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State Of New Jersey V Earl L Kelly

               NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
              APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

                                   SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                   APPELLATE DIVISION
                                   DOCKET NO. A-3424-22

STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

     Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

EARL L. KELLY,

     Defendant-Appellant.
_______________________

           Submitted March 17, 2025 – Decided July 23, 2025

           Before Judges Gummer, Jacobs, and Jablonski.

           On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
           Law Division, Morris County, Indictment No.
           22-03-0145.

           Jennifer Nicole Sellitti, Public Defender, attorney for
           appellant (Stefan Van Jura, Assistant Deputy Public
           Defender, of counsel and on the brief).

           Robert J. Carroll, Morris County Prosecutor, attorney
           for respondent (Erin Smith Wisloff, Legal Assistant,
           on the brief).

           Appellant filed pro se supplemental briefs.

     The opinion of the court was delivered by

GUMMER, J.A.D.
      Defendant Earl L. Kelly appeals from a judgment of conviction and

sentence imposed following a jury trial at which he was convicted of second -

degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-

4(a)(1); second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-

5(b)(1); and third-degree criminal restraint, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-2(a).     The jury

acquitted defendant of all other charges, including first-degree robbery,

N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1(a)(2), and multiple counts of first-degree sexual assault,

N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(3) and (4). On the weapons offenses, the court imposed

concurrent eight-year terms of imprisonment, with a four-year period of parole

ineligibility. The court sentenced defendant to a consecutive four-year term of

imprisonment, with no parole ineligibility, on the criminal-restraint conviction.

      In his counseled brief, defendant makes the following arguments on

appeal:

            POINT I

                  AS THIS COURT HELD IN STATE V.
                  JENKINS, 234 N.J. SUPER. 311 (APP. DIV.
                  1989), THE CONVICTION FOR POSSESSION
                  OF A HANDGUN FOR AN UNLAWFUL
                  PURPOSE MUST BE REVERSED BECAUSE
                  ACQUITTAL OF THE ACCOMPANYING
                  CHARGES            ERASED          THE
                  INDENTIFICATION OF THE UNLAWFUL
                  PURPOSE, LEADING THE JURY TO
                  SPECULATE AS TO WHAT POSSIBLE
                  PURPOSES QUALIFY AS UNLAWFUL.



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                                       2
            POINT II

                  THE MATTER MUST BE REMANDED FOR
                  RESENTENCING BECAUSE: 1) THE TRIAL
                  COURT ERRED IN REFUSING TO MERGE
                  THE CONVICTION FOR POSSESSION OF A
                  WEAPON FOR AN UNLAWFUL PURPOSE
                  WITH THE ONLY PROVEN PURPOSE OF
                  CRIMINAL RESTRAINT; 2) THE SENTENCE
                  FOR CRIMINAL RESTRAINT SHOULD BE
                  ORDERED TO RUN CONCURRENTLY
                  WITH THE SENTENCE FOR POSSESSION
                  OF A WEAPON FOR AN UNLAWFUL
                  PURPOSE IF THE OFFENSES ARE NOT
                  MERGED FOR SENTENCING; AND 3) THE
                  TRIAL COURT FAILED TO PROVIDE AN
                  EXPLANATION AS TO THE OVERALL
                  FAIRNESS OF CONSECUTIVE SENTENCES
                  UNDER THE FACTS OF THIS CASE.

                  A. The Trial Court Erred in Refusing to Merge
                  the Conviction for Possession of a Weapon for
                  an Unlawful Purpose with Criminal Restraint.

                  B. The Sentence for Criminal Restraint Should
                  Be Ordered to Run Concurrently with the
                  Sentence for Possession of a Weapon for an
                  Unlawful Purpose if the Offenses are not
                  Merged for Sentencing.

                  C. A Remand Is Necessary Because the Trial
                  Court Failed to Provide an Explanation as to
                  The Overall Fairness of Consecutive Sentences
                  Under the Facts of this Case.

In a supplemental pro se brief, defendant raises these additional issues:

            POINT ONE: IT WAS PLAIN ERROR FOR THE
            [TRIAL] COURT NOT TO TAILOR THE JURY
            INSTRUCTION ON COUNT TWELVE, "CRIMINAL

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                                        3
RESTRAINT," TO THE FACTS OF APPELLANT'S
CASE WHICH REQUIRES REVERSAL OF THAT
CHARGE.

POINT TWO: THE "BLUE IPHONE'S" CONTENTS
MUST BE SUPPRESSED, AND DEFENSE
COUNSEL WAS INEFFECTIVE FOR NOT
REQUESTING AS MUCH, BECAUSE THE
ARRESTING    OFFICERS    LACKED     THE
AUTHORITY TO:

    a. Seize it From Appellant's Vehicle – As
    it Was Not on Appellant's Person at the
    Time of the Arrest [Not Raised Below by
    Defense Counsel]

    b. Demand that Appellant Produce a
    Passcode to His/For His "Blue [i]Phone."
    [Not Raised Below by Defense Counsel]

    c. File for a Pen Register Trap and Trace
    Under     the    Exigent    Circumstances
    Exception to the Warrant Requirement
    Because There Was No Exigency at the
    Time of the Filing of Said Warrant.

POINT THREE: APPELLANT'S [MIRANDA V.
ARIZONA, 384 U.S. 436 (1966),] RIGHTS WERE
VIOLATED DURING THE JANUARY 7[], 2022
INTERROGATION, AS:

    a. The Appellant Was Never Informed of
    the Actual Charges He was Questioned
    for.

    b.    The State's Agents Intentionally
    Withheld Charging Appellant in Order to
    Gain Inculpatory Admissions from Him.




                                                A-3424-22
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    c. The State's Agents Placed Undue
    Influence       on     Appellant      by
    Quintessentially Threatening to Take His
    Children--as A Resultant Consequence of
    Arresting His Fiancé on Gun Charges if
    He Did Not Incriminate Himself
    Regarding Same.

    d. The [Trial] Court Forced Counsel for
    the Defense to be Ineffective During the
    Miranda Hearing as the "Timing" of the
    Arrest Warrant(s) Would Have Been
    Pivotal Pursuant to [State v. Diaz, 470
    N.J. Super. 495 (App. Div. 2022),] and It
    Would Have Shed Light on the Facts
    Surrounding the Detective's Intentions
    Pertaining to the Intentional Withholding
    of the Filing of Charges for "Two Hours."

    e. Appellant Was Subjected to "Pre-
    Interrogations" By the Parsippany/Morris
    County Detectives in Stark Contravention
    of Missouri v. Seibert, 542 U.S. 600
    (2004) and State v. O'Neill, 193 N.J. 148
    (2007).

    f.     Under the Totality of the
    Circumstances, Appellant's Statements to
    the Parsippany and Edison Officials
    Should Have Been Suppressed.

POINT FOUR: THE STATE VIOLATED BRADY V.
MARYLAND[, 373 U.S. 83 (1963),] WHEN IT:

    a. Destroyed Alleged Text Messages
    Between Detective Keiling and the
    Officers Performing A Search of
    Appellant's Vehicle at the Parsippany
    Police Department.



                                                A-3424-22
                       5
                  b. Did Not Abide by the 2021 Attorney
                  General Directive to Wear Body Worn
                  Camera During the January 7, 2022 Arrest
                  of Appellant in Elizabeth, New Jersey and
                  Counsel for the Defense Was Ineffective
                  for Not Moving to Suppress the Blue
                  iPhone and the Weapon.

                  c. Failed to Produce the January 7, 2022
                  Video Footage From the Elizabeth Wawa
                  Which Captured the Front View of the
                  Store and its Parking Lot Area.

            POINT FIVE:  THE STATE MADE HIGHLY
            PREJUDICIAL    STATEMENTS     DURING
            SUMMATION THAT COULD NOT HAVE BEEN
            CURED, CANNOT NOW BE SUBJECT TO A
            HARMLESS ERROR ANALYSIS, AND REQUIRE
            REVERSAL AND THE SCHEDULING OF A NEW
            TRIAL.

      We vacate the conviction because the prosecutor made prejudicial

statements during summation suggesting defendant had tailored his testimony

based on what he heard while exercising his fundamental rights to attend the

trial and confront the witnesses against him, thereby depriving defendant of a

fair trial. We remand the case for a new trial. For the sake of completeness,

we considered and reject defendant's remaining arguments regarding his

convictions. In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we conclude that had

we not set aside his convictions, we would have remanded the case for

resentencing because the court did not sufficiently analyze the appropriateness

of the imposition of the consecutive sentences under State v. Yarbough, 100

                                                                        A-3424-22
                                      6
N.J. 627, 643-44 (1985), or the overall fairness of the sentence under State v.

Torres, 246 N.J. 246, 268 (2021).

                                        I.

        On December 24, 2021, Detectives George Tsimpedes and John Keiling

of the Parsippany Police Department responded to a hotel in Parsippany after

receiving a report that a sexual assault had occurred there. They met with the

alleged victim, K.N., who was working as an "escort." 1 She reported a "client"

had pulled a handgun on her, forced her to take off her clothes, twice placed

his penis in her mouth, digitally penetrated her, and took her money before he

left her hotel room.       She subsequently provided the detectives with a

description of the client and the telephone number she had used to contact him.

The detectives obtained surveillance footage from the hotel. The telephone

number and the surveillance video, which depicted a car leaving the hotel that

matched a description of defendant's car, enabled detectives to identify

defendant as the primary suspect.

        On January 7, 2022, Edison Township police officers located defendant

in his car and detained him. Detective Thomas Laird of the Morris County

Prosecutor's Office told defendant he was conducting an investigation and had

a search warrant for defendant's vehicle; he also told defendant he was being

1
    We use initials in accordance with Rule 1:38-3(c)(12).


                                                                        A-3424-22
                                        7
detained and would be transported to the Parsippany Police Department. The

detective obtained a grey iPhone defendant had in his pocket and a blue iPhone

he had on the front seat of his car. Defendant asked if he could call his sister,

gave the detective the password to unlock his phone, and called his sister.

      After defendant was transported to the Parsippany Police Department,

Detective Laird observed a Crime Scene Unit locate a firearm in defendant's

car. The firearm was later determined to be a black, brown, and gold .25

caliber semi-automatic Beretta Model 21A.         Detective Laird conducted a

search of a firearms records database and determined defendant did not have a

permit to purchase or a permit to carry a handgun.              Detective Laird

subsequently extracted data from the cell phones.       Data from both phones

indicated defendant was at the hotel in Parsippany on December 24, 2021. The

blue phone contained a photograph of K.N.'s identification, and data from the

phone indicated the photograph was taken on December 24, 2021, at the

Parsippany hotel.

      At the Parsippany Police Department, Detective Keiling and a detective

from the Edison Police Department advised defendant of his Miranda rights.

Using a pre-printed form, 2 they read him the Miranda rights, explained them to


2
   See State v. Tillery, 238 N.J. 293, 318 (2019) ("Miranda cards . . . should
direct the interrogating officer to address the question of waiver in the Miranda


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                                       8
him, asked if he had any questions, had him place his initials next to each one

to note he understood them, and advised him to read and sign the waiver at the

bottom.      Defendant initialed and signed the form.      The detectives told

defendant he could start talking and stop talking whenever he wished and

asked him if he wanted to speak with them. Defendant agreed to speak with

them.

        Defendant told the detectives he saw escorts approximately twice a

week.      He admitted he possibly was in Parsippany on December 24.           He

initially denied having any sexual contact with the victim but ultimately said

she had "performed services" and he had paid her. He denied holding her at

gunpoint, taking anything from her, or photographing her identification. He

denied having a gun in his car. After the initial interrogation ended, defendant

asked to speak with Detective Keiling and advised him he wanted to speak

further.    Detective Keiling again advised defendant of his Miranda rights;

defendant initialed and signed a second Miranda form. Detective Keiling and

Detective Tsimpedes resumed the interrogation.         Defendant admitted he

carried a .25 caliber Beretta gun in his car but denied taking it to the hotel

room. He asserted the victim had taken the photograph of her identification.

inquiry. Miranda waiver cards and forms should guide an officer to ask
whether the suspect understands his or her rights, and whether, understanding
those rights, he . . . is willing to answer questions.")


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                                       9
      On March 16, 2022, a grand jury issued an indictment, charging

defendant with four counts of first-degree sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-

2(a)(3) and (4); first-degree robbery, N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1(a)(2); two counts of

second-degree    sexual   assault,   N.J.S.A.   2C:14-2(c)(1);    second-degree

possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a); second-

degree unlawful possession of a weapon, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1); two counts

of third-degree aggravated criminal sexual contact, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3(a); third-

degree criminal restraint, N.J.S.A. 2C:13-2(a); fourth-degree aggravated

assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(4); and fourth-degree criminal sexual contact,

N.J.S.A. 2C:14-3(b).

      The State moved pursuant to N.J.R.E. 104(c) to admit the statements

made by defendant during the interrogation. During an evidentiary hearing,

Detective Keiling testified about his investigation, his interview of the victim,

and the interrogation of defendant. After hearing argument on the motion, the

court on December 5, 2022, entered an order and written opinion in which it

granted the motion to admit defendant's statements. The court found defendant

had been duly apprised of his Miranda rights, had clearly understood those

rights, and had knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived them.

      At the trial, the victim testified that on December 24, 2021, she was

working as a prostitute at a hotel in Parsippany. She identified defendant as a



                                                                          A-3424-22
                                       10
client whom she had met that day in the hotel room. She testified that when he

arrived, defendant asked her if she were alone and if she were a police officer

and then went into the bathroom and opened the curtain. According to the

victim, defendant paid her $150, which she placed under a hotel telephone, and

she consensually attempted to perform oral sex on defendant. She testified

that when his penis "would not perform," she had told defendant she "could

not continue working with him" and he responded, "okay, no problem."

      According to the victim, after defendant got dressed, he pulled a black

and brown pistol on her, told her to give him her money, and looked around

the room for the money. She also stated he had told her to "keep quiet," turned

up the volume on the television so no one could hear her, unplugged the hotel

telephone, and placed her cell phone on airplane mode.            She testified

defendant, with one hand holding the gun and the other hand grabbing her

head, forced her to perform oral sex on him twice without a condom and then

used his fingers to "check[] around [her] vagina . . . to see if [she] had money

inside [her] vagina."   She stated he ultimately found approximately $500,

which included his payment to her, she had placed under the hotel room

telephone.   According to the victim, before he left, defendant took a

photograph of her identification and told her not to leave the room for five




                                                                         A-3424-22
                                      11
minutes. After he left, she called the hotel front desk and law-enforcement

officers subsequently came to her room.

      In addition to the victim, the State called as witnesses the hotel's

assistant general manager and various law-enforcement officials, including

Detective Tsimpedes and Detective Laird, who was admitted as an expert in

mobile device forensics and testified about his investigatory efforts, evidence

regarding defendant's gun and cell phones, and his contact with defendant.

      Defendant testified on his own behalf. He admitted he had met the

victim at the Parsippany hotel on December 24, 2021, and had hired and paid

her to perform sex acts on him. He testified that after she "performed the

services," she had asked him for a tip and he told her he had no more cash. He

claimed she wanted him to send her money through Western Union and took a

photograph of her identification with his blue phone. He admitted that after he

was arrested, he had waived his Miranda rights and voluntarily gave a

statement to the police. He asserted the victim was able to describe the gun

because she had seen a photograph of it on his phone. He denied waving a gun

at her, forcing her to have sex with him, or taking anything from her. On

cross-examination, he admitted a .25 caliber Beretta gun was found in his car

the day he was detained and at that time he was under probation and not

allowed to possess any weapon. He denied possessing a gun on December 24,



                                                                        A-3424-22
                                      12
2021, and testified he had placed the gun in his car on January 3 or 4, 2022.

He admitted he did not have a permit to purchase or carry the gun and that

during the interrogation, he had denied he possessed a gun. He testified the

gun had belonged to his friend's deceased father but admitted he had told law -

enforcement officers he had purchased it "off the street."

      Following the close of evidence and after the court had conducted a

charge conference, counsel addressed the jury in their closing arguments.

Defense counsel focused on the lack of forensic evidence and on why the jury

should believe defendant and not the victim. After recounting the victim's

testimony in her summation, the prosecutor stated:

             That's what happened that day, ladies and gentlemen,
             not what the defendant told you when he was on the
             stand yesterday after he sat through this entire trial,
             hearing the testimony of every witness, after he heard
             all of the evidence against him, after having time to
             construct a new narrative. What he told you was just a
             story, a story of having consent, which the victim even
             admitted that her very first interaction with the
             defendant was consensual.

Defendant did not object to that or any other part of the prosecutor's

summation.

      During its charge, the court instructed the jury that "[t]he comments of

the attorneys on these matters were not evidence" and that "[a]rguments,

statements, remarks, openings and summations of counsel are not evidence and



                                                                        A-3424-22
                                       13
must not be treated as evidence."        The court explained, "[a]lthough the

attorneys may point out what they think is important in this case, you must rely

upon your own understanding and recollection of the evidence that was

admitted during the trial. . . . Any comments by counsel are not controlling."

      In its charge, which tracked the model jury charges, the court instructed

the jury as to the law on the crimes defendant had been charged with

committing.     Regarding the unlawful-purpose weapons charge, the court

instructed the jury that "[a]ny person who has in his possession any firearm

with a purpose to use it unlawfully against the person or property of another is

guilty of a crime." As to the third and fourth elements of that crime, the court

explained:

              The third element that the State must prove beyond a
              reasonable doubt is that defendant's purpose in
              possessing the firearm was to use it against the person
              or property of another. Purpose is a condition of the
              mind which cannot be seen and can only be
              determined by inferences from conduct, words or acts.

              In determining the defendant's purpose in possessing
              the firearm, you may consider that a person acts
              purposely with respect to the nature of his conduct or
              a result of his conduct if it is the person's conscious
              object to engage in conduct of that nature or to cause
              such a result. That is, a person acts purposely if he
              means to act in a certain way or to cause a certain
              result. A person acts purposely with respect to
              attendant circumstances if the person is aware of the
              existence of such circumstances or believes or hopes
              that they exist.

                                                                         A-3424-22
                                        14
      The defendant's purpose or conscious objective to use
      the firearm against another person or the property of
      another may be found to exist at any time he is in
      possession of the object and need not have been the
      defendant's original intent in possessing the object.

      The fourth element that the State must prove beyond a
      reasonable doubt is that the defendant had a purpose
      to use the firearm in a manner that was prohibited by
      law. I've already defined "purpose" for you. This
      element requires that you find that the State has
      proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
      possessed a firearm with the conscious objective,
      design or specific intent to use it against the person or
      property of another in an unlawful manner as charged
      in the indictment, and not for some other purpose.

      In this case, the State contends that the defendant's
      unlawful purpose in possessing the firearm was to use
      it against the person of [K.N.]; that is, to threaten her
      with the weapon during the commission of the crimes
      of aggravated sexual assault and robbery and to point
      the weapon at [K.N.] during the aggravated assault.

      You must not rely on your own notions of the
      unlawfulness of some of the other undescribed
      purposes of the defendant; rather, you must consider
      whether the State has proven the specific unlawful
      purpose charged. The unlawful purpose alleged by the
      State may be inferred from all that was said or done
      and from all of the surrounding circumstances of this
      case. However, the State need not prove that the
      defendant accomplished his unlawful purpose of using
      the firearm.

      [(Emphasis added).]

The court gave the following instruction on criminal restraint:




                                                                  A-3424-22
                                 15
A person is guilty of criminal restraint if he knowingly
restrains another unlawfully in circumstances
exposing the other to risk of serious bodily injury.

In order for you to find the defendant guilty of this
offense, the State must prove the following elements
of this offense beyond a reasonable doubt:

Number [one], that        the   defendant    knowingly
restrained [K.N.];

Number [two], that the defendant knew the restraint
was unlawful; and,

[Three], that the restraint was under circumstances in
which the defendant knowingly exposed [the victim]
to the risk of serious bodily injury.

The first element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the defendant knowingly
restrained [the victim]. The word "restraint" means
confinement, abridgement or limitation. Restraint
involves hindrance, confinement or restriction of
liberty.

The second element that the State must prove beyond
a reasonable doubt is that the defendant knew that the
restraint was unlawful.

The term "unlawful" means to accomplish the restraint
by force, threat, or deception.

The third element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the restraint was under
circumstances in which the defendant knowingly
exposed [K.N.] to a risk of serious bodily injury. The
term "serious bodily injury" means bodily injury
which creates a substantial risk of death or which
causes serious permanent disfigurement or protracted



                                                           A-3424-22
                          16
            loss or impairment of the functions of any bodily
            member or organ.

            With regard to all three of these elements, the State
            must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
            defendant acted knowingly.

      The jury convicted defendant of the two weapons charges and of

criminal restraint. The jury acquitted defendant of all other charges.

      After the jury rendered its verdict and before the court conducted a

sentencing hearing, the court permitted defendant to file and argue a motion

his attorney had declined to submit.        In the motion defendant argued the

unlawful-purpose conviction could not stand because the jury had acquitted

him of the specific unlawful purposes that had been charged and no evidence

of a broader unlawful purpose had been "adduced."            He also argued the

evidence presented at trial was insufficient to support the criminal-restraint

conviction and contended the verdicts were "fatally inconsistent."        After

hearing argument, the court denied the motion, finding:

            And in this case, . . . the jury clearly believed, based
            on their verdict, that [defendant] went to that hotel
            room armed with a black and brown pistol. And he
            displayed that pistol because the victim was able to
            describe it to law enforcement. And . . . getting to . . .
            whether there's sufficient evidence, she testified that
            he pulled out the pistol. She described it as a pistol
            that was black and brown in color, the same pistol that
            was later recovered from [defendant's] automobile.




                                                                         A-3424-22
                                       17
            She testified that [defendant] told her to keep quiet.
            She testified that when he first came into the room, he
            checked the bathroom, asked her if there was anyone
            else present. Testified he pulled back the shower
            curtain and photographs show, when the police
            arrived, the shower curtain had been pulled back
            somewhat, as if someone had looked in the bathroom,
            in the shower to see if there was anyone hiding. He
            turned up the volume of the TV, according to the
            witness, he pulled out the phone jack.

            On those circumstances alone, the jury could find that
            he had an unlawful purpose.

      At the sentencing hearing, the court addressed the aggravating and

mitigating factors, finding aggravating factors three ("risk that the defendant

will commit another offense"), six ("extent of the defendant's prior criminal

record and the seriousness of the offenses of which the defendant has been

convicted"), and nine ("need for deterring the defendant and others from

violating the law") applied. N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3), (6), and (9). Finding no

mitigating factors, the court held the aggravating factors outweighed the

mitigating factors. Addressing whether the unlawful-purpose and criminal-

restraint convictions should merge, the court held "[m]erger is not appropriate

under the circumstances here based on State v[.] Diaz," 144 N.J. 628, 639

(1996).

      On the unlawful-possession conviction, the court sentenced defendant to

an eight-year term of imprisonment with a four-year parole-ineligibility period.



                                                                         A-3424-22
                                      18
The court rendered the same sentence on the unlawful-purpose conviction and

held that sentence would run concurrent to the sentence imposed for the

unlawful-possession conviction.    On the criminal-restraint conviction, the

court imposed a four-year term of imprisonment with no period of parole

ineligibility, to be served consecutively to the sentence imposed on the

unlawful-possession conviction.   The court also required defendant to pay

certain monetary fines and penalties and to provide a DNA sample.

     The court explained its decision to impose consecutive sentences:

           I do think it requires a consecutive sentence primarily
           for the reasons expressed by the prosecutor. . . .
           [T]here is a separate victim on the criminal restraint
           count, that being [K.N.]. Count [nine] is an offense,
           as the prosecutor . . . indicated that focuses on the
           State being a victim. It's . . . a possessory offense,
           possession of a weapon without a permit, and the
           criminal restraint count is focused on harm inflicted to
           a separate victim, and that would be [K.N.].

           And I think the [Yarbough] [f]actors indicate a
           consecutive sentence is appropriate under the
           circumstances. There should be no free crimes here
           and running a concurrent sentence would essentially
           give [defendant] a free crime committed against
           [K.N.], so a consecutive sentence is appropriate.

     The court entered an order denying defendant's motion on June 8, 2023,

and a judgment of conviction on June 9, 2023. This appeal followed.




                                                                         A-3424-22
                                     19
                                       II.

      We address first the argument defendant raised last in his supplemental

pro se brief. Defendant argues he is entitled to a new trial pursuant to State v.

Daniels, 182 N.J. 80 (2004), due to "highly prejudicial statements" the

prosecutor made during her summation. Defendant specifically takes issue

with the prosecutor's assertion defendant had tailored his testimony based on

what he heard while attending the trial, language we repeat here:

            That's what happened that day, ladies and gentlemen,
            not what the defendant told you when he was on the
            stand yesterday after he sat through this entire trial,
            hearing the testimony of every witness, after he heard
            all of the evidence against him, after having time to
            construct a new narrative. What he told you was just a
            story, a story of having consent, which the victim even
            admitted that her very first interaction with the
            defendant was consensual.

The State concedes the prosecutor erred but contends reversal is not warranted

because the prosecutor's statements did not "substantially prejudice[]"

defendant "in presenting the merits of his case." In making that argument, the

State relies in part on instructions the court gave during its charge that

counsels' statements and summations were not evidence.

      Because defendant did not object at trial to the prosecutor's summation,

we consider his challenge to the language at issue under the plain-error

standard of review. Id. at 80 (reviewing alleged error based on prosecutor's



                                                                          A-3424-22
                                       20
summation under a plain-error standard of review when defendant made no

objection to the summation at trial). "Under that standard, a reviewing court

must 'disregard any alleged error unless it is of such a nature as to have been

clearly capable of producing an unjust result.'" State v. Bragg, 260 N.J. 387,

404 (2025) (quoting State v. Funderburg, 225 N.J. 66, 79 (2016)) (internal

quotation marks omitted).        "Reversal is justified only when the error was

'sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt . . . as to whether the error led the jury to

a result it otherwise might not have reached.'" Ibid. (omission in original)

(quoting Funderburg, 225 N.J. at 79) (internal quotation marks omitted).

      In Daniels, the Court considered under the plain-error standard the

following unobjected-to statements the prosecutor had made during summation

in that case:

                Now, I said that the defendant in his testimony is
                subject to the same kinds of scrutiny as the State's
                witnesses. But just keep in mind, there is something
                obvious to you, I'm just restating something you
                already know, which is all I do in my summation, the
                defendant sits with counsel, listens to the entire case
                and he listens to each one of the State's witness[es], he
                knows what facts he can't get past. The fact that he
                was in the SUV. The fact that there's a purse in the
                car. The fact that a robbery happened. But he can
                choose to craft his version to accommodate those
                facts.

                [182 N.J. at 87 (alternation and emphasis in original).]

The trial court in Daniels included the following instructions in its charge:

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                                           21
            You are to determine the credibility of the various
            witnesses, as well as what weight to attach to any
            particular witness'[s] testimony. You and you alone
            are the sole and exclusive judges of that evidence, the
            credibility of the witnesses and the weight to attach to
            the testimony of each witness.

            Regardless [of] what counsel may have said during
            their closing arguments or if I say anything about the
            evidence, which I generally do not, keep in mind it is
            your recollection of the evidence that should guide
            you as the judges of the facts. Any arguments,
            statements, remarks in the opening or summations of
            counsel are not evidence and must not be treated by
            you as evidence.

            [Ibid. (alterations in original).]

Reversing the defendant's conviction and remanding the case for a new trial,

the Court held the prosecutor's statements were improper and the trial court's

instructions did not cure them. Id. at 100-02.

      In reaching that conclusion, the Court considered a criminal defendant's

"fundamental rights that are 'essential to a fair trial.'"   Id. at 97 (quoting

Pointer v. Texas, 380 U.S. 400, 403 (1965)). Those rights include "the right to

be present at trial," "to be confronted with the witnesses against him and to

hear the State's evidence," "to present witnesses and evidence in his defense,"

and "to testify on his own behalf."       Ibid. The Court held "[p]rosecutorial

comment suggesting that a defendant tailored his testimony inverts those

rights, permitting the prosecutor to punish the defendant for exercising that



                                                                         A-3424-22
                                         22
which the Constitution guarantees[, and] . . . undermine[s] the core principle of

our criminal justice system—that a defendant is entitled to a fair trial." Id. at

98.

      The Court recognized "generic and specific" categories of "prosecutorial

accusations of tailoring."     Ibid.   "Generic accusations occur when the

prosecutor, despite no specific evidentiary basis that defendant has tailored his

testimony, nonetheless attacks the defendant's credibility by drawing the jury's

attention to the defendant's presence during trial and his concomitant

opportunity to tailor his testimony." Ibid. Specific allegations of tailoring

occur "when there is evidence in the record, which the prosecutor can identify,

that supports an inference of tailoring." Ibid. The Court held that because

"generic accusations of tailoring debase the 'truth-seeking function of the

adversary process,' violate the 'respect for the defendant's individual dignity,'

and ignore 'the presumption of innocence that survives until a guilty verdict is

returned,'" ibid. (quoting Portuondo v. Agard, 529 U.S. 61, 76 (2000) (Stevens,

J., concurring)), they are not "a 'legitimate means to bring about a just

conviction,'" ibid. (quoting State v. Smith, 167 N.J. 158, 177 (2001)). The

Court held "prosecutors are prohibited from making generic accusations of

tailoring during summation." Ibid.




                                                                          A-3424-22
                                       23
      Regarding specific accusations of tailoring, the Court concluded "[i]f

there is evidence of tailoring, beyond the fact that the defendant was simply

present at the trial and heard the testimony of other witnesses, a prosecutor

may comment, but in a limited fashion." Id. at 98-99. The Court held "[t]he

prosecutor's comments must be based on the evidence in the record and the

reasonable inferences drawn therefrom" and that "the prosecutor may not refer

explicitly to the fact that the defendant was in the courtroom or that he heard

the testimony of other witnesses, and was thus able to tailor his testimony."

Id. at 99.

      Viewing the prosecutor's comments in summation as specific accusations

of tailoring, the Court nevertheless held they were improper and required

reversal of the defendant's conviction.

             [T]he prosecutor's comments highlighted the fact that
             defendant was able to "sit" in the courtroom during
             trial, enabling him to "listen[]" to other witnesses
             testify. Then, the prosecutor urged the jury to infer
             that defendant thus "craft[ed] his version." These
             comments are precisely the type that a prosecutor is
             prohibited from making, even when the record
             indicates that defendant tailored his testimony.

             [Id. at 101.]

The Court held the trial court's jury charge failed to cure "the harmful effects"

of the prosecutor's comments because the "generic jury instruction . . .




                                                                          A-3424-22
                                          24
reminded the jury to differentiate argument from evidence, but . . . made no

mention of the prosecutor's accusations of tailoring." Id. at 101-02.

      The prosecutor could have challenged defendant's credibility using

evidence in the record. But that's not what she did. Instead, she impermissibly

attacked his credibility based on his exercise of his fundamental rights to

attend his trial and confront the witnesses presented against him.           The

comments made by the prosecutor in her summation in this case are

indistinguishable from the improper comments made by the prosecutor in

Daniels. Like the Daniels prosecutor, the prosecutor in this case highlighted

that defendant had "sat through this entire trial, hearing the testimony of every

witness" and testified "after he heard all of the evidence against him, after

having time to construct a new narrative."       The prosecutor told the jury,

"[w]hat he told you was just a story, a story of having consent . . . ." The

prosecutor's comments were not about an inconsequential matter but went to

the core of defendant's case.

      The prosecutor directly and without question overstepped the clear

boundaries of acceptable vigorous advocacy set by the Court in Daniels,

depriving defendant of a fair trial. The Daniels Court held "the prosecutor

may not refer explicitly to the fact that the defendant was in the courtroom or

that he heard the testimony of other witnesses, and was thus able to tailor his



                                                                          A-3424-22
                                       25
testimony."   Id. at 99.     Despite that prohibition, that is exactly what the

prosecutor did in this case.       She explicitly referenced defendant sitting

"through this entire trial," "hearing the testimony of every witness," and

testifying "after having time to construct a new narrative." The court did not

provide any specific instructions to disregard the prosecutor's comments. And

like the charge in Daniels, the trial court's generic instructions that counsels'

statements were not evidence did not cure the harmful effects of the

prosecutor's improper comments. Following Daniels, we are constrained to

vacate the convictions in this case and remand the case to the trial court for

further proceedings, including a new trial.

                                       III.

      For the sake of completeness, we address defendant's remaining

arguments on other issues.

                                        A.

      Defendant argues we must reverse the unlawful-purpose conviction

because the jury acquitted him of "the substantive offenses" of sexual assault,

robbery, and aggravated assault and because the jury charge on the

unlawful-purpose charge was flawed. In so arguing, defendant relies on our

1989 decision in Jenkins, 234 N.J. Super. 311. Rejecting that argument, we




                                                                          A-3424-22
                                        26
follow the more recent, directly-on-point, Supreme Court decision in State v.

Banko, 182 N.J. 44 (2004).

      In Banko, the defendant was convicted of second-degree possession of a

weapon for an unlawful purpose and acquitted of kidnapping, attempted

aggravated sexual assault, and aggravated assault. Id. at 45-46. After the jury

had rendered its verdict, the trial court granted the defendant's motion for a

new trial.   Id. at 52. The trial court "reasoned that the unlawful purpose

conviction was 'legally incongruous' with" the acquittals of the other charges

and "concluded that 'the evidence [wa]s insufficient to show the unlawful

purpose of using the weapon.'"        Ibid. (alteration in original).     This court

reached the same conclusion but determined the defendant was entitled to

entry of a judgment of acquittal, not a new trial. Id. at 46.

      Reversing the decision and reinstating the defendant's conviction, the

Supreme Court "reaffirm[ed] that a jury may render inconsistent verdicts so

long as there exists a sufficient evidential basis in the record to support the

charge on which the defendant is convicted." Ibid. The Court found:

             In this matter, that defendant was acquitted of the
             substantive charge of attempted aggravated sexual
             assault is not fatal to the conviction for possession of a
             weapon for an unlawful purpose. The superficial
             inconsistency between the two charges does not void
             the legitimacy of the jury's conviction. The jury may
             have chosen to convict on possession of a weapon for
             an unlawful purpose, the purpose being, as the court

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                                        27
             instructed in respect of the State's theory of the case,
             to confine [the victim] and to assault her sexually.
             And, yet, the jury could have determined not to
             convict defendant on the substantive offenses for
             reasons known only to the jury.

             [Id. at 56.]

The Court noted the merit in the State's argument that "the verdicts here [were]

not inherently inconsistent." Id. at 57. The Court acknowledged "[t]he jury

did not have to believe all of the victim's testimony, and may have found some

aspects of defendant's story more credible" and that the jury's acquittal of the

assault and kidnapping charges "may be due to the jury's disinclination to

accept [the victim's] story in its entirety." Ibid.

      The Court nevertheless "accept[ed] the arguably inconsistent verdicts,

and decline[d] to speculate on the reasons for the jury's determination." Id. at

56. The Court held "[t]he only factual assessment required is to ensure that

there was sufficient evidence to support the charge for which defendant was

convicted." Ibid. Conducting that factual assessment, the Court found the

unlawful-purpose conviction "rest[ed] on a sufficient evidential base." Ibid.

In reaching that conclusion, the Court referenced the defendant's non-denial he

had "produced a BB gun" and the victim's testimony that at some point during

their encounter, the defendant had pointed a gun at her, told her he was going

to sexually assault her, and otherwise verbally threatened her. Ibid.



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      Following Banko, we accept the arguably inconsistent verdicts, review

the evidential record, and conclude the unlawful-purpose conviction was

supported by sufficient evidence in the record. Defendant may have denied

having a gun with him on December 24, 2021, but a jury could have believed

the victim's testimony that he had a gun, especially when her description of the

gun matched the gun found in defendant's car on January 7, 2022. And the

jury could have believed some of the rest of the victim's testimony, which was

similar to the victim's testimony in Banko, that defendant had pulled a gun on

her and threatened her while demanding she give him her money.             That

evidence is enough to support an unlawful-purpose conviction.

      The Banko Court also addressed the trial court's unlawful-purpose jury

charge, even though no party had challenged it. The trial court had included in

its charge the following language:

            In this case the State contends that the defendant's
            unlawful purpose in possessing the firearm was to
            unlawfully confine [the victim] with the purpose to
            commit the crime of aggravated sexual assault upon
            [the victim].

            You must not rely on your own notions of the
            unlawful purpose of the defendant. Rather, you must
            consider whether the State has proven the specific
            unlawful purpose charged. The unlawful purpose
            alleged by the State may be inferred from all that was
            said or done and from all the surrounding
            circumstances of this case.



                                                                         A-3424-22
                                      29
             [Id. at 51.]

The Court concluded that if it had to consider it, the Court would find the

charge "pass[ed] muster" because it "followed the model charge and was case-

specific." Id. at 58.

      The Court distinguished Jenkins in part because in Jenkins, "the jury had

not been instructed on the specific unlawful purposes suggested by the

evidence" and "the instruction failed to inform the jury that it could not convict

based on its own notions of unlawfulness or an undescribed purpose." Id. at

55. Relying on Jenkins, defendant challenges the unlawful-purpose charge the

trial court gave in this case. But the jury charge in this case did not have the

infirmities the Jenkins jury charge had, as identified by the Court in Banko.

Unlike the trial court in Jenkins, the trial court in this case instructed the jury

on the unlawful purposes suggested by the evidence and informed the jury that

it could not rely on its own "notions of . . . unlawfulness." Like the jury

charge in Banko, the charge in this case was "case-specific" and "followed the

model charge," id. at 58, including the language of the model charge that

provides "the State need not prove that defendant accomplished his[] unlawful

purpose of using the firearm," Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Possession Of

A Firearm With A Purpose To Use It Unlawfully Against The Person Or

Property Of Another (N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a))" (rev. Oct. 22, 2018).



                                                                            A-3424-22
                                        30
      For all those reasons, we conclude defendant's arguments about the

unlawful-purpose conviction – that it must be reversed because of the

acquittals or because the charge on that crime was inadequate or insufficiently

tailored to the facts of the case – to be without merit.

                                        B.

      In this unpublished portion of the opinion, we now turn to defendant's

arguments about his sentence, including his contention the trial court erred in

not merging the unlawful-purpose conviction with the criminal-restraint

conviction.

      "[T]he doctrine of merger is based on the precept that 'an accused [who]

committed only one offense . . . cannot be punished as if for two.'" State v.

Herrera, 469 N.J. Super. 559, 565 (App. Div. 2022) (second alteration in

original) (quoting State v. Davis, 68 N.J. 69, 77 (1975)). When a defendant is

convicted of possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose and another

crime, the convictions must merge when the evidence does not support the

existence of another unlawful purpose for possession of the weapon. State v.

Tate, 216 N.J. 300, 303 (2013).

      In its indictment, the grand jury charged defendant with possession of a

weapon for an unlawful purpose generally and did not specify a particular

unlawful purpose.     In its unlawful-purpose jury instruction, the trial court



                                                                        A-3424-22
                                        31
identified other crimes, not criminal restraint, as the unlawful purposes for

which the State had contended defendant possessed the gun and told the jury it

could not "rely on [its] own notions of . . . unlawfulness" and had to consider

"the specific unlawful purpose charged." Following those instructions, the

jury could not have premised the unlawful-purpose conviction on the criminal-

restraint allegations. See State v. Burns, 192 N.J. 312, 335 (2007) ("One of the

foundations of our jury system is that the jury is presumed to follow the trial

court's instructions").   And as we already have determined, the evidence

supports the existence of another unlawful purpose for possession of the

weapon other than criminal restraint. Thus, we perceive no error in the trial

court's decision not to merge the unlawful-purpose conviction with the

criminal-restraint conviction.

      We find fault with the court for merely mentioning and not applying the

analysis required under Yarbough, 100 N.J. at 643-44, to justify the imposition

of the consecutive sentences and for not "explaining the overall fairness" of

the sentence it had imposed pursuant to Torres, 246 N.J. at 268.          These

sentencing issues obviously are mooted by our decision to vacate the

convictions and remand for a new trial.       However, had we affirmed the

convictions, we would have remanded the case for resentencing with respect to




                                                                         A-3424-22
                                      32
the consecutive treatment of the sentences under the criteria of Yarbough and

Torres.

                                       C.

      We conclude defendant's argument his Miranda rights were violated is

without merit for the reasons set forth in the trial court's comprehensive

opinion granting the State's motion to admit defendant's statements into

evidence.

      To the extent we have not addressed them, we have considered all the

remaining points and sub-points raised on appeal and deem them of

insufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).

      Vacated and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We

do not retain jurisdiction.




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