, leaving behind Mrs. Place’s clothing. Nineteen days after the murder, Papasavvas turned himself in to the police.

During the guilt phase of the trial, Papasavvas introduced evidence of his life history. Born in Livingston, New Jersey in 1972, Papasavvas was one of four siblings. His childhood is most remarkable for the verbal and physical abuse he endured. Whenever Papasavvas’s father, Chris Papasavvas, suspected that any of his sons was misbehaving, he would take all three children downstairs to the basement, strip them, tie them to a column, and beat them with a belt or stick.

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Bluebook (online)
790 A.2d 798, 170 N.J. 462, 2002 N.J. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-papasavvas-nj-2002.