Skip to main content

Essex County Man Charged with Drug-Induced Death in Hanover

Hanover Township Hillside Irvington Township

Morris County Prosecutor Fredric M. Knapp and Hanover Township Police Chief Mark Roddy announce that Blaine Holley, 34, with a last known address in Hillside and formerly of Irvington, has been charged with crimes related to the September 2016 death of Eric Decter, 31, in Hanover.

Holley was charged Thursday by Warrant-Complaint with the first-degree crime of Strict Liability for Drug-Induced Death, and the third degree crime of Conspiracy to Distribute Controlled Dangerous Substances (Heroin and Cocaine). The charges were authorized by state Superior Court Judge Stephen J. Taylor, in Morristown. Holley was arrested on these charges on Friday in Newark. He was remanded to the Morris County Correctional Facility pending future court proceedings.

On the evening of Sept. 19, 2016, law enforcement responded to the America’s Best Value Inn in Hanover on a report of an unconscious male suffering from an apparent narcotics overdose.

The male, who was pronounced as deceased at the scene, was later identified as Decter, date of birth June 23, 1985.

Through a subsequent investigation, it is alleged that Holley distributed various narcotics to Decter on multiple occasions, including on Sept. 19.

It is further alleged that the ingestion of the narcotics distributed by Holley to Decter resulted in Decter’s death.

Holley has been charged with Strict Liability for Drug-Induced Death in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:35-9. This statute provides that any person who manufactures, distributes or dispenses any of a number of controlled dangerous substances is strictly liable for a death that results from the injection, inhalation, or ingestion of that substance.

This is a first-degree crime, which is punishable by up to 20 years in New Jersey State Prison and is subject to the 85 percent parole ineligibility requirements of the No Early Release Act.

794