delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, we must determine whether the police acted unreasonably, in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution, in executing a warrant for the search of drugs on defendant Antoine D. Watts.
A warrant secured by the police authorized a no-knoek entry and search of defendant’s apartment and a search of defendant for controlled dangerous substances. Before executing the search warrant, police officers waited until defendant left his apartment. The officers detained defendant one and one-half blocks away on a busy urban street, frisking him for weapons and taking his apartment keys to avoid a forced entry of his residence. The officers decided not to conduct a more intrusive search of his person in public view. Defendant was then placed in an unmarked police ear and taken back to his apartment. After defendant exited the vehicle, four bundles of heroin fell from the leg of his pants.
Defendant moved to suppress the drugs, claiming that the police were forbidden from conducting a second search of his person after the pat down on the street. After a hearing, the trial court granted defendant’s motion, concluding that because defendant was initially searched on a public sidewalk, the police were forbidden from searching him again at another location. The court found that the police acted unreasonably, and therefore unconstitutionally, by exposing defendant to successive searches. The court suppressed the drugs, and the Appellate Division affirmed.
We now hold that the police did not act in an objectively unreasonable manner in violation of our Federal and State Constitutions. The police were armed with a warrant to search defendant’s person for drugs. The police officers were not required to conduct a highly intrusive search of defendant on a public sidewalk in full view of pedestrian and vehicular traffic. Such a search would have offended defendant’s dignitary interest and would have been contrary to the police interest in conducting a thorough search in a safe and secure setting. Patting down defendant for weapons before transporting him in a police vehicle was a necessary precaution, and taking his apartment keys to avoid battering down his door or alerting occupants was a prudent step falling within the scope of the warrant. The initial search was limited in scope and did not bar the police from moving defendant to a more controlled location to complete the search for drugs in accordance with the warrant. We therefore reverse and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.
I.
A.
Defendant was charged in a Union County indictment with third-degree possession of heroin, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10(a)(l); third-degree possession of heroin with intent to distribute, N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5(a)(l) and N.J.S.A. 2C:35 — 5(b)(3); third-degree possession of heroin with intent to distribute in a school zone, N.J.S.A 2C:35- 7; and second-degree possession of heroin with intent to distribute within 500 feet of a public park, N.J.S.A. 20:35-7.1. Defendant moved to suppress drugs seized by the police, alleging that he was subjected to an unconstitutional search.
The trial court conducted a suppression hearing at which the State called to the
On March 14, 2012, Detective Valladares applied for a warrant to search defendant and his apartment. The detective filed an affidavit with a Superior Court judge detailing his reasons for believing that defendant was selling heroin from apartment number four at 224 Third Street in the City of Elizabeth. Based on the affidavit, the judge found probable cause to issue a warrant authorizing the police to conduct a no-knoek entry and search of the Third Street apartment and a search of defendant for such items as heroin, glassine envelopes, vials, and other paraphernalia related to drug distribution.
Detective Valladares testified that, on March 14, police officers gathered at a staging area in preparation to execute the search and activated a fixed surveillance camera capable of covering defendant’s apartment and the immediate environs. The plan was to wait until defendant left his apartment and then seize the apartment keys to avoid a forced entry into the residence. As Detective Valladares explained, the police did not want to “break any doors [or] cause any heart attacks.”
Shortly before 5:00 p.m., the surveillance camera recorded defendant leaving his apartment building and walking southward on Third Street. Approximately eight police officers sprang into action. Five officers, including Detective Valladares, detained defendant as he exited Seaport Liquor Store on the corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third Street, located one and one-half blocks from his apartment. Defendant was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, a shirt, jeans, and boots. One detective patted down defendant for weapons, and another detective removed the apartment keys from defendant’s pocket. No article of defendant’s clothing was removed during this limited search. The police decided not to conduct an “overly intrusive” search for drugs on the corner of Third Street, which was a busy thoroughfare of pedestrian and vehicular traffic. In Detective Valladares’s view, such a search on a public street would have been “undignified.”
Detective Valladares and another detective returned to the apartment with the keys and made a peaceable entry. In the meantime, defendant was handcuffed for officer safety and transported back to his apartment in an unmarked police vehicle. Upon arriving in front of the apartment, defendant exited the vehicle. As he walked toward a marked patrol ear under police escort, defendant shook his leg, and from his pants fell four bundles of heroin. 1 Six minutes had elapsed from the moment of defendant’s detention to the discovery of the drugs. The search of defendant’s apartment uncovered no drugs or related paraphernalia.
B.
In an oral opinion, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to suppress. The
II.
The Appellate Division granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal and affirmed the trial court in an unpublished opinion. The appellate panel agreed with the trial court that the warrant authorizing the search of defendant’s person “permitted the police to search [him] when they stopped him, even though he was no longer in or adjacent to his apartment.” However, after the initial search did not uncover contraband, the panel — like the trial court — discerned “no satisfactory explanation” for the need for a second search. It maintained that once the police exhausted the warrant authorizing the search of defendant’s person outside the liquor store, the search warrant for the residence did not permit a later warrantless search of defendant in accordance with Bailey. The panel described Bailey as a case involving “the warrantless search of an individual incident to the execution of a search warrant” of premises where the individual had recently left. According to the panel, none of the Bailey factors justified a warrantless search of defendant: defendant was not armed and thus not a danger to the officers searching the apartment; he was not in a position to hide or destroy evidence in the apartment; and, last, because no contraband was found on defendant’s person or later in his apartment, law enforcement’s interest in preventing flight was not an issue. Bailey, supra, — U.S. at-, 133 S.Ct. at 1038-41, 185 L.Ed.2d at 29-32. The panel noted that the “terms of the search warrant” permitted “a search rather than multiple searches.” Finally, the panel concluded that the judge’s fact findings were entitled to deference. For those reasons, the panel upheld the judge’s order suppressing the evidence.
We granted the State’s motion for leave to appeal.
III.
The State submits that the warrant to search defendant did not require “the police to search defendant’s person once and thoroughly in the place where he was first detained” — a busy, public sidewalk in the City of Elizabeth. Instead, the State argues that the police acted in an objectively reasonable manner by frisking defendant for weapons, securing the apartment keys,
Defendant urges that we affirm the Appellate Division. He contends that the panel correctly deferred to the trial court’s factual findings at the suppression hearing. According to defendant, the trial court did not accept Detective Valladares’s testimony about defendant’s encounter with the police. Instead, defendant insists that the court found that “the police conducted a full search when they first detained [him], not just a pat-down, and that the second search was, indeed, a search,” not an abandonment of drugs. Defendant submits that a second or new search of defendant at 224 Third Street was not authorized by the warrant. Moreover, defendant claims that the search of his person cannot be justified under Bailey because he did not pose a threat to the search of the premises.
IV.
The question before us is whether defendant was the subject of an unreasonable seizure and search after the police conducted the initial search outside the liquor store where defendant was first detained.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article I, Paragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution protect against “unreasonable searches and seizures” by government officials.
3
Our constitutional jurisprudence expresses a decided preference that government officials first secure a warrant before conducting a search of a home or a person.
See State v. Edmonds,
211
N.J.
117, 129,
Defendant does not challenge the validity of the warrant to search his person or apartment. He does not dispute that the search warrant, issued by a Superior Court judge, was based on a finding of probable cause to believe that he was dealing drugs. Rather, he claims that the search warrant for his person was fully executed outside the liquor store and that
“The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment and Article I, [P]aragraph 7 of the New Jersey Constitution is reasonableness.”
State v. Hathaway,
222
N.J.
453, 476,
A warrant for the search of a person carries with it implicit authority to detain that person for a reasonable period to complete the objective of the search.
See Florida v. Royer,
460
U.S.
491, 500, 103
S.Ct.
1319, 1325,
A warrant authorizing the search of a person for drugs and related paraphernalia allows the police to search for such evidence wherever it may normally be secreted, such as in clothes, boots, or on the body.
See United States v. Ross,
456
U.S.
798, 820, 102
S.Ct.
2157, 2170,
In such a scenario, neither the Federal nor State Constitution forbids the police from moving the individual to a secure and private setting where the search can be conducted without exposing the person to public degradation and the police
V.
A.
We now apply those principles to the facts before us. In doing so, we begin with our standard of review. We are bound to uphold a trial court’s factual findings in a motion to suppress provided those “findings are ‘supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record.’ ”
State v. Elders,
192
N.J.
224, 243-44,
B.
It bears emphasizing that the police had a warrant authorizing not only a no-knock entry and search of defendant’s apartment, but also a search of defendant’s person. The trial court did not second-guess the police strategy of waiting until defendant left his apartment to execute the warrant. Seizing defendant outside the apartment and securing the apartment keys allowed for a peaceable entry and minimized the potential for violence and damage to property.
The police detained defendant after he left a liquor store on a busy Elizabeth street corner where there was pedestrian and vehicular traffic. Defendant was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, a shirt, jeans, and boots. Drugs or paraphernalia could have been secreted in his clothes or on his body. The police made an objectively reasonable decision that compelling defendant to disrobe, partially or completely, in that public setting could cause public humiliation to defendant. Such an intrusive search at that location might also have posed potential dangers to the police.
However, the court ruled that the police had one of two choices: search defendant where he was detained or return him to the apartment or some other location and search him there. The court did not allow for a more nuanced approach consistent with constitutional jurisprudence and the notion of reasonableness. We reject, as a matter of law, the trial court’s all-or-nothing approach.
The police decided to conduct a thorough search of defendant at another location. Before placing him in a police vehicle, the officers had a right to pat him down to ensure that he was not armed with a weapon.
Cf. State v. Gibson,
218
N.J.
277, 299,
To be sure, what occurred on the corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third Street constituted a search under both the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution. But it was an incidental search preliminary to fulfilling the main objective of the warrant — a search of defendant for the presence of drugs and related paraphernalia. We cannot conclude that the limited search outside the liquor store triggered a constitutional requirement that the police conduct an intrusive search at the same location. As noted earlier, the touchstone of the Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 of our State Constitution is reasonableness. The warrant permitted the police to reasonably continue the search in a secure setting.
See State v. Hai Kim Nguyen,
419
N.J.Super.
413, 426-27,
We do not take issue with the trial court’s factual findings but rather with its legal conclusions. Detective Valladares testified to the limited nature of the initial search — a search for weapons and the apartment keys. Defendant was not ordered to remove articles of clothing, a natural step in conducting a search for drugs pursuant to the warrant. The trial court never found, as defendant contends, that the police conducted a complete search of defendant at the corner of Magnolia Avenue and Third Street. Rather, the court determined that the police conducted an “incompetent search” at that location, a premise based on the court’s mistaken understanding that once the search began, even for the limited purpose of frisking for weapons and seizing the apartment keys, an intrusive search for drugs had to continue in a public place to its inevitable conclusion. The court maintained that because the police officers did not find contraband on defendant during the initial search, they were obliged to release him.
We disagree with the trial court and the Appellate Division, which affirmed the suppression order. The police did not have to proceed in some formulaic or mechanistic manner.
See
Bruzzese, supra,
94
N.J.
at 228,
C.
Because we have determined that defendant was lawfully detained pursuant to a warrant to search his person when the drugs were discovered, we need not reach the issue addressed in
Bailey, supra,
— U.S.-, 133
S.Ct.
1031,
Bailey does not apply to a case involving a search warrant for a person. Therefore, the discussions of Bailey by the trial court and Appellate Division were not necessary to decide the suppression motion.
VI.
For the reasons expressed, we find that the trial court erred in suppressing the evidence. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division affirming the trial court’s suppression order. We remand to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
For reversal and remandment — Chief Justice RABNER and Justices LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON and SOLOMON— 5.
Not Participating — Justice FERNANDEZ-VINA and Judge CUFF (temporarily assigned).
Opposed — None.
Notes
Detective Valladares did not observe firsthand the recovery of the heroin. Before giving his testimony, he reviewed the videotape of the incident, which showed a police captain and sergeant walking behind defendant. One of those officers advised Detective Valladares that the heroin dropped from the leg of defendant's pants. The surveillance videotape shows a police officer walking behind defendant, picking up an item, and showing it to a fellow officer.
The court also pointedly noted that, based on the record, including the surveillance videotape, it could not be determined from what part of defendant’s clothing the bundles of heroin fell because no one from "the take-down group” was called to testify.
The Fourth Amendment and Article I, Paragraph 7 use virtually identical language. The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
[U.S. Const, amend. IV; see also N.J. Const, art. I, ¶ 7.]
We note that the State failed to call to the stand the police officer or officers who witnessed the discovery of the four bundles of heroin. Although hearsay is permissible in suppression hearings, subject to N.J.R.E. 104(a), the trial court is the arbiter of the weight to be given to such evidence when the state forgoes presenting available firsthand testimony concerning the discovery of contraband. The issue in this case, however, concerned not so much discovery of the heroin, but the legality of defendant's continued detention after the initial search.
