State v. Wildemar A. Dangcil (085665) (Bergen County & Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 16, 2021
DocketA-56-20
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Wildemar A. Dangcil (085665) (Bergen County & Statewide) (State v. Wildemar A. Dangcil (085665) (Bergen County & Statewide)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wildemar A. Dangcil (085665) (Bergen County & Statewide), (N.J. 2021).

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. Wildemar A. Dangcil (A-56-20) (085665)

Argued June 29, 2021-- Decided August 16, 2021

SOLOMON, J., writing for the Court.

The Court considers defendant Wildemar A. Dangcil’s contentions that the hybrid jury-selection process implemented by the Judiciary in response to the COVID-19 pandemic (1) deprived him of his rights to presence and representation and (2) failed to ensure him a jury drawn from a representative cross-section of the community.

Jury selection for defendant’s trial was scheduled for April 20, 2020, but was adjourned in light of the pandemic. On July 22, 2020, in coordination with representatives from the Attorney General’s Office, Office of the Public Defender, County Prosecutors Association of New Jersey, and New Jersey State Bar Association, the Court established a plan to resume criminal and civil jury selections using a hybrid process intended to maintain the core components of pre-pandemic jury operations modified to protect the health and safety of jurors, attorneys, parties, and all court users.

Under the predominately virtual selection process, jurors were to be summoned consistent with pre-pandemic practices, except that they were to receive a summons notice informing them of both the virtual jury-selection process and socially distanced trials. Prospective jurors also received a COVID-19 questionnaire. Court administration and assignment judges were tasked with prescreening jurors for technological access and knowledge, and with providing devices and broadband access as necessary. Judiciary staff prescreened jurors for trial availability, medical inability, and other considerations consistent with pre-pandemic protocols. All case-specific questioning was conducted during virtual voir dire before a judge, counsel, and the parties. Following virtual voir dire, a fraction of prospective jurors reported in person to courts for the final phase of selection with facemask and social-distancing precautions observed.

New Jersey’s first jury trial under the plan was set to begin in Bergen County on September 21, 2020, and defendant’s was selected as the first trial to be conducted. During pretrial conferences, defense counsel advised that defendant intended to challenge the hybrid jury-selection process, but no such challenge was filed. On the morning of September 21 -- after thirteen prospective jurors were interviewed over the course of two hours -- defense counsel filed a challenge of the array. 1 Brian McLaughlin, manager of jury programs for the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC), attested that the same Jury Management System used to generate jury pools and send out summonses and questionnaires pre-pandemic was used in the hybrid process, with the exception of added COVID-19 related materials and the temporary disablement of the juror self-deferral option. As they did pre-pandemic, jury managers addressed requests for disqualification, excusals, and deferrals in a standardized pre- screening process that did not include trial-specific information. Also consistent with pre-pandemic practices, juror demographic information including race, ethnicity, and gender was not collected.

Regarding defendant’s case, Lourdes Figueroa, jury manager for the Bergen County Vicinage, certified that 800 jurors were summoned. Of that list, 197 did not respond, 70 summonses were returned as “undeliverable,” 178 prospective jurors did not qualify for service under statute, 90 were excused based on statutory factors, and 58 were deferred due to calendar conflicts; in the end, 207 potential jurors remained. Only two prospective jurors required court-supplied equipment in order to participate; one accepted a tablet and one refused a device, which required that individual’s juror service to be rescheduled. The juror yield for pools summoned beginning on September 21, 2020 was comparable to the Bergen Vicinage’s February 2020 yield.

Defense counsel attacked the hybrid process, claiming a lack of transparency and of juror demographic data; the purportedly unclear standards with which prospective jurors were excused and deferred; and the possibility that prospective jurors who were older, of modest means, and/or lacking in technological access were disproportionately excluded. The trial court rejected defendant’s contentions both as time-barred under --- Rule 1:8-3(b) and on the merits, opining that the pre- and post-pandemic selection processes were substantially similar, and that defendant’s arguments were “based on nothing more than conjecture and innuendo spun from inaccurate information and rumors.”

After the Appellate Division affirmed, defendant was convicted of and sentenced for resisting arrest/eluding, terroristic threats, attempted aggravated arson, and attempted aggravated assault. The Court granted direct certification “limited to defendant’s challenge to the hybrid virtual/in-person jury selection procedure.” 246 N.J. 212 (2021).

HELD: *The pre-voir dire disqualification, excusal, or deferral of jurors is not a stage at which defendant is entitled to be present or be represented, and defendant has failed to support his representative-cross-section claim.

*In recognition of the important issues raised, but not nearly substantiated, in this appeal and to better assist New Jersey courts in preventing potential underrepresentation and irregularities stemming from the hybrid process and other facially neutral selection procedures, the Court directs the AOC to begin collecting jurors’ demographic information. 2 1. The trial court correctly determined that defendant’s filed challenge was untimely. Rule 1:8-3(b) directs that “[a] challenge to the array shall be decided before any individual juror is examined.” Relaxation of that time-bar is granted only upon a prima facie showing of actual prejudice to defendant’s right to a fair and impartial jury. Here, defendant waited for two hours and through the questioning of thirteen prospective jurors before filing his challenge, and counsel’s reliance on notice of a likely challenge to the jury pool is unpersuasive. Further, defendant does not set forth a prima facie claim of actual prejudice warranting relaxation of Rule 1:8-3(b)’s time-bar. (pp. 17-19)

2. Defendant argues that he was deprived of his constitutional rights to be present and represented by counsel during the pre-voir dire disqualification, excusal, and deferral of jurors. A defendant’s right to be present at trial and during critical stages of the adversarial process is guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment and by Article I, Paragraph 10 of the State Constitution. Reviewing the statutes that set the criteria for disqualifying jurors and that repose discretion for excusals or deferrals in the assignment judges or their designees, the Court notes that the process employed here was substantially the same as the pre-pandemic process. (pp. 19-21)

3. Federal circuit courts have concluded that routine administrative procedures such as the statutory disqualification, excusal, or deferral of prospective jurors are not part of the true jury impanelment process and thus not a critical stage of the trial during which the parties and counsel must be present. The Court agrees. Defendant fails to provide a persuasive reason why he was entitled to be present and represented during the process of statutory qualification, excusal, and deferral set in place long prior to the pandemic.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Wildemar A. Dangcil (085665) (Bergen County & Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wildemar-a-dangcil-085665-bergen-county-statewide-nj-2021.