Court Opinion

ID: 6496441
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-29 20:09:12.851671+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:08:08.439102
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 and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.

              State v. Quinnizel J. Clark (A-67-20/A-37-21) (085271)

Argued January 18, 2022 and March 28, 2022 -- Decided June 29, 2022

PIERRE-LOUIS, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

       In this appeal, the Court considers whether it was harmful error to allow the
jury to hear the portion of defendant Quinnizel J. Clark’s statement to police after he
invoked his right to counsel but the interrogation continued. The Court also
considers certain remarks in the prosecutor’s summation -- including that the
invocation was a sign of guilt -- as well as the admissibility of witness testimony.

       On January 3, 2016, police found James Dewyer without a pulse in his silver
Dodge on the side of Kinkora Road in Mansfield. That morning, Dewyer had picked
up defendant at a motel in Mansfield, and the men drove to a casino. Cameras in
front of the motel showed defendant and Dewyer return to the motel and then depart
in Dewyer’s car in the afternoon. Surveillance video showed defendant later return
to the motel alone and then leave in different clothes.

       On January 13, 2016, Detective Wayne Raynor and another officer
interviewed defendant about Dewyer’s death. Defendant was read his Miranda
rights and waived those rights. After approximately 40 minutes, Detective Raynor
began to confront defendant with his belief that defendant murdered Dewyer and
pressed defendant about his alibi. Defendant responded, “charge me, call my
attorney Mr. Keisler over here, charge me and let’s go.” The interrogation
continued and Detective Raynor expressed that if he were in defendant’s shoes, he
would tell the officers who he was with so that he is “not on the hook for [the
murder].” Detective Raynor suggested that defendant did not want to tell them who
he had been with during the time of the murder because he was lying. Defendant
said, “[i]f it’s game over, charge me, go get my attorney, charge me, and let’s go to
court.” The interrogation ended when defendant requested his attorney a third time.

        Defendant was charged with first-degree murder and weapons offenses. The
trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress his statement. When the statement
was played at trial, the jury heard defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel as
well as the officers’ continued questioning and their insinuations of his guilt. The
State also offered into evidence surveillance footage from the motel and casino, and
                                           1
called Jeffrey and Sandra Carver to testify. The Carvers testified that on January 3,
2016, they saw a silver car parked on the side of Kinkora Road. The Carvers
described a man they saw walking away from the car, who appeared to fit
defendant’s description. They were never asked to identify defendant in a
photographic or in-person lineup or even while in court during the trial.

       During summation, the prosecutor commented on defendant’s not being
Dewyer’s friend because he did not help him into the casino; his changing clothes on
the afternoon of the murder to avoid being identified; and the man the Carvers saw
being defendant. The prosecutor also argued that Detective Raynor “practically
begged” defendant to provide information regarding his alibi, but defendant refused,
which suggested his guilt. The jury found defendant guilty on all counts.

        In a split decision, the Appellate Division vacated defendant’s conviction and
remanded the matter for a new trial based on cumulative error. The majority ordered
the trial court to conduct an N.J.R.E. Rule 104(a) hearing as to the admissibility of
the Carvers’ testimony and appeared to take issue with several comments made by
the prosecutor during summation. The majority noted, but took no issue with, the
fact that the jury heard defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel. The dissent
found no reversible error.

      The State appealed as of right, and the Court granted certification on whether
defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated. 249 N.J. 559 (2022).

HELD: Once defendant invoked his right to counsel, the interrogation should have
stopped. Not only did the interrogation continue, but during the questioning, the
detective strongly suggested that defendant would give them the information they
sought if he were truly innocent. Allowing that entire exchange to be played for the
jury was harmful error. In addition, the error was compounded when the prosecutor
commented on that portion of the statement that should have never been before the
jury in the first place. The Court discerns no error regarding the witness testimony
or any of the prosecutor’s other comments during summation.

1. There was never an identification in this case, so there was no need for a Rule
104 hearing. The Carvers’ testimony is relevant and presumed admissible because it
tends to prove that defendant was near the scene of the crime around the time of the
crime, contrary to his alibi. Nothing in the record suggests that the probative value
of their testimony is substantially outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice,
confusion of issues, or misleading the jury. The trial court thoroughly instructed the
jury as to the State’s burden and how to evaluate the credibility of witness
testimony, so its failure to give a lack of identification charge did not possess a clear
capacity to bring about an unjust result. The charge should be given on remand,
however, because there was no identification by any witnesses. (pp. 23-25)
                                            2
2. Prosecutors are afforded considerable leeway in closing arguments. As long as
the prosecutor stays within the evidence and the legitimate inferences therefrom,
there is no error. Here, the prosecutor’s comments in summation that defendant did
not assist Dewyer in walking into the casino, regarding defendant changing his
clothes when he returned to the motel without Dewyer, and that the person the
Carvers saw the day of the murder was defendant were proper commentary on the
evidence before the jury and not so egregious as to have deprived defendant of a fair
trial. Those statements by the prosecutor were confined to the evidence revealed
during the trial and inferences the prosecutor was allowed to draw from that
evidence. Nothing in those comments amounted to reversible error. (pp. 25-28)

3. Pursuant to Miranda v. Arizona, if an individual subjected to police interrogation
while in custody “states that he wants an attorney, the interrogation must cease until
an attorney is present.” 384 U.S. 436, 474 (1966). Under the state privilege against
self-incrimination, any indication of a desire for counsel, however ambiguous, will
trigger the entitlement to counsel. In situations in which a suspect has waived his or
her Miranda rights and agreed to speak to law enforcement, but later invoked the
right to counsel during the interrogation, trial courts should endeavor to excise any
reference to a criminal defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel from the
statement that the jury hears. When testimony explaining why an interview or
interrogation was terminated is necessary, instruction should be provided that
explains to the jury that people decline to speak with police for many reasons,
emphasizing that a defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel or right to remain
silent may not in any way be used to infer guilt. (pp. 28-32)

4. When defendant invoked his right to counsel by stating, “call my attorney Mr.
Keisler over here,” all questioning should have ceased and that portion of the
recording should have been excised from the statement played for the jury. The jury
not only heard the invocation and the detective’s comments thereafter, but also heard
the prosecutor in summation note that Detective Raynor “practically begged”
defendant for information on his alibi. Although the portion of the statement prior
to invocation of the right to counsel is admissible and open for fair comment,
nothing in that exchange can be characterized as the detective “begging” for more
information. It was the post-invocation exchange to which the prosecutor’s
comments referred. Given the State’s circumstantial case, it was harmful error for
the jury to have heard defendant invoke his right to counsel and then hear the
prosecutor insinuate defendant’s guilt based on his refusal to answer. (pp. 32-41)

      AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED and REMANDED for a new trial.

CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON, and
SOLOMON join in JUSTICE PIERRE-LOUIS’s opinion. JUDGE FUENTES
(temporarily assigned) did not participate.
                                          3
          SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                A-67 September Term 2020
                A-37 September Term 2021
                          085271

                   State of New Jersey,

           Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Respondent,

                              v.

                    Quinnizel J. Clark,

          Defendant-Respondent/Cross-Appellant.

      On appeal from and certification to the Superior
                Court, Appellate Division.

          Argued                      Decided
 January 18, 2022 (A-67-20)         June 29, 2022
  March 28, 2022 (A-37-21)

   Valeria Dominguez, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
   cause for appellant/cross-respondent (Matthew J. Platkin,
   Acting Attorney General, attorney; Valeria Dominguez,
   of counsel and on the briefs).

   Daniel S. Rockoff, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
   argued the cause for respondent/cross-appellant (Joseph
   E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney; Daniel S.
   Rockoff, of counsel and on the briefs).

JUSTICE PIERRE-LOUIS delivered the opinion of the Court.

                              1
      Fifty-six years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that

individuals subject to police interrogation must be advised of certain rights,

including the right to remain silent and the right to have an attorney present, to

safeguard the right against self-incrimination. Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S.

436, 477-79 (1966). Accordingly, it is well-established in federal and state

jurisprudence that when a suspect invokes the right to counsel, law

enforcement must cease the interrogation. Id. at 473-74; State v. Chew, 150

N.J. 30, 63 (1997). This appeal presents a case in which law enforcement

officers failed to uphold that basic principle by not scrupulously honoring

invocations of the right to counsel.

      Defendant Quinnizel Clark was convicted of murder and sentenced to

life imprisonment. At trial, the State played for the jury Clark’s videotaped

statement to police prior to his arrest. At one point during the statement,

police pressed defendant about his alibi and confronted him with their theory

that defendant killed James Dewyer. In response, defendant told officers,

“charge me, call my attorney Mr. Keisler over here, charge me and let’s go.”

Even though defendant twice advised officers to call his attorney, the

interrogation continued. The officers continued to urge defendant to tell them

who he had been with during the time of the murder and to suggest that he did

not want to tell them because he was lying, and therefore guilty. Defendant

                                        2
asked officers to call his attorney a third time, and the interrogation ended.

When the statement was played for the jury at trial, the jury heard defendant’s

invocation of his right to counsel as well as the officer’s continued questioning

and their insinuations of his guilt. During summation, the State argued that the

detective “practically begged” defendant to provide information regarding his

alibi, but defendant refused, which again suggested his guilt.

      On appeal, in a split decision, the Appellate Division vacated

defendant’s conviction and remanded the matter for further proceedings based

on cumulative error. The court held that certain witness testimony was

impermissibly suggestive of identification and prejudicial to defendant. The

Appellate Division therefore ordered the trial court to conduct an N.J.R.E.

104(a) hearing as to the admissibility of that testimony. The majority also

appeared to take issue with several comments made by the prosecutor during

summation. The court concluded that the cumulative effect of the errors

rendered the trial unfair. The majority noted, but took no issue with, the fact

that the jury heard defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel during the

statement he gave to the police.

      The dissenting judge found no reversible error regarding the witness

testimony or any of the prosecutor’s comments.

                                        3
      For the reasons stated below, we affirm as modified the Appellate

Division’s decision vacating defendant’s conviction and remand for a new trial

based on a violation of defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights. Once defendant

invoked his right to counsel, the interrogation should have stopped. Not only

did the interrogation continue, but during the questioning, the detective

strongly suggested that defendant would give them the information they sought

if he were truly innocent. Allowing that entire exchange to be played for the

jury was harmful error. In addition, the error was compounded when the

prosecutor commented on that portion of the statement that should have never

been before the jury in the first place. Unlike the Appellate Division majority,

we discern no error regarding the witness testimony or any of the prosecutor’s

other comments during summation.

                                       I.

                                       A.

      We rely on the testimony at trial for the following factual summary. On

January 3, 2016, at 4:17 p.m., Sergeant Daniel Pachuta responded to a report

about an unresponsive man in a car on the side of Kinkora Road in Mansfield.

At the scene, Sergeant Pachuta found James Dewyer without a pulse in the

passenger’s seat of his silver Dodge Avenger. Dewyer was still warm to the

touch at the time. Paramedics arrived shortly thereafter and, in attempting to

                                        4
remove him from the car, observed that Dewyer had entry wounds from five

close-range gunshots in his left abdomen. Dewyer was later pronounced dead

at a local hospital.

         In searching Dewyer’s vehicle, officers found in the glove compartment

a receipt that showed Dewyer paid $1,050 in October 2015 to bail defendant

out of jail. In Dewyer’s wallet, law enforcement found, among other things, a

receipt timestamped 9:52 a.m. on the morning of his death from Delaware Park

Casino. The investigation revealed that at 7:00 a.m. on January 3, 2016,

Dewyer picked up defendant at the Riverfront Motel on Route 130 in

Mansfield and the men drove to the Delaware Park Casino in Wilmington,

Delaware. Dewyer met defendant at the motel. Defendant stayed there at

times and Dewyer frequented the motel, giving many of the residents there

rides.

         Surveillance cameras at the Delaware Park Casino showed defendant and

Dewyer arrive at the casino at approximately 8:34 a.m. and depart at

approximately 11:00 a.m. Cameras in front of the Riverfront Motel showed

defendant and Dewyer return to the motel at approximately 12:21 p.m.

Defendant went inside the motel and exited sometime later with a red and

black backpack. When defendant and Dewyer reentered the car, defendant was

driving and Dewyer was in the passenger seat. The men departed the motel at

                                         5
approximately 1:34 p.m. At 3:28 p.m., surveillance video showed defendant

return to the motel with his backpack on his back, alone and on foot.

      On January 13, 2016, Detective Wayne Raynor of the Burlington County

Prosecutor’s Office and another officer interviewed defendant about Dewyer’s

death.1 Detective Raynor told defendant that he was not under arrest but read

defendant his Miranda rights. Defendant waived his rights and agreed to

provide a recorded statement.

      After obtaining background information on defendant, officers asked

defendant what he knew about Dewyer. Defendant told officers that he called

Dewyer “Jimmy Dean” and explained his friendship with Dewyer, referring to

Dewyer as his “gambling buddy.” Defendant stated that he and Dewyer were

close because they both enjoyed horse racing. Defendant stated that he and

Dewyer went to a casino in Delaware every Sunday morning, including the day

Dewyer was killed.

      Defendant stated that after he and Dewyer returned from the casino that

morning, defendant went into the motel and then left with Dewyer about an

hour later. According to defendant, Dewyer dropped him off in Roebling and

1
  Although there were two officers in the room, Detective Raynor is the only
one who spoke.
                                       6
defendant believed Dewyer then proceeded to pick up a friend’s daughter.

Defendant claimed that was the last time he saw Dewyer.

      When the officers asked defendant what he was doing in Roebling,

defendant hesitated. After some initial back and forth about defendant not

wanting to talk about why he was in Roebling, defendant asked the officers

whether he could get in trouble for stating what he was doing there.

Ultimately, defendant told police that he went to Roebling, met up with

someone, and “traded something for something.” That entire conversation,

wherein defendant insinuated he was in Roebling doing something illegal, was

redacted from the videotaped statement played for the jury. 2

      After approximately 40 minutes of an arguably congenial interview with

defendant, Detective Raynor began to confront defendant with his belief that

defendant was involved in Dewyer’s murder. Raynor accused defendant of

knowing more about Dewyer’s pension money than he had revealed. Detective

Raynor also told defendant that it was obvious from their investigation that

2
  Although the conversation was deleted from the video, the copies of the
transcript the jurors received at trial to assist them in following along with the
video inadvertently included five lines of the redacted video, including
defendant’s statement that he “traded something for something.” Additionally,
possibly because of the five lines inadvertently left in the transcript, during
summation the prosecutor noted three times that defendant claimed he was in
Roebling and “trade[d] something for something.”

                                        7
defendant and Dewyer were together all day and that defendant walked back to

the motel from the area where Dewyer’s body was found. Raynor told

defendant “it’s game over.” Defendant responded, “[c]harge me and let’s go

to court then. If it’s game over, charge me and let’s go to court.” Detective

Raynor then pressed defendant for information on his alibi and the following

exchange occurred, which we reproduce at length for context:3

            DETECTIVE: Tell us exactly where you were and I’ll, I’ll
            get you to shoot up and we’ll get you off --

            DEFENDANT: Listen.

            DETECTIVE: ****.

            DEFENDANT: I, I already told you where I was.

            DETECTIVE: But if you exonerate yourself. Who ****.

            DEFENDANT: ****

            DETECTIVE: We’ll go talk to them in an hour and say it
            was [Q] ****. I don’t care what you were doing with him,
            the answer is gonna be no [Q]. Because this is a game you
            can smile.

            DEFENDANT: **** because it wasn’t true.

3
  As noted, the jury was provided a transcript of defendant’s videotaped
statement to follow along with while watching the tape. The trial judge
advised the jury that if they hear “something that is different than what is
written in the transcript, [they were] to follow what [they] hear[d].” There are
portions of the transcript that include a series of four asterisks. Those asterisks
appear to denote undecipherable speech.
                                          8
DETECTIVE: Because you weren’t **** that’s gonna say,
oh yeah, [Q] was with me on Sunday. I’m not gonna ask
you what you were doing. You have an out here. I’ll have it
run down in an hour. We’ve got 50 guys out there.

DEFENDANT: Listen, listen.

DETECTIVE: All right.

DEFENDANT: You say it’s game over, charge me, call my
attorney Mr. Keisler over here, charge me and let’s go.
Plain and simple. Plain and simple. Plain and simple.

DETECTIVE: So you, so you want us to write that down?

DEFENDANT: Plain and simple. Plain and simple.

DETECTIVE: Do you want us to run that down[?]

DEFENDANT: **** down.

DETECTIVE: Who you were with so that we can move
aside and say that he wasn’t, he was with who he said he
was with.

DEFENDANT: Listen, listen.

DETECTIVE: But I know ****.

DEFENDANT: ****.

DETECTIVE: Why would you believe, if I were sitting in
your seat and somebody was telling me that --

DEFENDANT: **** believe --

DETECTIVE: -- I’m good for murdering the guy, I would
say, you know what, I was with this person. You can go
checking ’cause I’m not on the hook for that.

                          9
DEFENDANT: Listen.

....

DETECTIVE: You have absolutely no desire to tell us who
you were with in Florence because it’s bullsh*t.

DEFENDANT: I wasn’t in Florence.

DETECTIVE: ****. Excuse me, excuse me, **** if I was
on the hook for something like this, I would probably say --

DEFENDANT: Officer.

DETECTIVE: -- [W]ho I was with **** and let us run it
down.

DEFENDANT: Listen, listen. If it’s game over, charge me,
go get my attorney, charge me, and let’s go to court.

DETECTIVE: ****

DEFENDANT: Plain and simple. You’re sure.

DETECTIVE: I’m sure.

DEFENDANT: ****

DETECTIVE: I’m asking you ****.

DEFENDANT: No, no. I just told you what’s gonna
transpire. Go get my attorney.

DETECTIVE: Okay.

DEFENDANT: Charge me. And that’s it.

[(emphases added.)]

                          10
      After defendant’s third request for an attorney, Detective Raynor ended

the interrogation. The officers then proceeded to arrest defendant on unrelated

outstanding traffic warrants.

                                       B.

      On January 18, 2017, a Burlington County grand jury charged defendant

with first-degree murder, second-degree possession of a weapon for an

unlawful purpose, and second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon.

      Before trial, defendant moved to suppress his January 13, 2016

statement, arguing that he did not knowingly waive his Miranda rights because

police did not disclose the outstanding traffic warrants prior to questioning.

The trial court denied the motion.

      On October 17, 2017, a jury trial proceeded. Among other things, the

State offered into evidence defendant’s statement, surveillance footage from

the motel and casino from January 3, 2016, and cell site data placing defendant

in the area where Dewyer’s body was found. Regarding the January 13

statement, defense counsel did not object to or seek redaction of defendant’s

statements requesting counsel.4

4
  Prior to trial, defense counsel and the assistant prosecutor discussed
redacting the statement and agreed on numerous portions of the statement to be
redacted. Neither the State nor the defense appeared to raise the issue of
redacting the portion of the statement when defendant invoked his right to
counsel.
                                        11
      After playing a recording of defendant’s statement to the jury, the

prosecutor asked Detective Raynor, “did [defendant] tell you who he was with

that day?” Detective Raynor responded, “No, sir.” On cross-examination,

defense counsel asked Detective Raynor, “at the end of the video . . .

[defendant] said to you a number of times . . . [‘]charge me with this, call my

lawyer[’] . . . did you charge him that day?” Detective Raynor responded,

“No, ma’am.”

      The State also called Detectives Anthony Mikulsi and David Kohler to

testify as to their review of the surveillance footage. Detective Mikulsi

testified that, despite driving together to the casino, defendant entered five to

ten minutes before Dewyer, that Dewyer and defendant did not interact much

while in the casino, and that Dewyer appeared to be following defendant

around the casino while defendant gambled and Dewyer did not. Detective

Kohler testified that on the morning of January 3, 2016, defendant wore dark

pants, white shoes, and a dark hooded sweatshirt or jacket, and carried a two-

toned backpack. Detective Kohler also testified that after defendant returned

to the motel alone at approximately 3:28 p.m., after Dewyer was killed, he

changed into different clothes, as shown on the video.

                                        12
      The State also called Jeffrey and Sandra Carver to testify. 5 The Carvers

testified that at approximately 2:30 p.m. on January 3, 2016, they were driving

their tractor on Kinkora Road in Mansfield when they saw a silver car parked

oddly on the side of the road. The Carvers slowed down but continued to drive

and soon thereafter saw a man walking away from the silver car. The man

kept looking back at them as he walked. Jeffrey described the man as wearing

“dark pants” and a “dark jacket” with “a little bit of red or [a] bright color

around the neck area” possibly from a “hooded sweatshirt,” and carrying a

“black backpack” with “silver trim.” He further described the man as “not a

white person” and recalled that he had “light tan” skin. Sandra described the

man as “over six f[ee]t and over 200 pounds,” in “blue jeans,” carrying a

“black backpack,” and possibly wearing a “red,” “orange,” or “yellow”

hoodie.6 She further described the man as “brown.” The Carvers were never

asked to identify defendant in a photographic or in-person lineup or even while

in court during the trial.

5
  We refer to Jeffrey and Sandra Carver collectively as “the Carvers” and
individually by their first names to avoid confusion. We do not intend any
disrespect.
6
  In summation, the prosecutor referenced defendant’s fingerprint card in
evidence that purportedly listed his weight as 265 pounds and his height as six
feet, three inches tall.
                                       13
      Defense counsel cross-examined the Carvers, impeaching their

credibility and uncertainty over the man’s appearance, particularly the

difference between Sandra’s initial statement and her trial testimony. During

her initial audio-recorded statement to police on January 7, 2016, four days

after the murder, Sandra stated that the man she saw walking away from the

silver car “definitely was not black.” When the interviewing officer asked,

“he’s absolutely not black, 100%?” Sandra responded “no.” In Jeffrey’s initial

January 12, 2016 statement, he recalled that the man had “light tan” skin and

“wasn’t a white person,” consistent with his trial testimony.

      During summation, the prosecutor made various arguments to the jury,

including the following comments relevant to this appeal. Regarding

defendant and Dewyer arriving at the casino, the prosecutor remarked:

            [Defendant] acknowledges James Dewyer has these bad
            legs, he could hardly get around. But does his good
            friend, [defendant], drop [Dewyer] off at the front door
            of that casino? No . . . . [Defendant] doesn’t try to help
            him into the casino. He doesn’t try to walk with him.
            He doesn’t stay with him. He’s not his friend. He’s
            using him.

As to defendant’s change of clothes, the prosecutor stated that,

            after the defendant returns to the motel at 3:28 p.m. on
            that day . . . nine minutes after . . . he comes out, his
            clothing is changed. A lot was made during cross-
            examination about that. Well could they be the same
            pants? Detective Kohler told you no, he had dark
            colored pants on when he came back to the motel and a
                                       14
            dark colored sweatshirt. And when he came out he had
            like pajama pants on . . . . And then he had a white shirt
            on . . . . Well, I submit to you, he just killed [Dewyer]
            and he’s trying not to be seen in the same clothes so he
            can’t be identified.

Next, as to the Carvers’ testimony, the prosecutor noted:

            It’s not a coincidence. The person that the Carvers saw
            that day was the defendant. They couldn’t identify him
            and say yes, that’s him, I see his face, it’s definitely him
            but the general description matches. It’s too much of a
            coincidence to not be him.

Finally, as to defendant’s January 13, 2016 statement to police, the prosecutor

argued:

            [Defendant] tells Detective Raynor he’s down there
            doing business in Roebling, Detective Raynor
            practically begged him, well, who you were with, tell
            us [who] you’re with, we’ll go out, track it down and
            talk to this person. No, I’m not gonna tell you who I
            was with.

            ....

            We’re investigating this murder and then they proceed
            to read him his Miranda rights. Yet he still won’t give
            up this person who he’s doing business with. Ask
            yourself why. And I’ll tell you what the reason is,
            because this person doesn’t exist. It didn't happen.

Defense counsel did not object to any of the State’s summation statements.

      After summations, the trial court instructed the jury as to the elements of

first-degree murder; defendant’s presumption of innocence, including that his

decision not to testify may not be used against him; and the State’s burden to
                                        15
prove defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The court also explained

that the jury can consider some or all the following factors when evaluating

witness testimony:

            The interest or lack of interest that any witness has in
            the outcome of the trial; the bias or prejudice of a
            witness, if any; the witness’ mental capacity for
            knowing that about which he or she speaks . . . [;] any
            prior inconsistent statements or discrepancies in the
            testimony of a witness; the reasonableness or
            unreasonableness of the testimony; the manner in
            which the witness testified; the witness’ demeanor on
            the stand; the willingness or the reluctance to answer
            questions.

In addition, the court explained that the jury may “disregard all of the

testimony” of a witness. Defense counsel did not object or request additional

instructions.

      On November 2, 2017, the jury found defendant guilty on all counts. On

December 14, 2017, the trial court sentenced defendant to life in prison with

an eighty-five percent parole-ineligibility term, pursuant to the No Early

Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2.

                                        C.

      Defendant appealed his conviction, submitting both counseled and pro se

briefs. In his counseled brief, defendant made the following arguments: (1)

the court erred in not giving an identification instruction regarding the

Carvers’ testimony; (2) the cell site location data testimony should not have
                                       16
been admitted; (3) the court erred in allowing the jury to hear that defendant

exercised his right to counsel, that defendant was out on bail at the time of the

offense, and kept a firearm in his home; and (4) the case should be remanded

for resentencing because the court did not explain why the thirty-year statutory

minimum, instead of a life sentence, did not suffice. In his pro se brief,

defendant raised additional arguments not relevant to this appeal.

      In an unpublished split opinion, the Appellate Division reversed

defendant’s conviction, vacated his sentence, and remanded the matter for a

new trial. The majority found that “the cumulative effect of errors committed

during the trial,” including various comments made by the prosecutor in

summation, “rendered the trial unfair.” Specifically, the majority was

concerned that the Carvers’ testimony was “impermissibly suggestive and

prejudicial to defendant, and [that] the jury may have erroneously drawn a

conclusion that he was the perpetrator.” Although this issue was not briefed

by the parties, the majority sua sponte directed the trial court on remand to

conduct a hearing pursuant to N.J.R.E. 104(a) to determine the admissibility of

the Carvers’ testimony, citing this Court’s decision in State v. Henderson, 208

N.J. 208, 289 (2011). The majority stated that the Rule 104(a) hearing was

necessary for the trial court “to ascertain if the proffered testimony by the

Carvers would aid the jury as the trier of fact in deciding the merits of the

                                        17
controversy or whether the Carvers’ testimony may cause undue prejudice in

the minds of the jurors and should be barred.” The majority ordered the trial

court, if the evidence were found admissible, to “provide appropriate, tailored

jury instructions explaining how the evidence is to be considered” by the jury.

      The Appellate Division majority also appeared to take issue with some

of the prosecutor’s comments during summation but did not analyze the

comments beyond detailing them in its factual recitation. The court’s majority

discerned no error in defendant’s remaining arguments, including the

admission of the cell site location data testimony by the FBI agent. Regarding

defendant’s statement to police, the majority held that the “limited exchange”

between defendant and the interviewing detectives after defendant invoked his

right to counsel, during which the officer continued to ask defendant for his

alibi, could not have produced an unjust result.

      The dissenting judge found no reversible error, noting that “the majority

seemingly suggests four of the prosecutor’s closing remarks exceeded the

bounds of fair comment,” but did not analyze the comments in context with

governing law. The dissent found all four comments addressed by the majority

to be supported by the record and that “no unjust result occurred from those

remarks -- in part or in combination.”

                                         18
      As for the order to conduct a Rule 104(a) hearing, the dissent argued that

“the majority’s outcome departs from well-established evidentiary principles”

because “there was no identification procedure here, [so] there was no basis

for the trial court to conduct a . . . preliminary hearing to determine the

admissibility of the Carvers’ testimony in the present trial.” In addition, the

dissenting judge agreed that the trial court should have provided a lack-of-

identification charge to the jury but nonetheless found no reversible error

because “the jury was more generally advised of the State’s burden to prove all

elements of the charged offenses beyond a reasonable doubt.”

      The State appealed as of right pursuant to Rule 2:2-1(a)(2).7 Defendant

also filed a petition for certification raising issues beyond the limited scope of

the State’s appeal, including whether his Fifth Amendment rights were

violated when officers continued the interrogation after defendant’s invocation

of his right to counsel. We initially denied defendant’s petition. On January

18, 2022, we heard oral argument on the State’s appeal. After oral argument,

we sua sponte reconsidered defendant’s petition and granted certification,

limited to whether defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated by the

admission of evidence that he requested an attorney when Detective Raynor

7
  Rule 2:2-1(a)(2) provides a right to appeal to this Court from final judgments
“with regard to those issues as to which, there is a dissent in the Appellate
Division.”
                                       19
asked for his alibi. 249 N.J. 559 (2022). A second oral argument was held

regarding the issue granted on certification.

                                        II.

      Regarding the appeal as of right, the State argues that the Appellate

Division improperly reversed defendant’s conviction on grounds not raised or

briefed. The State contends that no reversible error occurred. The State

asserts that the admission of the Carvers’ testimony was not plain error

because the testimony tended to prove a fact in dispute, namely defendant’s

whereabouts on January 3, 2016. The State also argues that the risk of unfair

prejudice was minimal because the Carvers did not identify defendant and

were cross-examined by defense counsel.

      Moreover, the State argues the trial court’s failure to provide a lack -of-

identification instruction was not reversible error. The State first notes that

defendant did not raise this argument at trial. Further, according to the State,

the trial court provided the jury with sufficient instructions to consider the

Carvers’ testimony. The State argues that because the Carvers did not identify

defendant, the enhanced jury instructions in Henderson were unnecessary.

      On the Fifth Amendment issue, the State responds that neither the

admission of defendant’s statement nor the prosecutor’s comments are

reversible error. Moreover, the State maintains that each of the prosecutor’s

                                        20
comments were based on evidence in the record and within the bounds of fair

comment. Specifically, the State contends that the prosecutor’s comment that

Detective Raynor “practically begged” defendant for information did not

exploit defendant’s invocations of counsel, but rather “acknowledged”

defendant’s refusal to elaborate on his alleged alibi. The State also argues that

the weight of the evidence against defendant outweighs any alleged comment

on his invocation. Finally, the State notes that, at trial, defense counsel did not

raise the argument above and used the invocations to defendant’s advantage.

Therefore, the State argues that any error arising from the admission of

defendant’s invocation was invited.

      Defendant argues that his Fifth Amendment rights were violated when

the trial court admitted into evidence the portions of his statement that

included his invocations of the right to counsel. Defendant maintains that the

admission of that portion of the statement without a limiting instruction ran the

risk of the jury inferring guilt from his invocations. Defendant further argues

that the prosecutor’s questioning of Detective Raynor after the statement was

played for the jury, as well as the prosecutor’s comments in summation that

defendant refused to provide exculpatory evidence after Detective Raynor

“practically begged” him to do so, improperly suggested that the jury should

infer guilt from the invocations.

                                        21
      Regarding the State’s appeal, defendant responds that the Appellate

Division properly found cumulative error. First, defendant submits that the

Appellate Division “unanimously . . . agreed that the trial court erred by not

instructing the jury to evaluate the sufficiency and reliability of eyewitness

proofs of identity” and “h[e]ld that the trial court erred by admitting

eyewitness evidence of [defendant’s] identity without any jury instruction.”

Specifically, defendant maintains that the Carvers’ testimony amounts to

“eyewitness identifications,” and that “a model identification charge should be

given in every case in which identification is a legitimate issue.” (quoting

State v. Davis, 363 N.J. Super. 556, 561 (App. Div. 2003)). Accordingly,

defendant asserts that the trial court permitted the risk of the jury believing

that he carried the burden to prove his innocence.

                                        III.

      As defendant did not object to any of the trial court rulings that he

contends were error, we review the issues presented for plain error. See R.

2:10-2. Under that standard, an unchallenged error constitutes plain error if it

was “clearly capable of producing an unjust result.” Ibid. The possibility of

an unjust result must be “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.

Melvin, 65 N.J. 1, 18-19 (1974) (quoting State v. Macon, 57 N.J. 325, 336

                                        22
(1971)). To determine whether an alleged error rises to the level of plain error,

it “must be evaluated ‘in light of the overall strength of the State’s case.’”

State v. Sanchez-Medina, 231 N.J. 452, 468 (2018) (quoting State v. Galicia,

210 N.J. 364, 388 (2012)).

                                        A.

      We first address the issues raised in the State’s appeal as of right. The

Appellate Division reversed defendant’s conviction and directed that the trial

court hold a Rule 104(a) hearing on remand to determine the admissibility of

the Carvers’ testimony. In dissenting, Judge Rose concluded that there was no

basis for a Rule 104 hearing because the Carvers never identified defendant,

either in or out of court.

      N.J.R.E. 104(a) states:

             (a) In General.

             (1) The court shall decide any preliminary question about
             whether a witness is qualified, a privilege exists, or evidence
             is admissible. In so deciding, the court is not bound by
             evidence rules, except those on privilege and Rule 403.

             (2) The court may hear and determine such matters out of the
             presence or hearing of the jury.

      Much of this Court’s case law analyzing the necessity of a Rule 104

hearing to determine the admissibility of witness identification testimony has

arisen from cases in which a witness actually identified the defendant or

                                        23
suspect pursuant to an identification procedure such as a photo array. See,

e.g., State v. Chen, 208 N.J. 307, 329-30 (2011) (holding that a Rule 104

hearing was necessary to determine whether a private party’s suggestive

behavior tainted the reliability of the witness’s identification of defendant’s

picture).

      Here, police never conducted a photo array for either Jeffrey or Susan

Carver to have them attempt to identify defendant as the person they saw on

the day of the murder walking down Kinkora Road. The Carvers also did not

participate in a show up or lineup or attempt to identify defendant in court.

There was never an identification in this case, so there was no need for a Rule

104 hearing.

      As the State readily conceded, this was a circumstantial evidence case.

No one was able to identify defendant as the perpetrator, so the State has

pieced together evidence that tends to show defendant committed the murder.

The Carvers’ testimony is one of those pieces. Their testimony is relevant and

presumed admissible because it tends to prove that defendant was near the

scene of the crime around the time of the crime, contrary to his alibi. See

N.J.R.E. 401, 402. Furthermore, nothing in the record suggests that the

probative value of their testimony is “substantially outweighed by the risk of

. . . [u]ndue prejudice, confusion of issues, or misleading the jury .” N.J.R.E.

                                        24
403(a). The Carvers never once identified defendant as the person they saw.

Their testimony simply shed light on a person, who appears to fit defendant’s

description, being present in the same area and at approximately the same time

that Dewyer was killed. There is nothing about that testimony that requires a

Rule 104 hearing.

      On the issue of the lack of identification charge, we agree with the

Appellate Division that the charge should be given to the jury on remand. See

Model Jury Charges (Criminal), “Identification: No In-or Out-of-Court

Identification” (approved Oct. 26, 2015). The trial court did thoroughly

instruct the jury as to the State’s burden and how to evaluate the credibility of

witness testimony, in accordance with the spirit of the model charges. So

although the trial court’s failure to give the charge, standing alone, did not

“possess[] a clear capacity to bring about an unjust result,” State v. Afanador,

151 N.J. 41, 54 (1997) (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Jordan, 147

N.J. 409, 422 (1997)), the charge should be given on remand because this is a

case in which there was no identification by any witnesses.

                                        B.

      As for the prosecutor’s comments in summation, it is unclear from the

majority opinion whether the court found the statements referenced in its

factual recitation to have exceeded the bounds of proper conduct, thereby

                                        25
contributing to the cumulative error that the court found. The dissent noted

that the extent of the cumulative error found by the majority was not fully

analyzed in the opinion, but discerned that the summation comments, along

with the Carvers’ testimony, contributed to the majority’s finding that the trial

was unfair. Because the dissent discusses the issue of the summation

comments at length in departing from the majority, we do so as well.

      In detailing the facts of the case, the majority highlighted the following

four comments made by the State during summation: (1) comments “intended

to malign defendant’s character” when the prosecutor pointed out that

defendant did not assist Dewyer in walking into the casino; (2) statements

regarding defendant changing his clothes when he returned to the Riverfront

Motel without Dewyer; (3) the prosecutor’s comment that the person the

Carvers saw the day of the murder was defendant; and (4) “without defendant

having the benefit of counsel,” the prosecutor’s statement that the detective

“practically begged” defendant for defendant’s alibi but he refused to tell

police who he was with that afternoon.

      “[P]rosecutors in criminal cases are expected to make vigorous and

forceful closing arguments to juries . . . .” State v. Williams, 244 N.J. 592,

607 (2021) (quoting State v. Frost, 158 N.J. 76, 82 (1999)). “Prosecutors are

afforded considerable leeway in closing arguments as long as their comments

                                       26
are reasonably related to the scope of the evidence presented.” Frost, 158 N.J.

at 82. “[A]s long as the prosecutor stays within the evidence and the

legitimate inferences therefrom, [t]here is no error.” Williams, 244 N.J. at 607

(second alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted) (quoting State v.

McNeil-Thomas, 238 N.J. 256, 275 (2019)). If defense counsel fails to object

contemporaneously to the prosecutor’s comments, “the reviewing court may

infer that counsel did not consider the remarks to be inappropriate.” State v.

Vasquez, 265 N.J. Super. 528, 560 (App. Div. 1993) (citing State v. Johnson,

31 N.J. 489, 511 (1960)).

      We will discuss the fourth summation comment below in our discussion

of defendant’s statement and invocation of his right to counsel. Regarding the

first three statements, we find that those comments in summation were proper

commentary on the evidence before the jury and not “so egregious as to [have]

deprive[d] defendant of a fair trial.” McNeil-Thomas, 238 N.J. at 275 (quoting

State v. Wakefield, 190 N.J. 397, 437 (2007)). Those statements by the

prosecutor were confined “to the evidence revealed during the trial .” State v.

Smith, 167 N.J. 158, 178 (2001). The video of defendant and Dewyer entering

the casino was in evidence. At trial, the defense made much of the close

friendship between defendant and Dewyer. In his statement to police,

defendant talked about the trouble Dewyer had with his legs, and even stated

                                       27
that he often drove Dewyer’s car because of the pain the victim experienced.

The State’s comments about defendant not helping Dewyer were fair comment

on the record.

      The same holds true for the comment about defendant changing his

clothes on the afternoon of the murder. The surveillance evidence of

defendant arriving at the Riverfront Motel without Dewyer and then later

exiting the motel in different clothes was in evidence before the jury. It was

not improper for the prosecutor to point out this change and infer that

defendant allegedly sought to evade detection by changing his clothes.

      Lastly, regarding the comment that the person the Carvers saw was

defendant even though the Carvers never identified defendant, the prosecutor

was once again allowed to draw an inference from the evidence presented.

The prosecutor was even careful to remind the jury that the Carvers “couldn’t

identify him,” but noted that their general description of the person they saw

matched defendant. Nothing in those comments amounted to reversible error.

                                        IV.

      We now turn to the issue of whether defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights

were violated by the admission of and comment on his invocations of his right

to counsel. Again, because defendant did not raise this issue below, we review

the trial court’s ruling for plain error. --
                                          R. 2:10-2.

                                         28
                                        A.

      The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, applicable to

the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, see State in Int. of A.A., 240

N.J. 341, 351 (2020), guarantees that “[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in

any criminal case to be a witness against himself,” U.S. Const. amend. V.

Although not included in the New Jersey Constitution, the right against self-

incrimination is deeply rooted in New Jersey common law and is codified by

statute and the Rules of Evidence. See N.J.S.A. 2A:84A-19; N.J.R.E. 503.

      In Miranda v. Arizona, the United States Supreme Court held that

individuals who are “subjected to police interrogation while in custody . . . or

otherwise deprived of [their] freedom of action in any significant way” must

be appropriately advised of certain rights so as to not offend the right against

self-incrimination. 384 U.S. at 477-79. Miranda warnings include advice as to

the right to remain silent and of the right to the presence of an attorney during

any questioning. Id. at 479. Pursuant to Miranda, if an “individual indicates

in any manner, at any time prior to or during questioning, that he wishes to

remain silent, the interrogation must cease.” Id. at 473-74. Furthermore, “[i]f

the individual states that he wants an attorney, the interrogation must cease

until an attorney is present.” Id. at 474.

                                        29
      This Court has reaffirmed time and time again that “[t]he privilege

against self-incrimination . . . is one of the most important protections of the

criminal law,” State v. Presha, 163 N.J. 304, 312 (2000), and has afforded the

state privilege broader protection than its Fifth Amendment counterpart , see,

e.g., State v. O’Neill, 193 N.J. 148, 176-77 (2007). That broader protection

includes the principle that “a suspect need not be articulate, clear, or explicit in

requesting counsel; any indication of a desire for counsel, however ambiguous,

will trigger the entitlement to counsel.” State v. Reed, 133 N.J. 237, 253

(1993); see also Chew, 150 N.J. at 63 (rejecting the federal law standard under

which the invocation of counsel must be “unambiguous or unequivocal” in

order for officers to stop the questioning and holding instead that, “[b]ecause

the right to counsel is so fundamental, an equivocal request for an attorney is

to be interpreted in a light most favorable to the defendant”).

      In situations in which a suspect has waived his or her Miranda rights and

agreed to speak to law enforcement, but later invoked the right to counsel

during the interrogation, this Court has held that “trial courts should endeavor

to excise any reference to a criminal defendant’s invocation of his right to

counsel” from the statement that the jury hears. State v. Feaster, 156 N.J. 1,

75-76 (1998). “[A] trial court’s failure to follow the Feaster stricture of

excision or a cautionary instruction does not necessarily equate to reversible or

                                        30
plain error”; rather, a harmful error analysis is warranted to determine whether

the defendant was deprived of a fair trial. State v. Tung, 460 N.J. Super. 75,

94-95 (App. Div. 2019) (holding that allowing the jury to hear the two

instances of defendant’s invocation of counsel constituted plain error).

      In Feaster, the Court found that the error was harmless because of “the

fleeting nature of the reference to defendant’s invocation of his right to

counsel” and the fact that “the prosecutor did not comment on the matter

during summation.” Feaster, 156 N.J. at 77. The Court further noted that

when “testimony explaining why an interview or interrogation was terminated”

is necessary, “instruction should be provided that explains to the jury that

people decline to speak with police for many reasons, emphasizing that a

defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel or right to remain silent may not

in any way be used to infer guilt.” Id. at 76.

      In Doyle v. Ohio, the Supreme Court held that although “the Miranda

warnings contain no express assurance that silence will carry no penalty, such

assurance is implicit to any person who receives the warnings.” 426 U.S. 610,

618 (1976). Indeed, it would be counterintuitive for suspects to be told that

they have the right to not speak, to ask for an attorney, and to stop the

interrogation at any time, if at the same time their invocation of those rights

could be used against them at trial. See United States v. Hale, 422 U.S. 171,

                                        31
182-83 (1975) (White, J., concurring in the judgment) (“[W]hen a person

under arrest is informed, as Miranda requires, that he may remain silent, . . .

and that he may have an attorney if he wishes, . . . it does not comport with

due process to permit the prosecution during trial to call attention to his silence

. . . and to insist that . . . an unfavorable inference might be drawn . . . . ”). And

as the Supreme Court noted in Wainwright v. Greenfield, post-Miranda

“silence does not mean only muteness; it includes the statement of a desire to

remain silent, as well as of a desire to remain silent until an attorney has been

consulted.” 474 U.S. 284, 295 n.13 (1986).

                                         B.

      In the present case, we find that it was error to play for the jury the

portion of the statement wherein defendant invoked his right to counsel and

Detective Raynor continued questioning him. That error was further

emphasized by the prosecutor’s comments in summation. Given the State’s

circumstantial case, allowing all that to go before the jury was clearly capable

of producing an unjust result.

      Defendant’s statement to police, as played for the jury, was

approximately 48 minutes long. Most of that interview was conducted in a

friendly atmosphere; defendant told officers about his friendship with Dewyer,

                                         32
his interest in betting on racehorses, and even the date defendant went on the

night of the murder.

      At approximately 41 minutes into the interview, Detective Raynor

confronted defendant for the first time with the State’s theory that defendant

murdered Dewyer. It was at that time that defendant invoked his right to

counsel by stating, “charge me, call my attorney Mr. Keisler over here, charge

me and let’s go.” At that moment, all questioning should have ceased.

Defendant, by specifically naming his attorney and telling officers to call him,

invoked his right to counsel. However, even if his invocation could be viewed

as equivocal or ambiguous, the detectives were not justified in continuing the

interrogation under New Jersey law. There is no question that the

interrogation should have ended at that point and that portion of the recording

should have been excised from the statement played, not once, but twice for

the jury.8

      The interrogation, however, did not end there. Instead, Detective

Raynor continued to press defendant about his alibi, continuously asking

defendant whether he wanted the detective to “run that down,” in reference to

the person defendant stated he was with in Roebling. Defendant, for the most

8
   During deliberations, the jury asked to view defendant’s statement again and
it was played for them in open court.
                                        33
part, said little during this exchange, except to tell the officers to “call my

attorney” and then twice telling them “go get my attorney.” During the

exchange, Detective Raynor expressed that if he were in defendant’s shoes, he

would tell the officers who he was with so that he is “not on the hook for [the

murder].”

      The jury not only heard the invocation and the detective’s comments

thereafter, but also heard the prosecutor give a summation that compounded

the error by commenting on the discussion that took place after the

invocations. The prosecutor noted that Detective Raynor “practically begged”

defendant for information on his alibi. The State argues that defendant

willingly provided an alibi during his statement and, therefore, the

prosecutor’s statements were fair comment on defendant’s alibi statements.

      Certainly, the portion of defendant’s statement prior to invocation of his

right to counsel is admissible. During that portion of the statement, he

provided officers with an alibi when he stated that Dewyer dropped him off in

Roebling where he met with someone. Defendant was hesitant to tell the

officers exactly what he did in Roebling and with whom. The videotaped

statement the jury heard was redacted to remove approximately one minute and

48 seconds of that portion of the interview during which defendant implied to

police that he met with someone in Roebling to apparently complete a drug

                                         34
deal. The jury, however, only heard the following exchange in the redacted

video:

           DETECTIVE: Where, where does he drop you off in
           Robley?

           DEFENDANT: Uh, right there by the, uh, by the um,
           the store. In between the store and, um what is that, uh,
           Lou’s, Doctor Lou’s.

           DETECTIVE: Doctor Lou’s okay.

           DEFENDANT: Mm hmm.

           DETECTIVE: He drops you off over there.

           DEFENDANT: Mm hmm.

           DETECTIVE: Um, what’s goin’ on down there?

           DEFENDANT: Uh --

           DETECTIVE: I can see you’re hesitating, I mean, I’m
           not, I’m less concerned about what was going on and
           just, you know, where he goes, who he’s with and then,
           you know, what’s goin’ on with you down there. Does
           he, does he hang around with you?

           DEFENDANT: No, no, he didn’t hang around. I, um,
           to see I’m hesitant because this is involving, it, it --

           DETECTIVE: It’s something you don’t wanna talk
           about.

           DEFENDANT: Right.

           DETECTIVE: Okay.

           DEFENDANT: You know.
                                      35
DETECTIVE: All right.

DEFENDANT: That I, that I did, you know.

DETECTIVE: Okay, um.

DEFENDANT: Uh.

DETECTIVE: And like I said, I’m trying to word this
where it’s not, um, it would be helpful, uh, you know
for us to just have an understanding of, in piecing this
together.

DEFENDANT: Okay, I --

DETECTIVE: You know, was he with somebody else
or did you guys meet up --

DEFENDANT: No.

DETECTIVE: With somebody else or, or what?

DEFENDANT: No.

DETECTIVE: Okay.

DETECTIVE: All right, so you met with somebody.

DEFENDANT: Right.

DETECTIVE: Okay. All right, down there near Dr.
Lou’s?

DEFENDANT: Mm hmm.

DETECTIVE: All right. Um, do, were you, when he
dropped you off at Dr. Lou’s, um do you go any, like
does somebody else pick you up and you go somewhere
and what?
                          36
            DEFENDANT: Uh, we take a walk.

            DETECTIVE: You and whoever take a walk.

            DEFENDANT: Yeah, mm hmm.

            DETECTIVE: Okay. You and whoever take a walk.

            DEFENDANT: Mm hmm.

            DETECTIVE: Um, do whatever it is you have to do.

            DEFENDANT: Mm hmm.

            DETECTIVE: Okay and then what?

            DEFENDANT: And that’s it.

            DETECTIVE: Okay.

            DEFENDANT: And well after he drops me off, I
            would suspect he went to pick up Judy’s daughter.

            DETECTIVE: Okay.

            DEFENDANT: Other than that, you know, that’s okay
            of what I needed to take care --

            DETECTIVE: Mm hmm.

            DEFENDANT: And I made my way back up to my
            room.

      That portion of the statement was certainly open for fair comment

because defendant had waived his Miranda rights and told police during the

interview that followed that he was in Roebling during the time of the murder.

                                      37
But when the prosecutor in summation stated, “Detective Raynor practically

begged him, well, who were you with, tell us [who] you’re with, we’ll go out,

track it down and talk to this person,” it cannot be logically concluded that the

prosecutor was referencing that pre-invocation portion of the statement.

Nothing in that exchange can be reasonably characterized as the detective

“begging” defendant for more information on his alibi and imploring him to

allow the police to track the person he was with down and talk to them.

      Contrast that, however, with the exchange between Detective Raynor

and defendant after defendant invoked his right to counsel. Detective Raynor

continued to ask defendant questions as quoted above, see supra pp. 9-11.

After defendant first invoked his right to counsel by stating, “You say it’s

game over, charge me, call my attorney Mr. Keisler over here, charge me and

let’s go,” Detective Raynor asked defendant no fewer than four times whether

defendant wanted the officers to run his alibi down. As already discussed,

Detective Raynor further commented that if he was in defendant’s shoes, he

would readily give the officers all the information about his alibi so as not to

be “on the hook” for a murder. The prosecutor in summation characterized

that exchange as “begging” defendant for the alibi information. Surely, it was

that exchange, after defendant had already invoked his right to counsel, to

which the prosecutor’s comments harkened back. It was during that exchange

                                        38
that Detective Raynor repeatedly mentioned tracking or running down the alibi

information.

      The exchange, however, took place after defendant had already invoked

his right to counsel and the interrogation should have ended. Although that

portion of the statement should not have been in evidence or before the jury, it

was introduced. The prosecutor thus likely believed he was free to comment

on it, and his comments certainly do not rise to the level of misconduct.

Nevertheless, those comments fueled the original error of allowing in the

invocation of defendant’s right to counsel. And although the prosecutor did

not directly comment on defendant’s invocation of his right to counsel , the

prosecutor’s inference that defendant was guilty because he did not provide the

name of the person he was with in response to the detective’s “begging” was

improper.

      Prior to trial, the prosecutor and defense counsel discussed redactions to

the statement to ensure that all references to defendant’s criminal history and

the alleged illegal activity in Roebling defendant discussed would not be

played for the jury. Somehow, all the parties to this matter at trial -- the State,

defense counsel, and the court -- missed the necessary redaction of defendant’s

invocation of his right to counsel. When defendant invoked his right to

counsel by specifically naming his attorney, alarm bells should have gone off

                                        39
signaling to all parties that the information should have been redacted.9

Unfortunately, everyone missed it.

      We find that allowing the jury to hear defendant’s invocation of his right

to counsel, the detective’s statements thereafter, and the prosecutor’s

comments in summation could have led the jury to a result it otherwise might

not have reached. The State concedes that its case against defendant was

circumstantial. There were no eyewitnesses to the murder, no murder weapon

was ever recovered, and defendant never confessed to killing Dewyer. It was

therefore harmful for the jury to have improperly heard defendant invoke his

right to counsel at the moment he was confronted with murdering Dewyer and

9
  The State argues that defendant invited this error because he did not seek to
redact the invocation portion of the video when he requested redaction of other
portions of the statement. Under the invited error doctrine, “trial errors that
‘were induced, encouraged or acquiesced in or consented to by defense counsel
ordinarily are not a basis for reversal on appeal.’” State v. A.R., 213 N.J. 542,
561 (2013) (quoting State v. Corsaro, 107 N.J. 339, 345 (1987)). Unlike most
cases with invited error, in which the court is encouraged to take a particular
course of action, defense counsel here initially, but unsuccessfully, sought to
suppress the entire statement, not use it to defendant’s advantage. Once the
offending portions of the statement were in and were played for the jury,
defense counsel had no choice but to deal with the reality of all that the jury
had heard and made a fleeting reference to defendant’s invocations as a means
of pointing out to the jury that officers did not charge defendant with the
murder on the day he gave his statement, despite his assertions for them to do
so. We cannot find from this record that defense counsel invited the error.

                                       40
then hear the prosecutor insinuate defendant’s guilt based on defendant’s

refusal to tell the officers who he was with in Roebling.

                                       V.

      For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Appellate

Division as modified, and we remand the matter for a new trial consistent with

this opinion.

     CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, PATTERSON, and
SOLOMON join in JUSTICE PIERRE-LOUIS’s opinion. JUDGE FUENTES
(temporarily assigned) did not participate.

                                       41