IN THE MATTER OF REGISTRANT A.B.
Case Date: 11/17/1995
Court: Superior Court of New Jersey
Docket No: none
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SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
IN THE MATTER OF REGISTRANT
___________________________________
Argued November 3, 1995 - Decided November 17, 1995
Judges Shebell, Long and Wallace.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
The opinion of the court was delivered by
SHEBELL, P.J.A.D.
The notice further attempted to convey to the registrant
that unless he made application to the designated judge of the
vicinage involved on or before October 17, 1995, that
notification would proceed in the manner described in the notice.
It was stated on the second page of the letter that "[if]
application is made by you, there will be no notification unless
authorized by the court." The letter continued by stating the
following:
1. READ AND IMMEDIATELY SEND a completed
copy of the attached Application Form to:
[designated judge and location of courthouse
were set forth]
A copy of this form must also be sent to the
Prosecutor's Office in the enclosed envelope.
2. If you wish to hire a lawyer, but can not
afford one, please include that information
on the attached Form.
3. If you decide to apply for judicial
review, a conference will be scheduled before
[designated judge] for the following date:
Tuesday, October 24, 1995 at 9:00 a.m.
Failure to appear on this date shall result
in the dismissal of your application. Should
you decide not to contest the Prosecutor's
decision, then notification will proceed as
of the conference date.
According to the certification of the registrant which
accompanied his motion to file a late application, he "understood
what the letter was about and the seriousness of being classified
in this tier, [but] [ ] did not understand the deadlines
contained in the letter." He stated that the deadline date
"appeared to me `170C795.' This did not appear to me to be a
date." The registrant further certified that after reading the
letter he was under the mistaken assumption that he had to appear
before the judge on October 24, 1995, as that was the date typed
in on page 2 of the notification. He further stated that since
he intended to object to the Tier 2 classification, he called his
attorney and told him that he wanted to retain him to represent
him in the application for judicial review. He advised his
attorney of the conference date of October 24, 1995 and that he
would drop the application off at his office before that date. He certified that he told his attorney that they had until October 24, 1995 to submit the application and as a result, his attorney did not place the file in any type of "priority status" and was unaware that the application was already out of time when delivered to the attorney's office. According to the registrant, it was his intent to have applied for judicial review of the
classification and he thought he was acting properly in advising
his attorney of the application and the court date. He
attributes this error to "the ambiguous nature of the letter and
the confusion, the wording in the letter..." He concludes that
he "was misinformed as to the correct deadline for filing" and as
a consequence, he also misinformed his attorney as to the correct
date.
the application was "cryptic writing" and appeared to be
"170C795."
Assessment established by the Prosecutor stating in part:
As to the issue of prejudice, because
that has been brought up in this case. I
originally had indicated that I wanted to
proceed on this motion in a quick fashion and
that I would consider today as either
preliminary hearing date or hearing on the
motion and if I denied the application
there's no need to get to the preliminary
hearing.
In terms of loss, I have considered the
fact in this particular case that the
preliminary hearing date was scheduled for
today. So in the terms of that kind of
prejudice, it's really not been a substantial
delay with respect to this matter except
insofar as everything had to be rushed
including the arguments on the record
concerning what specific motions were being
considered by the defense as against the Risk
Assessment Scale utilized by the prosecutor. So my first finding is is that there is no good cause in and of itself would justify a relaxation of the rule in this case, and it's not a circumstance where the defendant
in fact was a day or so late and did what he
was supposed to and he should have done
exactly what the order tells him to do. So
when you look at on a good cause standard,
there's not been good cause established to
relax the rules.
The County Prosecutor, in opposing the registrant's motion
for leave to file a late application for review, cites our
Supreme Court's holding in Doe v. Poritz,
142 N.J. 1 (1995) as
having "established a strict time frame in which the
classification and notification process should be completed."
The Prosecutor further cites the Attorney General's "Outline of
Procedure for Hearings on Objections to Megan's Law Tier 2 and
Tier 3 Classification and Manner of Notification Determinations,"
noting that it states that a registrant has fourteen days to
object to Tier 2 or Tier 3 classification. Stating that "Doe v.
Poritz is replete with references to how strictly courts must
adhere to the time frame for notification," the Prosecutor argues
that "the [r]egistrant's situation does not warrant relaxation of
the fourteen day time limit." The Prosecutor also argues:
We disagree with the Prosecutor's position in this matter.
Tier 2 and 3 Classifications carry with them the requirement of
public notification. N.J.S.A. 2C:7-6 through 10. Public
notification that one's presence in the community poses a risk
"implicates a privacy interest in non-disclosure, and therefore
triggers due process." Doe, supra, 142 N.J. at 100-07. The Doe
Court further concluded that even beyond principles of due
process, "New Jersey's Doctrine of Fundamental Fairness" requires
that sex offenders classified as Tier 2 or 3 be granted a pre-notification hearing. Id. at 108. Thus, our Supreme Court
conditioned its decision to sustain the constitutionality of
Megan's Law on the requirement that there be judicial review of
the Prosecutor's decision to impose Tier 2 and Tier 3
notification. Id. at 109-11.
permit additional motions not previously set forth in the
arraignment/status conference scheduling order). We adopt the
rule that the registrant must show good cause and that it is in
the interests of justice to permit late filing of an application
for judicial review.
because of the nature of the process, with the preliminary
conference being the first judicial appearance, there was little
likelihood that such a continuance would even have been
necessary, except perhaps to satisfy the judge's requirement that
the motion to extend the time to file the late application be
formalized. Under the circumstances presented, the consent of
the Prosecutor to the registrant's late filing would not have
been out of order. Footnote: 1The initials used in the caption are fictitious. This court has for the purposes of confidentiality, refrained from identifying the names of those involved as well as the attorneys, Municipality and County in question. Footnote: 2R. 3:5-7 in fact was amended effective January 19, 1995 to eliminate the original thirty day motion requirement and to substitute therefor the reference to R. 3:10-2, which governs the timing of all criminal motions. See Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, Comment Rule 3:5-7.
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