Approved 10/23/00
AGGRAVATED
ASSAULT
(POINTING OR
DISPLAYING IMITATION FIREARM
AT LAW
ENFORCEMENT OFFICER)
(N.J.S.A.
2C:12-1b(10))
Count
of this indictment charges the
defendant with the crime of aggravated assault.
(READ INDICTMENT)
The
applicable statute provides, in pertinent part,
that:
A person is
guilty of aggravated assault if he . . . (k)nowingly
points, displays or uses an imitation firearm . . .
at or in the direction of a law enforcement officer
with the purpose to intimidate, threaten or attempt
to put the officer in fear of bodily injury or for
any unlawful purpose.
In order
for you to find the defendant guilty, the State must
prove each of the following elements beyond a
reasonable doubt:
1. that the defendant knowingly
pointed, displayed or used an imitation firearm at
or in the direction of a law enforcement officer;
2. that the defendant knew that
the person was a law enforcement officer; and
3. that the defendant acted with the
purpose to intimidate, threaten or attempt to
put the officer in fear of bodily injury or for
any unlawful purpose.
The first
element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the defendant knowingly
pointed, displayed or used an imitation firearm at
or in the direction of a law enforcement officer.
An
imitation firearm is defined as an object or device
reasonably capable of being mistaken for a firearm.
A firearm
is defined as any handgun, rifle, shotgun, machine
gun, or automatic or semi-automatic rifle.
A law
enforcement officer is a person whose public duties
include the power to act as an officer for the
detection, apprehension, arrest and conviction of
offenders against the laws of this State.
A person
acts knowingly with respect to the nature of
(his/her) conduct or the attendant circumstances if
(he/she) is aware that (his/her) conduct is of that
nature or that such circumstances exist or if
(he/she) is aware of a high probability of their
existence. A person acts knowingly with respect to
the result of (his/her) conduct if (he/she) is aware
that it is practically certain that (his/her)
conduct will cause such a result.
Knowledge
is a condition of the mind that cannot be seen and
that can be determined only by inferences from
conduct, words or acts. A state of mind is rarely
susceptible of direct proof but must ordinarily be
inferred from the facts. Therefore, it is not
necessary that the State produce witnesses to
testify that an accused said that (he/she) had a
certain state of mind when (he/she) engaged in a
particular act. It is within your power to find that
such proof has been furnished beyond a reasonable
doubt by inference, which may arise from the nature
of the defendant’s acts and conduct, from all that
(he/she) said and did at the particular time and
place, and from all surrounding circumstances.
The
second element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the defendant knew that the
person was a law enforcement officer.
As I
instructed you earlier, a person acts knowingly with
respect to the nature of the attendant circumstances
if (he/she) is aware that such circumstances exist
or if (he/she) is aware of a high probability of
their existence.
The third
element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the defendant acted with
the purpose to intimidate, threaten or attempt to
put the officer in fear of bodily injury or for any
unlawful purpose.
A person
acts with purpose with respect to the nature of
(his/her) conduct or a result thereof if it is
(his/her) conscious object to engage in conduct of
that nature or to cause such a result. A person acts
with purpose with respect to attendant circumstances
if (he/she) believes or hopes that they exist. A
person acts with purpose if (he/she) acts with
design, with a specific intent, with a particular
object or purpose, or if (he/she) means to do what
(he/she) does. As with knowledge, purpose is a
condition of the mind that cannot be seen and that
can be determined only by inferences from conduct,
words or acts.
A person
has a purpose to use an imitation firearm unlawfully
if (he/she) has a purpose to use it in a manner that
is prohibited by law. In this case, the State
contends that the defendant’s unlawful purpose was
[describe the unlawful purpose alleged by the
State].
[If
the defense alleges a lawful purpose, the trial
court should instruct the jury on the defense claim.
See, for example, the model charge for Possession of
a Firearm for an Unlawful Purpose, N.J.S.A.
2C:39-4a (revised 5/18/98).]
You must
not rely on your own notions of the unlawfulness of
some other undescribed purpose of the defendant.
Rather, you must consider whether the State proved
the specific unlawful purpose alleged.
The unlawful purpose alleged by the State may be
inferred from all that was said or done and from all
of the surrounding circumstances in this case.
However, the State need not prove that the defendant
accomplished (his/her) unlawful purpose.
Bodily
injury is defined as physical pain, illness or any
impairment of physical condition.
If you find that
the State has proved each and every element of this
offense beyond a reasonable doubt, then you must
find the defendant guilty of aggravated assault.
If, however, you find that the State has failed to
prove any element of this offense beyond a
reasonable doubt, then you must find the defendant
not guilty.
This
statute took effect on April 20, 1999.
State
v. Villar, 150 N.J. 503, 511
(1997).
State v.
Jenkins, 234 N.J. Super. 311, 316
(App. Div. 1989). See also, State v.
Villar, supra.