State v. Wilbert Hannah (084052) (Hudson County & Statewide)
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Opinion
SYLLABUS
This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
State v. Wilbert Hannah (A-74/75-19) (084052)
January 4, 2021 -- Reargued March 31, 2021 -- Decided August 18, 2021
ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.
The Court considers whether Wilbert Hannah was denied a fair trial because critical evidence was withheld from the jury that supported his third-party-guilt defense. Hannah has presented two alternative grounds for post-conviction relief to the Court -- either the evidence in question was newly discovered and would have altered the outcome of his trial, or his counsel had the critical evidence in his file and was derelict in not using it, rendering him constitutionally ineffective.
In August 1993, Hannah and co-defendant William LaCue were indicted for murder and other offenses. The State presented testimony that shortly after midnight on June 7, 1993, Jersey City police officers responded to a report of gunshots and found the lifeless bodies of Angel Salazar and Luis Flores in a parked car. In the driver’s seat lay Salazar with a gunshot wound to his left temple. Directly behind him in the back seat lay Flores with three gunshot wounds to the right side of his face and a fourth to his right shoulder.
The central pillar of the State’s case was the testimony of LaCue. As part of a cooperation agreement with the State, LaCue gave three recorded statements to the police. In the first two, he told the police that he alone killed Salazar and Flores. In his third statement and again later in his trial testimony, LaCue stated that Hannah, who was also known by the name of Rabb, shot Salazar from the front passenger seat. The State also introduced testimony from Rosa Flores, Salazar’s wife and Flores’s sister, and Hazel Forrester, who had been in a relationship with Hannah. Rosa Flores testified that a person who identified himself as Rabb spoke to Salazar on the phone at around 11 p.m. on June 6, and that Salazar and Flores left after the call. Hazel Forrester testified that Hannah appeared at around 11:30 p.m. at the apartment where she lived with her sister, Arlene, that she overheard him telling her sister that he had killed a person named Fred (Salazar’s nickname), that Hannah told her that he had killed someone, that Fred had previously called the apartment several times, asking for Rabb, and that the phone number on a bloody piece of paper recovered from Salazar’s pocket after the shooting was her sister’s. No DNA or fingerprint evidence linked Hannah to the victims’ car.
1 Hannah testified that he, LaCue, and Maurice Thomas were heroin dealers, operating independently, in the same area of Jersey City. Among their drug sources were two New York suppliers, Salazar and Flores. Hannah testified that, on the evening of June 6, 1993, LaCue and Thomas were talking to the New York suppliers near their car while Hannah walked away to chat with a woman across the street. He heard gunshots and began to run. According to Hannah, Thomas and LaCue were the gunmen, and Thomas framed Hannah.
Certain evidence was never presented at trial. First, a six-page report prepared by Lieutenant Charles Redd of the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office provided a narrative of the homicide investigation and Thomas’s importance to that investigation. The Redd Report revealed that investigators found in the victims’ car a pager number listed to “Rabb.” When that number was called, however, it was Thomas who responded to the page. As a result, Thomas was interviewed. Before his arrival at the Prosecutor’s Office, Thomas made an anonymous telephone call to Jersey City Police Communications and claimed that Rabb and LaCue were responsible for the killings. During the interview, he told investigators that “he did not know the victims” or LaCue and that he was with his girlfriend, Arlene Forrester, and her sister, Hazel Forrester, at the time of the shootings. Thomas eventually conceded that he was not truthful when he denied knowing LaCue, and some of his statements about Hazel and Arlene were inconsistent. After Thomas left the interview, the police received another anonymous telephone call, stating that Hannah had confessed to killing the victims, not only to Thomas but also to the caller and Hazel Forrester. Afterwards, Hazel and Arlene were interviewed by the police, and Arlene admitted that she was the anonymous caller.
Because the defense did not call Lieutenant Redd as a witness, the jury never learned that Salazar and Flores had Thomas’s pager number in their possession when they were murdered, nor did they hear that LaCue had left a message on Thomas’s pager, asking to speak with him, the day after the murders.
The jury also did not hear the testimony of Thomas’s mother, Mary Jones, who had information that not only inferentially implicated her son in the murders, but also provided a motive for her son to frame Hannah. Jones acknowledged that her son and Hannah were drug dealers who sometimes worked together, and she testified to a number of comments Thomas made to her that suggested he had participated in the killings and planned to frame Hannah for them. The court rejected defense counsel’s argument that the testimony of Mary Jones was admissible under the co-conspirator’s exception to the hearsay rule. Defense counsel did not argue that Thomas’s admissions to his mother constituted statements against interest under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), nor did the court address that alternate ground for the admissibility of Jones’s testimony. In her summation remarks, the prosecutor told the jury, “[T]here is not a stitch, a scintilla, a scintilla, a bit, an ounce, a piece of evidence, that links [Thomas] to that murder.”
2 The Appellate Division affirmed, determining that Thomas’s statements to Jones were not admissible as statements against interest. The Court denied certification.
In his first petition for PCR, Hannah asserted ineffective assistance of counsel by his trial and appellate attorneys, claiming, among their deficiencies, their failure to adequately present the case for the admission of the testimony of Thomas’s mother. The PCR court denied the petition without an evidentiary hearing; after the Appellate Division remanded for a hearing, the PCR court again denied relief. The Appellate Division affirmed; the Court denied certification, and the federal district court denied Hannah’s habeas corpus petition.
Hannah’s copy of the case file, including trial discovery and transcripts, was lost during a lockdown at Trenton State Prison, and Hannah received a replacement copy. Hannah averred that, for the first time, he observed the Redd Report, which disclosed that Thomas responded to a pager number found in the victims’ car.
In his second PCR petition, Hannah moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. In January 2008, the PCR court denied Hannah’s petition without an evidentiary hearing. In February 2008, Hannah’s former PCR counsel certified that, to his recollection, the Redd Report did not appear in the file provided to him by the Public Defender’s Office. In February 2009, the Appellate Division reversed the second PCR court and remanded for an evidentiary hearing.
Before the evidentiary hearing, Hannah filed a motion to recuse the PCR judge because he had served as the Hudson County Prosecutor when that office opposed Hannah’s PCR application. The PCR judge declined to disqualify himself and denied Hannah post-conviction relief. The Appellate Division held that the PCR judge should have recused himself and remanded for a new hearing before a different judge.
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SYLLABUS
This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
State v. Wilbert Hannah (A-74/75-19) (084052)
January 4, 2021 -- Reargued March 31, 2021 -- Decided August 18, 2021
ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.
The Court considers whether Wilbert Hannah was denied a fair trial because critical evidence was withheld from the jury that supported his third-party-guilt defense. Hannah has presented two alternative grounds for post-conviction relief to the Court -- either the evidence in question was newly discovered and would have altered the outcome of his trial, or his counsel had the critical evidence in his file and was derelict in not using it, rendering him constitutionally ineffective.
In August 1993, Hannah and co-defendant William LaCue were indicted for murder and other offenses. The State presented testimony that shortly after midnight on June 7, 1993, Jersey City police officers responded to a report of gunshots and found the lifeless bodies of Angel Salazar and Luis Flores in a parked car. In the driver’s seat lay Salazar with a gunshot wound to his left temple. Directly behind him in the back seat lay Flores with three gunshot wounds to the right side of his face and a fourth to his right shoulder.
The central pillar of the State’s case was the testimony of LaCue. As part of a cooperation agreement with the State, LaCue gave three recorded statements to the police. In the first two, he told the police that he alone killed Salazar and Flores. In his third statement and again later in his trial testimony, LaCue stated that Hannah, who was also known by the name of Rabb, shot Salazar from the front passenger seat. The State also introduced testimony from Rosa Flores, Salazar’s wife and Flores’s sister, and Hazel Forrester, who had been in a relationship with Hannah. Rosa Flores testified that a person who identified himself as Rabb spoke to Salazar on the phone at around 11 p.m. on June 6, and that Salazar and Flores left after the call. Hazel Forrester testified that Hannah appeared at around 11:30 p.m. at the apartment where she lived with her sister, Arlene, that she overheard him telling her sister that he had killed a person named Fred (Salazar’s nickname), that Hannah told her that he had killed someone, that Fred had previously called the apartment several times, asking for Rabb, and that the phone number on a bloody piece of paper recovered from Salazar’s pocket after the shooting was her sister’s. No DNA or fingerprint evidence linked Hannah to the victims’ car.
1 Hannah testified that he, LaCue, and Maurice Thomas were heroin dealers, operating independently, in the same area of Jersey City. Among their drug sources were two New York suppliers, Salazar and Flores. Hannah testified that, on the evening of June 6, 1993, LaCue and Thomas were talking to the New York suppliers near their car while Hannah walked away to chat with a woman across the street. He heard gunshots and began to run. According to Hannah, Thomas and LaCue were the gunmen, and Thomas framed Hannah.
Certain evidence was never presented at trial. First, a six-page report prepared by Lieutenant Charles Redd of the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office provided a narrative of the homicide investigation and Thomas’s importance to that investigation. The Redd Report revealed that investigators found in the victims’ car a pager number listed to “Rabb.” When that number was called, however, it was Thomas who responded to the page. As a result, Thomas was interviewed. Before his arrival at the Prosecutor’s Office, Thomas made an anonymous telephone call to Jersey City Police Communications and claimed that Rabb and LaCue were responsible for the killings. During the interview, he told investigators that “he did not know the victims” or LaCue and that he was with his girlfriend, Arlene Forrester, and her sister, Hazel Forrester, at the time of the shootings. Thomas eventually conceded that he was not truthful when he denied knowing LaCue, and some of his statements about Hazel and Arlene were inconsistent. After Thomas left the interview, the police received another anonymous telephone call, stating that Hannah had confessed to killing the victims, not only to Thomas but also to the caller and Hazel Forrester. Afterwards, Hazel and Arlene were interviewed by the police, and Arlene admitted that she was the anonymous caller.
Because the defense did not call Lieutenant Redd as a witness, the jury never learned that Salazar and Flores had Thomas’s pager number in their possession when they were murdered, nor did they hear that LaCue had left a message on Thomas’s pager, asking to speak with him, the day after the murders.
The jury also did not hear the testimony of Thomas’s mother, Mary Jones, who had information that not only inferentially implicated her son in the murders, but also provided a motive for her son to frame Hannah. Jones acknowledged that her son and Hannah were drug dealers who sometimes worked together, and she testified to a number of comments Thomas made to her that suggested he had participated in the killings and planned to frame Hannah for them. The court rejected defense counsel’s argument that the testimony of Mary Jones was admissible under the co-conspirator’s exception to the hearsay rule. Defense counsel did not argue that Thomas’s admissions to his mother constituted statements against interest under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), nor did the court address that alternate ground for the admissibility of Jones’s testimony. In her summation remarks, the prosecutor told the jury, “[T]here is not a stitch, a scintilla, a scintilla, a bit, an ounce, a piece of evidence, that links [Thomas] to that murder.”
2 The Appellate Division affirmed, determining that Thomas’s statements to Jones were not admissible as statements against interest. The Court denied certification.
In his first petition for PCR, Hannah asserted ineffective assistance of counsel by his trial and appellate attorneys, claiming, among their deficiencies, their failure to adequately present the case for the admission of the testimony of Thomas’s mother. The PCR court denied the petition without an evidentiary hearing; after the Appellate Division remanded for a hearing, the PCR court again denied relief. The Appellate Division affirmed; the Court denied certification, and the federal district court denied Hannah’s habeas corpus petition.
Hannah’s copy of the case file, including trial discovery and transcripts, was lost during a lockdown at Trenton State Prison, and Hannah received a replacement copy. Hannah averred that, for the first time, he observed the Redd Report, which disclosed that Thomas responded to a pager number found in the victims’ car.
In his second PCR petition, Hannah moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. In January 2008, the PCR court denied Hannah’s petition without an evidentiary hearing. In February 2008, Hannah’s former PCR counsel certified that, to his recollection, the Redd Report did not appear in the file provided to him by the Public Defender’s Office. In February 2009, the Appellate Division reversed the second PCR court and remanded for an evidentiary hearing.
Before the evidentiary hearing, Hannah filed a motion to recuse the PCR judge because he had served as the Hudson County Prosecutor when that office opposed Hannah’s PCR application. The PCR judge declined to disqualify himself and denied Hannah post-conviction relief. The Appellate Division held that the PCR judge should have recused himself and remanded for a new hearing before a different judge.
At the new evidentiary hearing in 2014, the new PCR judge denied Hannah relief, making factual findings that (1) “it is probable that [Hannah’s] counsel was in possession of the [Redd] report” and that (2) “it [is] highly unlikely that the report was suppressed at trial,” as well as legal findings the evidence would not have changed the outcome at trial. The Appellate Division affirmed, but nevertheless remanded for a hearing to “address whether the pager was newly discovered evidence.” The Court denied certification.
In August 2018, a fourth evidentiary hearing was conducted. The court found that Hannah had not satisfied the three prongs of the standard for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. The Appellate Division affirmed on the ground that Thomas’s statements were not admissible as statements against interest. In so holding, the appellate court seemingly accepted that Hannah did not have the Redd Report, despite the findings of the third PCR court, which were affirmed on appeal. The Court granted certification. 242 N.J. 502 (2020). 3 HELD: Based on the record, Hannah has established that his counsel rendered constitutionally deficient representation and that, but for counsels’ errors, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial would have been different. The Court reverses the judgment of the Appellate Division denying Hannah post-conviction relief, vacates his judgment of conviction, and remands for a new trial.
1. Hannah’s argument that the information in the Redd Report was newly discovered evidence was adjudicated at an evidentiary hearing before the third PCR judge, who found, based on the record before him, that “it is probable that [Hannah’s] counsel was in possession of the [Redd] report” and “highly unlikely that the report was suppressed at trial.” The fourth PCR judge should have adhered to the finality of that decision. For purposes of this appeal, the Court accepts that counsel at trial, on direct appeal, and at the first PCR hearing had the Redd Report and somehow overlooked it. (pp. 32-33)
2. The question that remains is whether each of those counsel rendered ineffective assistance of counsel by not utilizing the Redd Report, and whether errors by trial counsel contributed to the court’s findings that Thomas’s mother’s testimony was inadmissible. Stressing that Hannah’s ineffective-assistance argument has not received a meaningful review and that there is a voluminous record from the trial and PCR evidentiary hearings, the Court considers Hannah’s claim to determine whether he was denied a fair trial and whether his conviction constitutes a fundamental injustice. Rules 3:22-4 and -5 permit review of otherwise barred claims to prevent a fundamental injustice, which occurs when an error or violation played a role in the determination of guilt. (pp. 33-37)
3. In a criminal case, the accused is guaranteed the effective assistance of counsel by the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution, Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 684-85 (1984), and Article I, Paragraph 10 of the New Jersey Constitution, State v. Fritz, 105 N.J. 42, 58 (1987). The test for determining whether counsel failed to provide the effective assistance required by the Federal and State Constitutions is set forth in Strickland and Fritz: first, a defendant must demonstrate that counsel’s representation was deficient -- that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness -- and second, he must show a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different but for counsel’s deficiencies. (pp. 37-39)
4. A defendant has a constitutional right to present a complete defense, including the right to introduce evidence of third-party guilt. In this case, defense counsel’s trial strategy was to advance an effective and credible third-party-guilt defense that Thomas -- not Hannah -- committed the crime. The success of that trial strategy required counsel merely to raise a reasonable doubt about Hannah’s guilt. Third-party-guilt evidence is admissible so long as the proof offered has a rational tendency to engender a reasonable doubt with respect to an essential feature of the State’s case, and third-party statements against penal interest are generally admissible where the proffered evidence draws a direct connection between the third party and the commission of the crime. (pp. 39-40) 4 5. In light of the factual findings of the third PCR judge, the Court accepts that Hannah’s trial counsel had the Redd Report. The exclusion of that evidence must be considered in conjunction with the other evidence withheld -- the testimony of Thomas’s mother. The mother’s damning testimony inculpating her son came in two forms -- her recounting statements against interest made by Thomas and her observations of Thomas involved in drug activities seemingly linked to the murdered drug dealers. The mother’s testimony did not get before the jury, however, because of Hannah’s counsel’s failure to present the proper evidentiary argument for the testimony’s admissibility -- an error magnified and multiplied by errors made by the trial court, the PCR courts, and the Appellate Division. The Court explains that the mother’s testimony about Thomas’s statements against penal interest were admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25); that trial counsel’s failure to identify that rule to the trial court cannot be ascribed to strategy; that the Appellate Division’s determination on direct appeal that N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) required the statement both to inculpate Thomas and exculpate Hannah was mistaken; and that the prosecutor unfairly exploited the derelictions of defense counsel when -- despite her knowledge of the Redd Report and the testimony by Thomas’s mother -- she told the jury in summation that there was not “a scintilla” or “a piece of evidence” linking Thomas to the murder. (pp. 40-49)
6. Applying the Strickland/Fritz test, the Court finds that Hannah has shown both that counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and that, to a degree of reasonable probability, the outcome of the trial would have been different but for counsel’s mistakes, which were magnified by mistakes made by the trial court and the prosecutor and perpetuated through various rounds of PCR proceedings. Counsel’s deficiencies deprived Hannah of his constitutional right to present a complete and credible third-party-guilt defense. One important factor in analyzing whether the prejudice from counsel’s ineffective performance denied Hannah a fair trial is the strength of the State’s case; here, the State presented far from overwhelming evidence of Hannah’s guilt. Among other examples, the Court cites LaCue’s credibility issues and the timing discrepancies in the other witnesses’ accounts. The Court also reviews the evidence that Hannah should have been able to introduce to support his version of events -- evidence that undoubtedly lay at the heart of his right to present a complete defense and whose admission was necessary to ensure the basic fairness of his trial. (pp. 49-52)
7. The combined errors in this case constitute a fundamental injustice that denied Hannah a fair trial. But for counsel’s errors -- combined with those made by the trial court and prosecutor -- there is a reasonable probability that, had the jury heard the withheld evidence, the outcome of the trial would have been different. The issue is not whether the State presented sufficient evidence for the jury to return a guilty verdict, but whether Hannah was denied the opportunity to present a full defense. The passage of time alone cannot bar relief to a defendant deprived of a fair trial. (pp. 52-53)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED. Hannah’s judgment of conviction is VACATED, and the matter is REMANDED for a new trial. 5 CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER concurs in full with the Court’s opinion and writes separately to ask the Committee on Evidence to examine whether N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) should be amended. Noting that the federal counterpart to Rule 803(c)(25) contains an additional requirement beyond those of the New Jersey rule -- to be admissible, a statement against interest must not only be against the declarant’s interest but must also be “supported by corroborating circumstances that clearly indicate its trustworthiness,” Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(3) -- Chief Justice Rabner explains that the requirement serves to assure both the prosecution and the accused that the Rule will not be abused and that only reliable hearsay statements will be admitted under the exception. Chief Justice Rabner recommends that the Committee on Evidence consider whether a corroboration requirement should be added to N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) for the same reason. The Chief Justice does not suggest that such a requirement would have had an effect in this case.
JUSTICE SOLOMON, dissenting, reviews the evidence presented and writes that it undercuts several defense claims, notably that Rosa Flores did not know who “Rabb” was; that Salazar was shot from outside the car; that the Redd Report contained key information otherwise unavailable to the jury; and that the Redd Report and certain excluded testimony was purely exculpatory. In Justice Solomon’s view, defense counsel cannot be considered deficient in failing to use the Redd Report because it implicated defendant in the felony murder, robbery, and weapons charges he faced. Justice Solomon adds that there is no reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different had the report been used because the Redd Report contains no evidence that undermines defendant’s felony murder conviction. For the same reason that defendant is unable to show ineffective assistance of counsel here, Justice Solomon writes, he is unable to demonstrate that the rules barring his PCR request must be relaxed to prevent a fundamental injustice. In Justice Solomon’s view, it is unclear why, after more than two decades, defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim premised on counsel’s failure to use the Redd Report was not raised on direct appeal or during defendant’s first or second PCR and was instead raised after Thomas had died. Justice Solomon finds that the State presented overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt and that there is no clear reason to disturb the jury’s verdict.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER also filed a concurrence. JUSTICE SOLOMON filed a dissent, in which JUSTICES PATTERSON and FERNANDEZ-VINA join.
6 SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY A-74/75 September Term 2019 084052
State of New Jersey,
Plaintiff-Respondent/Cross-Appellant,
v.
Wilbert Hannah, a/k/a Rabe,
Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Respondent.
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Argued Decided January 4, 2021 August 18, 2021 Reargued March 31, 2021
Andrew R. Burroughs, Designated Counsel, argued the cause for appellant/cross-respondent (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Andrew R. Burroughs, on the briefs).
Ednin D. Martinez, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for respondent/cross-appellant (Esther Suarez, Hudson County Prosecutor, attorney; Ednin D. Martinez, on the briefs).
Daniel A. Finkelstein, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for amicus curiae Attorney General of New Jersey (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Daniel A. Finkelstein, of counsel and on the brief).
1 JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal comes to us from Wilbert Hannah’s fourteen-year odyssey
through the post-conviction relief process and his repeated efforts to overturn
his 1994 felony murder convictions. The essential issue is whether Hannah
was denied a fair trial because critical evidence was withheld from the jury
that supported his third-party-guilt defense.
The trial turned largely on the testimony of William LaCue, a co-
defendant, who struck a favorable plea agreement with the State and became
the prosecution’s star witness. LaCue testified that he and Hannah shot and
killed two drug dealers and stole their drugs. But LaCue gave varying
contradictory stories to the police and his account of Hannah’s involvement in
the shooting conflicted with the forensic evidence presented by the State.
Hannah testified that the second gunman was Maurice Thomas, who was
involved in the local drug trade. The jury rejected Hannah’s third-party-guilt
defense and convicted him of felony murder of the two drug dealers.
But the jury did not hear the full story. A series of fatal trial errors
committed by Hannah’s defense counsel -- errors compounded by the trial
court and exploited by the prosecutor -- kept from the jury evidence that likely
would have altered the outcome of the verdict. The jury did not hear that
2 investigators found in the pocket of one of the victims a bloody piece of paper
bearing a pager number and that when investigators called that number,
Thomas responded. The jury did not hear Thomas’s mother’s testimony that
her son made various statements inferentially implicating himself in the
murders, that he plotted to frame Hannah, that he split drug monies with
LaCue, and that he apparently came into possession of the heroin taken from
the dead drug dealers.
The ineffective assistance of Hannah’s various counsel has evaded a
meaningful review, despite many post-conviction hearings and appeals. The
purpose of a PCR hearing is to provide a procedure to uncover mistakes that
may have caused an unjust result. State v. Hess, 207 N.J. 123, 144-45 (2011).
The legal missteps and errors and the resulting prejudice to Hannah are now
before us.
Even the best system of justice will result in some wrongful convictions.
We cannot remedy every wrongful conviction, but we must remedy those that
come to our attention. “[P]ost-conviction relief [is] the last line of defense
against a miscarriage of justice.” State v. Nash, 212 N.J. 518, 526 (2013).
We hold that, based on the record before us, Hannah has established that
his counsel rendered constitutionally deficient representation and that, but for
counsels’ errors, there is a reasonable probability that the outcome of the trial
3 would have been different. See Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 694
(1984), and State v. Fritz, 105 N.J. 42, 58 (1987). We therefore reverse the
judgment of the Appellate Division denying Hannah post-conviction relief,
vacate his judgment of conviction, and remand for a new trial consistent with
this opinion.
I.
A.
On August 25, 1993, a Hudson County Grand Jury indicted Hannah and
LaCue on two counts of purposeful or knowing murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1)
or (2); two counts of felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3); two counts of
armed robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1; and two counts of possession of a weapon
for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a).
The State’s Case
The State presented testimony that shortly after midnight on June 7,
1993, Jersey City police officers responded to a report of gunshots near the
intersection of Clinton Avenue and Sackett Street in Jersey City. There, in a
parked gray two-door Buick, they found the lifeless bodies of Angel Salazar
and Luis Flores. In the driver’s seat lay Salazar with a gunshot wound to his
left temple. Directly behind him in the back seat lay Flores with three gunshot
wounds to the right side of his face and a fourth to his right shoulder.
4 A pathologist for the State Medical Examiner’s office stated that the
bullet that killed Salazar entered the left side of his head at a downward,
approximately 45-degree angle while he was likely sitting upright -- a finding
consistent with a shooter firing from a standing position outside the car. 1 No
gunpowder residue was found on his skin, and the bullet that killed Salazar
was found still lodged in his head. The shots that struck the right side of
Flores’s head, killing him, were fired at a slightly upward angle and at close
range -- evidenced by powder burns.
The central pillar of the State’s case was the testimony of LaCue. As
part of a cooperation agreement with the State, LaCue pled guilty to charges of
aggravated manslaughter and armed robbery in exchange for the dismissal of
the murder and felony murder charges against him.
After LaCue’s arrest for the murders, he gave three recorded statements
to the police. In the first two statements, he told the police that he alone killed
Salazar and Flores. Those two false statements gave way to LaCue’s third
statement, which implicated Hannah in the murders. LaCue’s statement as
1 Indeed, a police investigation report revealed that the driver’s side window was punctured with a bullet hole and the window had partially collapsed into the car. No testimony, however, was elicited on that point.
5 well as his testimony placed Hannah in the front passenger seat when Hannah
allegedly shot Salazar -- a claim at odds with the forensic evidence.
LaCue gave the following account at trial. On June 6, 1993, Hannah,
who was also known by the name of Rabb, 2 arranged to purchase
approximately 2,200 “bags” of heroin from New York drug dealers that
evening in Jersey City. Hannah, however, had no intention of paying for the
heroin. With LaCue as his accomplice, Hannah hatched a plan to shoot the
drug dealers and steal the drugs. At around 10:30 p.m., Hannah and LaCue
retrieved two guns from Hannah’s house and then awaited the arrival of the
drug dealers.
Shortly afterwards, a grey two-door car appeared with two men, the
driver (later identified as Salazar) and a front seat passenger (later identified as
Flores). Flores exited the car and took a seat behind Salazar. LaCue got into
the back of the car with Flores, and Hannah took the front passenger’s seat
next to Salazar. They drove around a block in Jersey City, and then Hannah
told Salazar to park the car. There, Salazar handed a package of drugs to
Hannah and asked for the money. At that point, Hannah and LaCue drew their
guns, and the two drug dealers pled for their lives. As Salazar reached for the
2 We have adopted the trial testimony’s spelling of “Rabb” rather than the spelling of that name in the caption.
6 driver’s door, apparently intending to exit, Hannah told him to keep his hands
on the steering wheel. Then, according to LaCue, Hannah shot Salazar twice,
and LaCue shot Flores twice. LaCue stated that Hannah fired his gun within
six inches of the right side of Salazar’s head. The two shooters then exited the
car and ran.
As they ran, Hannah handed his gun to LaCue and told him to get rid of
both firearms. LaCue brought the guns to his girlfriend’s house, where he
gave the weapons to his brother with instructions to dispose of them.
LaCue later was arrested for the killings. After he gave his third
statement to the police -- the one he stuck with at trial -- LaCue called his
brother and told him to bring the murder weapons to the police station. The
shell casings found in Salazar’s car matched the two handguns LaCue’s
brother turned over to the police.
Rosa Flores testified that on June 6, 1993, she was living with Salazar
(her husband) and Flores (her brother) in an apartment in Brooklyn, New York.
She stated that around 11 p.m., she picked up the telephone and a person who
identified himself as “Q” asked to speak with Salazar. She had been instructed
by Salazar only to take a call from a person named Rabb. She responded to the
caller, “we don’t know any Q.” Then a person who identified himself as Rabb
got on the line and spoke with Salazar. After the call, Salazar and Flores left,
7 telling her that they had to pick up some money owed to them and that they
would return in fifteen to twenty minutes.
Hazel Forrester testified that on June 6, 1993, at around 11:30 p.m.,
Hannah appeared at the apartment where she lived with her sister, Arlene.
Hazel had been in a relationship with Hannah for about two months. Present
in the apartment that evening was an overnight visitor -- Maurice Thomas,
Arlene’s boyfriend. According to Hazel, Arlene opened the apartment door,
and Hazel overheard Hannah telling her sister that he had killed a person
named Fred (Salazar’s nickname). Hannah then entered Hazel’s bedroom and
told her that he had killed someone and would have to leave for a while.
Hannah stayed through the night and left in the morning. Hazel also testified
that Fred had previously called the apartment several times, asking for Rabb.
Hazel identified a number on a bloody piece of paper recovered from Salazar’s
pocket as her sister’s telephone number.
On June 30, 1993, the FBI arrested Hannah in Florida on a warrant for
the murders of Salazar and Flores. Investigator Vincent Doherty of the
Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office and a Jersey City Police sergeant flew
down to Florida to bring Hannah back to New Jersey. Investigator Doherty
testified that while waiting in the airport for the return flight home, Hannah
explained the events of June 6, 1993.
8 Hannah told Investigator Doherty that, on June 6, at LaCue’s request he
called his drug connection in New York. That evening, two Puerto Rican men
arrived in Jersey City in a car with New York plates. The men made eye
contact with Hannah and LaCue, who followed them to a nearby street, where
the car parked. One of the men stepped out of the front of the car and entered
the rear of the vehicle. LaCue followed closely behind him.
Hannah remained on the sidewalk “rapping with a girl” and drinking a
soda.3 After the girl left, Hannah heard gunshots and ran. As he was running,
LaCue called out to him, and they met in an alleyway where Hannah found
LaCue ejecting rounds from an automatic weapon. Hannah yelled, “why did
you do that? You are going to have the New York people come after us now.”
Hannah and LaCue then left the alleyway. Hannah went to the home of his
girlfriend, Hazel, but she was sleeping, so he walked to a nearby park “to sort
things out.” He decided to flee, fearing that “the people from New York”
would be looking for him in retaliation for the killings.
3 Investigator Doherty testified that Hannah stated that he was drinking from a can of C&C Cola. The police found in Salazar and Flores’s vehicle two soda cans, one a Mountain Dew and the other a ShopRite brand soda. Salazar’s fingerprints were recovered from the Mountain Dew can; no fingerprints were lifted from the other can. Hannah testified that Doherty misunderstood him, and that, in fact, LaCue was the one drinking a soda that night.
9 Upon their return to New Jersey, Hannah refused to give the officers a
recorded statement without an attorney present. No DNA or fingerprint
evidence linked Hannah to the victims’ car.
The Defense Case
Hannah testified that he, LaCue, and Thomas were heroin dealers,
operating independently, in the same area of Jersey City. Among their drug
sources were two New York suppliers, Salazar and Flores, who did business in
Brooklyn and in Jersey City. On the evening of June 6, 1993, LaCue told
Hannah that he had run out of his cache of heroin. After he learned that
Hannah had not been in contact with Salazar and Flores recently, LaCue
reached out directly to the New York suppliers. At Hannah’s home, LaCue
paged the suppliers repeatedly until he finally spoke with one of them.
Hannah was in another room and did not participate in or listen to the
conversation.
Afterwards, Hannah and LaCue walked to an area of Jersey City where,
for a couple of hours, Hannah “hustl[ed]” with others, including Thomas,
selling drugs. According to Hannah, Thomas -- known as Big Mo-T despite
his small stature -- “controlled the drugs” in the area, and Hannah, who was
proficient in martial arts, acted as a “bodyguard” for him. Hannah and Thomas
10 were “associates” but sold their own drugs and kept the proceeds from their
own sales.
When the New York suppliers arrived, Hannah, LaCue, and Thomas
followed their car on foot for about a block until it parked and one of the men
exited. They engaged in small talk with him, and then Hannah walked away to
chat with a woman across the street. As Hannah left the group, LaCue stood
by the car’s passenger side and Thomas by its driver’s side.
Hannah’s conversation with the woman lasted about ten minutes, and as
he watched her walk away, he heard gunshots. He instinctively ducked and
checked to see if he had been struck by a bullet, and then ran. As he ran, he
heard LaCue call out to him, “yo, yo.” LaCue soon caught up to him and
nudged him to keep running. When they reached a certain point, LaCue pulled
out a gun and began removing rounds. Hannah asked LaCue what happened,
but LaCue tersely responded, “[d]on’t worry about it.”
As Hannah walked back toward the scene, he saw Thomas standing in
front of Hazel Forrester’s apartment, and then heard people screaming about
the shooting and saying that “the New York boys” would be “coming over
here,” apparently to seek revenge.
Hannah then walked around the city, worrying that the associates of the
dead New York suppliers would conclude that he was involved in the shooting.
11 As he contemplated his next move, he returned home. When he later learned
from friends that a group of “Colombians” were coming to kill him, he fled to
Florida to stay with relatives.
During his testimony, Hannah made several points. He stated that at the
time of the killings of Salazar and Flores, several pagers were registered to
him, and Thomas had one of those pagers. He also stated that Hazel lied when
she testified that he went to her apartment the evening of the shooting. He
opined that she fabricated her testimony because of her fear of Thomas.4 He
further noted that two weeks before the shooting, drug money had been stolen
from him. Although Thomas pointed the finger of blame at someone within
their group, Hannah later learned from Thomas’s mother that her son was the
one who had committed the theft.
What The Jury Did Not Hear
1. The Redd Report
Post-conviction relief proceedings in this case revealed important details
potentially incriminating Thomas in the murder of Salazar and Flores and
supporting Hannah’s third-party-guilt defense. Those details, although
disclosed in discovery, were never elicited by defense counsel during trial.
4 Indeed, Hazel testified that she was more afraid of Thomas than Hannah.
12 See infra pp. 22-23, 32. Lieutenant Charles Redd of the Hudson County -------
Prosecutor’s Office prepared a six-page report that provided a narrative of the
homicide investigation and Thomas’s importance to that investigation.
The Redd Report revealed that investigators found in the victims’ car a
pager number listed to “Rabb.” When that number was called, however, it was
“Maurice Thomas A.K.A. ‘Big Mo T’ who responded to the page.” As a
result, Thomas was invited to the offices of the Hudson County Prosecutor’s
homicide squad to be interviewed. Before his arrival, Thomas made an
anonymous telephone call to Jersey City Police Communications and claimed
that Rabb and LaCue were responsible for the killings. During the interview,
he told investigators that “he did not know the victims” or LaCue and that he
was with his girlfriend, Arlene Forrester, and her sister, Hazel Forrester, at the
time of the shootings.
Pressed by the investigators, Thomas conceded that he was not truthful
when he denied knowing LaCue. According to the Redd Report, Thomas then
claimed that Hannah appeared at the apartment where he was residing on the
morning of June 7 and admitted that he and LaCue committed the murders. He
told the investigators that Arlene and Hazel were asleep at the time of
Hannah’s admission.
13 After Thomas left the interview, the police received another anonymous
telephone call, stating that Hannah had confessed to killing the victims, not
only to Thomas but also to the caller and Hazel Forrester. Afterwards, Hazel
and Arlene were interviewed by the police, and Arlene admitted that she was
the anonymous caller.
When interviewed again, Thomas retracted his earlier statement that
Hazel and Arlene were not present during Hannah’s confession to the crime.
At a further interview, Thomas told investigators that LaCue had placed a
message on his pager.
Because the defense did not call Lieutenant Redd as a witness, the jury
never learned that Salazar and Flores had Thomas’s pager number in their
possession when they were murdered, nor did they hear that LaCue had left a
message on Thomas’s pager, asking to speak with him, the day after the
murders.
2. Thomas’s Mother’s Testimony
The jury also did not hear the testimony of Thomas’s mother, Mary
Jones, who had information that not only inferentially implicated her son in the
murders, but also provided a motive for her son to frame Hannah. Defense
counsel attempted to call Thomas’s mother as a witness, but the State objected
to the admissibility of her testimony. The court conducted a ---- Rule 104
14 hearing,5 out of the presence of the jury, at which Mary Jones testified to the
following.
Jones acknowledged that her son and Hannah were drug dealers who
sometimes worked together. On the morning of June 7, 1993, Thomas called
her and said, “this kid LaCue [has] just killed two drug suppliers, and I don’t
know what to do because I think the police . . . have my name and my beeper
number.” Thomas told his mother that he “had beeped the two drug suppliers”
and “made arrangements” with them to bring drugs, and that “[h]e was afraid
that his number was going to be found in [their] car.”
Thomas then had a series of communications with his mother. That
afternoon, he told her that “he just found out that . . . Rabb had helped LaCue”;
later that evening, at her home, he stated that “he had talked to the cops”; the
next day he called and said that he was cooperating with the authorities, that
her line would be tapped, and that “he wanted the police to get [Hannah] . . .
that he was setting him up.”
On the morning of June 9, Thomas came to his mother’s house with
Arlene Forrester. While at her house, she heard her son tell Arlene that
5 N.J.R.E. 104(a)(2) provides that, in deciding the admissibility of evidence, “[t]he court may hear and determine such matters out of the presence or hearing of the jury.”
15 [Hannah] would have to take the weight. In order to get [Hannah] off his back he would have -- [Hannah] would have to be gotten rid of. The only way he know to get rid of [Hannah] is to have [Hannah] take the weight for the one of the murders that was committed.
Thomas’s mother explained that her son was involved in a scheme to rob
drugs and money from one of Hannah’s associates, but that Hannah did not
know about the role he played. Thomas, according to his mother, “was afraid
that [Hannah] would find out about it.” Thomas related to his mother that he
had a conversation with Hannah about the killing of the drug suppliers -- “that
he told [Hannah] that [Hannah’s] name was being kicked around, that the
Colombians were looking for him, and he told [Hannah] it was best for him to
leave the city.”
Over the following days, her son and Arlene stayed over her house, and
she observed them counting $10,600 in drug monies, $5,000 of which was
earmarked for LaCue. Thomas told his mother “that he had to find LaCue . . .
He had to get a package [of drugs] from LaCue.” Thomas’s mother testified
that the drugs taken from the “two suppliers ended up in the hands of [her] son
Maurice.” According to his mother, Thomas told “his girlfriend that they had
to move them out fast. This is what the police was looking for, and the name
of the drugs was Gotta Have It.”
16 The investigation report of Investigator Lawrence Mullane of the Jersey
City Police Department revealed that Salazar and Flores were selling a
particular brand of Heroin -- “Gotta Have It.”
The court rejected defense counsel’s argument that the testimony of
Mary Jones established that Thomas and LaCue conspired to rob and kill
Salazar and Flores and that Thomas’s statements made to his mother were
therefore admissible under the co-conspirator’s exception to the hearsay rule.
See N.J.R.E. 803(b)(5). The court also based its decision on N.J.R.E. 403,
finding that the admission of Jones’s testimony would be misleading and
confusing.6
Defense counsel did not argue that Thomas’s admissions to his mother
constituted statements against interest under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), nor did the
court address that alternate ground for the admissibility of Jones’s testimony.
B.
The Prosecutor’s Summation
In her summation remarks, the prosecutor told the jury that no evidence
connected Thomas with the murder of Salazar and Flores: “[T]here is not a
6 N.J.R.E. 403, in pertinent part, provides that “relevant evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the risk of: (a) [u]ndue prejudice, confusion of issues, or misleading the jury.”
17 stitch, a scintilla, a scintilla, a bit, an ounce, a piece of evidence, that links this
Mo-T, Maurice Thomas, Big Mo-T, whatever you want to call him, nothing to
link him to that murder, and if it came in, I missed it.” In addition, the
prosecutor argued to the jury that LaCue had no reason not to implicate
Thomas in the murders, stating “he’s not friends with Mo-T. He’s not
associates with Mo-T.” In listening to those remarks, the jury did not know
that Salazar and Flores had Thomas’s pager number in their car when they
were shot or that, after they were killed, Thomas and LaCue allegedly split
approximately $10,000.
C.
Conviction and Sentence
The jury convicted Hannah of two counts of felony murder, two counts
of armed robbery, and one count of possession of a weapon for an unlawful
purpose, and acquitted him of the remaining charges. On November 18, 1994,
the court sentenced Hannah to consecutive terms of life imprisonment with a
thirty-year period of parole ineligibility on each of the felony murder
convictions. The court merged the armed robbery and weapons possession
convictions into the felony murder convictions.
18 II.
Direct Appeal
On direct appeal, the Appellate Division held that the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in disallowing the testimony of Thomas’s mother, finding
that her proffered testimony was hearsay that (1) did not fall within the co-
conspirator’s exception to the hearsay rule and (2) “was irrelevant, confusing,
and misleading” under N.J.R.E. 401 and 403. The Appellate Division also
rejected Hannah’s plain error argument that the testimony was admissible
under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) on the ground that Thomas had made statements
against his interest to his mother. The Appellate Division reasoned that
N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) was inapplicable because Thomas’s statements to his
mother could not “be regarded as inculpating [Thomas] while exculpating
defendant” and because some of the statements “contain[ed] two layers of
hearsay.” This Court denied Hannah’s petition for certification. State v.
Hannah, 153 N.J. 217 (1998).
First Petition for Post-Conviction (PCR)
In his first petition for PCR, Hannah asserted ineffective assistance of
counsel by his trial and appellate attorneys, claiming, among their deficiencies,
their failure to adequately present the case for the admission of the testimony
19 of Thomas’s mother. The PCR court denied the petition without an
evidentiary hearing. The Appellate Division affirmed the PCR court’s
determination that Hannah’s attorneys were not constitutionally ineffective in
addressing the admissibility of the mother’s proffered testimony but remanded
for an evidentiary hearing on an unrelated issue. Before the remand
proceeding, this Court denied certification. State v. Hannah, 174 N.J. 41
(2002). On remand, the PCR court again denied relief, the Appellate Division
affirmed, and this Court again denied certification, State v. Hannah, 178 N.J.
453 (2004), and the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
denied Hannah’s habeas corpus petition in 2006.
Second Petition for Post-Conviction Relief
Hannah’s copy of the case file, including trial discovery and transcripts,
was lost during a lockdown at Trenton State Prison. In 2007, the Hudson
County Prosecutor’s Office forwarded to Hannah a replacement copy. Hannah
averred that, for the first time, he observed the Redd Report, which disclosed
that Thomas responded to a pager number found in the victims’ car.
In his second PCR petition, Hannah moved for a new trial based on
newly discovered evidence, claiming that the Prosecutor’s Office did not
disclose exculpatory evidence. In January 2008, the PCR court denied
Hannah’s petition without an evidentiary hearing, stating that Hannah failed to
20 establish that the State withheld exculpatory evidence or that any such new
evidence supported a claim of innocence. In February 2008, Hannah’s former
PCR counsel certified that, to his recollection, the Redd Report did not appear
in the file provided to him by the Public Defender’s Office.
In February 2009, the Appellate Division reversed the second PCR court
and remanded for “an evidentiary hearing to determine whether a Brady7
violation occurred” and whether Thomas’s pager number found in the victims’
car constituted “newly discovered evidence.”
Second Evidentiary Hearing
At the evidentiary hearing in November 2009, Hannah’s trial counsel
testified that although he did not recall ever reading the Redd Report, his
recollection of what occurred fifteen years earlier was “to put it charitably,
dim.” He added that if, during trial, he had information revealing that Thomas
had contact with the victims, he would have used it.
Hannah’s first PCR counsel also testified that he did not remember
seeing the Redd Report until Hannah forwarded it to him in 2007. He stated
that the report was either not in the file sent to him by the Public Defender’s
7 Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963) holds that “the suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.”
21 Office or that he overlooked the report. The importance of the information in
the report, however, was clear to him because “it bolster[ed] Hannah’s story
that [Thomas] was the shooter.”
Hannah testified that he did not see the Redd Report until the Hudson
County Prosecutor’s Office forwarded discovery to him in 2007.
The assistant prosecutor who tried Hannah’s case testified that although
she could not specifically recall whether the Redd Report was turned over to
the defense, she never in her career knowingly or willfully withheld a
discoverable document.
Before the evidentiary hearing, Hannah filed a motion to recuse the PCR
judge because he had served as the Hudson County Prosecutor from 1997 to
2002, a period during which his office opposed Hannah’s application for post-
conviction relief. The recusal motion was renewed at the conclusion of the
hearing. The PCR judge declined to disqualify himself from the case and
denied Hannah post-conviction relief.
The Appellate Division held that the PCR judge should have recused
himself and remanded for a new evidentiary hearing before a different judge.
Third Evidentiary Hearing
At the new evidentiary hearing in 2014, Hannah testified consistently
with his previous sworn statements that he did not have the Redd Report
22 before or during his trial, his direct appeal, or his first PCR petition .
Moreover, his trial, direct appeal, first PCR, and PCR direct appeal attorneys
testified that they had no memory of seeing the Redd Report in defendant’s
case file, and both Hannah’s trial and direct appeal attorneys stated that, had
they known about the Redd Report, they would have used it. Finally, the trial
prosecutor again testified that she had never knowingly withheld discovery
from a defendant.
The new PCR judge -- the third to preside over post-conviction
proceedings in this case -- denied Hannah relief, reasoning that Hannah did not
meet the standard for the grant of a new trial, based either on a theory of newly
discovered evidence or ineffective assistance of counsel. The PCR judge’s
ruling included these findings: (1) “it is probable that [Hannah’s] counsel was
in possession of the [Redd] report”; (2) “it [is] highly unlikely that the report
was suppressed at trial”; (3) “in the event the Redd Report was not available to
[Hannah], it would have in no way affected the outcome of the trial”; (4) “the
information that the Redd Report contained was information that [Hannah]
would have been made aware of through [Thomas’s mother’s] testimony”; (5)
“any information contained in the Redd Report was not new or unique to the
trial”; and (6) “there is no merit to [Hannah’s] assertion that the trial would
have had a different outcome but for his attorney’s actions.”
23 In May 2017, in an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed
substantially for the reasons stated by the PCR judge. The Appellate Division
nevertheless remanded for yet another evidentiary hearing to “address whether
the pager was newly discovered evidence.” This Court denied certification.
State v. Hannah, 231 N.J. 145 (2017).
Fourth Evidentiary Hearing
In August 2018, a fourth evidentiary hearing was conducted by the
fourth PCR judge assigned to this case. Hannah again testified that he did not
receive the Redd Report until 2007.
The PCR judge and defense counsel reached agreement on one issue:
the Appellate Division’s remand order was “confusing.” There was also
agreement that the Appellate Division’s reference to a “pager” related to a
piece of paper containing telephone or pager numbers found in the victim’s
car. Defense counsel argued that a pager number on the piece of paper
required context, and that context was provided by the Redd Report, which
revealed that when the number was called, Thomas responded.
Although the PCR judge concurred that the Redd Report had to be
considered in determining the merits of Hannah’s petition, he concluded that
Hannah had not satisfied the standard for a new trial based on newly
discovered evidence, as set forth in State v. Carter, 85 N.J. 300, 314 (1981).
24 The PCR judge found that Hannah met prong one of the three-prong Carter
test: the pager number on the piece of paper -- the number to which Thomas
responded -- was “material to the case.” But Hannah failed to satisfy prongs
two and three, in the judge’s view, because the connection between the pager
number and the call to Thomas could have been discovered by reasonable
diligence by counsel before trial (prong two) and because the evidence, even if
presented at a new trial, would probably not result in a change of the jury’s
verdict (prong three).
In an unpublished opinion in November 2019, the Appellate Division
affirmed the denial of defendant’s PCR petition on newly discovered evidence
grounds but for reasons seemingly at odds with its 2017 opinion. The
Appellate Division’s 2017 opinion affirmed the factual findings of the third
PCR judge, which evidently included a finding that “it is probable that
[Hannah’s] counsel was in possession of the [Redd] report.” In its 2019
opinion, however, the Appellate Division seemingly accepted the argument
that Hannah did not have the Redd Report. The 2019 panel asserted that the
testimony of Thomas’s mother did not reveal that the “police found the [pager]
number in Salazar’s pocket, called it, and reached Thomas.” The panel
concluded that the record did not support “the PCR judge’s finding that the
25 evidence [that the police called Thomas’s pager from a number found in the
dead drug dealers’ car] was discoverable by reasonable diligence beforehand.”
The Appellate Division, however, held that Hannah failed to satisfy the
third prong of the newly discovered evidence test. The panel rejected the
argument that had the jury known about the recovery of Thomas’s pager
number on a piece of paper in the drug dealer’s pocket (the information in the
Redd Report), it would have led the jury to find “his third-party-guilt defense
credible” and would have “acquitted him.” The panel came to this conclusion,
in part, because of its belief that the testimony of Thomas’s mother, which
presumably supported the third-party-guilt defense, “was inadmissible as a
statement against interest or a statement by a co-conspirator.” The panel
construed the statement against interest exception to the hearsay rule, N.J.R.E.
803(c)(25), as limited to such statements introduced “against an accused in a
criminal action [and] only if the accused was a declarant.” The panel reasoned
that the testimony of Thomas’s mother “concerned statements attributed to
Thomas, who was not the accused” and were therefore inadmissible.
As will be more fully discussed, the appellate panel clearly
misunderstood the meaning of the statement-against-interest rule. The
Attorney General agreed at oral argument that a statement against interest
26 under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) is admissible regardless of whether the declarant is
the accused.
In the end, the Appellate Division denied Hannah’s petition for a new
trial based on newly discovered evidence.
We granted Hannah’s petition for certification, which raised three issues:
(1) whether the Appellate Division’s misinterpretation of N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25)
led to the erroneous conclusion that Thomas’s mother’s exculpatory testimony
was inadmissible hearsay; (2) whether the mother’s recounting of her
observations of her son’s criminal conduct was non-hearsay testimony; and (3)
whether the Appellate Division’s misinterpretation of the statement-against-
interest rule resulted in the mistaken conclusion that “Hannah failed to
establish that the missing Redd Report was newly discovered evidence .” --- See
242 N.J. 502 (2020).
We also granted the State’s cross-petition, which raised the following
issue: whether the Appellate Division erred in “concluding that information
regarding a pager number and its connection to Maurice Thomas was not
27 reasonably discoverable before Mr. Hannah allegedly obtained the ‘Redd
Report’ for the first time.” --- See 242 N.J. 505 (2020).
Additionally, we granted the motion of the New Jersey Attorney General
to participate as amicus curiae.
After hearing oral argument on January 4, 2021, we requested
supplemental briefing to address two issues: whether trial counsel was
ineffective if the Redd Report was disclosed in discovery and whether the
Court could consider the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim “at this time.”
In requesting further briefing, we acknowledged that Hannah had suggested,
alternatively, an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim “[d]uring the course
of this litigation.”
III.
Hannah contends that whether the vital information in the Redd Report
constitutes newly discovered evidence -- evidence withheld from the defense
at trial -- or whether his counsel possessed the Report and was constitutionally
derelict in not presenting the information to the jury in support of his third-
party-guilt defense, the result is the same: he suffered a manifest injustice.
That Thomas responded to the pager number on the bloody piece of paper in
Salazar’s pocket, Hannah argues, established the “relevancy nexus” for the
28 admission of the testimony of Thomas’s mother. That testimony, Hannah
posits, was admissible because it recounted her observations of her son and his
statements against interest, which linked him to the drug dealers, their deaths,
and his efforts to frame Hannah. Without the mother’s testimony, according to
Hannah, the jury was left with Hannah’s “uncorroborated self-serving
testimony” that Thomas was LaCue’s accomplice in the killings. Hannah
asserts that he was denied the opportunity to present a complete defense and
therefore denied a fair trial.
Hannah also submits that the third PCR judge wrongly denied his
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim based on the flawed notion that the
Redd Report was not “new information” that would have altered the outcome
of the trial, and that the Appellate Division simply affirmed on this point
without any elaboration. He insists that the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
claim is a live claim, never reviewed by this Court, and that our Rules of Court
governing post-conviction relief do not require this Court to acquiesce to a
fundamental injustice when no court has addressed the issue in a meaningful
way, citing State v. Nash, 212 N.J. 518, 546-47 (2013).
The State contends that the Appellate Division erred in concluding that
the defense could not have discovered through reasonable diligence the
29 information in the Redd Report: that Thomas responded to the call placed by
the police to the pager number found in the drug dealers’ car. The State
maintains that the defense received the Redd Report and that, even if it did not,
the information about the pager number was available by cross-referencing
Thomas’s statements to the police, his mother’s testimony, and investigation
reports disclosed in discovery.
Additionally, the State asserts that Hannah’s newly discovered evidence
and ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claims fail because the evidence of his
guilt was overwhelming and the information in the Redd Report would not
have altered the outcome of the trial and because the testimony of Thomas’s
mother was not admissible. The State maintains that Thomas’s statements to
his mother “were not inculpatory of Thomas and at the same time exculpatory
of [Hannah],” a necessary prerequisite, it says, for statements against interest
under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25). It also claims that his mother’s observations of her
son’s involvement in narcotics transactions were not relevant to the murder of
the drug dealers.
The State also asserts that Hannah’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel
claim is not cognizable because the issue was fully litigated and decided by
both the PCR court and the Appellate Division. On the merits of that issue, the
State alleges that even if Hannah’s counsel possessed the Redd Report, the
30 Report was not helpful to the defense, and the decision not to use it was part of
counsel’s trial strategy. Last, the State submits that the grant of a new trial
twenty-seven years after the conviction would severely prejudice the State
considering the death of some witnesses and the unavailability of others.
The arguments of the Attorney General largely mirror those of the State.
IV.
The tortuous post-conviction procedural path of this case has included a
series of hearings conducted by multiple judges, a raft of appeals, and a
number of missteps and errors -- all combining to delay a final adjudication of
the issues within a reasonable timeframe. In the ordinary course, post-
conviction proceedings should not span fourteen years; final review of a case
should not occur twenty-seven years after a conviction. But a core feature of
our system of justice is that the passage of years will not render a fundamental
injustice beyond correction.
The heart of Hannah’s argument is that he was denied a meaningful
opportunity to present a complete and credible third-party-guilt defense that
Maurice Thomas was the second gunman and that Thomas framed him. He
could not effectively advance that defense, he says, because the jury did not
hear testimony that when the police called a pager number found on a bloody
31 piece of paper in the pocket of one of the murdered drug dealers, it was
Maurice Thomas who responded to the call. That is the information contained
in the Redd Report. Also withheld from the jury was the testimony of
Thomas’s mother that inferentially connected Thomas to the drug dealers and
their murders. Hannah argues that the Redd Report provided the necessary
nexus for the admission of that testimony.
Hannah has presented two alternative claims to this Court -- either the
information in the Redd Report was newly discovered evidence that would
have altered the outcome of the trial or his counsel had the Redd Report in his
file and was derelict in not using it, rendering him constitutionally ineffective.
We first conclude that the newly discovered evidence argument was
adjudicated at an evidentiary hearing before the third PCR judge who made
factual findings based on witness testimony -- findings that were entitled to
deference from the Appellate Division. See State v. S.S., 229 N.J. 360, 374
(2017); State v. Elders, 192 N.J. 224, 244 (2007). The third PCR judge relied
on testimony from Hannah’s trial counsel, direct appeal counsel, and PCR
counsel, all of whom did not recall seeing the Redd Report but, based on the
passage of time, could not say definitively it was not in the file. The assistant
prosecutor testified that she did not have a specific recollection of the Redd
32 Report but that she never knowingly withheld discoverable evidence. No one
disputes that the Prosecutor’s Office provided the Redd Report to Hannah in
2007 when he lost his file -- an act hardly suggestive of a plot to suppress
evidence. Hannah consistently testified that he had not seen the Report before
2007.
With that record before him, the third PCR judge found that “it is
probable that [Hannah’s] counsel was in possession of the [Redd] report” and
“highly unlikely that the report was suppressed at trial.” The Appellate
Division affirmed that factual finding, determining that the Redd Report was
not newly discovered evidence, and we denied certification. The fourth PCR
judge should have adhered to the finality of that decision.
For purposes of the appeal before us, we therefore accept that counsel at
trial, on direct appeal, and at the first PCR hearing had the Redd Report in
their files and somehow overlooked it. All three attorneys testified that the
Redd Report was an important piece of evidence to buttress Hannah’s third-
party-guilt defense and that, had they seen it, they would have used it at trial,
on direct appeal, and on PCR.
The question that remains is whether each of those counsel rendered
ineffective assistance of counsel by not utilizing the Redd Report and whether
33 errors by trial counsel contributed to the court’s findings that Thomas’s
mother’s testimony was inadmissible.
To be sure, throughout the PCR process, Hannah’s various attorneys
have mainly focused on the issue of newly discovered evidence -- relying on
the assumption that the Prosecutor’s Office did not transmit in discovery the
Redd Report. At the third PCR hearing, Hannah’s counsel argued that issue
exclusively. As already indicated, the third PCR judge determined that
defense counsel likely had the Redd Report. The PCR judge nevertheless
touched on the ineffective-assistance-of-counsel issue, even if somewhat
dismissively. He noted that Hannah “argue[d] that trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to offer the Redd Report to counter [Thomas’s mother’s]
testimony and to cross-examine the State’s witnesses.” The judge then
perfunctorily concluded that Hannah suffered no prejudice because the Redd
Report did not contain “new information” and therefore the failure to use the
Report could not have resulted in a different trial outcome.
After hearing argument on the newly discovered evidence issue, on
which we granted certification, we requested further briefing and argument on
whether Hannah was denied effective assistance of counsel. We now conclude
that, throughout the many PCR proceedings, this issue has not received a
34 meaningful review at the PCR trial or appellate level. We will not remand for
yet another evidentiary hearing and further prolong the fourteen-year saga of
PCR review. We have a voluminous record from the trial and PCR evidentiary
hearings. No procedural bar prevents this Court from reviewing the
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim to determine whether Hannah was
denied a fair trial and whether his conviction constitutes a fundamental
injustice.
D.
Our jurisprudence makes clear that our Rules of Court governing post-
conviction relief petitions and proceedings do not render our courts “powerless
to correct a fundamental injustice.” Nash, 212 N.J. at 547. Although a
defendant is “generally barred from presenting a claim on PCR that could have
been raised at trial or on direct appeal, R. 3:22-4(a), or that has been
previously litigated, R. 3:22-5,” those rules do not “require[] this Court to
acquiesce to a miscarriage of justice.” Id. at 546.
At the time of Hannah’s first and second PCR petitions, Rule 3:22-4
stated that
“[a]ny ground for relief not raised in a prior proceeding . . . is barred from assertion . . . unless the court . . . finds . . . (b) that enforcement of the bar would result in fundamental injustice; or (c) that denial of relief would
35 be contrary to the Constitution of the United States or the State of New Jersey.”
See State v. Martini, 187 N.J. 469, 481 (2006) (alteration and first three
omissions in original). Thus, Rule 3:22-4 permitted judicial review to correct
a fundamental injustice or to provide relief for a claim of constitutionally
ineffective assistance of counsel.8
Additionally, we have held that “Rule 3:22-5’s bar to review of a prior
claim litigated on the merits ‘is not an inflexible command’” and must yield to
a fundamental injustice. 9 Nash, 212 N.J. at 547 (quoting State v. Franklin, 184
N.J. 516, 528 (2005)). A fundamental injustice occurs “when the judicial
system has denied a ‘defendant with fair proceedings leading to a just
outcome’ or when ‘inadvertent errors mistakenly impacted a determination of
guilt or otherwise wrought a miscarriage of justice.’” Id. at 546 (quoting State
v. Mitchell, 126 N.J. 565, 587 (1992)). To demonstrate a fundamental
8 Indeed, the current version of Rule 3:22-4 explicitly states that fundamental injustice includes ineffective assistance of counsel. R. 3:22-4(a)(2). Rule 3:22-4(b), which addresses second and subsequent petitions for PCR, had not been adopted at the time Hannah filed his second PCR petition. Rule 3:22-4 was amended to include subparagraph (b) in 2010. 9 Rule 3:22-5 provides that “[a] prior adjudication upon the merits of any ground for relief is conclusive whether made in the proceedings resulting in the conviction or in any post-conviction proceeding . . . or in any appeal taken from such proceedings.”
36 injustice, a defendant must show “that an error or violation ‘played a role in
the determination of guilt.’” Id. at 547 (quoting Mitchell, 126 N.J. at 587).
We now turn to whether Hannah was denied the effective assistance of
counsel.
In a criminal case, the accused is guaranteed the effective assistance of
counsel by the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution, Strickland
v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 684-85 (1984), and Article I, Paragraph 10 of
the New Jersey Constitution, State v. Fritz, 105 N.J. 42, 58 (1987). See State
v. Gideon, 244 N.J. 538, 549-50 (2021). The proper functioning of the
adversarial system and the fundamental right to a fair trial are dependent on
counsel performing at a level that ensures a defendant an “ample opportunity
to meet the case of the prosecution.” State v. Pierre, 223 N.J. 560, 577 (2015)
(quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 685). “Counsel . . . has a duty to bring to bear
such skill and knowledge as will render the trial a reliable adversarial testing
process.” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688. “[T]he benchmark for judging any
claim of ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined the
proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied on
37 as having produced a just result.” Pierre, 223 N.J. at 577 (quoting Strickland,
466 U.S. at 686).
The familiar test for determining whether counsel failed to provide the
effective assistance required by our Federal and State Constitutions is set forth
in Strickland and Fritz: first, a defendant must demonstrate that counsel’s
representation was deficient -- that “counsel’s representation fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness,” Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88; Fritz,
105 N.J. at 52, and “[s]econd, he must show a reasonable probability that the
result of the proceeding would have been different but for counsel’s
deficiencies,” State v. Timmendequas, 161 N.J. 515, 598 (1999). See
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694; Fritz, 105 N.J. at 52.
Although “a court must indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s
conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance,”
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689, a failure to present available evidence to support
an obvious defense will not be characterized as a reasonable trial strategy, see
Pierre, 223 N.J. at 566. For example, the failure to present available alibi
witnesses to testify that the defendant was at a place other than where the
crime occurred at the time charged in the indictment could not be ascribed as a
reasonable strategy. Id. at 565-66.
38 We next turn to whether defendant was denied the right to present his
third-party-guilt defense through the dereliction of his trial counsel and the
errors of the trial court.
A defendant has a constitutional right to present a complete defense,
including the “right to introduce evidence of third-party guilt.” State v. Cope,
224 N.J. 530, 551 (2016) (quoting State v. Cotto, 182 N.J. 316, 332 (2005)).
In this case, Hannah asserted third-party guilt as a defense. LaCue admitted
his role in the murders. The jury had to decide the identity of the second
shooter. Hannah took the stand, denying involvement in the murders and
placing Thomas and LaCue at the drug dealers’ car moments before the
shooting. Defense counsel argued in summation that Thomas and LaCue were
the killers. Earlier, he had attempted to admit the testimony of Thomas’s
mother, which related her son’s connection to the murdered drug dealers. In
short, counsel’s trial strategy was to advance an effective and credible third -
party-guilt defense that Thomas -- not Hannah -- committed the crime. The
success of that trial strategy required counsel merely to raise a reasonable
doubt about Hannah’s guilt.
Third-party-guilt evidence is admissible so long as “the proof offered
has a rational tendency to engender a reasonable doubt with respect to an
39 essential feature of the State’s case.” State v. Perry, 225 N.J. 222, 238 (2016)
(quoting Cotto, 182 N.J. at 332); see State v. Fortin, 178 N.J. 540, 591 (2004);
State v. Sturdivant, 31 N.J. 165, 179 (1959). The doubt cast on the State’s
case must be based on “specific evidence linking the third-person to the crime”
or to the victim. Timmendequas, 161 N.J. at 620. “[T]hird-party statements
against penal interest” are generally admissible where “the proffered evidence
[draws] a direct connection between the third party and the commission of the
crime.” State v. Koedatich, 112 N.J. 225, 300-01, 311 (1988). Third-party-
guilt evidence is admissible “even if there is no evidence linking another
specific suspect to the crime,” provided the evidence tends to show that a
person other than the defendant committed the crime. See Perry, 225 N.J. at
238-39 (emphasis added).
In light of the factual findings of the third PCR judge, we accept that
Hannah’s trial counsel had the Redd Report -- had the information that
investigators found a pager number on a bloody piece of paper in the pocket of
Salazar, who lay dead in his car with a bullet in his head, and that when they
dialed that pager number, Thomas returned the call. The investigators’ call to
40 the pager Thomas answered occurred just hours after the discovery of the drug
dealers’ bodies.
The importance of that information, as part of the overall third-party-
guilt strategy, is self-evident. The defense simply could have called
Lieutenant Redd to testify that the pager number was dialed, and Thomas
responded. The information buttressed Hannah’s testimony that Thomas was
the killer, and it was the pathway toward the admission of Thomas’s mother’s
testimony implicating her son. Significantly, too, the information refuted the
prosecutor’s summation remarks that “there is not a stitch, a scintilla, a
scintilla, a bit, an ounce, a piece of evidence, that links this Mo-T, Maurice
Thomas . . . to that murder.” Defense counsel raised no objection to those
misleading remarks that distorted, if not misrepresented, evidence in the
prosecutor’s own file.
Hannah’s trial counsel testified that if he had the Redd Report, he
overlooked the information, which he unreservedly admitted buttressed the
third-party-guilt defense. Hannah’s direct appeal counsel and first PCR
counsel also testified to the critical importance of the Redd Report in
advancing the defense of third-party guilt. The failure to use the Redd Report
and to call Lieutenant Redd to the stand cannot be ascribed to a reasonable
41 defense strategy. 10 The first prong of Strickland/Fritz is clearly established --
trial counsel was constitutionally deficient in failing to introduce evidence to
support his third-party-guilt strategy.
The full extent of that prejudice can only be measured when compared to
the other evidence withheld -- the testimony of Thomas’s mother.
The finding of Thomas’s pager number in the pocket of Salazar
heightened the relevance of the testimony of Thomas’s mother in buttressing
Hannah’s third-party-guilt defense. The mother’s damning testimony
inculpating her son came in two forms -- her recounting statements against
interest made by Thomas and her observations of Thomas involved in drug
activities seemingly linked to the murdered drug dealers. The mother’s
testimony did not get before the jury, however, because of Hannah’s counsel’s
failure to present the proper evidentiary argument for the testimony’s
admissibility -- an error magnified and multiplied by errors made by the trial
court, the PCR courts, and the Appellate Division.
10 The State suggests that, had Lieutenant Redd testified regarding the pager number found in the victims’ car, the prosecutor would have called Thomas as a rebuttal witness. But that argument is suspect because the State had the opportunity to call Thomas and did not, perhaps for good reason, given Thomas’s multiple inconsistent statements to investigators.
42 We start with N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), which provides that a statement
against interest is admissible if
at the time of its making [the statement was] so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary, proprietary, or social interest, or so far tended to subject declarant to civil or criminal liability . . . that a reasonable person in declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless the person believed it to be true. Such a statement is admissible against a defendant in a criminal proceeding only if the defendant was the declarant.
The rationale for this exception to the hearsay rule “derives from ‘the theory
that, by human nature, individuals will neither assert, concede, nor admit to
facts that would affect them unfavorably’ and that, accordingly, ‘statements
that so disserve the declarant are deemed inherently trustworthy and reliable.’”
Rowe v. Bell & Gossett Co., 239 N.J. 531, 558 (2019) (quoting State v.
Brown, 170 N.J. 138, 148-49 (2001)).
The test for the admissibility of a statement under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) is
“whether, in the context of the whole statement, the particular remark was
plausibly against the declarant’s penal interest, even though it might be neutral
or even self-serving if considered alone.” Id. at 558-59 (quoting State v.
Nevius, 426 N.J. Super. 379, 394 (App. Div. 2012)). “The declarant, however,
need not be a party to the action in which the statement is admitted ,” nor must
the declarant be unavailable. Ibid. The rule requires “only that the statement
43 ‘so far subjected (the declarant) to a . . . criminal liability . . . that a reasonable
man in his position would not have made the statement unless he believed it to
be true.’” State v. Abrams, 140 N.J. Super. 232, 235 (App. Div. 1976)
(quoting Evid. R. 63(10), the predecessor to N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25)), aff’d, 72
N.J. 342, 370 (1977). “The rule does not require that each discrete part of the
statement imply involvement in a crime.” Ibid.
A statement against interest is clearly admissible “if the declarant has
admitted his involvement in the crime either directly, or indirectly.” State v.
White, 158 N.J. 230, 244-45 (1999) (citations omitted). It is admissible also
“if it exculpates a defendant,” provided that the statement is against the “penal
interest” of the declarant. Id. at 244 (quoting Report of the New Jersey
Supreme Court Committee on Evidence (Mar. 1963)).
The Appellate Division panel in the appeal before us clearly had a
mistaken understanding of the statement-against-interest rule. It held that a
statement against interest could be introduced only “against an accused in a
criminal action [and] only if the accused was a declarant.” From that clearly
erroneous interpretation of the rule, the panel came to the clearly e rroneous
conclusion that the testimony of Thomas’s mother was inadmissible because it
“concerned statements attributed to Thomas, who was not the accused.” An
interpretive analysis that misconceives the law must be rejected. See Nicholas
44 v. Mynster, 213 N.J. 463, 478 (2013) (“We do not defer to interpretative
conclusions by the trial court or Appellate Division that we believe are
mistaken.”).
All in all, we conclude that Thomas made multiple statements against
interest to his mother -- a seemingly reliable source -- in the hours and days
following the murders of Salazar and Flores.
E.
At the Rule 104 hearing, Thomas’s mother provided the following
testimony. On the morning that the police found the bodies of Salazar and
Flores, Thomas told her that he “had beeped the two drug suppliers” and
“made arrangements” with them to bring drugs, and that “[h]e was afraid that
his number was going to be found in [their] car.”
Thomas also told his mother: (1) he had earlier schemed to rob Hannah
of drugs and money and that he feared Hannah would “find out about it”; (2)
he had to get “rid of” Hannah, “to get [Hannah] off his back,” and “to have
[Hannah] take the weight for the one of the murders that was committed”; (3)
“he wanted the police to get [Hannah],” and “that he was setting him up”; (4)
he informed Hannah “that the Colombians were looking for him” and that “it
was best for him to leave the city”; and (5) “he had to find LaCue” and “get a
package [of drugs] from him.” Additionally, Thomas’s mother overheard her
45 son tell his girlfriend, Arlene, “they had to move [drugs called Gotta Have It]
out fast” because “[t]his is what the police was looking for.” The prosecutor’s
file confirmed that the dead drug suppliers had been peddling a brand of heroin
of the same name.
Each of those statements made by Thomas to his mother is a statement
against Thomas’s penal interest. The statements describe Thomas doing
business in the drug world with the dead drug suppliers; stealing money and
drugs from Hannah; scheming to “set[] him up”, “to get rid of” of him, and to
have him “take the weight” for one of the murders; and obstructing justice by
encouraging Hannah to flee the jurisdiction, even while Thomas was
cooperating with the police. Additionally, in her home, Thomas’s mother
observed her son and Arlene counting thousands of dollars, and evidently
overheard her son say of the $10,600 of drug monies, LaCue’s cut would be
$5,000.
Each statement so far subjected Thomas to criminal liability “that a
reasonable man in his position would not have made the statement unless he
believed it to be true.” See Abrams, 140 N.J. Super. at 235 (quoting Evid. R.
63(10)). And those statements, at least, “indirectly” implicated him in the
murders of Salazar and Flores. See White, 158 N.J. at 244-45.
46 Yet, Hannah’s trial counsel did not argue for the admission of that
testimony based on the statement-against-interest rule. Such a gross oversight
-- the failure to point out to the court the applicable rule to support the
admission of critical evidence -- cannot be ascribed to trial strategy. Indeed,
counsel’s dereliction, in part, deprived the jury of the evidence necessary to
consider the full scope of the defense of third-party guilt.
On direct appeal, the Appellate Division mistakenly believed that the
admissibility of a statement against interest under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) required
the statement both to inculpate Thomas and exculpate Hannah. Each
statement, however, was admissible if it “so far tended to subject [Thomas] to
. . . criminal liability,” see N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) or if “in the context of the
whole statement, the particular remark was plausibly against [Thomas’s] penal
interest,” Rowe, 239 N.J. at 558-59. Moreover, the statements -- particularly
when combined with the information in the Redd Report -- met the test for
relevance because they were offered in support of the defense of third-party
guilt. Last, the most inculpatory statements made by Thomas were not -- as
the appellate panel suggested -- subject to “two layers of hearsay.” Thomas’s
mother heard the words straight from his mouth and recited them in sworn
testimony at the Rule 104 hearing.
47 F.
Here, the jury was not just deprived of hearing from Lieutenant Redd
that Thomas’s pager number was found in the pocket of one of the dead drug
dealers or from Thomas’s mother that her son made multiple statements
connecting him to those dealers and the name-brand drugs they were selling.
The prosecutor told the jury in summation that there was not “a scintilla” or “a
piece of evidence” linking Thomas to the murder. That statement, at best, was
misleading, considering what the prosecutor knew. She had the Redd Report
in her file and heard Thomas’s mother’s testimony at the Rule 104 hearing.
As we recently said in State v. Garcia, “[a]lthough the prosecutor is free
to discuss the direct and inferential evidence presented at trial,” she cannot
present an argument she knows to be untrue. 245 N.J. 412, 435-36 (2021).
The prosecution apparently made a strategic decision not to elicit testimony
that Thomas answered the pager number found on a piece of paper in the
pocket of Salazar, and Hannah’s trial counsel evidently overlooked that
evidence supporting the third-party-guilt defense. A fair reading of the Redd
Report would lead a reasonable person to conclude that there was “a scintilla”
of evidence or “a piece of evidence” linking Thomas to the vehicle of the
murdered drug dealers. Additionally, there is the testimony of Thomas’s
mother connecting her son to the dead drug dealers. “That otherwise
48 trustworthy and reliable evidence may be deemed inadmissible, for one reason
or another, does not give a party, including the prosecutor, a right to freely
portray a false picture of events.” Ibid.
The prosecutor unfairly exploited the derelictions of defense counsel,
which, along with the erroneous evidentiary ruling of the trial court ,
compounded the prejudice to Hannah.
VI.
We conclude that Hannah’s “counsel’s representation fell below an
objective standard of reasonableness” and therefore Hannah has satisfied prong
one of the Strickland/Fritz test. See Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687-88; Fritz, 105
N.J. at 52.
We also find that Hannah has satisfied prong two of the Strickland/Fritz
test -- he has demonstrated, to a degree of reasonable probability, that but for
counsel’s deficiencies, the outcome of the trial would have been different. See
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694; Fritz, 105 N.J. at 52. In making the prejudice
assessment, we cannot ignore that counsel’s errors were magnified by mistakes
made by the trial court and the prosecutor -- and perpetuated through various
rounds of PCR proceedings.
Counsel’s deficiencies deprived Hannah of his constitutional right to
present a complete and credible third-party-guilt defense. One important
49 factor in analyzing whether the prejudice from counsel’s ineffective
performance denied Hannah a fair trial is the strength or weakness of the
State’s case. Unsurprisingly, “[a] verdict or conclusion only weakly supported
by the record is more likely to have been affected by errors than one with
overwhelming record support.” Pierre, 223 N.J. at 583 (quoting Strickland,
466 U.S. at 696); see also Gideon, 244 N.J. at 557 (“[A] conviction is more
readily attributable to deficiencies in defense counsel’s performance when the
State has a relatively weak case than when the State has presented
overwhelming evidence of guilt.”).
Here, the credibility of the State’s key witness, LaCue, who implicated
Hannah in the shootings, was certainly at issue. LaCue, who admitted to
shooting Flores in the head at near point-blank range, testified pursuant to a
plea agreement that resulted in the dismissal of the murder charges against
him, despite his central role in the double homicide. And LaCue had
possession of the murder weapons and turned them over to the Prosecutor’s
Office. LaCue gave investigators multiple conflicting statements before he
named Hannah as the second shooter. LaCue claimed that Hannah was sitting
in the front passenger seat when he shot Salazar twice in the right side of the
head at close range. But that account directly conflicted with the testimony of
the State Medical Examiner’s pathologist, who testified that Salazar was shot
50 only once and the bullet entered the left side of his head. Additionally,
Salazar, unlike Flores, had no powder burns -- evidence suggesting either that
the shot was not fired at close range or that the shot was fired through the
driver’s side window. In short, LaCue’s testimony seemingly could not be
squared with the forensic evidence. And even assuming that the shot that
killed Salazar came from within the car, Hannah’s defense was that he was not
the shooter -- Thomas was Salazar’s killer.
There were other weaknesses in the State’s case. Hazel Forrester
testified that, at 11:30 p.m. on the evening of the shootings, Hannah came to
the apartment she shared with her sister Arlene and confessed to killing
Salazar. But the shootings occurred at or after midnight. Moreover, Thomas
was staying at the apartment that evening with his girlfriend Arlene -- who,
according to Thomas’s mother, later assisted Thomas in offloading the very
same brand of heroin that the dead drug dealers were distributing. And , on the
bloody piece of paper found in Salazar’s pocket was Arlene’s telephone
number.
Everything considered, the State presented far from overwhelming
evidence of Hannah’s guilt.
On the other hand, Hannah -- who admitted that he was a drug dealer
and had dealings with Salazar and Flores -- testified that LaCue and Thomas
51 were near the drug dealers’ car at the time of the shootings and that he played
no role in the killings. Hannah’s third-party-guilt defense rose or fell based on
his uncorroborated account. Deprived of the testimony of Lieutenant Redd and
of Thomas’s mother due to counsel’s derelictions, the jury did not hear that (1)
Thomas had paged the drug suppliers and arranged a drug deal; (2) Thomas’s
pager number was on a piece of paper in Salazar’s pocket when Salazar was
killed; (3) Thomas was concerned that police would find the piece of paper,
which they did; (4) Thomas feared that Hannah would learn of a previous role
he played in robbing money and drugs from one of Hannah’s associates; (5)
Thomas plotted to “set up” Hannah and to have him “take the weight” for one
of the murders “to get him off his back”; (6) Thomas divided drug monies with
LaCue; and (7) Thomas was later distributing the same brand of heroin taken
from the drug dealers on the night of their murders.
That evidence undoubtedly lay at the heart of Hannah’s right to present a
complete defense, and indeed, its admission was necessary to ensure the basic
fairness of his trial. We conclude that the combined errors in this case
constitute a fundamental injustice that denied Hannah a fair trial. But for
counsel’s errors -- combined with those made by the trial court and prosecutor
-- there is a reasonable probability that, had the jury heard the withheld
evidence, the outcome of the trial would have been different.
52 To be clear, the issue is not whether the State presented sufficient
evidence for the jury to return a guilty verdict, but whether Hannah was denied
the opportunity to present a full defense -- to present evidence that would have
allowed the jury to return a not-guilty verdict.
The passage of time alone cannot be a basis to bar relief to a defendant
deprived of a fair trial because he was denied the opportunity to present a
complete defense. This remedy may come late for Hannah, who was convicted
twenty-seven years ago and has been toiling through the post-conviction relief
process for fourteen years -- but it would be a far greater injustice if it never
came at all.
VII.
For the reasons expressed, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate
Division, vacate Hannah’s conviction, and remand for a new trial consistent
with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA and PIERRE- LOUIS join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER also filed a concurrence. JUSTICE SOLOMON filed a dissent, in which JUSTICES PATTERSON and FERNANDEZ-VINA join.
53 State of New Jersey,
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER, concurring.
I join the majority’s opinion in full. I write separately to ask the
Committee on Evidence to examine whether N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25) should be
amended.
N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25), an exception to the hearsay rule, currently provides
as follows:
A statement which was at the time of its making so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary, proprietary, or social interest, or so far tended to subject declarant to civil or criminal liability, or to render invalid declarant’s claim against another, that a reasonable person in declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless the person believed it to be true. Such a statement is admissible against a defendant in a criminal proceeding only if the defendant was the declarant.
1 The majority ably explains the rationale for the rule -- that people do not
readily admit to facts that can harm them, which renders their statements
against interest trustworthy. See ante at ___ (slip op. at 43) (citing cases).
The federal counterpart to Rule 803(c)(25) contains an additional
requirement. To be admissible, a statement must not only be against the
declarant’s interest but must also be “supported by corroborating
circumstances that clearly indicate its trustworthiness, if it is offered in a
criminal case as one that tends to expose the declarant to criminal liability.”
Fed. R. Evid. 804(b)(3) (emphasis added). The added language “applies to all
declarations against penal interest offered in criminal cases.” Id. at advisory
committee’s note to 2010 amendment.
The federal rule requires corroborating circumstances for a simple and
sensible reason: to “assure[] both the prosecution and the accused that the
Rule will not be abused and that only reliable hearsay statements will be
admitted under the exception.” Ibid.; see also McCormick on Evidence
§ 319(F) (8th ed. 2020) (discussing corroboration requirement).
I respectfully recommend that the Committee on Evidence consider
whether a corroboration requirement should be added to N.J.R.E. 803(c)(25)
for the same reason. I do not suggest that such a requirement would have had
an effect in this case.
2 State of New Jersey,
JUSTICE SOLOMON, dissenting.
Twenty-eight years ago, Angel “Freddy” Salazar and Luis Flores were
shot to death in their car during a drug deal. Twenty-seven years ago,
defendant Wilbert Hannah was convicted by a jury of felony murder, 1 armed
robbery, and unlawful possession of a weapon. The jury concluded beyond a
reasonable doubt that defendant and William LaCue -- who pled guilty and
testified against defendant -- murdered Salazar and Flores while robbing them
1 Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3), felony murder is
committed when the actor, acting either alone or with one or more other persons, is engaged in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after committing, or attempting to commit robbery . . . and in the course of such crime or immediate flight therefrom, any person causes the death of a person other than one of the participants. 1 of the drugs they intended to sell to defendant and LaCue. The jury acquitted
defendant of purposeful and knowing murder.2
Twenty-seven years after defendant’s jury trial and conviction, and
following the exhaustion of his direct appeals, two petitions for post-
conviction relief, several appeals, and four evidentiary hearings, the majority
chooses to disregard all applicable procedural rules and accepts defendant’s
untimely ineffective assistance of counsel claim, raised for the first time before
this Court. In doing so, the majority ignores critical evidence of defendant’s
guilt that was presented to the jury, and it creates a new standard for post-
conviction relief. I therefore dissent.
It is important to review and consider evidence adduced at trial that is
not mentioned and, presumably, not considered by the majority; that evidence
undermines the majority’s conclusion that the interests of justice require
reversal of defendant’s judgment of conviction. Specifically, the evidence
undercuts the defense’s claim that Rosa Flores did not know who “Rabb” was;
that Salazar was shot from outside the car; that the Redd Report contained key
2 Criminal homicide constitutes purposeful and knowing murder when “[t]he actor purposely causes death or serious bodily injury resulting in death ,” or “[t]he actor knowingly causes death or serious bodily injury resulting in death.” N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(1), (2).
2 information otherwise unavailable to the jury; and that the Redd Report3 and
certain excluded testimony was purely exculpatory.
First, defense counsel asserts, and the majority accepts, that the trial
evidence established that Rosa Flores -- the wife of Salazar and sister of Luis
Flores -- did not know who Rabb 4 was and said that she “never met or heard
[defendant’s] voice before.” In fact, Rosa Flores testified at trial that her
husband, Freddy, told her on the night he was murdered that if the phone rings
“unless it’s a guy named Rabb I’m not here”; someone named “Q”5 called her
home, to which she responded “we don’t know any Q”; “Q” then passed the
phone to someone who identified himself as “Rabb”; and, at that point, she
gave the phone to Freddy. Rosa Flores also testified that prior to the night her
husband and brother were murdered, she heard her brother Luis tell her
husband Freddy “you have to be careful because Rabb is a stick-up kid.”
Thus, Rosa Flores not only knew who defendant was, but it was defendant --
not LaCue or Thomas -- who arranged the drug deal that became a robbery and
double murder.
3 The majority assumes, as the Appellate Division found, that defendant possessed the Redd Report. 4 “Rabb” is defendant’s street name. 5 “Q” is LaCue’s street name.
3 Next, defendant’s version of the evidence, upon which the majority
relies -- that the front-seat victim, Freddy Salazar, was shot at a forty-five-
degree angle from outside the car -- is contradicted by the report of
Investigator Lawrence Mullane and the testimony of Investigators Mark
Appleyard and John Murphy, which revealed that there was a bullet hole in the
front driver’s side window and two bullet holes in the rear windows caused by
shots fired from inside the vehicle; two ten-millimeter shell casings and three
nine-millimeter shell casings were found inside the car; and all lead projectiles
recovered were from the victims or outside the vehicle, including “a possible
projectile impact mark” discovered on a garage door near the car’s location.
Other than bullet holes in the front and rear driver’s side windows fired from
within the car, the Mullane Report does not describe any projectile impact
marks inside the car.
The majority’s version of the evidence -- that the front-seat victim,
Freddy Salazar, was shot at a forty-five-degree angle -- is subverted by the
testimony of medical examiner Dr. Ernest Tucker, who testified on cross-
examination that he “can only tell the direction relative to the victim’s head”
and that “[i]f his head was down . . . it, of course, alters, again, the position of
the shooter.” Though Dr. Tucker noted that “it’s possible” that “given the
angle” “the shooter could have been outside the automobile in which the
4 victim was seated,” the unrefuted record evidence establishes that all the shots
came from inside the car. Thus, counsel’s argument that it was “simply not
possible” for defendant to shoot Freddy Salazar from the front passenger seat
is disingenuous.
Finally, counsel argued without any factual support in the record that
there were “blue specks” from the car’s interior roof in the wound of Freddy
Salazar, revealing that he was struck by a bullet fired from a forty-five-degree
angle from outside the car. Yet neither Freddy Salazar’s autopsy report nor
Dr. Tucker’s testimony mentions the existence of “blue specks” in the victim’s
wound. Instead, both the autopsy report and Dr. Tucker’s testimony mention
the presence of pseudo-stippling -- little purple dots on the skin -- on the right
side of Salazar’s face, caused potentially by particles of unburned gunpowder;
Salazar’s wound was on the left side of his face. Additionally, although Dr.
Tucker testified that the small marks could have been caused by glass
shattering, no glass was found in the victim’s wound or inside the vehicle;
instead, shattered glass was found on the sidewalk outside the car, further
indicating that the shots fired at Salazar came from within the car.
The majority also cites the Redd Report and the wrongfully excluded
testimony of Mary Jones, Maurice Thomas’s mother, as evidence supporting
defendant’s assertion of third-party guilt -- that Maurice Thomas fired a
5 weapon from outside of the car and killed Salazar. In fact, the Redd Report
did not contain significant evidence not disclosed to the jury, and Jones’s
testimony at a Rule 104 hearing held out of the presence of the jury also
implicated defendant in the murders.
First, the majority acknowledges defendant’s testimony that he, LaCue,
and Thomas were drug dealers at the time of the murders; they all used the
same drug suppliers; LaCue asked for defendant’s help in getting more drugs
to sell; several pagers were registered to defendant; and Thomas had one of
those pagers. There is no mention by the majority that Flores and Salazar were
suppliers to defendant, Thomas, and LaCue, or that LaCue asked for
defendant’s help in getting more drugs to sell on the night of the murders. The
majority also ignores that, at trial, the State offered as an exhibit admitted into
evidence the bloody piece of paper bearing pager numbers taken from one of
the victims. The fact that Thomas responded when one of the pager numbers
on the paper was called -- a fact on which the majority relies -- is merely
consistent with defendant’s testimony, not evidence of third-party guilt.
The majority also ignores portions of the Redd Report implicating
defendant. Specifically, the Redd Report summarizes Thomas’s discussions
with police and contains evidence that defendant coordinated the robbery and
murders; that defendant had given the guns used “to LaCue for disposal”; and
6 that defendant planned to hide after the killings. In addition, the Redd Report
states that defendant “liked to use strong arm force” and that Thomas told
police defendant appeared at his apartment and stated that LaCue killed the
victims. The Redd Report also identifies the victims as the source of the
heroin that Thomas and defendant then sold and reveals that, once the victims
agreed to deliver heroin to Jersey City rather than sell only from Brooklyn
defendant “began to scheme to rob and kill them, so as to leave no witnesses.”
In addition to Thomas’s discussions with the police, the Redd Report
also contains statements made by LaCue to police and to Thomas, inculpating
defendant. Specifically, the Redd Report reveals that LaCue told Thomas
defendant “finally wore him down and he agreed to assist in the attempt.” It
also contains LaCue’s admission to police that he “assisted [defendant] in the
killings of the victims,” and that officers recovered the murder weapons
following their interview with LaCue. Finally, the Redd Report states that
“[i]nterviews of the victims’ family” by investigators “revealed that shortly
prior to their deaths, the victims had been contacted by Rabb,” and the victims
left Brooklyn, New York to deliver drugs to him.
Ignoring those facts, the majority emphasizes the prosecutor’s closing
remarks to the jury that “there is not a stich, a scintilla, a scintilla, a bit, an
ounce, a piece of evidence” linking Thomas to the murder, and suggests that
7 in, listening to those remarks, the jury did not know that the victims had
Thomas’s pager number in their car. But the jury had as an exhibit the very
pager numbers found on the victims and the jury listened to defendant testify
that he gave one of the pagers -- one that was registered in his name -- to
Thomas. In short, the Redd Report would not have provided the jury with any
information it did not already have.
As to Jones’s testimony at the Rule 104 hearing, while it implicated
Thomas, it also implicated defendant and, like the Redd Report, supported his
conviction for felony murder. For example, Thomas purportedly told Jones,
“he just found out that . . . Rabb had helped LaCue,” that “Rabb was
involved,” that “Rabb was with this kid LaCue and that Rabb had helped kill
somebody.” Indeed, Jones’s testimony corroborates LaCue’s and implicates
defendant in the robbery and murder of Salazar and Flores.
Importantly, at the time of the Rule 104 hearing, Thomas 6 was in the
county jail and available to testify at the hearing and at trial. He was not
called, ostensibly for the same reasons the Redd Report was never used -- the
Redd Report, Jones’s testimony, and Thomas all inculpate defendant.
6 Thomas was shot in the head and killed in Georgia in October 2000.
8 II.
Our jurisprudence emphasizes “the constitutional mandate of a fair
trial.” State v. Pierre, 223 N.J. 560, 577 (2015). That constitutional right, of
course, includes the “[a]ccess to the skill and knowledge of counsel,” which
“is necessary to accord defendants the ‘ample opportunity to meet the case of
the prosecution’ to which they are entitled.” Ibid. (quoting Strickland v.
Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 685 (1984)). Thus, our “benchmark for judging
any claim of ineffectiveness must be whether counsel’s conduct so undermined
the proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied
on as having produced a just result.” Ibid. (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at
686). In other words, a defendant must show “that counsel performed below a
level of reasonable competence,” and that there exists “‘a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different.’” State v. Fritz, 105 N.J. 42, 60-61
(1987) (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694).
“No particular set of detailed rules for counsel’s conduct can
satisfactorily take account of the variety of circumstances faced by defense
counsel or the range of legitimate decisions regarding how best to represent a
criminal defendant.” State v. Castagna, 187 N.J. 293, 314 (2006) (quoting
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 688-89). Therefore, “[i]n determining whether defense
9 counsel’s representation was deficient, ‘“[j]udical scrutiny . . . must be highly
deferential,” and must avoid viewing the performance under the “distorting
effects of hindsight.”’” State v. Arthur, 184 N.J. 307, 318-19 (2005) (quoting
State v. Norman, 151 N.J. 5, 37 (1997)). Courts “must indulge a strong
presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of professional
reasonable assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption
that, under the circumstances, the challenged action ‘might be considered
sound trial strategy.’” Id. at 319 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 689).
First, a defense decision not to use the Redd Report was “sound trial
strategy.” The Redd Report confirmed defendant’s central role in the robbery
and murder of Salazar and Flores. Indeed, in addition to the purposeful
murder charges for which defendant was acquitted, defendant faced two counts
of felony murder, two counts of armed robbery, and two counts of possession
of a weapon for an unlawful purpose. Given its prejudicial nature, it would
have been unreasonable for counsel to focus on the Redd Report hoping to
blame Thomas for the killings, when the report emphasizes defendant’s role in
orchestrating the “scheme to rob and kill” the victims. Thus, we cannot
conclude counsel was deficient in failing to use the Redd Report because it
implicated defendant in the felony murder, robbery, and possession charges he
faced. Use of the Redd Report by defense counsel, moreover, would
10 undoubtedly have prompted the State to call Detective Redd to testify at trial.
In sum, choosing not to use the Report was “sound trial strategy.” Castagna,
187 N.J. at 314 (quoting Strickland, 466 U.S. at 690).
Nevertheless, assuming counsel’s decision not to use the Redd Report
amounted to error, it is absurd to conclude that there exists a reasonable
probability that had defense counsel used the report, “the result of the
proceeding would have been different.” Fritz, 105 N.J. at 60-61 (quoting
Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). Defendant testified that he sold drugs, had a
relationship with the New York drug suppliers, was an associate of Thomas,
and that he, Thomas, and LaCue all sold drugs in the neighborhood.
Defendant testified that LaCue approached him because he had run out of
drugs to sell, that LaCue contacted the New York drug dealers in his presence,
and that, following LaCue’s alleged conversation with the New York dealers,
he and LaCue left “almost immediately” and went to the intersection of
Lexington and Bergen Avenues. Once the New York dealers -- Salazar and
Flores -- arrived, defendant testified that he, LaCue, and Thomas approached
the car. Defendant claimed it was at that point that he walked away to talk to a
woman on the corner while drinking a can of soda.
Salazar’s wife, Rosa Flores, in large part corroborated defendant’s
testimony that LaCue contacted the New York dealers; although she testified
11 that after receiving a call from someone named “Q” and after telling the caller
that “we don’t know any Q,” the caller passed the phone to someone who
identified himself as “Rabb” before she passed the phone to Salazar. Flores
further testified that she overheard Salazar say, “the car, two-door with my
brother-in-law, just us two” and that she had overheard a prior conversation
between the victims that referred to defendant as a “stick-up kid.”
Other evidence included the numerous nine and ten-millimeter shell
casings found within the vehicle; LaCue’s testimony that he and defendant
used nine and ten-millimeter handguns to carry out the killings and that
defendant was worried he may have left a soda can with his prints in the
victims’ car; Hazel’s testimony that defendant admitted to killing Fred;
defendant’s flight to Florida after the killings; Mark LaCue’s testimony that
his brother and someone named Rabb had “shot some Puerto Ricans”; and the
red can of soda found inside the victims’ vehicle. The jury heard that
evidence, made its credibility determinations, and found defendant guilty. We
fail to see how the Redd Report could have changed the trial outcome in any
way other than further confirming defendant’s role in the death of Salazar and
Flores.
In ignoring this case’s decades of litigated facts and our rules governing
post-conviction relief, the majority concludes that failure to use the Redd
12 Report at trial constituted ineffective assistance of counsel, resulting in
prejudice. The majority reaches that conclusion notwithstanding the fact that
the Redd Report inculpates defendant, putting him at the scene and stating that
it was defendant’s plan “to rob and kill” the victims “so as to leave no
witnesses.” The majority also mistakenly concludes that there exists a
“reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s failure to use the Redd Report,
the result of the proceeding would have been different.” Ante at ___ (slip op.
at 3-4) (citing Fritz, 105 N.J. at 60-61; Strickland, 466 U.S. at 694). But in
stressing that defendant was “denied the opportunity to present a complete
defense,” the majority forces a conclusion that is at odds with the facts of this
case and in conflict with decades of established precedent governing post-
conviction relief. While there may have been a scintilla of evidence that
Thomas had some involvement in the victims’ murders, there is no evidence
that undermines defendant’s felony murder conviction. In sum, defendant was
not denied the effective assistance of counsel.
For the same reason that defendant is unable to show ineffective
assistance of counsel here, he is unable to demonstrate that the rules barring
his request for post-conviction relief (PCR) must be relaxed to prevent a
fundamental injustice.
13 A.
There are “procedural restrictions that apply to PCR applications,” State
v. Szemple, ___ N.J. ___, ___ (2021) (slip op. at 18), and this Court
recognizes that “procedural bars to post-conviction relief exist ‘in order to
promote finality in judicial proceedings,’” State v. Goodwin, 173 N.J. 583, 593
(2002) (quoting State v. McQuaid, 147 N.J. 464, 483 (1997)); see also State v.
Preciose, 129 N.J. 451, 474 (1992) (emphasizing the importance of enforcing
our procedural rules to achieve finality and judicial efficiency). Indeed, “[a]s
time passes, justice becomes more elusive and the necessity for preserving
finality and certainty of judgments increases.” State v. Afanador, 151 N.J. 41,
52 (1997).
Hence, Rule 3:22-12(a) explicitly bars initial petitions for post-
conviction relief not filed within five years of entry of the challenged
judgment of conviction, and Rule 3:22-4 (a) bars petitions that rely on grounds
that could have been raised during direct appeal. Given the need for finality,
that procedural bar “should be relaxed only ‘under exceptional
circumstances.’” Goodwin, 173 N.J. at 594 (quoting Afanador, 151 N.J. at
52). Such circumstances include a determination “that enforcement of the bar
to preclude claims, including one for ineffective assistance of counsel, would
result in fundamental injustice.” R. 3:22-4(a)(2).
14 Second or subsequent petitions are subject to even more exacting
standards. When, as here, such petitions assert that relief should be granted
based on ineffective assistance of counsel, the petitions are barred unless they
allege “a prima facie case of ineffective assistance of counsel that represented
the defendant on the first or subsequent application for post-conviction relief.”
R. 3:22-4(b)(2)(C). Moreover, second or subsequent petitions for post-
conviction relief must be timely under Rule 3:22-12(a)(2). See R. 3:22-
4(b)(1). Such petitions are timely, as relevant here, if they are filed within one
year after the latest of “the date on which the factual predicate for the relief
sought was discovered, if that factual predicate could not have been discovered
earlier through the exercise of reasonable diligence.” R. 3:22-12(a)(2)(B).
Though post-conviction relief may be “the last opportunity for a
defendant to challenge the veracity of a criminal verdict on constitutional
grounds,” Szemple, ___ N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 18), it is neither a substitute for
direct appeal nor an opportunity to relitigate a case adjudicated on the merits,
State v. Jones, 219 N.J. 298, 310 (2014) (citing R. 3:22-5). Furthermore,
although we may relax procedural impediments to avoid fundamental injustice,
doing so requires a careful balance of fairness and finality. State v. Martini,
187 N.J. 469, 481 (2006).
15 Defendant and the majority fail to explain why, after more than two
decades, defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim premised on
counsel’s failure to use the Redd Report was not raised on direct appeal or
during defendant’s first or second PCR. Furthermore, defendant knew about
the bloody piece of paper with the pager numbers and had both the transcript
of the Rule 104 hearing and, as the majority acknowledges, the Redd Report.
But rather than raise the claim in a timely manner, defendant instead waited to
raise his ineffective assistance claim until after Thomas died and could not
testify. That precisely is why “[a]s time passes, justice becomes more elusive”
to the murder victims here. Afanador, 151 N.J. at 53; see also Szemple, ___
N.J. at ___ (slip op. at 3-4) (denying defendant’s motion for post-conviction
discovery forty-three years after the victim’s murder and nearly thirty years
after defendant’s conviction).
Also, a fundamental injustice occurs when the judicial system has failed
to provide to defendants “‘fair proceedings leading to a just outcome’ or when
‘inadvertent errors mistakenly impacted a determination of guilt or otherwise
wrought a miscarriage of justice.’” State v. Nash, 212 N.J. 518, 546 (2013)
(quoting State v. Mitchell, 126 N.J. 565, 587 (1992)). But nothing in this case
suggests defendant was denied “fair proceedings leading to a just outcome” or
16 that defendant’s trial was fraught with “inadvertent errors mistakenly
impact[ing] a determination of guilt” or causing “a miscarriage of justice.”
Ibid. ----
Indeed, the State presented to the jury overwhelming evidence of
defendant’s involvement in the planning and execution of the drug deal
culminating in two murders. That evidence included defendant’s own
testimony that LaCue approached him after running out of heroin to sell, and
that he, LaCue, and Thomas met Freddy Salazar and Luis Flores the night they
were murdered. It also included Rosa Flores’s testimony that she was
instructed by her husband not to speak to anyone but “Rabb,” that someone
called her house identifying themselves as “Q,” and that after telling the caller
“we don’t know any Q,” the caller handed the phone to someone who
identified himself as “Rabb.”
Furthermore, LaCue testified that he and defendant got into the victims’
car, that defendant instructed the driver to park on Sackett Street, and then,
instead of pulling out money to pay for the drugs, defendant pulled out a gun
and shot Salazar twice. LaCue also testified that he shot the back-seat
passenger, Flores, and that after fleeing the scene, he gave the guns used -- a
nine-millimeter and a ten-millimeter -- to his brother Mark with instructions to
get rid of them.
17 The jury also heard testimony from defendant’s then girlfriend, Hazel
Forrester, who testified that on the night of the killings, defendant came to the
apartment that she shared with her sister, Arlene, and told Arlene that he had
killed somebody named Fred. After hearing all of evidence admitted, the jury
reached the sound conclusion that defendant was guilty of two counts of felony
murder, two counts of armed robbery, and one count of possession of a
handgun for an unlawful purpose. See id. at 541 (“A jury verdict that has been
upheld on appeal ‘should not be disturbed except for the clearest of reasons.’”
(quoting State v. Ways, 180 N.J. 171, 187 (2004))). Accordingly, no
“fundamental injustice” occurred here, and there is no clear reason to disturb
the jury’s verdict. See id. at 541, 546. I therefore dissent.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
State v. Wilbert Hannah (084052) (Hudson County & Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilbert-hannah-084052-hudson-county-statewide-nj-2021.