Defendant appeals his conviction after a trial de novo in the Law Division of driving while intoxicated (DWI), contrary to N.J.S.A. 39:4-50. He also appeals his sentence, arguing the court erred when it considered his conviction to be a second DWI offense for sentencing purposes.
The court affirms defendant's conviction. However, because the State did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that his prior DWI conviction was not based on an Alcotest breath sample test result rendered inadmissible by the holding in State v. Cassidy, 235 N.J. 482 (2018), the court vacates his sentence, and remands for resentencing as a first offense.
Cassidy arose from the misconduct of State Trooper Marc Dennis who falsified Alcotest calibration records over a number of years. The Cassidy Court held that breath sample test results obtained on Alcotest instruments calibrated by Dennis are inadmissible, calling into question the validity of tens of thousands of DWI convictions based on such results. The Cassidy Court directed the State to provide notice to all defendants whose prior convictions were subject to challenge because they were based on test results from Alcotest instruments calibrated by Dennis. The State subsequently compiled a list of defendants who received notice as directed by Cassidy.
In the present appeal, defendant was convicted of DWI during the time Dennis was falsely certifying Alcotest calibration records. At sentencin g for the present offense, defendant argued the State was required to produce the calibration records from his prior conviction to prove that Dennis was not involved in his conviction. The trial court agreed with the State's argument that the absence of defendant's name on the list of defendants who were sent a Cassidy notice was sufficient proof that defendant's prior conviction was not tainted by Dennis.
The court held that in the absence of evidence of how the Cassidy list was compiled and that it definitively includes all prior DWI convictions that relied on test results from Alcotest instruments calibrated by Dennis, the absence of a defendant's name on the list was insufficient proof that the defendant's prior conviction was not invalidated by Cassidy. The court made a similar holding with respect to the State's assertion, without supporting evidence, that Dennis was not involved in any DWI convictions that arose out of Camden County. The court noted that the burden of Dennis's malfeasance as a law enforcement officer falls on the State, which cannot escape on the grounds of convenience and expediency its obligation to prove that a prior conviction on which it relies for an enhanced sentence in a subsequent prosecution was not tainted by his misconduct.