SUPERIOR COURT -- Known for his court outbursts and his refusal to recognize the jurisdiction of the court, Donte Crumidy, the Newark man who admitted his guilt in his role in a 2013 home invasion in Green Township, was again booted from the courtroom.

SUPERIOR COURT -- Known for his court outbursts and his refusal to recognize the jurisdiction of the court, Donte Crumidy, the Newark man who admitted his guilt in his role in a 2013 home invasion in Green Township, was again booted from the courtroom nearly five minutes into his sentencing on Friday.

Crumidy, 39, appeared before state Superior Court Judge William J. McGovern on Friday where he was sentenced, in absentia, to 14 years in state prison.

He will receive 861 days of jail credit and will be required to serve 85 percent of his sentence without the possibility for parole under the No Early Release Act. Upon his release, he will be placed on five years of parole supervision.

On Friday, Crumidy, who started to interrupt proceedings after nearly 30 seconds, stated that "I, Donte, of the family of Crumidy," was subject to a psychological evaluation at the Ann Klein Forensic Center in Trenton -- a court-mandated evaluation -- and that doctor who conducted the testing was "unfair."

He went on to state that the psycholological report was incomplete since the doctor told him that, "I need to pray when I told her I hear voices and I see aliens."

Stating that he has "mental illness," Crumidy claimed that he deserved new testing that has "not been tainted by prejudice."

In addition, Crumidy, as he has done in prior hearings, asked for the judge for proof of his oath of office and asked the assistant prosecutor, Sahil Kabse, and his own attorney, William Oake, to provide proof of their nationality.

After having Crumidy removed from court, McGovern noted that he felt Crumidy's actions were "entirely motivated to frustrate the legal process" and stated he would "not stand to tolerate this nonsense."

Crumidy was calm during a hearing in June where he agreed to a plea offer from the state of 15 years in state prison on day two of jury selection.

He pleaded guilty to first-degree armed robbery, second-degree burglary, second-degree possession of a weapon with an unlawful purpose, second-degree unlawful possession of a weapon, third-degree threatening to kill, third-degree theft, fourth-degree assault pointing of a firearm, and second-degree certain persons not permitted to have a weapon.

His codefendant, Delquan Baskett, 32, of Hillsborough, who admitted to possessing a weapon during the incident, was sentenced to 14 years in prison. Jarrell Belle, 27, of Newark, who was sentenced with Baskett, was given 12 years in prison.

Oake, in asking for a 13-year sentence for his client "regardless of his behavior," said he was doing so because Crumidy never actually held a weapon during the home invasion.

Kabse, who argued for a 15-year sentence, called the crime "heinous" and noted Crumidy's substantial criminal history, which dates back to 1997.

In 2008, Kabse said, Crumidy was convicted on conspiracy to commit robbery and was sentenced to 14 years in state prison.

"Clearly that 14-year sentence wasn't enough to dissuade him from future acts of violence and criminal conduct," he said.

Crumidy is the last of six codefendants to be sentenced in the case, which dates to Dec. 28, 2013.

Others arrested included Michael Johnson, of New Brunswick, Morgan Ivory, of Hackettstown, and Elizabeth Cooper, of Princeton.

Johnson and Ivory received seven-year prison terms and Cooper was sentenced to five years.

Crumidy also has pending first-degree charges in Middlesex County where prosecutors are offering him a plea deal of 20 years in state prison.

Lori Comstock can also be reached on Twitter: @LoriComstockNJH, on Facebook: www.Facebook.com/LoriComstockNJH or by phone: 973-383-1194.