Court Opinion

ID: 4666416
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-03-10 15:08:17.595016+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:02:49.253830
License: Public Domain

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. Gabriel Garcia (A-47-19) (083568)

Argued November 9, 2020 -- Decided March 10, 2021

ALBIN, J., writing for the Court.

        The Court considers, under the plain error doctrine, whether the exclusion of a cell
phone video depicting defendant Gabriel Garcia’s family members attempting to give
their account to the police at the scene of defendant’s arrest and the prosecutor’s
summation remarks, directly at odds with the video, denied defendant a fair trial.

       Defendant was charged with second-degree aggravated assault and related charges
stemming from a bloody confrontation with Raymond Urbanski outside of defendant’s
mother’s house in September 2016. During a four-day jury trial, the State and defense
presented starkly different accounts of the events in dispute.

        According to Urbanski and his wife, they were outside around 1:00 a.m. when
defendant parked two houses away and began “blasting” his horn. Urbanski gestured for
defendant to “keep it down,” and walked toward defendant’s car. Defendant then exited
his car with a box cutter in hand and, after a physical struggle, slashed Urbanski’s face
and finger. Urbanksi’s wife called the police. Detective Janixza Domenech and other
police officers responded. Domenech spoke with Urbanski and took a formal statement
from his wife. Domenech stated she canvassed the area for witnesses but found none.
She stated that, to her knowledge, no other witnesses came forward.

        In contrast, defendant testified that, after parking outside his mother’s house and
honking his horn three times, Urbanski approached his vehicle and banged on his car
roof. When defendant exited the car, Urbanski, armed with a bottle, along with two other
armed men, chased defendant. After being punched by Urbanski, defendant pulled a box
cutter, used for work, from his belt. Defendant was struck in the head with a bottle;
defendant flung his hand in fear and slashed Urbanski’s face.

        Meanwhile, defendant’s mother, stepfather, and sister gathered on the mother’s
porch. Their testimony of the events they witnessed paralleled defendant’s. They each
testified that they attempted to speak with police at the scene but that “they just wouldn’t
listen.” During cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited the same basic responses from

                                             1
defendant’s family members -- they spoke to defense counsel and each other before
testifying and hoped their testimony would help defendant.

       During trial, defense counsel sought to admit a video, taken by defendant’s uncle,
capturing the family’s interaction with the police at the scene. The video portrayed the
family attempting to give their account to the police and being told to “take it to court,”
with Domenech walking in the background. The trial court excluded the video as
inadmissible hearsay, rejecting the argument that the video contained prior consistent
statements admissible to meet a charge of recent fabrication under N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2).

       The prosecutor’s summation targeted the credibility of defendant’s family
members, specifically the mother’s, urging the jury to disbelieve their testimony because
they did not come forward and give their accounts to police at the scene. The prosecutor
also intimated that it was preposterous to think that the police would not take information
from an available witness.

       Defendant was convicted of all charges. The Appellate Division affirmed the
convictions. The Court granted certification, limited to the issues of whether “the
exclusion of the cell phone video” and the prosecutor’s summation remarks denied
defendant a fair trial. 241 N.J. 15 (2020).

HELD: The trial court erroneously kept admissible evidence from the jury. The video
rebutted what the prosecutor implied during cross-examination -- that defendant’s
witnesses lied about their attempt to speak with the police at the scene. That video also
contradicted the investigating detective’s testimony that she had thoroughly canvassed
the area for witnesses. In summation, the prosecutor exploited the suppression of the
video to present a false narrative and improperly suggested to the jury that the defense
witnesses made no effort to give their accounts to the officers at the scene. The
combination of the trial court’s erroneous evidentiary ruling and the prosecutor’s
inappropriate remarks during summation had the clear capacity to cause an unjust result.

1. The video recording constituted extrinsic evidence that simultaneously contradicted
Detective Domenech’s testimony that she canvassed the crime scene looking for
witnesses and supported the family members’ testimony that they attempted to speak to
the police. It was admissible under N.J.R.E. 607(a), which permits introduction of
relevant extrinsic evidence “[f]or the purpose of attacking or supporting the credibility of
a witness.” The testimony of Detective Domenech and the family were in direct conflict.
The on-scene video arguably resolved the conflict. The prosecutor dispelled any doubt
about the relevance and importance of the withheld video when he urged the jury to reject
the family members’ testimony about their attempted cooperation. If the jury accepted
the prosecutor’s argument that the family members testified falsely about coming forward
to the police, the jury was entitled to reject the entirety of their testimony, including their
testimony that defendant acted in self-defense. (pp. 24-26)

                                              2
2. The video was admissible to rebut a charge of recent fabrication pursuant to N.J.R.E.
803(a). The combination of the detective’s testimony that no witnesses came forward at
the scene and the prosecutor’s finely crafted questions posed to defendant’s family
members -- eliciting answers that they met with defense counsel and each other before
testifying and that their bonds of affection toward defendant made them want to help him
-- inescapably suggested that they were fabricating their testimony or had an improper
motive in testifying. The contemporaneously recorded video of the contact between the
family members and the police at the scene rebutted the implied charge, raised by the
prosecutor’s questions, of recent fabrication and improper motive. (pp. 26-27)

3. In his summation, the prosecutor attacked the credibility of defendant’s family
members, misrepresenting that they made no attempt to speak with the police at the
scene. The prosecutor specifically discredited the mother, arguing that the mother was
aware she had to speak with the detective and not the police officers, that she saw
Domenech taking notes, and that she did not respond the way a mother naturally would
respond if she had helpful information concerning her son to “tell the police at the scene”
about what had happened. The excluded video refuted the image he conveyed to the jury.
The prosecutor exploited a favorable evidentiary ruling to strike an unfair blow at the
defense and give a misleading presentation to the jury untethered to the truth. (pp. 27-30)

4. In fulfilling the duty to seek justice, a prosecutor must refrain from making inaccurate
factual assertions to the jury and from employing improper methods calculated to
produce a wrongful conviction. Although the prosecutor is free to discuss the direct and
inferential evidence presented at trial, the prosecutor cannot press an argument that is
untrue -- that is contradicted by an objective video recording excluded from evidence for
reasons unrelated to its authenticity. That otherwise 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. (pp. 30-32)

5. This case was a pitched credibility contest between the witnesses presented by the
State and the defense. The prosecutor’s synthetic argument that defendant’s family
members, in essence, lied when they testified that they tried to speak with the police at
the scene had the clear capacity to tip the scales against defendant. For if the jury
believed that argument, then it was within its rights to disregard the whole of their
testimony supporting defendant’s self-defense claim. Under the plain error doctrine, the
trial court’s error in excluding the video from evidence and the prosecutor’s improper
exploitation of that evidentiary ruling combined to deny defendant a fair trial. (pp. 32-34)

       REVERSED and REMANDED for a new trial.

CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON,
FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE
ALBIN’s opinion.

                                             3
           SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                 A-47 September Term 2019
                           083568

                     State of New Jersey,

                    Plaintiff-Respondent,

                              v.

Gabriel Garcia, a/k/a Gabriel H. Garcia, Gabriel H. Chiriboga,
   Gabriel G. Chirboga, and Gabriel H. Garciachiriboga,

                    Defendant-Appellant.

            On certification to the Superior Court,
                      Appellate Division.

          Argued                       Decided
      November 9, 2020              March 10, 2021

   Marcia Blum, Assistant Deputy Public Defender, argued
   the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
   Defender, attorney; Marcia Blum, of counsel and on the
   briefs).

   Erin M. Campbell, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
   for respondent (Esther Suarez, Hudson County
   Prosecutor, attorney; Stephanie Davis Elson, Assistant
   Prosecutor, on the brief).

   Karen Thompson argued the cause for amicus curiae
   American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (American
   Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey Foundation,
   attorneys; Karen Thompson, Alexander Shalom, and
   Jeanne LoCicero, on the brief).

                              1
            Dillon J. McGuire argued the cause for amicus curiae
            Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New Jersey
            (Pashman Stein Walder Hayden, attorneys; CJ Griffin, of
            counsel and on the brief, and Dillon J. McGuire, on the
            brief).

            Deborah Bartolomey, Deputy Attorney General, argued
            the cause for amicus curiae Attorney General of New
            Jersey (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney;
            Deborah Bartolomey, of counsel and on the brief).

             JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.

      The trial of defendant Gabriel Garcia presented two diametrically

different accounts of what happened on Sip Avenue in Jersey City on

September 11, 2016. The State’s witnesses claimed that Raymond Urbanski

approached defendant about the honking of his car’s horn, and defendant,

without provocation, slashed his face with a knife. In contrast, the defense

witnesses claimed that Urbanski and two other men -- all armed with weapons

-- assaulted defendant for beeping the horn, and that defendant, as a last resort,

defended himself with his work box cutter.

      To rebut the prosecutor’s implicit charge that the defense witnesses --

members of defendant’s family -- fabricated their trial testimony, defendant

sought to introduce a video showing that those witnesses attempted to give

their account to police officers at the scene, only to be turned away and told to

“take it to court.” The trial court ruled that the video constituted inadmissible

                                        2
hearsay. Without having to explain away the voices and images on the video

that conflicted with his presentation, the prosecutor in his summation

suggested that had the defense witnesses actually observed defendant act in

self-defense, they would have approached the police and investigating

detective at the scene.

      The jury convicted defendant of second-degree aggravated assault and

related offenses. The Appellate Division upheld defendant’s convictions. The

Appellate Division concluded that the trial court erred in finding the video

inadmissible but that the error did not warrant the grant of a new trial. It found

that the prosecutor’s summation -- to which defense counsel offered no

objection -- did not exceed the acceptable bounds of fair comment.

      We now reverse. We agree with the Appellate Division that the trial

court erroneously kept admissible evidence from the jury. The video rebutted

what the prosecutor implied during cross-examination -- that defendant’s

witnesses lied about their attempt to speak and cooperate with the police at the

scene. That video also contradicted the investigating detective’s testimony

that she had thoroughly canvassed the area for witnesses. In summation, the

prosecutor exploited the suppression of the video to present a false narrative.

The prosecutor improperly suggested to the jury that the defense witnesses

made no effort to give their accounts to the police officers at the scene --

                                        3
despite the excluded video’s evidence to the contrary. On that unjustifiable

basis, the prosecutor urged the jury to reject the defense witnesses’ testimony

as untrustworthy. That improper gamesmanship had the clear capacity to

unfairly tip the scales in this pitched credibility contest.

      Prosecutors are required to turn square corners because their overriding

duty is to do justice. A misleading argument pressed even in the heat of the

moment while zealously presenting closing remarks does not lessen the

damage done to defendant’s fair trial rights. We conclude that the

combination of the trial court’s erroneous evidentiary ruling and the

prosecutor’s inappropriate remarks during summation had the clear capacity to

cause an unjust result.

      We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand

for a new trial.

                                          I.

                                         A.

      Defendant was charged in a Hudson County indictment with second-

degree aggravated assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1); third-degree possession of

a weapon with an unlawful purpose, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(d); and fourth-degree

possession of a knife under circumstances not manifestly appropriate, N.J.S.A.

                                          4
2C:39-5(d).1 During a four-day jury trial, the State and defense presented

starkly different accounts of the events in dispute. The one point neither side

contests is that the bloody confrontation between defendant and Urbanski

began with the beeping of a car horn as defendant waited in his BMW outside

his mother’s house to pick up his uncle.

                                        1.

        According to the testimony of Urbanski and his wife, Jennifer, on

September 11, 2016, at around 1:00 a.m., defendant parked his BMW two

doors from their home on Sip Avenue in Jersey City and began “blasting” his

horn. At that moment, Urbanski and Jennifer were outside saying good-bye to

Jennifer’s brother while their three children were asleep inside. Urbanski

gestured for defendant “to keep it down,” but defendant may not have seen

him, so he walked toward the car with his wife a few feet behind. Defendant

then exited his car and approached Urbanski with a box cutter in his hand. The

two started arguing loudly, and the confrontation escalated into a physical

struggle on a nearby sidewalk. Urbanski decided that he had “to get this knife

from this guy,” and then defendant raised the knife high and brought it down,

slashing Urbanski’s face and finger.

1
    A fourth charge was dismissed before trial.

                                         5
      In shock and soaked in blood, Urbanski stated he ripped off his shirt and

pressed it against his face, which Jennifer described as “sliced . . . wide open.”

Afterwards, defendant left the scene in his car. Jennifer recalled that her

husband briefly passed out and when he regained consciousness he went up to

defendant’s mother’s porch, where the mother and other family members had

gathered, and a shouting match ensued. Urbanski remembered going to the

porch with the thought that defendant was inside the house. Jennifer stated

that she and her brother dragged Urbanski away by his t-shirt because he was

“flipping out.” Jennifer called the police.

      Jersey City police officers arrived on the scene minutes later, and

Urbanski and Jennifer gave a description of the attacker. Emergency medical

services transported Urbanski to the hospital, where he received approximately

twenty-six stitches to his face and treatment for nerve damage and a fracture to

his pinky, which also required a skin graft.

      Detective Janixza Domenech testified that when she arrived on the scene

approximately ten police officers were already there -- some of whom were

investigating the crime. Detective Domenech spoke briefly with Urbanski

while he was receiving medical attention but took a formal statement only

from Jennifer. The detective also took Jennifer to a nearby ambulance where

she identified defendant as her husband’s assailant. No investigating police

                                        6
officer spoke with defendant, and Detective Domenech made no attempt to do

so. Domenech stated that she canvassed the area for witnesses but found none

other than Urbanski and Jennifer. The detective said she did not speak with

any member of defendant’s family, and, to her knowledge, no other witnesses

came forward. When asked whether she knocked on doors looking for

witnesses, Detective Domenech responded that she had a victim, and she had a

witness who identified the perpetrator. To her mind, the case was “pretty cut

and dry.”

                                       2.

      The defense presented testimony from defendant as well as his mother,

Migdalia Chirobaga; his stepfather, Jose Canales; his sister, Diana Freire; his

uncle, Jorge Salgado; and a police officer friend, Jonathan Colon.

      Defendant testified that around 12:00 a.m. on September 11, he went to

his mother’s house to pick up his uncle, aunt, and cousin, who were visiting

from Venezuela. He planned to take them to his home to stay and from there

to visit an indoor waterpark. When he parked near his mother’s house on Sip

Avenue, he honked his horn three times to announce his arrival. Urbanski

approached his car uttering expletives about the beeping of the horn. When

defendant explained that he was waiting for his uncle, Urbanski banged on his

                                       7
car roof, saying words to the effect of, “don’t make no F’ing noise around

here.”

         Defendant exited his car, and Urbanski attempted to punch him. As

defendant backed up, Urbanski and two other men began to chase him. All

three men were armed -- Urbanski with a bottle, one with a stick, and another

with a knife who stabbed the tires of defendant’s car. Over the course of the

confrontation, Urbanski punched defendant several times. Defendant ran

towards his mother’s house and told the men that he “didn’t want any

problems.”

         Aroused by the screaming outside, defendant’s mother, stepfather, sister,

and uncle came onto the porch. Their testimony generally paralleled

defendant’s account of the events that followed. As defendant was confronted

by Urbanski and his armed companions, defendant’s mother rushed in front of

her son and pleaded with the men to stop, but one of them pushed her away.

         Defendant carried a small box cutter on his belt that he used at work as a

mechanic. He pulled the box cutter out after Urbanski had punched him and as

the men continued to menace him. When one of the men struck defendant in

the head with a bottle, defendant, in fear, flung out his hand that held the box

cutter and slashed Urbanski’s face. Defendant managed to escape and enter

his car, and with the men banging on his car’s windows, he “took off.”

                                          8
      Afterwards, defendant’s family retreated into the house, as Urbanski, in

a rage, kicked and broke the front door and threatened to kill the family

members inside.

      Defendant drove up the block and parked, as blood streamed down his

face onto his shirt. Defendant then contacted his friend from church, Jonathan

Colon, an off-duty Jersey City police officer, and asked him to call the police.

According to Colon’s testimony, defendant “sounded like he was crying . . .

[and] [v]ery scared.” As defendant requested, Officer Colon called dispatch to

send police units to the scene.

      According to defendant, as soon as the police arrived in front of his

mother’s house, he returned and parked in front of a patrol car. Urbanski then

approached his car and began punching him through the window -- an act also

witnessed by defendant’s family members. A police officer pulled Urbanski

away, and defendant was taken from his car and arrested. When he attempted

to explain what had happened, he was told to “shut up.” Defendant was placed

in an ambulance and eventually transported to a hospital where he was treated

for a head injury requiring a number of staples.

      Defendant’s mother, stepfather, and sister each testified that they

attempted to speak with the police at the scene but that “they just wouldn’t

listen.” Each gave an account of police indifference to listening to their side

                                        9
of the story. The sister stated, “[n]obody came up to us. Not one detective

came up to us. Not one of them heard our story,” and when the family

members tried to speak up, they were told “to back up, back off.” The mother

explained that they tried to tell the police officers what had happened but were

told “you have to say that at court.” The mother stated that she saw nearby a

female detective in civilian clothes with a notebook, who “never asked us

anything.” The family members recalled that Detective Domenech made no

attempt to interview them, and when they tried to approach, defendant’s

mother said, “the police pushed us away.” When asked whether he tried to tell

the police what happened, the stepfather replied, “[w]e tried a number of

times. Two or three times, but they ignored us. Simple. They simply ignored

us.”

       During the cross-examination of defendant’s mother, stepfather, and

sister, the prosecutor elicited generally the same basic responses from the

witnesses: they spoke to the defense attorney and among themselves before

appearing in court, and they hoped their testimony would be helpful to

defendant.

                                        3.

       At the start of the second day of testimony, defense counsel notified the

court and prosecutor of a video taken by the uncle capturing the family’s

                                       10
interaction with the police at the scene. Defendant sought to admit the video.

Later that day, after defendant’s mother and stepfather had testified, the court

conducted a Rule 104 hearing 2 out of the presence of the jury. At the hearing,

the uncle testified and the video was played.

      The video revealed, in relevant part, the following exchange between the

family members and the police:

            Police officer: What happened -- . . . that’s for court.
            That’s not for now.

            ....

            Stepfather: Okay. Excuse me. What happened this
            guy. He -- he come and say me killing me, that that
            shorter guy over there he got a knife --

            Police officer: You didn’t call the cops. Did you call
            the cops?

            Stepfather: Yeah. My daughter called the cop.

            Mother: We call the cops.

            Police officer: No, you didn’t.

            Mother: Yes, we did.

            Stepfather: Yeah, yeah.

            Mother: We called the cops.

2
  N.J.R.E. 104(a) provides that a court “shall decide any preliminary question
about whether . . . evidence is admissible” and “may hear and determine such
matters out of the presence or hearing of the jury.”

                                       11
            ....

            Stepfather: I -- I got a record for the calling . . . . I got
            a video of this guy saying he’s killing (indiscernible).

            Police officer: Okay. You take that to court. Take that
            to court when you go to court. When you go to court
            you take it to court.

            ....

            Stepfather:     This guy -- this guy no coming,
            (indiscernible) --

            Police officer: Take it to court.

            Stepfather: [Killing] everybody in the house.

            Police officer: Take it to court. Okay?

      The court ruled that the video was inadmissible hearsay offered to

bolster the testimony of the defense witnesses. The court specifically rejected

the argument that the statements captured on the video were prior consistent

statements admissible to meet a charge of recent fabrication, improper

influence, or improper motive under N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2). Indeed, the court

found that the prosecutor did not suggest, in cross-examining the defense

witnesses, that they recently fabricated their testimony or that their testimony

was based on an improper influence or motive.

                                         12
                                        4.

      The prosecutor’s summation targeted the credibility of defendant’s

family members, urging the jury to disbelieve their testimony because they did

not come forward and give their accounts to Detective Domenech or the police

officers at the scene. The prosecutor also intimated that it was preposterous to

think that the police would not take information from an available witness.

The prosecutor argued:

            And then, again, the family’s all outside and -- and
            they’re supposedly out there and nobody cares what
            they have to say. And his mother testifies and there was
            an important little part of that testimony that I want to
            emphasize to you that I think is relevant to figure out
            what happened here, that the mother knew the
            difference between a police officer and a detective. She
            knew that police officers don’t have the same role, that
            they get there and they help secure a scene, they do this
            and that. But the detectives, the detectives are the
            people who investigate, who take the witness
            statements, who try to get the picture here. And she
            described the person, who’s Detective Domenech, who
            came here and told you nobody approached her, nobody
            approached her, nobody from the Garcia family as he
            would have you believe approached her.

            Despite the fact that she was clearly a detective she’s
            walking around with the notebook, she’s taking notes,
            she’s talking to the Urbanskis, she’s trying to figure out
            what happened.         And knowing this they still
            (indiscernible) and talk to her. If this really happened
            like that, you running out there for your son, you’re
            going to tell the people, the police at the scene, the
            detectives at the scene, those charged with this
            investigation that, no, this -- there’s something else
                                       13
            going on here. But she never did, she never did. And
            that should rule large in your mind.

            Another thing [our] common sense tells us, police don’t
            ignore witnesses who have material information. . . .
            When people have information about a crime, about an
            attack, about anything like that, they want
            (indiscernible) people have to say. They don’t ignore
            people. And they certainly don’t ignore defendants
            who want to talk.

            [(emphases added).]

      Defense counsel raised no objection to those remarks.

                                       B.

      The jury returned a guilty verdict on all three charges. The court

sentenced defendant on the second-degree aggravated assault conviction to a

seven-year term with an eighty-five percent period of parole ineligibility

pursuant to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, and on the third-

degree possession of a weapon with an unlawful purpose conviction to a

concurrent three-year term. The fourth-degree weapons possession conviction

was merged into the third-degree weapons conviction.

                                       14
                                        C.

      In an unpublished, per curiam opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed

defendant’s convictions.3 The Appellate Division, however, disagreed with the

trial court’s ruling that the video was hearsay and instead found that the video

was offered “to rebut Domenech’s testimony that no one from [defendant’s]

family came forward to discuss the incident.” In its view, the statements in the

video were offered not for their truthfulness but only to show that they were

made. Nevertheless, the Appellate Division concluded that the trial court did

not abuse its discretion “based on the information presented to the [court] .” It

determined that the exclusion of the video did not deprive defendant of a fair

trial because it had no bearing on “whether defendant acted in self-defense

when he stabbed Raymond” and because “[i]t showed defendant’s family

fleetingly speaking with police officers, not the detective.”

      The Appellate Division also held that, in his summation, the prosecutor

did not act unreasonably in impeaching the defendant’s mother’s credibility for

failing to approach Detective Domenech at the scene with the account

favorable to her son that she presented at trial. The court emphasized that the

video “showed family members interacting with police officers,” not with

3
  We do not discuss issues raised before the Appellate Division that are not
germane to the appeal before us.

                                        15
Detective Domenech, and that defendant’s mother knew that Domenech was

leading the investigation because the detective was carrying a notebook. In the

end, the Appellate Division concluded that the prosecutor’s remarks, including

those attacking the mother’s credibility, were a fair commentary on the

evidence and a fair response to defense counsel’s “summation that the police

investigation was one-sided.”

                                       D.

      This Court granted defendant’s petition for certification, limited to the

issues of whether “the exclusion of the cell phone video” and the prosecutor’s

summation remarks denied defendant a fair trial. 241 N.J. 15 (2020). We also

granted the motions of the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey

(ACLU), the Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New Jersey

(ACDL), and the New Jersey Attorney General to participate as amici curiae.

                                        II.

                                       A.

                                        1.

      Defendant argues that the video of defendant’s family members

attempting to give their account to the police at the scene -- an account that

would have portrayed defendant as a victim who acted in self-defense -- was

admissible on two separate grounds. First, the events and statements captured

                                       16
on the video were not hearsay because they were offered not to prove the truth

of any “matter asserted” but rather to “disprove[] the detective’s assertion that

no one from [defendant’s] family came forward at the scene.” Defendant

asserts that the contemporaneously recorded video evidence “carried infinitely

greater credibility and impact than their testimony” in refuting Domenech’s

testimony.

      Second, defendant contends that the video-recorded evidence was

admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2) to rebut an implied charge of recent

fabrication. Detective Domenech’s trial testimony that defendant’s parents did

not “come forward” implied that the parents lied when they testified that they

attempted to give their account to the police at the scene. The on-scene video

of the family’s attempt to speak with the police, defendant submits, was

relevant to prove that his parents’ testimony was not a recent fabrication but

indeed the truth.

      Defendant also claims that the prosecutor in his summation “took

unconscionable advantage of the exclusion of the video to mislead the jury and

undermine [defendant’s] self-defense claim.” Defendant maintains that the

prosecutor misrepresented to the jury that defendant’s family members made

no effort to speak with the police, even though the prosecutor “knew that the

excluded cellphone video supported” the testimony of defendant’s parents. He

                                       17
contends that the prosecutor’s misrepresentations “create[d] the false

impression that [defendant’s] parents did not testify truthfully,” thus fatally

undermining his defense and denying him a fair trial. Defendant urges the

reversal of his conviction because “critical defense evidence was wrongly

excluded” and because “the prosecutor capitalized on the [video’s] exclusion

to mislead the jury.”

                                        2.

      Amici, the ACDL and ACLU, echo defendant’s arguments that he was

denied a fair trial. The ACDL emphasizes that the prosecutor knew that “the

jury would reasonably expect the family to speak with police if [d]efendant

had in fact acted in self-defense” and knew that the jury would never see the

video showing the family members speaking with the police. Nevertheless, the

prosecutor falsely asserted that no family member spoke with the police and

implored the jurors to let that point “rule large” in their minds. Those knowing

factual misrepresentations, the ACLU posits, “corrupted the truth-seeking

function the prosecutor is tasked with upholding” and rendered defendant’s

conviction “fundamentally unjust.”

                                        18
                                       B.

                                       1.

      The State counters that the trial court properly excluded the video on the

basis that it contained “inadmissible hearsay” and was “needlessly

cumulative.”4 The State contends that defendant offered the video for the

impermissible purpose of bolstering the testimony of his witnesses and that the

video “had no bearing on whether [defendant] acted in self-defense” because it

did not capture the events surrounding the slashing of Urbanski. The State

also maintains that the video was not admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2)

because the prosecutor did not argue that defendant’s witnesses fabricated their

testimony and therefore the defense had no charge of fabrication to rebut.

      The State, moreover, submits that the prosecutor’s summation was

nothing more than fair commentary on the evidence and an appropriate

response to defendant’s self-defense claim. The State deflects defendant’s

argument that the prosecutor falsely asserted that “[defendant’s] family had not

tried to speak to police,” explaining that defendant “uses the term ‘police’ too

4
  The State’s claim that the court excluded the video on the ground that it was
not “properly authenticated” is not supported by the record. Neither the trial
court nor the Appellate Division found a lack of authentication of the video.
Defendant’s uncle testified through a Spanish interpreter that he took the
video. That the voices on the video are in English did not diminish the uncle’s
ability to vouch for the authenticity of the video.

                                       19
generally” and that defendant’s mother knew the difference between a police

officer and a detective and yet “did not approach the detective at any point

during the investigation” to claim that her son was “attacked by a mob of

armed men.” The State emphasizes that defendant did not object to the

prosecution’s summation remarks and that, in any event, those remarks were

not clearly and unmistakably improper and did not have the capacity to deny

him a fair trial.

                                        2.

      Amicus, the Attorney General, repeats many of the same arguments

advanced by the State: the video was (1) inadmissible hearsay offered to

bolster the testimony of the defense witnesses; (2) irrelevant because it did not

refute the detective’s testimony; (3) “ancillary” because it did not speak to the

occurrence of the stabbing or support the claim of self-defense; and (4)

“cumulative” because it was repetitive of the defense testimony. In the

Attorney General’s view, “[t]he video was not critical evidence for the

defense.” Last, the Attorney General submits that the prosecutor’s summation

did not exploit the exclusion of the video but rather made fair comment on the

evidence.

                                       20
                                       III.

                                       A.

      The witnesses for the State and defense presented starkly different

accounts of what occurred in the early morning hours on Sip Avenue -- and the

outcome of the case largely depended on the jury’s assessment of the

credibility of those witnesses. The jury had to decide whether defendant, when

confronted by Urbanski for honking his horn, exited his car, pulled a knife,

and then during the ensuing argument slashed Urbanski. Or whether an

enraged Urbanski and other armed companions pursued defendant, surrounded

him in front of his mother’s house, punched him, and struck him in the head

with a bottle, leading defendant to slash Urbanski in self-defense.

      Defendant’s mother, stepfather, and sister all testified to witnessing a

violent attack on defendant and his attempt to defend himself. Whether the

jury accepted that account depended on the credibility of those witnesses --

and the prosecutor unsurprisingly sought to impair their credibility.

      Detective Domenech testified that she canvassed the area for witnesses,

which presumably included the vicinity of the mother’s porch where the events

occurred, and found no witnesses other than Urbanski and his wife, Jennifer.

In contrast to Detective Domenech’s testimony, defendant’s family members

testified that, outside their home, they attempted to convey to the police their

                                       21
side of what happened only to be pushed away and told to say it in court.

Thus, the credibility of the detective and the family members was also at issue.

      In cross-examining the family-member witnesses, the prosecutor elicited

that, before testifying, they all had spoken with the defense attorney, they all

had conversed with each other about the events, and they all had sufficient

affection for defendant that they would do what they could to help him. That

line of questioning is not unusual and certainly not nefarious, but it suggests

that the witnesses coordinated their testimony with defendant’s attorney and

among themselves, and that they might have a motive to bend the truth for a

beloved family member.

      Within that context, we must determine whether the trial court erred in

barring the admission of the video recording taken by defendant’s uncle at the

scene -- a recording that showed the family members attempting to speak with

police officers about what they had witnessed and that depicted a plainclothes

female officer (evidently Detective Domenech) carrying a notepad walking

only a few feet away from them. 5

      We defer to a trial court’s evidentiary ruling absent an abuse of

discretion. State v. Nantambu, 221 N.J. 390, 402 (2015). We will not

5
  Defendant’s mother testified that she saw a female detective carrying a
notebook at the scene. The prosecutor in his summation accepted that the
                                       22
substitute our judgment unless the evidentiary ruling is “so wide of the mark”

that it constitutes “a clear error in judgment.” See State v. Medina, 242 N.J.

397, 412 (2020) (first quoting State v. Brown, 170 N.J. 138, 147 (2001); and

then quoting State v. Scott, 229 N.J. 469, 479 (2017)). Every mistaken

evidentiary ruling, however, will not lead to a reversal of a conviction. Only

those that have the clear capacity to cause an unjust result will do so. See

State v. Prall, 231 N.J. 567, 581 (2018); see also R. 2:10-2.

                                        B.

      Defense counsel learned of the existence of the video the evening after

the first day of trial testimony and brought it to the attention of the prosecutor

and court the next morning. Defense counsel stated that the video would

corroborate his witnesses. Although defendant and his sister had already

testified, his mother, stepfather, and uncle had yet to do so. The court

withheld a decision on the admissibility of the video until after th ose family

members were called to the stand. After they testified, defense counsel offered

the admission of the video “to support my client and my witnesses,” without

citing to a specific evidentiary rule as authority. Noting that the request to

admit the video was untimely, the court nevertheless addressed the merits of

mother’s testimony identified Detective Domenech.

                                        23
the video’s admissibility and determined that the video did not constitute a

prior consistent statement to meet a charge of recent fabrication, N.J.R.E.

803(a)(2). Specifically, the court found that the prosecutor’s cross-

examination did not give rise to a suggestion of “recent fabrication or improper

influence or motive” and that the video would improperly bolster the testimony

of the family witnesses.

      To be sure, defense counsel did not artfully present the case for the

admissibility of the video, and we do not excuse the failure of defense counsel

to cite specific rules of evidence to support her position. Nonetheless, two

clear grounds justified the admission of that critical evidence.

      First, the video recording constituted extrinsic evidence that

simultaneously contradicted Detective Domenech’s testimony that she

canvassed the crime scene looking for witnesses and supported the family

members’ testimony that they attempted to speak to the police. N.J.R.E. 607

provides, in relevant part, that “[f]or the purpose of attacking or supporting the

credibility of a witness, any party including the party calling the witness may

examine the witness and introduce extrinsic evidence relevant to the issue of

credibility.” N.J.R.E. 607(a) (emphasis added). The video recording was

relevant evidence -- “evidence having a tendency in reason to prove or

disprove any fact of consequence to the determination of the action.” N.J.R.E.

                                       24
401; see also State v. Timmendequas, 161 N.J. 515, 596 (1999) (noting that

extrinsic evidence proving “that material facts are other than as testified to by

the witness under attack” is “essential” for the jury’s credibility

determinations). The testimony of Detective Domenech and the family were in

direct conflict. The on-scene video -- seemingly unimpeachable extrinsic

evidence -- arguably resolved the conflict. The prosecutor, moreover,

dispelled any doubt about the relevance and importance of the withheld video

when, based on Detective Domenech’s testimony, he urged the jury to reject

the family members’ testimony, particularly the mother’s, because they failed

to come forward at the scene.

      The power of a video of contemporaneously recorded events at the crime

scene can hardly be disputed. Indeed, it “enhance[s] a judge or juror’s

assessment of credibility by providing a more complete picture of what

occurred.” State v. Cole, 229 N.J. 430, 450-51 (2017) (alteration in original)

(quoting State v. Cook, 179 N.J. 533, 556 (2004)). The video’s importance in

this case cannot be underestimated. If the jury accepted the prosecutor’s

argument that the family members testified falsely about coming forward to

the police at the scene, the jury was entitled to reject the entirety of their

                                         25
testimony, including their testimony that defendant acted in self-defense.

Indeed, the court charged the jury on the “false in one, false in all” doctrine.6

      Second, the video was admissible, as an exception to the hearsay rule, to

rebut a charge of recent fabrication. N.J.R.E. 803(a) provides that a statement

is not subject to the hearsay rule if “[t]he declarant-witness testifies and is

subject to cross-examination about a prior otherwise admissible statement, and

the statement: . . . (2) is consistent with the declarant-witness’ testimony and

is offered to rebut an express or implied charge against the declarant -witness

of (A) recent fabrication or (B) improper influence or motive.” Accord

N.J.R.E. 607(b) (“A prior consistent statement shall not be admitted to support

the credibility of a witness except: (1) to rebut an express or implied charge

against the witness of recent fabrication or of improper influence or motive,

and (2) as otherwise provided by the law of evidence.” (emphasis added)).

      The combination of Detective Domenech’s testimony that no witnesses

came forward at the scene and the prosecutor’s finely crafted questions posed

6
  The trial court instructed the jury that “[e]vidence has been presented
showing that at a prior time a witness or perhaps witnesses said something or
failed to say something which is inconsistent with the witness’s testimony at
the trial. . . . [I]f you believe that any witness or party willfully or knowingly
testified falsely to any material facts in the case with intent to deceive you, you
may give such weight to [his] or her testimony as you may deem is entitled.
You may believe some of it or you may in your discretion disregard all of it.”

                                        26
to defendant’s family members -- eliciting answers that they met with defense

counsel and each other before testifying and that their bonds of affection

toward defendant made them want to help him -- inescapably suggested that

they were fabricating their testimony or had an improper motive in testifying.

That line of prosecutorial questioning, however permissible, had no other

purpose than to intimate that the family members’ testimony was untruthful.

For that reason, the contemporaneously recorded video of the contact between

the family members and the police at the scene rebutted the implied charge,

raised by the prosecutor’s questions, of recent fabrication and improper

motive.

                                       IV.

                                       A.

      With the video excluded and without the constraint of the images and

voices on the video played before the jury, the prosecutor launched a damning

attack in his summation on the credibility of defendant’s family members,

misrepresenting that they made no attempt to speak with the police at the

scene. The prosecutor characterized the notion that the police disregarded

defendant’s family as utterly incredible:

            And then, again, the family’s outside and -- and they’re
            supposedly out there and nobody cares what they have
            to say.

                                       27
             Another thing [our] common sense tells us, police don’t
             ignore witnesses who have material information. . . .
             When people have information about a crime, about an
             attack, about anything like that, they want
             (indiscernible) people have to say. They don’t ignore
             people.

             [(emphases added)].

Yet, the video showed that the family members attempted to provide

information to the uniformed officers, only to be told repeatedly: “You take

that to court.”; “Take it to court.”; “Take it to court.”

      The prosecutor specifically discredited the mother by imputing to her a

first-hand knowledge of the police chain of command, an understanding that

“detectives are the people who investigate, who take the witness statements .”

From that premise, the prosecutor argued that the mother was aware she had to

speak with the detective and not the police officers. But Detective Domenech

made no such distinction in her testimony. Domenech stated that some of the

police officers were also investigating the crime scene. And defendant’s

family was imploring the police officers to listen.

      The prosecutor indicated that the mother saw Domenech “walking

around with a notebook . . . taking notes.” And that is one of the striking

images on the video not seen by the jury: a plainclothes woman walking

around with a notebook, just feet from the family members whose way was

blocked by the uniformed officers. The video -- had it been seen by the jury --
                                         28
would have stood as an unimpeachable refutation of Detective Domenech’s

testimony that she was canvassing the area for witnesses.

      The prosecutor, moreover, sought to sow disbelief in the mother’s

testimony based on the natural maternal instinct to come to the defense of a

child at the first opportunity -- and falsely argued nothing of that nature

occurred at the scene:

            If this really happened like that, you running out there
            for your son, you’re going to tell the people, the police
            at the scene, the detectives at the scene, those charged
            with this investigation that, no, this -- there’s something
            else going on here. But she never did, she never did.
            And that should rule large in your mind.

            [(emphasis added.)]

Remarkably, the prosecutor advanced an argument he knew to be untrue -- an

argument intended to devastate the mother’s credibility -- even though the

excluded video he reviewed that very day refuted the image he conveyed to the

jury. He drove home that falsehood by urging the jury to remember that

defendant’s mother did not respond the way a mother naturally would respond

if she had information that would spare her son from a wrongful arrest: she

did not attempt to “tell the police at the scene” what had happened. That point,

the prosecutor emphasized, “should rule large in your mind.”

      The prosecutor exploited a favorable evidentiary ruling -- the exclusion

of the video -- to strike an unfair blow at the defense. Unburdened by having
                                        29
to explain the images and voices on the video, the prosecutor then gave a

misleading presentation to the jury untethered to the truth.

      That the prosecutor’s remarks may have been the product of the surprise

production of the video that morning coupled with overzealous advocacy in

which he was carried by the current of the moment cannot excuse the

purposeful presentation of a fiction to the jury.

                                        B.

      In representing the State in a criminal action, the prosecutor is endowed

with a solemn duty -- “to seek justice, not merely to convict.” State v.

Williams, 113 N.J. 393, 447 (1988) (quoting ABA Standards Relating to the

Administration of Criminal Justice, Standard 3-1.1(c) (2d ed. 1980)). In

fulfilling that duty, a prosecutor must refrain from making inaccurate factual

assertions to the jury, State v. Smith, 167 N.J. 158, 178 (2001), and from

employing “improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction,”

State v. Ramseur, 106 N.J. 123, 320 (1987) (quoting State v. Farrell, 61 N.J.

99, 105 (1972)). To be sure, prosecutors are given wide latitude in making

their summations and may sum up “graphically and forcefully.” State v.

Johnson, 31 N.J. 489, 510 (1960); see also Williams, 113 N.J. at 447. We are

also mindful of the “charged atmosphere” of a trial that summons the

competitive instincts of the advocates. Ramseur, 106 N.J. at 320 (quoting

                                        30
State v. Bucanis, 26 N.J. 45, 56 (1958)). But a trial is not a gladiatorial

contest; it is a forum where justice must be done. In that forum, prosecutors

must “stay within the orbit of strict propriety” and adhere to the high ethical

standards of their office. Ibid. (quoting Bucanis, 26 N.J. at 56).

      Although the prosecutor is free to discuss the direct and inferential

evidence presented at trial, the prosecutor cannot press an argument that is

untrue -- that is contradicted by an objective video recording excluded from

evidence for reasons unrelated to its authenticity. That otherwise 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. Cf. State v. Francis, 191 N.J. 571, 594 (2007).

      In this case, in the technical sense, the prosecutor may have limited his

remarks to the evidence of record, but in the fullest sense, he pursued a course

that he knew was not consistent with the truth. Our system of justice places

checks on the propagation of falsehood. An object or a video excluded from

evidence does not become imaginary or non-existent. For example, a gun

suppressed because of a Fourth Amendment violation does not allow a

defendant to take the stand and lie -- without contradiction -- that he never

possessed the gun when a video reveals that he did. Cf. State v. Burris, 145

N.J. 509, 532-34 (1996) (noting that, to “ensur[e] truth in the justice system,” a

                                        31
defendant’s in-court testimony may be impeached by trustworthy out-of-court

statements made by defendant but excluded for Miranda violations). Even in

our adversarial system, the notion that a trial is a search for truth is not an

empty anachronism.

      Every prosecutorial misstep will not warrant a new trial. In this case, as

in others, we must measure the prejudicial effect of the prosecutorial excesses

against a defendant’s fair trial rights. State v. McNeil-Thomas, 238 N.J. 256,

275 (2019). Only when the prosecutor’s conduct in summation so

“substantially prejudice[s] the defendant’s fundamental right to have the jury

fairly evaluate the merits of his defense” must a court reverse a conviction and

grant a new trial. Bucanis, 26 N.J. at 56; see also McNeil-Thomas, 238 N.J. at

276 (“Prosecutorial comments are deemed to have violated the defendant’s

right to a fair trial when they ‘so infect[] the trial with unfairness as to make

the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’” (alteration in original)

(quoting State v. Jackson, 211 N.J. 394, 409 (2012))).

                                         V.

      Defendant did not clearly articulate to the trial court the grounds for the

admission of the video and did not raise an objection to the prosecutor’s

summation remarks. We consider the trial court’s error in excluding the video

from evidence and the prosecutor’s improper exploitation of that evidentiary

                                         32
ruling cumulatively under the plain error doctrine. See R. 2:10-2. Under that

doctrine, an appellate court should disregard errors unless they are “clearly

capable of producing an unjust result.” Ibid. “This is a ‘high bar,’ requiring

reversal only where the possibility of an injustice is ‘real’ and ‘sufficient to

raise a reasonable doubt as to whether the error led the jury to a result it

otherwise might not have reached.’” State v. Trinidad, 241 N.J. 425, 445

(2020) (first quoting State v. Santamaria, 236 N.J. 390, 404 (2019); and then

quoting State v. Macon, 57 N.J. 325, 336 (1971)).

      We conclude that the manifest errors committed in this case have vaulted

that high bar and combined to deny defendant a fair trial. This case was a

pitched credibility contest between the witnesses presented by the State and

the defense. The jury had to determine whether defendant or Raymond

Urbanski was the aggressor and whether defendant acted in self-defense.

Although the prosecutor had a right to attempt to discredit the defense

witnesses, he did not have a license to do so by unfair means. The

prosecutor’s synthetic argument that defendant’s family members, in essence,

lied when they testified that they tried to speak with the police at the scene had

the clear capacity to tip the scales against defendant. For if the jury believed

that the family members lied about their attempt to cooperate at the scene, then

                                        33
the jury was within its rights to disregard the whole of their testimony

supporting defendant’s self-defense claim.

      The errors here undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial and are

“sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether [they] led the jury to a

result it otherwise might not have reached.” See ibid. (quoting Macon, 57 N.J.

at 336).

                                       VI.

      For the reasons expressed, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate

Division and grant defendant a new trial. We remand to the trial court for

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON,
FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and PIERRE-LOUIS join in JUSTICE
ALBIN’s opinion.

                                        34