APPELLATE COURT AFFIRMS DOUBLE MURDER CONVICTION OF OCEAN TOWNSHIP MAN
March 25, 2013MASSACHUSETTS MAN SENTENCED TO 40 YEARS IN PRISON FOR ROBBERY, BEATING OF 82-YEAR-OLD MAN
March 25, 2013(FREEHOLD) An Asbury Park man has been named in an indictment handed up by a Monmouth County Grand Jury charging him with the 2011 murder of RyeKill Agostini, Acting Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni announced.
The indictment charges Gregory Hopson, Jr., 25, with first degree Murder, second degree Possession of a Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose, second degree Unlawful Possession of a Firearm, and second degree Certain Persons Not to Possess Weapons.
On October 2, 2011, Asbury Park police were responding to a report of a disorderly male at Mr. Pizza around 2:11 a.m. when gunshots were heard from the 100 Block of Ridge Avenue. The responding officer found the unresponsive victim seated in the driver’s seat of a vehicle. He was taken to Jersey Shore University Medical Center, Neptune, where he died the following day.
The Middlesex County Medical Examiner’s Office determined the cause of death was gunshot wounds to the head. A subsequent investigation revealed Hopson shot the victim following a verbal dispute.
As a result of the investigation, Hopson was arrested and charged with murder on April 14, 2012, and lodged in the Monmouth County Correctional Institution where he remains held on $3 million bail as set by Monmouth County Superior Court Judge Thomas F. Scully, J.S.C.
If convicted of murder, Hopson faces a minimum sentence of 30 years in a New Jersey State Prison, with a thirty year period of parole ineligibility and a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. The murder charge is subject to the provisions of the “No Early Release Act,” which requires that a defendant serve 85 percent of the sentence imposed before being eligible for parole. If convicted of the second degree charges Hopson would be subject to ten years in a New Jersey state prison with a five year period of parole ineligibility for each offense.
Despite these charges, every defendant is presumed innocent, unless and until found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, following a trial at which the defendant has all of the trial rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution and State law.
The case is assigned to Assistant Prosecutors Diane Aifer and Paul Alexander. Hopson is represented by Allison Tucker, Esq., of Freehold.