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Jurors deciding whether or not getaway driver in Wyckoff jewel heist was part of plan

ONLY ON CVP: After again watching surveillance video of a brazen $900,000 Wyckoff jewelry store robbery, jurors in Hackensack this afternoon began deliberating the fate of the getaway driver.

Photo Credit: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter
Photo Credit: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter

Senior Assistant Bergen County Prosecutor Kenneth Ralph told them in closing arguments that Adrian Hicken was an integral, purposeful part of the plan to rob Hartgers Jewelers in April, 2011.

Defense attorney Diane D’Alessandro, meanwhile, portrayed her client as “threatened and afraid” after being duped by a member of the holdup crew into being the wheelman.

Ralph recreated the crime, showing jurors interior and exterior surveillance video from the shop, while insisting that Hicken bears what under state law is known as “collective responsibility” for the heist — even though he never entered the store.

Aidan Hicken watches video during closing arguments today in Superior Court in Hackensack (STORY / PHOTO: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter)

“They were there to do this crime,” Ralph said.  “Mr. Hicken was there to help them.”

To drive home his point, he showed how Hicken pulled a maroon Chevy Tahoe behind the store while the others got out, donned masks, hoods and gloves and then followed a point man after he was buzzed in.

As soon as they were inside, the video shows, Hicken moved the vehicle into an area out of sight of passersby.

Meanwhile, the crew smashed glass cases with a long-handled sledgehammer, shoved two customers to the floor, and dragged co-owner Gregg Hartgers across the room when he tried to get to a phone, Ralph said.

After throwing 86 high-end Rolex watches and 27 rings into two pillowcases, they bolted out of the store — and straight to where Hicken had moved the truck, the assistant prosecutor said.

Ralph followed with video from police cruisers that showed the speed and potential danger of a subsequent car chase along Route 208 and through side streets, with drivers hurriedly moving their vehicles out of the way.

The Tahoe eventually hit two police cars before Hicken and his three associates bailed out. The others ran while Hicken, at well over 300 pounds, tried to tip away, Ralph said.

Ridgewood Police Officer Patrick Elwood, who’d climbed a ridge overlooking the neighborhood, spotted Hicken and arrested him, the assistant prosecutor told jurors.

“I hit the police car to stop,” he told Elwood, according to Ralph.

“Would three men hire him on the spur of the moment to be their driver without his knowledge, relying on an ‘unwitting participant’ to wait outside alone while they went into the store, and to be there when they come out?” he asked jurors.

D’Alessandro, in turn said her client “was afraid of the three robbers, and then he was frightened by the police. He has no prior criminal record, and he’s engaged to be married.”

Hicken testified last week, telling jurors that he was hired by one of the three men to drive to Wyckoff and didn’t know anything about the planned holdup.

He said the trio threatened him with a knife during the chase, causing the vehicle to swerve and hit other cars.

His fiance also testified on his behalf.

Jurors are deliberating 16 counts in all in the trial, which began two weeks ago. They range from eluding to robbery, aggravated assault, assault with a deadly weapon and more.

The three other defendants in the case have pleaded guilty and await sentencing.

Prosecutors offered Hicken a 15-year prison sentence in exchange for a guilty plea — more than any of the other three received.

He refused and went to trial instead.

STORY / PHOTOS: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter

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