State v. Poinsett

502 A.2d 578, 206 N.J. Super. 307
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 12, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 502 A.2d 578 (State v. Poinsett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Poinsett, 502 A.2d 578, 206 N.J. Super. 307 (N.J. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

206 N.J. Super. 307 (1984)
502 A.2d 578

STATE OF NEW JERSEY
v.
JAMES POINSETT, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division Burlington County.

Decided December 12, 1984.

*309 Francis J. Hartman, for defendant (Francis J. Hartman, Chartered).

Rocco Minervino, Assistant Prosecutor, for the State (Stephen Raymond, Burlington County Prosecutor).

*310 HAINES, A.J.S.C.

The defendant, James Poinsett, and three others, have been indicted for various violations of the Controlled Dangerous Substances (CDS) Act. The indictment against Poinsett contains seven counts, which include charges of possession of CDS with intent to distribute. Substantial quantities of cocaine, methamphetamine and marijuana were seized at the time of his arrest and are claimed to be under his control.

Poinsett applied for admission to Burlington County's Pretrial Intervention Program (PTI). At the same time, he acknowledged his drug and alcohol addiction, entering into programs designed to overcome those problems. He also secured reemployment at an old job. He claimed a strong desire for rehabilitation. The PTI Director consented to his admission. The Prosecutor did not, basing his refusal upon prosecutorial policies relating to drug offenses, the needs of society, the nature of the offense and difficulties in prosecuting co-defendants. Consequently, Poinsett's application was denied. He appeals to this court from that denial as permitted by N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12 and R. 3:28.

The defendant has presented only the Prosecutor's refusal letter as the appellate record. Consideration of the appeal is therefore limited to an analysis of the Prosecutor's reasons and the facts recited above. These facts were exposed during argument without objection. They are not significant for the purposes of this opinion.

The Prosecutor's refusal cannot be reversed unless it is shown to have been a "patent and gross" abuse of discretion. The rule is set forth in State v. Bender, 80 N.J. 84 (1979):

Ordinarily, an abuse of discretion will be manifest if defendant can show that a prosecutorial veto (a) was not premised upon the consideration of all relevant factors, (b) was based upon the consideration of irrelevant or inappropriate factors, or (c) amounted to a clear error in judgment. [Citations omitted] In order for such an abuse of discretion to rise to the level of "patent and gross," it must further be shown that the prosecutorial error complained of will clearly subvert the goals underlying Pretrial Intervention. [at 93.]

*311 A. Consideration of the Individual

Defendant argues that the Prosecutor improperly ignored his individual characteristics, basing his rejection upon generalized concepts. Consideration of the individual characteristics is a basic PTI requirement. In State v. Leonardis, 71 N.J. 85 (1976) (Leonardis I), the Supreme Court said:

Because rehabilitation is dependent on an individual's propensity for correction, conditioning his admission solely on the nature of his crime may be both arbitrary and illogical. Greater emphasis should be placed on the offender than on the offense. [at 102.]

In State v. Maguire, 168 N.J. Super. 109 (App.Div. 1979), the court said:

It is obvious that the prosecutor, in writing the letters of December 1, 1977, failed to deal with defendants on a prompt and individual basis. The fact that the defendants were involved in a single night of wrongful conduct does not justify grouping them as he did. We are dealing with young persons whose futures hang in the balance, and whose applications for diversion mandate prompt individualized study and consideration. [at 116.]

In State v. Lamphere, 159 N.J. Super. 562 (App.Div. 1978), the court said:

The emphasis ... is on the individual offender and his potential for rehabilitation, rather than the offense or the offender's status. Neither these opinions nor the Guidelines authorize a priori exclusion of an offender from the program without a judgmental consideration of the individual and the offense. [at 565.]

In the present case, the Prosecutor addressed the individual defendant only in his recital of the facts that relate to the criminal charge. He did not mention the defendant's prospects for rehabilitation, his attitudes, his past history, or his present efforts to reconstruct his life. This omission is central, making the Prosecutor's reasons inadequate.

B. Prosecutorial Policy

The Prosecutor states:

Burlington County experiences a frightening proliferation of drug trafficking, both as a corridor County through which passes major highways that channel drugs from the importation points located in the South to the highly populated and profitable markets of the Northeast section in the United States and, more importantly, such trafficking within this county.
*312 It is the policy of this office that those individuals who are found trafficking in controlled dangerous substances within this County; in particular, those who traffic in cocaine and methamphetamine should be tried, and if found guilty, given a term of imprisonment within the New Jersey State Prison system. It is the firm belief of this Office that only such policy can deter such an insidious and covert crime such as this.
....
... to divert him would adversely affect the efforts of law enforcement within this County to protect the public from the pernicious evil of drug trafficking.

These are legitimate goals, and prosecutorial policy is an important PTI consideration. State v. Litton, 155 N.J. Super. 207 (App.Div. 1977), for example, acknowledges that the "prosecutor's responsiveness to prevailing levels of local public anxiety over certain forms of misconduct and its proper effect upon him in choosing between the goals of public deterrence and the least burdensome form of rehabilitation for the offender" cannot be discounted. Id. at 215. (This opinion was written during the early stages of PTI programs in New Jersey. It must be read in the light of its own acknowledgment that "the spirit of reserved and skeptical appraisal is not inappropriate at this still formative time in the life of the program." Id. at 216. State v. Sutton, 80 N.J. 110 (1979), held that "the degree of local public anxiety attaching to certain forms of misconduct" is a relevant "subjective" evaluation to be made by the Prosecutor. Id. at 119. It is apparent, however, that "automatic exclusion... is contrary to the purpose and philosophy underlining the adoption of the program...." State v. Lamphere, 159 N.J. Super. at 565. Consequently, prosecutorial policy, while a consideration, cannot be an absolute bar to PTI admission.

It is also true that N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12(e)(7) requires the Prosecutor and the Program Director to consider "[t]he needs and interests of the victim and society" and that subparagraph (17) requires them to consider "[w]hether or not the harm done to society by abandoning criminal prosecution would outweigh the benefits to society from channeling an offender into a *313 supervisory treatment program." The Prosecutor addressed these criteria by stating in his letter of rejection that:

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Bluebook (online)
502 A.2d 578, 206 N.J. Super. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-poinsett-njsuperctappdiv-1984.