State v. Samander S. Dabas (069498)

71 A.3d 814, 215 N.J. 114
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 30, 2013
DocketA-109-11
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 71 A.3d 814 (State v. Samander S. Dabas (069498)) 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. Samander S. Dabas (069498), 71 A.3d 814, 215 N.J. 114 (N.J. 2013).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant Samander Dabas was convicted of the murder of his wife based largely on statements he made to prosecutor’s investigators in the early morning hours of August 25, 2004. An investigator’s purposeful destruction of his notes taken during two hours of Dabas’s interrogation is at the heart of the appeal before us.

After Dabas’s arrest, Investigator John Dando of the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office conducted a two-hour “pre-interview” during which he asked Dabas open-ended questions and recorded, in handwritten notes, Dabas’s answers. Then, Investigator Dan-do—using his interview notes—conducted a tape-recorded interrogation of Dabas, lasting approximately fifteen minutes. During this abbreviated interrogation, Investigator Dando asked Dabas leading questions that mostly elicited one-word answers, some of which were highly incriminating.

*118 Dabas was indicted for murder and a related offense. At the time of Dabas’s indictment, and for over one year afterwards, Investigator Dando’s notes of Dabas’s statements made during the two-hour pre-interview remained in the prosecutor’s file. The prosecutor’s office did not provide those notes to the defense as required by our discovery rule, R. 3:13-3, 1 and case law, see State v. Marshall, 123 N.J. 1, 133-34, 586 A.2d 85 (1991), cert. denied, 507 U.S. 929, 113 S.Ct. 1306, 122 L.Ed.2d 694 (1993). Instead, Investigator Dando prepared a final typewritten report into which he purportedly incorporated his contemporaneous interview notes. In the report, Investigator Dando concluded that Dabas purposely killed his wife. With the report completed, Dando destroyed his interview notes.

At trial, the court denied Dabas’s request for a charge that would have allowed the jury to draw an adverse inference from the destruction of the interview notes. The Appellate Division reversed Dabas’s conviction based on the trial court’s failure to give the adverse-inference charge.

We affirm the Appellate Division. After a defendant’s indictment, as part of its discovery obligations, the prosecution is obliged to provide to the defense any statement made by the defendant that is memorialized in a police officer’s notes. See R. 3:13-3. Our discovery rale and case law are crystal clear on this point. Moreover, we have warned prosecutors that we strongly disapprove of the destruction of interview notes, even earlier in the investigative process. See State v. Cook, 179 N.J. 533, 542 n. 3, 847 A.2d 530 (2004); State v. Branch, 182 N.J. 338, 367 n. 10, 865 A.2d 673 (2005). We sent that message with the expectation that law enforcement officers would preserve their contemporaneous notes of witness interviews. In State v. W.B., 205 N.J. 588, *119 608, 17 A.3d 187 (2011), we left no doubt that law enforcement officers must preserve their handwritten interview notes even before the State is required to tender discovery to the defense under Rule 3:13-3. W.B. covered the gap between the investigation and a defendant’s indictment. See ibid.

Here, we are not dealing with the destruction of interview notes before an indictment—the issue addressed in Cook, Branch, and W.B. In this ease, the prosecutor’s office possessed the notes at a time when it was required to provide them to the defense in accordance with Rule 3:13-3. In violation of that rule, the prosecutor’s office withheld the notes from the defense and then destroyed them. Whether the precise words uttered by Dabas during the two-hour pre-interview were fully and accurately incorporated into Dando’s final report, just as they appeared in Dando’s handwritten notes, can now never be known. By shredding those notes, Dando destroyed evidence—the best evidence of what Dabas said during two hours of interrogation. Because of the flagrant violation of the discovery rule, we hold that the trial court erred in denying the defense an adverse-inference charge. That error was “clearly capable of producing an unjust result,” R. 2:10-2, and therefore a new trial must be granted.

I.

A.

On December 21, 2004, defendant Samander Dabas was charged in a Middlesex County indictment with the first-degree purposeful or knowing murder of his wife, Renu Dabas, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1) or (2), and the third-degree attempt to leave the scene of a fatal motor vehicle accident, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-1 and N.J.S.A. 2C:11-5.1. The facts relevant to this appeal are gleaned from Dabas’s twenty-four-day jury trial that began on May 24 and concluded on July 9, 2007.

*120 B.

Dabas immigrated to the United States from India approximately twenty-five years ago and became a citizen of this country and a New Jersey resident. Sometime in 2003, during a trip to India, Dabas married Renu. Dabas returned to New Jersey and made arrangements for his wife to secure a visa to enter the United States. In late July 2004, when Renu arrived in New Jersey, the newlyweds took up residence in the home of Dabas’s sister and brother-in-law, Shushila and Jitander Khatri, in South Brunswick.

Dabas worked full-time at a manufacturing company and part-time at the Khatris’ Dollar City store in the South Brunswick Square Mall. On August 24, 2004, Dabas awakened at approximately 6:00 a.m. He and Renu spent the day together. At approximately 5:00 p.m., Dabas brought Renu with him to Dollar City where he was scheduled to work a shift. At some point, Dabas left Renu stocking shelves while he went to a nearby liquor store to purchase a bottle of Dewar’s Scotch. Back at the store, Dabas drank two coffee mugs of Scotch and water. At approximately 9:00 p.m., Dabas closed the store and walked with Renu to his parked minivan. As Dabas began driving out of the parking lot with Renu seated beside him, the minivan struck a free, causing the airbags to deploy.

A short time later, witnesses observed Renu’s unconscious body, half lying in the mall parking lot and half on the sidewalk. She was bleeding from her mouth, nose, and ears. In the meantime, Dabas was seen moving between the opened hood of the minivan and the driver’s seat. He was not paying any attention to his seriously injured wife. What occurred in the minutes between the minivan striking the tree and this surreal scene would later be explained in a statement Dabas made to prosecutor’s investigators.

When Officer Robert Jairdullo of the South Brunswick Township Police Department arrived at the mall parking lot, shortly after 9:25 p.m., Dabas was behind the wheel, attempting to start the minivan.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A.3d 814, 215 N.J. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-samander-s-dabas-069498-nj-2013.