Lead Opinion
A man was attacked at a bus stop in Willingboro and his cell phone was stolen. He and a police officer tracked the phone's location to a nearby house using a phone tracking application.
Several officers arrived at the house, and one spotted the stolen cell phone's case through a window. When no one responded to their knocks on the door, the officers entered the house through an unlocked window. Once inside, they performed a protective sweep to determine whether the suspect was inside, and they found defendant, J.A., then seventeen years of age, under the covers of a bed. Shortly thereafter, defendant's mother and brother arrived home. After the officers explained their investigation, defendant's mother consented to a search of the house, and defendant's brother voluntarily retrieved the stolen phone. Defendant was later charged with second-degree robbery for theft of the phone.
Defendant moved to suppress the evidence, arguing that the officers' entry into his home was unconstitutional because the officers entered without a warrant and there were no circumstances that would justify an exception to the warrant requirement. The trial court denied defendant's motion to suppress. The court found that, although the officers' search procedure may have been imprudent, it was ultimately defendant's brother-without any coercion or duress from law enforcement-who retrieved the cell phone. The court reasoned that defendant could not challenge the seizure of the cell phone in light of that lack of state action.
Defendant appealed, and the Appellate Division affirmed. The panel held that the officers had probable cause to search and found that exigent circumstances justified the officers' warrantless
We disagree with the panel's determination that the officers' warrantless entry was justified by the claimed exigency faced by the officers. However, we agree that defendant's brother's actions did not constitute state action and were sufficiently attenuated from the unlawful police conduct. Because we find that the brother's independent actions operate to preclude application of the exclusionary rule to the evidence, we do not reach the question of defendant's mother's consent to search. Accordingly, we modify and affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division.
A.
On May 30, 2014, the victim was standing at a bus stop in Willingboro when he was approached by a young man in a hooded black sweatshirt and camouflage shorts. The young man asked to use the victim's cell phone, explaining that he was locked out of his house. The victim hesitated, then reached to take out his phone. As the victim was facing the other direction, the man punched him in the arm, took the phone, and ran.
A Willingboro Police Officer was dispatched to meet the victim at the bus stop. The victim explained that the phone was an Apple iPhone, which had been in a pink glittery case.
The officer and the victim used the "Find My iPhone" application to track the location of the phone. The application immediately identified a house about three
The officer went to the house, and other police officers were dispatched there as well. The officers decided to secure the perimeter of the house. While performing an exterior security
The officers believed that the house was abandoned: curtain blinds covered most of the windows, there were no signs of life inside or cars in the driveway, and no one responded to the officers' several knocks on the front door.
One officer found an unlocked window on the first floor, through which he and another officer entered the house. Another officer subsequently entered through the front door. Once inside, the officers began searching the house for the suspect. During their search, they observed the phone case that was previously seen through the first floor window, but did not take possession of it. The phone was not found during that initial search.
The officers found defendant, unarmed, upstairs in the master bedroom, lying under a blanket on the bed. The officers also found a hooded sweatshirt and a pair of camouflage shorts nearby.
The officers handcuffed defendant, brought him downstairs, and questioned him about his knowledge of the robbery. Defendant's family members subsequently arrived at the house, including his older brother and mother, who lived there. The latter appeared irate at defendant upon her arrival. She asked the police "what did [defendant] do now?" and said that she was "sick" of his antics and that she previously "told him if he comes here acting up he's got to go." She angrily informed the officers that they could search the house for the missing phone.
The officers explained to defendant's brother that they suspected that defendant had stolen the phone. Defendant's brother irritably responded that stealing a phone is something that defendant would be inclined to do. The brother asked if the officers had found the phone, and when they responded that they had not, he said that if it was not in defendant's bedroom, it was probably in the younger brother's room. Without encouragement from the
Defendant's mother later provided written consent to search the house.
B.
Defendant was charged with an act that would have constituted second-degree robbery, contrary to N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1(a)(1), had he been an adult at the time. He filed a motion to suppress the phone, arguing that it was found as a result of an unconstitutional search and seizure.
At the suppression hearing, the court found that the police did not conduct a search of the residence until his mother gave consent. The court also found that defendant's brother's search was not driven by "coercion or duress from law enforcement," explaining that although "third parties acting on behalf of the State are bound by constitutional strictures," the brother's actions here did not constitute state action. The court opined that the officers' behavior in the house may have
The case went to trial and defendant was adjudicated delinquent and sentenced to two years of house arrest.
Defendant appealed, arguing that the trial court should have suppressed the cell phone evidence because the police officers' entrance into his home and subsequent search were unconstitutional. The Appellate Division affirmed. The panel concluded that the officers had probable cause to search and faced exigent circumstances, which justified their warrantless entry into defendant's home.
The panel stated that "[t]he technology that led police to [defendant's] home provided some of the exigency supporting their entry." In particular, the court found it significant that two minutes after the officer activated the "Find My iPhone" application, the phone was turned off. That led the officer to feel that "immediate action was required because once the phone was turned off, it could be moved and the GPS capabilities would not function." The panel found that this concern was reasonable, "as the small cell phone could easily have been destroyed or hidden, and was the only physical evidence linking [defendant] to the robbery." Thus, the panel concluded that, "in entering the residence to secure the area, determine whether there was any danger to anyone in the house, and prevent destruction of the proceeds of the robbery," the police acted reasonably and within the confines of the Fourth Amendment.
The panel reasoned that had the officers identified defendant as a suspect immediately following the taking of the victim's phone and then physically followed him to the house, the "hot pursuit" doctrine, in all likelihood, would have permitted the warrantless entry. The panel found that, though those facts are not present here, there "was a close temporal link between a serious criminal event, during which physical force was used against the victim, and the police pursuit that resulted in a warrantless entry." The panel also found that there was "a reasonable expectation that a delay in obtaining a warrant would result in the destruction of evidence." Therefore, the panel concluded that the record supported a finding that the hot pursuit exception to the warrant requirement rendered the officers' action constitutional.
Defendant filed a petition for certification with this Court, again challenging the trial court's denial of his suppression motion. We granted certification.
II.
A.
First, defendant argues that the hot pursuit doctrine cannot validate the officers' warrantless entry into his home. For the hot pursuit doctrine exception to apply, defendant asserts, the State must show that the "suspect (1) was armed and immediately dangerous or (2) knew that the police were in pursuit and therefore had a reason to immediately dispose of evidence." Defendant contends that the State has failed to prove that he posed a danger to anyone or that he knew that he was being trailed and would thus be motivated to destroy evidence.
Additionally, defendant suggests that whether his brother led the police to the phone is "legally insignificant" because the "police were not lawfully present in the home." Defendant adds that his brother was not acting as a private citizen because a police officer was "right beside" him as they searched the house together. Therefore, defendant asserts, his brother was acting on behalf of the State for constitutional purposes.
B.
As does defendant, amici Seton Hall University School of Law Center for Social Justice and the ACLU claim that the officers'
Seton Hall University School of Law Center for Social Justice further asserts that the officers were not justified in entering the home based on any other exigency because the theft of a phone does not alone present sufficiently dangerous circumstances and the officers could have safely waited to obtain a telephonic warrant while securing the house.
As to defendant's brother's search, amici argue it was the product of the unlawful police entry. Amici contend that defendant's brother acted only after he discovered that the police had-as far as he knew, lawfully-entered the home, gathered inculpatory evidence, and seized defendant. Thus, amici claim, the search was the inadmissible fruit of the illegal entry's poisonous tree.
C.
The State contends that objectively exigent circumstances existed to justify the officers' entry because the officers entered the house "shortly after learning that evidence of a robbery was in the house." The State also asserts the officers' reasonable concern that evidence might be destroyed if they waited to obtain a warrant because the "suspect had already changed the appearance of the stolen iPhone by removing it from its case" and had "turned the phone off." The State stresses that because the officers were
Finally, the State emphasizes that defendant's brother voluntarily located the stolen phone and gave it to the officers. The State contends that defendant's brother's actions were independent, non-state actions that were sufficiently attenuated from any alleged misconduct related to the officers' entry. Thus, according to the State, the trial court properly held that the phone was admissible at trial.
III.
A.
When an appellate court reviews a trial court's decision on a motion to suppress, the reviewing court defers to the trial court's factual findings, upholding them "so long as sufficient credible evidence in the record supports those findings." State v. Gonzales,
However, the reviewing court need not defer to the trial court's legal conclusions, State v. Bryant,
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 1, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution both safeguard the right to privacy and forbid warrantless entry into a home except under certain circumstances. State v. Davila,
Evidence found pursuant to a warrantless search not justified by an exception to the warrant requirement is subject to suppression, see State v. Edmonds,
However, the exclusionary rule applies to preclude the admission of evidence only when such evidence is suitably linked
The appropriate inquiry for courts assessing the admissibility of the evidence is whether the evidence was "the product of the 'exploitation' of [the unconstitutional police action] or of a 'means sufficiently distinguishable' from the constitutional violation such that the 'taint' of the violation was 'purged.' " State v. Shaw,
In Brown v. Illinois,
In sum, evidence seized without a warrant and in the absence of an exception to the warrant requirement is subject to suppression unless the exclusionary rule is inapplicable. That rule does not apply when the conduct through which the evidence is obtained
IV.
Here, the State argues that the warrantless entry was lawful because it was justified by the exigency faced by the officers.
A.
One recognized exception to the warrant requirement is the presence of exigent circumstances. State v. Johnson,
The latter inquiry is fact-sensitive. State v. Nishina,
For a "hot pursuit" to justify an exception to the warrant requirement, officers must have had probable cause, Bolte,
Because the "hot pursuit" doctrine is a subset of the exigent-circumstances exception to the warrant requirement, the touchstones that would justify a warrantless entry remain the possible destruction of evidence, ibid.; Bolte,
In Bolte, for example, a police officer observed the defendant driving erratically for approximately one mile. Id. at 581,
The trial court held that the officer's entry into the house was justified under the hot pursuit exception to the warrant requirement.
B.
With those principles in mind, we turn to the facts of this case and hold that the officers' warrantless entry into defendant's house was not justified by exigent circumstances. Although we agree with the Appellate Division's finding that the officers had probable cause, we reject its application of the hot pursuit doctrine.
Initially, we need not consider whether the officer's pursuit of defendant, facilitated by his use of the Find My iPhone application,
Likewise, the State has not shown that the officers had any reason to believe that defendant would (or could effectively) destroy the phone. There is no evidence supporting that defendant knew that he was being followed and would thus have had an impetus to dispose of the phone. And even if he did, unlike controlled substances or narcotics, a phone cannot be easily flushed down a drain or destroyed by burning. While it is possible that defendant powered down the phone so that he could not be as easily traced, deactivating a tracking device on an electronic piece of evidence simply reduces the trackable evidence to an average piece of evidence; the mere presence of evidence in a home does not alone justify a warrantless entry.
In the absence of any danger that defendant would commit violent acts or that he would destroy the desired evidence, we find that the officers' pursuit of defendant was not an exigency overriding the warrant requirement. We therefore find that neither exigency nor the hot pursuit doctrine justified the officers' warrantless entry here. However, for the following reasons, as a result of defendant's brother's attenuated, non-state actions, we affirm the trial court's denial of defendant's motion to suppress.
V.
A.
The Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures operates as a restraint only upon
When a private person acts "as an arm of the police," however, the private person's seizure of property constitutes state action.
In Scrotsky, the landlady of an apartment building suspected that one of her tenants had been stealing personal effects from her home located within the building. Id. at 413,
On appeal to this Court, the tenant argued that the evidence taken by the landlady from his apartment, which was used at trial to prove the State's case, was procured by an unconstitutional search and seizure. Id. at 412,
We disagreed, finding that the landlady "went into the apartment with the [police] and seized the property under color of their
B.
Guided by those principles, we turn to the State's argument that defendant's brother's search for the missing phone was independent non-state action free from constitutional restrictions and sufficiently attenuated from the police's illegal entry to be permissible. We agree.
Defendant's brother was clearly not acting as an agent of the State when he searched the house for the phone. Unlike in Scrotsky, where the landlady and the police detective traveled to the tenant's apartment together with the sole purpose of discovering and retrieving the landlady's stolen property, defendant's brother's actions were completely independent of the officer's investigation. Frustrated with yet another incident of defendant's misconduct, defendant's brother decided to search the house without solicitation or even encouragement from the officers present. And when the brother successfully recovered the victim's phone, he offered
Moreover, defendant's brother's actions were voluntary and sufficiently attenuated from the officers' unlawful entry. No evidence in the record supports a finding that defendant's brother's search was causally or temporally connected to the police misconduct.
The dissent's reliance on State v. Smith,
VI.
Accordingly, we modify and affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES PATTERSON, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA's opinion. JUSTICE ALBIN filed a dissenting opinion, in which JUSTICE LaVECCHIA joins.
Notes
As a threshold matter, although the State claims that the police officers may have believed the home was vacant, the State has not shown a reasonable basis to believe the house was abandoned. The State, in fact, concedes that it is not challenging the juvenile's standing based on a theory of abandonment. See State v. Brown,
Because we find that the brother's independent actions operate to remove the evidence from the ambit of the exclusionary rule, we do not reach the question of defendant's mother's consent to search.
Dissenting Opinion
During their unlawful presence in defendant's home, the officers swept through various rooms, confronted defendant's sister who had just awakened, located and arrested defendant for the alleged robbery of a cell phone, and seized evidence. The police then remained unlawfully on the
An officer explained to the family members that they were investigating the theft of a cell phone by defendant. When asked by the brother whether they had found it, the officer answered, "nope." In response to the surreal situation he encountered, the brother offered to look for the cell phone-and did so while shadowed by an officer. He discovered the phone in another brother's room and gave it to the officer.
I cannot conclude, as the majority does, that the brother's act of recovering the cell phone was independent of or sufficiently attenuated from the unconstitutional police presence in his home. The State failed to show that the unlawful police occupation of the
Because there was no break in the causative chain between the officers' unconstitutional presence in the home and the ultimate discovery of the cell phone, evidence of the phone should have been suppressed. I therefore respectfully dissent.
I.
A.
The Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution are intended to protect the home from "unreasonable searches and seizures" by the police. State v. Brown,
"The exclusionary rule 'is a judicially created remedy designed to safeguard' the right of the people to be free from 'unreasonable searches and seizures.' " State v. Williams,
An exception to the exclusionary rule is the attenuation doctrine. Shaw,
In State v. Smith, a case comparable to the present one, we applied the Brown factors and rejected the attenuation doctrine as a basis for upholding the search of a home.
Applying the Brown factors, we held that "the discovery of the drugs was a product of the unlawful seizure of the keys," despite
B.
Applying those principles to the facts of this case leads to the ineluctable conclusion that the police misconduct is directly linked to the discovery of the cell phone, which therefore must be suppressed. Importantly, the State had the burden of proving attenuation-a point ignored by the majority-and failed to do so.
First, there was no temporal break between the officers' unconstitutional entry and presence in the home and the brother's search for the phone. When the brother arrived, the police officers had already unconstitutionally entered and occupied the home, conducted a sweep, gathered incriminating evidence (the cell phone case and defendant's camouflage shorts), and handcuffed defendant, who was seated on the living room couch. As soon as the brother and his parents came home, the officers stated that they were investigating the alleged theft of a cell phone by defendant. The brother asked an officer whether the police had found the cell phone, and the officer responded, no. Apparently, the brother believed the police had conducted an initial search. He had no way of knowing at the time that the four police officers were unlawfully on the premises.
Second, the State was required to prove that the constitutional violation of the family's
Third, the officers' entry and occupation of the home was a flagrant violation of the family's-not just defendant's-constitutional rights under our Federal and State Constitutions. Without the justification of exigent circumstances, officers entered through a house window, went from room to room, surprised defendant's recently awakened sister, took defendant into custody, and gathered evidence. The exclusionary rule, if nothing else, is directed at deterring the police from unlawfully entering the sanctity of the home and exploiting their unconstitutional conduct, as occurred in this case.
II.
In conclusion, the State failed to carry the burden of proving that the police misconduct did not significantly influence the brother's decision to search for the cell phone. Because the taint from the unconstitutional police occupation of defendant's home was not purged by the brother's cooperation with the police, the ultimate seizure of the phone by the police violated both the
I therefore respectfully dissent.
