Prosecutor: Couple Charged With Strict Liability For Drug-Induced Death

An Oceanport couple has been charged with the first-degree crime of strict liability for drug induced death. The charges stem from a December Eatontown overdose death, Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni announced.

George Cucuzella, 30, and Nicole Ricciardi, 32, both of Oceanport, were taken into custody on July 14 in connection with the fatal overdose death of 36-year-old Raul Garcia, of Keansburg, who died on Dec. 2, 2019. 

On that date, at 12:21 a.m., the Eatontown Police Department received a report of a possible overdose victim in a local motel room. The responding officers located the victim, Raul Garcia, lying on the bathroom floor of room 137.  He was unconscious and not breathing. Despite the efforts of the Eatontown Police Department, the Eatontown First Aid Squad, and the MONOC Paramedics, Garcia was pronounced dead.

An investigation was immediately launched into the victim’s death by the Eatontown Police Department and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.  As a result of that investigation, police determined that the victim purchased heroin twice on Dec. 1, 2019, once at a gas station in Eatontown and once earlier that same day in the area of his hotel room, also in Eatontown. 

George Cucuzella, Nicole Ricciardi, and another man who has since passed away, were all previously tied to the drug sales while the investigation progressed into the cause of the victim’s death.

Ultimately, an examination conducted by the Middlesex County Medical Examiner’s Office determined the cause of Raul Garcia’s death as “acute combined drug toxicity due to fentanyl, acetyl fentanyl, and heroin” and the manner of death as being an “accident.” 

As a result of the investigation, George Cucuzella and Nicole Ricciardi were charged with the first-degree crime. N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5 defines that a person who distributes a controlled dangerous substance is strictly liable for a death which results from the injection, inhalation or ingestion of that substance, and is guilty of a crime of the first degree.

If convicted of this charge, both face up to 20 years in New Jersey state prison, subject to the provisions of the No Early Release Act (N.E.R.A.), which requires that 85% of the sentence must be served prior to release.

A detention hearing is currently scheduled for July 20 before Monmouth County Superior Court Judge Paul X. Escandon.