

Fatal Crash Scene photos by: Alex Cohen
Updated, Monday, June 8 at 5:00 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - The jury in the trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee found him not guilty just before 5:00 p.m. on both counts of vehicular homicide in the deaths of Jacqueline and Christina Becker.
Updated, Monday, June 8 at 11:20 a.m.
COURT HOUSE - The jury asked to hear Higbee's testimony again. During the trial, the court record has been kept by stenographers, and one of them will have to read back Higbee's testimony from start to finish including both direct testimony and his cross-examination.
Jurors were unable to reach a verdict after deliberating for a full day June 5. But they did have a few questions for the court. Just after 9 a.m., jurors sent a note to Judge Batten requesting a calculator and then a ruler.
Updated, Thursday, June 4 at 4:30 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten charged the jury on points of law in the vehicular homicide trial of N.J. Trooper Robert Higbee’s, concluding at 4:15 p.m.
At that time, the panel of 14 was reduced to 12, with two alternates being selected; in the event they are required to stand in for one of the 12 for any reason.
Batten told defense and prosecution attorneys he wanted jurors to get a sense of direction before calling them back into the courtroom at 4:30 p.m. to decide if they desired to continue their deliberation or retire for the evening and resume deliberation at 9 a.m. Friday, June 5.
Updated, Thursday, June 4 at 2:05 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — N.J. Trooper Robert Higbee’s trial was recessed for one hour at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, June 4 after First Assistant Prosecutor J. David Mayer rested the state’s closing case to the 12 members of the jury.
Meyer recited all aspects that the state had proven in the case: that Higbee was driving the vehicle that caused the deaths of the Becker sisters on Sept. 27, 2006, and that the deaths were caused because Higbee was driving recklessly.
He focused on photographs that indicated that stop sign would have been more visible at night than in the daytimes, since it would be lit by headlights and reflect its color.
Meyer showed charts of the Power Control Module (PCM) of the trooper’s car that showed when the accelera-tor and brake was applied, and then those actions likely took place.
He said the final application of the trooper’s brakes took place over one second before the two vehicles collided, and that reduced the patrol care from 75 mph to 64-65mph at the point of impact.
“What was that braking in response to? Not the stop sign,” Meyer said.
He said Higbee disregarded the risk, which he termed a “gross deviation.”
“How can that be reconciled with anything by gross deviation? The risk of causing death of another,” Meyer said.
He cited State Police stand operating procedure, which dictates that any vehicle in pursuit of another still has to stop at stop signs.
“That applies to everyone all the time. The operator of any pursuit vehicle must reduce speed to avoid colli-sion,” said Meyer.
Meyer urged jurors to “Be guided by the evidence, not passion, not prejudice, not sympathy, not concern for ramifications, but a fait and impartial application of the facts.”
“I suggest to you that there can be no question. You must do what the facts and the evidence in this case compel you to find, beyond reasonable doubt. Yu must then do what justice compels and demands. Find the defendant criminally responsible for his behavior,” Meyer concluded.
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EARLIER THURSDAY: N.J. Trooper Robert Higbee’s defense attorney William Subin concluded his closing argument at 11:50 a.m. Thursday, June 4, and Judge Raymond Batten recessed the trial for 10 minutes prior to the prosecution’s closing statement, which is expected to last until at least 1:15.
Subin told the jury that the prosecution did not produce witnesses that showed Higbess acted with criminal intent. He noted that the case was handled as an accident by State Police investigators and Medical Examiners until the Cape May County Prosecutor, on Feb. 27, 2007, presented the case to the grand jury.
“What occurred? What turned this from an accident into a crime?” Subin asked the jurors.
He noted that Higbee will bear the accident in mind for the rest of is life.
“It was a tragic mistake with ghastly consequences in which he did not perceive the stop sign,” said Subin.
“We can’t assume a criminal wrong doing in this case. That is not fair. That is not just,” said Subin.
Updated, Thursday, June 4 at 10:15 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten heard various points of law from prosecution and defense that they will use in closing arguments in the vehicular homicide trial of N.J. State Trooper Robert Higbee later Thursday, June 4. Batten placed the court on a 15 minute recess at 10 a.m.
It is expected that the jury will be brought in at that time and the trial will proceed.
Updated, Tuesday, June 2 at 12:47 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — No closing arguments will be heard Wednesday, June 3 as expected in the vehicular homicide trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee. Those arguments will be heard Thursday, June 4.
Most of the day was taken up as Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten conferred with both defense and prosecution attorneys regarding what legal instructions he will give the jury during his charge.
Higbee is charged with two counts of vehicular homicide for the deaths of Christina and Jacqueline Becker on Sept. 27, 2007.
RECAP:
N.J. State Trooper Robert Higbee testified Monday, June 1 that he had no memory of the Sept. 27, 2006 fatal crash for which he is facing two counts of vehicular homicide.
On that date just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were traveling in. Those two cars then struck a third vehi-cle, occupied by Robert and Michael Taylor, which was stopped across the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads.
The Becker sisters were pronounced dead at the scene.
Higbee, 27, of was on the stand the entire day and presented testimony that included his background as a high school and collegiate athlete; his employment history as a bartender, salesman and teacher; and eventually his application, acceptance, training and career as a state trooper.
He said he had many hours of vehicle safety training.
In testifying about the night of the accident, Higbee said he had observed a speeder travel-ing northbound on Stagecoach Road at approximately 65 mph, nearly twice the speed limit of 35 mph.
He said he turned around and attempted pursue the speeder following Attorney General guidelines that require troopers to close the distance before activating overhead lights and sirens.
He said he did not see the stop sign at the intersection or the “stop ahead” sign 500 feet before the intersection.
Higbee was expected to continue testifying yesterday and to be followed by other defense witnesses.
Updated, Thursday May 28 at 2:50 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — The defense began to present its case in the trial of Trooper Robert Higbee, who is charged with two counts of vehicular homicide in the deaths of the two Up-per Township sisters.
On Sept. 27, 2006, just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were traveling in. Those two cars then struck a third vehicle, occupied by Robert and Michael Taylor, which was stopped across the inter-section of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads.
The Becker sisters were pronounced dead at the scene.
The first defense witness was also the first person on the scene. Janet Harmelin, a regis-tered nurse of Upper Township, came across the aftermath of the collision between Higbee's police car and the Beckers' minivan just after the 10 p.m. crash.
Harmelin told the jury that she saw two bodies outside one of the vehicles.
Harmelin said she tried to help the people in the third vehicle, Robert Taylor and his son Michael and once she saw that they were OK, then went to the State Police car.
She said she found Higbee with his eyes closed, leaning back in his seat motioning with his right hand as if he were reaching for his police radio. Harmelin asked if he was all right but Higbee did not respond.
According to Harmelin, “He was not alert."
She told the jury that, “he seemed to be semiconscious.”
On May 28, Professor Geoffrey Loftus, a psychologist from the University of Washington in Seattle, took the witness stand to explain to the jury human responses to factors such as stress as well as memory issues.
The defense has focused on several issues it believes played a part in the Sept. 27, 2006 crash between Higbee's police car and a minivan occupied by the Becker sisters and the statements given after the incident.
Higbee gave a statement three weeks later where he recalled stopping at the intersection of Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads prior to the crash, but evidence found by the event data recorder and accident reconstruction indicated that his police car did not stop.
The Taylors also gave testimony that the remembered seeing Higbee’s trooper car accelerate thought he intersection, but evidence also revealed that there had been heavy braking on the part of the trooper car.
Loftus told the jury that memory doesn’t work like a video recording, but rather begins as fragments that filter bit by bit into the brain. He said that it was possible for memory to change and be reconstructed.
“We can’t distinguish which part of memory came from the original event or what was post incident information,” he said.
Loftus offered the explanation that both the Taylors’ testimony and Higbee’s original statement was a product of post information that added to their memory and made sense.
Loftus said that the collision would not have been easily memorizeable due to a number of factors: darkness, extremely stressful, the witnesses were involved in the crash and attention was on a number of things and not focused.
Loftus also presented a theory that Higbee's perception might have been skewed because a stop sign at the intersection of Roosevelt Boulevard, which was in the distance, was more visible than the one at Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads.
Updated, Wednesday May 27 at 4:30 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten denied a defense motion for acquittal May 27 in the vehicular homicide case of Trooper Robert Higbee.
Defense attorney D. William Subin argued that the judge should grant a motion of acquit-tal following the end of the state's case.
Batten found that there is sufficient evidence for a jury to conclude that Higbee acted recklessly on Sept. 27, 2006 when he ran through an intersection, striking a minivan occupied by sisters Jacqueline and Christina Becker.
Batten found it notable that Higbee had gone through the intersection himself just moments before the crash. Higbee had been traveling southbound, but after he clocked a speeder he did a K-turn and went north through the same intersection he had just traveled.
Updated, Wednesday May 27 at 12:20 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - The state rested its case against State Trooper Robert Higbee shortly after noon on May 27.
The defense will begin calling their witnesses after the jury returns from their mid-day break at 2 p.m.
Earlier this morning, Dr. Charles Siebert Jr. of the Southern Regional Medical Examiner's Office took the stand to explain to the jury what was found during the autopsies of Jacqueline and Christina Becker, based on reports made by medical examiner Dr. Chase Blanchard
Although Siebert did not perform the autopsies on the Beckers, he described in his testimony the injuries both suffered as a result of the Sept. 27, 2006 car crash. Jacqueline Becker, the driver, had numerous injuries to her head and chest. The right side of her forehead had a gaping wound, he said, that multiple bone fractures could be see along with some brain exposure.
Siebert said that Christina Becker's injuries were similar to her sisters, with a large gaping head wound and multiple bone fractures.
He said they also had internal injures, particularly to the lungs and brain, as a result of the crash.
According to Sieber, the cause of death for both Becker sisters was multiple blunt force trauma.
Updated, Tuesday May 26 at 11:30 a.m.
COURT HOUSE - After a four-day break over the Memorial Day weekend, testimony in the vehicular homicide trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee resumed as Sgt. 1st Class John McMahon, an accident reconstructionist with the State Police returned to the witness stand.
During cross examination, defense attorney D. William Subin asked McMahon if there were inconsistencies between the testimony of Robert and Michael Taylor, who were in the third vehicle and witnesses to the Sept. 27, 2006 crash that killed Christina and Jacqueline Becher, and the data found in the trooper car's event data recorder and the accident reconstruction.
The Taylors testified that they believed Higbee accelerated through the intersection before the collision. McMahon told the jury in cross examination that both the trooper car's event data recorder and his accident reconstruction data indicated that Higbee attempted heavy braking directly before the crash.
According to McMahon’s testimony, he said that the stop sign at the next intersection with Roosevelt Boulevard is more prominent prior to reaching 350 feet before the Stagecoach and Tuckahoe road intersection. But after 350 feet, the sign at Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads is the prominent sign
Updated, Thursday May 21 at 4:20 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — Former Ford Motor Company engineer Richard Ruth took the witness stand in the vehicular homicide trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee on May 21.
On Sept. 27, 2006, just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were driving in. Higbee was attempting to close the gap on a speeder before the collision occurred.
Ruth is an expert in the event data recorders (EDR), commonly called the “black box” found in Ford automobiles like the trooper car State Trooper Robert Higbee was driving. The device records about the speeding and braking information
Ruth told the jury that when power is lost, such in this crash, all the information is preserved prior to the collision.
“You can be confident that you will have the first 25 seconds prior to power being lost,” Ruth said.
Ruth said that the collision reconstruction data and the event data recorded information were very close.
“That’s a conservative estimate. The speed may have actually been higher because information recorded indicated that there was braking,” he said.
Using a graph, Ruth went over the data taken from the EDR from Higbee’s trooper car.
The vehicle speed, marked in red dots, he said was recorded 25 seconds before impact at speeds between 60 and 70 mph. The highest speed reached was 79.6 mph. He noted that the last data point before impact recorded Higbee’s speed at 65 miles per hour.
The EDR recorded the brake switch, marked by green lines. Ruth said that the break switch could not determine how hard the brake was applied, just if the brake light comes on.
Ruth said that a speed trace used to infer how quickly the vehicle was slowing down, which is generally applied to braking. He said that just prior to the accident brakes were applied, which is called impact avoidance.
Approximately the last half-mile of travel, he said were recorded.
Ruth told First Assistant Prosecution J. David Meyer under direct examination that EDR was broken down to phases. The first phase accelerated to pursuit speed, then maintained pursuit speed. Next, Ruth said the EDR shows that Higbee’s foot hovered on the brake.
“The foot of the driver was touching the brake but not pushing it alt the way down,” he said.
The fourth phase, Ruth said, was a maintaining of pursuit speed.
“And how far from impact was that?” Meyer asked.
“That was between 1.6 and 1.6 seconds to impact, which was 276 to 166 feet to impact,” he said.
The final phase was “avoid impact,” which was about 1.5 seconds or 144 to 19 feet to impact.
Defense attorney D. William Subin objected to the use of the word “pursuit.” State Police officials have testified that a pursuit is when a suspect is fleeing from a police officer. Hig-bee was attempting to close the gap on a speeder when the crash occurred.
Cross examination of the witness is expected to continue beyond 4:30 p.m. today.
Updated, Thursday May 21 at 10:35 a.m.
COURT HOUSE - Former Ford Motor Co. employee Richard Ruth, an expert in the event data recorders, or EDRs, found in Ford vehicles testified about the speeding and braking information taken from State Trooper Robert Higbee's police car.
Updated, Wednesday May 20 at 12:00 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - The trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee was postponed Wednesday morning because defense attorney D. William Subin was ill.
The trial should resume Thursday morning with the testimony of former Ford Motor Company engineer Richard Ruth. Because Ruth traveled from from Michigan to testify, Sgt. 1st Class John McMahon, still undergoing cross-examination, will return to the stand at a later time.
Ruth is an expert in the event data recorders found in Ford automobiles like the trooper car State Trooper Robert Higbe was driving.
McMahon told the jury on Tuesday that Higbee had the right to speed while closing the gap on a speeder on Sept. 27, 2006. However, there is no provision in the law that would allowed him to ignore a stop sign.
McMahon, an accident reconstruction expert with the State Police, calculated that Higbee's police car was traveling between 57 and 62 mph when it crashed into the minivan occupied by Jacqueline and Christina Becker. McMahon said the Beckers' Dodge minivan was traveling at a speed of between 42 and 49 mph at the time of the collision.
The police car and minivan struck each other twice and then those two vehicles struck a third vehicle, a Mazda minivan occupied by Robert and Michael Taylor. McMahon said that the Taylor's car was a case of "being in the wrong place at the wrong time."
During the start of his cross-examination of McMahon, defense attorney D. William Subin focused on driver perception and reaction times, specifically when they are processing various stimuli. Subin also asked about a driver's peripheral vision and how it could be affected at night and by any obstructions such as the equipment in Higbee's police car, including the radar device and camera.
Updated, Tuesday May 19 at 11:30 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - One juror was excused this morning after his wife suffered a stroke on Monday, May 18.
Fifteen jurors will continue to hear the case in the trial of Trooper Robert Higbee, charged with two counts of vehicular homicide in the deaths of Jacqueline and Christina Becker. Before the trial began, 16 jurors were picked to hear the case, but only 12 will deliberate to reach a verdict. Additional jurors were selected in case of such emergencies.
State Police Sgt. First Class John McMahon returned to the witness stand to testify about the investigation into the crash. Defense attorney William Subin is continuing cross examination of McMahon this afternoon.
Updated, Monday May 18 at 3:30 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — The jury in the trial of Trooper Robert Higbee was sent home at 2 p.m. on Monday, May 18 after one of the jurors learned his wife had suffered a stroke.
The jury will return at 9 a.m. tomorrow and is expected to hear from Engineer Richard Ruth, an expert in the event data recorders found in Ford automobiles like the trooper car Higbee was driving.
The day began with State Police Sgt. First Class John McMahon who testified that the stop sign at the intersection of Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads in Marmora is visible 350 feet from the intersection, but prior to that it is partially obstructed.
According to McMahon’s testimony, he said that the stop sign at the next intersection with Roosevelt Boulevard is more prominent prior to reaching 350 feet before the Stagecoach and Tuckahoe road intersection. But after 350 feet, the sign at Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads is the prominent sign.
Updated, Thursday May 14 at 3:45 p.m.
Jurors heard from State Trooper Robert Higbee for the first time on May 14 when First Assistant Prosecutor J. David Meyer played the tape-recorded statement Higbee gave State Police Detective Karl Ulbrich on Oct. 17, 2006.
That statement was given several weeks after Higbee crashed into a minivan occupied by Jacqueline Becker, 17, and her sister, Christina Becker, 19, at the intersection of Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads in Marmora on Sept. 27, 2006. The sisters were killed as a result of the collision.
Ulbrich testified about the investigation following the Sept. 27, 2006 collision and his re-sponsibility in interviewing witnesses, including Higbee.
Higbee said that he had a made a K-turn to go after a speeder that was going about 50 mph in a 35 mph zone. He said it was “just a motor vehicle stop” and wasn’t prepared to stop the vehicle at all costs.
Higbee said that he didn't notice any other vehicles, beside the speeder’s tailights, in the area as he approached the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads. However he said, “I remember stopping and looking both ways and proceeding through the intersection.”
Higbee later said on the tape that he might not have been clear exactly where is stopped. He said he could have stopped at a driveway at the Wayside Village shopping center or mis-judged the stop sign at nearby Roosevelt Road.
Additional investigation revealed that Higbee was traveling at about 65 miles per hour when his police car crashed into the minivan carrying the Becker sisters.
The prosecution is expected to call the expert witness to testify on evidence provided by the trooper car's power train control module, or event data recorder, when court resumes on Monday, May 18.
Updated, Wednesday May 13 at 3:25 p.m.
COURT HOUSE - Testimony in the trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee got to a late start this morning while Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten heard from the attorneys on the issue of evidence preserved following the crash.
Testimony resumed with State Police Sgt. Anthony Mertis, who told the jury about his arrival at the scene of the fatal crash on the night of Sept. 27, 2006. Mertis said he traveled with another trooper to the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads on arriving on the scenes at 10:12 p.m., minutes after the collision happened, as evident by the video taken by the camera in the troop car he was riding in.
That video was shown to the jury, with Mertis describing the scene of the crash.
Updated, Tuesday May 12 at 4:15 p.m.
COURT HOUSE — Joshua Wigglesworth, the speeder Trooper Robert Higbee was chasing on Sept. 27, 2007 before his car collided with the van carrying Jacqueline and Christina Becker, testified that he was rushing home to meet his curfew as he passed Higbee's trooper car on Stagecoach Road.
"I don't know exactly what time it was, I just knew it was late and I was trying to get home in time," Wigglesworth said.
Wigglesworth said he was returning from his girlfriend’s house and knew he was at least 15 mph over the 35 mph speed limit when the car passed him. He said he saw the trooper’s car perform a K-turn and he then slowed down to 35 mph, expecting to be pulled over.
Wigglesworth said he was waiting to see the trooper’s emergency lights or hear the siren, but neither came.
Wigglesworth continued down the road and in his rear view mirror saw the crash that he would later learn killed Jacqueline and Christina Becker.
He told the jury that he had first denied knowing anything about the incident because he was scared, but almost four weeks after the crash came gave a statement to police.
Earlier today, Michael Taylor testified that he saw a police car accelerating toward the stop sign at the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads just before Trooper Robert Higbee's car collided with a minivan occupied by sisters Jacqueline and Christina Becker.
Taylor and his father Robert Taylor were heading home, south on Stagecoach Road, after finishing a couple of late-night errands on Sept. 27, 2006 just after 10 p.m.
Their route of travel home brought them to the stop sign at, Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads, and stopped at the sign. Taylor told the jury that he recognized the police car by its logo and said, “as he [the trooper’s car] got closer he accelerated more. It made a distinct sound.”
Taylor said his attention was on the police car and he didn’t notice the Becker’s van until the collision occurred.
“I was completely shocked,” Taylor said. “I remember a very loud bang and the car hitting us and then my vision was tilted.”
After their van stopped moving from the force of the collision, Taylor said that he saw his father holding his face.
“Blood was trickling off his nose,” Taylor said. “He seemed to be in pain, but he said he was all right.”
Taylor said that after making sure his father was OK, he exited the van and went to check on the other occupants of the other vehicles.
Taylor said that he went up to Higbee’s passenger window and asked if he was OK. Higbee, he said, looked to be in pain and trapped in his car but said he was fine.
“I told him that my father and I were OK and that I hadn’t checked on the other van yet. He seemed surprised that there was another vehicle,” Taylor said.
Taylor testified that he went to check on the van that the Becker sisters had been traveling in.
Taylor said that he got within a short distance of the van and noticed the car’s break lights but no noise.
“Something came over me and I knew whoever was in that vehicle didn’t make it, Taylor told the jury.
Testimony concluded for the day after the jury heard from Joseph Repici III, who was the deputy chief of the Upper Township Rescue Squad at the time of the incident.
Repici testified that after he arrived on scene he was asked to attend to Higbee, who Repici said was limping and complaining of pain in his left side and left leg. Repici said that during his examination, Higbee told him that he knew he was involved in an accident but didn't know exactly what happened.
Court resumes tomorrow at 9 a.m.
Updated, Monday May 11 at 4:30 p.m.
Robert Taylor, driver of the third vehicle involved in a collision when State Trooper Robert Higbee's car collided with a minivan occupied by sisters Jacqueline and Christina Becker, told his story of the fatal crash in Superior Court here Monday afternoon.
On Sept. 27, 2006, just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were driving in.
Robert Taylor and his son Michael testified that they were returning home after running errands, first stopping at the local Wawa and then a transmission repair shop to retrieve personal effects from another vehicle.
Their route of travel home took them to the stop sign at Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads, and stopped at the sign. At the intersection Michael, his son, pointed out “look at this guy coming up.”
Taylor said that he then saw the white car coming fast to the intersection. Taylor testified that he didn’t see the other van approaching at all. He just saw the impact and felt his vehicle move with the force of the collision.
After the crash, Taylor said he had facial cuts, his leg hurt and he couldn’t open his driver’s side door.
Taylor told the jury he first checked to see if his son was safe. Michael, he said, responded that he was all right, pointed out that one of the cars involved in the crash was a trooper car and got out of their van to see if he could be of help.
Taylor said that when Michael returned to the van he told him that, “they’re dead,” referring to the occupants of the other van.
Father and son then waited for emergency help to arrive.
State Trooper John Schulke, who was the first state trooper to respond to the crash scene at Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads, testified earlier that he saw the three cars involved in the collision and then encountered Higbee as he walked down Stagecoach Road from the Beckers' minivan.
“He appeared to be soft-spoken and he appeared to have an upset look on his face,” Schulke said of Higbee's appearance after the collision.
Testimony will continue tomorrow at 9 a.m.
Updated Thursday, May 7 at 4:30 p.m.
Superior Court Raymond Batten adjourned court for a three-day break. He warned jurors to continue to stay away from media accounts of the trial and not to discuss the case to anyone. The trial will resume Monday, May 11 at 9 a.m.
Updated Thursday, May 7 at 3:30 p.m.
Anthony Cinaglia testified that when he approached State Trooper Robert Higbee after his police car crashed at the intersection of Tuckahoe and Stagecoach roads on Sept. 27, 2006, Higbee told him he was OK and to go check on the other people.
Cinaglia testified that he reached the minivan that had been carrying Jacqueline and Christina Becker, the Upper Township sisters who died in the crash. He put his hand on the neck of one of the victims, but found no pulse. He noted that as he approached “the scene was very still.”
Updated Thursday, May 7:
The state's first witness on May 7 in the vehicular manslaughter trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee was the victims' grandfather, Caesar Caiafa.
Caiafa described the night of Sept. 27, 2006 when he learned that his grandchildren were killed when Higbee’s patrol car crashed into the minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were driving.
“There weren't enough tissues to dry our eyes,” he said of finding out about the tragic outcome of the collision.
Marmora resident Karen Giblin was at her kitchen table opening her mail shortly before 10 p.m. on Sept. 27, 2006 when she heard a car speed by her home on Stagecoach Road toward the nearby intersection.
“I was worried that they wouldn’t be able to stop,” Giblin testified. “And then I heard a really loud crash and then silence.”
During cross-examination, defense attorney William Subin asked if Giblin had any way of knowing what type of car was going past her home and exactly how fast it was going.
“I have no way of knowing,” Giblin responded.
She told jurors that she ran out of her house after hearing the crash, looked down the street and saw evidence of an accident and called 911. She then said she continued to the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads.
Giblin said that she saw a police officer, Higbee, get out of the passenger door of his police car that was off the road and two other people, Robert Taylor and his son Michael, exit their vehicle. Both groups, she said appeared unharmed.
Emergency personnel, she said were not yet on the scene. However, a small group of other people, possibly neighbors or other motorists were at the scene.
Giblin testified that she then started walking down the street toward the third vehicle that was further down the road.
“I started to walk toward the other vehicle and someone walking back up toward me said ‘don’t go down there,’” Giblin said.
Both the prosecution and the defense questioned Giblin on her familiarity with the intersection.
Besides that person that told her not to continue to the third vehicle, Giblin testified un-der cross-examination that she had no interaction with anyone involved or on the scene.
After breaking for lunch, three jurors came forward with various concerns. However the court determined that the issues would not impede them from fairly determining the out-come of the case.
One juror had recognized Giblin as someone who worked in a pharmacy she frequented. The juror said that she didn’t know Giblin personally, would continue to stay away from that pharmacy through the duration of the trial and would not impact her decision on evaluating the evidence in the case.
Another juror was going to hire a dog sitter while she was busy at the trial, but decided to make other plans after the dog sitter informed her that she worked with the defendant’s wife.
The third juror came forward with concerns that his profession gave him a heightened understanding of photos, particularly the aerial photos, in regards to signage. Superior Court Judge Raymond Batten told the juror that the court was aware of his occupation before he was chosen as a juror. Batten said that each member of the jury brings their own unique life experiences to the case.
The three jurors were thanked for bringing their concerns to the court and will continue to hear the case.
Wednesday, May 6:
COURT HOUSE – The accident that took the life of Christina and Jacqueline Becker certainly was tragic, but was it a crime?
That was the question posed during opening arguments in the trial of State Trooper Robert Higbee, who is charged with two counts of vehicular homicide in the deaths of the two Upper Township sisters.
On Sept. 27, 2006, just after 10 p.m., Higbee’s patrol car crashed into a minivan that Christina, 19, and Jacqueline, 17, Becker were driving in. The sisters were headed to the Wawa close to their grandparent’s home to pick up milk for the next morning’s breakfast. They were pronounced dead at the scene.
Now, over two years later, a jury must decide whether Higbee acted recklessly when he ran a stop sign at the intersection of Stagecoach and Tuckahoe roads.
First Assistant Prosecutor J. David Meyer told jurors that he believed Higbee didn’t mean to end the life of the Becker sisters.
“He’s no doubt remorseful,” Meyer said. “But that doesn’t excuse his action.”
He argued that Higbee acted recklessly when he drove through the Marmora intersection that night when he was trying to close the gap between his vehicle and a speeder. The speeder, Meyer said, was a 17-year-old teenager who was rushing home from his girlfriend’s house to make it home in time to meet his curfew.
Meyer noted that Higbee first claimed to have stopped at the intersection, but later evidence he said provided by his car’s power train control module, or event data recorder, told a different story.
The device, he said, recorded information 25 seconds before the crash, including Higbee’s speed.
“He was going between 70 and 80 mph while he was trying to close the gap between his car and the speeder,” said Meyer. “It shows his foot had contact with the brake pedal, but no where near the intensity needed to brake completely.”
Meyer said that at about 200 feet away from the approaching stop sign, Higbee took his foot away from the brake pedal and accelerated again. At the last second, Meyer said that Higbee hit the brakes.
“But it was too little too late for Jacqueline and Christina,” he said.
“That mistake is not a minor mistake,” Meyer said. “What happened here was a gross error.”
Meyer said that society demands that law enforcement officials act reasonably and responsibly.
“Society demands that,” he told jurors. “And the Becker sisters deserved that.”
Defense attorney D. William Subin told the jurors that his client was on duty and abiding by his obligation to go after anyone breaking the law.
“You cannot judge he acted recklessly in this case by the tragic results,” Subin said.
Subin said that Higbee had no way of knowing who was in the speeding car he was pursuing and was acting in accordance with state police policy when he was attempting to “close the gap.”
Subin said according to the NJ Attorney General’s policy, a police trooper closes the gap between his patrol vehicle and the speeder’s vehicle before activating the emergency lights and sirens.
The intersection where the accident took place, Subin argued is dark and dangerous during the nighttime hours. He added that Higbee had a wide patrol area and was not as familiar with the area as the prosecution suggested.
The intersection, he said, was dimly lit, had a wide paved shoulder and the stop sign was further to the right than normal. At the intersection, vehicles traveling northbound and southbound on Stagecoach Road had to stop at a stop sign, while those traveling on Tuckahoe Road had the right of way.
“He’s looking straight ahead at the taillights of the speeding vehicle,” Subin suggested to the jury of Higbee’s approach to the intersection. “He might have judged the stop sign further up the road, at Roosevelt as the stop sign.”
Subin told the jury to use their common sense when deciding the facts of the case and asked them to view his client as both a state trooper and a human being.
Opening arguments concluded late Wednesday, May 6. The state’s first witness will testify Thursday morning.
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Wed, 07/08/2009 - 10:52am - Posted by: sidneyseward
July 8, 2009
In looking at what I have written, I know it is from the heart, as it was not what I had composed in my head. Please know that I share these words from love and compassion
Being a poorly educated grandmother, mother, and wife, my heart goes out to everyone in this tragidy and I know my words are inadequate. The Lord, I believe, has a special comfort for all who have suffered this kind of pain. My prayer is that each day for the rest of your lives you will be blessed with a sure knowledge of Our Heavenly Father,s great love.
With prayful love,
Sidney Seward
Ft. Worth, Texas
Mon, 07/06/2009 - 11:47am - Posted by: Atomic Hammer
FYI Folks TommyR Poster is none other than...........
A law enforcement officer.
How do I know? Classic LEO defense of its own tactic. I have seen it a hundred times in posts relating to COPS.
And I am EX LEO...EX MILL, EX DOD, EX NSA.
Mon, 07/06/2009 - 11:41am - Posted by: Atomic Hammer
"The close the Gap" Policy is REALLY a - let me turn around and sneak up on the car so I can nail him good and he won't flee before I get to him trick. The TROOPERS EMERGENCY lights should be on ANYTIME LEO is engaged in actions that might endanger the public at large.
The POLICY IS WRONG....2 DEAD GIRLS.
This Cop has to go....NO JOB, NO BACK PAY AND A GIANT wrongful death suit for WILLFUL NEGLIGENCE...
Wallmart is always hiring greeters and this would be fitting end to a control freak gone wild.
Sat, 06/13/2009 - 3:35pm - Posted by: LeadingU_2009
Justice System made the final decision - Higbee is not guilty as a conclusion of this trial.
Agree it or not, the decison is final, unless an appeal requested to a higher commanding authority.
We WANT Higbee alike law enforcement personnel to perform protection duties and we NEED them too.
Ideally, the law enforcement personnel perform their duties perfectly, accurately and flawlessly.
Unfortunately, this is not a perfect world, no one is perfect and people make mistakes.
And, accidents happen. That is why we have INSURANCE INDUSTRY exists.
Maybe, after the fact, we should think about how to establish and/or improve the system in order for those law enforcement officers better perform their duties.
Again, this is a tragedy. An accident. No one wants to see this happen.
More or less, Higbee has been and would be taking responsibility consequently.
Sat, 06/13/2009 - 2:06pm - Posted by: TommyR
Wow Mr. cool, a whole 34 signatures from cop haters.! Some idiots call it murder. Amazing that fools who are so ignorant and blinded by their bias can't even understand what the law is.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 5:19pm - Posted by: chantal171969
I could not be happier for Rob and Bethany and his entire family. It is a sad situation. One that I am sure all would agree would have been better off not happening. But, the man was cleared and that is what it should have been all along. The Caiafa family is saddened and so is the Higbee family over their loss. If people honestly beleive that he inteded to hurt those girls they do not know the man at all. Believe this he grieves for them too. So stop the bullshit on here and let it go. Both families deserve some peace at this point. Cut the NJ State Police a break. They are your friends as well as any Police officer is. Just remember next time you need to dial 911 for something who it is that is coming to help you out.
God bless Rob and his family and friends. And God bless the Caiafa family as well....
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 3:52pm - Posted by: jadwan
Bandit, I have to agree with you on security for airplanes it should have started long ago, it is a sad fact that it is not even close to being secure right now. One of my son's flew from San Diego to Kodiak Ak going through 6 different airports. The fact of the matter is that they had checked him in under the wrong name and even showing his Military ID and his ticket while boarding it was not caught. He did not realize it until he arrived in Anchorage and his luggage was in Denver (under a different name). Makes me feel really safe for my next flight to Virginia. But, I have to question why was this not caught and who are these people checking passengers? Have a good one and I will quit giving you a hard time. Be safe.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 3:05pm - Posted by: bandit
10,000,000 backlashes doesnt make right wrong or v/v
soldiers....alls im sayin....finally one this....is if you wanted to stick your leg in a trap and go look for wmds in foriegn sand...have at it....but once you found out the truth...your leg is still caught.....it doesnt take a visionary to have seen Washington's blurred reality back then....
1st ever highjacked commuter plane was in something like 1923 in Peru....look it up.
so homeland security should have started at plane screen doors LONG B4 2001.
end transmission.....
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 2:03pm - Posted by: Vader
A jury decided his fate.....NOT GUILTY!!!! Stop crying about it and move on!!!! If you don't like the law.....then petition to change it. Go visit the law makers. By the looks of the backlash you are receiving Bandit, it looks as if you are the THICK one!
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 1:22pm - Posted by: jadwan
Bandit, Homeland Security does start at our borders!!! It is called the UNITED STATES COAST GUARD they are considered military they do defend this country and any place that the military goes as it is considered US property. I have a son who is USCG and he will lay his life down for yours in a second to try and keep our shores safe. He does not care if you think he is a nit-wit as he states simple minded people are a part of us also and that is his job he loves it and when his career is over he will continue to defend our land in any way he can. Yes, bandit even if that is going over to where you think that the issue is for oil and poppy produced products. You listen to the media to much and need to really understand what the issue is. Yes, I drive a car that uses oil based products, do you? Have you ever had to take a pain medication? I am sure that it was of an opiate base. Do you have the right to say what you wish to say and not be thrown in jail for it or executed because of your beliefs. Thank someone who fought for these freedoms and the more you speak the more liberal you sound. I am sure you are for closing Gitmo also and hopefully one of those guys will end up in your neighborhood. You make me sad and you have never said what you do for a living? Thank you to those that appreciate our military and police officers good or bad, they keep us safe from the true nit-wits of life who believe that they have the right to steal what I work for, to break every law they feel is ok and yes, if we did not have them the nit-wits would rule.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 12:47pm - Posted by: granmac
you people must be idiots. if you would just look at updates may 14 at 3:45 p. m. 5th section. higbie states he remembers stopping looking both ways and perceding through the intersection. the black box shows he did not.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 11:43am - Posted by: granmac
even if he was just closing the gap don't you think he should use common sense!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! didn't he see the lights of these other vehicles. if he can't do 2 things at once why is he on the police force.he was cited for running a stop sign, reckless driving and speeding and something else that i can't remember at this time, doesn't this say something to you.as for worring about his family being without a daddy what about the mother and grandfather and all other family members that are without these children.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! oh and by the way are you perfect just because someone doesn't spell correctly doesn't make them stupid. they also have an opinion.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 10:21am - Posted by: bandit
repeating my topic point:
a road beat cop got a road sign wrong....SERIOUSLY WRONG!!!
the unknown danger that a cop faces....while having multiple caliber firearms at discretionary use.....and back-up available...only becomes a greater and broader danger to more bystanders like sisters in a van...WHEN HIGH SPEED CHASED ON PUBLIC ROADS.
2 speeding cars through a stop sign is statistically more dangerous....and therefore unacceptable as service for public sponsored pay check.
radio ahead...cut em off...or disengage. How much more blatant can wrong be!!!!
way off the topic cause the Blind Allegiance want to probe me...
what i do....i soldier up and clean up after the sloppy american lifestyle...glutinous users and wasters that push their $ based system on people who dont necessarily want that.
As long as poppies and oil come out of that hellish region, service people will just make convenient targets in a struggle that will continue...as cheney predicted....maybe 100 years. Homeland security should have begun at OUR borders...not other's.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 8:08am - Posted by: TommyR
Someone asked what bandit did for a living? It's easy to see he wouldn't have the testicular fortitude to be a soldier or a cop. He stays safe at home throwing stones from behind the safety of his computer.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 1:20am - Posted by: bandit
yep.....as i see it...bone head decision...
if i know 1 thing...it is this: i wont die off of the north american continent for nothin !!!!
so ill just have to get "THEM" at my door....if i ever have to....thats just me.
meanwhile, i cant figure those that choose even the risk of fighting on sand underlain with oil for.................freedom???? whos thick here.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 12:47am - Posted by: Vader
Bandit wrote........there is no draft currently...so people who CHOOSE to join the armed forces CHOOSE to. so i dont owe those nit wits anything....they made a bone head decision and can try and dodge bullets.
Wow! What ignorance! If we did not have any "nit wits" to join our military, our country would be gone. Our soldiers make up the bravest men and women in this country. The fact that it is their choice, makes them even more brave and admirable. They fight for our freedoms moron. Because of them, you can come on here and make stupid comments and make an A-S-S out of yourself! Thank you to all of our soldiers fighting for our freedoms.
Bandit........It's better to keep your mouth shut and be thought stupid, then to open it and remove all doubt.
Fri, 06/12/2009 - 12:34am - Posted by: bandit
a road beat cop got a road sign wrong....SERIOUSLY WRONG!!!
the unknown danger that a cop faces....while having multiple caliber firearms at discretionary use.....and back-up available...only becomes a greater and broader danger to more bystanders like sisters in a van...WHEN HIGH SPEED CHASED ON PUBLIC ROADS.
2 speeding cars through a stop sign is statistically more dangerous....and therefore unacceptable as service for public sponsored pay check.
radio ahead...cut em off...or disengage. How much more blatant can wrong be!!!!
and btw- i hope everyone saw the phills kick the snot out of the ny mets
i hate NY !!!!
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 10:15pm - Posted by: jadwan
Oh Bandit, when an officer goes into a pursuit they have no clue as to what that person just did or why they are running. And by the way the nit wits that choose these professions do so to protect your rights and freedoms. The family member who was a police officer is yes, college educated, could have gone into many other professions and choose law enforcement and now is a sitting judge. What do you do for a living?
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 9:54pm - Posted by: jadwan
You are right Bandit, I do not know you well enough to judge if you are liberal or not, and I am sorry for that. But, I would also expect that you would say that those that are military or a police officer and that they have chosen this profession because they cannot do anything else was a tad judgmental. You are right that the military is volunteer and they are out there dodging bullets. Also, police officers would not have to make some of the choices that they do if they did not have idiots running from them. I would expect that if it would not have been a NJ trooper it would have had the same outcome as the jury decided. But, don't make a judgment as to why someone has chosen a profession and do not assume that they are mindless and know no other way to earn a living. We would have a difference of opinion and we would battle for our beliefs. I don't know why you feel the way you do and again, I am sorry that I assumed. But, I tend to get a tad sideways that my Coast Guard Son, Army daughter and two Air Force Veteran son's would be thought of as killing machines. They serve and served to protect our rights and do not want anyone to ever attack this country again. Believe me my daughter has seen enough horror to last her a life time as she is a medic and yes, I am very proud. Also, they are all college educated, are wonderful young people and no, they would hate to have to kill someone, they did not join the military to do that. It was for freedom's that we enjoy. And my former cop family member when he joined the force he wanted to make a change and "no" he never had to shoot someone but he did have to do pursuits. Have a good night and I will keep your safety in my prayers.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 9:06pm - Posted by: TommyR
Actually Vader, what these cop haters can not understand is that there is a difference. The cop hater trailwatcher brought up a reverse scenario. The girls or anyone else would likely be charged because they are not cops in the performance of their duty. They would have no legitimate reason to be going that fast. This fact is lost on ignorant haters like trailwatcher and this bandit clown.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 7:55pm - Posted by: Vader
Bandit you are an idiot who obviously does not know what murder means. If the girls were the ones who ran the sign and killed the Trooper...it would be the same outcome. That is the way the law is.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 5:18pm - Posted by: clf72
Well put Trialwatcher1. I never thought about it from that prospective. Thank you.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 2:29pm - Posted by: bandit
so sorry TommyR a douchebag....but bandit aint upset. The girls were no relation to me (and obviously you either), didnt know them or anyone in the family.....your just a heartless murderer lover.... and I like when the stupid such as you expose narrow-minded thought. keep it up...you got real talent at it. as for the taser great grandmom...i hope yours gets the same treatment...see if your narrow mindedness expands any....but she'll probably kill herself before that for having you in the fam.
those cops have it soooo tough in...where is this again...Sandy Beach Cape May County....those pseudo-officers couldnt police 1 block in camden nj...so they congregate at the sunny cape. and no i dont live in camden...dillweed.
Here-forward police should change their terminology from cruisers to crushers.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 1:53pm - Posted by: Trialwatcher1
OK, so we have now given the police in New Jersey the right to drive as fast as they want, to close the gap, and ignore all signs and markings on the road because it was a dark intersection. What if we switch a few things around here. So lets say that Higbee is closing the gap and he is on the road with no stop signs, and lets say the girls are coming down the road with the stop sign. Lets say the girls go through the stop sign and hit Higbee(no lights/sirens going 70+ miles an hour) and Higbee gets killed. Do the girls go to jail?
Or do we say, they just didn't see the stop sign it was an accident. What if the girls didn't have their headlights on, blow the stop sign, kill Higbee ? Accident again or negligence ?
This isn't about hating police, its about being responsible whether your a janitor, CEO or police officer. I don't want any of you driving recklessly any more than you want me doing the same thing. Not only did Higbee not miss seeing the stop sign he said he stopped. YES STOPPED. Was this because he knew he wasn't doing the right thing, he knew he was reckless, he knew he was careless? He knew he was wrong, because if he thought he was right all he had to say was, I was "Closing the Gap" didn't see the stop sign, made a mistake. No, his new testimony was, I don't remember anything, trama block. He sped up to get through that intersection, probably had done it a few times before and got away with it. Sadly, he got away with it again. Rest in peace young ladies, never to grow up, never to fall in love, never to have children, never to live again.Your life Stopped by a Careless, Negligent State Trooper who didn't.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 1:50pm - Posted by: TommyR
Oh, Boo Hoo! bandit is upset at the verdict. Guess your just gonna have to deal with it cop hater. The jury got to hear all the facts and circumstances. Not just the mostly one sided ones that the media chose to publish leading up to the trial. If you weren't so ignorant and blinded by your hate, you may have seen that. The nasty, old bag deserved to be tased too.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 12:55pm - Posted by: bandit
golly gee back....you dont know me well enough to call me liberal....my eyes are wide open to the fact that there is no draft currently...so people who CHOOSE to join the armed forces CHOOSE to. so i dont owe those nit wits anything....they made a bone head decision and can try and dodge bullets.
as for the murderous police officer...he is a murdered...who was looking to issue a 100.00 to 200.00 fine that cost a lot more. FACT !!!!
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 12:44pm - Posted by: jadwan
Gee, Bandit these so called former service members who are trained to kill with no other job options, have given you the right to print and say pretty much what you want to say. They have given you the right to sleep in a free country, shoot your mouth off and not respect authority. I am not in love with cops as there are bad and good, but most go into the profession to try and keep you safe and I am sure by your attitude that you are a liberal that thinks this country and our laws are to be broken if you feel like it. Do you want to hold hands and sing koom-by-ya with those that want to destroy our freedoms. Shoot, it won't come from out side this country it will be from inside. Yes, I am a military mom, Lt's. daughter, a sister-in-law to a former cop and I vote.
Thu, 06/11/2009 - 12:32pm - Posted by: jadwan
I was really happy to see this officer be found not guilty. One of the points during the trial is that they did not show what the intersection and the stop sign really looked like at night. I would have liked to have seen that information and not after adjustments and corrections were made. Show me the scene as it would have looked not what it is now.
I am very sorry for the family that lost their daughters, but if bad guys didn't run from the police, why was he not charged? This has always amazed me, charge the one who caused the police to have to pursue them. So, many families are changed forever because some idiot was speeding and did not want a ticket. Very sad indeed.
Wed, 06/10/2009 - 11:37am - Posted by: bandit
Intentional or not....it is reasonable to expect impact when you speed through an intersection. Further, it says a lot about a cop (HIGBEE) who dosnt feel enough remorse to seek another profession.
So nice job jurors....guess we know how you feel about cops tasering 72-year old great grandmoms who may simply get lippy with a PUBLIC SERVANT.
Higbee and great-grandmom tasering cops are NOT HEROS...but are more often former service men and women with little-to-no career options...with plenty of kill training.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 11:27pm - Posted by: pattyk
Great job Mr. Subin. To the procecutors office. You and that stupid judge should be thrown out of office for that joke of a trial. To the jury Good job. Thank you for not taking a good man away from his family.To all you cop-haters where does that spitefulness come from? I got a ticket from a trooper a couple of years ago. does that mean I want all troopers to go to jail? I think the ones who wanted Higbee found guilty are scum of the earth lowlifes who have done time and so your scummy opinion doesnt matter anyway.Anyway its over thank you God and Jesus and St Jude and The Virgin Mary who I prayed to for Trooper Higbee.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 11:04pm - Posted by: pattyk
Hey newmommy you have a stupiid screen name. Nobody cares that you are a new wittle mommy. You live in Texas so mind your own business. Higbee got found not guilty as he should be. HA ha you stupid cop-hater with your old man husband. The old geezer has been watching the trial on tv so he knows hes guilty. Does he even know what day it is? Is your kid the geezers kid or did you trick the old fool.? Triall is over so go back to changing diapers. Your husbands that is.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 1:19pm - Posted by: mrcool
he lawsuits i were referring to were the Taylrs and quite possibly Ms. Becker. Against not only Higbee but the NJSP. Not sure about Ms. Becker since the Cafia's allready have sued but the Taylors will win something. And i still say its a damn shame what the jury did, and i am not a "police hater" as Tommy has posted. I also thought O.J. Simpson was guilty and let go free as well in the Nicole Simpson Murders. Anyways, its all over now. Maybe ill see some of u in a future forum. It was nice debating and seeing everybodies theories about this trial. Good luck to you all in your endeavours.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 12:09pm - Posted by: TommyR
Like I said, the police haters have their panties in a bunch over the verdict. The police haters let their ignorance and prejudice get in the way and had Higbee convicted based on mostly one sided and limited information that was in the media before the rest of the facts finally came out in the trial.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 11:20am - Posted by: Vader
I agree with you there Chuck S. There are many policies that need change! Hopefully this will get the ball rolling. I was just glad that Higbee was not made an example of. This type of ACCIDENT has happened hundreds of times before and never tried in criminal court. It would NOT have been fair. Just my opinion.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 11:13am - Posted by: Chuck S
Vader: In pursue of---high speed---LIGHTS ON---no excuses---saves lives
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 10:35am - Posted by: Vader
Lawsuits for what? Ms. Caiafa (not Becker) already settled with the state for 2 million.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 10:22am - Posted by: mrcool
I can't believe this jury. It really makes me sick that Higbee got off. However, he did act like a man when the announcement was made. If he would of jumped up and did some fist pounding i would of been so pissed but he acted respectively. I hope this accident and trial brings about some changes in policies and procedures. Im not sure if it will,but i think America can see some of the problems with the policies. Hopefully the agency do now too. I know Higbee will get his back pay and job suspension lifted. That worries me that this man will be back out there. Even Ms. Becker isnt happy. Let the lawsuits start flying! Disgusting jury, absolutely disgusting. Could we really expect the judicial system to do what is right though? Everyone knows its messed up, this just proves it. I hope some jurors and Higbee read all thats in this forum.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 10:10am - Posted by: Vader
Well said TommyR. Chuck S I can see your anger but if Higbee is a criminal for this ACCIDENT, then there are hundreds of civilian criminals running our streets who have had a similar ACCIDENT. That may be hard to understand but the law is what it is. Never has an accident like this been brought to the spotlight before. Only now because he is a NJST. Do you think that in this States existence that an ACCIDENT like this involving a First Responder has never happened? Sure it has... with rescue, with fire and police. You just never heard about it because other State Prosecutors didn't find it necessary to waste taxpayers money on a comedy show. Maybe they need to change the law a bit but be careful what you wish for. You may be the next to miss that sign or light and kill someone. Would you want to be labled a criminal if that happened? Would you throw your hands up and say take me to prison I'm guilty? As far as Higbee returning to the job...I don't think he should. His uneasy mental status would be enough for me to keep him off the road. He will always be thinking of the ACCIDENT and may be hesitant in certain situations and that's not good for him or the public. However, if a doctor finds him compitant enough to continue, then we have to deal with it. It would be best to find him a desk job for sure. I can't imagine him pulling people over for a traffic offense and getting any respect.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 10:00am - Posted by: tuckahoekid
It's funny seeing everyone complaining about this ruling.
According to the court, he was not reckless (that's the only element that they COULD debate-since the other 2 were pretty much set in stone.)
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 7:56am - Posted by: Chuck S
NO RESPECT FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT! A CRIMINAL AND LIAR GOES FREE
What a stinking crime! Those poor girls. Everyone from now on that gets in an accident and kills someone should get cleared of any wrong doing. IT WAS JUST A TRAGIC ACCIDENT! Well I say BS to that! Death by auto and wreakless driving is what went on here and everyone knows it. THIS IS EXACTLY WHY WHENEVER STATE LAW ENFORCEMENT GOES OVER THE SPEED LIMIT FOR ANY REASON THEY SHOULD HAVE THEIR LIGHTS ON. I have no respect for the law of this state just for this reason. Police are lazy and do not enforce the law which creates poor driving habits on the road. They also feel they are above the law. They should be enforcing the laws of the land not by breaking them but by setting good examples. They never use their turn signals. Speeding without your lights on is hard to judge coming down the road. Those poor girls did not have a chance. If he had his lights on the girls would have saw that and they would be alive today! Doesn't law enforcement have radios? Every time is see a state cop form now on I'll just turn my head because this just makes me sick. And they got nerve calling me on the phone and asking me to make a donation to their BS funds! And yes I was taught to drive by my father who graduated the NJ state police academy. Over the speed limit LIGHTS ON!
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 7:23am - Posted by: TommyR
The Cape May County Prosecutors Office made a huge and foolish mistake to charge the Trooper criminally in the first place. The waste of taxpayer dollars especialy in these economic times is ridiculous. This was truly a tragic accident that the facts and circumstances showed did not rise to the level of a crime. This was a civil matter from the start. Sadly the case only brought out the police bashers who ultimately got their comeuppance with the verdict that an unbiased jury reached quickly.
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 7:10am - Posted by: clf72
If driving 70 plus MPH in a residential area, going through a stop sign and killing 2 people isn't reckless, what is? If he wasn't reckless, wasn't he negligent? And now he gets his job back, paroling our roads and TRAINING new troopers!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I am one New Jersey Taxpaper who never wants this man driving a state vechicle again. By the way, I didn't watch the trial, does anyone know what he's blood alcohol level was?
Tue, 06/09/2009 - 2:49am - Posted by: JarHead
Same here, long night and watching my speed.
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 10:50pm - Posted by: Vader
Oh Jarhead...you are not going to get me started on a childish battle of words. We had one childish exchange and I'm done with you. You are soooo wrong about me. It's not my problem you took it the wrong way and brought the innocent victims into this. I am happy for the law enforcement community who have been trashed in these forums for the past month. That's all! Nothing more...nothing less! A guilty verdict would have been extremely bad for all. You are the only one here blasting me. I could care less how you feel about me. Read the spouts in other papers. The CMC Prosecutors Office is being scrutinized by many...not just me. They created this show knowing all along that it should not have been brought this far costing us tax payers millions of dollars, I'm sure. Oh I get it...you work there! Sorry but that is how I, as well as many others in the law enforcement community, feel about them after this travesty. So you can respond with your bad big boy words if that makes you feel tough you mighty marine you. Have a nice day Sir.
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 10:27pm - Posted by: eyespy
CMCPO put all the eggs in one basket on this one. Judge wasn't going to dismiss when all the TV set up was present. At the same time, they are being sued by the woman's family(sea Isle Death). The ME has major issues. He had recently replaced the last ME who had drug problems. He even testified for her in this case. CM doesn't learn. I actually think jurors are tired of the crap that gets thrown at them in CM Co. Wait until Dr. carty wins his case(No evidence0 and then maybe we will see a few retirements. Lost evidence, suprise witnesses. Same Mo as Atlantic co used for years until they got caught. Better start rethinking Plea deals instead of wasting the millions of $ on this case. Higbee may be a few things we don't like, but he didn't committ a criminal act. Case closed
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 10:18pm - Posted by: JarHead
I stand by my comments , you are a little kitten with a badge. I can tell by your reaction you know it to be the truth. As I said I feel for Higbee and the two deceased girls. Higbee's reaction to the verdict was professional and dignified, yours was a low lifes reaction to a horrible case. I know if you were a real cop you would not be talking trash on the prosecuters office. I bet when you go over there for the grand jury you are not talking smack but smiling to their faces and telling them what a fine bunch of guys you all are. That just shows what a little two faced weasle you are.
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 9:28pm - Posted by: Vader
Why is being excited wrong!? It was a BS trial to begin with and Higbee was put through the ringer for NOTHING! NOT GUILTY! You don't know me. Of coarse I feel for the Becker family! You would not be human if you did not! I have lost friends and family to ACCIDENTS like this so I know how it feels! If he was found guilty, how many people would be singing hallaluah!? Many and you know it! I'm just really happy because law enforcement has been getting blasted for an ACCIDENT and all 12 jurors made it just that...an ACCIDENT! JARHEAD! Don't you dare blast me when you have no right to do so. I'm happy for Higbee's little girl and wife who need him. I'm happy because the CMC Prosecuters office is a joke and they really proved it with this Court TV Show. They really needed a guilty verdict to save a bit of face and they did not get it. I'm happy because Higbee and the defense had the judge against them and had crucial evidence barred from the court for no good reason. If you are so angry at me, go tell the next cop you see the same BS that you typed to me because I'm willing to bet that 100% of the law enforcement community is pretty happy with the verdict and it has nothing to do with those two girls...YOU BROUGHT THAT INTO THE ARGUMENT!
To the others online here...I apologize for the angry rant but it was not as JARHEAD made it sound. Yes I am in law enforcement and I am very good at what I do. I am extremely fair and am well respected among this community because of it among adults and juveniles. I don't hide behind any badge and if not for my job, I'd be glad to post my name. However, I'm not stupid and would not put my family in jeopardy of some crazy nutjob like JARHEAD.
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 8:06pm - Posted by: JarHead
Vader, you got to be kidding me !!!!!!!!!!!! Your celebrating !!!!!!!!!!!!! Two people are dead and there should be no cause for celebration. Higbee won his freedom and he acted like the real man that he is. You are a dispicable little human being and if you are a police officer that you say you are ,you are not fit to wear a badge!!!! You are a little weasel and probably hide behind your badge because in reality you are a coward with no morals or ethics.
LOOK IN THE MIRROR AND TELL YOURSELF WHAT YOU SEE
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 7:52pm - Posted by: Elisa
YES i'm so happy Robert Higbee was found not guilty I was praying for him
Mon, 06/08/2009 - 7:35pm - Posted by: goat247
Something for those of you who are critical of the verdict to think about. 12 jurors who were all just ordinary citizens but who sat there for the past month everyday listening to ALL of the evidence, unlike some of you who formed your opinions based on short blurbs in the local paper, unanimously agreed that he was not guilty. All twelve of them. It's nice to know our justice system works. And something else for you to think about next time you pay your tax bill. How much did this trial cost? 1 million? 2 million? even more? Guess who's pocket that comes out of just so a show trial could go on that the prosecutor knew should never have been tried in criminal court.