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Vineland's tainted evidence frees man


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BRIDGETON — A state judge Friday dismissed a firearms indictment against a Vineland man after a county prosecutor admitted a Vineland police detective’s alleged misconduct raises “credibility” issues about evidence.

Cumberland County Superior Court Judge Darrell M. Fineman quickly accepted the prosecution’s motion, allowing defendant Maurice A. Pettway to walk out of the county courthouse a free man. The dismissal means Pettway cannot be charged again in the same matter.

Pettway praised his attorney, state Deputy Public Defender Caroline Turner. “This woman saved my life,” the Vineland man said outside court, smiling at Turner.

With Friday’s action, there are now at least 40 criminal cases in Cumberland County that have been dropped since March 2011. All were dropped based on suspicions that Vineland police detective Gamaliel Cruz lied in at least one affidavit he filed for a search warrant while assigned to the city’s narcotics unit.

The Cumberland County Prosecutor’ Office made that allegation against Cruz after an investigation into a case unrelated to Pettway’s. That investigation expanded to include at least 39 cases in which Cruz’s involvement led prosecutors to drop charges.

Cruz was suspended from the police force as a result, although he was not charged criminally. He is fighting the city’s attempt to dismiss him from his job.

Pretrial argument on whether the state’s case against Pettway was fatally tainted started last year.

First Assistant Prosecutor Harold B. Shapiro has handled the Pettway case. Prior to the hearing Friday, he declined to comment on whether his office might take similar action on other pending cases.

“The state has been guided in its consideration of the Detective Cruz cases by what it deems to be its responsibility to minimize and/or alleviate unfair prejudice to defendants,” Shapiro wrote in a brief submitted to the judge. “In previously pending cases where the charges could not be sustained against defendants without the testimony of Detective Cruz and in circumstances where the state has determined that the involvement of Detective Cruz may have caused it to lose confidence in the integrity and credibility of the evidence supporting prosecution, the state has determined that dismissal with prejudice is required.”

One impact from the prosecution’s decision to drop the Pettway case is it short-circuits a defense motion to obtain copies of all other affidavits Cruz filed in similar cases over the past several years.

Defense attorneys, in this case and others, have questioned Cruz’s use of unidentified “confidential informants” and his habit of using what Turner called an affidavit “template” to fill out the requests. Cruz would “cut and paste” information from one affidavit for another, adjusting details as needed, she alleged.

In the Pettway case, court documents and testimony indicate, Cruz emailed his affidavit template to Vineland police Officer Robert Magee. That officer then used it, with alterations, to secure a warrant from Superior Court Judge Gary D. Wodlinger to search for any drugs that might be in Pettway’s possession.

Pettway was arrested on Aug. 5, 2010, at a traffic stop and the warrant executed. But police did not find the narcotics the affidavit indicated would be present in his vehicle.

Instead, Pettway was charged with possessing a stolen firearm that was found during the search. Pettway denies ever seeing the weapon before police said they found it.

“I’m delighted that the case is being dismissed by the prosecution,” Turner said after Shapiro offered his motion. “However, I would like to continue my discovery motion for the affidavits. Because, Judge, my office represents a lot of clients that could have been affected by these irregularities.”

“I don’t think anything has been proven ‘true,’” Fineman answered, adding he must consider discovery requests on a case-by-case basis.

As the argument continued, Turner asked, “How are people, who have been affected by this, to know they have been affected?”

Fineman responded that is a duty of the prosecution. The Prosecutor’s Office, over the course of this case, has come forth with additional information favorable to the defense after investigating defense claims.

Fineman complimented Turner for showing “tenacity.” But the court isn’t empowered to address “amorphous” controversies, he added.

In dismissing Cruz-related cases last year, the Prosecutor’s Office set up three categories representing what it said were different levels of involvement by the detective. It decided to dismiss cases in which Cruz was the officer to file an affidavit, or in which he was a principal witness.

The office has continued with an undisclosed number of cases for which, it argues, Cruz doesn’t need to be called as a witness even though he’s linked to the cases. The legitimacy of such a legal firewall has been in question throughout the Pettway case.

In her motion, Turner states: “As part of the affidavit discussed so far has been proven to be, at least in part a lie, and as the detective who wrote about his personal knowledge of the CI (confidential informant) in question has been suspended for lying in an affidavit under oath to a Superior Court judge and as Office Magee acted in bad faith or a reckless disregard for the truth of his sworn statement, all the information pertaining to the CI should be stricken. As stated by the Supreme Court … ‘police can not insulate one officer’s deliberate misstatement merely by relaying it through an officer-affiant personally ignorant of its falsity.’”

Outside court, Turner criticized the Vineland Police Department for a lack of management oversight.

“There is no accountability,” she said. “They can change (informant identity) numbers when they like. The can change other people’s affidavits make it look like their own. They can tell lies in affidavits. This is a police department?”