| Kenneth Vercammen's
Law office represents individuals charged with criminal and serious traffic
violations throughout New Jersey. Our office helps people with traffic/municipal
court tickets including drivers charged with driving commercial vehicle
while intoxicated, refusal and on driving while suspended with a CDL.
Motor vehicle violations can cost you. You will have to pay fines in
court or receive points on your drivers license. Don't give up! The
Law Office of Kenneth Vercammen can provide experienced attorney representation
for motor vehicle violations.
When your driver's license is in jeopardy or you are facing thousands
of dollars in fines, DMV surcharges and car insurance increases, you need
excellent legal representation. The least expensive attorney is not always
the answer. Please call us if you need experienced legal representation
in a traffic/municipal court matter. Our web site www.njlaws.com provides
information on traffic offenses we can be retained to represent people.
Our web site also provides details on jail terms for traffic violations
and car insurance eligibility points. Car insurance companies increase
rates or drop customers based on moving violations.
The defense of a person charged with criminal offenses and DWI is not
impossible. There are a number of viable defenses and arguments which
can be pursued to achieve a successful result. Advocacy, commitment,
and persistence are essential to defending a client. In a DWI case,
State v. Farrell NJ Super (App. Div 1999) a DWI conviction was reversed
and case dismissed based on speedy trial violation. The court held:
"Excessive delay in completing a prosecution can potentially violate
a defendant's constitutional right to a speedy trial as a matter of
fundamental fairness, apart from whether double jeopardy standards have
been contravened. Id. at 354-55. In cases arising from municipal court
DWI prosecutions, just as with criminal prosecutions, consideration
whether the right to a speedy trial has been violated is guided by the
four factors announced in Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514, 530, 92 S.
Ct. 2182, 2192, 33 L. Ed.2d 101, 117-18 (1972). Gallegan, supra, [117
NJ 345, 1989] 117 N.J. at 355; State v. Prickett, 240 N.J. Super. 139,
143 (App. Div. 1990)." Farrell, supra.
Specifically, the court must engage in a multi-element balancing process
of the four factors: the length of the delay, the reasons for the delay,
whether the defendant asserted his right to speedy trial, and any prejudice
to the defendant occasioned by the delay. Gallegan, supra, 117 N.J.
at 355;
State v. Marcus, 294 N.J. Super. 267, 293 (App. Div. 1996), certif.
denied, 157 N.J. 543 (1997). State v Farrell NJ supra. Delay caused
or requested by the defendant is not considered to weigh in favor of
finding a speedy trial violation. Gallegan, supra, 117 N.J. at 355;
Marcus, supra, 294 N.J. Super. at 293. Further, because the evaluative
process involves a balancing of considerations, if the other factors
weigh heavily enough, a speedy trial violation can be established without
an affirmative showing of prejudice to the defendant. See State v. Smith,
131 N.J. Super. 354, 368 n.2 (App. Div. 1974), aff'd o.b., 70 N.J. 213
(1976). In a related vein, the defendant's demonstration of prejudice
is not strictly limited to a "lessened ability to defend on the
merits." Ibid. Rather, prejudice can be found from a variety of
factors including "employment interruptions, public obloquy, anxieties
concerning the continued and unresolved prosecution, the drain on finances,
and the like." Ibid. (citing Moore v Arizona, 414 U.S. 25, 94 S.
Ct. 188, 38 L. Ed.2d 183 (1973)), cited by State V Farre;. supra.
The New Jersey judiciary is, as a matter of policy, committed to the
quick and thorough resolution of DWI cases. In 1984, Chief Justice Wilentz
issued a directive, later echoed in Municipal Court Bulletin letters
from the Administrative Office of the Courts, that municipal courts
should attempt to dispose of DWI cases within sixty days. See State
v. Fox, 249 N.J. Super. 521, 523 & n.1 (Law Div. 1991); State v.
Perkins, 219 N.J. Super. 121, 124 (Law Div. 1987).
In Perkins, supra, defendant was charged with DWI on October 10, 1986,
following a car accident in which only he was injured. 219 N.J. Super.
at 122. Defendant first appeared in municipal court on December 4, 1986,
but the State was not prepared to proceed and sought a continuance.
Id. at 123. The trial was reset for January 8, 1987, and the municipal
court judge stated that defendant would be entitled to a dismissal if
the State was not ready to prosecute. Ibid. Nevertheless, even though
the State was not prepared on January 8 due to a change of prosecutor
and subpoena problems,
the municipal court denied defendant's motion to dismiss. Perkins at
123-24. On appeal, in Perkins the Law Division dismissed the complaint
against
defendant. Id. at 124. After first noting the Supreme Court's sixty-day
directive, the judge stressed that the municipal court had promised
that the
case would be tried or dismissed on that date. Id. at 124-25. He stated
that "[a] court's promise is sacrosanct" and must be honored.
Id. at 125.
Accordingly, the municipal court's denial of defendant's motion to dismiss
was evaluated as "an arbitrary, and therefore improper" exercise
of discretion. Ibid. The municipal court's promises aside, the Law Division
judge added, a substitution of prosecutor and failure to subpoena witnesses
and otherwise prepare the State's case could not justify the second
adjournment. Ibid.
As a general rule in applying the evaluative features of the four-part
test of Barker in fundamental fairness terms, delays of scheduling and
other failures of the process for which the trial court itself was responsible
are attributable to the State and not to the defendant. 407 U.S. at
531, 92 S.
Ct. at 2192, 33 L. Ed. 2d at 117
"A defendant has no duty to bring himself to trial; the State has
that duty as well as the duty of insuring that the trial is consistent
with due process. Moreover...society has a particular interest in bringing
swift prosecutions, and society's representatives are the ones who should
protect that interest." State v Perkins, supra at 127, quoting
Barker v Wingo, supra, 497 U.S. at 527.
The Municipal Court Can Dismiss Complaints Against Defendant When the
State is Not Ready to Proceed or Discovery Not Provided. Preparation
of the State's case is clearly a prosecutorial function and is a responsibility
that cannot be shifted to others. Any attempt by the prosecutor to place
this function upon the clerk, who is an impartial judicial officer,
is improper. State v. Perkins, 219 N.J. Super.121, 125, 529 A.2d 1056
(Law Div. 1987). In State v. Polasky, 216 N.J. Super. 549 (Law Div 1986)
Judge Haines discussed the municipal prosecutor's role in connection
with discovery, and added:
"There is further reason for requiring the prosecutor to be responsible.
In our court system, the prosecutor, contrary to an ordinary advocate,
has a
duty to see that justice is done. State v. D'Ippolito, 19 N.J. 450,
549-550 [117 A.2d 592] (1955). He is not to prosecute, for example,
when the
evidence does not support the State's charges. Consequently, the prosecutor
has an obligation to defendants as well as the State and the public.
Our
discovery rules implicate that obligation, an obligation which can be
discharged by no one else." [216 N.J. Super. at 555, 524 A.2d 474]
As set forth in State v Prickett; 240 NJ Super 139, 146 (App. Div 1990),
it is the municipal prosecutor who selects the State's witnesses, requests
postponements for the State, complies with discovery rules, requests
dismissal if the State cannot make out a case, and does all else necessary
to prepare and present the State's cases in the municipal court. See
also Position 3.11, "The Role of the Prosecutor, Report of the
Supreme Court Task Force on the Improvement of Municipal Courts (1985)".
R. 1:2-4(a) provides for payment of costs to an adverse party as a
condition of adjournment even where the State is the offending party
in a criminal action. State v. Audette, 201 N.J. Super. 410, 493 A.
2d 540 (App. Div. 1985).
In Prickett, supra the Appellate Division agreed with the Law Division
judge that the case should be remanded to the municipal court for determination
and imposition of appropriate costs and for trial within 45 days of
the date of this opinion.
If a party has failed to comply with this Rule [a discovery request]
or with an order issued pursuant to this Rule, the court may order such
party to permit the discovery or inspection of materials not previously
disclosed, grant a continuance, or prohibit the party from introducing
in evidence the material not disclosed, or it may enter such other order
as it deems appropriate. State v Prickett 240 NJ Super 139, 145 App.
Div (1990) "We have the problem of a part-time municipal prosecutor
responsible for preparing cases for trial who abandons a prosecutorial
function to the municipal court clerk who assumes it. R. 1:9-1 indicates
that the court clerk may issue a subpoena, but makes no provision for
service by the court clerk nor does it give the clerk the authority
to excuse any witness absent instructions from the municipal court judge.
The municipal court clerk should not become involved in the preparation
of the State's case. " See N.J. Municipal Court Clerks' Manual,
§2.3, pp. 69-70 (A.O.C. 1985) which states:
"The municipal prosecutor has the responsibility for determining
what witnesses he wants and of preparing his own subpoenas. However,
if the municipal prosecutor lacks secretarial help, court personnel
may assistin typing the subpoenas." State v Prickett 240 NJ Super
at 145. However, the
court should not ever act as the prosecutor's assistant. The court must
be neutral.
If the state is not prepared, the charges should be dismissed or state
sanctioned. Because the State is the municipal prosecutor's client,
a failure to discharge the obligations of his office is a violation
of a prosecutor's professional responsibility to represent the client
diligently. When a prosecutor has available relevant evidence bearing
on a prosecution, and the prosecutor's failure to present that evidence
in the course of trial results in acquittal, that prosecutor has not
diligently discharged his or her duty to prepare and present the State's
case. Furthermore, when the failure to prepare for trial and present
relevant evidence prejudices the State's case, the prosecutor's deviation
from that duty may be so severe as to constitute gross negligence. Matter
of Segal 130 NJ 468 (1992) Furthermore, "delay occasioned by the
courts must be charged against the State, not the defendant." State
v Perkins, 219 NJ Super. 121, 127 (Law Div 1987). "The court is
one part of our tripartite system of government. Its failures cannot
be permitted to injure a defendant who had nothing to do with them and
no control over them." Id. at 127.
CONCLUSION
DWI and Drug related offenses carry substantial penalties which will
follow someone for the rest of their life. The space limits of this
article do not
allow detailed explanation of the extensive caselaw on DWI and Narcotics.
Drug law and other defenses are explained in greater details in other
articles on www.njlaws.com. Call 732-572-0500 to schedule a confidential
consultation.
About the Author
Kenneth A. Vercammen is a trial attorney in Edison, Middlesex County,
New Jersey. He often lectures for the New Jersey State Bar Association,
New
Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education and Middlesex County
College on personal injury, criminal / municipal court law, and drunk
driving. He
has published 125 articles in national and New Jersey publications on
municipal court and litigation topics. He has served as a Special Acting
Prosecutor in seven different cities and towns in New Jersey and also
successfully defended hundreds of individuals facing Municipal Court
and
Criminal Court charges.
In his private practice, he has devoted a substantial portion of his
professional time to the preparation and trial of litigated matters.
He has appeared in Courts throughout New Jersey several times each week
on many personal injury matters, Municipal Court trials, matrimonial
hearings, and contested administrative law hearings.
Since 1985, his primary concentration has been on litigation matters.
Mr. Vercammen gained other legal experiences as the Confidential Law
Clerk to the Court of Appeals of Maryland (Supreme Court), with the
Delaware County, PA District Attorney Office handling Probable Cause
Hearings, Middlesex County Probation Dept as a Probation Officer, and
an Executive Assistant to Scranton District Magistrate, Thomas Hart,
in Scranton, PA.
KENNETH VERCAMMEN & ASSOCIATES, PC
ATTORNEY AT LAW
2053 Woodbridge Ave.
Edison, NJ 08817
(Phone) 732-572-0500
(Fax) 732-572-0030
web site: www.njlaws.com
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