Articles Tagged with Union County criminal lawyer

New-Evidence-300x300The New Jersey Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in State v. Nirav Patel that delivers an important message to defendants and defense counsel about newly discovered evidence. The Court held that a defendant who possessed exculpatory documents before trial, knew or had reason to know they existed, and yet never searched for them during the four years between indictment and trial cannot satisfy the reasonable diligence requirement for a new trial. The Court reversed both the trial court and the Appellate Division, which had granted the defendant a new trial, and remanded the matter for sentencing. The decision clarifies how the reasonable diligence prong of the newly discovered evidence standard operates and how much deference appellate courts owe to a trial court’s findings on that question.

The underlying prosecution arose out of a failed restaurant venture in Hoboken. In May 2019, a State grand jury indicted Nirav Patel for second-degree theft by deception. The State alleged that he obtained $750,000 from a group of six investors who believed they were purchasing a 30 percent interest in a planned World of Beer franchise, when in reality Patel owned only a 5 percent interest in the entity that held the franchise rights. The investors’ money was deposited into an account belonging to his family’s business, Bhagu, Inc. A financial crimes investigator testified at trial that the funds were used to pay Patel’s personal expenses, including mortgage and car payments for a residence and a Porsche, to cover debts of the family’s restaurant, and to fund checks made payable directly to Patel. According to the investigator, none of the money ever reached the franchise entity or was used for the benefit of the Hoboken project. In April 2023, nearly four years after the indictment, a jury found Patel guilty.

Eight days after the verdict, Patel moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. At an evidentiary hearing, his sister testified that the family was shocked by the verdict and that she began combing through boxes of documents at their parents’ home, where Patel had lived full-time since 2019. After days of searching, she found eleven pages in the garage referencing Bhagu and World of Beer. Patel then searched his own email accounts using basic terms such as “World of Beer” and “Bhagu,” and within roughly an hour he located complete versions of the documents. Among them were two franchise agreements naming Bhagu, Inc. as the sole franchisee for the Hoboken location and a guaranty reflecting that Patel held a 30 percent interest in an entity called Tapmasters II. Patel argued the documents proved he had authority to sell shares to the investors. World of Beer’s chief development officer testified that he believed the Bhagu agreements were not legitimate and that a search of the company’s records turned up no trace of them. The trial court nonetheless granted a new trial, reasoning that because Patel was involved in many businesses, the evidence was buried among presumably thousands of documents and was not discoverable by reasonable diligence. The Appellate Division affirmed.

ChatGPT-Image-May-1-2026-03_50_30-PM-300x300 The New Jersey Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in State v. Jamel Carlton that has immediate and far-reaching consequences for how extended-term sentences are sought and challenged across the state. At its core, the Court held that a constitutional error occurred when a judge, rather than a jury, made the factual findings required to sentence Carlton as a persistent offender under N.J.S.A. 2C:44-3(a). But the Court did not stop there. It went on to hold that such an error is subject to harmless error review, and that under the specific facts of Carlton’s case, the error was indeed harmless. For criminal defense attorneys and prosecutors working in Hudson, Essex, Union, Passaic, and counties throughout New Jersey, the decision raises important questions about pending cases, ongoing sentencing proceedings, and the long-term viability of the persistent offender statute as it currently reads.

The background of the case is straightforward. Jamel Carlton was convicted after a jury trial of first-degree aggravated sexual assault, burglary, and related offenses. At sentencing, the State moved to have him sentenced as a persistent offender based on two prior New York convictions such as a third-degree robbery from 2007 and a fourth-degree possession of stolen property from 2011. The trial judge, not a jury, made the factual findings establishing Carlton’s persistent offender status and imposed an aggregate forty-two-year term subject to the No Early Release Act. While Carlton’s appeal was pending, the United States Supreme Court decided Erlinger v. United States, 602 U.S. 821 (2024), which held that the Fifth and Sixth Amendments require a unanimous jury, not a judge, to determine whether a defendant’s prior offenses were committed on separate occasions when those findings increase sentencing exposure. Both the State and Carlton agreed that his sentence was unconstitutional under Erlinger.

The constitutional backdrop matters here, and the New Jersey Supreme Court traced it carefully. The line of cases from Apprendi v. New Jersey through Blakely v. Washington and into Erlinger stands for a consistent proposition: any fact that increases the penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a jury and proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Erlinger extended that logic directly to the persistent-offender context, rejecting the government’s argument that the narrow “prior conviction” exception established in Almendarez-Torres allowed a judge to resolve the surrounding factual questions such as whether the prior offenses were committed on different occasions. The New Jersey Supreme Court made clear that Erlinger abrogated the Court’s own earlier holding in State v. Pierce, which had permitted judges to make exactly those findings.

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