2. That the threat was made
with the purpose to put the person
in imminent fear of death; and,
3. That the threat was made
under circumstances which reasonably
caused the person to believe that
the threat was likely to be carried
out.
The first element that the State must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt is that defendant
threatened to kill
(name of victim).
The words or actions of the defendant must
be of such a nature as to convey menace or
fear of being killed to the ordinary
person. It is not a violation of this
statute if the threat expresses fleeting
anger or was made merely to alarm.
The second
element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that the threat was made
with the purpose to put (name of victim)
in imminent fear of death.
The third element that the State must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt is that the threat
was made under circumstances which made
(name of victim)
believe that the threat was likely to be
carried out.
The threat must be such that it would
reasonably convey a fear of death to an
ordinary person.
A person acts purposely 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 purposely with
respect to attendant circumstances if the
individual is aware of the existence of such
circumstances or the individual believes or
hopes that they exist. “With purpose,”
“designed,” “with design” or equivalent
terms have the same meaning.
The term purposely is a condition of the
mind. A condition of the mind cannot be
seen. It can only be determined by
inference from defendant’s 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 did a particular thing. 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
his/her acts and conduct and from all he/she
said and did at the particular time and
place and from all surrounding circumstances
established by the evidence.
If
you find that the State has proven all the
elements of the offense beyond a reasonable
doubt, then you must find the defendant
guilty. If, however, you find that the
State has failed to prove any of these
elements beyond a reasonable doubt, then you
must find defendant not guilty.
The court should consider
cautioning the jury that this charge
does not deal with “terrorism” in
the post September 11, 2001, sense
of the term.
See Final Report of the New
Jersey Criminal Law Revision
Commission, Vol. II:
Commentary (October 1971).
It is unclear whether the statute
requires that the victim be aware of
the threat to support a conviction.
See State v. Ortisi,
308
N.J. Super.
573, 597 (App. Div.),
certif. denied,
156
N.J.
383 (1998) (Court “leaves for
another day” issue of whether
victims must be made aware of the
threat because the evidence in the
case showed that victims knew of
threat).
State v. Nolan, 205
N.J. Super.
1, 4 (App. Div. 1985).