The suspect was serving a 60-year sentence for a 2016 shooting that killed a man in Camden.
A New Jersey appeals court has reversed a Camden man’s murder conviction due to a series of errors that it said deprived him of a fair trial.near a Camden barber shop. A judge sentenced him to 60 years behind bars, with a 50-year mandatory minimum.
The problems started before Reyes’ case reached a courtroom, the decision says. He was unhappy with his lawyer and sent the trial judge, John Kelley, two letters laying out his disagreements. The judge responded in writing that he would send the concerns to Reyes’ lawyer. The appeals judge wrote the court could not conclude whether Reyes’ motion for a new lawyer would or should have been denied. But failure to address it was a “reversible error.”Reyes and Feliu knew each other and Reyes admitted to wanting to fight Feliu right before the shooting. He maintains he was not the gunman, and professed over and over he did not have a gun.
None of the three initial witnesses Sutley interviewed testified at trial, and that robbed Reyes his Constitutional right to confront witnesses at trial, the judges said. The appeals judges were unmoved. “However labeled, the detectives’ repeated assertions that defendant had a gun were improper, highly prejudicial, and capable of producing an unjust result.”
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